Selasa, 30 Juni 2015

basketball stream live WNBA Player Reads Mean Tweets, Proves Sexism Is Alive And Well

basketball stream live Chicago Sky player Elena Delle Donne made headlines for her impressive performance at a recent game. Haters on Twitter don't care about that, though. They only seem to care that she's a woman.

According to the Chicago Sun-Times, Delle Donne scored a career-high 45 points against the Atlanta Dream last Wednesday and set a league record when she made 19 of 19 free throws. "SportsCenter" tweeted about her success, but it wasn’t long until the trolls pounced with some sexist responses. In the style of Jimmy Kimmel’s "Mean Tweets" series, the star read the tweets aloud in a video posted on the Chicago Sky's YouTube channel.

"I’d rather watch paint dry," she said as she read a tweet. "The WNBA is a complete joke and totally unwatchable," she said as she read another.

Other users decided to completely give up on creativity and went with an outdated sexist stereotype. "Where is the oven?" one user tweeted.

Delle Donne’s response? "In the kitchen. We're on the court. Get over it."

Take that, haters.

H/T The Cut

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basketball stream live Scottie Pippen Dubs Himself 'LeBron James Before LeBron James'

basketball stream live Let's not get it twisted: There's only one LeBron James. He's the only player who can single-handedly carry his team to the brink of a championship, travel a whole bunch and get away with it and receive comparisons to Magic Johnson and Michael Jordan -- an exercise in NBA historical thought that still seems to sell LeBron's talents short.

Chicago Bulls Hall of Famer Scottie Pippen, however, doesn't see Magic or Michael in LeBron's game. And thinks someone else should be added to that conversation.

"I was LeBron James before LeBron James," Pippen told Cleveland.com at the annual Nike Basketball Academy in Santa Monica, California last weekend. "It's not even close."

LeBron was also at the Nike Basketball Academy, observing, mentoring and playing with top high school and college basketball prospects. (He even snuck in some beachfront yoga with the campers.)

"They want to compare him to the greatest, whether it be Michael Jordan or Magic Johnson, but he's more closer to myself," Pippen said. "It's natural for folks to say that, but if you look at how he plays the game and how I played the game, you'll see more similarities with us."

Physically, Pippen's assertion is spot-on. Not that Pippen, 50, was the athlete that LeBron is now (nobody is), but both NBA stars are 6 feet 8 inches and small forwards by trade.


Pippen was always a threat to throw down a huge dunk while running the floor.


Like Pippen did, especially when Jordan left the Bulls to play baseball, LeBron often plays an unusual "point forward" role for his team, combining the best qualities of two positions: the unselfish passing and leadership of point guards with the inside-out versatility of forwards. Stylistically, Pippen and LeBron share similar tasks and execution.




Getting in LeBron's way is a bad idea.


"I'm no slouch, but when comparing LeBron's game, I'm usually left out," Pippen said.

So why does Pippen get left out of the conversation? Status. In the revised version of NBA history we follow, Pippen was always No. 2. He can't shake that tag. Players of LeBron's star power or near it -- the 1 percent of the NBA's alpha dogs -- don't get compared to second-best options. That's why Pippen's closest popular comparison to current NBA stars is actually Golden State Warriors small forward Andre Iguodala, the 2015 Finals MVP who closely guarded LeBron one-on-one for much of the series.

During the Bulls' championship run in the 1990s, Jordan and Pippen were affectionally called "Batman and Robin" by Chicago fans. You can guess who was The Batman -- although in August 2014, Pippen jokingly opposed that widely held belief too:

"I'm the greatest Chicago Bull of all time," Pippen said in a Foot Locker commercial.



Perhaps, so Pippen doesn't feel left out of the conversation next time, his Hall of Fame bust should read "LeBron James Before LeBron James: The Greatest Chicago Bull Ever." Now that's a unique distinction for the NBA's GOAT second option.

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basketball stream live Here Are The 5 Things You Need To Know Entering NBA Free Agency

basketball stream live If the NBA Draft is a full-on crapshoot (read my winners and losers here and my interview with Karl-Anthony Towns here) then we might as well call free agency a poker game. Why? Because teams have a better idea of who's who at this point, although second and third contracts have a way of changing players. Fit is often just as important as talent, and the right system can make or break a player. As we will examine, that hardly excuses teams of making costly mistakes.

The 2015 free agency may be one year removed from the LeBron James saga, but with two of the league's premier power forwards, Kevin Love and LaMarcus Aldridge, opting out, there remains star power. Free agency begins July 1, and unlike the draft, it lasts more than just a few hours on primetime television. Here are the five most important questions as we get set for the league's second season.

Are The Lakers On Their Way Back?



Kobe Bryant returning to the lineup isn't the only good news in Tinseltown. Armed with a future superstar in point guard D'Angelo Russell -- the second pick in the draft -- the Lakers also have an abundance of cash. The two obvious targets are the former UCLA product Love, 26, and Aldridge, 29, both of whom can come in right away and help propel them back to sustained postseason runs. The beauty of both these guys is the ability to stretch the floor and play the two-man game. Both thrive in pick-and-roll because of their passing and shooting, but also because of their sound footwork and capacity to make tough catches. That has to be a huge selling point with Russell, whose prodigious passing talent draws comparisons to Jason Kidd and even Magic Johnson.

As I've reported, Aldridge -- who is from Dallas and went to Texas -- is highly unlikely to become a Laker. The two best bets are Dallas and San Antonio, with the Spurs having an edge. Don't forget either that Texas doesn't have a state income tax, surely an added bonus for a contract this large. Aldridge, an All-Star for four consecutive years, averaged a career-high 23.4 points and 10.2 rebounds while leading Portland to the playoffs last year. San Antonio's patented side pick-and-roll action with Tony Parker -- which vanquished Aldridge and the Blazers during the 2014 postseason -- would be an easy marriage.







All may be well in Lakerland even if Love or Aldridge doesn't sign: the Lakers will get $25 million when Bryant's "loyalty" contract expires next season, not to mention the added funding of a raised salary cap (see below).

Does Marc Gasol's Market Value Even Matter?

marc gasol

The NBA's best center will earn his final big contract at 30 years old, right smack in his prime. Gasol, who averaged a career best 17.4 points last year for a playoff Memphis squad, will draw interest from several teams, likely including the Lakers and Spurs. The general consensus, though, is that in all likelihood, it will be the Grizz resigning Gasol, despite him being unrestricted. Gasol has lived in Memphis since his teenage years, he's comfortable there and the team has weapons around him. The physical Zach Randolph can bang with other 4s and even 5s, and a terrific pick-and-roll triggerman in Mike Conley aids in Gasol's offensive prowess.

What Happens To The "Other" Big?

deandre jordan

Dare we sleep on Los Angeles Clippers' Third-Team All-NBA center DeAndre Jordan, the NBA's leader in field goal percentage at 71 percent? The 26-year-old had a career year -- free-throw woes and all -- and has become one of the game's elite shot blockers and finishers. While the market for Jordan isn't as robust as Love's or Aldridge's, we can expect him to field a series of offers. Having already dealt 7-footer Spencer Hawes, vice president and head coach Doc Rivers -- prone to questionable decision-making -- appears to be banking on Jordan's return. Presumably, part of that stems from the fact that the Clippers can offer more years -- and more cash -- than anyone else. Then again, Dallas appears to be a front-runner for the unrestricted Jordan, given that the Mavs have two sizable deals coming off the books in center Tyson Chandler and disgruntled point guard Rajon Rondo. If the Clips cannot retain Jordan, it would be a massive blow for Blake Griffin and Chris Paul, whose patented "Lob City" would be cut in half.

Is D-Wade Leaving South Beach?

dwyane wade

In a pretty bare market for guards, a rickety Dwyane Wade is one of the best available. The 33-year-old may only give you 50 games, but realistically, how many guys on the open market are more dynamic on both ends? Sans LeBron, Wade averaged a healthy 21.5 points, albeit on 47 percent shooting, the third lowest clip of his marvelous 12-year career. After opting out of his player option, Wade -- who was scheduled to earn more than $16 million next season -- is now believed to be seeking three more years, averaging $16 million, according to ESPN.com.

