SuperSonics 96, Bobcats 89: Blogcat’s Take

Posted by on Mar 5, 2007 in Seattle Supersonics | 0 comments

After the “Misfortune in Portland” on Friday, Derek Anderson predicted the next team wouldn’t be as equipped to beat them from outside.  "That's not going to be the norm," Anderson said, and I remember having to bite my tongue at the time, wondering how DA came to that conclusion, considering the next opponents were Ray Allen and Rashard Lewis (who are basically equipped to do little else).  Maybe Anderson was counting on Allen’s ankle keeping him out, but the Sonics have proven to be the Anti-Bobcats this year: their seemingly catastrophic injuries turn out to be much more benign, while Charlotte players get muscle strains that morph into leprosy. 
 
Call Allen the Ankle Whisperer: "I just tried to listen to (my ankle), take the shots that I had, and move and not put too much pressure on it," Allen said.  He and Lewis combined for 62 points and Earl Watson (more on him later) had a double-double to run our losing streak to five in another Okafor-less, blooper-filled dud (all we were missing was Bob Ueker on the play-by-play).  No one else on Seattle did much of anything, which begs the question: why does Lewis seem all but gone in free agency this summer?  After Ray Allen, who do the Sonics have all their money tied up in, Nick Collison?             
 
Anyway, the good news is the Cats were in this right up until the end, beautiful friend, the end.  They also played grittier than Shaft’s Big Score—Umm, except for Primoz Brezec, who…lost…a…jump…ball…to Earl…Jesus Shuttlesworth, I can’t even type this sentence without stopping in disbelief…Earl Watson!! (There, I did it really fast.)  Yep, Watson beat out Brezec on a jump ball, and all the credit in the world should go to commentator Matt Devlin, who took it completely in stride and said something like, “That Watson can really jump,” as if 6-1 guys out-jumping 7-1 guys is entirely normal.  Then, about a minute later, in a sort of Suck Encore, Brezec had his shot blocked by Watson.  And AGAIN Devlin barely flinched—he deserves an Emmy for that, in my opinion; either the guy was on a jumbo-sized bag of Dramomine or he’s incapable of getting excited.  Imagine if he’d been calling the Hindenburg tragedy (“Those blimps can really explode and shower hordes of screaming onlookers with fiery death from above, can’t they, Stephanie?”), no one would even remember it.   
 
Spoiled in the loss was Adam Morrison’s homecoming to the state of Washington.  Supposedly there was a lot of build-up in the press for AM’s big reunion, although the only proof of that we saw were two articles that Stephanie showed us, neither of which looked much bigger than coupon clippings.  Morrison himself didn’t seem particularly moved either.  “I don't miss going to class,” he said before the game, “I don't miss some of the other stuff…I enjoyed my college days and now it's time to move on.”  Well, that’s okay, he’s at that age when it’s not cool to be nostalgic—I remember it well.  That was also the age when I lived by codes like, “Never drive less than 15 mph over the speed limit,” so I won’t hold it against him.
 
PS—
Allen’s got some new reality show on NBA-TV, and the promo for it has got to be one of the all-time worst.  It tries for this dramatic mood music and then Allen goes into this mumbled, rambling monologue that’s so terrible and meaningless, I had no choice but to transcribe it, word-for-incoherent-word:
 
 “Being able to be the great shooter…or the best shooter—one of the best shooters in the world—really there…as much people…they use the, the phrase, ‘the art of shooting’…if you take a picture of anybody’s shot, you can dissect it and say why it works…but what most people don’t see is the work put into that shot.  My point, my point is…when I’m shooting I need to, this ball needs to be part of my body when I shoot.  Just, just you go up.  When you go up you just let it go.”
 
Is he talking about how to shoot a basketball or how to pass gas?  What’s really scary is that someone edited it to sound like that.

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Brevin Knight is pissed at somebody

Posted by on Nov 10, 2006 in Brevin Knight, Seattle Supersonics | 0 comments

This is a quote from Brevin Knight following Friday night's loss to the Sonics.

We win one game, we play well in another, and we think we've arrived. … We don't have stars on this team. We don't have anything. We need to work hard if we're ever going to win.

My question is which Bobcats player is getting under Brevin's skin ?

  • Can't be Emeka, hes playing his ass off. In fact, through the first 5 games of the season Emeka is averaging 17.4 ppg, 11.6 rpg and blocking 3.6 shots per game. (Chew on those numbers Dwight HowardTongue out)
  • Could be Raymond. Even though he didn't play in that game because of the rib injury he has been vocal in his playoff predictions for this season.
  • It could possibly be Adam pMorrison. I could see how Brevin could be jealous of the hype that Adam brought when he came to the team, plus as soon as Adam gets adjusted to the NBA, BK will be sent to the bench.
  • Sean May possibly, The problem with that is Sean May's role isn't getting enough minutes to cause those kind of problems on the court.
  • Crash??? If there were some heat between Brevin and Gerald Wallace, that would be interesting, but not playing hard enough has never been Gerald's problem.

If anyone has any deeper insight into this, I'd love to hear it.

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Kareem Rush wants REVENGE!!!

Posted by on Oct 18, 2006 in Kareem Rush, Seattle Supersonics | 0 comments

Kareem Rush is hoping to find a home with the Seattle SuperSonics. In his words:

Tacoma News Tribune  

“I think I can fill a role that this team needs, which is to knock down shots consistently,” Rush said. “That’s what I do. I’m a veteran guy and I can step right in if somebody goes down.”

Random Observation: Rush shot 38.6% from the field last season, Since when did that qualify as "knocking down shots consistently"? 

"If I make this team, I am hunting for Charlotte," Rush told the Tacoma News-Tribune

 

After doing some googling, I found that this Kareem is getting ahead of himself with his plans of vengeance. He  STILL can't stay healthy enough to get on the court.

The Seattle Times

Sonics guard Kareem Rush aggravated the partial tear in his groin during warmups at the team's open practice at Hazen High School on Tuesday. He is listed as day to day.
Coach Bob Hill was eager to finally see the veteran play since Rush missed the opening two weeks of camp, including three exhibition games, because of the injury. But when Rush attempted to play through the pain, he pulled up limp and had to watch the sets of 12-minute scrimmages before a packed gym of high-school students.

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