Tag Archive | "eastern"

Report: Howard wants Van Gundy out in Orlando

Sources close to the Orlando Magic and the NBA have told WKMG Orlando that Dwight Howard wants head coach Stan Van Gundy out.

According to the station’s sports director, David Pingalore, sources claim that talk has been “amping” up in recent weeks and that the probability of Van Gundy being released from his final contract year is very high.

Pingalore claims that, according to a league source, Howard has been telling team owners  to change the coaching staff and that the Magic are already planning to make the move as per Howard’s demand.  Although Magic owner Rich DeVos has denied that Howard does has the power to make those kind of demands, DeVos did tell Pingalore that “We [owners] will make those, but we will let him know what we are making and want his opinion on what fits and doesn’t fit.”

Despite Howard’s pre-season demand to either be traded or be surrounded by better players in order to win a championship, Howard waived his right to opt-out this summer, meaning he will stay with the team through at least next season. Under Van Gundy the Magic are in playoff position with a 32-22 record, standing in the fifth spot in the Eastern Conference.  This season, Howard is averaging 20.9 points and 14.5 rebounds per game.

Thanks for visiting our blog =).

Posted in UncategorizedComments Off

New York Knicks rout Orlando Magic 108-86, climb back above .500

NEW YORK — Carmelo Anthony knocked down three long jumpers, finding a rhythm that’s been missing most of the season.

Then the Knicks really got rolling — on their biggest run in 8 1/2 years.

Anthony and the Knicks climbed above .500 for the first time since mid-January in overwhelming fashion, scoring 21 straight points in the third quarter and routing the Orlando Magic 108-86 on Wednesday night.

Anthony and Iman Shumpert each scored 25 points for the Knicks (26-25), who won for the eighth time in nine games despite playing without the injured Amare Stoudemire and Jeremy Lin. New York outscored Orlando 65-30 in the middle two quarters and has a winning record for the first time since it was 6-5 before a loss to Oklahoma City on Jan. 14.

“I said this at the top, as a coach I’m always interested in when you’re short-handed who’s going to step up and make plays? And we’re getting it from everybody and that to me is a sign of a good, quality team that wants to win,” interim coach Mike Woodson said.

The Knicks moved 2 1/2 games ahead of Milwaukee for the eighth and final playoff spot in the Eastern Conference and pulled within 2 1/2 of Philadelphia and Boston for first place in the Atlantic Division. New York could get Stoudemire back before the end of the season, announcing Wednesday that he could be back in two to four weeks after non-surgical treatment for a bulging disk in his back.

Anthony knows he must step up until then without Stoudemire and Lin (sore left knee), and he had his second straight strong performance since they were hurt. Anthony scored 28 points Monday, and would have easily surpassed that had he not been limited to 26 minutes.

Playing despite a strained right groin, Anthony shot 9 of 15, his jumper that has been off all season falling in a third-quarter flurry that blew open the game.

Anthony said it’s been a rocky season, which includes his own struggles with injuries and his shot, the resignation of coach Mike D’Antoni, and now the injuries to the Knicks’ second- and third-leading scorers. But they sure seemed as if they had it all figured out in the third quarter, when they had their longest consecutive run of points since a franchise-record 24 in a row against Indiana on Nov. 15, 2003.

“Right now, with the coaching change, we’ve been playing extremely well,” Anthony said. “Guys seem to be responding pretty well. We’ve been really locked in on our mission right now.”

Leave your comments on the news below.

Posted in UncategorizedComments Off

MAGIC AT KNICKS 7 P.M., SUN, ESPN Nelson sits out shootaround but expects to play tonight

NEW YORK — Jameer Nelson sat out the Orlando Magic’s shootaround this morning at Madison Square Garden because he felt sick, but he said he expects to play when the Magic face the New York Knicks tonight.

“Whatever it takes,” said Nelson, who watched the shootaround from the Garden sidelines.

Nelson left the arena wearing a surgical mask as a joke.

