I'm watching the Cavaliers/Celtics game right now and this just dawned on me...

Now the real question is whether or not Dr. Bunsen Honeydew - like his
doppelganger, Mike Brown - would also run his offense by having
LeBron James (the most powerful player in the NBA) start out two feet beyond the three-point line on every possession?
4 comments:
Ha! That's funny!
Speaking of the playoffs, something we don't do enough of around here (oh yea, because we are not in the playoffs), I caught the 2nd half of the Jazz-Lakers game 6 last night. The Lakers won and were in total control through three-and-a-half quarters but the Jazz never gave up. Down the stretch Utah buckled down on defense, grabbed every rebound, fought hard, knocked down threes, heck - two guys (AK & Milsap) blocked Kobe's last shot.
The Jazz rally fell three points short but they did have two pretty good looks at 3-pointers at the buzzer. But it was really cool to see the crowd totally get into it and to see the team believe in themselves, even though they were down 19 in the 3rd.
Man, how I would love to see that in Denver one day.
"Now the real question is whether or not Dr. Bunsen Honeydew - like his doppelganger, Mike Brown - would also run his offense by having LeBron James (the most powerful player in the NBA) start out two feet beyond the three-point line on every possession?"
I'm not saying Brown is a coaching genius, but I can certainly understand why LeBron is playing so far from the rim after the loss of Daniel Gibson. Especially, after watching Rondo own Delonte West as he tries to play the point.
It is amazing though how few assists Gibson has averaged for the season (2.5). You'd think he would have Nash-like numbers when he has James on the same team.
freakin boobie bibson and steve nash-like numbers?
think again about that one
Gibson isn't a real PG, he's more of a SG in a small body. His job with the Cavs isn't to get assists, it's to be a perimeter shooter.
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