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[oc register]Cassell comes up big again

Discussion in 'NBA Dish' started by tinman, Feb 6, 2006.

  1. tinman

    tinman 999999999
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    [​IMG]

    Cassell comes up big again
    His shot sends the game into OT, and the Clippers are able to overhaul Toronto.

    By ART THOMPSON III
    The Orange County Register

    TORONTO – When in dire straits, the Clippers have learned to lean on the player known to friend and foe as Sam I Am.

    For the second time on this trip and seemingly countless times in his 13-year career, Clippers point guard Sam Cassell rescued his team from defeat Sunday.

    Cassell's three-point basket from straightaway with 5.5 seconds remaining in regulation pulled the Clippers into atie. From there, the Clippers overcame the Toronto Raptors' three-point shooting barrage in overtime to squeak out a 115-113 victory Sunday at Air Canada Centre.

    Chris Bosh, who had 29 points and 16 rebounds for the Raptors, missed an open jumpshot at the buzzer that would have sent the game into a second overtime.

    Instead the Clippers extended their winning streak to three games on this trip, rose 11 games above .500 and have won eight of their past nine games. At 28-17, they have the fourth-best record in the Western Conference. Toronto had won three consecutive games, until they ran into the Clippers.

    "We feel like we're one of the best teams in the league," Clippers swingman Quinton Ross said. "But we know we still have to go out and prove ourselves every night."

    Elton Brand scored a game-high 30 points for the Clippers. He has scored at least 30 points in all four games on this trip.

    Cassell, the late-game hero in Friday's victory at Boston, scored 14 of his 27 points in the final 4:32 of regulation and the five-minute overtime. None was bigger than the three-pointer that tied the score as he used a screen set by Brand to break free.

    Raptors coach Sam Mitchell said he thought Brand's screen was too secure.

    "Mike (James) felt like he got held because we were going to take a foul, and I believe Mike," Mitchell said. "I don't think, in no earthly way, Sam Cassell would have been that wide open."

    Cool and calm, Cassell buried the shot.

    "Whatever my team needs, if I am able to do it, I'm going to try my best to do it," said Cassell, who also had a game-high 13 assists.

    Plays like that are what Clippers coach Mike Dunleavy envisioned 36-year old Cassell making in crucial situations when the Clippers acquired him in the summer in a trade with the Minnesota Timberwolves.

    "Sam is terrific," Dunleavy said. "He made the big shots, again. It's just an unbelievable knack that he has."

    James scored 20 points for Toronto and Morris Peterson finished with 25. In the overtime, the Clippers had to overcome two three-pointers by James and one by Peterson. The biggest play for the Clippers occurred with the Raptors in possession with a chance to stretch their 110-107 lead to five. But Quinton Ross stepped in front of a pass, motored downcourt, and scored a layup while getting fouled by Bosh. Ross completed the three-point play to tie the score.

    "I was just in the right position,'' said Ross, regarded as the Clippers' best perimeter defender. "I saw the ball in the air, got it and took off. I had no choice but to attack him (Bosh), and I was fortunate that I was able to score the basket."

    Toronto, which relies heavily on the three-point shot, made 8 of 21 but benefited indirectly from its frequent deep launches because the misses resulted in long rebounds, which the Raptors often gathered. Toronto outrebounded the league's top rebounding team, 48-46, with the Raptors getting 16 from the offensive glass that they converted into 20 second-chance points.

    "They hurt us on the offensive boards a great deal," Dunleavy said. "But our guys stayed tough and made the plays down the stretch."
     
  2. tinman

    tinman 999999999
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    here's another great SAM article: really long but good.


    Posts: 233
    (2/6/06 12:49 pm)
    Reply
    NBA Insider Feb. 6: Sam Cassell (long but good read) NBA Insider...Feb 6: Sam Cassell; Ball of confusion in NYC; Trades; Rumors

    For Your Consideration

    BY TOM FRIEND
    PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BY ADAM WEISS


    GONNA TELL you about opening night. The Clippers, the Washington Generals of the NBA, have given the basketball to Sammy, and Sammy isn't giving it back. Up one in Seattle with 2:15 left, Sammy hits a three-pointer.