Different team?
New York has a 7-1 record since March 14, when Mike Woodson replaced Mike D’Antoni as coach.

In that span, the Knicks have held opponents to 40.3 percent shooting from the field, the lowest defensive field-goal percentage in the league.

“They’ve been pretty good at that end all year,” Magic coach Stan Van Gundy said. “I think that’s actually been the story nobody’s talked about with New York: how good they’ve been defensively all year and what an improvement they’ve made. And they did it when Mike [Woodson] was an assistant and Mike D’Antoni was coaching, and they extended that now.”

The numbers also indicate the Knicks are better defensively when power forward Amar’e Stoudemire is off the floor, Van Gundy said. Stoudemire is out of action because of a lower-back issue.

“They’re a little bit quicker,” Van Gundy said. “They’re switching a lot of pick-and-rolls, if not all of them, and they’re very, very good. They force a lot of turnovers, which obviously has been an issue with us, and they are a very, very aggressive, quick defensive team.”

Layups
• Jeremy Lin, the Knicks’ starting point guard, will not play tonight. Baron Davis is expected to replace Lin in the lineup.

• This is a big game for the Knicks. New York began the day two games ahead of the Milwaukee Bucks for the eighth, and final, playoff spot in the Eastern Conference.

• Marc Davis, Karl Lane and Eric Lewis have been assigned to referee tonight’s game.

Follow Josh Robbins on Twitter at @JoshuaBRobbins and e-mail him at jrobbins@orlandosentinel.com. Subscribe to our Orlando Magic newsletter at OrlandoSentinel.com/joinus.

Copyright © 2012, Orlando Sentinel

That’s all for today guys, i’ll be back to blog you tomorrow.

Posted in UncategorizedComments Off

Magic have plenty to work on as playoffs approach

5:22 p.m. EST, March 24, 2012|

By Josh Robbins, Orlando Sentinel

Time is running out for the Orlando Magic to smooth out their rough edges. Their regular season will end April 26, almost one month from today, leaving them precious few opportunities to prepare for the playoffs.

At 31-18, the Magic own the third-best record in the Eastern Conference and the fifth-best record in the NBA. That’s an impressive achievement for the coaches and the players. They rose above the distractions brought on by the Dwight Howard stay-or-go saga and overcame the injuries the team faced with its starting backcourt.

Yet there are areas in which the team must improve for it to make a deep playoff run, and Stan Van Gundy wants his players to make a concerted effort to address those weak points.

“We’ve got to want more,” Van Gundy said after a recent win.

“I think players hate it when you mention other teams. But if you watch Chicago play, every single night that team’s on a mission. It doesn’t matter who the opponent is. They play from start to finish every night. They don’t screw around with games. That’s what you’ve got to be, and I’m not sure we’re on that kind of mission.”

Here are some specific areas Orlando must shore up with 17 regular-season games remaining:

• Defensive dynamics: Aside from Howard, the Magic have few players who are good one-on-one defenders. That means Orlando players must place a higher emphasis on team defense. They can’t make mental mistakes on rotations, and they need to make the most of their repetitions during their limited practice time. Through Friday, the Magic ranked ninth in the NBA in points allowed per possession.

• Cutting turnovers: The Magic average 15.6 turnovers per game, the sixth-highest figure in the NBA through Friday. The problem has worsened lately. They have committed at least 19 turnovers in four of their past five games. It’s one thing to lose the ball 20 times against a bad team such as the Cleveland Cavaliers, as the Magic did Friday. But it’s a recipe for disaster in a playoff series. It’s a delicate balance between maintaining their aggressiveness and trying to avoid mistakes; still, players need to pass and catch the ball with two hands whenever possible.

• Turk work:Hedo Turkoglu is one of the Magic’s crucial wild cards. Turkoglu and Jameer Nelson initiate the bulk of the Magic’s offense, and when they both play well, the Magic are a difficult team to beat. When they both are off, the Magic’s chances of winning plummet severely. Turkoglu, 33, is more inconsistent than Nelson, 30. Turkoglu’s game might be declining because of his age, so perhaps Van Gundy would do well to give him more rest with the playoffs approaching. And Turkoglu needs to make sure he’s getting the proper rest, too.

