Monday, May 30, 2016

From the June 13, 2016, issue of NR


Gary Johnson Acceptance Speech After Winning Libertarian Nomination

Lansing, Mich. Gary Johnson likes to talk about the day Ted Cruz quit the Republican presidential race. My Google hits went up 5,000 percent, says the former GOP governor of New Mexico, now a Libertarian candidate for president. Hes speaking to nearly a hundred supporters in a packed room on the second floor of the Radisson Hotel, at a meet-and-greet on the evening of May 13. An activist from the Libertarian partys Michigan wing passes out forms, seeking membership dues of $25 apiece. A cash bar in the corner sells beer and wine, apparently because theres no such thing as a free drink.

This is one of the Johnson campaigns larger events, according to aides. Just down the hall, roughly the same number of people attend a gathering of MITES, the unfortunate acronym of the Michigan Industrial and Technology Education Society. Wearing a pink shirt, blue blazer, and black Nikes, Johnson begins to make his case: Amazing things are happening!

Starting with a mite-sized base makes it easy for Google hits to inflate like a balloon. Yet an expansion of 5,000 percent is impressive almost no matter what, and Johnson has jumped at the chance to court Republicans who feel disoriented by the rise of Donald Trump. Look, I cant support Trump. You cant either, he says in a one-minute video released on the day of Indianas primary, when the New York populist became the presumptive GOP nominee. We can fight for small government and conservative values. Just Google Gary Johnson and find out.

At a time when many conservatives harbor deep doubts about the man who will head the Republican ticket, Johnson enjoys an unprecedented opportunity to attract the alienated and to make the Libertarians relevant at the level of presidential politics for the first time since the founding of their party in 1971. On May 18, a Fox News poll did something that almost no other major poll has done this year. It asked registered voters to name their presidential preferences and it included Johnson as an option. He drew 10 percent against Trumps 42 percent and Democrat Hillary Clintons 39 percent. In March, a Monmouth University poll reported a similar result: 11 percent for Johnson, including 13 percent of self-identified Republicans and 4 percent of Democrats. These numbers wont carry Johnson to the White House. Yet theyre a respectable showing for a guy who flies around the country in coach, carries his own luggage, and shakes hands with just about everybody who attends his events.

Even if his polling fails to improve, Johnson could shape the presidential race in November. Many Republicans insist that Ross Perot cost President George H. W. Bush his reelection in 1992, and lots of Democrats complain that but for Ralph Naders name on Florida ballots, Al Gore would have beaten Bushs son in 2000. For his part, Johnson brushes off questions about his potential role as a spoiler: I wouldnt be doing this now if I didnt think we had an opportunity to win.

The 63-year-old Johnson says that he became a libertarian as a high-school student in Albuquerque, when he read a short tract whose title and author he does not remember. In 1972, he registered as a Democrat and voted for George McGovern because of the war, he says. He didnt stay in the party for long. As soon as I started making money, I registered as a Republican. This was around 1975, when he graduated from the University of New Mexico and began a door-to-door handyman business that grew into a construction company with revenues in the tens of millions of dollars. He continued to regard himself as a libertarian in spirit and even thought about running on the Libertarian line in 1994, when he set his sights on the governorship of New Mexico. Then he went to the partys meeting in Bernalillo County, the states largest. It took about 45 seconds for me to come to grips with the fact that I would never get elected as a Libertarian, he says. It wasnt an organization and it wasnt my crowd. So he entered the Republican race, won a close primary as a self-funder, and went on to beat an incumbent Democrat by ten points.

Vetoes made him famous. Johnson issued 739 of them, according to Ballotpedia, and that doesnt count line-item vetoes of spending measures. I turned them into an art form, he says now. He didnt win every battle, as the Democrat-dominated legislature sometimes overrode him. He also never came close to establishing the statewide school-voucher program he envisioned and repeatedly proposed. Yet he slowed the growth of government, presided over a series of tax cuts, and finished his eight years in office with fewer employees on the state payroll than when he started.

RELATED: Is the Libertarian Partys Gary Johnson a Plausible Alternative to Trump and Clinton?

National notoriety struck during his second term, when Johnson became probably the highest-ranking elected official in the United States ever to back drug legalization. He called it his outrageous hypothesis, and he knew it was politically provocative. The denunciations poured in. Some of the loudest came from Susana Martinez, then a district attorney and now the GOP governor of New Mexico. I have effectively pulled the pin on my political career, Johnson confessed at the time, in an interview with Reason.

