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sturt

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Everything posted by sturt

  1. I don't necessarily agree or disagree... I just wanted to hear what the consensus is. FWIW, I think the theories like Diesel's might be sound, but because of the relative sparce number of college hirings through the years compared to the number of hirings otherwise, they remain unproven... simply not enough data to be scientifically valid. (I recall attempting some semblance of an analysis back when Kruger got hired, but it soon became evident that it wasn't going to be meaningful... the only comparison one really could make was between assistant-coach-hires and former-head-coach-hires.) Another "fact" of life in _sturt_'s world is that coaching college hoops and coaching pro hoops seems to be the equivalent of coaching college wrestling and coaching pro wrestling. One is ballet, the other is bronco-busting. One normally attempts officiating within reason, the other tilts the floor 51% or more according to TV ratings. Still, if college players can make the transition, you'd think college coaches eventually could. But wait... the case can be made that college players usually get a whole lot more time to prove themselves than college coaches do... right?
  2. ...on Izzo. Maybe the Kruger experiment was too much, and we can't even fathom hiring a college coach now (???).
  3. I'm not advocating here... I'm *asking*... how would you feel about Tom Izzo, two coaches removed from his flirtation with the Hawks?
  4. In any hiring, you try to list all of the job requirements and you prioritize those. It's a "cake and eat it too" proposition when you're thinking of what that "ideal candidate" has on their resume. You might not be able to satisfy the most important criterion, and at that point you jump to the next for evaluation. Ultimately tho, you want the closest thing you can get to that ideal. I'm sure we agree on that much. KB, don't get hung up on the actual name... I'm not proposing that you hire a name exclusively. I was never a fan of hiring Isiah personally, tho several were adamant about getting him pre-Kruger. I think it's arguable whether Magic was a good coach or not... it was such a brief stint, I don't really recall it either way. Bird wasn't necessarily a great coach, but he was apparently smart enough to delegate and let Carlisle and Harter do what they do pretty well... and certainly, Indiana wouldn't go back and change a thing with that hire, either in terms of actual coaching or in building enthusiasm for the team or, had they had a few million to spend at the time, attracting free agents. Bird may be a better example here than my mention of Parcells... he did for Indiana what we need to happen here. Atlantans need more than a coach... they need an inspiration... they need a reason to put faith in Atlanta Spirit... they need a reason to return (or in some cases, visit for the first time) to Philips Arena. If Magic isn't that person, so be it. And maybe I'm talking about an non-existent person... in which case, you have to default back to what you're talking about -- a Fratello et al. I'm only talking about how gaping a void and how large the need is... and that filling that void/need can only be met partially if we cannot attract that person, again, who I'm hoping against all hope, exists.
  5. There are a lot of good qualified coaches who are and who will become candidates. But let's at least agree with where the hire starts: and just for me, the criteria has to start with who has the drawing power to help acquire that special free agent(s). None of those mentioned thus far have that kind of appeal. None. There is nothing special to playing for Mike Fratello. Good coach, respected... but his kind are almost a dime-a-dozen. Del Harris, same story. Eric Musselman is a hot young coach... but in a league that gobbles hot young coaches and spits them out in a heartbeat... the point being, there's limited appeal there. I say this, having very few legitimate answers given that kind of criteria. Maybe someone else can conjur up some that I haven't thought of, who would meet this standard. For instance, I know it's almost impossible to conceive that Krzyzewski would leave Duke. I know it's highly unlikely that Magic would ever consider coaching again given his distaste for the experience in Lakerland years ago. But boys and girls... we need that kind of hire here if change is truly going to occur. Ours is a dead franchise, like it or not. It needs a resurrection. Fortunately, there is a new ownership and we're beyond that huge hurdle that was staring our Hawks in the face last year. And there seems to be some reason to think that our GM position is in good hands. Now, there needs to be that coach that can offer a name, some substantial level of credibility, and someone that the GM and the ownership group can bring to their roundtable who they will respect such that the stability of the franchise can be settled. Not unlike what Bill Parcells did for the Cowboys... but in our case, we don't have the Cowboys "brand" going for us, which is what helped to bring Big Bill to Valley Ranch. So is it achievable? Don't know. But our "Big Billy" has to do everything in his power to make it happen. And while there's no harm in interviewing the Dwayne Caseys and Randy Wittmans... ultimately, that's not enough for what this franchise needs at this moment.