• Ball movement: The Magic don’t have a perimeter player in their rotation who can consistently create his own shot. So the Magic need to move the ball with energy and make the extra pass to generate open shots, especially against top defensive teams.

• Holding leads: It’s unrealistic to expect any team to play with maximum effort 48 minutes a game for every game. But the Magic need to do a better job protecting leads. They led by 27 points in a Jan. 26 loss to Boston, by 14 points in a March 1 loss to Oklahoma City and by 20 points in a March 6 defeat in Charlotte.

• Free-throw focus: Howard spent plenty of time this off-season working on his free-throw shooting, but he’s making a career-worst 48.4 percent of his foul shots. The team cannot rely on him as a fourth-quarter offensive threat unless he improves.

jbrobbins@tribune.com

Copyright © 2012, Orlando Sentinel

Not much else going on in the NBA world today.

Posted in UncategorizedComments Off

Magic entertain Suns at Amway Center

Written by

The Sports Network

Miami Heat Look to Even Out Season Series Against Magic: Fan Reaction

The Miami Heat will look for their 13th straight home win, when they face the Orlando Magic on March 18. The Heat currently trail the Chicago Bulls by three games in the Eastern Conference standings, and it’s about time they start making their push for the top spot in the East.

The Heat ran into some trouble in their last encounter against the Magic, losing 104-98. Their inability to contain Dwight Howard — who finished with 24 points and 25 rebounds — definitely played a role in the overtime loss.

During the first half of the 2011/12 NBA season, the Heat were clearly the most dominant team in the league. Unfortunately for Miami fans, things haven’t been as clear since the All-Star break, with the Heat going 5-4 in their outings since the break.

“We’re a no-excuse team, and we’re going to continue to keep playing,” Dwyane Wade told reporters about their struggles. “We’re one of the top teams in the league with one of the best records in the league, and we’re going to go back home, try to get our energy up and try to get back to playing Miami Heat basketball and finish the last 20 [games] the same way.”

LeBron James led the Heat in their previous game against the Philadelphia 76ers, finishing with 29 points, 8 assists, and 7 rebounds. LeBron’s performance was enough to carry the Heat through a rough second half against the 76ers, but they’ll need a lot more than that against the Magic.

“It’s never good to give up a 20-point lead,” LeBron told reporters about the game against the 76ers. “But when you have to close out a game, it’s good to see you can keep the lead and win.”

LeBron certainly has a point, as the Heat’s second half performance against the 76ers wasn’t very encouraging. A poor half like that against the Magic will pretty much guarantee a loss.

The Magic currently lead the season series between the two Eastern Conference powerhouses 2-1. The Heat will certainly have their hands full on Sunday, but they should be up to the task.

David is a Miami Heat fan that has followed the team for 16 years. Follow him on twitter @davidkingwriter and check out his blog.

Sources:

Stats LLC, “Magic-Heat Preview”

Joseph Goodman, “Miami Heat faces task of containing Dwight Howard again”

Player and game information from ESPN.com

More from the Yahoo! Contributor Network:

Miami Heat Frustrate Jeremy Lin in 102-88 Victory

Miami Heat Increase Win Streak to Nine Games

Miami Heat Fall Short Against Orlando Magic

Miami Heat’s Struggles Continue Against Bulls

Miami Heat Escape with Win Against 76ers

What are your opinions.

Posted in UncategorizedComments Off

NBA: Orlando Magic puts end to Chicago Bulls' win streak

The Magic had to beat the best to overcome the sting of losing to the worst.

Dwight Howard had 29 points and 18 rebounds to lead Orlando to a 99-94 win over the host Bulls on Thursday, snapping Chicago’s eight-game winning streak.

