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[nbatv] NBA Hardwood Classics : Rockets vs Lakers game 5 -friday noon

Discussion in 'Houston Rockets: Game Action & Roster Moves' started by tinman, Dec 14, 2006.

  1. tinman

    tinman 999999999
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    For people who have NBATV,
    you need to watch this game to experience the Twin Towers at its best.
    Facing a team regarded as the Best Ever, Ralph, Dream, Robert Reid, showed what ClutchCity is about, years before the term ClutchCity was invented.
    [​IMG]
     
  2. ClutchCityReturns

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    I post these types of reminders for NBATV from time to time but nobody seems to respond, so let me be the first to say thanks.

    "Thanks".

    :D
     
  3. TBar

    TBar Member

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    Thanks Tin man-

    I really enjoy watching Ralph Sampson and Rodney McCray. McCray was an under rated defensive stopper-he ran the fast break to perfection. Akeem Olajuwan is so strong and athletic- the Lakers are scared of him. A couple of times in this game Jabbar looks so frustrated-freaked out having Akeem in the paint. What an under rated team- took the 86 Celtics to 6 games with lopsided officiating. They say that Kevin McHale had nightmares about Dream during the series......
     
  4. tinman

    tinman 999999999
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    keep up the good work, we need to remind all these fans what rich and great history the Rockets have. They are basically learning Rockets 101.

    Especially this game, cause people who never seen Ralph play questions his skills and his heart. This was the Rockets game that changed alot of people's opinion about the organization. This is something the other sports teams in Houston have never experienced at that point in time.

    if we change 1 person's opinion about Ralph Sampson, our mission would be accomplished.
     
  5. DaDakota

    DaDakota Balance wins
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    Preach PREACHER !!!

    Amen !

    DD
     
  6. tinman

    tinman 999999999
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    This is probably the most dramatic Rockets playoff game. Some might say the Mario Elie KOD game, but people forget after his shot, it was a foul/free throw shooting fest.

    This game ended on the last shot, and we beat a team regarded as THE BEST TEAM OF THE DECADE.
     
  7. tinman

    tinman 999999999
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    [​IMG]
    This is the high point that became the greek tragedy of Ralph Sampson and the greatest Rocket team never to win a championship.

    http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/sports/bk/bkn/rox/3663271.html

    Feb. 16, 2006, 12:24PM
    Rockets became a lost dynasty after promising run 20 years ago

    By FRAN BLINEBURY
    Copyright 2006 Houston Chronicle


    THERE was one second on the clock when Rodney McCray threw the perfect inbounds pass that Ralph Sampson jumped and caught with two hands. James Worthy stood frozen, having never made a move to cover, and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar backed away on defense, not wanting to be called for a foul.

    Sampson's body was a giant corkscrew, twisting 10 feet out on the left side of the lane, and he let fly with a careful, prayerful shot that tapped like an out-of-breath clog dancer on the front, the back, then the front of the rim again before collapsing with a last gasp down into the net.

    On May 21, 1986, the Houston Rockets defeated the Los Angeles Lakers 114-112 at The Forum, completing a five-game playoff blitz of the defending champions and advancing to play the Boston Celtics in what was supposed to be the first of many trips to the NBA Finals.

    The Rockets would lose the championship round to the
    Celtics, four games to two, yet there was no reason for Houston fans to be anything except optimistic about the future. They had the young Twin Towers of Sampson and Hakeem Olajuwon anchoring their frontline and a fast break that could crackle like summer lightning.

    "I thought we had a dynasty," said backup forward Jim Petersen.

    "In our own minds, we probably figured we were a year ahead of schedule, and we'd be back to finish the job," said guard Robert Reid.

    "There was a disappointment, for sure, in not beating Boston," said McCray. "Still, we came away from that experience feeling good, knowing that we had really whipped the Lakers.

    "That was our time. It was before the rise of the Bad Boys in Detroit, before Jordan and the Bulls came on. In my mind, we were a lock to win one championship and probably more. This was only the beginning."

    But in truth, it was already the beginning of the end. The Rockets had made it through the minefield of the playoffs after having to change their lineup when point guard John Lucas was suspended by the league a third time for having failed a drug test.

    Midway through the next season, guards Lewis Lloyd and Mitchell Wiggins would fail drug tests. And within 19 months of his making the shot to beat L.A., Sampson — the former No. 1 overall pick in the draft, former Rookie of the Year and four-time All-Star — would be hobbled by bad knees and traded to the Golden State Warriors.