If he chooses to stay, however, help is on the way. Team president Pat Riley stole Justise Winslow with the 10th pick, giving Wade an immensely gifted perimeter running mate that Mike Krzyzewski -- who has coached them both -- even went so far as to compare to Wade. Ideally, Winslow can both alleviate some of the defensive and offensive onus, but also absorb some of Wade's minutes. The other matter for the future Hall of Famer to consider is free agent point guard Goran Dragic, a Third-Team All-NBA performer whom Riley shrewdly acquired at the trade deadline (see my deadline winners and losers) and who will surely command a five-year deal.

"I feel confident that this is where he wants to be," Riley said recently. "He stated that when we traded for him. He knew how much we gave up for him. And he wants to be here. He let me know that in the exit meeting."

A splendid playmaker who has shown the capacity to go off the ball as well, the efficient Dragic (17 points, 5 assists on 50 percent shooting in 26 games with Miami) can presumably make life easier for Wade moving forward because of his versatility. All in all, Riley has a pretty decent roster if he retains the Slovenian, given his found gold in former D-League center Hassan Whiteside. The continually solid, if not spectacular Chris Bosh -- locked up on a max deal last summer -- gives the Heat a formidable, rangy front line that can create a litany of problems. Presumably, Wade would want to remain in Miami in the measly Eastern Conference, and he may ultimately think that staying put gives him the best chance to go for a fourth ring. Regardless, this is the last marquee contract of his career, so the decision holds that much more weight.

Who's Getting Overpaid?

tobias harris

It's not a matter of if, but when. The annual barrage of inflated contracts is as much a part of free agency as anything. Sorry, Knick fans, but remember salary albatrosses Jerome James and Eddy Curry? Washington was burned when it gave Gilbert Arenas a six-figure deal, and don't forget Philly ponying up $80 million to Elton Brand for his middling numbers on sorry teams.

Circumstances are different for every team: a GM might think he's one piece away from contending. Or, he might have such an abundance of cap space that it's worth taking a chance on a sizable deal, even if he's overpaying. Or better yet, his evaluation of a player might be completely wrong. With the cap set to expand considerably for the 2016-17 season, we can expect to see more of the same colossal-failure free agent signings. And, in this specific class, there are several prime candidates, two of whom are especially worth highlighting.

Orlando's Tobias Harris (above), 22, has been floated as a potential max guy with Detroit or Boston. Harris is a fine young player and he should command a hefty deal -- maybe with the Lakers or Knicks -- but giving the max to a guy who put up decent numbers for a terrible Orlando team seems like an awful lot.

Another young forward expected to get max money is Cleveland's Tristan Thompson, who emerged in the playoffs as a terrific offensive rebounder, capable defender and an adequate finisher around the rim. In other words, the 24-year-old is a nice asset to have as part of a winning core. But has Thompson ever displayed any sort of a skill set to suggest he can become a reliable go-to option or shot blocker? This may be more of LeBron flexing his muscles given the extensive reports that he wants Thompson -- a former top-five pick -- back for the long haul. Any bargaining chip the Cavs front office may have had is long gone.

Email me at jordan.schultz@huffingtonpost.com or ask me questions about anything sports-related at @Schultz_Report, and follow me on Instagram @Schultz_Report.

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Senin, 29 Juni 2015

basketball stream live 14-Year-Old Mo'ne Davis Signs to the Harlem Globetrotters

basketball stream live Score another point for 14-year-old Mo'ne Davis!

Originally made famous by her stellar performance at the 2014 Little League World Series, Mo'ne is adding accomplishments to her resumé at a remarkable pace: a shoe line, a memoir, several athletic awards, and most recently, an offer from traveling exhibition basketball team, the Harlem Globetrotters.

Wait -- isn't her sport baseball?

Davis' talents can't be confined to one realm, and apparently not to one sport either. New York Magazine reports that The Globetrotters have instituted a "Future Discovery Clause," meaning that Davis will begin playing for them after she graduates from college, but she has indeed been offered a spot on the team.

And since she's not yet a high school freshman, she's got plenty of time to practice. Although, she seems to be in pretty good shape already. According to ESPN, she's been playing for her school's varsity basketball team since she was in 8th grade.

We're on Team Mo'ne -- whatever sport she ends up playing.

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Minggu, 28 Juni 2015

basketball stream live The Campaign: Cameron Payne's Journey From Obscurity To The NBA Draft

basketball stream live NEW YORK -- Quick flashes lit the hollow gray stairway when Cameron Payne walked through the door. He had already moved past the TMZ cameras outside. Now a few photographers wanted their shots.

Payne, in a black designer T-shirt and blue jeans, paused for a picture or two, then pushed by them and into the small Tribeca pop-up studio where a crowd of 50 or so had already assembled for a local fundraiser. In a room the size of a luxury Manhattan apartment, expensive paintings lined bleach-white walls, and guests sipped on Champagne and cocktails.

Two short years ago, Cameron Payne was a lightly recruited point guard who landed at mid-major Murray State University, a proud basketball program but one hardly known for sending players to the next level. Now, he was a highly touted NBA draft prospect, on the cusp of completing a rise not even those closest to him saw coming.

The night before he might realize his biggest dream, the most improbable of the 20 players invited to attend the draft spent a few hours looking at contemporary art.

Cool and collected, without a hint of unease about what lay ahead of him over the next 24 hours, Payne ambled through the room with friends, family and his agent in tow. A painting hanging in a corner opposite the most crowded part of the room caught Payne’s eye.

“The Best Ever,” its black paint screamed, the slogan surrounded by a dollar sign, a minimalist American flag, and other symbols. Black paint on a white canvas, its only splash of color came in the red gloves of the stick-figure boxer in the bottom right corner.

Payne, determined to prove he belonged at the draft and in the NBA, said later that he viewed the piece’s simple message as “a way to get focused” on that goal.

Ten minutes after Payne first saw the painting, the event’s host clinked two bottles of Champagne together to gather the crowd. He’d just made his first sale. Payne bought the painting that captured his attention, a Tonia Calderon piece listed for $250 as a print and $2,200 for the original. He wouldn’t say how much he paid -- the proceeds of everything sold at the event went to help provide free dental care to low-income New Yorkers -- but it didn’t count as Payne’s first NBA purchase. “I ain’t got none of that money yet,” he said.

How does a 20-year-old NBA draft prospect whose life is about to change end up at an art show?

“I just like style,” Payne said later. “I like the swag.”

“He’s a different kind of cat,” his brother Tony Payne Jr. laughed.

travis waldron

* * * * *


The frenzied few days leading up to the NBA draft are packed with photo shoots, autograph signings, and various appearances next to promoters and media personalities who want a small piece of the action. It culminates, for those players invited to attend, in a butterfly-inducing draft night spent sitting at a ritzy table in a flashy suit -- in Payne’s case, a blue double-breasted jacket he kept hidden from his parents and friends until the big night -- waiting for NBA Commissioner Adam Silver to call your name. It is an evening when college athletes, forbidden from making money off their talents in the years before, take their first step toward becoming multimillionaires, a night when a team’s fans start showering their newest faces with love or, for the unlucky soul selected by the Knicks, immediate disdain.

For those who starred on a collegiate powerhouse in front of fans obsessed with their teams -- like the Kentucky and Duke players in attendance this week -- the whole process may seem like an exaggerated extension of their previous lives. When you play ball in the Ohio Valley Conference, it seems inevitable that the attention will become overwhelming.

It didn’t take long for Payne to notice the biggest difference between himself and the rest of the players invited to attend Thursday night’s draft. Scouring the list of invitees, one name stood out.

Kentucky. Wisconsin. Duke. Arizona. Murray State.

“I’m the only one,” Payne said, recalling the moment when he looked at his invitation for the first time. “All these guys who played for Final Four teams, and we didn’t even make the tournament. I’m the only mid-major guy here.”

Payne, a product of Memphis’ Lausanne Collegiate School, hadn’t received the glut of scholarship offers his fellow invitees had out of high school. Once at Murray State, the university tucked into the 22nd-largest city in Kentucky, he never received the nationwide media attention that awaited players at Duke, Kentucky or Wisconsin. Payne’s parents figured he’d play four years for the Racers before he tried to latch on somewhere in the NBA. A tour of overseas leagues seemed more likely.