  6. Kobe played for the Suns' Mike D'Antoni when he was in Europe and was on the record as looking forward to the day when he could play for him on this side of the pond... now of course he might have long since become less romantic about that notion, but I do wonder... think it might be more than mere coincidence that Barkley et al have decided to pursue ownership there?... that maybe some decisions have already been made?
  7. Thanks for the "welcome back." I check in here periodically, but had mostly lost interest in David Stern's edition of the WWF for the last couple of years... ever since the Steve Smith/Shaq debacle of, I think, the 2001 playoffs, I haven't been able to bring myself to watch an NBA game without feeling my stomach turn. So, by my own admission, take my posts with a grain of salt... it's not that I've lost my love for our Hawks, but my skepticism over the league's validity, coupled w/ the Hawks' hopelessness, has diminished any desire to sink much of myself into professional basketball. These days, I mostly monitor the sports section for word that Mark Cuban has said or done something new to ruffle Stern's feathers. I continue to yearn for the days of the Celtics/Lakers championship games when the NBA was fun to watch even when your fav team wasn't playing... pre-Stern. Dem were da days.
  8. I know how you're going to reply before I even write this... but Chuck Daly is, I think, 74 years old. Sure, Hubie's not a young punk and look at his success @ Memphis... and it's not like Daly couldn't hack the NBA grind again (as far as I know). But here's the thing: first, at that age, he's little more than a bridge to the next coach. And second, Memphis isn't just a success based on Hubie... they've got a GM who's had even more success than Hubie in his NBA career, and is now working his magic for the Griz. No, what Knight has to be looking for is what we all know he's looking for -- that coach whose reputation around the league is such that he can help them spend $20 million effectively. And in saying that, I'm not dismissing the respect held for Daly... if it comes down to a choice between Daly and Wittman, for example, I think Chuck can forego the Social Security check for awhile. But that's what this search is all about... and that's why Stotts doesn't have a job right now.
  9. ...all over him. Meet Jeff Hornacek. Thinking of recently retired NBA players, his name occurred to me earlier today... and whaddayaknow but, having done a Google search, it appears that his name also occurred to the Celtics GM. His demeanor and his seeming knowledge of the game just really appeal to me. I can see him as another Jerry Sloan or Rudy T... another cognition that ironically enough parallels some of the quotes gathered for the second article below. No, it's not going to happen... Hornacek isn't on Knight's radar, and by the same token, it would appear that Hornacek is loate to disrupt his family with a career change that would involve transplanting to the East. But you watch. We're going to be talking about Hornacek someday. He's just "got it," you know? ::::::::::::::::::::::: Tuesday, April 27, 2004 Hornacek eyes job with Celtics Ainge says Hornacek would be a 'great' coach By Tim Buckley Deseret Morning News Danny Ainge wants Jeff Hornacek to interview for the now-vacant Boston Celtics head coaching position. The retired Jazz shooting guard sounds quite interested, and said Monday he plans to talk with Ainge "in the next week." Jeff Hornacek said he's interested in the vacant head coaching position in Boston. Ainge initially approached Hornacek while attending recent high school basketball tournament games in Phoenix, and made a pitch then. "He asked me if I'd be interested in coming in and interviewing," Hornacek said Monday, "and he's called a couple of times since. "He goes, 'You'd make a great coach,' and he goes, 'You have the calmness I never had,' " Hornacek added. "I'm thinking, he's never seen me a couple of times go after the referees." Hornacek's candidacy surfaced in Monday's Boston Herald. "Unless all the present candidates turn down the Celtics' offer, or cannot come to terms, the next coach will come from a group that includes Lionel Hollins, Doc Rivers, Paul Westphal, Dwane Casey, Jeff Hornacek and Avery Johnson," the Herald report said. "Also, Atlanta head coach Terry Stotts would be on the Celtics' radar if he is not retained by the Hawks." That's the first known public connection of Hornacek's name to Boston, where John Carroll took over on an interim basis after new Philadelphia 76ers coach Jim O'Brien exited in January. Carroll was dismissed Monday, one day after Indiana swept the Celtics out of the first round of the NBA playoffs. Doing the deed was Ainge, the BYU product and ex-Phoenix head coach who last May took over as Boston's executive director of basketball operations. Hornacek — now living in the Phoenix area, where he spent six seasons with the Suns — retired from the NBA after the 1999-2000 season. His No. 14 is retired in Utah, where he played from 1994-2000 and later worked as a part-time shooting coach. Hornacek, who turns 41 years old next week, said he would draw on that experience, plus a playing stint