    “Bucket,” he says out loud.

    Up four with 1:43 left, he hits a leaner.

    “Bucket.”

    Historically, the Clips do not hit clutch shots, but Sammy is introducing them to his world-a world of winning and toothy grins. “This is why they brought me here!” shouts Sam Cassell after he scores his 35th point. “This is what I do. I got big balls, fellas. I got big balls.”

    GONNA TELL you what Charles Barkley thinks of Sammy. He says if Sammy played on the same team as Magic, Michael, Bird and Sir Charles himself, Sammy would take the last shot. “Not only that, he'd tell them, Gimme the ball,' ” says Sammy's old Rockets teammate, Kenny Smith, with a laugh.

    “And those other guys would have to raise their hands to talk,” says Sammy's old Rockets assistant coach, Carroll Dawson.

    “Yeah, I'd shoot it,” admits Sammy. “Of course, with that five, I might be the only one open.”

    GONNA TELL you why Sammy needs a new image. People think all the 13-year vet does is shoot and yap. But who took the Nets to the playoffs before Jason Kidd? Sammy. Who turned Glenn Robinson into an All-Star? Sammy. Who turned Kevin Garnett into an MVP? Sammy. Who finally got Minnesota out of the first round? Sammy. Who has the laughingstock Clippers sniffing first place? Sammy.

    So who deserves to be explained in complete detail? Sammy.

    GONNA TELL you why Sammy ain't afraid of nothing. His grandmother and great aunt-the two women who basically raised him in East Baltimore-worked at a factory that made rat poison. They were no-nonsense ladies. To get the best out of their Sammy, they sent him to play for the roughest coach they could find, Bob Wade at Dunbar High.

    Wade's teams didn't lose much, but when they did, he gave his players a choice: 10-pound bricks or the paddle. One day in 1985, a young Kansas assistant named John Calipari walks in on practice and sees the boys lined up. He hears Wade ask the first kid, “Bricks or paddle?” and the kid answers “bricks.” Then he sees the kid do a lengthy slide drill while toting two concrete slabs over his head. The next player in line is nicknamed Quiet Boy, and Quiet Boy picks the paddle. Wade winds up and slams him in the butt, and the kid doesn't make a peep. Sammy, who is next, sees the one kid running with the bricks, dying, and sees Quiet Boy, stoic as could be. So Sammy, a ninth grader, says “Gimme paddle.” He bends over, takes one whack from the 230-pound Wade and, according to Calipari, “let out a screech that I can't even begin to tell you. Ahhhhhh! Ahhhhhh!' He's running and holding his butt, screaming.

    “All the other guys went and got bricks.”

    GONNA TELL you how Sammy slipped through the cracks. While he was at San Jacinto (Texas) College, he was scouted thoroughly by only one NBA team, the neighboring Rockets. Most everyone else saw Sammy play later at Florida State, where he was a 6’3" gunner playing with point guard Charlie Ward. Saddled with a reputation as an undersized 2-guard with no future, he went behind guys like Rex Walters and Terry Dehere in the 1993 draft. But the Rockets knew Sammy could handle the rock. They picked him 24th overall-and chuckled under their breath.

    GONNA TELL you why Sammy had a headache most of his rookie year. “Man, I was a party animal when I first got to league,” he says. “You got to understand, we started 22-1. I'm 24 and I'm like, Hell, the world is good!' I'm partying every night, I'm at the clubs, hanging with the fellas. I used to drink until I got messed up, then I'd come to practice and smell like a liquor store. And they knew it. They'd say, `Look at him!' Some days, I'd be at practice like, I ain't doing s- today, Rudy. I'm sick.' And Rudy T was cool. He'd say, If you're going to party like a rock star, you'd better play like a superstar.'”
    GONNA TELL you when Sammy took Rudy T up on the dare. Houston's at Madison Square Garden with Game 3 of the 1994 NBA Finals on the line. The ball is supposed to go inside, but Dream is triple-teamed, and the ball finds Sammy beyond the arc. No rookie takes that shot. Sammy does. Bucket. It's arguably the shot that propels Houston to the title-and puts Sammy on the map. After the game, Kenny Smith jokes with Sammy. “That play was for Hakeem.” “I was open,” Sammy says. “Well, don't pass up anything open, Sam.” “You know I'm not.”