Instead, he took advantage of an injury to Murray State’s starting point guard his freshman year and never looked back, averaging 18 points and 6 assists over two seasons. As a sophomore, he was one of just three players in the country to average 20 points and 5 assists per game, and his play during the Racers’ 25-game winning streak this spring caught the attention of scouts and draft analysts alike. In mock drafts, his name started popping up in the first round.

It all came to a head Thursday night at the Barclay’s Center, the Brooklyn arena where Payne and the others waited to learn their professional fates. Payne’s draft week had gotten off to a shaky start. A delayed flight kept him in his native Memphis hours longer than expected, meaning his schedule upon landing in New York was even more condensed than planned. After weeks of hopscotching the country from workout to workout for various NBA teams, he crisscrossed Manhattan before the draft for photo shoots, media appearances and other NBA-mandated events.

Payne had never even been to New York. When he finally got to the Westin, the midtown hotel where the NBA housed players and their families for the week, autograph seekers swarmed his car. The first time he and his family drove through Times Square, Payne gawked at the huge video boards overhead and stared in amazement at the number of people lining the streets. When he got to media day, he faced the kind of attention players at programs like Murray State rarely get.

From the beginning, Payne dealt with the draft with a confidence and bombast his parents said was a natural element of his personality. He at times leaned on tired and clichéd talking points -- he’d be happy to go anywhere, of course. But once those were out of the way, he added his own flavor to the pre-draft process. With a touch of political flair, he referred to his journey to the draft, and the subsequent career he envisioned, by citing his nickname: "The Campaign."

In pre-draft interviews, Payne declared himself one of the draft’s best guards, right up there with Ohio State’s D’Angelo Russell, a projected top-three pick, and Emmanuel Mudiay, once the nation’s top high school recruit. He spoke in the third person, making it known that “there is no ceiling for Cameron Payne.” He said he wanted to follow in the footsteps of fellow mid-major guard Damian Lillard, who won Rookie of the Year after the Portland Trailblazers drafted him out of Weber State in 2012.

With its “Best Ever” scrawl, the painting he bought Wednesday was on message. If he wasn’t supposed to be here, if he held any disbelief in his ability or his place among the players who’d made their names on much bigger collegiate stages, he didn’t show it.

“If he’s nervous, I can’t tell,” Tony Payne Jr., Cameron’s older brother by four years, said on the eve of the draft. “It’s crazy how he’s taking the situation. He’s happy, but he’s kind of like, ‘It’s just the draft.’”

After the art show, more than 40 friends and family members gathered in the deepest of back rooms at Cove Lounge, a bar in Harlem. Payne lapped up the moment.

“In less than 24 hours,” he yelled into the bright lights of the NBA TV documentary crew that had followed him all day, “I’ll know my team.”

The room erupted in cheers. Payne started to dance.

* * * * *


cameron payne

At Cove, Payne snagged a seat -- and as much solitude as was available at a 40-person party -- at the end of the bar. The day had started more than 14 hours before and still had a few hours of partying to go. The TVs above him blasted non-stop draft coverage. He sliced off small pieces of the steak in front of him and never looked up. It was after 10 o’clock, and this was his first meal of the day.

A few minutes later, he dipped into a hallway lit with neon blue lights, and the guard came down, if only for a minute. Payne used to tell his parents and his brother that he’d be here, like this, after just two years of college. He never quite believed it.

“I was planning on going to school four years, getting my degree, trying to play overseas, try to get a coaching job,” he said. “It wasn’t nothing like, ‘I’m gonna play two years and go to the NBA.’”

Still, the two-year prediction wasn’t just “something crazy” he’d come up with.

"It was a goal," he said.

Memphis high schools have produced numerous talented point guards, and Tony Payne Sr., who played the point himself, can rattle off the names: Larry Finch, Andre Turner, Penny Hardaway, all of whom stayed home to play their college ball at the University of Memphis. But even after winning a state title and a Mr. Basketball award as a senior, Cameron Payne never earned much attention from the Tigers.

When he broke out in college two years later, he did it at Murray State, in the statewide and national shadows of a Kentucky team pursuing season-long perfection. An upset loss in the OVC tournament final cost the Racers an NCAA Tournament berth, robbing Payne of his chance to prove himself on college basketball’s biggest stage.

Payne has “been doubted his whole life,” at every level of basketball, his brother said, and the slights, both real and perceived, popped up in conversation. Upon his return to Memphis after weeks of pre-draft workouts, Payne remembered, he received interview requests from local news stations that had paid him no attention before. The delayed flight stung because he knew he wasn’t going to get “the same love as those big-time guys” in New York, and being late might only make it worse.

The Campaign grew out of others’ constant doubt that he belonged, out of the desperation for a chance to prove he actually did. It isn’t anywhere near its end.

“I’m going to have something to prove until I’m 90 years old. I mean, God bless me, if I become a 16-time All-Star, they’re bringing in some rookie trying to take my spot, just like I am now,” he said. “There’s never going to be a point where I don’t need to get better. I’m never going to find my ceiling.”

Now, Payne was on the brink, and over eight weeks of workouts and the last 48 hours of travel and pre-draft euphoria, he hadn’t had time to get nervous. He figured he’d maybe get a few hours of sleep Wednesday night. (His agent, Travis King, laughed at that notion: “None of them can sleep.") But even if he was doing his best to obscure it, nerves were there.

“I don’t know anybody who’ll say they’re not nervous,” Payne said. “If there’s anybody who says they’re not nervous, they’re the most nervous.”

He had an idea of where he’d go -- somewhere between the sixth and 14th picks was his best guess -- but admitted that he'd start freaking out a bit if other names kept rolling off the board.

“Once you get to nine, 10, you start thinking,” he said, staring at the ceiling. “That’s when I’m going to get anxious.”

He paused.

“I just want to put on that hat."

* * * * *


When Thursday night finally arrived, Cameron Payne sat on the floor of the Barclay’s Center in a bright blue double-breasted suit jacket as those names began rolling off the board: Karl Anthony Towns, D’Angelo Russell, Jahlil Okafor. The hometown crowd booed when the Knicks took Latvia’s Kristaps Porzingis. Nothing out of the ordinary.

Pick six, the first in Payne’s range, sent Kentucky’s Willie Cauley-Stein to Sacramento. Denver used the seventh on another point guard, Emmanuel Mudiay. Eight, nine, and 10 passed. Indiana had hinted at a need for a more athletic point guard, but used the 11th pick on Texas big man Myles Turner. Two more came and went.

Then, at 9:10 p.m. Thursday night, Cameron Payne got his hat.

“With the 14th pick in the 2015 NBA Draft,” NBA Commissioner Adam Silver announced, “the Oklahoma City Thunder select Cameron Payne, Murray State University.”

Payne sprung from his chair and wrapped his arms around his mother, Leshawn, first and then Tony Sr. After an elaborate handshake with Tony Jr., who had already made plans to follow Cameron to his new city -- wherever that would be -- he waltzed up onto the platform.

He slid the hat on. The Campaign was underway.

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Jumat, 26 Juni 2015

basketball stream live Willie Cauley-Stein Had The Best Answer When Asked What's He's Looking Forward To In The NBA

basketball stream live It's been a crazy few months for the young basketball players who, on Thursday, finally found out their fate in the NBA.

A guessing game of where they'd fall in the draft had filled their minds and the airwaves for months. But it finally ended, for some at least, after Thursday's 2015 NBA Draft was held at Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York.

Willie Cauley-Stein, a former member of John Calipari's Kentucky Wildcats, told The Huffington Post that getting picked sixth overall by the Sacramento Kings in the NBA Draft means one thing to him: He finally has a home.

"I have a home. I've been living out of a suitcase for weeks and I haven't had a home," he said. "So now it's cool to finally know where I'm going and get a chance to go out there and get acquainted with my fans and the city and the organization."