    The originals

    Long before the cast of Lost veered off course to an uncharted island in the Pacific to launch a hit show, the crash of the 1986 Rockets turned them into perhaps the NBA's greatest Lost Dynasty. Twenty seasons later, they still know it.

    "It was a really good ballclub and probably missed its mark in history with all the things it could have done," said head coach Bill Fitch. "I had so much fun coaching that team, because they had a lot of talent and because they were, for the most part, willing to do everything I asked of them.

    "That team had a lot of guys who could shoot and would shoot the big shots at the end of games. It had a player like Ralph, who could do a lot of different things at 7-4, like get the ball off the glass and throw the outlet or run down the floor and finish the break.

    "It had Dream in the middle to be relentless on defense and make offensive moves that nobody could stop. It had a Rodney McCray, who would do so many of the little things that are so important. It had Lew, who just loved to play the game."

    It was a team that came together according to plan. The Rockets had won back-to-back coin flips for the right to make Sampson and Olajuwon consecutive No. 1 draft picks in 1983 and 1984. They had chosen McCray with the No. 3 pick in 1983 to be a passer, defender and complementary part. They signed Lloyd as a free agent, traded for Wiggins and then handpicked the veteran Lucas to run the offense.

    "We took a lot of criticism for drafting Hakeem when we already had Ralph," said general manager Carroll Dawson, who was then an assistant coach. "But we were excited about the Twin Towers concept. We were pretty sure it could work, and once it did, everybody around the league tried to copy it."

    Running Rockets

    Fitch loved the fast break and had a cast of characters who could run it. None did it with such relish as Lloyd, who'd been cast off by Golden State in 1983 and became a fifth gear for the Rockets' running game.

    "I know there were guys back then waking up in cold sweats with dreams of Lew Lloyd coming at them on the break," Fitch said.

    "The only player I ever saw who could get to the basket like him was Earl Monroe."

    The '86 Rockets were deep. When Lucas was suspended, the veteran Reid was able to shift from shooting guard and handle most of the point guard duties in the playoffs. Behind him was the tenacious Allen Leavell, who had a broken wrist through most of the postseason but played a clutch role in the second half of the clinching win over the Lakers.

    Petersen was an invaluble backup at the power forward spot who could bang on the inside for rebounds and bury the medium-range jump shots. Wiggins struggled at first to mesh his personality with that of Fitch but eventually became a defensive stopper who roughed up and bottled up Magic Johnson. The Rockets were so deep that swingman Craig Ehlo, who wound up playing more than a decade in the league, couldn't get any time off the bench.

    "It was not just like many teams that you see today," Olajuwon wrote in an e-mail from Amman, Jordan. "The 1986 Rockets were a complete team, and we were not lacking at any position.

    "What we might have lacked in experience, we made up for with enthusiasm and never backing down from any challenge. Nobody really thought we could beat the Lakers that year. But we did it convincingly. We knew what we had."

    Lucas factor

    What the Rockets also had before March 14, when Lucas was suspended, was a smart, gritty, talented quarterback who could run the offense virtually blindfolded, tossing lob passes for dunks to Sampson and Olajuwon.

    "I told John a couple weeks after he was out that he was costing me six to eight points a game, and everything wasn't so easy all of a sudden," Sampson said.

    The Rockets zoomed out of the gate, starting the season 9-2. They went 14-3 from Dec. 26 to Jan. 30 and were 41-25 when Lucas failed the drug test.

    "I don't mean to be disrespectful to anyone or in any way put a knock on accomplishments of the organization," Lucas said. "But when I walk around Houston now and I hear people talk about winning those championships in '94 and '95, I just shake my head. I tell them, 'You've either forgotten or you have never seen the best Rockets team. I know. I was a part of it. And I was a big part of bringing it down.'

    "I'm telling you, we'd have beaten Boston if I was there. You look at most teams that are put together like that one and they get about an eight- to 10-year window. We didn't know it, but our window was right there, and then it slammed shut."

    What the Rockets also didn't know was the first crack in their foundation had appeared when Sampson was undercut while going for a rebound at Boston Garden on March 24. There was a sickening thud when his head cracked against the parquet floor. However, the real damage was done to his back and left hip.

    Big man hobbled

    Sampson sat out for the first time in his career, missing three games and coming back with a limp. When he began to overcompensate for the pain in his hip, it led to the start of knee problems that would require three operations and cut short his career as an All-Star player. For the final six weeks of the regular season, Fitch closed practice to the media to keep a lid on the extent of the injury.

    "It was hard thing to see," Fitch said. "A lot of days, he could barely run, and he couldn't do anything to stop Dream defensively."

