Monday, April 30, 2012

NBA:  OKC & Minnesota Down, Nuggets Go Forward.

For more analysis, go to Mile High Sports Radio AM1510 or FM93.7, and to Denver’s best sports blogging team, milehighsports.com

“SPORTS NOTEBOOK” posts its columns Tuesday and Friday of every week---Ed. & Publ., Marvin Leibstone.

SPECIAL OLYMPICS SUMMER GAMES, COLORADO, June 2, @ UNC, Greeley: for more information: specialolympicsco.org , or: 800-777-5767.
 
35th Annual Rocky Mountain Senior Games, June 6-10, at Greeley, Colorado, contact: Sheri.Lobmeyer@greeleygov.com
 
NBA:    BY achieving a victory against the Oklahoma City Thunder on Wednesday, April 25, the Denver Nuggets became a single winning game away from achieving the NBA-Western Conference’s number six playoff seed, which whipping the Minnesota Timberwolves in Denver’s last game of the 2011/12 season would guarantee. On Thursday, April 26, the Nuggets took care of business, they defeated the Timberwolves, 131-102.

The Nuggets have been a winning team, and here’s the better side of the good: in addition to the Nuggets maintaining its 103.7 points per game average throughout most of the regular season, nine of its games won were versus the likely to be post-season contenders, among them, the Dallas Mavericks, Los Angeles Lakers, the Miami Heat, the L.A. Clippers, Boston Celtics, Chicago Bulls, the Orlando Magic, and the Timberwolves. Only one of the nine wins was by fewer than 103 points, vs. the Lakers, 99-90.

Five of those nine Nuggets-defeated teams are already the number one franchise of their division---the Thunder, the Lakers, the Celtics, the Heat, and the Bulls, an indication that the post-Carmelo Anthony/Billups Nuggets haven’t been the left-behind franchise they were expected to be since the 2011 Nuggets revision began with the popular star shooters Anthony and Billups sent from Denver to the New York Knicks in exchange for several unknowns from the Knicks.

The only leading division team that the Nuggets haven’t beaten this year with those former Knicks aboard, are the San Antonio Spurs, a contest during which the Nuggets were one point shy of three digits, losing 114-99. Only in four of 66 games played this season have the Nuggets finished with less than 90 points, neither of the four below 81.

Other Nuggets stats address the team’s ride into the post-season. Not only have seven Nuggets players achieved double-digit averages, 11 Nuggets players have double-digit averages in the execution of blocks, 13 in the employment of steals, 15 with double-digit assists (four of these players have triple-digit assist totals), and 12 Nuggets players have triple-digit rebound totals, while 10 have high triple-digit field goal totals. Noteworthy about these Nuggets individual player stats is that there are numerous other NBA franchises with players that have higher numbers in most of the listed categories, yet across the rosters of those teams are fewer players with double- and triple-digit totals, and also fewer double-digit scorers than the Nuggets have had, though the Nuggets highest ppg holder hasn’t attained more than a 16.3 ppg average (guard, Ty Lawson), when several NBA teams can boast of having shooters with 20+ ppg averages. Reflected, then, is the Nuggets emphasis on teamwork over star power.

No Nuggets player stands out the way that the Thunder’s Kevin Durant, the Lakers Kobe Bryant or the Heat’s LeBron James can---Nuggets formidability has maintained from head coach George Karl’s insistence on the “We” instead of the “Me,” and that is what could bring the Nuggets past the first round of the playoffs and serve as a model for future NBA reliance on a motto, “Teamwork reigns!” ending any rushes within NBA teams to trade three or four above-the-margin “team first” players for the next Durant, Bryant or LeBron. It’s a safe guess that in recent months the New York Knicks front office and head coach have been paying lots of attention to “We” over “Me,” even with that Linsanity breakthrough.  
END/ml
NBA:  OKC & Minnesota Down, Nuggets Go Forward.

For more analysis, go to Mile High Sports Radio AM1510 or FM93.7, and to Denver’s best sports blogging team, milehighsports.com

“SPORTS NOTEBOOK” posts its columns Tuesday and Friday of every week---Ed. & Publ., Marvin Leibstone.

SPECIAL OLYMPICS SUMMER GAMES, COLORADO, June 2, @ UNC, Greeley: for more information: specialolympicsco.org , or: 800-777-5767.
 
35th Annual Rocky Mountain Senior Games, June 6-10, at Greeley, Colorado, contact: Sheri.Lobmeyer@greeleygov.com
NBA:    BY achieving a victory against the Oklahoma City Thunder on Wednesday, April 25, the Denver Nuggets became a single winning game away from achieving the NBA-Western Conference’s number six playoff seed, which whipping the Minnesota Timberwolves in Denver’s last game of the 2011/12 season would guarantee. On Thursday, April 26, the Nuggets took care of business, they defeated the Timberwolves, 131-102.

The Nuggets have been a winning team, and here’s the better side of the good: in addition to the Nuggets maintaining its 103.7 points per game average throughout most of the regular season, nine of its games won were versus the likely to be post-season contenders, among them, the Dallas Mavericks, Los Angeles Lakers, the Miami Heat, the L.A. Clippers, Boston Celtics, Chicago Bulls, the Orlando Magic, and the Timberwolves. Only one of the nine wins was by fewer than 103 points, vs. the Lakers, 99-90.

Five of those nine Nuggets-defeated teams are already the number one franchise of their division---the Thunder, the Lakers, the Celtics, the Heat, and the Bulls, an indication that the post-Carmelo Anthony/Billups Nuggets haven’t been the left-behind franchise they were expected to be since the 2011 Nuggets revision began with the popular star shooters Anthony and Billups sent from Denver to the New York Knicks in exchange for several unknowns from the Knicks.

