Game 5 of the 2010 NBA Finals will forever live in infamy for Lakers fans, as well as anti-Celtics fans like me. It was, without question, one of the worst collaborative performances I have ever seen on a basketball court. And that was just the broadcast team (again, I apologize about the sudden change in font. I still have NO idea how to fix it).
I started taking notes just before halftime when Rajon Rondo pushed (I cannot emphasize that verb enough. PUSHED.) Ron Artest after the mercurial former defensive player of the year issued a hard foul on Kevin Garnett. Upon witnessing this PUSH, Jeff Van Gundy claimed that Rondo barely touched Artest—who, just so you don’t think I’m completely biased, flopped in such a way that made Vlade Divac’s renowned histrionics look Oscar-worthy—and then continued to insist this was the case despite multiple replays showing a deliberate PUSH and Mike Breen and Mark Jackson’s pointing the PUSH out to the visionless Van Gundy. Finally, the former Knick head coaching legend conceded, but only after five minutes of ludicrous conjecture. I still love you, JVG, but please, never do that again (the rest of this blog is going to make the sudden jump into journal form. Please stay calm).
-Just before halftime, Paul Pierce appears to be disgruntled as Rondo shuns him by moving the ball in the other direction away from the former Kansas Jayhawk so that someone else can take the final shot before the end of the second quarter. Pierce is immediately questioned by Doris Burke as to why he was so upset, to which the self-proclaimed best player in the NBA ardently and defensively responded “I wasn’t upset!” Three times. Thrice. He was definitely upset.
-Highlight as the halftime show returns depicts Rondo feeding Pierce for a layup. Pretty standard stuff except that Pierce blatantly takes two steps without dribbling the basketball before putting it in (Again, just so you don’t think I’m completely biased, Lamar Odom would later in the game complete the most blatant travel in NBA history never to be called, when he appeared to take at least eight steps toward the basket before attempting a floater. Don’t laugh, LeBron. You get away with this EVERY TIME YOU TOUCH A BASKETBALL).
-The Lakers are not smart with the basketball. Especially Gasol, who finally rebounds the ball, only to turn it over to Garnett in the Celtics’ zone. It is this recurring play that will eventually come to epitomize the series for
-I’m starting to think the Celtics are just better shooters than the
-Odom missed two consecutive free throws. It’s a free throw. There is NO ONE guarding you. Make the shots please, Lamar. You, too, EVERY OTHER LAKER.
-Has Rasheed Wallace made every three he has taken this series? And why have they all been from the top of the key? Why couldn’t he have just stayed with the Hawks for more than a day?
-Every time I think the Lakers are going to spark a come back, they do something stupid—i.e. Gasol’s pass to Farmer that resulted in a backcourt violation. Fun stuff. REALLY fun stuff.
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-Nate Robinson makes a layup in more space than OUTER SPACE, and then Odom gets mad at Sasha Vujačić, for, well, probably being Sasha Vujačić. Both are guilty of appalling defensive jobs on that play.
-As a Knicks fan, I’m not even sure how I should feel about Nate Robinson’s spontaneously admirable play. Where the hell was it when he played for
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-The Lakers must be the worst team in the NBA at passing the basketball immediately after grabbing a defensive rebound. Gasol just turned it over again.
-Oh good. A Celtics fan just threw something onto the court as
-Artest breakaway! And...!...instead of dunking it for an and-one he cowers away like a frightened child? At least he gets a couple of shots from the charity stripe though…and he missed them both. That’s a lot of fun isn’t it?
-The inbounds play to seal the win. The only question I ask is this: how many kids in
I had an epiphany last night while I was watching the Lakers put on their biennial clinic of awfulness: I am more passionate about
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