Ball Don't Lie - NBA

Each weekday morning, BDL serves up a handful of NBA-related stories to digest with your Nintendo Cereal System from Ralston-Purina. At least for now. We'll see how long this lasts.

K.C. Johnson, Chicago Tribune: "Larry Hughes started for the injured Luol Deng Wednesday, but Deng's sore left hamstring can't make the Bulls' glut of guards disappear. That's why the disenchantment Hughes expressed late Tuesday in Los Angeles, after averaging 18 minutes this season, could resurface. 'I don't want to play like this,' Hughes said. 'I'm not comfortable with 15-20 minutes. Something has to change.' It did, albeit temporarily. But Derrick Rose is the No. 1 overall pick, Ben Gordon is the team's leading scorer and Kirk Hinrich, currently injured, is the best perimeter defender. 'You have to understand that situation and I do,' Hughes said. 'We have a lot of guys at one position. Somebody has to come off the bench and you accept that role. But I'm not expecting 15-20 minutes, and I don't want to deal with that.'"

Mike Wells, Indianapolis Star: "Trying to defend stars such as LeBron James and Kobe Bryant affected Granger's offense. Or vice versa. Sometimes he struggled defensively if he focused too much on offense. That hasn't been a concern this season. Marquis Daniels is guarding the opponent's best perimeter player at the start of each game, which means Granger doesn't have to exert as much energy on both ends of the court. 'It definitely helps a lot,' Granger said. 'I don't get tired as much as I used to. It's a hard job chasing those guys around. I still end up defending them at some point in the game.'"

Paul Coro, Arizona Republic: "In a convoluted storyline layered with meanings lost in translation, Suns center Shaquille O'Neal is denying an interview that he probably didn't need to deny. From a transcript run Friday on a Sacramento Bee blog, O'Neal's comments were pulled and translated in Los Angeles and then nationally on an ESPN crawl. The "news" was that O'Neal had not ruled out a return to the Lakers when he is a free agent in 2010 and that Lakers coach Phil Jackson orchestrated O'Neal's tension with Kobe Bryant. Part of the problem was that O'Neal said Wednesday that he did not talk to anyone in Sacramento, where the Suns played last Friday — but the interview was done in the preseason in Phoenix by the Bee's Scott Howard-Cooper, a former Los Angeles Times writer whom O'Neal knows."

Chris McCosky, Detroit News: "Ben Wallace, who is playing a somewhat diminished role for the Cavaliers these days, barely recognizes his former Pistons team. 'It's strange coming in here now and this guy's not here any more, and that guy's not here and then a couple more guys are gone,' he said. 'The numbers keep getting smaller (of guys he played with here) and that is a little strange.' Wallace said, like everybody else, he was shocked when he heard the Pistons had traded Chauncey Billups and Antonio McDyess for Allen Iverson. He joked that all that was left was, 'the Big Three,' Hamilton, Rasheed Wallace and Tayshaun Prince. 'Their style of play has definitely changed,' Wallace said. 'They are forced to play a different style of basketball now. You get used to playing one way, then you've got to change the way you play toward the end of your career, I mean, I am sure it's been a little tough on them.'"

Michael Lee, Washington Post: "For a fleeting moment, it seemed that cocky swagger that has come to define the Washington Wizards in their annual journey through adversity had returned. A desperate, hard-luck team appeared set to pull out a gutsy road victory over the Atlanta Hawks on Wednesday night when DeShawn Stevenson dribbled toward the right baseline, gave Maurice Evans a slight nudge for separation, then drilled a jumper over him to give the Wizards a four-point lead with just more than a minute remaining. Stevenson waved his hand over his face, rookie JaVale McGee patted him on his backside and Stevenson then jumped into Caron Butler as a stunned Philips Arena crowd looked on. It was a premature celebration, because the Wizards don't have the Eastern Conference's worst record by mistake. They've earned it in a season that has been marked by fourth-quarter mishaps and an inability to close. And one minute proved to be too long for the Wizards to hang on, as Joe Johnson and Marvin Williams nailed back-to-back three-pointers to hand them a 91-87 defeat."

Charles F. Gardner, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel: "Hey, the Milwaukee Bucks still haven't won in Utah since the 2001-'02 season. But the Bucks did have a decent chance Wednesday night, holding a 10-point, third-quarter lead before faltering in a 105-94 loss to the Jazz. 'Compared to the Denver game, it was a step up,' said Bucks center Andrew Bogut, who finished with 16 points and a season-high 20 rebounds. 'We came with intensity and played hard. But we still were making simple mistakes. We were so close, yet so far. Mental lapses for 4 or 5 minutes at a time absolutely cost us ball games.'"

Mark Murphy, Boston Herald: "The Celtics coach, asked yesterday about Knicks forward Quinton Richardson’s postgame complaints about the C’s perceived compunction for boastful talk, wrote part of the issue off to rivalry and the other to the source. 'This thing with the Knicks has been going on for a while now,' Rivers said. 'And Q has been in the middle of it. But a lot of teams talk to us, man. What I tell our guys is, 'You’ve proven what you can do, so just go out and do it.''"