Yet his continued advocacy of drug legalization is a major source of what popularity he still enjoys. Ive always maintained that legal marijuana will lead to less substance abuse, starting with alcohol, he says. Nobody has ever documented a death due to a marijuana overdose. Johnson says that he stopped using marijuana long before he become governor, but he adds that he started again about a decade ago, for the medicinal purpose of pain relief after a paragliding accident. When his injuries healed, he quit for a second time, but he took up the practice once more after joining Cannabis Sativa, a Nevada company that sells legal marijuana products. As CEO, I felt I had an obligation, he says.

Johnson enjoys an unprecedented opportunity to attract the alienated and to make the Libertarians relevant at the level of presidential politics for the first time since the founding of their party in 1971.

Johnson also became a figure of abiding curiosity. From the right angle, he looks like Harrison Ford, wrote GQ, which doesnt normally print admiring profiles of former Republican governors let alone run pictures of them shirtless, as it did with Johnson in 2011. It turns out that theres more to the man than vetoes and pot. Hes also a devotee of extreme fitness who follows a gluten-free diet. As governor, Johnson marked an anniversary of the Bataan Death March by running 25 miles through the desert while wearing combat boots and a backpack, and he also participated in Hawaiis invitation-only Ironman Triathlon Championship not just once, but three times. After leaving office, he scaled Mount Everest, where his toes suffered permanent damage from frostbite. He has topped the tallest peak on each continent, completing the Seven Summits two years ago with Mount Vinson in Antarctica. The day before his visit to Lansing, he embarked on one of his typical jaunts: a 74-mile bike ride in New Mexico. If he isnt sitting in the Oval Office in the summer of 2017, he has big plans: Ill ride the Divide, he says, referring to a mountain-bike race of more than 2,700 miles along the Continental Divide, from Canada to the U.S. border with Mexico.

In 2011, Johnson announced his candidacy for president as a Republican. At a September debate, he had one of the falls best quips: My next-door neighbors two dogs have created more shovel-ready jobs than this current administration, in a line he possibly borrowed from Rush Limbaugh. This was Johnsons first shining moment, but also his last: He wasnt invited to another debate. Its a rigged game, he says. To debate, we had to poll at a certain level, but pollsters didnt include me in their surveys.

Even before this, he had started to question his future in the party. As he watched a Fox News debate that had excluded him, Bret Baier asked the eight candidates present to raise their hands if they would walk away from a federal budget deal that included $10 in spending cuts for every $1 in tax increases. From Mitt Romney on down, all eight raised their hands. I couldnt believe it, says Johnson. If you think spending is the biggest problem facing the country, you accept that deal. I didnt raise taxes a penny in New Mexico, but this was just common sense.

RELATED: Never Gary Johnson: Hes Not Conservative and Not Even All That Libertarian

So Johnson quit the GOP and ran for president as a Libertarian. In the general election, he won almost 1.3 million votes, or nearly 1 percent of the total. For many Libertarians, this was an invigorating result. Never before had so many Americans voted for a member of their party. This year, Libertarian officials believe theyre poised to improve, particularly because their candidate is likely to appear on the ballot in all 50 states for only the second time in American history (Ed Clark was the first in 1980).

On May 18, Johnson announced his running mate: William Weld, who won two elections as governor in Massachusetts in the 1990s, serving as a Republican. This choice means that the Libertarian ticket possibly will have more governing experience than the Democratic and Republican tickets combined. Johnsons immediate goal is to capture his partys nomination at its national convention over Memorial Day weekend in Orlando, Fla., where he comes in as a heavy favorite, having won a series of straw polls.

If Johnson prevails, his next objective will be to earn a spot in the presidential debates in the fall. Theres no way a third party wins the presidency without being in the debates, he says. Youve got to have a microphone in your mouth, broadcasting to tens of millions of people instead of nobody. The Commission on Presidential Debates plans to use its usual selection criteria: Getting on stage will require candidates to meet a threshold of 15 percent in five national polls. Just put me in the polls! says Johnson. They cant say Im not polling well if theyre not polling me at all.

If voters simply pay attention, says Johnson, h**l do well: The majority of people are libertarian and just dont know it. Johnson describes himself as fiscally conservative and socially tolerant. He wants to balance the federal budget through a mix of pro-growth policies, spending discipline (including military cuts), and federalism. He supports the Fair Tax i.e., replacing federal taxes with a single national consumption tax but says he would settle for a flat tax. To preserve Social Security, he would raise the retirement age, introduce a means test, and allow personal investments. Free markets and private innovation will continue to solve problems: The future is Uber everything, he says. Not just for rides, but for doctors, lawyers, and everything.

