Showing posts with label Sports. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sports. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 1, 2012

For Woodson, the Test Keeps Getting Tougher

All Mike Woodson would say was that Amar’e Stoudemire had lacerated his left hand after the Knicks lost Game 2 of their playoff series against the Heat on Monday night at American Airlines Arena. He wouldn’t say how or how badly.
“That’s all I’m going to say,” Woodson said on the latest news-break from a team that writes headlines these days like no other except maybe the Jets.
The follow-up question could have easily been: Are you sure you really want this job?
Logic tells us that Woodson will be retained as the Knicks’ coach for next season, even if they should lose their first-round playoff series to the Heat, which they now trail, 2-0, after losing, 104-94.
Granted, logic and the Knicks have not exactly enjoyed the closest of relationships for the past decade, and they weren’t even in the same arena when Stoudemire apparently took out his frustrations on what was suspected of being the glass case of a fire extinguisher.
“Let’s talk about the game,” Woodson said, changing the subject, a skill Knicks coaches must perfect given the continuous circus they have presided over.
Despite an 18-6 record after Mike D’Antoni’s departure, the Knicks did not remove Woodson’s interim tag leading into the postseason, nor should they have. They are entitled and even obliged to evaluate Woodson under postseason conditions, which are distinctively different from the regular season, and especially given the unique challenges the Knicks have developed a habit of presenting.
If LeBron James and Dwyane Wade weren’t daunting enough for Woodson, a roster that appears to be crumbling before his eyes was further muddled by Stoudemire’s juvenile act after Carmelo Anthony’s 30 points — only 9 in the second half — weren’t enough for the Knicks to get beyond arm’s length of the Heat.
At least they competed, unlike their showing in Game 1, when they were thoroughly unprepared for Miami’s defensive tactic of fronting Anthony to deny him from making an easy catch on the wing. It was as if it hadn’t occurred to the Knicks that the Heat — a defensive-minded team under the executive stewardship of Pat Riley — would try something different from their last regular-season meeting, when Anthony dropped 42 points in a tense Miami victory.
Nor did Anthony and the Knicks recognize how to combat the strategy, with quicker ball and body movement to set up catch-and-shoot chances, or by just having Anthony bring the ball up the floor and attack his defender before double-team help could arrive. That works for James and Wade — why not Anthony, a more stare-you-down scorer than either Heat star, at least during the regular season?
To his credit, Woodson did not resort to the expanding list of readily available excuses, beginning with Tyson Chandler’s illness, Iman Shumpert’s season-ending knee injury, Baron Davis’s assorted ailments and the cloud that has settled over Stoudemire’s career two seasons after the Knicks gave him $100 million.
Unfortunately for Woodson and the Knicks, Miami had too much James and Wade and got a welcome lift from its role players, especially Mario Chalmers, the quick, cocky point guard.
“Now we’ve got to go home and protect our home floor,” Woodson said in the interview room while paramedics stitched up Stoudemire and put him in a sling in a closed Knicks locker room, where Chandler later said of Stoudemire, “He’s probably going to be out” of Game 3 on Thursday night.
It was grand Knicks theater in the way they do it best — off the court.
Most folks around the Knicks seem to want Woodson rewarded with a multiyear contract. He brings a quiet professionalism with the appropriate amount of honesty and accountability when evaluating the performance of his players. But he had to play the company man on Stoudemire, and had better get used to two words in particular — no and comment — if he does get a multiyear deal.
He is no brand name, but on the plus side he is not John Calipari, who did not exactly thrive in an unstable professional environment in New Jersey. Phil Jackson — the other oft-mentioned candidate, who has more championship rings (11) than fingers — didn’t respond to an e-mail last week asking if he might have interest in the Knicks job if it were to become available, whatever that means.
Given the Knicks’ tattered backcourt, no coach — Woodson to Wooden — would consider this situation enviable. It is possible that Woodson, who is considered a strong defensive coach and communicator, could get the job by default. But it is fair to ask that the Knicks at least be competitive as they return home and not go out the way Woodson’s Atlanta teams too often succumbed in the postseason.
In a 2010 series against Orlando, the Hawks were swept by an average of 25 points per game. In 2009, James’s Cleveland team hammered them, 4-0, with the margin of defeat at 18. The previous year, as the eighth seed, the Hawks extended Boston to seven games but in their four losses were outscored on average by 25, including a 34-point walloping in Game 7.
Back then, Woodson was generally given a pass because some of the Hawks were said to be of the knucklehead persuasion. In that sense, maybe Stoudemire did him a favor Monday night if his suspected and belated attack of the glass — pun intended — gives people reason to say, “Poor Woody.” For having to deal with the Knicks right now and quite possibly in the future.

Sunday, April 29, 2012

London 2012: Missiles may be placed at residential flats

Residents at an estate in east London have received a leaflet saying soldiers could be placed there during the Games.
It says part of an air defence system might be based at a water tower on the estate, where 700 people live.
A spokesman said the MoD had not yet decided whether to deploy ground based air defence systems during the Games.
The leaflet states that members of the Armed Forces will be at the location for a military exercise in early May for between five and seven days, between 2 and 7 May.
It goes on to say that there will be a "major national exercise" from 2 to 10 May to test the Armed Forces' capabilities to help the police provide security during the Olympics.
Improve security
And if the government decides to use the missiles during the Games, then the soldiers could be "operationally deployed for a period of up to two months this summer".
The MoD also says in the leaflet that the missiles will be manned by "fully trained, professional soldiers", will not pose a hazard to residents and the missiles "will only be authorised for active use following specific orders from the highest levels of government in response to a confirmed and extreme security threat".
The document also states that "having a 24/7 Armed Forces and police presence will improve your local security and will not make you a target for terrorists".
Journalist Brian Whelan, a resident at the flats, said: "They are going to have a test run next week, putting high velocity missiles on the roof just above our apartment and on the back of it they're stationing police and military in the tower of the building for two months.
"It's a private, gated community... We have an MoD leaflet saying the building is the only suitable place in the area.
"It says there will be 10 officers plus police present 24/7. I'm not sure if they are going to live in the building."
'Not normal'
Mr Whelan also said that the property management company which runs the flats put up posters and gave out the leaflets on Saturday.
A
MoD spokesman said: "As announced before Christmas, ground based air defence systems could be deployed as part of a multi-layered air securit
y plan for the Olympics, including fast jets and helicopters, which will protect the skies over London during the Games.
"Based on military advice we have identified a number of sites and, alongside colleagues from the Metropolitan Police, are talking to local authorities and relevant landowners to help minimise the impact of any temporary deployments.
"As part of our ongoing planning, we can confirm site evaluations have taken place."
Source: BBC News