The only leading division team that the Nuggets haven’t beaten this year with those former Knicks aboard, are the San Antonio Spurs, a contest during which the Nuggets were one point shy of three digits, losing 114-99. Only in four of 66 games played this season have the Nuggets finished with less than 90 points, neither of the four below 81.

Other Nuggets stats address the team’s ride into the post-season. Not only have seven Nuggets players achieved double-digit averages, 11 Nuggets players have double-digit averages in the execution of blocks, 13 in the employment of steals, 15 with double-digit assists (four of these players have triple-digit assist totals), and 12 Nuggets players have triple-digit rebound totals, while 10 have high triple-digit field goal totals. Noteworthy about these Nuggets individual player stats is that there are numerous other NBA franchises with players that have higher numbers in most of the listed categories, yet across the rosters of those teams are fewer players with double- and triple-digit totals, and also fewer double-digit scorers than the Nuggets have had, though the Nuggets highest ppg holder hasn’t attained more than a 16.3 ppg average (guard, Ty Lawson), when several NBA teams can boast of having shooters with 20+ ppg averages. Reflected, then, is the Nuggets emphasis on teamwork over star power.

No Nuggets player stands out the way that the Thunder’s Kevin Durant, the Lakers Kobe Bryant or the Heat’s LeBron James can---Nuggets formidability has maintained from head coach George Karl’s insistence on the “We” instead of the “Me,” and that is what could bring the Nuggets past the first round of the playoffs and serve as a model for future NBA reliance on a motto, “Teamwork reigns!” ending any rushes within NBA teams to trade three or four above-the-margin “team first” players for the next Durant, Bryant or LeBron. It’s a safe guess that in recent months the New York Knicks front office and head coach have been paying lots of attention to “We” over “Me,” even with that Linsanity breakthrough.  
END/ml
NBA:  OKC Down, Nuggets GoForward // MLB: the Unexpected    

For more analysis, go to Mile High Sports Radio AM1510 or FM93.7, and to Denver’s best sports blogging team, milehighsports.com

“SPORTS NOTEBOOK” posts its columns Tuesday and Friday of every week---Ed. & Publ., Marvin Leibstone.

SPECIAL OLYMPICS SUMMER GAMES, COLORADO, June 2, @ UNC, Greeley: for more information: specialolympicsco.org , or: 800-777-5767.

NBA:    BY achieving a victory against the Oklahoma City Thunder on Wednesday, April 25, the Denver Nuggets became a single winning game away from achieving the NBA-Western Conference’s number six playoff seed, which whipping the Minnesota Timberwolves in Denver’s last game of the 2011/12 season would guarantee. On Thursday, April 26, the Nuggets took care of business, they defeated the Timberwolves, 131-102.

The Nuggets have been a winning team, and here’s the better side of the good: in addition to the Nuggets maintaining its 103.7 points per game average throughout most of the regular season, nine of its games won were versus the likely to be post-season contenders, among them, the Dallas Mavericks, Los Angeles Lakers, the Miami Heat, the L.A. Clippers, Boston Celtics, Chicago Bulls, the Orlando Magic, and the Timberwolves. Only one of the nine wins was by fewer than 103 points, vs. the Lakers, 99-90.

Five of those nine Nuggets-defeated teams are already the number one franchise of their division---the Thunder, the Lakers, the Celtics, the Heat, and the Bulls, an indication that the post-Carmelo Anthony/Billups Nuggets haven’t been the left-behind franchise they were expected to be since the 2011 Nuggets revision began with the popular star shooters Anthony and Billups sent from Denver to the New York Knicks in exchange for several unknowns from the Knicks.

The only leading division team that the Nuggets haven’t beaten this year with those former Knicks aboard, are the San Antonio Spurs, a contest during which the Nuggets were one point shy of three digits, losing 114-99. Only in four of 66 games played this season have the Nuggets finished with less than 90 points, neither of the four below 81.

Other Nuggets stats address the team’s ride into the post-season. Not only have seven Nuggets players achieved double-digit averages, 11 Nuggets players have double-digit averages in the execution of blocks, 13 in the employment of steals, 15 with double-digit assists (four of these players have triple-digit assist totals), and 12 Nuggets players have triple-digit rebound totals, while 10 have high triple-digit field goal totals. Noteworthy about these Nuggets individual player stats is that there are numerous other NBA franchises with players that have higher numbers in most of the listed categories, yet across the rosters of those teams are fewer players with double- and triple-digit totals, and also fewer double-digit scorers than the Nuggets have had, though the Nuggets highest ppg holder hasn’t attained more than a 16.3 ppg average (guard, Ty Lawson), when several NBA teams can boast of having shooters with 20+ ppg averages. Reflected, then, is the Nuggets emphasis on teamwork over star power.

No Nuggets player stands out the way that the Thunder’s Kevin Durant, the Lakers Kobe Bryant or the Heat’s LeBron James can---Nuggets formidability has maintained from head coach George Karl’s insistence on the “We” instead of the “Me,” and that is what could bring the Nuggets past the first round of the playoffs and serve as a model for future NBA reliance on a motto, “Teamwork reigns!” ending any rushes within NBA teams to trade three or four above-the-margin “team first” players for the next Durant, Bryant or LeBron. It’s a safe guess that in recent months the New York Knicks front office and head coach have been paying lots of attention to “We” over “Me,” even with that Linsanity breakthrough.  
END/ml

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

NBA:  Denver Nuggets, Playoff-bound  

For more analysis, go to Mile High Sports Radio AM1510 or FM93.7, and to Denver’s best sports blogging team, milehighsports.com

“SPORTS NOTEBOOK” posts its columns Tuesday and Friday of every week---Ed. & Publ., Marvin Leibstone.