    GONNA TELL you what Sammy did the morning after that shot. Got Otis Thorpe a pot of coffee. Brought Mario Elie practice clothes. That's what rookies do. He hated it, and dreamed of a day a rookie would have to wait on him, bring him a club sandwich. GONNA TELL you how ruthless Sammy is. His second year in the league, new teammate Clyde Drexler has the flu before a playoff game against the Suns. And Sammy is happy. While Drexler is taking fluids intravenously, Sammy-the sixth man-is highstepping around the locker room. Smith asks him what's up, and Sammy whispers, “I'm just hoping Clyde don't play so I can get in.” Sounds callous, but Sammy wanted the Rockets to be his team. Always wanted to have his own team.

    GONNA TELL you when Sammy's life turned upside down. On Aug. 19, 1996, Houston traded him to Phoenix. Then Phoenix traded him to Dallas. Then Dallas traded him to New Jersey. All in six months! Why? The Rockets wanted Barkley and thought Sammy wanted too much money (“They haven't replaced me yet,'' Sammy says), the Suns thought he hated coach Danny Ainge (he sort of did) and the Mavs thought he was a bad seed (Don Nelson later apologized for misreading him).

    Screw 'em all. His new coach in Jersey loved him-had ever since he saw Sammy get his paddled. So Calipari became the first NBA coach to give him the green light. It didn't take long for the league to find out about Sammy's deadly midrange shot and eagle-eye passing. Rookie Keith Van Horn got lots of open looks because defenses had to double his new teammate on the pick-and-roll. “People actually began to mention Van Horn in the same breath as Tim Duncan,” Sammy says.

    But another Net, Kendall Gill, complained that Sammy shot too much. So before one game, Calipari gently asks his point guard to share more, and Sammy grunts, “Which one got to you? Kendall, right? The dude can't shoot.” The next game, at the Garden, Sammy keeps feeding Gill, even as he shoots two airballs on the way to a 2-for-11 night. Toward the end of the game, Sammy asks, “Cal, you want me to keep passing to this dude or you want to win?” “How 'bout we win,” is the answer. Sammy goes for 34, but the Nets lose by one.

    Moral of the story: he still didn't have his own team.

    GONNA TELL you why people think Sammy is a nut: the fourth quarter. That's when Sammy is possessed. He'll shoot when he wants to and yap when he wants to. When George Karl got him in Milwaukee in 1999, as part of a three-way deal, two things dawned on the coach:

    1. Sammy has an uncanny ability to make “effed up” fourth-quarter shots.

    2. Sammy's fourth-quarter chatter is indecipherable. “It might help if he'd take out his mouthpiece,” Karl says.

    With George and Sam, it was love/hate. Sometimes, George would call a set play and Sammy would dribble down the court and launch a 25-footer. One time, Karl's college coach, Dean Smith, asked, “Why do you let him do that?” Karl said, “Because it goes in 65% of the time.”

    In Milwaukee, Sammy got Glenn Robinson and Ray Allen the same open looks and celebrity he got Van Horn in Jersey. But make no mistake, the end of the game was all his. In a game in Miami in November 2000, the Bucks are down 22 in the final quarter, but cut it to two with eight seconds left. After a missed Heat free throw, 6’3" Sammy and 6’8" Anthony Mason tie each other up for a jump ball. Sammy grabs Mason's arm and wins the jump. Then he hits a three to win the game. “Damn, you're tricky,” Karl tells him afterward.

    GONNA TELL you how Sammy got Kevin Garnett to lighten up. Traded to Minnesota in 2003 for Joe Smith, Sammy walks into the tense Timberwolves locker room one day and immediately starts to flap his gums. Garnett, who demanded silence before games, snaps, “Didn't I tell you to shut up?” But Sammy says, “You talking to me?”

    From then on, he and good buddy Latrell Sprewell make it a point to needle KG. They talk as loud as they can before every game, and when KG won't say hello, Sammy hits him in the chest and says, “You'd better speak to me.” KG won't budge-“Y'all leave me alone.” So Sammy goes so far as to follow him into the training room.

