Skip to main content

It’s the Lakers

Thanks to their 89-70 victory over the Houston Rockets today, the Los Angeles Lakers will face the Denver Nuggets in this year’s Western Conference Finals. If you didn’t see the game, know that it was truly an easy win; the Lakers won by 19 despite Houston closing the game on a 12-0 run.

The schedule is now set for the next series as well. Game One is Tuesday night at 7 Mountain (ESPN), and the Nuggets and Lakers will play every other day until the series is over. Actually, the schedule’s been set for a few days, a fact I wish I’d known when I was looking for but not getting any tickets on Friday. (Did any of you have any luck on that front?)

Does today’s first Game Seven give anyone pause heading into the series? I say it’s about time the Lakers step up, because they haven’t done much to this point. But then, all we’ve done is beat a bunch of quitters, and then a one-Germensional team. I am excited to see the games, but would feel a lot better with the warm blanket of homecourt advantage nearby. Does anyone think we have to win the series in six?

One thing I did notice in today’s game that Kobe wasn’t the first guy off the bench congratulating his teammates, even though he totally was the night before when I watched Kobe Doin’ Work. Huh. That’s weird. Could the Lakers’ star be hiding some kind of injury? I mean, gosh, I can’t think of any reason for him to act differently during the movie like that…

Comments

Anonymous said…
Seriously are there people out there who actually like Kobe? Not in this state.

I think we'd better suprize them in Game one with some real competition, agression, and use our extra "rest" to beat them down. Then I think we can take them in 6.

I will enjoy this series thanks to my love hate relationship with these teams. Love the Nuggs, Hate the Lakes. Wish I could have been there give Kobe the ol "BOO" from the stands.

LT
Anonymous said…
One more thing. I hope we keep this a short series, Pau is just not a beautiful man, the less I have to see this guy the better.
Mike said…
I agree, how we come out in Game One is key. I don't doubt we'll start well, but I'm sure Phil knows how important it is to us to grab the homecourt edge in the series. Just two more days!
blaine said…
It would have been nice to have homecourt against the depleted Houston Rockets, but I'm kind of glad the Lakers won. It will be so much more satisfying if the Nuggets beat the Lakers. I don't think we necessarily have to win the first game, but we do need to compete. I think we need to win one of two and neutralize the Lakers' homecourt advantage.

Do you think Karl will put K-Mart on Kobe like last year, or will he try Jones on him?
Mike said…
Well, yeah, we don't need to win Game One necessarily, but I hope we at least have a real lead at some point. I mean the Lakers annihilated us last year. We were a different team, yes, but I still think a good start is huge.

I'm interested to see how we guard Kobe...I'm afraid he'll take Dahntay to the post early and often. I want to see if Carmelo will pick him up at times, too.
John said…
I agree that Game 1 is critical - we need to take advantage of our extra rest and set a physical tone early.

As for the series, I think the play of our big men will be crucial because we will need to dictate a slower pace and avoid a shootout, and because Pau Gasol, Lamar Odom, and Andrew Bynum are softer than tissue paper when pushed around.
Mike said…
I think our bigs are important because Gasol had such a huge series against us last year (esp. in Game One) but I think we'd do fine in an up-tempo game, even on the road. The Lakers traditionally have a bunch of guys who can hit the three-ball but I'm not impressed with their shooters this season.
John said…
You are right about their shooters being less impressive this year, but they still have some guys who can score in a hurry. Plus, I love how we obviously intimidated the Mavs and their cross-eyed owner into submission, and wouldn't mind a repeat with the Lakers.

Popular posts from this blog

And now that it’s gone, it’s like it wasn’t there at all

I never thought this blog would last longer than Jay Cutler's career with the Denver Broncos. He was a talented young prospect so good that the Broncos, a powerhouse organization only one game removed from the Super Bowl the season before, traded up to get him—or, in other words, a player whose upside was so huge, the team sacrificed its present to get his future. And now? He's gone . How did it come to this? * * * Often I'll play devil's advocate with a move like this; you know, I'll try and explain how it makes sense from the other side of the table. Today, during the most disastrous Broncos offseason in memory—and the draft hasn't even happened yet, so settle in—I just don't have it in me. I don't think move is really defensible from a football standpoint. But what the heck: as the article above says, the Broncos are sending Cutler and a fifth-round draft pick this month to the Chicago Bears for quarterback Kyle Orton, Chicago's first-rounder in t...

Who cares?

So we finally got done with the NBA playoffs after nearly two months of stretched-out play, and tomorrow's the draft. I really couldn't care less. I'm so burned out on the sport. Sadly, there's nothing else going on worth mentioning, so we might as well get into it. (Yes, baseball, Pugs, but I haven't really started following that this year yet, sorry.) Would the NFL hold its draft five days after the Super Bowl? Of course not, and not just because the league doesn't want to distract from the highlight of its annual calendar, the Pro Bowl. Of course, the NBA's situation is a little different. College play ended two and a half months ago, and the teams want to get draftees ready for the all-important summer league play (because the kind of guys that need the summer league always end up players). Not that when college basketball is over is relevant, anyway-the league is overrun by a bunch of high school players "just months removed from their prom" (...

Did CU ever win the Pac-12?

In 2010, I bet a college buddy of mine (who longtime readers may remember as the only other contributor to Hole Punch Sports) that CU’s football team would not win the Pac-12 in the next 15 years. Guess what? It’s time for me to gloat, because I was right. Why we were doomed Back in the day, a lot of people made the argument that CU should join the Pac-12 because we’d get so much more TV money there. Of course, given college football is the answer to the question, “what if you had a sport where multiple teams were like the Yankees, and you created a whole universe of haves and have-nots?”, then yeah, you want to be aligned with some of the haves. But the question in my mind wasn’t, “will CU be better off with more money?” That’s an obvious yes. The question I asked was, will CU be any more competitive in their own conference if they’re competing against teams who are also getting more money? I couldn’t see why they would be. The mathematical angle Legend has it that Cowboys runn...