SPECIAL OLYMPICS SUMMER GAMES, COLORADO, June 2, @ UNC, Greeley: for more information: specialolympicsco.org , or: 800-777-5767.

NBA:    FOUR years ago, I asked then Denver Nuggets star forward, Carmelo Anthony, to reveal his dominant basketball wish. The answer: help a franchise get to the playoffs, reach the finals and become an NBA championship team. Well, one could say that Anthony helped the Denver Nuggets get to the playoffs this season and the last “by not showing up,” by urging a trade that took him, and then Denver guard, Chauncey Billups, to New York, the Nuggets having to remake hastily with newcomers Danilo Gallinari, Al Harrington, Wilson Chandler, Kenneth Faried, Kosta Koufos, Andre Miller and others, while putting new pressure on guards Ty Lawson and Arron Afflalo, meanwhile the dependable center/forward Kenyon Martin and reserve guard J.R. Smith were off to China during  an NBA lockout that forced up a 66-game 2011/2012 NBA season.

Not four years ago, nor long before that, have the Nuggets been a Hollywood tale, coming from the lowest tier to where they’d be waving victory banners. Most commendably, they are a team that has been to the playoffs “nine years straight”---there’s consistency in that, yes? What does beg highlighting is that the Nuggets have always played hard under circumstances that usually take other teams out of the running for post-season entry, e.g., best players injured when needed the most, relied-upon head coach George Karl struck with cancer and away from the NBA for more than a month, Anthony and Billups off to the Knicks.

Yet in the many years that the Nuggets have made the playoffs, none were easy slide-ins. The Nuggets have been, no, they are, a team that progresses a game or two forward, next goes three back, soon startles with a stretch of wins against leading franchises but goes back to losing, scrambling forward again to achieve enough wins to make it under the wire and be seeded for that first playoff round.

This year, the Nuggets big and meaningful leap began with a Nuggets 101-86 win against the Houston Rockets on April 16, lockboxed for the playoffs on April 21 with a 118-107 victory against the Phoenix Suns, then confirmation of the team’s drive and skills shown with a back-to-back 101-74 win versus the Orlando Magic, on April 22. Of note is that the three pivotal wins were vs. teams that have been on par with, or ahead of, the Nuggets since the current season began, the message being that the Nuggets won’t be shoved aside easily during the playoff’s first round.

It did not look good for the Nuggets, however, when the team’s March and early April losses indicated a level of defense that the team seemed unable to reach. The defense needed for a playoff berth seemed to be eluding them, and that is what Nuggets head coach, George Karl, probably began stressing at the expense of his players positioning themselves to block and taking some rebounds. Karl must have wanted the Nuggets players to put the kind of pressure on that would keep their opponents from actualizing pre-planned plays, therefore from shooting until improvising in that last second allowed by the shot clock, because that is what has been happening enough times per quarter, evident in the mere 74 points attained by the Magic, April 22.

As the Nuggets defense has matured, there’s been no drawback in the Nuggets aggressive offense. The Nuggets have maintained their total points-per-game average, now 103.7, ahead of all teams that the franchise has confronted this year when the latter are totaled as an aggregate. Seven Nuggets players have ppg averages in double digits, led by Lawson’s 16.3, Afflalo next with 15.2.

With the recent addition of JaVale McGee (he has an unusually hefty number of blocks to his credit) and Lawson having accrued 78 steals this year, there’s indication that the Nuggets defense can stay above-the-margin, sending the team into round two of the playoffs, perhaps beyond that. On Wednesday, April 25, the Nuggets will face the Oklahoma City Thunder, a team expected to be the hottest challenge for the year’s Western Conference title, a win taking the victor to the NBA finals---Wednesday’s vs. Thunder game is the Nuggets last chance to determine what could be their more difficult moments during the 2011/12 post-season.

END/ml 

Friday, April 20, 2012

NFL” the DRAFT,” some Observations //  MLB:  Rockies, Going Higher    

For more analysis, go to Mile High Sports Radio AM1510 or FM93.7, and to Denver’s best sports blogging team, milehighsports.com

                “SPORTS NOTEBOOK” posts its columns Tuesday and Friday of every week---Ed. & Publ., Marvin Leibstone.

            SPECIAL OLYMPICS SUMMER GAMES, COLORADO, June 2, @ UNC, Greeley: for more information: specialolympicsco.org , or: 800-777-5767.

