Look at these quotes by McGrady after the Orlando game this year. I remember Yao having a monster game and McGrady really praising him. Do you guys think that game made up his mind about coming here? I think it at least planted a seed. http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory.mpl/sports/bk/bkn/rox/2370768 Orlando pays for ignoring Yao Rockets' center scores 37 in easy win By JONATHAN FEIGEN Copyright 2004 Houston Chronicle ------------------------------ ORLANDO, Fla. -- Perhaps the Magic did not notice him. Yao Ming. Big guy. The reason they had another Asian-American night in Orlando. Still not sure? He was the one torturing poor Andrew DeClercq. He was the focus of the two plays the Rockets ran most of the night, the guy taking all the shots. One more clue: He was the guy who when he was through carrying the Rockets to a 99-87 win over the Magic on Sunday inspired several Shaquille O'Neal references. Maybe the Magic just did catch the magazine covers. But Yao knew pretty much any shot he tried would go in. So when the Magic did not send the customary double teams to surround him, Yao punished them with a career-high 37 points, making (15) and taking (23) more shots than he ever has. "That's just like somebody not (double-teaming) Shaq," Rockets forward Jim Jackson said. "I'm not saying Yao is in that class yet. But he's dominant enough that he demands a double team. If you're not going to double-team, we're not going to reinvent the wheel. We're going to run the same play over and over." While they posted him up time and again, Yao was determined to demand double teams or the ball. He began the second half by slamming in a missed shot. But he had the most sustained stretch of dominant play in his NBA career, scoring 15 consecutive Rockets points to carry them to a 15-point lead. He drove the lane. He hit turnaround jumpers. By the fourth quarter, he was so automatic, that he never hesitated on a catch-and-shoot jumper from 21 feet. "I can't wait for people to attack me," Yao said. "I have to attack them." The Magic attack amounted to peashooters in a combat zone. Actually, Magic coach Johnny Davis said he did have his team double-teaming. They were just so bad at it, the Rockets did not notice. "Our game plan was to double-team, but we were just late getting there tonight," Davis said. "If he was deep, obviously it was too late. But if he was coming two or three dribbles, we were supposed to double-team him on the first dribble as he started his way back to the post." But if help was coming, it never arrived in time to keep DeClercq and, briefly, Zaza Pachulia from being exposed and overmatched. On the rare occasions Yao noticed a double team coming, he turned away from it to drop in baseline jumpers. With 21 points in the third quarter, he made Tracy McGrady's 31-point night seem mundane. "Every time I answered, Yao Ming answered," McGrady said. "He's going to look over you, passing out of double teams if you double-team. And if not, then he's going to kill you all day because he's so big. He's knocking down the 15-footers, so he's really scary. "You can't stop him from getting his position. Because he's that big, I don't think even Shaq can stop him from getting his position. The guy is big, has strong legs, and he's a beast." Actually, the Magic did not merely fail to double-team Yao. They also did not send double-team help against Maurice Taylor. So when Yao rested to start the fourth quarter, Taylor burned Orlando for 12 of his 20 points. "I loved it," Taylor said. "They came at me once. That's unheard of. When you have two frontcourt guys going like that, usually you double-team every time. It's hard (to double-team) when you have backcourt guys bringing the ball up. But when it's guys just sitting in the post, running the same plays, it's unbelievable." In that case, it did not take Mark Jackson's 16 years of experience to figure out what to do with the ball. But as long as he was out there for 24 minutes, he collected 10 assists on passes so on-target they forced the Rockets to make the shots they had been missing. In the first half, the Rockets missed all five of their 3-pointers, while, excluding Yao, they made just 11 of 28 shots. Steve Francis did not score until the last minute of the third quarter. But in the second half, with Mark Jackson guiding the Rockets' offense for 17 minutes, they made five of nine treys and a few of the alley-oops he placed perfectly at the rim. "Mark played great on the offensive end, kept us organized, some great passes, a terrific job," Rockets coach Jeff Van Gundy said. "You're going to shoot the ball better, the better the pass