Yeah, Favors had a good first step and extension. He just left Hickson behind.
I'm not sure that Harris's deal was so much about him. I think it has something to do with our offense being less focused around getting Jefferson the ball EVERY SINGLE TIME down the court.
Ever since we have treated Big Al as a good player instead of Karl Malone, Hayward, Harris, Burks, etc have all flourished. Even with Duron our offense sucked. I think we were trying to feed him the ball too much while everyone else stood around to rebound his misses.
Seriously. Al was defending a driving guard, the guy misses and falls kind of hard to the ground. Utah board, they were running and Al was helping the guy up. I like Al but I'd bench him for the rest of the game for that play.
Since when Blazers changed name to Ripcity?
We might have lost Carroll for some time if he has another concussion.
Well, you have Charlotte which has lost 18 straight and Minnesota at 11. But my vote goes to Golden State. They're not even trying.I think this has everything to do with Porty being sooooooooooooo sucky. I honestly don't understand how anyone could pay good money to watch this crap. Porty might be thee worst team in the league right now.
Well, you have Charlotte which has lost 18 straight and Minnesota at 11. But my vote goes to Golden State. They're not even trying.
Since when Blazers changed name to Ripcity?
Oregonlive.com said:Since the first tip at a Trail Blazers game in 1970, there have been more difficult, and more important shots than the one guard Jim Barnett took on Feb. 18, 1971.
But no shot in team history has proven to be more enduring than his long, high-arcing attempt at Memorial Coliseum that swished against the Lakers in that inaugural season.
The shot was ill-advised, taken much too quickly and from far too long of distance. And ultimately, Barnett and the Blazers had far too few baskets that night in a 136-114 loss.
But the shot produced one of the most lasting and defining moments in the team's history.
It was the shot that spawned Rip City.
Bill Schonely, the Blazers radio voice, got caught up in the excitement, which created a brief moment of hope against the mighty Lakers. When the shot swished, Schonely blurted out "Rip City! All right!"
To this day, Schonely doesn't know where "Rip City!" came from, or what it means.
But for some reason, the phrase stuck and has since become synonymous with Blazers basketball. When Schonely was the team's broadcaster from 1970 through 1998, he would say "Rip City!" after an important basket or exciting play. Today, Rip City has come to symbolize the connection between Portland and its only major league professional sports team, becoming perhaps as well-known and oft-used as the city's formal moniker, The Rose City.
I'm glad I'm not the only one that noticed this. It's been amazing over the last month and a half how many times we've had T's and can't make the freaking free throw. It drives me insane.
Portland sometimes goes by the nickname of Rip City, kind of like Boston/Beantown.
Winning this game makes me want to vomit. Sorry playoff guys, but this is crap. We will be stuck with this exact same team next year. How exciting.