NFL:   LAST year’s Penn State revelation, and illegalities at other schools, portrayed college football as being largely immoral and damaging to its talent and its continuance. But this month, more than 150 college players have been announced as being ready for the National Football League, suggesting that the college game is a lot more worthy and productive than last year’s scandals would have anyone believe, top of the list of 12 NFL quarterback possibilities
“Thinking About China Thinking About Us
IT’s been clear from reported conversations with Chinese diplomats that Beijing finds many U.S. perceptions of what China’s been up to since the end of the Cold War, “dead wrong.” Also, these officials have led some U.S. counterparts to believe that Beijing obtains comfort from the West believing in “a mysterious Orient,” as if China learned that it could keep the West guessing, never knowing the true China.
            But much of how the U.S. thinks about China has been the result of Beijing lacking the transparency that could reveal which of its possible intentions will be chosen for fruition.
            Which color will the chameleon (Beijing) choose in the next instant, and in which direction will it move? Using baseball parlance, which will be hurled next from Beijing, a curveball, fastball or a slider? Will it be inside or wide when cornering the plate?
Because of insufficient knowledge about China’s global intentions, U.S. analysts have wondered if Beijing decided several years back to grow its economic, military and political influence around the world to (a) become the world’s one and only superpower, or  (b) only raise China’s standard of living, without serious concern about maintaining global or regional superpower status; or (c) have what it takes for just enough control of needed resources like petroleum, so that China could sustain its manufacturing and services for its exports and therefore prevent the Chinese economy from slipping way back into the poverty that existed for the Chinese people several decades ago; or, China may have decided that it would be necessary to (d) keep other powers from interfering with its ability to sustain the rapid growth rates that it has achieved, “no hegemony in mind except as last resort means.”
Could it then be that China’s recent military build-up is nothing more than the expression of a country that has planned to match military strength proportionately with its economic growth, to have the capability to protect, if necessary, the economic and political influence that it has built up since the 1990’s?
Some analysts claim that Beijing has considered actualization of all of the above, that it has maneuvered to satisfy each of the above-cited objectives depending on world situational factors.
Other analysts add that Beijing thinks about using military power “as leverage” for achieving special but limited ends, for example, to attack Taiwan, or lending show-of-force support to Iran during the latter’s disputes with the West.
            Fact: Neither the U.S. nor any other Western nation knows China’s intentions with great certainty. Even so, American politics continues to weigh in on the possibilities, e.g., America's conservatives being sure that China wants to dominate the West and will do whatever it takes to have that happen, to include the use of military force.
Meanwhile, American liberals think otherwise, that China will never be imperialist, though Beijing may rattle its cage before other nations from time to time. Many liberals believe that China behaves as would any country experiencing new growth, wanting a bigger slice of the global economic pie, Beijing without any interest in land-grabbing or in besting the U.S. only to be numero uno, or because it fears the U.S.
            So, which way will China be going in the near and distant future? Will it work to have the ways and means to engage whatever the winds blowing from the West conjure up? This requires Beijing to have the ability to counter that which appears to its leaders to be unlawful aggression, though such may not be the case. The always possible scenario is Beijing or Washington misinterpreting sudden out-of-the-box behavior, using military power to preempt what it may be thinking is preparation for aggression.
            More than likely, and since neither the U.S. nor China sees the other except through that proverbial glass darkly, each will keep several hard and soft options at the ready, and at the starting gate.
END/ml

Friday, April 27, 2012

NBA:  OKC & Minnesota Down, Nuggets Go Forward.

For more analysis, go to Mile High Sports Radio AM1510 or FM93.7, and to Denver’s best sports blogging team, milehighsports.com

“SPORTS NOTEBOOK” posts its columns Tuesday and Friday of every week---Ed. & Publ., Marvin Leibstone.

SPECIAL OLYMPICS SUMMER GAMES, COLORADO, June 2, @ UNC, Greeley: for more information: specialolympicsco.org , or: 800-777-5767.
 
35th Annual Rocky Mountain Senior Games, June 6-10, at Greeley, Colorado, contact: Sheri.Lobmeyer@greeleygov.com
 
NBA:    BY achieving a victory against the Oklahoma City Thunder on Wednesday, April 25, the Denver Nuggets became a single winning game away from achieving the NBA-Western Conference’s number six playoff seed, which whipping the Minnesota Timberwolves in Denver’s last game of the 2011/12 season would guarantee. On Thursday, April 26, the Nuggets took care of business, they defeated the Timberwolves, 131-102.

The Nuggets have been a winning team, and here’s the better side of the good: in addition to the Nuggets maintaining its 103.7 points per game average throughout most of the regular season, nine of its games won were versus the likely to be post-season contenders, among them, the Dallas Mavericks, Los Angeles Lakers, the Miami Heat, the L.A. Clippers, Boston Celtics, Chicago Bulls, the Orlando Magic, and the Timberwolves. Only one of the nine wins was by fewer than 103 points, vs. the Lakers, 99-90.

Five of those nine Nuggets-defeated teams are already the number one franchise of their division---the Thunder, the Lakers, the Celtics, the Heat, and the Bulls, an indication that the post-Carmelo Anthony/Billups Nuggets haven’t been the left-behind franchise they were expected to be since the 2011 Nuggets revision began with the popular star shooters Anthony and Billups sent from Denver to the New York Knicks in exchange for several unknowns from the Knicks.

The only leading division team that the Nuggets haven’t beaten this year with those former Knicks aboard, are the San Antonio Spurs, a contest during which the Nuggets were one point shy of three digits, losing 114-99. Only in four of 66 games played this season have the Nuggets finished with less than 90 points, neither of the four below 81.

Other Nuggets stats address the team’s ride into the post-season. Not only have seven Nuggets players achieved double-digit averages, 11 Nuggets players have double-digit averages in the execution of blocks, 13 in the employment of steals, 15 with double-digit assists (four of these players have triple-digit assist totals), and 12 Nuggets players have triple-digit rebound totals, while 10 have high triple-digit field goal totals. Noteworthy about these Nuggets individual player stats is that there are numerous other NBA franchises with players that have higher numbers in most of the listed categories, yet across the rosters of those teams are fewer players with double- and triple-digit totals, and also fewer double-digit scorers than the Nuggets have had, though the Nuggets highest ppg holder hasn’t attained more than a 16.3 ppg average (guard, Ty Lawson), when several NBA teams can boast of having shooters with 20+ ppg averages. Reflected, then, is the Nuggets emphasis on teamwork over star power.