Cauley-Stein, 21, eyed by both the New York Knicks and Charlotte Hornets, will now join the Kings. Sacramento, please welcome this adorable guy with lots of hugs.

willie cauley
Too cute. (Credit: Nathaniel S. Butler/NBAE via Getty Images)



Video edited by Eva Hill. Video shot and story written by Lucy McCalmont.

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basketball stream live Here Are Your 2015 NBA Draft Winners And Losers

basketball stream live While we won't really know who won Thursday's draft for at least a few seasons, it remains an annual tradition to break down each team's decision-making on the clock. In recent years, with the influx of free agency every summer, it's become clear that the draft has lost some of its relevance. If you hit it big, that's great, but if not, you can still build a successful roster in July. Still, the significance of a quality draft -- or, in the case of the world champions, quality drafts -- remains too great to ignore. Golden State nabbed league MVP Stephen Curry in 2009, then selected All-Star Klay Thompson in 2011. In 2012, we saw the Warriors draft Festus Ezili and Harrison Barnes, along with First-Team All-NBA Defender Draymond Green, in the second round.

The 2015 class, as we've highlighted, features perhaps the best assortment of incoming talent since the LeBron-Carmelo-Bosh-Wade draft of 2003. It also saw a record 13 freshmen drafted in the first round. Knowing all too well the value of a draft-night steal or the damage of a bust, let's make a very, very early assessment of the winners and losers of 2015. For what it's worth, I do have a pretty good record about this stuff.

WINNERS

Minnesota

We'll look back at Thursday night as the moment the T-Wolves altered the tenor of their entire organization. Just by himself, top pick Karl-Anthony Towns -- whom HuffPost caught up with before the draft -- would have turned Thursday into a major victory for the team, but when they went out and got Tyus Jones from Cleveland, it was the icing on the cake. We know plenty about Towns, but Jones, who won a state title as a prep in his home state of Minnesota, is a winning lead guard whose lack of size at 6 feet 1 inch shouldn't be a concern. The heartbeat of Duke's national champion team, Jones averaged nearly 6 assists per game and fewer than 2 turnovers. Ricky Rubio makes well over $12 million, but he's also the worst-shooting starting point guard in basketball. Jones provides insurance, and as we saw with Jahlil Okafor, he thrives in the two-man game. He will help with Towns' offensive development from day one.

Philadelphia



I've described Sam Hinkie's "master plan" as genius, but with all due respect, having Jahlil Okafor fall into his lap at 3 is just good luck. Forget about Okafor's defensive deficiencies. How many 19-year-olds could come into the NBA as a rookie and average 20 points and 4 assists? That's Okafor, who, aside from having several go-to post moves, is a sensational -- and willing -- passer who will likely be an All-Star for the next decade-plus.

Lakers

dangelo russell

Okafor would have been an excellent pick, but so is Ohio State's D'Angelo Russell, who led all freshmen in scoring during his lone season in Columbus. Russell won't back down from the Steph Currys and Russell Westbrooks of the West, and while he's not necessarily a great athlete, his prodigious court vision and passing ability, not to mention his great size, give the Lakers their All-Star triggerman of the future. Keep in mind that the franchise is linked to both Kevin Love and LaMarcus Aldridge, either of whom would presumably love to play with a guy like Russell.

The Bigs

Towns and Okafor -- two freshmen big men, each one poised to become a franchise cornerstone -- went first and third. But that was just the beginning. Latvia's Kristaps Porzingis, also 19 years old, went fourth to New York. Here's how I put it on Thursday:



Sacramento is taking a gamble on Willie Cauley-Stein, presumably in the hopes that the former Wildcat can become Tyson Chandler 2.0. All in all, a combined six power forwards and centers were taken in the lottery. We saw in the NBA Finals that the league has shifted away from playing through the low post. The 2015 draft class, however, shows us that the big boys still matter.

Denver

The 6-foot-5-inch Emmanuel Mudiay comes to a team in desperate need of a lead guard, assuming Ty Lawson is dealt. Mudiay can learn on the job, which is typically a plus for a lead guard, and in time, he should become the face of the franchise. Denver wants to run, and it gets a natural attacker in Mudiay, who excels in the open floor. Moreover, the Western Conference is littered with elite young guards -- think Russell Westbrook, James Harden, Damian Lillard and Stephen Curry. Mudiay, at 19 years old, has the tools to join that list in time.

Charlotte

frank kaminsky

Last year, the Hornets ranked last in the league in 3-point shooting and 28th in overall offense. They've missed the playoffs nine out of 11 seasons since returning to Charlotte. But Wooden Award winner Frank Kaminsky, taken ninth overall, is the rare 7-footer who can really spread you out as well as score in the block. His superb footwork and passing ability are huge pluses for a team that would love to play through both him and Al Jefferson. This is an ideal pick in many ways because it will also aid Kemba Walker's pick-and-roll development.

Miami

Coach K has talked about Justise Winslow having similar characteristics and style to Dwyane Wade. Winslow's toughness, winning pedigree and two-way ability could give Miami exactly what it needs following the departure of LeBron James. Ultimately, we're guessing he will guard four positions and then go out and immediately score in the low teens. Winslow, 19, is going to be an All-Star, and the fact that he slipped to the 10th pick works perfectly for a Miami team that wants to get more athletic and dynamic on both sides of the floor. This feels like the steal of the draft.

Dallas

justin anderson virginia

Justin Anderson, the rugged two-way wing from Virginia, was one of my favorite values in the draft. Dallas nabbed him at 21, and they're getting a guy who shot in the mid-40s from 3 while morphing into one of college basketball's premier defenders.

Toronto

Delon Wright is a poor man's Mudiay. He's 6 feet 5 inches with superb quickness and athleticism, but he still wants to pass first. UCLA's Norman Powell, at 46, is just awesome value. He was one of the best athletes throughout the entire predraft process and has shown an increased willingness to get physical guarding the perimeter. Major sleeper potential there. This is good news all around for a Raptors team that ranked 23rd in team defense last year en route to another first-round postseason exit.

Orlando

Not only is Croatian wing Mario Hezonja the best shooter in the 2015 draft, he's also one of the best all-around athletes. The 6-foot-8-inch Hezonja will blend nicely alongside Elfrid Payton and even Victor Oladipo, giving rising 7-footer Nikola Vucevic and the Magic a young and dynamic trio of playmakers on the perimeter. Bottom line: This was a team desperate for shooting, and the 20-year-old Hezonja meets that need and then some. Don't sleep on second-rounder Tyler Harvey, either: The lefty led the nation in scoring (23 points per game) last year while taking Eastern Washington to the NCAA Tournament.

LOSERS

Detroit

stanley johnson arizona

Cardinal sin No. 1? Taking Stanley Johnson over Justise Winslow. How the Pistons can justify that is baffling. Johnson is a stiff wing who doesn't finish especially well at the rim. Despite miles-high expectations during his freshman period in Tucson, he disappeared in the final three games of the tournament, shooting 7-26 from the floor. But hey, at least he's confident. Then, at 38, Detroit took another perimeter player in four-year Villanova shooting guard Darrun Hilliard. At best, Hilliard is a third guard, and with the abundance of talent that was still on the board at that point, he feels like a wasted pick.

Washington

The Wizards needed a stretch forward to complement Bradley Beal and John Wall and to allow Otto Porter to bang a little bit more. Instead, they went out and got Kelly Oubre, a wing from Kansas about as thin as a credit card. Oubre is not going to play heavy minutes for at least a couple years, and while I like Aaron White, Washington's second-rounder, I don't see him playing much either.

Phoenix

devin booker

Like Detroit, the Suns were another team that really missed out on a late lottery opportunity. Utah's Delon Wright or UNLV's Rashad Vaughn are both better players with more upside than Devin Booker, whom Phoenix took at 13. Booker can play off of Eric Bledsoe given that he can stick it from anywhere (41 percent 3s as a freshman), but the Kentucky product remains in his infancy stages as a playmaker. To be fair, John Calipari didn't ask him to be one, but with fewer than 2 free throw attempts per game, Booker is more of a spot-up and pull-up guy than anything else.