    “Ticket would get his massages and no one would dare touch,” Sammy says. “I'd come in and give him a hug: What's up, homeboy?' He'd just be staring. I'd get in uniform, come back and give him another hug. And he'd be like, Why you keep hugging me? What's wrong with you, man?'” Sammy, now on his sixth team, just wanted KG to enjoy his precious NBA moments.

    Before long, the two began to jell on the court and the Timberwolves became lethal. Sammy was shooting so well (a career-high 48.8%) that if he missed a 15-footer, teammate Fred Hoiberg would ask, “Are you shaving
    points?” Sammy took the heat off KG. He'd turned Robinson into an All-Star, and now morphed KG into All-World.

    And Big Ticket finally exhaled. In front of the guys at practice one day, he laughingly offered Sammy 10 grand if he could dunk, and Sammywho'd dunked only twice in his career-turned him down. “You ain't gonna try?” Ticket asked. “No,” Sammy said. “Last time I dunked, I was with Jersey. Lost my balance and fell onto the basket support. I was so drained, I missed my next four shots. Calipari yelled, `Don't do that no more, you'll kill yourself.' So I haven't.”

    KG adored him, even started kissing the top of Sammy's bald head. Together, they might have defeated the Lakers in the Western finals, but Sammy injured his hip and back. Still, after being an All-Star for the first time, this was the closest he'd come to having his own team.

    GONNA TELL you why Sammy wore out his welcome in Minnesota. He'd helped Van Horn get $73 million and Ray Allen $70.9 million, but he'd never struck it rich himself. And he stewed about that. Actually, he blew a chance in New Jersey. His contract was going to be up after the 1996-’97 season, and instead of risking injury, he sat out the final six games with a phantom hamstring pull. He’d had his first big-time season (19.6 ppg) and deserved a huge payday, but the Nets owners didn’t trust him after his late-season sit-in, and shelled out only $21 million over six years. With no out clause.

    He did sign a three-year extension when he went to the Bucks, but Sammy never recouped those lost wages. Maybe, he thought, a grateful Wolves franchise would renegotiate and finally make him whole. “Look, I’ve been underpaid my whole career,” Sammy says. “Then I take that Minnesota team to a franchise-high 58 wins. Help ’em get out of the first round for the first time. Help Kevin McHale walk around with his chest out. Help Ticket become MVP. But management says no new deal and says I’m a distraction.”

    After the Timberwolves refused to deal, Sammy strained his hamstring in January the next season. The front office and fans suspected it was a ploy. But they didn’t know about Bob Wade’s paddle. Or how Sammy had played with cracked ribs and turf toe, or how he’d learned in New Jersey never to fake an injury again. He sat out 23 games; the Wolves lost 11 of them. KG knew how invaluable Sammy was, but McHale had no qualms about sending him to the Clippers last August for Marko Jaric.

    “Minnesota gave me away,” Sammy says. “No disrespect to Marko, but ain’t no way in the world he’s me. KG was pissed.”

    GONNA TELL you what changed Sammy’s mind about the Clippers. When the trade went down, Sammy wasn’t even sure he’d go. But he agreed to meet with head coach Mike Dunleavy, and Dunleavy assured Sammy he badly wanted to win, that the rock would be in Sammy’s hands, that it would be his team.

    What? Those were the words Sammy had always wanted to hear. At 36, he’d doubted he’d ever see this day. But the final word had to come from Elton

    Brand, the team’s undisputed star. Sammy knew he could set up Brand the way he’d set up Van Horn, Robinson, KG-“I’m a hell of a decoy,” he saysbut Brand had to want to be led by Sammy. Brand couldn’t be Kendall Gill.

    On the second day of training camp, the Clippers learned what they had. Sammy called the squad together and took off on one of his vintage rants. “Guys,” he said, “I’ve been around the league forever, and if you don’t believe we can win, you’re stupid. Stupid! With Elton, we can win. You our horse, Elton. I’m the spoon that stirs the coffee, but you our horse. We got to ride you, baby.”