No Nuggets player stands out the way that the Thunder’s Kevin Durant, the Lakers Kobe Bryant or the Heat’s LeBron James can---Nuggets formidability has maintained from head coach George Karl’s insistence on the “We” instead of the “Me,” and that is what could bring the Nuggets past the first round of the playoffs and serve as a model for future NBA reliance on a motto, “Teamwork reigns!” ending any rushes within NBA teams to trade three or four above-the-margin “team first” players for the next Durant, Bryant or LeBron. It’s a safe guess that in recent months the New York Knicks front office and head coach have been paying lots of attention to “We” over “Me,” even with that Linsanity breakthrough.  
END/ml
NBA:  OKC & Minnesota Down, Nuggets Go Forward.

For more analysis, go to Mile High Sports Radio AM1510 or FM93.7, and to Denver’s best sports blogging team, milehighsports.com

“SPORTS NOTEBOOK” posts its columns Tuesday and Friday of every week---Ed. & Publ., Marvin Leibstone.

SPECIAL OLYMPICS SUMMER GAMES, COLORADO, June 2, @ UNC, Greeley: for more information: specialolympicsco.org , or: 800-777-5767.
 
35th Annual Rocky Mountain Senior Games, June 6-10, at Greeley, Colorado, contact: Sheri.Lobmeyer@greeleygov.com
NBA:    BY achieving a victory against the Oklahoma City Thunder on Wednesday, April 25, the Denver Nuggets became a single winning game away from achieving the NBA-Western Conference’s number six playoff seed, which whipping the Minnesota Timberwolves in Denver’s last game of the 2011/12 season would guarantee. On Thursday, April 26, the Nuggets took care of business, they defeated the Timberwolves, 131-102.

The Nuggets have been a winning team, and here’s the better side of the good: in addition to the Nuggets maintaining its 103.7 points per game average throughout most of the regular season, nine of its games won were versus the likely to be post-season contenders, among them, the Dallas Mavericks, Los Angeles Lakers, the Miami Heat, the L.A. Clippers, Boston Celtics, Chicago Bulls, the Orlando Magic, and the Timberwolves. Only one of the nine wins was by fewer than 103 points, vs. the Lakers, 99-90.

Five of those nine Nuggets-defeated teams are already the number one franchise of their division---the Thunder, the Lakers, the Celtics, the Heat, and the Bulls, an indication that the post-Carmelo Anthony/Billups Nuggets haven’t been the left-behind franchise they were expected to be since the 2011 Nuggets revision began with the popular star shooters Anthony and Billups sent from Denver to the New York Knicks in exchange for several unknowns from the Knicks.

The only leading division team that the Nuggets haven’t beaten this year with those former Knicks aboard, are the San Antonio Spurs, a contest during which the Nuggets were one point shy of three digits, losing 114-99. Only in four of 66 games played this season have the Nuggets finished with less than 90 points, neither of the four below 81.

Other Nuggets stats address the team’s ride into the post-season. Not only have seven Nuggets players achieved double-digit averages, 11 Nuggets players have double-digit averages in the execution of blocks, 13 in the employment of steals, 15 with double-digit assists (four of these players have triple-digit assist totals), and 12 Nuggets players have triple-digit rebound totals, while 10 have high triple-digit field goal totals. Noteworthy about these Nuggets individual player stats is that there are numerous other NBA franchises with players that have higher numbers in most of the listed categories, yet across the rosters of those teams are fewer players with double- and triple-digit totals, and also fewer double-digit scorers than the Nuggets have had, though the Nuggets highest ppg holder hasn’t attained more than a 16.3 ppg average (guard, Ty Lawson), when several NBA teams can boast of having shooters with 20+ ppg averages. Reflected, then, is the Nuggets emphasis on teamwork over star power.

No Nuggets player stands out the way that the Thunder’s Kevin Durant, the Lakers Kobe Bryant or the Heat’s LeBron James can---Nuggets formidability has maintained from head coach George Karl’s insistence on the “We” instead of the “Me,” and that is what could bring the Nuggets past the first round of the playoffs and serve as a model for future NBA reliance on a motto, “Teamwork reigns!” ending any rushes within NBA teams to trade three or four above-the-margin “team first” players for the next Durant, Bryant or LeBron. It’s a safe guess that in recent months the New York Knicks front office and head coach have been paying lots of attention to “We” over “Me,” even with that Linsanity breakthrough.  
END/ml
NBA:  OKC Down, Nuggets GoForward // MLB: the Unexpected    

For more analysis, go to Mile High Sports Radio AM1510 or FM93.7, and to Denver’s best sports blogging team, milehighsports.com

“SPORTS NOTEBOOK” posts its columns Tuesday and Friday of every week---Ed. & Publ., Marvin Leibstone.

SPECIAL OLYMPICS SUMMER GAMES, COLORADO, June 2, @ UNC, Greeley: for more information: specialolympicsco.org , or: 800-777-5767.

NBA:    BY achieving a victory against the Oklahoma City Thunder on Wednesday, April 25, the Denver Nuggets became a single winning game away from achieving the NBA-Western Conference’s number six playoff seed, which whipping the Minnesota Timberwolves in Denver’s last game of the 2011/12 season would guarantee. On Thursday, April 26, the Nuggets took care of business, they defeated the Timberwolves, 131-102.

The Nuggets have been a winning team, and here’s the better side of the good: in addition to the Nuggets maintaining its 103.7 points per game average throughout most of the regular season, nine of its games won were versus the likely to be post-season contenders, among them, the Dallas Mavericks, Los Angeles Lakers, the Miami Heat, the L.A. Clippers, Boston Celtics, Chicago Bulls, the Orlando Magic, and the Timberwolves. Only one of the nine wins was by fewer than 103 points, vs. the Lakers, 99-90.