    "I was never the same from the time I went down in Boston," Sampson said. "It was like I couldn't play my game."

    The Rockets started the next season 2-0 but then struggled. On the morning of Jan. 13, 1987 they were 15-18 when word came down that Lloyd and Wiggins had failed drug tests and been suspended by the league.

    "I'll never forget. The night before that test, I was in the Summit and Wiggins was there shooting," Fitch said. "The news then was that Micheal Ray Richardson had flunked a drug test with a huge quantity in his system. Wig looked at me and said, 'Don't worry about a thing, Coach. I'm clean.' The very next day he broke Micheal Ray's record. He was off the charts on the test."

    The would-be dynasty was coming unglued.

    "It's one thing to have injuries," said McCray. "But when guys have drug problems, there's a different kind of feeling. It's a personal letdown. You feel for them. You want them to recover. But you sit back and reflect and say, 'Why did they have to do that?' "

    Lack of focus

    Olajuwon agreed with McCray.

    "I believe we really had the potential to be a dynasty," he said. "There were a lot of championships there for us. But being a dynasty doesn't just come by accident. You have to stay focused on the goal, on and off the court."

    On Feb. 3, while trying to make a cut against Bill Hanzlik of Denver, Sampson slipped on a wet spot at the Summit and tore ligaments in his left knee. The injury required surgery and forced him to miss 39 games.

    The Rockets finished the regular season 42-40 and lost to Seattle in the second round of the playoffs, eliminated on a night when Olajuwon scored 49 points and grabbed 25 rebounds.

    Seven months later, Sampson was traded to Golden State in a deal for Joe Barry Carroll and Sleepy Floyd.

    'Gone in a heartbeat'

    "When you think about where we were, just a short time earlier, man," said Reid. "The Celtics and Lakers still had their starting fives together and we were all broken up — John, Lew, Wig, then Ralph. It was all gone in a heartbeat."

    Dawson walks down the hallway outside his Toyota Center office every day past the collection of team photos through the years. Occasionally, he'll still pause and linger in front of that group from 1986.

    "There are still scars that don't heal from that experience," he said. "They deserved better."

    McCray can still close his eyes and conjure up the atmosphere, the energy of May 21, 1986 at The Forum.

    "I remember running out of the tunnel before the game, the packed house, the movie stars in their seats," he said. "And I remember thinking, 'We're gonna be doing this every year. It's just the start.' "

    For the Lost Dynasty, it was the beginning of the end.
     
    #7 tinman, Dec 14, 2006
    Last edited: Dec 14, 2006
  8. tinman

    tinman 999999999
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    I guess I have to stir up contraversy to get Rocket fans to become excited about watching this game on NBATV.
    [​IMG]

    (May 19, 1983) The Rockets offered the Indiana Pacers a package of players, draft picks and a million dollars in cash for the No. 1 pick in the 1983 NBA Draft. The Pacers turned it down, preferring to take their chances on a flip of the coin. They lost. The Rockets called heads on the advice of owner Charlie Thomas' daughter Tracy and won, immediately letting it be known they wanted University of Virginia center Ralph Sampson.

    [​IMG]
    Quick Facts on Vince Young

    1. Born Vincent Paul Young, Jr. on May 18, 1983 in Houston, Texas
     
  9. Sishir Chang

    Sishir Chang Member

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    I don't have NBATV but would love see that game any possibility someone could record that and make a bit torrent out of it?

    Help out a hard up nostalgic Rockets fan..
     
  10. Kam

    Kam Member

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    [​IMG]

    Look at that hat.








    oh and may 18th, isn't the same day as may 19th.
     
  11. tinman

    tinman 999999999
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    May was the playoff month where Rocket History has been made:

    (May 21, 1994)
    From Choke City to Clutch City to the 1994 Western Conference Finals. The Rockets completed their comeback from an 0-2 deficit in the Western Conference Semifinals by winning Game 7 104-94 over the Phoenix Suns. "I'm so proud of this team, especially with the gigantic hole that we had to crawl out of," Rockets Head Coach Rudy Tomjanovich said. "This team has done it all year long." Hakeem Olajuwon led Houston with 37 points and 17 rebounds followed by rookie Sam Cassell with 22 points and seven assists.
    (May 7, 1981)
    After losing Game 1 of the 1981 NBA Finals to the Boston Celtics, the Rockets took a different approach in Game 2. "I decided that when I went up for a rebound, if I came down and someone was under me swatting at the ball, I was going to knock him through the floor," Moses Malone said. Malone used his new mindset to score 31 points and grab 15 rebounds as the Rockets won their first-ever NBA Finals game 92-90. Calvin Murphy chipped in 10 points.
    (May 31, 1994)
    How was the West won? Team defense, three-pointers and team play. The Rockets used eight three-pointers to jump out to a 24-point lead after three quarters, then had to hang on for dear life as the Utah Jazz mounted an amazing comeback in Game 5 of the 1994 Western Conference Finals. The Jazz cut the lead to eight, but Robert Horry and Hakeem Olajuwon made sure they wouldn't get any closer as the Rockets reached the NBA Finals for the first time since 1986 with a 94-83 victory to claim the 1994 Western Conference title.
    (May 7, 1995)
    The Houston Rockets owned the fourth quarter. After trailing 71-59 with a minute to go in the third quarter, the Rockets used some timely defense and the shooting touch of Hakeem Olajuwon to win Game 5 of the First Round of the 1995 NBA Playoffs 95-91 over Utah. The Rockets were down seven with 4:49 to go in the fourth quarter when an Olajuwon jumper sparked a 10-0 run, which saw the Rockets take an 85-82 lead with 1:44 to play. Olajuwon scored the last six points of the run, two of which came on a dunk over three Jazz players. Olajuwon finished the day with 33 points followed by Clyde Drexler with 31.
    (May 11, 1994)
    For the first three quarters, the Rockets could do no wrong. In the fourth quarter they could do no right. Three days after blowing an 18-point lead and losing Game 1 of the 1994 Western Conference Semifinals to the Phoenix Suns, the Rockets lost a 20-point fourth-quarter lead and Game 2. The next day the Houston Chronicle renamed Houston "Choke City." The Rockets then used Houston's new moniker as a motivational tool and won two games in Phoenix to tie the series. "When Choke City came out, nobody believed in us but ourselves," Rockets Head Coach Rudy Tomjanovich said. "It was nice to prove all those people wrong."
    (May 23, 1984)
    NBA Commissioner David Stern flipped the coin, Portland Trail Blazers owner Larry Weinberg called tails, and when the coin came up heads on the carpet the Rockets had won the No. 1 pick in the 1984 NBA Draft. Rockets publicity director Jim Foley left no doubt whom the team would select when he took off his jacket, shirt and tie to reveal a red T-shirt with the word "Akeem" across the chest. Rockets Head Coach Bill Fitch couldn't contain his excitement when he started to think about Olajuwon and 1983 No. 1 pick Ralph Sampson in the same frontcourt. "I don't know a coach who would tell you that Olajuwon and Sampson can't play together in the same lineup," Fitch said. "Then again, we could cut them in half and make four guards."
     
  12. Kam

    Kam Member

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    May is playoff time for all NBA teams that qualified.
     
  13. tinman

    tinman 999999999
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    speaking of May. Bring this guy back where he belongs:
    (May 10, 1993)
    All Calvin Murphy ever wanted to do was start for his high school basketball team. He ended up in the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame. In 1993, Murphy became the first player to spend his entire career with the Rockets and be inducted into the Hall of Fame. The 5-9 guard finished his career 42nd on the all-time NBA scoring list and 17th in scoring average. He still holds the NBA record for the highest free throw percentage in one season (.958, 1980-81).

    I'm putting Les Alexander slightly below Bud Adams for not giving back Calvin his job and hiring Clyde (who would lose to Borat for commentary). He can redeem himself buy giving Calvin his job back so they might let him into heaven. else the other places is waiting for him.
     
  14. tinman

    tinman 999999999
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    its almost on. beat la! beat la!
     
  15. WhoMikeJames

    WhoMikeJames Member

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    LOL Dick Stockton
     
  16. MLittle577

    MLittle577 Member

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    :( :( Trying to watch on Sopcast, but I guess not enough people are on. Stuttering every few seconds
     
  17. Deckard

    Deckard Blade Runner
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    Thanks, tinman! Wish I'd seen this earlier, but I'm taping most of it. Everyone should watch this, if they have the chance. A great example of how basketball in the league was far different in the '80s than it is today. And a better game, imo.
     
  18. Jerry36

    Jerry36 Member

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    That 85- 86' team would blow away 2006 -07 (soft) team easily.
     
  19. geeimsobored

    geeimsobored Member

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    That team could very well blow out anyone in the league right now. I have no idea how anyone today could guard the twin towers. Most teams don't even have real centers on their team anymore, and to have to guard two incredibly mobile ones would be a nightmare.
     
  20. tinman

    tinman 999999999
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    I love the passion of that team. I like the angry non peaceful Dream!
     

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