    Now Sammy has even the introverted Brand riled up. The Clippers had been a notoriously quiet group, but now they have a guy who, according to
    Kenny Smith, “eats a speaker sandwich for lunch and washes it down with a microphone.” Sammy’s given them a swagger they’d never had. The players have anointed him “Team Dad.”

    They love his stories. How his Bucks teammate Gary Payton forced Michael Jordan to miss a potential game-tying three, and how Sammy yelled loud enough for MJ to hear, “Way to lock his up,” and how MJ glared at Sammy. They love how Sammy’s on a first-name basis with every ref, and how, when he gets called for a foul, he says, “How you catch me?”

    They love that Sammy TiVos three games a day (even Harvard-Yale, once) and that he wants to be a head coach. They love that Sammy nearly threw a no-hitter at a charity slow-pitch game with something he calls a funk/lob/spin/lube ball. They love how Sammy’s turned Brand into an MVP candidate and how he has the typically monotonal forward yelling “Yeah, boy!” after big shots. They love how Sammy gets Dunleavy to call off practice sometimes (“They talk a lot; they’re the same age,” Brand says). They love how, after games, Sammy addresses the team before Dunleavy does. They love how Dunleavy can actually understand what Sammy is saying in the fourth quarter. “I have an advantage,’’ Dunleavy says. “I played with Moses Malone.”

    It has taken 13 seasons, but Sammy, who is averaging 17.4 ppg and 6.5 apg, is finally dispelling the myths. He still takes occasional “heat-check shots,” but the Clippers don’t understand how he got that rep as a selfish gunner. Over the past six seasons he’s never averaged fewer than five assists and has taken 20 or more shots in a game only 50 times in 406 contests.


    “If he gets the Clippers to the playoffs, he’s king of LA,” Smith says. “Kobe couldn’t get that team to the playoffs. Sammy can. What he does is settle them down. The Clippers always got antsy down the stretch, but Sam takes care of that. He says, ‘There’s only two or three guys who will get the ball down the stretch, and I’m going to decide who they are.’ And trust me, a lot of times he’s going to decide he’s one of them.”

    GONNA TELL you why, finally, it’s good to be Sammy. On team flights, he walks onboard, and the rookies are there to serve him. It’s his pot of coffee now. They’re his practice clothes. It’s him with his legs up, eating a club sandwich.

    It was worth the wait
     
  3. arkoe

    arkoe (ง'̀-'́)ง

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    I never realized how good Sam was at making other people better. The trade for Barkley was a terrible trade for the Rockets.
     
  4. Parlett316

    Parlett316 Member

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    I love Sam but the Barkley trade was worth it since we couldn't get past Seattle, Barkley did that.
     
  5. apostolic3

    apostolic3 Member

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    The reason we beat the Sonics was because Matt Maloney shot the ball out of his bloomin' mind 2 or 3 games. Totally unbelievable. Problem was, he went totally in the tank against Utah, which is why we lost to them in the WCFs and didn't make the NBA Finals. Then the Rockets rewarded him with one of their dumbest contracts ever. The Utah series proved to me beyond a doubt that Maloney's shooting against the Sonics was fluke that would never happen again.

    For the record, I agreed with the Barkley trade because the Rockets got tired of Horry's lack of desire to improve and take his game to the next level, plus Sam and Rudy stopped getting along. Sam was known for not following instructions and the Rockets just got tired of Sam's act.
     
  6. tinman

    tinman 999999999
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    after that Horry won 4 more championships, Sam made more playoff appearances than the entire rockets teams and we're still trying to find a PG to this day.
     
  7. Rocket River

    Rocket River Member

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    forreal
    I remember folx comparing Van Horn to . . . a real Forward

    Rocket River
     
  8. apostolic3

    apostolic3 Member

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    True, but sometimes change is good for players. Horry going to the Lakers and Spurs was great for him because he wouldn't have helped us win 4 championships. He rode Shaq/Kobe's wagon in during the regular season and hit some key playoff shots. Same thing with the Spurs. The Rockets needed him to be a cornerstone, which he wasn't.

    In Sam's case, when a player wears out their welcome, what can you do but trade them? Maybe he just got tired of listening to Rudy. It was time for him to move on.
     