with the 76ers, if he were tapped in Boston. "You learn a lot of different things . . . what's good, what's bad, what you can take from other teams," he said. When he retired, Hornacek said the NBA's hectic travel schedule was taking a toll. He looked forward to spending more time watching his kids grow. Now, that reality may be a factor as he ponders the Celtics post. "Even if they offered me the job," he said, "it would come down to what it does to the family." As for his coaching philosophy, it is partly influenced by televised games he has watched throughout retirement. "You say, 'Oh, gosh, if guys knew how to play, they'd be winning,' " Hornacek said. "You don't win a lot of games, and win championships," he added, "if you don't play as a team." ::::::::::::::::::::::: Thursday, May 18, 2000 Jeff Hornacek: Gone, but never forgotten Jeff Hornacek opens new chapter as full-time husband, dad By Doug Robinson Deseret News sports columnist Jeff Hornacek's retirement isn't about going away; it's about coming home. As much as he enjoyed his accidental career as a professional basketball player, there were always the painful goodbyes, the hugs and kisses at the door and the endless long-distance calls. "He still calls 15 times a day when he's on the road," his wife, Stacy, said a few weeks ago. While trying to watch her kids' little league games, Stacy would field calls "every five minutes" on her cell phone — Jeff, in some far-away NBA city, wanting the play-by-play and score. A few years ago, Stacy made a pillow case for Jeff to take on road trips. It is decorated with pictures of each of the children, along with their messages and drawings. "That way he could sleep with them every night," says Stacy. The retirement from basketball isn't about the bum knee and the 37 years, either; it's about being a dad. It's about a guy who, as every fan knows, says hello to his kids before every free throw — 1-2-3 wipes of his right cheek, one each for Tyler, Ryan and Abigale. He always felt guilty about his frequent absences over the years, leaving Stacy a single mom during road trips. He did his best to compensate. He once instructed his kids over the phone, step-by-step, through the preparation of French toast and sausage so they could serve Mom breakfast in bed. He has been known to leave a pasta dish in the refrigerator that he prepared before he left town. He has done his own laundry after games so his wife could sleep (gentlemen, you could learn to hate this guy). "I am blessed to have him," Stacy once said. "Sometimes I think he's too good to be true." But there is only so much a father and husband can do from his room in the Marriott. So, he will retire from the spotlight to drive carpools and sit in the stands at soccer games and tend kids while Stacy pursues her own aspirations as a writer. It's her turn, he says. What seemed to bother him most about his career was that it demanded that his family bend their lives to his schedule. So there he goes, off into retirement, one of the most beloved Jazz players of all time, a better fit in Utah than even his popular Hall of Fame teammates; a warmer, naturally gracious person who is so ordinary in many ways that he is extraordinary. As one fan observed recently on a talk radio show, "He's one of us. He's like a neighbor." Universally admired He is a player universally admired, both for his skill and his comportment. Gordon Chiesa, the Jazz assistant, captured Hornacek best when he said, "He has inner peace." He is a remarkably relaxed, comfortable, imperturbable man who was never changed by the NBA pitfalls of money and adulation. What a man does for a living is not important, he said. He is still the aw-shucks, family man from mid-America who married a farmer's daughter. "He's one of the few guys that you get a Christmas card and a birthday card from," says Frank Layden, the former Jazz president. "My wife's brother passed away, and he acknowledged it. He called. He was very concerned. That's the type of guy he is." Hornacek of course never expected to be a professional basketball player; he was going to be an accountant and then got sidetracked — permanently, it turns out. Every step of the way his career was given a nudge by quirks of fate or accidents, in some cases literally. He cracked the starting lineup as a high school junior when a teammate was suspended after an auto accident. Hornacek went to work in a paper cup factory following graduation, but his father, John, a freshman coach at another high school in Chicago, arranged a tryout with Iowa State. ISU gave him a scholarship when several teammates flunked out of school. Ignored by NBA scouts, Hornacek interviewed with several accounting firms after graduation, but his father called Bob Knight, who called Jerry Colangelo of the Phoenix Suns, and Hornacek was invited to a pre-draft camp. The Suns made him the 46th pick of the draft. Even after he was drafted, Hornacek interviewed with another accounting firm. He only hoped to survive the first couple of months with the Suns because league rules would then guarantee a full season's salary. Later he hoped only to make enough money so his wife wouldn't have to work and could stay home with the kids. Fourteen