Saturday, May 9, 2015

The Chicago Bulls Can't Wait Too Long to Fix Their Joakim Noah Problem



CLEVELAND It is the ultimate tribute to Joakim Noahand everything he represents that he has earned so much appreciation, so many accolades, even with all his awkwardness. There are plenty of good glue guys in the NBA, with Draymond Green and, to a lesser extent,DeMarre Carroll the latest to grab attention. But it's rather remarkable when someone with a gangly gait and a broken shot can go beyond capturing a blue-collar city's heart and a Defensive Player of the Year award to win over hard-edged sportswriters enough to finish fourth in MVP voting.

Yes, fourth.

That's where Noah placed for his relentless drive during the 2013-14 season, when he, at times single-handedly, willed the battered Bulls to 48 wins.

He finished behind only Kevin Durant, LeBron James and Blake Griffin in the voting and comfortably ahead of James Harden, Stephen Curry and Chris Paul, who followed their fifth-, sixth- and seventh-place finishes in 2014 by placing second, first and sixth, respectively, this season.

This season, Noah wasn't anywhere near their company. Not only did he not receive a vote for MVP, but he received none for Defensive Player of the Year either. The odds are also against him receiving any All-NBA votes this season after he finished on the first team with 101 of 125 first-place votes last season. And he may get shut out of all three All-Defensive teams after being named the first-team center last year.

In this regular season, he was just a plus-1.9 per 100 possessions, behind six other Bulls regulars and little-used backup Nazr Mohammed, whereas last season, he was a plus-4.3 per 100 possessions, best among Bulls regulars.

He's a plus-4.8 per 100 possessionsin this brief postseason, but that still stands as sixth among regulars, well behind all four other startersas well as Nikola Mirotic, who is a plus-11.6 per 100 possessions in much more limited playing time. Only Taj Gibson's ongoing struggles (minus-10.5 per 100 possessions with the second unit) have cushioned Noah's plunge in the power rotation.

Eyesight supports statistics. In fact, if anything, Noah has looked more like a negative than the numbers suggest. That's the real story, as many get sidetracked by the master instigator's usual array of sideshows, whether it's his silly spat with Ohio State quarterback Cardale Jonesor his postgame altercationwith a fan as he headed through the tunnel, whichdepending on your anglemay or may not have included spittle from the fan and a walkaway slap from Noah.

This is a basketball problem.

And it's a tricky one for Noah's truest believer, Tom Thibodeau, as the Bulls attempt to take control of a series now tied at 1-1 as they head back to the United Center for Game 3 Friday night.

Simply, if Noah doesn't show something soon, Thibodeau needs to reduce his minutes and try someone else, maybe the more offensively able Mirotic, who finished second in Rookie of the Year voting but has been granted only nine minutes in the first two games.

That sounds crazy to say considering all Noah has meant in recent years to the franchise, to the city, to the coach trying to keep everyone together. But Noah is regularly the fifth-best Bull on the court.

He's made a few pinpoint passes and does have eight assists in 59 minutes. He has also collected 16 boards, seven of which have been contested, according to SportVU, in 25 rebound chances. But that's been outweighed by the fact that he strangles the Bulls' sets with his tentative play, eschewing some open looks on those rare occasions when he actually turned to glance at the basket.

While he's not counted upon to consistently score double digits, four points over two games won't cut it for any starting center, no matter how strong the supporting cast. He wasn't an especially frequent or proficient shooter from outside 10 feet in the regular season, making 29 of his 87 attempts in 67 games (two were half-court heaves). In eight playoff games, however, he's been even more timid, with justthree attempts outside 10 feet, all missed, one blocked.Those deficiencies on offense were especially debilitating in Game 2, even as he made half of his four field-goal attempts. (He made a tip, missed a tip, made a bank shot and missed a layup.)

He has become too easy to entirely ignore, forcing the Bulls to play four-on-five. Cleveland, which had inexplicably wasted LeBron James against him in Game 1, recognized there was little need to monitor him in Wednesday's rematch, especially after Timofey Mozgov drew the initial assignment, charged largely with keeping Noah off the offensive glass. As Game 2 continued, and even as the Cavaliers got progressively smaller, Noah's defender simply left him to help derail Derrick Rose in the lane or to bust up Rose's attempt to pick-and-pop with PauGasol.

So what's the issue?