Sacramento

As if California's state capital didn't have enough problems. Seriously, who knows what's going on behind closed doors. George Karl is impossible to deal with, and you have to think the Kings' drafting Willie Cauley-Stein with the sixth pick was his doing after the DeMarcus Cousins mess. Cauley-Stein is a fine defensive player, but this was one of the deepest drafts we've ever seen. To take him at 6 -- with Mudiay and Winslow still on the board, mind you -- seems like a massive reach for a 29-win team.

New York

porzingis

We're not necessarily saying that Kristaps Porzingis won't become a fine player -- an All-Star, even -- but the Knicks need help now. And from everything we hear, Porzingis isn't ready to provide that. The Knicks need to develop winning culture. Wouldn't Winslow help with that? He could have fit in very nicely with Carmelo Anthony, giving Derek Fisher a two-way wing who could actually play in the triangle. Instead, Phil Jackson's Porzinigis pick essentially guarantees that the Knicks won't be competitive for another year or two.

Email me at jordan.schultz@huffingtonpost.com or ask me questions about anything sports-related at @Schultz_Report, and follow me on Instagram @Schultz_Report.

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basketball stream live There's Only 8 Meters Of This Fabric In The World, And Karl-Anthony Towns' Suit Used Two And A Half Of Them

basketball stream live If you're going to get selected first overall in the NBA Draft, you need to make sure swag levels are way, way up. And Karl-Anthony Towns, who the Minnesota Timberwolves selected on Thursday night with their number-one pick, did not disappoint.

On his big night, the basketball player said his stylist told him there's only eight meters in the world of the fabric used to make his herringbone jacket.

"And this suit is two and a half of it," Towns said. "So he really blessed me with a one-of-a-kind suit for this special day in my life and I really can't thank him enough."


Towns starts his story near the beginning of the video.

The jacket also featured a leather detailing on the collar, and Towns added that the idea for the jacket came from him, his stylist and his sisters.

"This outfit really was special to me," he said.

Karl-Anthony Towns, first overall pick -- and first in NBA style.

karl anthony towns
#swagchamp (Credit: Jennifer Pottheiser/NBAE via Getty Images)

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basketball stream live Two NBA Draftees Learned The Hard Way That Their Tweets Are Public

basketball stream live Ah, the NBA Draft. A night for fun. A night for family. A night for friends. A night in which a lifetime of hard work culminates in hearing your name called by the commissioner of the National Basketball Association. And a night for realizing that tweet from four years ago was a pretty stupid idea.

Not one but two first-round draft picks spent at least a few of their first minutes in the league on Thursday frantically deleting tweets on their Twitter accounts after realizing they had been drafted by teams with players they had talked shit about in the past.

The first one was Bobby Portis of Arkansas, who was drafted by an esteemed organization known as the Chicago Bulls. Take the stage, Bobby.

nba draft
It's about to go down. (Source: Getty)


Unfortunately for Bobby, he soon remembered (or more likely, was reminded of) a number of tweets he once published mocking Bulls fans and team stars Derrick Rose and Pau Gasol.

portis 1
portis 2


Another tweet he once sent off read: “Where did all these ‘so called’ Derrick Rose/Chicago Bulls fans come from.. Smh.” Portis, who I think we all can safely assume quickly started freaking out, apologized soon after and began to immediately bow down to his new overlords.




Our second mishap revolved around one Larry Nance Jr. of Wyoming, on whom the Los Angeles Lakers used their 27th overall pick in the draft. And, well, here’s the tweet in question, which was deleted just moments after he was selected:

nance

(Bryant was accused of sexual assault in 2003, but he was never found guilty. Bryant settled with his accuser and the case was ultimately dropped.)

No word from Bryant yet, but Lakers GM Mitch Kupchak addressed the situation shortly afterward, basically saying Nance and Bryant are going to have to have a little conversation between the two of them, which sounds horrifying.

Kupchak also added this little pearl of wisdom:

My understanding is that it's something that happened years ago, and in today's world, things don't go away, which really doesn't make it any less offensive because it was said three, four years ago.


Nance, for his part, stuck with the tried and true strategy of ignore, ignore, ignore.




Is there a lesson here? Yes. It’s that your public Twitter accounts are very public. Or it’s that you should keep your account private. Or maybe just don’t say dumb stuff online. Or is it if you think there’s a chance you might one day be in the NBA, don’t talk smack? Unsure, but there must be some lesson here, right? RIGHT?!

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Kamis, 25 Juni 2015

basketball stream live Clarence Thomas: Racial Imbalances Aren't Always A Bad Thing, Just Look At The Mostly Black NBA

basketball stream live In a sharply divided 5-4 ruling on Thursday, the Supreme Court upheld the use of disparate impact claims under the 1968 Fair Housing Act, finding that policies and practices with discriminatory effects can be challenged under the law, even when there was no intent to discriminate. Fair housing advocates said the decision will enable them to continue rooting out racial discrimination at a time when overt bias has largely been replaced by more unconscious or implicit forms of prejudice. But Justice Clarence Thomas argued that racial disparities often appear without the help of discrimination -- and sometimes to the benefit of the minority group -- citing the racial makeup of the NBA as proof.

"Racial imbalances do not always disfavor minorities," Thomas wrote, joining Justice Samuel Alito in his dissent. "[I]n our own country, for roughly a quarter-century now, over 70 percent of National Basketball Association players have been black. To presume that these and all other measurable disparities are products of racial discrimination is to ignore the complexities of human existence."

Thomas went on to express his concern that using the presence of racial disparities as evidence of discrimination would lead to unconstitutional "racial balancing" that might be "limited to only some groups."

Racial imbalances in the NBA may indeed work out in favor of the small number of black people who count themselves as professional basketball players. But systemic racial imbalances in the housing and lending markets certainly do not work out for the rest of the population. Decades of segregation have helped concentrate poverty in minority neighborhoods. And in communities with large percentages of black and Hispanic residents, you see fewer economic and employment opportunities, lower-quality education, lower levels of public safety, and less access to medical care, healthy food and public transportation.

In other words, racial imbalance in housing is regularly accompanied by substantial socioeconomic imbalance, which, according to the Supreme Court's decision on Thursday, can be challenged as discriminatory regardless of intent.

Sure, we've made some progress in chipping away at that legacy of segregation. But there's still a long way to go, and a handful of wealthy black basketball players does nothing to change that fact.

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basketball stream live Oh My God, The Lakers Could Get DeMarcus Cousins AND LaMarcus Aldridge This Summer???

basketball stream live Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait. What?

Some rumors have started to circulate in the last 24 hours about the Los Angeles Lakers, and when pasted together, it’s all almost enough to make a Laker fan ask: OH MY GOD, COULD THIS POSSIBLY BE REAL LIFE? COULD WE THEY BE BACK?

Lakers fans have been forced to spend the last couple of weeks talking themselves into getting excited about the prospect of rooting for a team based around last year’s first-round pick, Julius Randle, and Duke’s Jahlil Okafor, who many people expect the Lakers to draft at No. 2 on Thursday night despite the fact that he can’t really shoot or play defense.

But then, because like water drops toward earth things break for the Lakers, two simultaneous reports cropped up ever so separately but ever so beautifully.

1. The Sacramento Kings are reportedly discussing a trade with the Lakers that would send second team All-NBA center and known emoji user DeMarcus Cousins to Los Angeles in exchange for Randle and promising young point guard Jordan Clarkson.





2. The Lakers have reportedly vaulted up the list of second team All-NBA forward and free agent-to-be LaMarcus Aldridge’s preferred teams. In fact, the Lakers appear to only be behind the San Antonio Spurs at the current moment.





OK, hold on. The Lakers could theoretically obtain DeMarcus Cousins and LaMarcus Aldridge this summer? It is within the realm of possibility that the Lakers, a team whose future looked bleak just a month ago, could be just a few short weeks away from having the second best power forward and the second best center in the league on their team, paving the way toward a future so bright I’m already in tears?

BREATHE, LAKERS FANS. BREATHE. BUT KNOW THE POSSIBILITIES.

demarcus cousins lamarcus aldridge
Just imagine this situation, except they are on the same team. In Lakers uniforms. (Source: AP)


The two would work together so seamlessly on offense too. Aldridge with his midrange game. Cousins bruising people down low. It would be enough to bring Phil Jackson to tears as tries to sign whoever to whatever contract for the Knicks.