Johnson recognizes his unique opportunity among anti-Trump Republicans.

Johnson supports gay marriage and calls himself pro-choice on abortion, but he also believes Roe was wrongly decided and says that abortion should be legal only up to the point of the viability of the fetus, when it can be sustained outside the womb even if by artificial means. (As governor, he favored a parental-consent law as well as a ban on late-term abortions and won the endorsement of the Right to Life Committee of New Mexico when he ran for reelection.) On immigration, he cites his experience as a border-state governor, scoffs at walls and fences, and talks about a generous program of work visas. On judges, he offers the name of a man he says hed nominate to the Supreme Court: Bruce Fein, who is perhaps best described as an iconoclastic former Republican. On foreign policy, he speaks the language of non-intervention. Johnson says he has heard the mash-up term conservatarian, but he doesnt use it and has not read The Conservatarian Manifesto, by National Review writer Charlie Cooke. He urges voters to visit a website: iSideWith.com, which offers a political quiz and tries to match participants with like-minded candidates.

Johnson hopes to attract Republicans turned off by Trump, but he thinks he also shares a bit of Trumps outsider appeal. The pitch that Donald Trump is making to the country is similar to the one I made in New Mexico. Id never been in politics, I was successful in business, and I knew how to make things work, he says. Then he continues: But Ive never said anything as uninformed as wanting to deport 11 million people, raise tariffs to 35 percent, kill the families of terrorists, and force Apple to make its products in the United States.

Johnson recognizes his unique opportunity among anti-Trump Republicans: Cruz would have held this thing together. Yet he also believes he can pick up disaffected Democrats, especially among the millions who have supported Bernie Sanders in the primaries: When Hillary Clinton clinches the nomination, where do all those Bernie voters go? He adds that when he answered the questions posed by iSideWith.com, he found himself aligned with a few of his rivals for the Libertarian nomination. Outside of them, I was closest to Bernie, he says, expressing surprise at the result and hoping it might lead to a new source of support. Holy cow!

Perhaps the anti-Trump and anti-Hillary factions will give Johnson a look, and then a boost. Given this years baffling politics, who can say with certainty that the former governor of New Mexico wont play a part?

Libertarian optimists might find comfort by re-reading Milton Friedman: Only a crisis actual or perceived produces real change, he wrote in a 1982 preface to Capitalism and Freedom. When that crisis occurs, the actions that are taken depend on the ideas that are lying around. That, I believe, is our basic function: to develop alternatives to existing policies, to keep them alive and available until the politically impossible becomes politically inevitable. Perhaps this has been the true purpose of Libertarians all along to lie around until 2016, when they finally could present themselves to the legions of voters who suddenly wondered whether they still had a home in the old-fashioned two-party system.

In the months ahead, Gary Johnson will be waiting for them, just a Google search away.

John J. Miller is National Reviews national correspondent. This article originally appeared in the June 13, 2016, issue of National Review.

*National Review magazine content is typically available only to paid subscribers. Due to the immediacy of this article, it has been made available to you for free. To enjoy the full complement of exceptional National Review magazine content, sign up for a subscription today. A special discounted rate is available for you here.

Source: http://www.nationalreview.com/article/435998/gary-johnson-libertarian-party-presidential-bid

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Monterrey vs. Pachuca EN VIVO ONLINE TV por Fox Sports 2 | Gua de canales


Analisis del MONTERREY vs PACHUCA - Final Vuelta C2016 - Futbol Picante [1/3]
Este domingo se define al campen del Torneo Clausura en la Liga MX en el choque entre Monterrey y Pachuca, el cual se desarrollar en el Estadio BBVA Bancomer a partir de las 8.36 p.m. (hora peruana)

La gran final ser transmitida por Fox Sports 2, que lo llevar para todo el pblico peruano desde su patanlla y tambin a travs de su plataforma de Fox Play.

La narracin del partido est a cargo de Ral Orvaanos, mientras que los comentarios son responsabilidad de Santiago Puente y Andr Marn. En cancha, los reporteros Antonio Valls y Carlos Hernndez tienen la informacin.

Por otro lado, los seguidores en Mxico pueden revisar todos los detalles en Fox Sports, que tambin ofrecer este partidos a otros pases de Amrica Latina. En tanto,en Estados Unidos, los hinchas podrn ver el encuentro por NBC Universo y NBC Deportes Streaming.