years later, Hornacek is one of only 20 players ever to collect 15,000 points and 5,000 assists. The Utah Jazz will surely miss guard Jeff Hornacek's offensive repertoire. As a player, he was an earth-bound oddity, an Oldsmobile in a field of Ferraris. He can't even dunk, for crying out loud. Much has been made of his lack of athleticism, at least as it is commonly measured today. His coaches concede that Hornacek ranks among the bottom half of his teammates in speed and jumping ability, but his hand-eye coordination, so essential in shooting, passing and ball-handling, is uncanny. "He's not the fastest guy or the best jumper," says teammate Adam Keefe, "but if you had him play the bar sports, nobody would touch him. Pool. Ping-pong. Darts. I've seen it. We (Jazz players) play those games when we get together, and he beats the snot out of everybody. His hand-eye coordination is amazing." Sweet shot Hornacek made his name as the best pure shooter in then NBA. Jazz coach Jerry Sloan, who preaches defense and rebounding above all else, once noted, "He's one of the guys that when he's open from 15 to 18 feet you almost feel like you don't have to go to the basket (to rebound) . . . If I were a player, and I was having a problem shooting, I'd rent a place at his house." Layden once said of Hornacek, "Above all, he can stroke it." It wasn't always that way. When he first entered the NBA, Hornacek had what was essentially a two-handed shot. He used the thumb of the left hand as a sort of guide, which put a strange side spin on the ball, and his shooting was always erratic. He resisted his father's attempts to correct his shot, but, as was the case throughout his career, help came in an unlikeliest way. His coaches didn't fix his shot; his wife did. Following his rookie season, Hornacek made daily trips to the gym to practice his shooting, often with Stacy rebounding. He tried everything to correct his shot, including taping his left thumb to his hand. One day Stacy grew weary of chasing his missed shots and stepped back to observe. Why don't you point at the basket after you release the ball, she suggested. You can imagine what Hornacek thought. Great, now the wife's telling me how to shoot. But he tried it, and it worked. Hornacek says Stacy had the biggest influence on his shot. His shooting accuracy improved from 45.4 percent in his rookie season to 50.6 a year later. He has been a 50 percent shooter ever since. It isn't just that Hornacek could shoot accurately that raised eyebrows; it's that he could do it from so many angles and in so many ways — falling away, leaning, looking the other way, over 7-footers, under 7-footers, half-hooks, running jumpers, underhand, overhand, whatever — and all of them with the quickest release in the NBA. When necessary, he actually shots the ball at the same time he was catching it. It's as if Hornacek has a microchip in his brain, which, in a split second, calculates distance, angle, body lean, trajectory needed to clear a defender's hands, precise ETA of the in-coming defender and the latest possible launch time allowable to beat the block. He sees things in slow motion, which allowed him to pick apart defenders and defenses. All of this compensated for any lack of jumping ability and speed. His shot was rarely blocked, even though he often ventured into the lane. The first time Hornacek faced Ralph Sampson, the 7-foot-4 sensation, he took the ball right at him twice and flipped the ball into the basket over Sampson's outstretched arms. "He could shoot accurately in a windstorm," Chiesa likes to say. In the first round of this year's playoffs, Hornacek was spinning through the air, back to the basket, when he flipped a no-look shot over his shoulder that banked off the glass and into the net. Earlier this season, he made a similar shot while darting through the lane. The curious part of it is this: It wasn't a fluke. Anyone who has observed Hornacek knows it. Nothing Hornacek did was unpracticed or uncalculated. He practiced those shots, or something close to them, and if he hadn't then, that computer in his brain did the rest. He studied and honed his shot, as well. Hornacek kept a notebook in which he recorded details and observations about his shooting technique and then referred to them when he hit the rare slump. Unorthodox success When he first came into the league, Hornacek was reluctant to attempt his unorthodox shots, such as his signature running jumper, because he was uncertain how coaches would respond. According to all standards of technique, a shooter should check his body's drift and take a balanced shot. Hornacek thought otherwise, and eventually coaches not only accepted it, they asked him how he did it and began teaching it to others. "We call it the Hornacek Drill," says Chiesa. "We're teaching other guys to shoot off balance but under control. We've taught it to Howard Eisley and Jacque Vaughn and Quincy Lewis and Scott Padgett. Jeff taught me that. I looked at it, studied him every day and then asked him how he did it." No one was ever quite certain how Hornacek did much of what he did. Part of the Hornacek mystique was that he looked like such a regular guy, on and off the court. Minutes