Either the Celtics are running out of steam, or the Magic finally found their engine. The NBA’s Eastern Conference Finals is 3-2 in favor of Boston after Orlando shortened the gap on the Celtics’ three game lead Wednesday in Florida’s Amway Arena. The Magic incredibly have a plausible chance to winning the series. However, no team in NBA history has ever overcome a 0-3 deficit to win a seven game series. Dwight Howard and guard, Jameer Nelson, combined for 52 of the Magic’s 113 points in a 21 point Game 5 victory. Ironically, Orlando also shot 52% from downtown last night. The series heads to a pressure-packed Boston Friday, where the home Celtics could possibly be without Kendrick Perkins. The starting center for Boston was lost in the second period last night after picking up a technical foul, his seventh of the post-season. The league issues mandatory suspensions for exceeding the foul limit. The inundated Celtics also played without Glen Davis for the final quarter after Big Baby took a Howard elbow to the mouth and lost a tooth.
Orlando showed a bit of punch in a physical game, parading out to a 51-37 second quarter edge. J.J. Redick burst off the bench to give the Magic a much needed boost. The former Duke standout tallied 14 points to add to Orlando’s frenetic pace. Boston trailed 57-49 at the break. The Celtics couldn’t sustain a solid 3-point defense against the Florida hot hands. Nelson was 4-for-5 from the arc and Matt Barnes added three from the rainbow. Howard grabbed 10 rebounds and clamped down on the Celtics with five blocked shots. Superman stood on his platform as the team’s cornerstone Wednesday two days after the Magic stole an overtime Game 4 in Boston.
The Magic had an answer to every Celtics’ charge even when Boston trimmed their lead in the third quarter. Shooting guard, Vince Carter, struggled for the Magic but Rashard Lewis stepped up in the fourth quarter to lift the hosts to a second straight win. Lewis rattled off five consecutive buckets in the final period and finished with 14. Boston basketed just 17 points in the final quarter. Rasheed Wallace led the way with 21 points, followed by Rajon Rondo’s 17 for Boston. Ray Allen had a game high seven assists, but it wasn’t enough to send the Celtics to the NBA championship series. Allen and company have two more chances to put away this series.
Everyone has heard of Dwight Howard. Tim Howard? Maybe not so much. Tim Howard is one of three goalies named to the 23-man U.S. World Cup roster, finalize yesterday by Coach Bob Bradley. I decided to check into the number one goaltender who will try to lead our country to a soccer title this summer. Howard is a 31 year old Everton, England star. The six year veteran of England’s Barclay Premier League is not the oldest goalkeeper on the team, by the way. The American is expected to be one of the core leaders for Bradley’s U.S. squad next month. Many consider him in the top ten talent-wise for glovemen in the world. Howard was born in North Brunswick, New Jersey (one of three Jersey born on the team) and has occupied the number one position for the U.S. since 2006. He is a FIFA Gold Glove and U.S. Soccer Male Athlete of the Year winner. Howard was also on the fourth place U.S. Olympic team that competed in Sydney in 2000. Bradley is banking on a bolder, better finish in South Africa with Howard in net again.
Philadelphia’s Ryan Howard is arguably close to the most-feared slugger in the National League (behind Albert Pujols). You wouldn’t have known it last night, as Howard was fanned twice and went 0-for-4 at the plate against the Mets. The MVP first baseman has seen his batting average dip below the .300 mark and he continues to leave runners on base. Would it make sense to move Howard from the clean-up slot? I think Charlie Manuel needs to insert some challenge into his struggling infielder’s head. He’s had four hits in his last 18 at-bats, and has struck out at least one time in all six of those games. Howard has eight dingers on the season, but hasn’t registered a multi-homer game yet. The Phillies’ first baseman had his best game on May 17th, where he drove in six runs in five plate appearances against the Pittsburgh Pirates. Yes, the same Bucs who have had something close to 17 straight losing seasons. It’s time for Ryan Howard to step up to the plate and dish out hits. Philadelphia relies on his bat, just as the Orlando Magic depend on Dwight and U.S. Soccer will soon look to Tim for the answers.
Parting Points: “I thought what I felt was simple, and I thought that I don’t belong”- Lisa Loeb
Is it just me or is there absolutely no buzz around the French Open this year?
Thursday, May 27, 2010
Thursday Take-Twos (The Howard Edition)
Labels:
Boston Celtics,
Dwight Howard,
Orlando Magic,
Ryan Howard,
Tim Howard
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment