yeeupp
Banned
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Lee's elbow. Told ya'll chandler plays defense.
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Originally Posted by KING x RIECE
Originally Posted by HarlemToTheBronx
Wow. They can't be serious down in Miami.
Goodness. They sound like a bunch of kids. You need to be rewarded for your efforts on defense with offensive rewards? Seriously?
Bunch of ({})
Originally Posted by l Knicks Fresh Knick l
thank pick up there isn't working.. anyone have a better pic?
i dont have a twitter
DAntoni Continues to Push the Pace
Posted: 12/14/2010 5:57:00 AM
Source: Marc Berman of the New York Post
(Mike) D'Antoni's speedball is rip-roaring at 108.5 points per game -- tops in the league.
"I was always confident it works," D'Antoni said. "Offensively, I never doubted this is the way I want to play and this is the way to be successful. If I doubted it, I would've changed jobs. You have to get the right chemistry with the guys and the talent has to be at a certain level. And they're showing how good they can be."
Even Spurs coach Gregg Popovich is trying speedball in San Antonio. But D'Antoni feels the so-called "Seven Seconds or Less" carries misperceptions on its intricacy.
"We try to be fast, we do shoot quicker than a lot of teams," D'Antoni said. "But as much as we push the ball, most teams have more fastbreak points. It doesn't matter to me as long as we take the first good shot. If it's in the first seven seconds, so be it. What we're doing is spacing and moving the basketball and trying to discourage holding the ball."
"It is complicated because there's so many options but we try to take complicated and make it easy for them," D'Antoni added. "And we keep getting better at it."
The logos, more concepts than finished drawings, make it clear the trademarks are for a Brooklyn basketball team. In one, a basketball player straddles the Brooklyn Bridge. In another, the words, "Brooklyn New Yorkers" fronts a basketball featuring a world map while in a third, another version of "Brooklyn New Yorkers" is imposed on a basketball. The Patent and Trademark Office continues to review the applications.
The decision to seek trademark protection around the time the team informed the NBA it would be changing its name from the "New Jersey Nets". The NBA requires a team to file two years prior to a name change but it does not require a team to state what the new name will be. Under an agreement with the Empire State Development Corp., the Nets' new name must include either "Brooklyn" or "New York" in its name.