RealClearSports: Warriors Make a Legendary Hire

By Art Spander
For RealClearSports.com


SAN FRANCISCO — He's always had what was required, as a player with a last-second jump shot — Jerry West wasn't nicknamed "Mr. Clutch for nothing — as an executive with a draft day trade for the rights to Kobe Bryant.

"A tremendous amount of good fortune,'' advised West, "can happen for a risk taker.''

A risk taker who knows the territory, which Jerry West certainly does.

Read the full story here.

© RealClearSports 2011

RealClearSports: Butler's Big Dance Big Disappointment

By Art Spander
For RealClearSports.com


HOUSTON -- The ultimate game of the Final Four was a final flop, the Big Dance a big disappointment. You can debate whether the best team won the national college basketball championship, but there's no little doubt the poorest shooting team lost it Monday night.

An event the NCAA likes to promote as its premier sporting attraction deserved to get the hook, and that didn't mean the hook shots, because almost none of those fell either.

Read the full story here.

© RealClearSports 2011

RealClearSports: Another Chance for a Butler Moment

By Art Spander
For RealClearSports.com


HOUSTON -- Remember that Canon advertising slogan a while back, the one trying to persuade us perception is reality? Not in college basketball, it isn't. Reality is what you put on the floor. And on the scoreboard.

Reality is Butler University.



Provide explanations. Make excuses. Butler, we believe, must be doing it with smoke and mirrors, doing it because all the schools it has faced -- all the schools it has defeated -- have been unable to do it.

Read the full story here.

© RealClearSports 2011

RealClearSports: Games Are Best Even If Teams Aren't

By Art Spander
For RealClearSports.com


HOUSTON — An interesting theory put forth by the man from the Midwest: The team that wins the NCAA tournament won't be the best in college basketball. Well, then, who will be, all those schools eliminated along the way?

The refrain repeated so often has basketball ahead of college football, because in basketball a champion is determined the proper way, in competition.

Oh, we keep hearing, why can't football do the same thing, have a playoff?

© RealClearSports 2011

Newsday (N.Y.): St. John's women lose to Stanford, 75-49

By Art Spander
Special to Newsday


STANFORD, Calif. — It looked so good for the St. John's women when they led Stanford by eight points at about the midway point of the first half of their NCAA Tournament second-round game Monday night. Then it looked perfectly awful.

Practically before anyone could blink, and virtually before St. John's could get off any shot — let alone a good one — Stanford had outscored St. John's by 40 points. Not 4 . . . 40.

As in 55-15 — which turned an eight-point deficit into a 32-point lead.

With a huge second half, Stanford beat the Red Storm, 75-49. And No. 9 seed St. John's understood how the No. 2-ranked Cardinal could have stopped UConn's record 90-game winning streak in December.

It was the 63nd straight win for Stanford at Maples Pavilion and its 24th straight overall.

"Obviously, I'm disappointed," St. John's coach Kim Barnes Arico said, "but they're one of the best teams in the country. We were able to hang with them early, but we ran out of gas. They're an outstanding team."

They're also a bigger team. St. John's tried to jam the middle, and it worked for a while, as Storm led 22-14 with 9:45 left in the first half. But Stanford went outside and started hitting, and St. John's, inside or outside, started missing. And kept missing.

In the second half, St. John's was 5-for-24 from the field, and in one stretch, after trailing only 38-30 at intermission, was outscored 21-0. The Red Storm wound up falling behind by 32 points at 69-37.

"We sort of ran out of energy," St. John's Da'Shena Stevens said. "They hurt us inside. We went cold. We rushed things a little bit, which is what happens when you fall behind. We didn't get stops, so it was hard to get good shots."

Stanford's sister act from Cypress, Texas, made a difference, with junior Nnemkadi Ogwumike getting the points (22) and freshman Chiney Ogwumike getting the rebounds (12). Kayla Pedersen had 14 points, eight rebounds and five
assists.

Centhya Hart led the Red Storm with 15 points and Nadirah McKenith added 10. St. John's (22-11) had beaten Texas Tech on Saturday, but Stanford is one of the elite squads, with a history of NCAA titles and a 31-2 record this season.

St. John's goes home after a season that wasn't all that bad -- except for the final 30 minutes.

"We were just worn down trying to match up with them," Barnes Arico said, "but I'm proud of my team. They worked very hard."

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http://www.newsday.com/sports/college/college-basketball/st-john-s-women-lose-to-stanford-75-49-1.2774950
Copyright © 2011 Newsday. All rights reserved.