Will these two transactions work under the salary cap rules? I’m no Larry Coon, but with only $37 million currently on the books for next season, I’m sure NBA Commissioner Adam Silver would let it slide, right? The only real snag right now is that the Lakers are reportedly unwilling to move Randle at this moment. But see the forest through the trees, Mitch Kupchak! Once the team has LaMarcus and DeMarcus -- and God, don't those names look beautiful side by side? -- it’s only a matter of time before the team is able to also sign Russell Westbrook, Kevin Durant, LeBron James and a 27-year-old version of Michael Jordan, no?

It just makes too much sense, doesn’t it? To be honest, the Lakers’ rebuilding effort was always going to end like this. Out of nowhere, the team will obtain the latest incarnation of the Twin Towers, vaulting them back into relevancy. They're the Lakers, this is what happens. And it could happen, people. It. Could. Happen.

EDITOR’S NOTE: Maxwell Strachan's a Lakers fan, obviously.

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Rabu, 24 Juni 2015

basketball stream live Celtics Try To Scare Kevin Love Away By Threatening To Sign Paul Pierce And Brook Lopez's Brother

basketball stream live In an attempt to keep free agent Kevin Love from obtaining any interest whatsoever in signing with the Boston Celtics this summer, the team is threatening to also sign Paul Pierce and Brook Lopez’s brother, Robin Lopez, should he somehow find his way onto the team.

It’s unknown why the team has decided to leak the threat of creating the most depressing version of a “Big Three” ever assembled, rather than simply not offer Love a contract -- the more traditional means of not obtaining players -- but Celtics President of Basketball Operations Danny Ainge has been known in the past to employ forward-thinking tactics when constructing his rosters.

It’s also not out of the realm of possibility that, in a moment of darkness, Ainge drafted Love’s contract back in 2014 and then locked it away in his office, forgot about it, remembered it today, went to shred it up, discovered it was lost, realized it was theoretically possible Love had somehow obtained it and then leaked the aforementioned threat to Yahoo’s Adrian Wojnarowski, who first reported on news of the threat Wednesday.

Pierce, 37, has played in the league since the Clinton administration and was contemplating retirement before he decided he had one last season in him. Robin Lopez is an NBA basketball player and the brother of pretty good NBA basketball player Brook Lopez, and that’s about all we can say about that.

Love could also decide to sign with the Los Angeles Lakers, who suck, or rejoin Kyrie Irving, LeBron James and the team that was in the NBA Finals literally, like, a week ago. He opted out of his contract Wednesday.

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basketball stream live Here's A Look At The Nursery For Stephen Curry's Baby-To-Be

basketball stream live Schools Reconsider Confederate Mascots In Wake Of Charleston Shooting

basketball stream live In the wake of last week’s Charleston shooting, state and local governments around the country are taking efforts to get rid of Confederate symbols and monuments. Now, some are calling for their local schools and colleges to shed their Confederate imagery as well.

In Fort Smith, Arkansas, school board members voted Tuesday to change Southside High School's "rebel" mascot and stop using “Dixie” as its fight song. The board will take a final vote on the issue in July.

“The Board understands the challenges of changing what has come to be the tradition of the Southside High School community, and will work with the student body and staff over the next year to name a new mascot and fight song for the school,” the board said in a statement on Facebook.

Over in Alabama, another high school with a “rebel” mascot may soon change its name. A superintendent in Vestavia Hills said she will look into potentially changing the team name after a columnist on AL.com criticized it.

At the collegiate level, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) called on the University of Nevada, Las Vegas to consider changing its “rebel” mascot as well. According to Sports Illustrated, Rep. Joe Heck (R-Nev.) fired back at Reid, saying the mascot has "no relation" to the Confederacy.

Meanwhile at the University of Texas at Austin, student leaders have renewed their push to get the school to take down its statue of Confederate President Jefferson Davis.

With a number of public education institution across the United States named after Confederate leaders, one California lawmaker is asking a local elementary school in San Diego named after Confederate general Robert E. Lee to change its name.

“They’re going to a school that really is named after a guy who fought his own country to protect slavery,” state Assemblywoman Lorena Gonzalez (D) told the San Diego Union-Tribune. “Schools should be inclusive. If they’re named after a person, they should be named after role models.”

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basketball stream live Karl-Anthony Towns: 'I'm Not Just A Basketball Player'

basketball stream live Projected No. 1 NBA draft pick Karl-Anthony Towns only played 21 minutes per game as a freshman at Kentucky. And yet, with his 6-foot-11 frame, deft shooting touch and natural shot-blocking instincts, the 19-year-old Towns might be the premier big man to enter the league since fellow Wildcat and former top selection Anthony Davis.

(You can read my 2015 NBA Mock Draft right here.)

Amid the pre-draft chaos, Towns caught up with The Huffington Post to discuss the draft, his favorite sports other than basketball and why playing so few minutes in college will help him in the future.

You teamed up with American Express to show your personality off the court.

It allowed players like Frank Kaminsky, D’Angelo Russell and I to really show our personalities more than our basketball abilities, and I think that sometimes during this draft process people get caught up so much in how our jump shots look, how our free throws look, that you forget we’re really human beings and we’re normal like everyone else.

What are some of the coolest parts about Karl-Anthony Towns off the floor?

I mean, I’m not just a basketball player; I have a lot of different hobbies. I love to golf. I love to play baseball. I love to just be myself. I think there’s much that people already know about me, but it’s different when you see the basketball player and then you see the man off the court. It’s nice to know that people can see the personality that comes off the court.

How hard is it for a guy like you -- all 6-foot-11 -- to get those custom golf clubs?

It’s pretty abnormal. But it’s a great sport. I love to play. I absolutely have a blast playing golf, and every morning I’m on the golf course.

What would be the one thing from an offensive standpoint that you’d want to improve the most during your rookie season?

You know what, I just want to improve everything.

I’m glad you said that. You only played 21 minutes a game. You know, you play anywhere else and you're playing 35-plus. How much of a learning experience was that?

I think the biggest thing you learn when playing those kinds of minutes is consistency. You have to be very consistent playing that short on minutes. You have to make your best on the court known, because you don’t have much time to do it. One of the biggest things that you learn, and it’s one of the biggest things that will help us going to the next level -- all seven of us -- is that we learned how to start the game hot. We don’t have time to start the game cold.

karl anthony towns

Going into it, as a mega-recruit, did you anticipate how you would feel? I imagine at the beginning, at least, it was quite the shell shock to not play such heavy minutes.

You know what, it wasn’t a shock whatsoever. Obviously it’s a little different than it was in high school, but it definitely wasn’t a shock. Whatever we had to do to win, we were going to do. And we all came together as a team of brothers and we did our best.

When you look at some of the other bigs in this draft -- whether it’s [Jahlil] Okafor, Kaminsky or your teammates, how good of a draft is this in terms of the frontcourt?

This draft is really, really great for any team that needs big guys.

What comes to mind when you think about Minnesota and the potential to run the floor with Andrew Wiggins, to run pick-and-roll with Ricky Rubio?

If I was blessed and honored and privileged enough to play for the Minnesota organization, being able to play with talent like that would be awesome. Talking about the Rookie of the Year, one of the most pass-first point guards in all of the NBA, possibly learning under the tutelage of Kevin Garnett -- it would be a very cool experience and a very humbling experience also.



I spoke recently with Anthony Davis about the impact that Coach [John] Calipari had on him: teaching him the NBA game. John Wall said the same thing: teaching him how to become a pro. I’m wondering: For you, what was is that Coach Cal presented other than just basketball?

The biggest thing he taught was how quick these moments go by. You can never get yesterday back, and you’re going to have to go in and dominate today because you’re not promised tomorrow. I knew that coming in, but when someone reinforces it even more and really makes it known just how important it really is to take no one lightly and dominate every day. That is really just how important it is to really fight and that comes with taking advantage of today and not worrying about tomorrow. Taking care of what we have to take care of [in] the present.

I saw you play for the Dominican at Madison Square Garden during the FIBA games. What impact did that imprint on you?