Why the decline?

Noah seems to be battling some sort of injury every season, and in this one, his knees and ankles have given him persistent trouble. He is known for playing through pain, and Thibodeau and Rose have both alluded to some issues there. Tuesday, Rose said Noah was "giving us everything he has."

But what about Noah's mental state?

He simply doesn't look like himself, and he certainly doesn't seem sure of himself.

That's been especially evident at the free-throw line, where he has never been elite but has never been awful either. Even after a career-low 60.3 percent this season, his career number is still a respectable 71.6, not all that far from league average.

After missing both free-throw attempts Wednesday, he's now 1-of-14 from the line in the playoffs, making Dwight Howard and DeAndre Jordan look like Rick Barry and Calvin Murphy. Cavaliers coach David Blatt, for all his aversion to the so-called Hack-a-Shaqhe says it's deemed an "unsportmanslike" play in Europedid deploy it earlier this season against the Clippers and may be tempted to experiment again. And even if he doesn't, it does appear that Noah is falling prey to a common conundrum for poor free-throw shooters: He's avoiding putting himself in a position to get fouled.

Noah insisted that his confidence is "good." "I'm good," he said. "Overall, I just think that I could have played better [Wednesday] night. Just got to keep working and get ready for the next one."

What does Rose think?

"It's not even confidence," Rose said. "It's just being in the right spot. Sometimes, he's out of place and so far away from the basket, where he can't get there in time. We have to make sure he's in the right spot for our offense."

Rose added that the Bulls need "to put him in the right position so he can be successful and our team and our offense can run a little bit better."

They've got to pick him up like he picked them up in previous years.

Thibodeau, when asked if Noah appears to be doubting himself, especially on offense, deflected some but didn't dispute it, saying,"Players go through different things. There's ups and downs in a game. If he's not going well offensively, there's so many other things he does that do help us. That's what I want him to lock into. Find another way to help. Make great effort on defense. Don't allow the offense to impact your energy or your concentration on defense."

Opponents are shooting 43.9 percent with Noah defending this postseason, including 50.8 percent on two-pointers and 58.3 percent from inside 10 feet. That comes after they shot41.4 percentwith him defending during the season. Cleveland is at 50 percentoverallthrough the first two games and 19-of-27 (70.4 percent) inside 10 feet.

If that continues, there goes the best justification for Noah's preponderance of the playing time: that he's a superior defender to Mirotic and Gasol.

Thibodeau made it clear that his call for concentration, even amid offensive adversity, "goes for the entire team. Not just Jo. So if it's not going your way, those are the things you can control." The coach can control something too: which guys go in the game and to the bench. There can't be much more waiting for Noah to get it going.

EthanSkolnickcovers the NBA for Bleacher Report and is a co-host ofNBA Sunday Tip, 9-11 a.m. ET onSiriusXMBleacher Report Radio. Follow him on Twitter,@EthanJSkolnick.

Source: http://bleacherreport.com/articles/2456994-the-chicago-bulls-cant-wait-too-long-to-fix-their-joakim-noah-problem



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Friday, May 8, 2015

Shaq falls over, loses shoe, breaks the TNT set



This is absolutely incredible in every d**n way possible.

Shaquille O'Neal, the "Big Shaqtus" and every other nickname his huge, 7'3 frame holds went crashing down on the TNT set during halftime of the Rockets vs. Clippers.

Shaq hit the floor harder than that old plate in your grandma's cabinet you've been wanting to smash forever. Shaq fell faster than everything in "Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs." The first and the sequel.

Imagine the ground. That's a small earthquake inside the studio. I don't even know how the rest of the analysts didn't rock out of their chairs from a chain reaction from a literal giant falling to the ground ungracefully. I don't know what's worse, the graceful fall from your drunk uncle at a Christmas party crashing on your couch or the large seismic shock that comes from Shaq cracking a few tiles.

It's not Blackhawk down, it's Shaqhawk down. Man, Sonny Liston didn't hit the mat faster than Shaq. Jerome Boateng didn't get crossed up for this.This is bad. Everyone must remember the day that Shaq broke the Earth. The TNT set will never be the same. This is worse than whenKenny pushed him into a Christmas tree.

Forget Shaq'tin a Fool. He just re-enactedSHAQTIN A FALL. Down goes Frazier? Nah. Down goes the Big Diesel.

