Posts Tagged ‘Denver Nuggets’

Carmelo Anthony(15) vs Donte Greene (20)

Carmelo Anthony(15) vs Donte Greene (20)

SACRAMENTO, Calif. Andres Nocioni made four 3-pointers and scored a season-high 21 points, helping the Sacramento Kings beat the struggling Denver Nuggets 106-101 on Monday night.Omri Casspi made a 3-pointer from the corner to put the Kings ahead for good at 97-96. Following a missed shot by Carmelo Anthony, Beno Udrih converted on a fastbreak for a three-point play to give Sacramento a 100-96 lead with 1:41 remaining.Udrih scored 17 points and had seven assists and Donte Greene also had 17 points for the Kings. Jason Thompson contributed 15 points and 11 rebounds.Anthony scored 34 points and Nene had 25 points for the Nuggets, who lost their third straight and fifth in six games. Kenyon Martin added 10 points and 12 rebounds.The Nuggets made just 20 of 35 free throws and shot 41 percent overall. Hounded by Kings defenders throughout, Anthony shot 15 of 35 and was 3 of 7 on free throws.The Nuggets are a different team on the road, where they have dropped six straight. They came into the game averaging just over 100 points in road games while averaging 114 in Denver, where they are 13-2.



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Stephen Jackson

Stephen Jackson

Charlotte got more than just a scorer with the arrival of Stephen Jackson last month.The Bobcats’ newest addition showed off his varied skill set Tuesday as his new team picked up a 107-95 win over the Denver Nuggets.

Jackson tallied team-highs with 25 points and six assists as the Bobcats picked up their sixth win in the last eight games. However, it was Jackson’s contributions on defense that had him talking after the victory.

“I want be to be able to make plays for guys, get my shots and at the same time guard their best player,” Jackson said. “Anytime there is a great scorer out there and I can guard him it gets my game going. It gets my level up and I’m always up to that challenge.”

Jackson grabbed seven defensive rebounds and had three steals while also being tasked with guarding the league’s leading scorer in Carmelo Anthony. The Denver All-Star scored a game-high 34 points, but was limited in transition and in his ability to get his teammates involved.

“You have to make a guy like (Anthony) work,” Jackson added. “You can’t stop him completely. He’s the leading scorer in the league. You just want to make it as difficult as possible.”

The Bobcats opened the game with the first nine points of the game, including five from Raymond Felton. Charlotte led after the opening quarter by three points, but allowed Anthony to pick up 10 points.

Denver took the lead in the second quarter and led by as many as seven points. Flip Murray’s three combined with Jackson’s free throws capped a 9-0 run to close the half as the Bobcats took a 54-49 lead into the break.

The Nuggets again proved to be resilient in the third quarter. Denver used an early run and took another lead, this time as many as four points. However, Charlotte used a late burst to take a lead late in the quarter again and led by three with the final 12 minutes on tap.

Charlotte then took control late in the fourth. With the game tied at 87, Murray hit a jumper from the left wing and Felton followed it up with a drive in the lane. Anthony tried to rally his team and scored to cut the lead in half, but Charlotte responded with a pair of buckets.

The Bobcats pushed their lead to six points, 95-89, with back-to-back buckets from Jackson and Felton. Denver was able to pull within four points on multiple occasions, but never got closer.

Anthony lost his cool late in the fourth quarter after picking up his fifth foul and was whistled for a technical foul. Jackson, who scored 10 points in the final period, sank six free throws in the final minute to seal the Charlotte win.

The loss snapped a four-game winning streak for the Nuggets, who were on the second night of a back-to-back after losing in Philadelphia. Anthony, who was coming off his first sub-20-point game of the season, rebounded for a strong night for Denver with 12-for-22 shooting and seven rebounds.

“[Anthony] got his,” Gerald Wallace said. “But we were able to limit the other guys and not let them get involved. Our defense has always been good. If we can keep our turnovers down and get back on defense and keep people in front of us we have a pretty good opportunity (to win) every game.”

However, Anthony’s fellow Nuggets were never able to add much to the league’s most potent offense.

“We just weren’t making the shots tonight,” Anthony said. “It happens. You swing the ball, you don’t make the shots. It happens.”The Bobcats are now 8-3 at Time Warner Cable Arena and hope to take that momentum on the road this weekend.

“We get the momentum on our side going into a two-game road trip in San Antonio and Dallas,” Wallace said. “For us to get this one and have the momentum prepares us to go into those games.”