It gave me a new perspective on basketball. Being able to play with new rules that changes the game of basketball and being able to play professional. That was the biggest thing. You’re playing professionally. I was blessed to play with the Dominican national team for two years, so it feels like going into the NBA, this is my third year of professional ball.

The league has actually had some interesting rule changes. I’m wondering your stance on how a lot of bigs will take a charge or go straight up instead of trying to get a block? Have you talked about it at all during pre-draft workouts?

You know what? No. I really haven’t been talked to about that. I’ll learn anything I have to learn about defense when I’m in the NBA, you really can’t teach that. I’ll have to get advice when I play for my team, my new organization. But right now I have not been talked to about that.

karl anthony towns

Which UK teammate who hasn't gotten a lot of publicity could you see having a really good career as far the NBA is concerned?

It would actually be two guys: the Harrison twins. I don’t understand how you could undervalue a 6-foot-6 pure point guard, absolute winners, big time shot-takers, leaders and just great teammates. I just don’t get why people are undervaluing some of the best talents in the entire draft. I think these guys will have some of the best careers of all of us.

Lastly, and most importantly, can you give us an idea of what your draft night suit will look like?

I know one thing: If you've seen Willie Trill Cauley-Stein, you know that it's gonna have some flavor of his in it.

This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity.

Email me at jordan.schultz@huffingtonpost.com or ask me questions about anything sports-related at @Schultz_Report, and follow me on Instagram @Schultz_Report.

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basketball stream live Harvey Pollack Dead At 93

basketball stream live PHILADELPHIA — Harvey Pollack, the last original employee of the NBA's inaugural season to still be working in the league, has died. He was 93.

Pollack died on Tuesday. Pollack worked for the Philadelphia 76ers at the time of his death, spending the past 28 years as the team's director of statistical information.

In 1946, Pollack began his career with the Philadelphia Warriors of the Basketball Association of America, which later merged with the National Basketball League to form the National Basketball Association, as the team's assistant publicity director.

He sat courtside on March 6, 1962, when Warriors center Wilt Chamberlain scored a record 100 points against the New York Knicks. When the game was over, Pollack stuffed the ball in Chamberlain's duffel bag and organized a famed photo. Pollack wrote "100" on a piece of paper and gave it to Chamberlain to hold for the classic black-and-white snapshot.

"He may never have laced up his sneakers, but few have done more to advance the game, in the NBA or Philadelphia basketball, than Harvey," Sixers CEO Scott O'Neil said. "He did what he loved until the end, and shared that love of statistics and basketball with his family, who we remember at this difficult time.

"We count ourselves incredibly lucky to have had his wealth of knowledge, indomitable spirit, passionate drive and love for our sport with us here in Philadelphia and with the Sixers for so many years. He will be missed while his legacy will endure."

Pollack was awarded the John W. Bunn Lifetime Achievement Award in 2002 by the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame. It is the highest honor bestowed to an individual outside of enshrinement.

"He documented NBA history for nearly 70 years with passion, curiosity and a relentless work ethic," NBA Commissioner Adam Silver said. "Harvey has been a true caretaker and ambassador of the game, and he will be sorely missed."

Known as the "Super Stat," Pollack was widely considered the engineer of modern-day basketball statistics. Pollack was credited with beginning the league's official tracking of offensive and defensive rebounds, steals, turnovers, blocked shots and minutes played. He coined the triple-double.

"I don't have a favorite stat," Pollack said. "I like to keep stats, period."

The number crunching started in 1942 when Pollack was the student-manager for Temple basketball and he realized he could do more than keep track of points and shots. He made columns for rebounds, assists and blocked shots, stats that would eventually become routine but were revolutionary for college hoops.

After a stint in the war after graduation, he worked as a sports writer for the Philadelphia Bulletin. He kept stats at basketball doubleheaders and eventually was hired by the Warriors as an assistant PR director.

He was promoted a few years later and worked as head PR director for the Warriors/76ers all the way until the late 1980s.

The 76ers' run toward their first championship in 1966-67 prompted the organization to put Pollack in charge of a midseason media guide, their first. The book was only 24 pages and each one had a beer ad. The 76ers' all-time roster took up two pages.

"Harvey Pollack's Statistical Yearbook," was printed annually for decades, including this season, and was stuffed with info on slams, streaks, standings and steals.

In his 90s, Pollack often plugged away at a typewriter, not much different than the one he lugged to Hershey, Pennsylvania, on March 6, 1962, when Chamberlain scored 100 points.

Pollack started the night as the public relations director for the Warriors and the game statistician. With each milestone basket putting Chamberlain closer to triple digits, Pollack was pressed into action. He wrote or dictated the game story for The Associated Press, The Philadelphia Inquirer and United Press International.

His son, Ron, who later joined Pollack on the Sixers stat crew, ran the copy to Western Union. AP photographer Paul Vathis, who attended the game as a fan, rushed to a car for his equipment. Pollack said he squashed an idea of posing Chamberlain with the ball and wanted something more unique to preserve the moment.

"Why don't we do something to show the 100 points," Pollack said.

So Pollack wrote "100" on a piece of paper and gave it to Chamberlain. An NBA classic was born.

Pollack was the only person with all four Philly pro basketball championship rings, earning them with the Warriors in 1946-47 and 1955-56 and the Sixers in 1966-67 and 1982-83.

"Harvey embodied our league's great history and its extraordinary aspirations," NBA Commissioner Emeritus David Stern said.

"At a time when statistics are giving all of us a new perspective on the game, we have lost someone who understood its nuances in a way that will never be duplicated."

At one point, Pollack headed stat crews at six major Philadelphia-area colleges simultaneously and was Temple football's statistician for more than 60 years.

He also spent time in charge of the stats crew for the Philadelphia Wings of the Major Indoor Lacrosse League and the Philadelphia Soul of the Arena Football League.

Pollack served as the head of the stats crew for the NFL's Baltimore Colts for 15 seasons.

Pollack balanced his career in sports with entertainment, and would write a column for a suburban weekly. He reviewed restaurants, concerts, or traveling Broadway shows. He even did the circus.

"I never had a job that I didn't like," Pollack said. "I never had a job that when I got up in the morning, I said, 'Oh do I have to go into the office today?' I never had a job where I didn't have something to do when I got in."

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Selasa, 23 Juni 2015

basketball stream live Sam Dekker Already Has A Game Plan For Defending LeBron James

basketball stream live The 2014-15 college basketball season had a bittersweet ending for Sam Dekker, as his Wisconsin Badgers fell short to the Duke Blue Devils in the NCAA men's basketball title game. Nonetheless, the two-time second-team All-Big Ten player and former Wisconsin Mr. Basketball has shifted his thought process toward higher stakes, focusing on Thursday night's NBA Draft and beyond.

The draft will likely result in a first-round selection that would pit Dekker against fellow small forward LeBron James. When Dekker sat down with HuffPost Live on Tuesday to discuss his partnership with Old Spice, host Marc Lamont Hill asked how he would defend against James, a four-time league MVP and two-time NBA champion, when they play against one other next season.

"I am going to try to give him a step because he is so quick. If at all possible, try to force a tough jump shot, because if he gets into the paint, it is over," Dekker said. "LeBron's not a bad shooter, but I would rather have him shooting a jump shot fading away than dunking on me. [I would] try to force something tough. No easy buckets."

Dekker is considered by most draft boards to be a mid-first round pick. Last season the college standout averaged 13.9 points and 5.5 assists per game.

Watch Dekker discuss his strategy for playing LeBron in the video above, and click here for the full HuffPost Live conversation.




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basketball stream live Was Bill Russell Really Traded for the Ice Capades?

basketball stream live On the day of the 1956 NBA Draft, Boston Celtics general manager (and coach) Arnold "Red" Auerbach made one of the greatest trades in NBA history. He dealt All-Star Center Ed Macauley and rookie small forward Cliff Hagan to the St. Louis Hawks for the second pick in the draft, University of San Francisco center Bill Russell. Macauley and Hagan were both great players (they are both in the Basketball Hall of Fame), but Bill Russell was one of the greatest players of all time and led the Celtics to a remarkable 11 championships in his 13 seasons in the NBA.