Five of those nine Nuggets-defeated teams are already the number one franchise of their division---the Thunder, the Lakers, the Celtics, the Heat, and the Bulls, an indication that the post-Carmelo Anthony/Billups Nuggets haven’t been the left-behind franchise they were expected to be since the 2011 Nuggets revision began with the popular star shooters Anthony and Billups sent from Denver to the New York Knicks in exchange for several unknowns from the Knicks.

The only leading division team that the Nuggets haven’t beaten this year with those former Knicks aboard, are the San Antonio Spurs, a contest during which the Nuggets were one point shy of three digits, losing 114-99. Only in four of 66 games played this season have the Nuggets finished with less than 90 points, neither of the four below 81.

Other Nuggets stats address the team’s ride into the post-season. Not only have seven Nuggets players achieved double-digit averages, 11 Nuggets players have double-digit averages in the execution of blocks, 13 in the employment of steals, 15 with double-digit assists (four of these players have triple-digit assist totals), and 12 Nuggets players have triple-digit rebound totals, while 10 have high triple-digit field goal totals. Noteworthy about these Nuggets individual player stats is that there are numerous other NBA franchises with players that have higher numbers in most of the listed categories, yet across the rosters of those teams are fewer players with double- and triple-digit totals, and also fewer double-digit scorers than the Nuggets have had, though the Nuggets highest ppg holder hasn’t attained more than a 16.3 ppg average (guard, Ty Lawson), when several NBA teams can boast of having shooters with 20+ ppg averages. Reflected, then, is the Nuggets emphasis on teamwork over star power.

No Nuggets player stands out the way that the Thunder’s Kevin Durant, the Lakers Kobe Bryant or the Heat’s LeBron James can---Nuggets formidability has maintained from head coach George Karl’s insistence on the “We” instead of the “Me,” and that is what could bring the Nuggets past the first round of the playoffs and serve as a model for future NBA reliance on a motto, “Teamwork reigns!” ending any rushes within NBA teams to trade three or four above-the-margin “team first” players for the next Durant, Bryant or LeBron. It’s a safe guess that in recent months the New York Knicks front office and head coach have been paying lots of attention to “We” over “Me,” even with that Linsanity breakthrough.  
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Tuesday, April 24, 2012

NBA:  Denver Nuggets, Playoff-bound  

For more analysis, go to Mile High Sports Radio AM1510 or FM93.7, and to Denver’s best sports blogging team, milehighsports.com

“SPORTS NOTEBOOK” posts its columns Tuesday and Friday of every week---Ed. & Publ., Marvin Leibstone.

SPECIAL OLYMPICS SUMMER GAMES, COLORADO, June 2, @ UNC, Greeley: for more information: specialolympicsco.org , or: 800-777-5767.

NBA:    FOUR years ago, I asked then Denver Nuggets star forward, Carmelo Anthony, to reveal his dominant basketball wish. The answer: help a franchise get to the playoffs, reach the finals and become an NBA championship team. Well, one could say that Anthony helped the Denver Nuggets get to the playoffs this season and the last “by not showing up,” by urging a trade that took him, and then Denver guard, Chauncey Billups, to New York, the Nuggets having to remake hastily with newcomers Danilo Gallinari, Al Harrington, Wilson Chandler, Kenneth Faried, Kosta Koufos, Andre Miller and others, while putting new pressure on guards Ty Lawson and Arron Afflalo, meanwhile the dependable center/forward Kenyon Martin and reserve guard J.R. Smith were off to China during  an NBA lockout that forced up a 66-game 2011/2012 NBA season.

Not four years ago, nor long before that, have the Nuggets been a Hollywood tale, coming from the lowest tier to where they’d be waving victory banners. Most commendably, they are a team that has been to the playoffs “nine years straight”---there’s consistency in that, yes? What does beg highlighting is that the Nuggets have always played hard under circumstances that usually take other teams out of the running for post-season entry, e.g., best players injured when needed the most, relied-upon head coach George Karl struck with cancer and away from the NBA for more than a month, Anthony and Billups off to the Knicks.

Yet in the many years that the Nuggets have made the playoffs, none were easy slide-ins. The Nuggets have been, no, they are, a team that progresses a game or two forward, next goes three back, soon startles with a stretch of wins against leading franchises but goes back to losing, scrambling forward again to achieve enough wins to make it under the wire and be seeded for that first playoff round.

This year, the Nuggets big and meaningful leap began with a Nuggets 101-86 win against the Houston Rockets on April 16, lockboxed for the playoffs on April 21 with a 118-107 victory against the Phoenix Suns, then confirmation of the team’s drive and skills shown with a back-to-back 101-74 win versus the Orlando Magic, on April 22. Of note is that the three pivotal wins were vs. teams that have been on par with, or ahead of, the Nuggets since the current season began, the message being that the Nuggets won’t be shoved aside easily during the playoff’s first round.

It did not look good for the Nuggets, however, when the team’s March and early April losses indicated a level of defense that the team seemed unable to reach. The defense needed for a playoff berth seemed to be eluding them, and that is what Nuggets head coach, George Karl, probably began stressing at the expense of his players positioning themselves to block and taking some rebounds. Karl must have wanted the Nuggets players to put the kind of pressure on that would keep their opponents from actualizing pre-planned plays, therefore from shooting until improvising in that last second allowed by the shot clock, because that is what has been happening enough times per quarter, evident in the mere 74 points attained by the Magic, April 22.