The Magic bounced back from a 100-84 loss at Charlotte, beating the Bulls two nights after losing to the Bobcats, who sport a league-worst 5-32 record. Despite the loss, Chicago’s 33-9 mark is tops in the Eastern Conference.

“We stepped up tonight and everybody played great,” Howard said. “I think it was our defense that got us the lead early in the game. We forced a couple of turnovers and we were able to run and get easy buckets.

“We have to play that brand of

basketball to compete for a championship. We can’t fall back and have a game like Charlotte and expect to be in the same breath as Chicago and Miami.”

Chicago twice overcame double-digit deficits and led 91-89 with 2:56 to play after Derrick Rose passed to Carlos Boozer for a jumper.

Orlando responded with an 8-1 run started by Jameer Nelson’s lob to Howard for a vicious, two-hand dunk out of a timeout. Ryan Anderson hit a 3 and a pair of free throws in the decisive rally.

“There is some luck to it,” Magic coach Stan Van Gundy said. “Towards the end, we had two guys laying on the ground and they don’t get a basket. Our offensive rebounding down the stretch was big.”

Boozer led the Bulls with 26 points. Rose added

17 points and nine assists, but shot just 6 for 22 from the field. The Bulls missed a number of layups and open 3-pointers down the stretch.

“We came out kind of sluggish, got ourselves into a hole and couldn’t dig ourselves out,” Rose said.

Designated sharpshooter Kyle Korver hit just 1 of 7 from long range, including a misfire from the corner after defender Jason Richardson fell down, leaving him unguarded.

“I thought at least three of them were in the bottom of the bucket,”

Korver said. “You’ve got one play where everybody falls down and it goes in and out. I need to come through on those.”

Richardson scored 18 points and hit four 3-pointers for the Magic.

Suns 96, Mavericks 94: Jared Dudley scored 12 of his 18 points in a third-quarter comeback as host Phoenix held on to beat Dallas, the Suns’ first victory over the Mavericks in nine tries.

Grant Hill scored 10 of his 15 points in the second half for Phoenix but missed two free throws with 15.4 seconds left. Dallas had two chances after that, but Rodrigue Beaubois missed a driving layup, then couldn’t hit an 18-foot jumper at the buzzer.

Comment Below!.

Posted in UncategorizedComments Off

Magic wilt as Heat roll

Orlando Magic center Dwight Howard (12) drives up against Miami Heat center Joel Anthony during the first half of an NBA basketball game, Sunday, Feb. 19, 2012, in Miami.

Wilfredo Lee / The Associated Press

Published: Monday, February 20, 2012 at 7:51 a.m.
Last Modified: Monday, February 20, 2012 at 7:51 a.m.

MIAMI – Dwyane Wade scored 27 points, LeBron James had 25 points, 11 rebounds and eight assists, and the NBA-leading Miami Heat beat the Orlando Magic 90-78 on Sunday for their sixth consecutive victory.

With former President Bill Clinton sitting courtside next to Heat managing general partner Micky Arison, Udonis Haslem scored 10 for the Heat, who improved to 25-7, a half-game better than Chicago for the best record in the NBA and the Eastern Conference. The 12-point final margin Sunday was Miami’s smallest during its current winning streak.

Wade made 13 of 23 shots from the floor, shooting 50 percent or better for the 10th straight game.

J.J. Redick, who was a late addition to the Orlando starting lineup after Jason Richardson was scratched with chest pain, scored 17 points. Dwight Howard finished with 12 points and 15 rebounds and Glen Davis – back in the Magic lineup after a one-game absence to attend his father’s funeral – scored 12.

Quentin Richardson added 10 for Orlando, which made 11 shots from 3-point range. The Magic had been 12-1 when connecting on at least that many this season.

Clinton stayed until the end, even posing for a quick photo with game officials Bill Kennedy, Mark Lindsay and Rodney Mott shortly after the final buzzer.

The six-game winning streak is a season best for Miami. Orlando lost for just the third time in its last 11 games.