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You might have noticed, though, that the trade was for the second pick in the draft. The Rochester Royals had the first pick in the draft. Why didn't they draft Russell? There is a legendary story explaining why they passed on Russell. Here is Auerbach telling the story to John Feinstein in Feinstein's 2004 collection of Auerbach stories, Let Me Tell You a Story: A Lifetime in the Game:

'So how'd you get them to not take Russell?'
Red smiled. I had set him up perfectly.
'The Ice Capades,' he said.
'The Ice Capades?'
'Sure. Walter Brown [the owner of the Celtics] was president of the Ice-Capades. I had him call Les Harrison, the owner in Rochester, and tell them he'd send the Ice Capades up there for a week if they didn't draft Russell.'
'So you got Bill Russell for the Ice-Capades?'
'You got it.'


The "Bill Russell was traded for the Ice Capades" story is now part of basketball lore. But is it true?

Walter Brown never spoke publicly about the incident before he passed away in 1964. Lester Harrison vehemently denied the story before he passed away in 1997. Auerbach told the story a number of times before he passed away in 2006. So we're dealing with a disputed story involving three deceased gentlemen. Since we can't ask them about it anymore, what we can we do? We can look at what the situation was in April of 1956 and determine how credible the story is. The two major areas of dispute are "Is it unbelievable that Harrison would pass on Russell otherwise?" and "Would Harrison need Brown's help to have the Ice Capades in Rochester?"

As to the first point, it seems as though Harrison had a number of reasons not to draft Bill Russell.

First off, there was a big financial gap between owners in the NBA in 1956. There were owners who owned their arenas and were well off financially and there were owners who did not own their arenas and were barely able to keep their teams afloat. Lester Harrison and the Rochester Royals were part of the second group. Harrison did not own his own arena. The city of Rochester did (they had just built a new one in 1955). In an era before television opened up new revenue streams, attendance was how teams made money and Rochester drew poorly (the Royals ultimately moved to Cincinnati in April 1957). It is important, then, to note that Harrison was strapped for cash going into the 1956 NBA Draft.

Money was a major factor with regards to the drafting of Bill Russell. Abe Saperstein's Harlem Globetrotters were very interested in signing Russell and the popular barnstorming team had a lot more money to spend on the top African-American players in the game. The rumor (almost certainly propagated by Saperstein himself in an attempt to scare off NBA teams) was that the Globetrotters were prepared to offer Russell $50,000. In truth, they had really only offered him $15-17,000, but the rest of the world did not know that. With an offer so large, NBA teams were justifiably worried about spending a top pick on a player who would eschew the NBA for the Globetrotters. What Harrison and most other NBA owners did not know, though, was that Russell was never going to play for the Globetrotters, both because he was too competitive to play anywhere but the best league in the world and also because he felt that Saperstein disrespected him when Saperstein tried to recruit him (ignoring Russell himself and directing his pitch to Russell's college coach, Phil Woolpert).

While Harrison did not know Russell had no intention of playing for the Globetrotters, Auerbach, on the other hand, did (former Celtic Don Barksdale was friends with Russell's family and he informed Auerbach that the Globetrotters were not a real contender for Russell). Moreover, when Harrison actually met with Russell, Russell informed him that it would take $25,000 to get him to play in Rochester. He might as well have been asking for $250,000, as Harrison would be extremely hard pressed to pay that sum. Russell ended up signing with the Celtics for roughly $22,000 (pro-rated for time Russell missed in his first season representing the United States in the Olympics).

The last (and perhaps the most notable) reason Harrison would be willing to pass on Russell was that the Royals already had a great center. Maurice Stokes was the second pick of the previous NBA Draft and had just won the NBA Rookie of the Year. Stokes tragically suffered a brain injury during his third season in the NBA (he was an All-Star in all three seasons) that ended his career and ultimately his life in 1970. However, in 1956, he was a star player and made the idea of spending so much money on another center seem unwise.

Ultimately, the Royals drafted a well-regarded first team All-American guard/forward from Duquesne University, Sihugo Green. Green had a respectable career in the NBA but was never an All-Star.

Given their financial situation and the fact that they already had Stokes on the team, it seems realistic that the Royals would pass on Russell. However, what about the Ice Capades angle?

The Ice Capades were founded in 1940 by John Harris, owner of the Pittsburgh Gardens. By the end of the 1940s, performances of the Ice Capades and similar ice shows were drawing in larger audiences than even Major League Baseball! So yes, by 1956, having the Ice Capades in your arena was clearly a big deal. In fact, when Walter Brown accidentally booked the Ice Capades on the same day he had a Boston Celtics game at the Garden in 1952, the Celtics game was pushed to midnight! I spoke with Don Watson, former ice skater and later company manager of the Ice Capades, for insights over how the Ice Capades worked at the time. According to Watson, the main Ice Capades touring group played in Rochester as soon as they debuted in their new building from December 12-18 in 1955. This tour was a major success, bringing in over $200,000 over the week. During the next touring season, Harrison also had the Ice Capades from September 4-10 in 1956. Therefore, Brown did not need to "give" Harrison the Ice Capades because Harrison already had the Ice Capades. In addition, the Ice Capades went wherever they thought that they could make money. Harrison would not need Brown to book the Ice Capades. He just needed a big enough arena, which he finally had in 1955.

Harrison did acknowledge that Brown did, in fact, give him assistance with the Ice Capades at one point, noting to Terry Pluto for Pluto's classic 1992 oral history of the early days of the NBA, Tall Tales: The Glory Years of the NBA, in the Words of the Men Who Played, Coached, and Built Pro Basketball:

It is true that I had the Ice Capades for two years, then I was in jeopardy of losing them. I was having trouble with the people who ran our building in Rochester, and Walter Brown did come down to talk to them, saying that I should have the Ice Capades. But this had absolutely nothing to do with the draft. Walter and I were friends and we did favors for each other all the time.


However, as noted above, the "two years" Harrison had the Ice Capades were 1955 and 1956 -- after the NBA Draft. Therefore, any help Brown gave Harrison could not have been related to the Spring 1956 NBA Draft, since Harrison's problem with the arena owners did not come about until after Rochester had the Ice Capades in Fall 1956. Note that Harrison split from Rochester in the Spring of 1957, so it surely would stand to reason that he had trouble with the people who ran the building. It appears as though Auerbach is just conflating an incident of Brown trying to help Harrison in Winter 1956/Spring 1957 with the Russell draft of a year earlier.

Putting it all together, it seems that it was an open secret in the NBA that Harrison was not going to draft Russell with the number one pick, both for money reasons but also because he already had a future Hall of Fame center in Maurice Stokes. Meanwhile, Rochester already had the Ice Capades before the NBA Draft and it does not appear that whatever conflict Brown helped him with occurred before the NBA Draft. So while we will never be able to know precisely what was said fifty-nine years ago, the information that we do have suggests that Auerbach exaggerated what happened to the point where I feel safe in stating that the legend is.

STATUS: False

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basketball stream live Steve Nash Says The Dallas Mavericks Would Have Won A Championship If He Stayed

basketball stream live The ever-polite Steve Nash doesn't like dwelling on the past. But he does think that he could have won a championship or two in Dallas if he had stayed with the Mavericks.

"I think yeah we would have won maybe more than one championship if we would have stayed together," he told HuffPost Live's Marc Lamont Hill on Tuesday. "You know, Mark's put incredible resources into that team. Energy, passion, ideas."

"I think I played my best basketball from that point on," he added. "Obviously Dirk was unbelievable and won a championship there, and I think it could have been something great, but I don't spend much time thinking about it. But the arrogant cocky part of me is like, 'Yeah, would would have won.'"

Nash signed with the Phoenix Suns in 2004 after six years and two All-Star seasons with the Mavericks. He would go on to win two MVPs with the Suns, but retired this year with zero championships to his name.

Cuban has since said that letting Nash walk away was the "worst move" he's made as owner of the Mavs. The Mavs would nevertheless go on without Nash to win the NBA Finals in 2011.

The NBA legend swill play his "Showdown in Chinatown" charity soccer match in New York City on Wednesday.

Watch Nash discuss what could have been in the video above, and click here for his full HuffPost Live conversation.

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