I told myself one day after a very meaningful and tranqual meditation, that I would never, ever ever ever use rolling eyes again during sarcastic comments on this forum. I was the best day of my life... However, when I don't use them and people send reply like this, life became miserable...
hope you could download this (it works for me) the 3rd quarter. mmst://219.136.56.7/vod1/sport/olym_video/040817_china_nzl/3.wmv?str=ab1f66637ead70442665504c3a0c1ccc
Damn. Maybe the Chinese team jumped the shark or whatever you call it. That was a total change in philosophy. Maybe USA should do the the same with Duncan.
I’m glad that Yao played well, but I sure hope he doesn’t wear himself out during these Olympics. He’s still got an NBA season to play.
i'm watching the game right now (a bit late i know) but not only can the CNT can't shoot, they don't know how to play defense either. one possession, they'll attempt to zone only to move out of their space. on another, they stick to one man. they're defending like worker bees out there.
http://www.oaklandtribune.com/Stories/0,1413,82~10835~2341944,00.html Former Bear Marks enjoys dunk on Yao By Jeff Faraudo, STAFF WRITER ATHENS, Greece -- In the final analysis it changed nothing, but Sean Marks had his Olympic moment. With 71/2 minutes left in New Zealand's 69-62 basketball loss to China on Tuesday morning, Marks picked up a ball deflected from the hands of NBA star Yao Ming and threw down a fierce two-handed dunk on the Houston Rockets' 7-foot-6 center. Marks, the former Cal standout playing in his second Olympics, briefly stared down Yao, before New Zealand teammate Dillon Boucher took that one step further. He chest-bumped the big man, only to be shoved 10 feet on his backside by the once-timid center. "I was just trying to get the guy to react," Boucher said, "trying to inspire the guys. I was trying anything out there." Advertisement Yao got the last word, finishing with 39 points and 13 rebounds against a New Zealand defense that stubbornly tried much of the game to single cover him. Yao responded to the invitation by scoring 35 points in the first 371/2 minutes, including 21 straight Chinese points during one stretch. The 6-10 Marks said he had played against Yao several times before, but he acknowledged he'd never thrown down a dunk on the big man. "I'm not going to rub it in or anything. I have tremendous respect for him," Marks said. "I've got one little notch on my belt, but how many times is he going to do that to me in the future? Actually, Marks hopes plenty. He spent last season signed as a practice player for the San Antonio Spurs and recently re-upped for another year. His goal continues to be a career in the NBA. Although he hopes to contribute more than serving as a practice player against Tim Duncan, Marks said the experience has made him a better player. "It's fantastic. To play against an MVP player like that is just incredible," Marks said. "It's such a great organization, I love the people (in San Antonio)." The loss to China was cast in the first half, when the Kiwis turned the ball over 18 times while falling behind 29-20. New Zealand used its perimeter shooting to keep the game competitive, but it never drew closer than four points in the second half. The problem was Yao, who had an offensive counterpunch to every blow New Zealand landed with their 3-point shoting. "Obviously, he's incredible, a tough matchup for anybody," Marks said. Added Boucher, "He dominated the whole game. We wanted to try to play him straight up, give him a but of the muscle game. But he just turned around and used his finesse game with his turn-around jumper. "He's a class player." The loss dropped the Aussies to 0-2 in the sixth-team pool. Serbia & Montenegro loom on Thursday, with Argentina and Spain completing their pool. China is 1-1