Source: http://larepublica.pe/deportes/771894-monterrey-vs-pachuca-siguelo-en-vivo-por-fox-sport-2-guia-tv

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John Eggers: What is Memorial Day?


Emotional Vet Describes What Memorial Day Means To Those Who Served

Memorial Day is the flag.

We wait until Memorial Day to put up our two flags. Kathy watches me while I raise them. I give each a salute, and we sing "My Country Tis of Thee." If our kids are around, they join us. In 60 more years, the U.S. flag will be 300 years old. I won"t be around, but most young people will. I hope our flag will stand for the same thing then as it does todaypeace, honor, respect, duty, safety, but mostly peace.

Memorial Day is the movie "Music Man."

The movie "Music Man" embodies what I believe a Memorial Day should betrombones playing, bands marching, flags waving, people cheering and a little romance. Starring in the movie are Robert Preston and Shirley Jones. I am sure you have seen it. It takes place in Mason City, Iowathe birthplace of Meredith Wilson, the man who wrote the music for the movie.

Each summer the city hosts a music fest where scores of bands march through the streets. There is nothing like a high school marching band playing "Stars and Stripes Forever" to bring shivers up and down your spine. I try to watch a little bit of the movie during the day on Memorial Day.

Memorial Day is a tombstone.

Kathy and I will do a unique thing this Memorial Day. We will go to a cemetery and pick out our burial plots.

Kathy wants to have a bench in front of her tombstone. If she goes before I go, I can see myself sitting on that bench reading some of the many letters and notes she has written me over the years. I hope there is a lilac bush nearby. Love notes and the smell of lilacs are a good combination.

Memorial Day is a parade.

Did you ever march in a Memorial Day parade? I did in my younger days as a Boy Scout.

It was a short parade, probably no more than 15 minutes viewing time. Personally, it was the best of times because it marked the beginning of summer vacation.

School was always out prior to Memorial Day, and kids could now say, "No more pencils, no more books, no more teacher"s dirty looks." Yes, if you have a chance to go to a parade, take your kids to a Memorial Day parade. If they haven"t learned that little verse yet, teach them that too. It"s all part of growing up.

Memorial Day is potato salad.

I"m sorry, but my wife makes the best potato salad in the world. It"s not some overcooked salad you buy in a store with an over supply of mayonnaise mixed in and some soft celery. No, my wife"s is the best. I always maintain that you could tell a good cook by the quality of their potato salad.

Do you want a menu for a good Memorial Day picnic? Here it is: Hot dogs roasted on an open fire, crisp dill pickles, potato salad and rhubarb pie. You can only drink one thing: Ice cold root beer. It seems to me I read some place that the first dinner you get in heaven is what I just described. I can hardly wait to taste G*d"s potato salad.

Memorial Day is a soldier.

His name is Lewis "Chesty" Puller. He is the most decorated Marine in military history. Among his many medals are five Navy Crosses, which is the second-highest military decoration for valor the nation awards, second only to the Medal of Honor.

He is known for his heady quotes like, "Son, when the Marine Corps wants you to have a wife, you will be issued one." (This was Puller"s response to a young Marine who was asking permission to be married.) Also, "All right, they"re on the left, they"re on the right, they"re behind us and in front of us. They can"t get away this time." He passed away in 1971 at the age of 73. Memorial Day is the day we salute our soldiers who are still here today and those who have gone before us.

That"s Memorial Day.

Today"s Riddle

What did one U.S. flag say to the other? Nothing, it just waved! Don"t forget to wave and salute our soldiers as they march by in the Memorial Day parade.

John R. Eggers of Bemidji is a former university professor and area principal. He also is a writer and public speaker.

Source: http://www.bemidjipioneer.com/columns/4042657-john-eggers-what-memorial-day

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What is Memorial Day?


Memorial Day (History for Kids) Educational Videos for Students (Learning Cartoon Network)

Memorial Day is a great and wonderful way to remember our patriotic heroes who sacrificed their lives to help us breathe the air of freedom. This day is observed with families and friends visiting cemeteries and memorials to pay homage to their loved and forgotten ones.

Your silent tents of green

We deck with fragrant flowers;

Yours has the suffering been,

The memory shall be ours.

Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

Memorial Day was first celebrated on May 30, 1868. It was observed by placing flowers on the graves of Union and Confederate soldiers during the first national celebration. Gen. James Garfield made a speech at Arlington National Cemetery, after which around 5,000 participants helped to decorate the graves of the more than 20,000 Union and Confederate soldiers who were buried there.