Let's just be glad he didn't suffer a compound Shaqture.

And, of course, it's Ernie's fault.

It's going down. We yellin' Timber.

Since you asked, look no further than below Shaq. SB Nation will provide you with the memes so you can provide us with the $$$$.

Here's Shaq just chillin with Simba:

Oh, did Mayweather win another fight?

Playing some Twister Shaq?

You thought we were kidding about Ali vs. Liston vs. Shaq?

Shaqtus was the name of a Gladiator once:

Hey Shaq, were you playing Grand Theft Auto before you fell?

HOW DID THAT SHARK GET IN THE STUDIO?!?!??!

It's okay Shaq, Austin Rivers can join you on the floor.

Well Shaq. It seems you've fallen and you can't get up. Call Life Alert bro.

Source: http://www.sbnation.com/lookit/2015/5/6/8563793/shaq-falls-over-loses-shoe-breaks-the-tnt-set



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Tom Brokaw on His 'Lucky Life Interrupted'



NBC's Tom Brokaw penned a new memoir on his journey through blood cancer, but he insists: "This isn't poor Tommy has cancer."

"There are lots of dimensions to being a cancer patient," Brokaw, author of "A Lucky Life Interrupted" said in a PRESS Pass interview with Chuck Todd. "The overwhelming one is that it takes over your life."

Brokaw is known for his privacy - but he decided to tell his story because he wants others to know about how to navigate America's complex health care system. He says his financial situation, connections and family support might have given him a leg up.

"I was on the board of the Mayo Clinic. I was diagnosed there and I could pick up the phone and get a hold of whoever I wanted to," said Brokaw, 75." What I learned is that you really have to get proactive and manage your case."

Despite a tough journey with multiple myeloma, which is treatable but not curable, Brokaw insists he's an eternal optimist.

"You remember that great old Ronald Reagan line about a child comes down in the morning and beneath the Christmas tree, there's just this enormous pile of horse dung. And he starts thinking, 'there must be a pony in here somewhere.' That's kind of my attitude about life."

A Dateline special on Brokaw's experience with cancer airs Thursday on NBC.

--Justin Peligri

First published May 7 2015, 2:04 PM

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/meet-the-press/tom-brokaw-his-lucky-life-interrupted-n355596



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Adam Levine -- Sugar Bombed at Jimmy Kimmel ... Suspect Apprehended



Sugar Bombed at Kimmel's Studio ... Suspect Arrested

5/6/2015 8:35 PM PDT BY TMZ STAFF

Exclusive Details

Nice day for a white welcome --Adam Levinejust got blasted with powdered sugar on his way into Jimmy Kimmel's Hollywood studio.

The Maroon 5 frontman was actually taking time to greet fans when the sugar bomber attacked -- seemingly landing a head shot on Adam with some sweet sweet powder ... and leaving one side of his face completely white. He did NOT look happy. (Check out this new angle of the attack)

Unclear if the attacker was protesting on behalf of any particular group -- or just some idiot prankster -- but he was quickly detained by security until police arrived and arrested him for battery. Adam continued into the studio for his scheduled appearance.

No word on what he and the band will play, but our best guess -- "Sugar."

Source: http://www.tmz.com/2015/05/06/adam-levine-powdered-sugar-flour-bombed-jimmy-kimmel/



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Cleveland Cavaliers and Anheuser-Busch anger viewers with ads



Beer maker Anheuser-Busch and basketball team Cleveland Cavaliers have found themselves sharply criticized for what many are calling tone-deaf advertising alluding to sexual assault and domestic violence.

The Cavaliers showed a promotional video on Wednesday during a game against the Chicago Bulls depicting a man throwing his girlfriend to the ground once it's revealed she is a Bulls Fan.

When its playoff basketball time, you have to be all in," avoice-over says. "So dont make the same mistake she made.

That came a week after Anheuser-Busch sparked a social media storm for a controversial label on Bud Light bottles calling it "the perfect beer for removing 'No' from your vocabulary for the night." A tweet on St. Patrick's Day also suggested that customers can "pinch people who aren't #UpForWhatever."

People rushed online to decry both ads, with many calling them tasteless and offensive.

"Hey Bud Light, Does #UpForWhatever Include Date Rape?" Chrystal Rose wrote on Twitter.

"Cleveland Cavaliers think sports fandom is justification for domestic violence," tweeted Navin Dore.

