5:30p PT
KTLA 5
Former Los Angeles Times Clippers beat writer, Jonathan Abrams, has a story in his new outfit, the New York Times, on Elgin Baylor:
Baylor faces an uphill legal battle. Although his authority waned in recent seasons, he was a team executive for 22 years — a span that other general managers could only dream of matching…
The allegations in the lawsuit surfaced only after Baylor left his job. He said he was fired; the organization said he resigned.
For the general edification of the team, because this seems to be a recurring problem:
Section I-Player
The player is out-of-bounds when he touches the floor or any object on or outside a boundary. For location of a player in the air, his position is that from which he last touched the floor.
From Chris Sheridan of ESPN.com:
NEW YORK — Isiah Thomas is actively seeking work again, and he spoke several weeks ago with Los Angeles Clippers owner Donald Sterling in a meeting arranged by current coach/general manager Mike Dunleavy, ESPN.com learned Wednesday.
Several NBA sources confirmed the February meeting between the former president and general manager of the New York Knicks, adding that there were follow-up discussions between Thomas and other high-ranking club officials — but also stressing that no job has been offered.
In a game that includes a rim-hanging technical foul in the final thirty seconds of regulation, an inbounds violation inside of four minutes, a New York FGM with no Knick anywhere near the ball or basket, a Baron Davis leg cramp in overtime, seven 3PMs in the first four minutes of the second half, the biggest curio of them all is Mike Taylor. The rookie point guard scores 35 points [14-20 FG, 7-7 FT], fueling the Clippers to an improbable win that, for a quarter, looked like it might exceed all but the Cleveland and the early Denver loss in absolute unsightliness.
The game begins horribly. Even though they field a starting lineup that includes Zach Randolph [against Al Harrington], Al Thornton [Quentin Richardson], and Marcus Camby [David Lee] — not a Knick shot-blocker in sight — the Clippers work themselves only two inside looks over the first eight possessions. It’s astounding, because if a team isn’t shooting inside of 15 feet against the Knicks, it simply isn’t trying. And the Clippers aren’t. There’s a telling moment toward the end of the first quarter [1st, 1:22] with the Clippers trailing 40-23. A penetrating Chris Duhon, motor running a little hot, picks up his dribble before he realizes he has no one to pass out to. The ball ends up in the hands of Zach Randolph, who throws it ahead to Eric Gordon in the open court. It’s not a great pass — Eric has to run it down on the right side with Nate Robinson in hot pursuit. Eric gathers the ball, but when he looks up to find what should be a procession of teammates filling the open lanes, all he sees are white jerseys. Jared Jeffries and Al Harrington crane their heads around, almost surprised to see they’ve beaten their assignments back on a certain Clippers’ fast break. Neither Baron Davis nor Zach Randolph bothered to run out on the break. They outsourced the entire opportunity to the rookie. Never let anyone ever tell you that all Zach Randolph cares about are his personal statistics.
Gordon is the only starter who plays with any degree of intensity in the opening quarter, when the Clippers give up a season-high 44 points. When the Clippers start the second with Gordon and four reserves — Mike Taylor, Fred Jones, Steve Novak, and Chris Kaman — the game changes. Taylor was born to play at this tempo, and he scores 17 points in the second quarter:
Only one of Taylor’s eight scoring sequences in the second quarter follow a Knicks’ FGM, with six of the eight coming off a Knicks’ miss, and that trend continues through the game. Running is predicated on defensive stops, which is why the Clippers appear most fluid during their best defensive quarter.