Three years after the Civil War ended, on May 5, 1868, the head of the Grand Army of the Republic (GAR) established Decoration Day as a time for the nation to decorate the graves of the war dead with flowers. Maj. Gen. John A. Logan declared that Decoration Day should be observed on May 30. This date was chosen because flowers would be in bloom all over the country.

The alternative name of Memorial Day was first used in 1882. It did not become more common until after World War II, and was not declared the official name by Federal law until 1967. On June 28, 1968, the United States Congress passed the Uniform Holidays Bill, which moved three holidays from their traditional dates to a specified Monday in order to create a convenient three-day weekend. The holidays included Washingtons Birthday, now celebrated as Presidents Day; Veterans Day and Memorial Day. The change moved Memorial Day from its traditional May 30 date to the last Monday in May. The law took effect at the federal level in 1971.

Red poppies are a tradition inspired by a poem in 1915. In Flanders Fields, Moina Michael replied with her own poem:

We cherish too, the Poppy red

That grows on fields where valor led,

It seems to signal to the skies

That blood of heroes never dies.

Memorial Day is a day of remembrance of those who have died serving our country. I tear at the sound of Taps played at ceremonies on Memorial Day: We come, not to mourn our dead soldiers, but to praise them. Francis A. Walker.

I will tear up as well. We will be with our son, Scott, at his gravesite in Bigfork, Montana in memory of his service to our country. Have a fun, safe, and memorable Memorial Day weekend!

G*d Bless America and our great United States.

It is the VETERAN, not the preacher, who has given us freedom of religion.

It is the VETERAN, not the reporter, who has given us freedom of the press.

It is the VETERAN, not the poet, who has given us freedom of speech.

It is the VETERAN, not the campus organizer, who has given us freedom to assemble.

It is the VETERAN, not the lawyer, who has given us the right to a fair trial.

It is the VETERAN, not the politician, who has given us the right to vote.

Source: http://www.aim.org/guest-column/what-is-memorial-day-4/

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Photos: Sunday at the Dean and Deluca Invitational

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Dez foot update, would he pull a Megatron and his amazing tolerance for pain


Jordan Spieth holes a stunning birdie putt on No. 16 at DEAN & DELUCA

Jon Machota and Brandon George of The Dallas Morning News are back with an all-new edition of Candidly Cowboys discussing their observations following the first "open to the media" Dallas Cowboys OTA session this offseason.

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Highlights from the episode:

Checking in on Dez"s health

Jon Machota: It"s the first time we got a chance to talk to him in a while. I think what was kind of interesting is that, when you"re around somebody like that all of a sudden you want to ask him about the foot and where he sits with that. And to keep in mind, I don"t think I mentioned this, but he is gonna have an X-ray coming up within the next couple of weeks to kind of determine where he"s at ... if he can be cleared for the next stage. It all hinges on what that X-ray says. If there was no X-ray and there were no doctors, Dez Bryant would be out there. He made that very clear.

Brandon George: If I understand it, it"s not like a concern about the X-ray; it"s more about just a checkup and see how far along he is right?

Would Dez pull a Calvin Johnson and retire early?

Jon Machota: Right, absolutely. And that is something that he talked about. But another thing, not talking to him in a while, I wanted to ask him about Calvin Johnson, a guy that obviously Dez looks up to and a guy that just recently stepped away from the game at 30-years-old. Dez is 27. I was just interested to get his take on what he thought about Calvin retiring, stepping away from the game when obviously he still has tread left on the tire. And just kind of what that makes Dez think of with his own career.

Brandon George: Dez is only 27. He"s three years away from where Calvin was at this point when he was retiring this offseason. As you know, you talk about Dez Bryant maybe retiring early, it literally would have to be some kind of major injury that would force Dez Bryant to retire early. There"s just no way I could see a healthy Dez Bryant stepping away from the game early in his career. He"s gonna leave everything out there. He"s so competitive. You just wonder how he"s gonna be able to manage those competitive juices when he"s not playing football. What is he gonna do? How"s that gonna look in his life? Dez is gonna run all the tread off his tires before he"s done. It"s going to be interesting to see what Dez Bryant actually looks like at the end of his career. But I can pretty much guarantee you he"s not going to retire early, unless he"s hurt.

