Friday, November 30, 2007

The NBA Fashion Police

The Suit


Fashion Fines


Shaq Shoes


Forget about the Dribbling

Monday, November 19, 2007

MUST BE THE SHOES: Former Spur BENO UDRIH shining with Sacramento

Good to see Beno playing with confidence.

But for god sakes, get some new shoes!

Mo Fo is still wearing the Spurs Silver and Black issued shoes.

Gangster!


MUST BE THE SHOES!




SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) -- Unwanted in San Antonio, Beno Udrih appears to have found a home with the Sacramento Kings.

Udrih had 23 points and six assists to help the Kings beat the Detroit Pistons 105-95 on Sunday night.

Udrih, a late preseason cut by San Antonio who came to the Kings as a backup when Mike Bibby was injured just prior to the season, has quickly become a starter. He showed why against the Pistons, hitting 9 of 13 shots from the field and all five of his free throw attempts and fueling a strong second half by the Kings.

"I chose this team because I knew I would get an opportunity to play; I didn't get that in San Antonio," said Udrih, who played three seasons with the Spurs and owns two championship rings.

"Playing regular minutes has helped my confidence. In San Antonio I never knew how much I would play. I won't come out here if I miss one or two shots in a row."

Udrih hardly missed anything in the third quarter when he scored 15 points, including 11 in a stretch where the Kings outscored Detroit 15-1 to take the lead after trailing by nine points.

"He had an unbelievable game in the third quarter," Detroit coach Flip Saunders said. "He made shots and he made plays. He's been playing extremely well for them."

But Udrih had plenty of help, as the Kings won for a second straight time and improved to 4-1 at home. Kevin Martin had his first sub-20-point game, but still finished with 19 points and eight rebounds. Ron Artest scored 16, Brad Miller had 15 points and nine rebounds, and Mikki Moore added 10 points and nine rebounds.

Tayshaun Prince scored 19 points for the Pistons, who have lost two straight. Rasheed Wallace had 17 points and 12 rebounds, Richard Hamilton scored 17 and Chauncey Billups contributed 14 points and nine assists.

"Our team grew up tonight playing a tough, tough team like Detroit in a grind-it-out game," Kings coach Reggie Theus said. "From a confidence standpoint, winning against an upper-echelon team builds confidence."

Clinging to a 94-92 lead, Martin hit two free throws after Rasheed Wallace and Detroit assistant coach Dave Cowens both drew technical fouls for arguing a call. Miller, who fouled by Wallace on a drive to the basket, hit two more free throws to put the Kings ahead 98-92 with 2:17 left, and the Pistons never got any closer.

"You make it halfway down the court, then you decide to call it?" said Wallace, referring to the call coming late that resulted in his first technical this season. "You know, it's crazy. But we let them hang around."

It was the end of a five-game trip for the road-weary Pistons, who went 2-3 and have opened the season by playing eight of 10 games away from home. Detroit starts a five-game homestand Wednesday against New York.

"It was a bad road trip in my eyes," said Billups, who had missed the two previous games with injuries.

Sunday, November 18, 2007

American Revolutionary: Matt Bonner

Matt Bonner, 25 points, 17 Rebounds, 1 Assist earns him TIME MAGAZINE Man of the Year

It must of been the 1 assist that got him the nod.

But also look at how graceful he is when pouring beer!

True American Revolutionary!

LeBRON stays winless