As the Nuggets defense has matured, there’s been no drawback in the Nuggets aggressive offense. The Nuggets have maintained their total points-per-game average, now 103.7, ahead of all teams that the franchise has confronted this year when the latter are totaled as an aggregate. Seven Nuggets players have ppg averages in double digits, led by Lawson’s 16.3, Afflalo next with 15.2.

With the recent addition of JaVale McGee (he has an unusually hefty number of blocks to his credit) and Lawson having accrued 78 steals this year, there’s indication that the Nuggets defense can stay above-the-margin, sending the team into round two of the playoffs, perhaps beyond that. On Wednesday, April 25, the Nuggets will face the Oklahoma City Thunder, a team expected to be the hottest challenge for the year’s Western Conference title, a win taking the victor to the NBA finals---Wednesday’s vs. Thunder game is the Nuggets last chance to determine what could be their more difficult moments during the 2011/12 post-season.

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Friday, April 20, 2012

NFL” the DRAFT,” some Observations //  MLB:  Rockies, Going Higher    

For more analysis, go to Mile High Sports Radio AM1510 or FM93.7, and to Denver’s best sports blogging team, milehighsports.com

                “SPORTS NOTEBOOK” posts its columns Tuesday and Friday of every week---Ed. & Publ., Marvin Leibstone.

            SPECIAL OLYMPICS SUMMER GAMES, COLORADO, June 2, @ UNC, Greeley: for more information: specialolympicsco.org , or: 800-777-5767.

NFL:   LAST year’s Penn State revelation, and illegalities at other schools, portrayed college football as being largely immoral and damaging to its talent and its continuance. But this month, more than 150 college players have been announced as being ready for the National Football League, suggesting that the college game is a lot more worthy and productive than last year’s scandals would have anyone believe, top of the list of 12 NFL quarterback possibilities being the amazing QB from Stanford, Andrew Luck.

But only five schools delivering NFL prospects onto a list of the top 30 college players nationwide are from the east, and three of those are from the southeast. Within the top 30, three picks are from the University of Alabama, and three are from Stanford, the only schools with multiple draft picks within the top 30.

All told, the top 100 of this year’s draft picks are from more than 90 colleges/universities, the lion’s share from the south and the west.

Of the top 12 NFL QB’s, none are from eastern schools. Eight are from southern institutions, four from western schools. From the South, Alabama has delivered picks in four different categories: running back, fullback, defensive tackle, safety. Stanford has delivered for five categories: QB, RB, tight end, tackle and guard. The categories filled with the most picks are running backs and wide receivers, 20 having been identified for each of the two categories. Within the top 30 picks, three of the potentials are QB’s---Luck, Robert Griffin III from Baylor, and Ryan Tannehill, from Texas A&M. Yet among the remaining 28, only one is a running back---Trent Richardson, from Alabama, while four are WR’s. Within the top 60, there are no kickers, no punters.

With all of the above noted, standing out is the fact that there’s an imbalance among college offerings regarding required player positions, e.g., there must be more than one NFL franchise in need of a kicker and/or punter, and there are definitely franchise owners who’d consider betting the farm for another good QB. While this imbalance isn’t horribly askew, colleges delivering a better across-the-board position-availability for what’s truly needed by the NFL’s franchises would be a good happening.

Also noticeable is that no draft pick within the top 30 is from a small school, and less than a dozen picks within the top 150 are from small schools.

There’s no NCAA rule saying there has to be a perfect balance among type players provided for the annual NFL draft picks, or a nationwide “geographical” balance when it comes to colleges/universities receiving and then providing the best football players for the professional game (this could be out of more eastern seaboard and central-U.S. schools being part of the equation). And there's no NCAA rule saying that the smaller colleges/universities must have new opportunities to nurture more and better football players for NFL postings. However, such rules could deliver a wider and more balanced athlete development system for American football, along with economic and cultural infusions for the wider, more balanced range of colleges/universities and their communities.

MLB:   Tuesday’s Colorado Rockies versus San Diego Padres game at Coors Field (April 17) will certainly be remembered if only because the Rockies win went to LHP, Jamie Moyer, which anointed him as the oldest pitcher in baseball history to win a game that he started. At 49 and 150 days old, Moyer surpassed a record held since the 1930’s. But the game should also be remembered for some outstanding work by the Rockies infield, which included two seemingly faster-than-sound double-plays. Should the manner in which those plays were conducted expand into a consistent defense throughout most of the rest of the MLB season, teams challenging the Rockies will be of the low-score variety (forget shortstop Troy Tulowitzki’s game errors, it’s the most inconsistent thing about this infielder).

Too, six Rockies hitters managed seven hits on Tuesday, including a home run by center fielder, Dexter Fowler, and two solid hits punched by right fielder, Michael Cuddyer. Also, Moyer entered the game on Tuesday emblematic of a pitching staff holding to an average ERA under 3.0. And, on Tuesday, RHP Rafael Betancourt proved himself a wise choice as "closer" entering play before a final inning.

Then, on Wednesday, Rockies RHP, Juan Nicasio, proved that he could be among the MLB’s better quality starters, achieving an 8-4 win against the Padres. In this game, the Rockies pounded out 12 hits, one of them a home run by Cuddyer. Before Thursday, the Rockies had reached .500, that midway mark separating the good from the not so good. The Colorado team is not only now in third place of the National League’s Western Division (behind Arizona---7-5, .563), it is seventh among the NL’s 16 teams, tied with Milwaukee and Miami.

Of the Rockies remaining April series, it has a chance of sweeping three of them, or winning the three by two games each (vs. Milwaukee, Pittsburgh and the Mets). The series that the Rockies will be faced with at the end of April with the Los Angeles Dodgers could be the team’s toughest challenge since the 2012 MLB season opened. The Dodgers are currently atop the NL-West, at 9-3, .750.