Fueled by Wade scoring 12 points in the first seven minutes, Miami ran out to a 22-11 lead, the second straight game where the Magic faced a double-digit deficit in the opening quarter.

Just as they did two days earlier against Milwaukee, Orlando rallied. The Magic scored the next 13 points and took a 27-24 lead.

Orlando then went more than seven minutes without a point, and wound up missing 11 straight shots and 14 of 15 in one stretch.

What are your opinions.

Posted in UncategorizedComments Off

Magic Vs. Heat: Southeast Division Rivals Meet For A Sunday In South Beach

By Ethan Rothstein

Contributor

Bookmark and Share


LeBron James and the Miami Heat, winners of their last five by an average of 18.8 points, will host Dwight Howard and the Magic, winners of eight of their last 10, Sunday afternoon.

Follow , and

Like SBNation.com on Facebook.

Feb 19, 2012 – After scoring just 56 points in a game in January against the Boston, the Orlando Magic, with Dwight Howard trade rumors swirling, seemed like they were ready to roll over and call it a season. They lost four out of their next five games and looked lifeless and listless.

Since that losing stretch, they’ve won eight of their 10 games and find themselves right in the mix for a home series in the Eastern Conference playoffs. Among those eight victories was a resounding 102-89 win over the Miami Heat and wins over the Indiana Pacers and the Philadelphia 76ers. The Magic’s formula — surrounding Howard with dynamite three-point shooters — has worked to perfection as they’ve barraged opponents from the outside with ruthless efficiency.

Speaking of ruthless efficiency, no one has eviscerated opponents like the Miami Heat recently. They’ve won five straight since their loss to the Magic, beating teams by an average of 18.8 points in those games. The trifecta of LeBron James, Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh has performed at stunningly high levels game in and game out. Despite being surrounded by two All-Stars, the MVP buzz surrounding James seems unavoidable. He’s averaged 28 points, 8.1 rebounds, 6.7 assists and 1.7 steals this season, numbers that are unavoidably incredible. He’ll look to continue that dominance in a classic revenge game at home.

For more on these two teams, visit Heat blog Peninsula Is Mightier and Magic blog Orlando Pinstriped Post.

Read More: Dwight Howard (C – ORL), LeBron James (F – MIA), Orlando Magic, Miami Heat

Follow , and

Like SBNation.com on Facebook.

Do you like this story?

What do you guys think about this.

Posted in UncategorizedComments Off

Orlando Magic Visit Milwaukee Bucks: Game 28 Preview

By Paul Ciullo

Newsdesk writer

Bookmark and Share


The Orlando Magic visit the Milwaukee Bucks at the Bradley Center tonight in an Eastern Conference matchup.

Follow , and

Like SB Nation Tampa Bay on Facebook.

Feb 11, 2012 – The Orlando Magic visit the Milwaukee Bucks at the Bradley Center tonight. This will be the first of four contests to be played between the two clubs this season, as both teams are looking gain a victory to improve their respective standing in the Eastern Conference

Orlando is coming off a tough 89-87 overtime home loss to the Atlanta Hawks on Friday night. Atlanta was paced by Josh Smith, who had 23 points and 19 rebounds, while Ryan Anderson scored 21 points for the Magic. Dwight Howard had another monster game with 18 points and 18 rebounds, but it wasn’t enough to beat the team that knocked them out of the playoffs last season.

The Bucks have won two straight games, including last night’s 113-112 overtime win over the Cleveland Cavaliers. Brandon Jennings led the way for Milwaukee with 24 points, while Drew Gooden chipped in with 19. The Bucks will look to keep their modest two game winning streak alive against a Magic team that has beaten them in 10 out of their previous 12 meetings.

Standings:

Orlando Magic: 16-11, third in the Southeast Division, sixth in the Eastern Conference

Milwaukee Bucks: 12-14, third in the Central Division, eighth in the Eastern Conference

Season Series: 0-0

Gametime: 9:00 ET

For updates on this game throughout be sure to check out SB Nation Tampa

Read More: Dwight Howard (C – ORL), Ryan Anderson (F – ORL), Brandon Jennings (G – MIL), Milwaukee Bucks, Orlando Magic

Follow , and

Like SB Nation Tampa Bay on Facebook.