Advertising experts say the gaffes are especiallycringe-worthy given the recent nationaldialogue over campus rape in America and a rash of domestic violence cases in pro sports that have made front-page news.

"Organizations are human and sometimes make mistakes," said Miro Copic, a marketing professor at San Diego State University. "Maybe it was a last-minute ad from someone in the marketing department who thought it was humorous without thinking through the repercussions."

Social media and a 24/7news cycle mean marketing departments are often given more freedom than in decades past to run with an idea, Copic said. But that can mean more mistakes. And sometimes, he said, advertisers know a theme could be judged distasteful but go with it anyways.

"Some marketers might say, 'If this is a fine line as opposed to something flagrant, better to put it up, get a reaction, and be contrite later," Copic said. "The goal is to be moreprovocative these days."

Follow Shan Li on Twitter @ByShanLi

Copyright 2015, Los Angeles Times

Source: http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-cleveland-cavaliers-anheuser-busch-ads-20150507-story.html



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Thursday, May 7, 2015

Ryan Gosling eats cereal in tribute to Vine creator Ryan McHenry � video



Since 2013 the Scottish film-maker Ryan McHenry has built a huge viral audience for his Vine seriesRyan Gosling Won't Eat His Cereal, in which the star appears to refuse to eat his cereal. Gosling had no involvement with the series, but when it was announced this week that McHenry had died from osteosarcoma, the actor paid tribute with a Vine of his own

ARyan McHenry memorial fund has been opened to raise money for cancer research

Vines:Ryan McHenry andRyan Gosling

Source: http://www.theguardian.com/film/video/2015/may/05/ryan-gosling-cereal-mchenry-vine-video



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Golden State Warriors Face First Wake-Up Call of Season, NBA Playoffs



The Golden State Warriors led a charmed life all season, filled with splashy threes, jaw-dropping highlights and a boatload of wins.

But there's nothing sweet about spending a second-round series in the mud, where the battle-testedand in Mike Conley's case, battle-scarredMemphis Grizzlies simultaneously do their best work and bring out their opponents' worst.

Controlled aggression will be Golden State's key to turn these slugfests back in its favor. During Tuesday's 97-90 loss, the Dubs were too eager for their own good and lacked the control that powered them to 42 victories over their previous 44 games inside the raucous Oracle Arena.

"I thought we lost our poise tonight," Warriors coach Steve Kerr said afterward, via ESPN.com's Ethan Sherwood Strauss. "... We were too quick with our intention to score. Instead of just moving the ball and setting good screens, everyone was trying to do everything frantically on their own."

The Warriors tried forcing the issue. They made any and every attempt to avoid as many half-court encounters with the Grizzlies as possible.

Strange as this sounds given the outcome, a similar approach is Golden State's best bet to survive a series so many pundits expected it to dominate. But the Dubs need to dial things back a few notches from the ludicrous speeds that saw them cough up 20 turnovers and shoot just 41.9 percent from the field and 23.1 percent from distance.

The Splash Brothers, Stephen Curry and Klay Thompson, stayed unseasonably dry. Curry, who collected his NBA MVP award prior to the contest, missed nine of his 11 three-point attempts and finished with 19 points on 19 shots. Thompson turned his 15 shots into only 13 points while posting five turnovers against just two assists.

"For the first time, a team was challenging everything. Memphis completely flipped the formula for the Warriors," wrote CBS Sports' Matt Moore. "... The Warriors were sloppy, but they were also caught off guard by how physical this game was, how much everything was a struggle, how it wasn't easy."

The Grizzlies gave nothing to the Warriors.

Conley, barely one week removed from having surgery on multiple facial fractures, dazzled on both ends of the floor. He piled up 22 points on efficient 8-of-12 shooting while committing just a single turnover in his 27 minutes. At the opposite end, his pressure on Curry allowed Tony Allen (aka "First-Team All-Defense") to focus on harassing Thompson and plugging the Dubs' passing lanes.

As a result, Golden State could never flip the ignition on its high-powered offense.

Part of that was sloppiness and an uncharacteristic selfishness. But a lot of it had to do with Memphis' swarming, suffocating defense. The Grizzlies limited the Warriors to 24 uncontested shots after surrendering 39 during Sunday's series opener.