Allen Iverson

Allen Iverson

PHILADELPHIA — Ann Iverson, his mother, wasn’t there and Tawanna Iverson, his wife, had a doctor’s appointment, and the 11-year-old son preferred waiting for him at home, ready to tell him how lousy he’d played. His longtime personal manager/football coach/father figure/friend of friends, Gary Moore, was sitting courtside, next to Ed Snider, the man who’d sent him into exile three years ago — mutually assured destruction achieved, as the player drifted in and out of towns like a carny working by the docks, and the team floundered into utter, utter irrelevance. But otherwise, Allen Iverson was pretty much alone when he came onto the Wachovia Center court Monday, knelt and kissed the hardwood, just as he had when he’d worn the uniform of the Denver Nuggets in 2008 and come back to town.Closure.Real closure.He was back in the home white of the Philadelphia 76ers, 34 years old and not sure if this is going to be his last year or not in the NBA. If it is, he can live with it, because the ending, now, makes sense.

Allen Iverson in Memphis Grizzlies Blue didn’t make sense.
“Words can’t describe it,” Iverson said after the 76ers ran out of gas in the fourth quarter Monday and dropped a 93-83 game to the Nuggets, Philadelphia’s 10th straight loss. “I’ve been to other cities, played in Denver, and the people embraced me. I had fans there. I had a good life there. But it will never be, for me and my career, like this place.”

This is not about basketball — well, not just about basketball. Iverson will no more will the 76ers to the playoffs than elephants will tap dance, because he isn’t a kid anymore and he can’t summon those kinds of nights anymore, when he shot and shot and shot the ball until his team won, and there were four other guys on the court that were perfectly willing to watch him while they played defense and rebounded. These Sixers have an All-Star worthy player in Andre Iguodala, and an $80 million investment in Elton Brand, and whatever Philadelphia does this season will be determined by those two more than anyone. (Iguodala is also dressing in Iverson’s old locker, the biggest one, nearest the hallway by the coach’s office. “He hasn’t offered anything yet,” Iguodala said before tipoff, “but everything is up for negotation. Shoot, it’s Christmas.”)
But Iverson has never been just about basketball.This is the part I want to get right. I hope I do.Allen Iverson is just as important to the history of this league as Michael Jordan and Magic Johnson, Larry Bird and Bill Russell, Oscar Robertson and Wilt Chamberlain.

He was the symbol of this league for almost a decade, the engine that drove it after Jordan retired for good (we thought) in Chicago. That wasn’t always positive, and it wasn’t always aesthetically pleasing to the hoops purist, because there were a lot of 9 for 31s in the deal. But it was real, and that deserves your respect. A whole generation of new jacks, from Brandon Jennings to Ty Lawson — the Nuggets rookie that blew by Iverson at will in the second half (“me, stay in front of him?,” Iverson said afterward. “That kid is the fastest guy in the league”) — idolized number 3 growing up. The guy with the tats and the braids and the crossover, who got this league from the Jordan Era to the LeBron Era, all 160 pounds of him.

That’s the guy whose jersey was consistently the biggest seller of them all, whose trips abroad were scenes of chaos, the person for whom everyone would wait when he was, again, late for something (as he was Monday night, not arriving for the 7 p.m. tipoff until just before 6). No one of this generation — not LeBron, not Kobe, not D Wade — put butts in seats like Allen Iverson. Twenty thousand came out to see him Monday, the first sellout of the season — not the 5-15 team whose uniform he wore, not Iguodala, not Brand, not Eddie Jordan, not Carmelo Anthony or Chauncey Billups. Him.

They wore their T-shirts and held up their homemade signs (and they were mostly white, the not-so-secret secret of Iverson’s appeal; you don’t move as many shoes and jerseys as he has over the last 15 years by just selling in the ‘hood), and Snider was sick as a dog, but damned if he wasn’t going to be on hand for this, a night in the dead of winter when his team mattered in town again. The Flyers stink this year and the Phillies are beloved (but looking for still more starting pitching), and the Eagles are rounding into playoff shape, but there’s no way that Donovan McNabb –one of a half-dozen or so Eagles in attendance Monday — has the impact in this town that Iverson does, even now.

There’s a reason Patti LaBelle offered to sing the anthem in exchange for two tickets — although she ultimately passed, unable to get out of a prior engagement. There’s a reason Cuttino Mobley materialized on the front row. There’s a reason you couldn’t hear the PA guy after he said, “a six-foot guard, from Georgetown, number 3,” as the crowd roared and loosed itself, Iverson introduced next to last, leaving poor Iguodala to pick up the crumbs of dying applause.

David Letterman has this great saying about his own late father: when he came into a room, the lamps would rattle. That’s Iverson.

“He represents the city of Philadelphia to a T — hard working, chip on his shoulder,” said Iverson’s once and current teammate, Willie Green.

