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Vince tied the game and won it with this.....
Photo
by Ron Turenne-NBAE- Getty
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.....while Harris owned the 3rd quarter.....
Photo
by Ron Turenne-NBAE- Getty
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I had been looking for inspiration all
day. Even the clever cap-clearing moves
engineered
by new Knicks GM Donnie Walsh didn’t really do it for me. I had loved watching Jamal Crawford the last
two years, and I’d recognized some renewed efforts put out by Zak
Randolph this
year.
<>That the Knicks would get a former NJ wunderkind named Al
Harrington and a still very serviceable Cuttino Mobley in exchange
didn’t
really do it for me.
Although things
will be much more exciting two years from now for the Knicks, it’ll be
pretty
much the same story for the rest of this 2008-2009 season.
I had thought I could salvage
something from the NFL
Thursday night game, but as the Steelers rolled over the hapless
Bengals rather
easily, my inspiration wouldn’t come from there. The
most notable aspect of that game was the
Bengals coach’s decision to kick a field goal rather than go for a
touchdown
embarrassingly late in the game.
<>Maybe that’s what’s wrong with the Bengals.
They
have a head coach who’s just as happy to
cover the spread as he is to win the game.
After
the Pittsburgh-San Diego refereeing
debacle of the previous week, in which the referee “mistakenly” called
back a
touchdown that would have enabled the Steelers to cover the spread, it
was
another unpleasant reminder that we may not be watching what we think
we are.
It may be rather well-disguised
professional
wrestling.
The Giants and Jets prospects can
usually move me, but as it
was still Friday, and with both teams facing rather uncertain futures
on
Sunday, the Jets having to play the undefeated Titans and the Giants
having to
face the pass-happy Arizona Cardinals, I wasn’t quite ready to wax
prosaic just
yet about those contests.
<>But tonight, quite by chance, amid some channel surfing,
I
witnessed a furious battle in
Canada,
an NBA basketball game that reminds me of what purpose there could be
in
sportswriting.
Someone needs to
chronicle the heroism displayed in only those contests decreed by God
to be
special.
Such was the battle between the Nets
and Raptors last
night. Who would have expected it, such
drama, such intensity, such athleticism, such talent, such
strategizing, all
being played out before my wondering eyes on what otherwise could have
been a
dreary Friday night.
<>Just for the record, the Nets won 129-127 in overtime.
But that says nothing.
It
was the ebb and flow of the game that was
mesmerizing, and the heroics of Nets point guard Devin Harris in the
third
quarter and perennial All-Everything and Toronto pariah Vince Carter in
the
fourth quarter and overtime that eventually decided the matter.
But for all their heroics, it was the
inbounds pass from
Bobby Simmons to the very sneaky Vince Carter that eventually ended
this
marathon. It was seemingly an impossible
scenario, being that Vince was electrifying all night and had sent the
game
into overtime with his last-second high arching jumper from the top of
the key.
<>Carter seemed to just disappear as he glided away and
behind
his defender, and Simmons waited until the last possible moment to loft
his
perfect inbounds Alley-Oop pass to Vince directly in front of the
basket.
Carter simply jammed it in
backwards and
didn’t even smile really.
His face just
radiated contentment and a realization that his had been a job well
done.
Right behind Carter in the line for
accolades had to be the
mercurial Devin Harris. It was Harris
who mobilized the Nets in their comeback in the third quarter, Harris
who
charged past defenders, Harris who made the pull-up jumpers, Harris who
made
all the right passes to bring his team back from a huge deficit.
<>Despite the flair exhibited by the Nets in coming back,
at
no time was the miraculous ending an expected one, if only because of
the
unbelievable efforts of
Toronto
forward Chris Bosh.
Every time the Nets
did something, it was Bosh who’d answer back.
Sometimes,
he’d defer to Bargnani or Calderon, but
it was Bosh who was
running the show, and he fought the good fight.
That it was Carter providing most of
the spectacle was
especially fitting, given that the Toronto fans continue to boo the man
for
having had the temerity to abandon their team those many years ago,
this
despite Vince’s admitted lack of enthusiasm for the game in those days. The fans’ vitriolic treatment of Carter,
though, certainly made the win sweeter for Vince, sweeter for the Nets,
and
sweeter for yours truly.
<>Nets coach Lawrence Frank was predictably ebullient in
the
game’s aftermath.
He of course praised
his big guns but also had kind words for the less evident aspects and
players
of the game.
He certainly had many good
reasons to be happy.
Jarvis Hayes got 32 minutes off the
bench and contributed 14
points, a late and timely three-pointer, 6 rebounds, 3 assists and 3
steals. Rookie Brook Lopez contributed 14
points and
6 rebounds and Sean Williams, though the box score may not reflect it,
contributed a great deal to the win with physical play in the paint.
<>Williams certainly let Jermaine O’Neal know he was there.
Williams’s not so flagrant
flagrant foul on
the Toronto center contributed to some pain O’Neal had been already
feeling in
his knee and hip and sent him to the bench.
Coach Frank’s biggest problems may be
just determining his
starting lineup, a happy dilemma to be sure. The
young Nets are now 6-6 and seem to have a
lot of talent, not to mention height, power, a dynamite speedster in
Harris and
the magic that Vince Carter can still bring to the court more often
than not.
<>Yes, sometimes you get some magic in the unlikeliest of
places and so it was last night in
Toronto.
I
most certainly appreciate the Nets effort.
I
know I’ll be looking to watch those Nets
some more in the months ahead, especially when I might need some
inspiration.