is. Mark has an innate ability to hit people on time and on target and allow guys to shoot the ball particularly well." He also found out just what Yao could handle, sending him a high-speed, no-look alley-oop on the break that Yao threw down easily. "I just tried to put it in a position where I know he's going to get it," Jackson said. "You're going to have to try a guy sooner or later. If he couldn't catch them, he would have to learn, because I'm not going to stop throwing them. "The big fella played great. He creates havoc when he's rolling like that. Not many teams have a weapon like that, other than the Lakers. The guy is so big and skilled. He's unbelievable." "Every time I answered, Yao Ming answered," McGrady said. "He's going to look over you, passing out of double teams if you double-team. And if not, then he's going to kill you all day because he's so big. He's knocking down the 15-footers, so he's really scary. "You can't stop him from getting his position. Because he's that big, I don't think even Shaq can stop him from getting his position. The guy is big, has strong legs, and he's a beast." Actually, the Magic did not merely fail to double-team Yao. They also did not send double-team help against Maurice Taylor. So when Yao rested to start the fourth quarter, Taylor burned Orlando for 12 of his 20 points. "I loved it," Taylor said. "They came at me once. That's unheard of. When you have two frontcourt guys going like that, usually you double-team every time. It's hard (to double-team) when you have backcourt guys bringing the ball up. But when it's guys just sitting in the post, running the same plays, it's unbelievable." In that case, it did not take Mark Jackson's 16 years of experience to figure out what to do with the ball. But as long as he was out there for 24 minutes, he collected 10 assists on passes so on-target they forced the Rockets to make the shots they had been missing. In the first half, the Rockets missed all five of their 3-pointers, while, excluding Yao, they made just 11 of 28 shots. Steve Francis did not score until the last minute of the third quarter. But in the second half, with Mark Jackson guiding the Rockets' offense for 17 minutes, they made five of nine treys and a few of the alley-oops he placed perfectly at the rim. "Mark played great on the offensive end, kept us organized, some great passes, a terrific job," Rockets coach Jeff Van Gundy said. "You're going to shoot the ball better, the better the pass is. Mark has an innate ability to hit people on time and on target and allow guys to shoot the ball particularly well." He also found out just what Yao could handle, sending him a high-speed, no-look alley-oop on the break that Yao threw down easily. "I just tried to put it in a position where I know he's going to get it," Jackson said. "You're going to have to try a guy sooner or later. If he couldn't catch them, he would have to learn, because I'm not going to stop throwing them. "The big fella played great. He creates havoc when he's rolling like that. Not many teams have a weapon like that, other than the Lakers. The guy is so big and skilled. He's unbelievable."
Yep, it shows the respect he had for Yao. He feels Yao will be the next dominant force, and he would love to be on the winning side with Yao. The poor guy was on a team that won 21 games last year.
I remember when Yao destroyed Philadelphia Iverson was raving about Yao and said he was a gift from god he was so talented. No shock that free agents were flocking to the Rockets offices!
He also lead a team with virtually no supporting cast to the play offs the three previous years. He did that as close to single handedly as you can be in the NBA. The only person I can think of who has carried teams to the play offs by himself with as little support as him has been Kevin Garnett. And I don't think we can say he had no decent support since they drafted Wally Sczerbiak. The teams since then have been decent anyway. I'm greatly looking forward to seeing what these guys can do together.
Yes, but apparently T-mac has the "what have you done for me lately" approach, and has no excuses if what he's done lately hasn't been perfection. Despite of coures, a history of a great overall balanced play. For some strange reason though, what Steve did for us lately, which was his worst season of his carreer, is brushed off by these same people with plenty of excuses. And wiith a stubborness that has no sway. Ah well, can't wait for the season to start. By mid season, these people or their attitude towards T-mac will die out. Unless, they develope some personal hate towards him. You can't please everyone.