Green was here when Iverson was at the top of his game, when the hotels would swell as the team’s bus pulled up, as the restaurants would make way and clear tables out of the air for the team to eat. Rock star treatment, Green said, and not enviously, because he knew, and knows, what Iverson has meant and done, both locally and nationally, for the game.

“I always say, there are superstars, and there are megastars,” Green said. “He’s a megastar.”

Of course Iverson made mistakes by the carload. He was an individual performer in a team sport — not selfish, but very hard to play with. Only a few NBA players could swallow their own ambitions that long. He didn’t make many of his teammates that much better with his presence. His practice habits…well, you know. He stayed out too late too many nights, and he could be loud and profane — to management, to coaches — who didn’t give him his way. I’m not saying he was the best player. I’m saying he was the show, the reason you tuned in, the reason you stayed and watched.
But in recent years, he’s gone out of his way to acknowledge that he had rough patches. The best I’ve ever seen him was that first time back, when he was with Denver, when he spoke the media before the game and said he was to blame for him not being in Philly any more. He wasn’t mad that night; he was wistful, like an adult looking back on his life, aware of the mistakes he made, and saddened by them. If he hadn’t given the Sixers reasons galore to get rid of him, he said then, he could have finished his career here.Now, he just might.

“These people here, they watched me become who I am,” Iverson said Monday. “They watched me go through my ups and downs. They watched me go through my trendsetting stage. People don’t forget that. Just like I wouldn’t forget the impact that Michael Jordan had on me. I would never forget that. It would never go nowhere. I know who made me want to play basketball. Just like the song, ‘I want to be like Mike’? I was one of those guys that wanted to be like Mike. It never goes away. When Mike came back, I was ecstatic about it.”

I was overjoyed last year, at All-Star, when Iverson showed up without braids, his hair cut like it was when he was a teenager playing for John Thompson at Georgetown. This isn’t a hair argument; I know the symbolism of braids and why people wore their hair in braids, I know, I know. But my daddy used to always tell me you don’t see any old junkies for a reason, and I think you don’t see men closer to their 40s than their 20s wearing braids for a reason. Time requires all of us to make accomodations with life.But that’s my worldview. Not his.

He was back in braids Monday night, and wearing the home white, and the Wachovia Center was packed to bursting, and the crowd was roaring, and if it wasn’t because the fans believed the Sixers were going to win, or going anywhere, for that matter, or that Allen Iverson has a lot left in the tank, and even if they knew this was the beginning of the end, the end of his era, it would still do.

The Cavaliers beat the Pistons 98-88

Posted: November 27, 2009 in baket ball
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Cavaliers 98, Pistons 88

In Auburn Hills, Mich., LeBron James scored 12 of his 34 points in the first quarter to help Cleveland build a cushion it used to cruise to a win over Detroit.

Nuggets 124, T-Wolves 111

In Minneapolis, Carmelo Anthony scored 22 points and Nene had 17 points, eight rebounds and six assists as Denver Nuggets handed Minnesota its 14th straight loss.

Pacers 86, Clippers 73

In Indianapolis, Troy Murphy had 18 points and 11 rebounds as Indiana beat Los Angeles to snap a four-game losing streak.

Celtics 113, 76ers 110

In Boston, Rajon Rondo scored six points during a key run early in the fourth quarter and made a shot clock-beating jump shot on the baseline in the closing seconds as the Celtics overcame poor 3-point shooting to beat Philadelphia.

Bobcats 116, Raptors 81

In Charlotte, Gerald Wallace broke out of his shooting slump with 31 points and grabbed 13 rebounds to help the Bobcats to the most lopsided victory in team history, over Toronto.

Heat 99, Magic 98

In Orlando, Michael Beasley dunked a missed shot by Dwyane Wade with 1.6 seconds remaining to lift Miami to a victory over the Magic.

Spurs 118, Warriors 104

In San Antonio, Tony Parker scored 32 points as the Spurs overcame another iron man performance by Monta Ellis in a victory over Golden State.

Ellis tied his career high with 42 points for the Warriors.

Mavericks 130, Rockets 99

In Houston, Jason Kidd moved into second place on the NBA’s career assists list and Jason Terry scored 27 points as Dallas shot 65.5 percent in a victory over the Rockets.

Hornets 102, Bucks 99

In New Orleans, David West had 27 points and 10 rebounds as the Hornets defeated Milwaukee.

Luke Ridnour scored a season-high 23 points for the Bucks.

Suns 126, Grizzlies 111

In Phoenix, Amare Stoudemire scored 18 of his 28 points during a torrid third quarter as the Suns beat Memphis for their 15th consecutive home victory.

Kings 111, Knicks 97

In Sacramento, Donte Greene made six 3-pointers and tied a career high with 24 points, and the Kings never trailed in a victory over New York.