Do you like this story?

That’s all for today.

Posted in UncategorizedComments Off

Orlando Magic Squeak by Washington Wizards 109-103

It’s a sad state of affairs in the Eastern Conference when sixth ranked Orlando Magic barely held their head above water from beginning to end against the Washington Wizards who have only won 4 games this season. Maybe the lockout was too long and the players are tired? The fans were a bit lackluster in the Amway Center Wednesday night. Or possibly people were expecting the Magic to do their thing and beat the Wizards with one hand behind their back.

Live scoreboard at Amway Center – Magic vs Wizards Feb 1, 2012.
Monica Lehua

Is Anderson the next Howard?

I’m not sure but the comical antics of our surrounding fans were much more entertaining than most of the game. It wasn’t as if there weren’t a few good plays. Dwight Howard made a nice show-off of a slam dunk. However, even though he scored 21 points and 18 rebounds, the cheers were louder for Ryan Anderson whenever he stepped on the courts. Anderson was the high scorer with 23 and J.J. Redick, another crowd favorite mimicked Howards 21 points.

It’s possible that Orlando fans have decided they need to change who they are going to cheer for in the future since Howard has basically said he doesn’t want to be in Orlando. In addition, off the court and in the ear shot of reporters Howard is constantly quoted belittling his teammates – yea, way to go to boost morale, kick your teammates when they are already down. Basically Howard has a foot out the Amway Center door and his comments are loud and clear to Orlando fans – thus you can sense the loyalty of fans changing gears.

Orlando Struggles to Hold On

As usually the crowd began to leave the arena with just two minutes left in the game, Orlando had a tiny lead up by six. We weren’t going to try to beat the crowd, it was too easy for the Magic to make a mistake; they had been struggling all night. Fortunately both sides kept using their time outs and Hedo Turkoglu and Redick’s free throws added a few more points to seal the deal in the final minutes. Orlando’s defense held up and they broke loose from their losing streak. We’ll be holding our breath for Thursday’s game in Indiana at Banker’s Life Fieldhouse as Orlando faces the Pacer’s at 7 p.m. ET.

Note: This article was written by a Yahoo! contributor. Sign up here to start publishing your own sports content.

Feel free to leave your comments below.

Posted in UncategorizedComments Off

Dwight Howard's Best Chance to Win Is With Orlando Magic

Dwight HowardDwight Howard is apparently hurting Jameer Nelson‘s feelings.

What a meanie.

Orlando Magic general manager Otis Smith has been through a lot with the Howard saga over the past two seasons, and on Friday he said that the issue has finally trickled down from the front office to the players. The distractions of Howard’s impending free agency and rumblings of his desire to play with Nets point guard Deron Williams are partly to blame for the underwhelming play of Nelson this season, Smith reasoned.

“You spend time talking about Chris Paul or Deron Williams, but what position do they play?” Smith said, according to the Orlando Sentinel. “It’s the same position that [Nelson] plays. So it’s not necessarily that [Howard] is directly throwing him under the bus, but he’s indirectly throwing him under the bus.”

On the surface, this looks like a defense of Nelson, whose scoring, field goal attempts and free throw attempts per game have plummeted since his All-Star season of 2008-09. Is it really, though? Smith is saying, in essence, that Nelson is a kid who can have his feelings hurt by blasphemous talk that he might not be the best point guard in the world.

At last check, Nelson, 29, was a grown man who played four seasons at Saint Joseph’s University, won the Naismith and Wooden awards as a senior, and has played in the NBA for eight seasons, including 39 playoff games. He is married and has a son, nicknamed “Deuce,” and he bravely faced the death of his father, who in 2007 was found floating in the Delaware River in Chester, Pa.