after a game, dressed in a polo shirt and Dockers, with children following in his wake — as they did on weekend nights walking through the Delta Center to the parking lot and the Suburban — he could have been any Jazz fan headed for home. If you lined him up with nine other guys down at the YMCA to choose sides for a pickup game, he might be the last guy picked. Look at him: No muscles, medium build, a middle-aged white man, and that knee! Bum luck It wasn't enough that he lacked athleticism; he also got stuck with this bum left knee, which placed major limitations on him. He played 14 years and half of his college career on a knee that doctors say will need to be replaced one day. Most people have a cushion where the bones meet in the knee; he has bone on bone. There were nights when he didn't know if he could pull up for a jumper without his knee "hiccuping" on him, as he called it. After one game this season, a reporter happened to find himself following Hornacek as they walked from the Delta Center to the parking lot and was struck by the how severely he limped when he was out of the public eye. But two nights later he was back on the court. In the past few years, Hornacek didn't run a step or pick up a ball in the off-season; he had to save the few remaining miles left on his knee for the basketball season. He had to play his way into shape. To the casual observer, Hornacek was a casual player: always the last one to arrive for games and practices, always the first one to leave. But what he could he do with the knee — extra running? With his belongings packed in a laundry basket, Jeff Hornacek, now retired from Jazz, waits for ride home from Delta Center. And yet, to the end, Hornacek was still playing at the top of his game, despite his years and his knee. In his final regular season, he ranked first in free-throw accuracy (missing just nine shots all season), third in three-point accuracy and 18th in field goal percentage. At the All-Star Game, he defended his three-point shooting title and teamed with Natalie Williams to win the 2-ball contest. All along, of course, there were appeals from within and without the Jazz organization to return for another year, just as there was a year ago when he contemplated retirement. For the Jazz, Hornacek's departure marks the first step in the long-anticipated breakup of the golden oldie Jazz. He came to the Jazz seven years ago and was such a natural fit — for the city, the fans, John Stockton, the offense, Jerry Sloan, his own family — that owner Larry Miller has long regretted that Hornacek didn't spend his entire career here. Missing link Hornacek proved to be the piece of the puzzle had been missing for years. Rudy Tomjanovich, the coach of the archrival Rockets, was reportedly stunned when the trade for Hornacek was completed. "It's so hard to make meaningful trades these days," he said at the time. " . . . If you would have looked at Utah's team and tried to find the perfect fit, you'd have picked Hornacek." The season before Hornacek arrived, the Jazz were 45-37. The following years brought records of, in order, 53-29, 60-22, 55-27, 64-18, 62-20, 37-13 (the lockout year), 55-27. That stretch included appearances in four conference finals and two NBA finals. "We were missing something, and that something was Jeff Hornacek," Sloan says. Now the Jazz will miss him again. Hornacek is quitting the game to spend more time at home — and home is Utah. The Hornaceks considered moving their family to Salt Lake City even before he was traded to the Jazz because of the family atmosphere. Seven years later, he has adopted Utah and vice versa. He's one of us.
  10. We truly needed that 12th man to be a center, perahps Kevin Willis, or at least someone with enough weight to push, lean, and wrestle adequately enough and who can use up their allotment of six personal fouls effectively.
  11. What's up with this? The AJC/Denberg article is a broken link. The Hawks site doesn't say anything about it. And there's not another news source anywhere that has mentioned it, either. Should anything be read into that? Especially that the Hawks site doesn't even broach the subject???
  12. ...cause I think this will be the first year that Kruger has had a legit opportunity to excel (assuming injuries aren't again a culprit). But... Stotts has interviewed for a number of head coaching positions for two or three years now... can't help but suspect that, if Babs or Kasten decides to make a mid-year change, this puts them in a good position to do so. Ya think???
  13. Very limited trade value. We don't want to pay first team dollars for second team players... why would anyone else? There's been countless scenarios hatched on this board to move CC and Hendu from HawkSquawk's earliest days. My advice, for what it's worth: get over it guys, and feel some contentedness. It's not like we've got a Ken Norman on the payroll or something. Those two are here for the duration of their contracts, because they aren't good enough that anyone wants their contracts, but they're just good enough that they are legitimate substitutes. Dion is a different story, and that's why I believe he could be destined for another place to hang his jock strap.