John Denton, Florida Today: "What then will happen to Redick? Pietrus is the unquestioned starter when healthy and Keith Bogans has been Orlando’s best reserve. According to head coach Stan Van Gundy, rookie Courtney Lee is the Magic’s best on-ball defender on the perimeter. Then, there’s Redick, who is eager to learn his fate as it applies to the future. 'This was an opportunity presented because MP (Pietrus) was injured and whenever chances like this come I have to go out and earn my minutes,' Redick said. 'I hope I’ll get more chances like this.' Those chances were few and far between after Redick was pulled from Van Gundy’s rotation following a dreadful three-game start to the season."

Brian Lewis, New York Post: "As if their listless loss to LeBron James & Co. wasn't bad enough, Yi Jianlian strained his neck yesterday in practice. With every power forward on the roster banged up, the New Jersey Nets could start a pair of rookies tomorrow in Toronto. [...] 'Yi hurt himself in practice, strained neck. We'll know more [today],' said coach Lawrence Frank. 'He kind of jolted back. It must've been some sort of hit, and his head [went back]. It wasn't anything glaring.'"

SI.com: "Anthony Morrow can still walk without incident from his downtown hotel to the BART trains that sometimes take him to the Golden State Warriors' arena. Most of Oakland's famously enthusiastic hoops fans haven't yet put a face to the name that hit their favorite team's starting lineup like a thunderbolt last weekend. [...] Just a few weeks after Morrow was wondering whether he'd have to play in Ukraine this winter, he is Golden State's starting shooting guard. Corey Maggette and captain Stephen Jackson already see him as an equal, and coach Don Nelson is talking about building parts of his famed offense around Morrow. 'He's the real deal, and we haven't even learned how to play with him yet,' Nelson said. 'I told the team that we'd better know where this guy is at all times. We'd better get him open, because he looks like the real deal.'"

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  1. burrhus
    1. Posted by burrhus Thu Sep 03, 2009 9:32 pm EDT

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    when the cavs-bulls-sonics trade went down, i said that ben wallace made a huge contribution to the cavs even if he never played a game for them because it was his contract that got larry hughes out of town. for a guy with constant injury problems and a shaky jumpshot, he sure love to pitch a fit when he's not getting "his" minutes and "his" shots.
  2. drunk_and_disorderly_too
    2. Posted by drunk_and_disorderly_too Thu Sep 03, 2009 3:48 pm EDT

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    Wes T must be gay.
  3. Boomhauer
    3. Posted by Boomhauer Thu Sep 03, 2009 10:12 pm EDT

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    What a surprise that Hughes is complaining. Enjoy Bulls fans.
  4. The Don
    4. Posted by The Don Thu Sep 03, 2009 9:41 pm EDT

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    Larry is a high priced role player who thinks he's better than he is. He and ben shoot 1stgordan are hampering the develpmnt of the young bulls. Can you see a lopsided trade comin? I do. Oh I kno I spelled gordon like Jordan on purpose
  5. The Don
    5. Posted by The Don Thu Sep 03, 2009 9:41 pm EDT

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    Larry is a high priced role player who thinks he's better than he is. He and ben shoot 1stgordan are hampering the develpmnt of the young bulls. Can you see a lopsided trade comin? I do. Oh I kno I spelled gordon like Jordan on purpose
  6. mark payne
    6. Posted by mark payne Thu Sep 03, 2009 7:27 pm EDT

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    Larry is a great player, but he needs consistent minutes on a well rounded team. Let him rot on the nebch and of course, watch his numbers go down.
    DeShawn Stevenson is a bum. This dude is just an borderline OK 3-point shooter, is on the worse team in the NBA, got embrassed last year. This guy has proven nothing in his career, isn't a top player at all.... yet he has this stupid gesture. Um you can't celebrate and mock other players when you're losing dude. The fact that the coach allows this really says it ALL about the Washington BULLETS.
  7. Andrew K
    7. Posted by Andrew K Thu Sep 03, 2009 9:23 pm EDT

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    Wow.... Larry Hughes is an idiot. He barely deserves the minutes he's getting now as it is. I really hope the Bulls can dump him off somewhere, like on OKC or Charlotte, younger teams that would be even more reluctant to play him.
    Also, though Big Ben was pretty much useless last year, he's off to a pretty solid start this season, much like the rest of the Cavs. He even completed a 3-point play early in the game last night!
  8. Duk
    8. Posted by 'Duk Thu Sep 03, 2009 3:07 pm EDT

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    I made a pledge when the Bulls acquired Larry Hughes that I wouldn't be watching the team as long as he was on it. I've remained true to that pledge and now that I've heard he and Ben Gordon are freezing out Derrick Rose like he's MJ in his first All-Star Game, I'm confident I made the right choice.
  9. joe mama
    9. Posted by joe mama Thu Sep 03, 2009 8:10 pm EDT

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    larry hughes sucks.
    hughes isn't accustomed to playing 15-20 mins per game.
    bulls fans aren't accustomed to having a crappy player like hughes act like he's actually good.
    i guess that makes it even.
  10. followthailand
    10. Posted by followthailand Thu Sep 03, 2009 10:43 pm EDT

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    ist

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