Who's the moron in charge of releasing the confetti? LOL
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Who's the moron in charge of releasing the confetti? LOL
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Great freaking game. Well played by the Magic.
Okay, so the Lakers are still probably going to win this series. What I want to know is, where are all of the experts saying that they can't win a title because their defense isn't good enough? Is their defense really that much better than what the Suns had in their two WCF years? Heck, is it good at all?
No matter how you slice it, the Lakers are an average defensive team. Maybe I've missed it, but has ONE talking head moron on television admitted that the "defense wins championships" rule may not be absolute?
What an amazing freaking game.
THIS is Orlando's best shot...glad the Lakers are weathering it soooo well.
Got three shots to win one....fail on the first?
Fail the second and the third and LA finds themselves in a big stinking pile of dung. Not saying ORL can overtake the series, but the way the Finals are set up with games 3-5 in ORL, momentum can swing pretty easily.
Obviously Magic fans care too!What are the national ratings? Does anybody not a Laker fan care at all?
What are the national ratings? Does anybody not a Laker fan care at all?
Umm don't think the Lakers are as mighty as some like to think, your a goaltending call away from being down 2-1 to the Magic. And don't give me they won't shoot that well again because the Lakers shot damn well as well.
The Magic shot 63%, a record for an Nba finals game, so yah they'll almost certainly cool off. The Lakers shot 51%, much closer to normality, and still only lost by 4 points.
And it seems very unlikely for Bryant to choke again. 5 missed free throws, a key turnover and 2-8 from the field? Not gonna happen again!
That was the Bryant of old. Catching fire but then never realizing that he cooled down and continue racking up crazy shots instead of moving the ball.
Orlando's record shooting obscured an equally important detail: The Magic barely won, because the Lakers themselves hit a not-so-shabby 51.3 percent from the field. The Lakers shot well in the first two games, too, at 46 percent, so it seems we can officially call this a trend: Orlando's defense is having a lot of trouble with L.A.'s offense.
In the regular season the Lakers averaged 109.8 points per 100 possessions, and the Magic gave up 98.9 -- a nearly 11-point gap in productivity. Clearly, a big determinant of who will win this series will be whether L.A.'s efficiency number is closer to the 109.8 or the 98.9.
And on that count, this series remains the Lakers in a rout. If anything, Tuesday night cemented their advantage. L.A. scored 104 points in an unusually slow-paced game (it's tough to get much transition going when both teams are taking the ball out of the net), resulting in a 113.8 offensive efficiency mark. That was the Lakers' best output of the series, even better than the 110.0 from Game 1 or the 102.7 from Game 2.
You'll note all those numbers had three digits before the decimal point, a very bad trend if you're an Orlando fan. The Magic need to be holding the Lakers below a point per possession, especially at home these next two games, but haven't been able to come close thus far. For the series, the Lakers' 108.7 offensive efficiency mark is nearly an exact replica of what they did in the regular season. In other words, Orlando's top-ranked defense has barely made a dent in the Lakers' attack.
I see......smart adjustment.mojo, that's because he put CL on the bench with pump fakes already.
Huh? Do you mean the Lakers D tonight?I swear, put "Phoenix" on the Laker jerseys and every TV analyst in America would be saying that they don't play defense well enough to win a title.