Newsday (N.Y.): St. John's women beat Texas Tech, advance

By Art Spander
Special to Newsday


STANFORD, Calif -- Kim Barnes Arico was aware  of what was happening. Yes, the fans were screaming. No, it wasn't for the coach's St. John's women's basketball team.

With a few seconds remaining in what wound up a 55-50 win for the Red Storm over Texas Tech Saturday in an NCAA Tournament first-round game, the growing crowd at Maples Pavilion let loose.

"You mean those cheers weren't for us?'' Barnes Arico joked.

She added, "I started to look around. I'm not naive enough not to know what was happening.''

There on the video board, the Stanford team was emerging from its locker room to face UC Davis in the second game, which it won easily. Stanford will host St. John's in the second round Monday night at Maples, the campus arena.

"You face that situation when you're playing Connecticut,'' Barnes Arico said about the crowd reaction. "That's the women's game, playing on the home court of an opponent in the tournament. Maybe we'll catch them on an off night, and maybe we'll have a phenomenal night.''

The Storm (22-10) wasn't phenomenal, but it was effective. Trailing 30-28 at intermission, St. John's opened the second half with an 8-0 run. Tech didn't get a point for the first 4 minutes, 32 seconds.

Then, after Tech (22-11) tied it at 36 with 10:46 left, St. John's ran off nine straight points in three-plus minutes. At that point, Texas Tech was 4-for-22 from the floor in the second half.

"I thought our defense was really exceptional,'' Barnes Arico said. "And even though we were undersized compared to Texas Tech, we outrebounded them.''

That they did, 47-40, with Da'Shena Stevens grabbing 11.

Sophomore point guard Nadirah McKenith, injured so often earlier in the  season with concussions, an ankle sprain and a bruised thumb, led St. John's  with 14 points and four assists. She also had seven rebounds.

"Only the last month has she been able to practice,'' Barnes Arico said. "She does everything. Down the stretch, she got two key rebounds and made her free throws.''

Said sophomore guard Eugeneia McPherson, who starred at North Babylon,  "Having Nadirah on our team is an honor. She'll throw passes that I or anyone won't see. She's always ready to make a pass.''

Both the St. John's men and women had to cross the country, or most of it.  The men played their NCAA first-rounder in Denver, two time zones west of New York, and lost  to Gonzaga. The women traveled three time zones, which Barnes Arico said she attempted to downplay.

"St. John's looked more comfortable than we did,'' Tech coach Kristy Curry said. "Whether it was the St. John's defense or inability to make shots, we missed a whole bunch.''

Tech missed 40 of 60, shooting 33 percent. St. John's was marginally better.  "I think both of us were extremely sloppy,'' Barnes Arico said.
But one them, St. John's, also was extremely happy.

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http://www.newsday.com/sports/college/college-basketball/st-john-s-women-beat-texas-tech-advance-1.2771159
Copyright © 2011 Newsday. All rights reserved.

RealClearSports: NBA's All About Glamour Teams

By Art Spander
For RealClearSports.com


So, Denver, the city and the team, symbolically lies bleeding and battered. It was overmatched and under-financed. The NBA is a league for the Big Guys, figuratively as well as literally.

In the so-called ultimate team game, everything is under the control of the individual.

Read the full story here.

© RealClearSports 2011

RealClearSports: Cheers, Jeers - and Baskets - Follow Kobe

By Art Spander
For RealClearSports.com


OAKLAND, Calif. -- The people who weren't cheering him were booing him. It was a game in the arena of the Golden State Warriors, but for Kobe Bryant, it could have been in L.A.'s Staples Center.

"Yeah,'' Bryant said, "when we're up, it does feel like a home game."

Read the full story here.

© RealClearSports 2011

SF Examiner: Lakers bring electricity to town

By Art Spander
Special to The Examiner


The long ago Pacific Coast League baseball team was called the Hollywood Stars, a name both pretentious and truthful in Southern Cal. Down there, if you’re not signing autographs, you’re asking for them. It’s an L.A. way of life.

Read the full story here.

Copyright 2011 SF Newspaper Company

SF Examiner: Keith Smart enjoying life at the top

By Art Spander
Special to The Examiner


He remembers the spoon being tossed into the metal sink at 4:30 a.m. Keith Smart’s father had finished his coffee and was leaving for work in Baton Rouge, La. Another day had begun, and for a boy, so had an understanding of what life was all about.