Dez Bryant"s passion for football

Jon Machota: No question. I agree with you on that. He"s as aggressive, if not more aggressive, than any receiver I"ve ever watched play the game. I agree with you 100 percent. I don"t see him stepping away from the game early. It"ll be one of those things where I really feel like he"ll have to be past his prime and he"s just not the same player he once was and maybe he"ll lose a little bit of passion for the game then. I tell you what, I can"t see that happening any time in the near future. You suffer some of the injuries that Dez has suffered ... you look at some of these pictures of Dez"s hand from that finger injury that he played through. He still can"t straighten that finger all the way out. There"s a lot of stuff most people, if they had these problems in life, they"d be like "Yeah, this is enough." But this is life.

Brandon George: I"ll take you even further than that. I guess it was three or four years ago when the Cowboys played the Redskins late in the season. Dez was hurt, he hurt his back. I just remember they brought him into the locker room in a wheelchair. He was in so much pain, you could see him kind of bending over and yelling out. He was in his wheelchair and he just looked terrible. I"ve been around sports for two decades now and I can"t ever remember seeing an athlete in that much pain after a game. A couple of months later, he was back running and everything. You"re just not gonna keep Dez Bryant down long.

Twitter: @jonmachota, @DMN_George

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Source: http://sportsday.dallasnews.com/dallas-cowboys/cowboys/2016/05/27/dez-foot-update-pull-megatron-amazing-tolerance-pain

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Cavaliers to the Finals, Thunder-Warriors, NBA Notes


Golden State Warriors vs Oklahoma City Thunder - Game 3 - Full Highlights | 2016 NBA Playoffs

Dan Hamilton-USA TODAY Sports

The Cavs take care of the Raptors in six games and await the winner of the Thunder-Warriors series.

The Cleveland Cavaliers wrapped up the Eastern Conference Finals with a convincing win in Toronto last night, to finish off the Raptors in six games. The Raps getting two was more than many expected when the series started, and it"s worth pausing to congratulate them on a fantastic season--finishing 2nd in the East in the regular season and reaching the Conference Finals for the first time in franchise history. Also a salute to the great fans in Toronto, who stayed and cheered on their team well beyond the final buzzer.

But the Cavs were clearly the class of the conference again, and reach the Finals for the 2nd consecutive year behind the brilliant LeBron James, who went for 33-11-6 in last night"s win, absolutely dominating the game. The Cavs found their three point accuracy, which had been so lethal earlier in the playoffs, but disappeared for a bit against the Raps. Last night"s 17-31 performance ended the Raptors hopes on their home floor.

This marks the 6th straight season LeBron James has made it to the NBA Finals, an absolutely incredible achievement.

The Cavs await the winner of the Warriors-Thunder Western Conference Finals, with the Thunder holding a surprising 3-2 edge and the chance to close it out tonight at home.

Warriors at Thunder8:00 pm CDTTNT

The Warriors stayed alive with a home win in game five, but have a tough task tonight, as the Thunder dominated them in both earlier games in Oklahoma City in this series. The atmosphere in the arena is going to be bonkers tonight.

Elsewhere, the Rockets have hired Mike D"Antoni to be their head coach. D"Antoni, who had great success with his SSOL Suns teams, struggled with dubious personnel at later stops. D"Antoni is a believer in high tempo basketball, spreading the floor, and having shooters everywhere. He deserves acknowledgment for helping usher in the current style of basketball prevalent in the NBA, but whether he has the chops or personnel to turn the Rockets into a contender remains to be seen.

The Wolves (along with several other teams with lottery picks) will be attending a workout by Jaylen Brown on Cal"s campus today. Brown is an interesting and somewhat divisive prospect. His play as a freshman was not particularly impressive, and he lacked the statistical markers we tend to like to see to make us comfortable with prospects. On the other hand, his physical profile is, as they say, prototypical for an NBA wing.

What interests me, however, is the apparent disconnect between his on court IQ and his off court IQ. One of the consistent complaints about Brown"s play (albeit as a freshman) was his poor feel for the game--which is one of the weaknesses highlighted in his DX scouting video.

On the other hand, he is byall accounts a fantastically intelligent person. He chose Cal for its academics, and while he spent just one year there, apparently took a rigorous course load. He apparently likes learning and likes asking questions. This appeals to me. I like smart players--as Jeff Van Gundy sometimes says on television: "Dumb gets you beat." I think smart is good--it means better able to learn, to understand concepts, to process information. The question is whether that off-court intelligence will translate to smarter on court play with Brown.

At any rate, the Wolves will get to see him in person today.

Today"s musical birthday is Gladys Knight, born in 1944

Have a great weekend.

Source: http://www.canishoopus.com/2016/5/28/11805268/cavaliers-to-the-finals-thunder-warriors-nba-notes

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