[外電] Keeping It Real
Mark Heisler:
Keeping It Real
Sterling's Clippers seem to have reached the big time, but continued
success isn't guaranteed in this new world.
May 24 2006
Somewhere men are laughing
And little children shout;
But there is no joy in Mudville...
"Casey at the Bat"
Ernest Lawrence Thayer
*
PHOENIX — Was it a dream?
Even after Mighty Casey struck out, Mudville was a happy place compared
with the mud hut where hope went to die for Clipper Nation.
Of course, anything that appears so suddenly out of the mist can go
right back into the mist, but for the moment, the Clippers are real.
"I thought they'd be good but not this good, to be honest with you,
with Sam [Cassell] and [Cuttino] Mobley and kind of new people, but
halfway through [the season], you knew they were real and they were
going to be tough," Suns Coach Mike D'Antoni said after Monday's Game
7 wipeout.
"They fought us all the way. I mean, obviously, we had a nice shooting
night, but there's nothing that separates us."
This season represented all the things that went right amid the
pratfalls — owner Donald T. Sterling's surprise move to Staples Center
(if the Lakers could get a new home for free, why not them?) and the
young players General Manager Elgin Baylor acquired so even after all
the misadventures and jailbreaks, there was still a good talent base.
Mike Dunleavy arrived at a perfect time in the spring of 2003 with
enough players and the franchise so profitable that Sterling could
consider putting up hundreds of millions of dollars.
Soft-spoken in public, Dunleavy is actually as brash as his alter ego,
Cassell. When Dunleavy was hired, Sterling might not have been able to
pick him out of a lineup, but a few days later in The Donald's Beverly
Hills office, he heard the bravado — "I told him, 'I'm going to make
you money,' " Dunleavy says — and flipped for his new coach.
After that, it was just like being in the NBA. Sterling, who was known
to question their direction at a skeptical remark from a friend or a
valet parking attendant, didn't even waver in Dunleavy's first two
seasons when they went 28-54 and 37-45.
Of course, as Dunleavy's restlessness suggested this season when they
leveled off after their 14-5 start, it was time to show this worked.
Now as far as Clipper tradition goes, they're off the map, like Columbus
sailing toward the New World.
Until this spring, the Clippers were defined by their tradition. If
they tried to forget it, they learned it anew as every new media outlet
that showed up did the obligatory former-laughingstock angle. (Some of
us were shameless and did it daily.)
Pained Clippers officials asked each other, "What's that got to do with
today?"
Their past made them a Cinderella story, but that has a chance to be
over. With normal progress and a little luck, they can journey into an
entire New Universe.
"The first thing that is very, very positive for us, we can improve by
doing nothing," Dunleavy said. "We've got guys here that are young
enough that they're just going to get better. They can take us to
another level on that alone."
The Clipper Retrospective days are over. Now they'll be judged by the
standards of a winning team. They don't have to pull any rabbits out
of hats or squint at the future until it starts to look promising, but
they do have to do something.
In the NBA, you're either coming or going. Deferring big-money decisions,
as they always have, counts as going.
Happily for them, they're not only profitable but cost-efficient, with
the league's fifth lowest payroll. With Cassell signaling he'd take $5
million a season and Vlade Radmanovic looking as if he'll be OK with
the veteran's exception of $5.5 million, they can give Chris Kaman an
extension that doesn't kick in until 2007-08 and next season's payroll
would go up only $4 million.
Throw in an extension at $6 million for Dunleavy, who makes $2.5 million,
and their total cost goes up $7.5 million ... about what they just made
from six playoff dates.
Of course, if no deal gets done and they bring Dunleavy back on their
team option, alarm bells will go off in the front office of every team,
such as the 76ers and Warriors, that just decided to give its coach one
more chance.
Not bringing back Cassell, who says he wants only a two-year deal, would
be like playing, "Turn Out the Lights, the Party's Over."
Failing to extend Kaman's contract would suggest big-money commitments
that are routine to 29 other teams are still agonizing for the Clippers.
Failing to bring back Radmanovic, another no-brainer anywhere else,
would suggest that with the Clippers, you still never know.
By the way, Clippers fans, get ready for another new feature popular
with winning teams:
TICKET PRICE INCREASES!
It's not as if the Clippers are a guaranteed success. Kaman is still
like a seven-foot puppy dog, apt to do anything. Mobley, a career 38%
three-point shooter, dropped to 34% this season.
Corey Maggette, the gamer who has left pieces of himself in arenas
throughout the league, might no longer fit. A terrific young man off
the floor, he's a force unto himself on it, which doesn't work with
Elton Brand going to a new level and a more structured system that
pounds the ball inside.
Maggette's high-energy style would make him sixth man of the year the
day he says he'll do it. Although he held still for it this spring,
he has never been shy about saying he wants to start.
"I'm just letting my agent [Rob Pelinka] handle it, that's not for me
to do," Maggette said. " ... The biggest thing now is to be professional
about it."
The oft-asked question of whether this will always be a Laker town is
irrelevant. Whatever the town is, it's big enough for the Clippers,
who just averaged an 8.4 rating in this market for their TNT games
this round compared to the Lakers' 7.3 in the first round. It's just
sports and winning is the great leveler.
Cassell ended his season as he started it, talking about the Clippers'
future and pleading to be part of it.
"I've been around Mike one year," Cassell said. "He knows how to win.
He's done it before, so now he's back at that level where he's been.
I know him and he's not going back. He'll leave before he has to go
back...
"If management steps up, which they say they will... "
Management has said that before, but the Clippers were a cult then.
However long it lasts, they're a nation now.
*
(INFOBOX BELOW)
Mike Dunleavy
‧ Position: Coach
‧ Age: 52
‧ Why the Clippers would miss him: Dunleavy, a favorite of Donald
Sterling, gets respect from veterans. A new coach would mean a lack
of stability.
*
Sam Cassell
‧ Position: Point guard
‧ Age: 36
‧ Why the Clippers would miss him: Cassell was a key addition as the
team reached the next level and is a link to the Shaun Livingston era.
*
Vladimir Radmanovic
‧ Position: Forward
‧ Age: 25
‧ Why the Clippers would miss him: Radmanovic's three-point shooting
keeps opponents from collapsing on Elton Brand and Chris Kaman.
*
Corey Maggette
‧ Position: Guard-forward
‧ Age: 26
‧ Why the Clippers would miss him: Maggette is young and athletic.
He can score, rebound and run. But does he want to come off the bench?
--
你們認為海南高高在上,位於雲端嗎?他們真的就這麼高不可攀嗎?
他們的成績的確是有目共睹的。以他們過去的戰績來看,我們和海南的確有天壤之別。
但是----
我在睡前,都會想像著有一天......
我每晚都在腦裡描繪我們和海南大學附屬高中參加IH的戰況。
從那一年前起,每晚都如此!
--
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05/25 15:49, , 1F
05/25 15:49, 1F
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