It seems that, when it comes to the NBA playoffs, teams gotta learn to walk before they can run. After all, didn't Michael Jordan's Chicago Bulls struggle for several seasons to get past the roadblock that the Detroit Pistons provided.
I think it worked out pretty well for Mike. Six titles (two threepeats there). He may well have had eight if he hadn't left to play baseball. Of course, that self-imposed exile is still a tad questionable...
So it's no surprise to me that the Milwaukee Bucks came up short of playing for the NBA championship this season. Yes, the Giannis Antetokounmpo-fueled squad won a league-best 60 games this season. And yes, they won topped Detroit and Boston in the playoffs. Still, there are those who are SEVERELY disappointed that the squad won't get a chance to take on the Golden State Warriors.
Seriously? To many Bucks fans, just getting a series win in the playoffs was great. Everything after that was house money.
When the Bucks, two years in existence, made the playoffs and lost in the conference finals (4-1 to the New York Knicks), they did so led by rookie hall-of-fame center Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (then known as Lew Alcindor).
Over the course of five Jabbar's five seasons (1970-1974), Milwaukee made the conference finals four times, won a title in 1971 and lost to the Boston Celtics in the 1974 finals (4-3).
After that season, the Bucks traded Jabbar -- who wanted out of the city -- to the Los Angeles Lakers for a boatload of draft picks and players.
While Milwaukee may or may not have that long a run with The Greek Freak, enjoy this season and those that follow.
The Bucks will need to make some difficult decisions in the coming weeks -- whether to resign Brooks Lopez, Khris Middleton and Malcolm Brogdon for example. It's best to look at this with a practical eye, as Giannis will become a free agent in 2021.
giannis antetokounmpo
Thursday, May 30, 2019
Sunday, May 26, 2019
Packers' Royalty Passes Away
With great sadness, I learned today of the passing of Bryan Bartlett Starr. Sad to think that this all-time great will never again get a chance to walk onto Lambeau Field.
Starr, the Hall of Fame quarterback who, like his peers, called his own plays and ran the offense his way -- after building that playbook with Lombardi. This wasn't the era of passers throwing for 4,000 yards a season. This was an era of game control; for Green Bay, that was Jimmy Taylor and Paul Hornung on the Packer Sweep, turning the corner behind guards Fuzzy Thurston and Jerry Kramer.
Starr and his wife of 65 years, Cherry, are probably the closest thing to royalty that Wisconsin has ever seen. The Starrs, in 1965, were involved in starting the Rawhide Boys Ranch to give back to the community. Based in New London, it continues today to offer at-risk youth programs, programs that help reshape lives and provide counseling services for boys, girls, adults and families.
For years, and on his own, Starr would call Green Bay draft picks and welcome them to the Packer family. Not even an ill-advised stint as head coach could dim the shine on this Starr. Without any coaching experience, he responded when the franchise asked him to come in as head coach -- because of the loyalty he felt to the Green Bay Packers. From 1975-83, he directed the Packers to a 53-77-3 record (he was 1-1 in the playoffs).
Despite that lack of success as a coach, Starr is beloved by Packer fans. Whenever he returned to Lambeau Field for Packer Alumni reunions, no one received a bigger ovation than Bart Starr, no matter who shared the field with him.
Remember when former persona non grata Brett Favre returned to be honored and mend fences, Packer faithful forgave him because Bart Starr, attending Favre's special evening despite health issues that included a couple of strokes.
RIP Bart. Gone, but never forgotten by Packer Nation.
Starr, the Hall of Fame quarterback who, like his peers, called his own plays and ran the offense his way -- after building that playbook with Lombardi. This wasn't the era of passers throwing for 4,000 yards a season. This was an era of game control; for Green Bay, that was Jimmy Taylor and Paul Hornung on the Packer Sweep, turning the corner behind guards Fuzzy Thurston and Jerry Kramer.
Starr and his wife of 65 years, Cherry, are probably the closest thing to royalty that Wisconsin has ever seen. The Starrs, in 1965, were involved in starting the Rawhide Boys Ranch to give back to the community. Based in New London, it continues today to offer at-risk youth programs, programs that help reshape lives and provide counseling services for boys, girls, adults and families.
For years, and on his own, Starr would call Green Bay draft picks and welcome them to the Packer family. Not even an ill-advised stint as head coach could dim the shine on this Starr. Without any coaching experience, he responded when the franchise asked him to come in as head coach -- because of the loyalty he felt to the Green Bay Packers. From 1975-83, he directed the Packers to a 53-77-3 record (he was 1-1 in the playoffs).
Despite that lack of success as a coach, Starr is beloved by Packer fans. Whenever he returned to Lambeau Field for Packer Alumni reunions, no one received a bigger ovation than Bart Starr, no matter who shared the field with him.
Remember when former persona non grata Brett Favre returned to be honored and mend fences, Packer faithful forgave him because Bart Starr, attending Favre's special evening despite health issues that included a couple of strokes.
RIP Bart. Gone, but never forgotten by Packer Nation.
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