Nelson has dealt with a lot worse than a teammate wanting to walk as a free agent. He’s not playing well this season — in fact, he’s been terrible — but it’s not because of indirect speculation that Williams might be a little better than he is.

We point this out only to note that, on the most important matter of all, Smith has expertly played a potentially explosive situation. He’s done so simply by not trading Howard, who visits Boston on Monday night to take on the Celtics.

Orlando is the best place for Howard, even if he doesn’t fully realize it. 

It’s unclear what star players such as Howard envision awaits them in new locales. The Magic have spent seven years building their team around Howard, surrounding him with dangerous 3-point shooters, rugged rebounders and a point guard who has probably sacrificed his own statistics to accomodate Howard, the best big man in the game.

The other supposed suitors have, what? Howard supposedly dreams to teaming up with Williams on the Nets, but has he looked at the rest of that roster? Playing for the Lakers sounds nice until he realizes that, without Pau Gasol and Andrew Bynum (at least one of whom, if not both, would have to be sent to Orlando in any trade), the Lakers are a lot like the Magic, only with a constantly disgruntled Kobe Bryant to tolerate.

With Howard, the Magic are 11-4 and arguably have better team chemistry than any of the Eastern Conference’s elite teams, save Chicago. (The 76ers and Pacers may top them all, but for now let’s hold off on calling Philly or Indy “elite.”)

Smith and the Magic clearly recognize that by keeping Howard, they stand a reasonable chance of making their second NBA Finals appearance in four years. The “trade him or he’ll leave for nothing” logic is outdated. The collective bargaining agreement gives players favorable terms for re-signing with their old teams, so most notable free agents take part in sign-and-trades. The Celtics recently exercised this option to sign unrestricted free agent Glen Davis before shipping him to Orlando for Brandon Bass.

To recap the Magic’s current options:

Keep Howard: They maintain one of the top four spots in the Eastern Conference, possibly make a deep playoff run and, at worst, sign-and-trade Howard this offseason for several young players and draft picks.

Trade Howard: First off, they lose the most dominant interior force in the NBA; plummet to the bottom of the standings; waste half a season of their young talent’s development when the coaching staff inevitably would get cleared out after a dispiriting campaign; watch those draft picks they acquired fall to the end of the first round, because Howard will single-handedly yank his new team out of the draft lottery.

Either Smith, who has made some questionable deals in attempts to keep Howard in Orlando (Hello, Gilbert Arenas!), knows this or he has advisors reminding him of this. The Magic are better for now and for the near future with Howard, and Howard will be better in the short term and in the long run as a member of the Magic.

This should be the type of disappointment even Nelson can overcome.

Leave any suggestions in the comment box.

Posted in UncategorizedComments Off

Rashard Lewis has recovered from being traded by the Orlando Magic

Rashard Lewis found himself in a familiar place Tuesday afternoon.

He practiced with his current team, the Washington Wizards, on the Amway Center practice court he once used with his old team, the Orlando Magic. Four of the banners that he helped the Magic win still hang on the walls. A few pictures of him still adorn the Magic weight room.

“It just brings a smile back to my face,” Lewis said afterward as he looked at the 2008-09 Eastern Conference championship banner.

Fans probably will see that familiar grin when Lewis’ Wizards face the Magic tonight at Amway Center. It will be Lewis’ first game at the arena as a player since he was traded to Washington for Gilbert Arenas on Dec. 18, 2010.


Lewis has adjusted.

Finally.

In an interview Tuesday, as he sat in his old team’s practice gym, Lewis revealed that it took him months to come to terms with the blockbuster trade. He went from a team with legitimate NBA title aspirations to a team headed for the NBA lottery. And although he had heard rumors that a trade was in the offing, the deal still caught him by surprise.

“At the time, when the trade happened, it was a blow,” Lewis recalled.

“It was a huge blow. My main focus was to try and win the NBA championship for the city of Orlando. We got close one year. We’d been to the Eastern Conference finals the year after that. It was nothing but good times here when we were winning ballgames, and I put everything into trying to bring a championship for this city and for this team. It just seemed like it came crashing down all in one day.”

On Dec. 17, the day before the deal, the Magic organization hosted 55 families from a nearby youth center for a holiday party at Amway Center. Players gave the kids brand-new, gleaming bicycles. The team set up activities on the arena grounds. Everything seemed just fine.

The next morning, everything felt different when the team gathered for its shootaround to prepare for that night’s game against the Philadelphia 76ers.

“I woke up that morning and I kind of heard the rumors of a trade, but you always hear rumors of a million different trades or a million different things that go on in the NBA,” Lewis said. “I didn’t talk to the coach about it. I didn’t talk to the GM [Otis Smith]. Nobody told me nothing.

“I came to the shootaround in the morning, and the vibe was weird. It was different at that shootaround that morning. Some guys were laughing and upbeat; maybe they knew about the trade, I don’t know. It was just a different vibe.

“Then, when I left to go home, I ate my pregame meal and took a nap. My phone started ringing while I was asleep; I woke up and looked at my phone and I saw it was Otis calling. I pretty much knew what happened just by seeing him call.”

Lewis didn’t answer his phone right away.

He wanted to speak to his agent, Tony Dutt, before he talked with Smith.

It was official. Lewis had been traded for Arenas.

And, in a separate deal, the Magic sent Vince Carter, Marcin Gortat, Mickael Pietrus, a first-round draft pick and cash to Phoenix for Jason Richardson, Hedo Turkoglu and Earl Clark.

Lewis said what made it tough was that he didn’t have time to prepare. He had no inkling that he was on the trading block.

Subscribe to our feed!.

Posted in UncategorizedComments Off

Magic still wary of Hawks

ORLANDO — If the Orlando Magic’s 2010-11 season were likened to a fairy tale, it would probably be a mix of “The Wizard of Oz” and “Alice in Wonderland.”

In December, the Magic’s championship journey was detoured by a massive trade that altered their roster. Then, in the second half of the schedule, injuries, inconsistency and other growing pains left a team that made the NBA Finals two years ago feeling like it was trudging through some strange world.

Tonight, Orlando opens the playoffs against a team it swept out of the Eastern Conference semifinals a year ago. But this time, the Magic face a Hawks squad that has had its number this season.

“They got a lot of the same guys, but as far as the way they play against us, it’s a lot different,” Magic coach Stan Van Gundy said of Atlanta, which has beaten Orlando in three out of four meetings in 2010-11.

The Hawks jettisoned point guard Mike Bibby in favor of Kirk Hinrich in a February trade with Washington. They also moved Jason Collins to center and Al Horford to power forward, allowing Horford a lot more flexibility on the offensive end.

Horford is averaging a career-best 15.3 points overall and 16.3 in the four games against Orlando. Collins, by guarding Dwight Howard, has allowed Horford to avoid foul trouble.

Howard and the Magic have suffered offensively against Atlanta.

As a team, Orlando is averaging 82.5 points per game, below its season average of 99.2 points.

“That’s not us. We want to be high 90s, low 100s,” point guard Jameer Nelson said. “If we could score 200, that would be great.”

Howard’s individual output has also waned. After going 10-for-20 and scoring 27 points in the Nov. 8 win against Atlanta, he was held below 50 percent shooting in the final three games and shot 43 percent overall.

“The three games that they beat us in, the pace was slow and we played to their liking,” Howard said. “In order to beat these guys, we have to run and we have to move.”

Nelson said that though this playoff run begins with only four players (Nelson, Howard, Redick and Hedo Turkoglu) that were on the roster for the NBA Finals run two years ago, he has plenty of confidence in this new group.

“It’s fun. I’ve done it numerous times now, and on different teams in terms of personnel,” Nelson said. “One thing I know is we have winners on this team. . . . We’re hard to beat when we play the right way.”

Not much else going on in the NBA world today.

Posted in UncategorizedComments Off