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Tuesday, April 17, 2012

MLB:   Colorado Rockies, That Walk-Off Homer & The Age-Myth  // NBA: Denver Nuggets, Other Teams & The "Final Stretch."    

For more analysis, go to Mile High Sports Radio AM1510 or FM93.7, and to Denver’s best sports blogging team, milehighsports.com

                “SPORTS NOTEBOOK” posts its columns Tuesday and Friday of every week---Ed. & Publ., Marvin Leibstone.

            SPECIAL OLYMPICS SUMMER GAMES, COLORADO, June 2, @ UNC, Greeley: for more information: specialolympicsco.org , or: 800-777-5767.

MLB:   A fervent baseball fan is seated in his living room, in front of a televised Colorado Rockies/Arizona Diamondbacks game. It’s mid-April, and the fan is certain that bad luck joined the Rockies after rain sent lots of fans home from Coors Field before the bottom of the ninth, now in progress---the 'Backs could win this one, after the Rockies held a big lead.

Arizona’s closer, J.J. Putz, has forced the Rockies into two outs. “It looks real bad for the Rockies,” the armchair fan claims, and his wife throws a quote into the equation, “It aint over ‘til it’s over,” for the Rockies have a man on base.

Colorado first baseman, Todd Helton, goes to the plate, and the fan at home turns to his wife and says confidently, “A few years ago, Helton would deliver the needed home run. He’d smack the ball into the stands, sending his guy around the bases, himself, too, the Rockies taking the Diamondbacks down past the count. Helton’s too old now,” he adds, “if Helton doesn’t strike out he’ll probably hit short, the ball will be caught, the Diamondbacks will win.”

But Helton’s the intrepid pro---he sends the ball into the stands above right field, game over, the Rockies walk away as winners.

How does the saying go, the one visible on a lot of T-shirts worn under the Florida sun? “Old age will beat youth every  .  .  . ”  but what’s important is our realizing that the age thing warning athletes to quit at 30 and start selling products on TV if they can’t get a gig on ESPN, has shifted upward. The 35+ Helton is still capable of the walk-off home run and attaining a high on-base percentage, he’s still one of the best first basemen in professional baseball. “Maybe that 35+ is the new 25+,” shouts the wife of our living room commando.

Consider Colorado hurler, Jamie Moyer, at 49. He could be the oldest pitcher still rostered for professional baseball, and he may be so next year, too; his mediocre 2012 start is not a product of age, statically he’s ahead of several younger MLB pitchers when included are his spring training numbers, (inserted by editor after the fact, i.e., it happened::) knowing his next start could see him making history, becoming the oldest pitcher in professional baseball to win a ballgame. Also consider that an 82 year-old man climbed Mount Everest in recent years, though some analysts suspect that he had to be helped in the final stretch by more than one Sherpa.

A man in his mid-90’s completed a marathon last year. Check out tennis clubs and you’ll find players in their 60’s and 70’s rated 5.0 and 6.0, and Coloradans are familiar with men and women over 70 who ski the black diamond slopes at Aspen, Steamboat Springs, Vail and Winter Park. Only a few weeks ago, newspapers reported that several Masters Track & Field records were surpassed by a New York-based woman in her 60’s. For several years, Colorado has had a league for baseball players 60 years old and over, players who can hit and field as well as athletes half their age, although the league’s pitchers haven’t been hurling faster than around 55 mph.

In the NBA, there are players in their mid-thirties, still crack shooters, Kobe Bryant among them. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar played basketball into his 40’s. Jerry Rice, one of the best NFL receivers ever, was afield in his 40’s, and golfer Jack Nicklaus won the Masters when 46. Tennis player, Martina Navratilova, won mixed doubles at Wimbledon when past 45. Heavyweight George Foreman’s best work in the ring occurred after he turned 40. Cancer kicked butt for awhile against Denver Nuggets head coach, George Karl, and he just turned 60 as possibly the more active and more intellectually alert among NBA leaders, several much younger than Karl.

Baseball’s Satchel Paige, one of the finest pitchers of all time, played into his 50’s, and MLB pitcher Nolan Ryan didn’t retire from active play until in his mid-40’s. Nascar driver Richard Petty’s final victory occurred during his 40’s.

Todd Helton, old?  Keep watching, he’s begun a better year than his last several.

NBA:  The Denver Nuggets are still playoff contenders, thanks to a big win against the Houston Rockets on Monday, April 16. The Nuggets are holding at second place in the NBA’s Western Conference-Northwest Division, at 34-27, two up on Utah, and they’re in sixth place in the conference itself, tied with last year’s NBA championship team, the Dallas Mavericks. Had the opposite of Monday night occurred and the Rockets beat the Nuggets, it could have been all over for Denver as a team headed into the post-season, in that there are no easy nights ahead. Of the five games that the Nuggets have left to play, three will be against teams holding better 2011/12 records than Denver has---tomorrow vs. the L.A. Clippers (37-23), then the Orlando Magic (36-25) on April 22, and the Oklahoma City Thunder (44-16), April 25.

Far ahead of the pack in the Western Conference, in addition to leading team, the Thunder, are the San Antonio Spurs (42-16) and the L.A./ Lakers (39-22). Leading the Eastern Conference are the Chicago Bulls (46-15), the Miami Heat (43-17) and the Boston Celtics (36-25). The teams way low in the NBA this year are within the Eastern Conference, Michael Jordan’s Charlotte Bobcats, with an abysmal 7-53 record, followed by the Washington Wizards (15-46). Weakest within the Western Conference are the New Orleans Hornets (19-42).

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