  14. Encoded in the Big Dawg conference, was an indication that defense is now the primary focus of any remaining roster moves. As if we needed Kojak to discover that one. But given that point, it appears to me that Dion might have just parlayed his Summer League MVP into a new employer. Maybe I'm late to the discussion (I can't read HawkSquawk nearly as much as I'd like these days), but the prospect of Theo's health cries out for a Kevin Willis-type on the roster, and the value of Ira as a defender and as a momentum-changer has been well documented. (Wasn't it interesting that Lon spoke about Ira as if he were already re-signed?) To those who would counter that E-mail is more likely than Dion to find a new home, I would disagree. E-mail provides needed insurance in case Dickau isn't ready, as well as a decent 3-pt % and an asset you can't teach to a point guard, ie heighth. Besides, I would venture that there would be more interest in Dion than in E-mail. Given all this, I imagine what is really going on behind the scenes, and the reason that it's projected that our roster will be set in the next week or so is that Babs is attempting to move Dion in order to make room for both Newble and Willis. He's just waiting for the highest bidder to surface.
  15. should make a statement to anyone whose hoops-wisdom is as limited an ESPN.com writer... JT is here to stay for awhile. (That is, at least until his contract is up next year.)
  16. ...reply: You make a good point that BD and SAR would seemingly compliment each other, insofar as one-on-one match-ups are concerned. Is it your impression, however, that Milwaukee received any kind of similar benefit with BD on the floor? Did, in fact, BD make Ray Allen better? Is it the case that Milwaukee's greatest failure was in not finding that low-post scorer (similar to SAR) who BD could compliment? Like to hear commentary on these questions, especially from those who have actually gotten to watch the Bucks play recently.
  17. Can't agree with that. Just b/c someone doesn't say what you'd like to hear them say doesn't make them a panty-waste writer. But, that said... We're all glass-half-full thinkers right now, and at the same time, his experience w/ BD is a glass-half-empty. He sees BD's past for it's failures while we see his past for it's successes. We believe we have a bright future w/ BD, he believes the Bucks have a bright future w/o him. Both have a foundation for thinking the way they do... but I think both could agree that if BD is to win a championship in red and white, he will need to mount up both a stubborn motivation to prove the Bucks and the Beer City media wrong *and* a team altruism that promotes chemistry. We also would agree that Big Dog himself controls much of his destiny and his new team's according to those conditions. Consider yourself challenged, Big Dog. This is your great second chance in your NBA career to help take your team to the top.
  18. On this board, we've called this team JT's team for a time, then SAR's team... does a *championship team* have to have "a" leader, or can their be three or more "co-leaders"? It has already been mentioned, and most of us remember too well the off-season that yielded Reggie Theus and Moses Malone to add to Doc, Willis, and Nique... and how that there was immediate friction b/t Theus and Wilkins (...not to mention, that Moses and Nique never equated to the dynamic duo they might have otherwise seemed on paper). What we'd all *like* to imagine is that all four veteran stars in the starting line-up (JT, Big Dog, SAR, and Theo) will set the standard and set it high. And that they will challenge each other, *and* their coaches for that matter, only in *good, positive ways*. As I said in an earlier post, Lon's future is staring him right in the face now. Expectations were just raised not just one notch, but two. If he's successful in meeting expectations, he'll likely be our coach for several more years to come... if he's not successful--I suggest, from the very first two months of the season--he's wise to keep that Rolodex of college AD's up-to-date.
  19. who knows what he's doing than Mahorn. I admit I have no way of confirming it, but on the surface of things, one guy's at least got a long track record of successful coaching, while the other guy had our respect mainly based on his on-court demeanor. My suspicion is that Mahorn didn't do what was asked of him... and I'm especially inclined to think that now, given that Mahorn apparently was unprofessional enough to talk publicly about it.
  20. http://www.jsonline.com/sports/buck/aug02/63619.asp Here's to hoping that Dog reads this stuff, and comes to Atlanta with a growl and a determination to make these guys eat some serious crow... and btw, be sure to catch the remark about Dominique's futility.
  21. http://sports.yahoo.com/nba/columns/200208...getbettere.html
  22. http://www.bleachermob.com/madness.html
  23. http://www.jsonline.com/sports/buck/aug02/63424.asp
  24. http://mfile.akamai.com/3310/rm/sportnws.d...020802/9919.ram (Must have RealPlayer, I think, to listen)
  25. ...and 14th time shy. Theo's got to play a few games before I can get excited about that 2003 NBA Championship that I predicted immediately following the 1999 key acquisition of JR Rider.
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