Golden State has no reason to panic. Curry and Thompson may not shoot 3-of-17 from deep again, even if they try to miss. The defense struggled to contain Conley, but it kept Zach Randolph in check (20 points, 7-of-16 shooting) and turned Courtney Lee, Jeff Green, Vince Carter and Beno Udrih into volume contributors (29 combined points on 35 shots).

The Warriors need the proper perspective to process their first home loss since Jan. 27. And they sound like they've already found it.

"You can kind of be real with yourself and know that you won't go 16-0 in the playoffs," Curry said, via KNBR's Dieter Kurtenbach. "But we'll be able to bounce back. I think the next three days will be huge to kind of rejuvenate ourselves and understand what we need to do to get a win in Memphis."

The challenge now facing Golden State is unlike any it has felt all season: The Warriors have to figure out how to respond to adversity after essentially avoiding it for the past six-plus months.

They had a historically dominant regular seasontied for the sixth-most wins (67) and eighth-best point differential of all time (plus-10.1)and dispatched the not-quite-ready New Orleans Pelicans in a swift four-game sweep to start the playoffs. Golden State never had a losing streak last longer than two games and only suffered consecutive defeats four times during its 82-game trek to the top.

The Warriors had the MVP and Executive of the Year (general manager Bob Myers). They should be well represented on both the All-NBA and All-Defensive teams when those selections are made.

But none of that will help stop a Grizzlies squad that isn't scared of this stage or this offense. The Warriors have to hope their first true test of the 2014-15 campaign will serve as their ultimate wake-up call.

"This was a beatdown the likes of which the Warriors can barely remember," CSN Bay Area's Ray Ratto wrote after Tuesday's loss. "... Now the Warriors are forced to focus on the matter at hand, with the day-to-day battle of dealing with the league's best attitude-adjusters."

Memphis is a worthy opponent, but Golden State's biggest championship threat remains itself.

The Warriors need only to live up to their own standards. The ball movement can't stagnate the way it did in Game 2. Their focus and execution must improve. They have to realize patience is more than a virtue; it's a necessity when attempting to break down a defense this disciplined.

The Dubs can't feed the Grizzlies' transition game with turnovers and long rebounds off ill-advised shots. Memphis isn't a run-and-gun team by any stretch but will get out in the open floor when the opportunity arises.

Golden State can't concede those easy baskets. And it can't push the pace for the simple sake of playing fast. It's one thing to put a defense on its heels, quite another to force attacks into areas that aren't actually open, a problem that hurt the Dubs early and often in Game 2.

The Grizzlies aren't built to mount massive comebacks, so starting out on the right foot is paramount to the Warriors' success.

But there's no need for major adjustments.

Draymond Green has to keep himself out of foul trouble. The Dubs have to gang-rebound when Kerr deploys his explosive small-ball unit. Thompson must rediscover the consistency that largely eluded him during the second half of the season. The supporting castnamely Harrison Barnes, Andre Iguodala, Leandro Barbosa and Shaun Livingstonhas to punish the Memphis defense for not paying attention to it.

Frankly, this team needs to play its game. And it must maintain that lofty level for each minute, each quarter, each game and each round that still sits in front of it.

"As the margin for error grows thinner by the game, the Warriors need to show that they can maintain 48 minutes of consistently excellent execution," wrote Adam Lauridsen of the San Jose Mercury News. "It's been a long time since we've seen a game when they've managed that."

Despite losing home-court advantage, the Warriors still have the upper hand in this series.

Their offensive arsenal is deeper and more versatile than the Grizzlies'. Golden State's defense has the bodies to stay in front of Memphis' attacking guards and bang with the big bruisers underneath. The Warriors have the advantages in both star power and depth.

How will this series end?

Tuesday's loss didn't change any of that. The Warriors couldn't have played much worse, yet they still could have stolen a victory had they knocked in a couple more long b***s or curtailed a few of those giveaways.

But the game did prove Memphis is something far greater than a doormat to the Western Conference Finals.

The Warriors are in for a dogfight. Their playoffs have officially started.

The charmed life is over. This is the reality of playoff basketball, and Golden State needs to embrace the first real challenge it's faced in more than a year.

Unless otherwise noted, statistics used courtesy of Basketball-Reference.com and NBA.com.

Source: http://bleacherreport.com/articles/2455519-golden-state-warriors-face-first-wake-up-call-of-the-season-nba-playoffs



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