Read the full story here.

Copyright 2010 SF Newspaper Company

RealClearSports: Heat's On LeBron, Miami

By Art Spander
For RealClearSports.com


"We're not having fun right now.'' The speaker was LeBron James. The same LeBron James who turned the end of his free agency into a parody and it was believed would turn the Miami Heat into the greatest team in the history of basketball. Or at least in the history of overhyped basketball players.

Nothing against Mr. James and the Heat, but some of us are having a great deal of fun.

Read the full story here.

© RealClearSports 2010

SF Examiner: Things are looking up in NorCal

By Art Spander
Special to The Examiner



John Cook, who won the Charles Schwab Cup Championship on Sunday at Harding Park, was saying as a kid who grew up in Southern California — or “SoCal,” as he phrased it — how much he reveled in beating people and teams from Northern California.

Read the full story here.

C0pyright 2010 SF Newspaper Company

RealClearSports: Warriors Send Don Nelson Swimming

By Art Spander
For RealClearSports.com


He was busy. "Probably swimming with the dolphins,'' was the message on Don Nelson's answering machine. He meant the real ones, off the coast of Maui.

As opposed to swimming with sharks, the figurative kind, who symbolically chewed him up.

The ones who chomped him out of pro basketball, this time apparently for good.

Read the full story here.

© RealClearSports 2010

SF Examiner: New ownership for Warriors a good place to start

By Art Spander
Special to The Examiner


SAN FRANCISCO — Coming from the entertainment industry, where he was the poobah of National General, the late Gene Klein was used to having things his own way, which is what happens when you are successful in business. In fact, that is what makes you successful in business.

Read the full story here.

Copyright 2010 SF Newspaper Company

RealClearSports: Lakers on the Freeway to Success

By Art Spander
For RealClearSports.com


Ray Allen's jumper must have been stopped at security. He traveled from L.A. to Boston, but his shot wasn't allowed to board. Or knowing the airlines, maybe it was shipped to the Bahamas by mistake, with those suitcases which were supposed to go to Baltimore.

Is there a Bureau of Missing Baskets?

Read the full story here.

© RealClearSports 2010

RealClearSports: The Great Fight Ends for John Wooden

By Art Spander
For RealClearSports.com


The discipline is about to begin up in heaven. St. Peter will learn how to wear his socks and tie his shoes. Or else.

John Wooden's arrived, and if there's one thing John never could accept, it was ignoring fundamentals, whether dealing with the proper method of shooting free throws or the proper method of getting into one's footwear.

Read the full story here.

© RealClearSports 2010

RealClearSports: Celtics: A History of Agony for Lakers

By Art Spander
For RealClearSports.com


They came from Minneapolis 50 years ago -- you think a team in southern California ever would be named "Lakers?'' -- and nobody seemed to care.

The big games played in L.A. in those days were not under a roof. As the Rivieras sang, people were out there having fun in the warm California sun. Not indoors.

Read the full story here.

© RealClearSports 2010

RealClearSports: Lakers-Suns: As Good As It Gets

By Art Spander
For RealClearSports.com

Remember the film from a few years back, “As Good as it Gets’’? Jack Nicholson was in that one. Nicholson, who as always, was courtside Thursday night when the Lakers and Suns played a game that was, yes, as good as it gets.




Maybe it wasn’t for Suns fans. Not when they look at the scoreboard. But if they are able to see the big picture, if they judge a sporting event for what it can offer in excitement and drama and irony, even they grudgingly might concede.

Read the full story here.

© RealClearSports 2010

RealClearSports: Speculation on LeBron: We Do Overkill Well

By Art Spander
For RealClearSports.com


Avery Johnson, the coach turned announcer, is "rooting for Cleveland.'' I'm rooting for a moratorium. Wishing there were not one mention of LeBron James until July. As if that's possible.

This will be the summer of our dyspepsia. We're going to be sick of the speculation. We already are.

Read the full story here.

© RealClearSports 2010

RealClearSports: 'Los Suns' Go After Arizona's Immigration Law

By Art Spander
For RealClearSports.com


It's Cinco de Mayo, the Fifth of May, the anniversary of the Mexican militia's victory over Napoleon's troops in 1862; cause for celebration in Mexico, a holiday.

It's reason for the Phoenix Suns, whose home is a state at war with itself over immigration, mainly about undocumented Mexicans, to make a statement as clear as the words on the front of their jerseys.

Read the full story here.

© RealClearSports 2010