  9. tinman

    tinman 999999999
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    http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/recap?gameId=260207018
    Cassell's late 3's give Clippers fourth straight win

    NEW YORK (AP) -- Sam Cassell hit consecutive 3-pointers in the final two minutes, including the go-ahead one, and the Los Angeles Clippers beat the New York Knicks 85-82 Tuesday night for their fourth straight victory.

    Elton Brand scored 25 points, nine in the fourth quarter, and grabbed 12 rebounds as the Clippers improved to 4-1 on their six-game road trip that ends Wednesday night at Detroit. They have won nine of 10 overall.

    Cassell was quiet for most of the game and finished with only 13 points and before his late surge the most energy he showed was when he was hit with a technical foul that was taken away by another referee.

    Jalen Rose scored 23 points for the Knicks, who have lost six straight and 12 of 13. They fell to 0-6 this season without starting point guard Stephon Marbury.

    New York led 78-77 after Jamal Crawford's basket with 2:48 to play, but Cassell drilled a 3 about a minute later for an 80-78 lead. He missed on the next possession, but got the ball back after an offensive rebound and made another 3 from the corner with 1:13 remaining to extend the lead to five points.

    Before that, Brand had carried the Clippers in the final quarter. Los Angeles trailed by seven points with 8 minutes to go, but had half the Clippers' points in a 12-4 spurt and gave them a 77-76 lead with a jumper with 3:09 left.

    The Knicks got within 83-82 and had the ball after a Clippers miss, but Rose couldn't get the ball in and was called for a 5-second violation. Cuttino Mobley made two free throws, and Brand knocked away a desperation inbounds pass.

    Chris Kaman added 22 points and 11 rebounds for the Clippers (29-17), who are a game behind the 1974-75 Buffalo Braves for the best record in franchise history after 46 games. That team went a franchise-best 49-33.

    The Knicks shot 32 percent in the first half but still led 40-36 behind 12 points from Rose. The Clippers then opened a 58-51 lead on Cassell's 3-pointer with 3:11 left in the third, but the Knicks closed the quarter with a 10-2 spurt to take a 61-60 lead on Nate Robinson's steal and layup with 1.4 seconds left.

    New York then opened the fourth with consecutive baskets by Crawford and Qyntel Woods to push the lead to 65-60.

    Shortly after that, Cassell was hit with a technical foul that was taken away. He jumped off the bench to scream at teammate Chris Wilcox after Wilcox was beaten by Channing Frye for an offensive rebound and basket. Referee Kevin Fehr apparently thought Cassell was yelling at Tom Washington, the official under the basket, and called the technical. Washington calmed down the irate Cassell by telling Fehr that he wasn't the one being yelled at and had the technical removed.
     
  10. jeremyang2002

    jeremyang2002 Member

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    Can we have a shot of bringing him back for the next season?
     
  11. IROC it

    IROC it Member

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    "Hey! Get yo' hand off my bressesses."
     
  12. JayZ750

    JayZ750 Member

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    Cassell also fired up the team, I think, in the 4th, by almost getting a technical. Wilcox boxed out Channing Frye extremely pooorly and gave up an offensive rebound basket and Cassel cam charing off the bench to yell at Wilcox. The Clipps were down 3 or 4 at this point. The refs called a technical, but then rescinded it because Sam was yelling at a teammate, not the ref, as the one ref thought.

    He's really being a leader and playmaker out there. As good a season as Brand is having, the Clipps probably aren't anywhere without Sam.
     
  13. tinman

    tinman 999999999
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    Sam hitting 3 pointers to beat New York at Madision Square Garden..
    that sounds familiar :)
     
  14. hooi

    hooi Member

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    I love Sammy. Was very sorry to see him get traded for Barky. I my mind, he and Horry were the ones who put the Clutch in the City.

    Maybe he can come back as a Rockets coach one day?
     
  15. tinman

    tinman 999999999
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    they should both retire and walk into the hall of fame as Rockets.
     
  16. tinman

    tinman 999999999
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    His three late three-pointers helped the Clippers pull away in a 98-81 victory over the Boston Celtics on Friday, so the Clippers said they expected another late show from Cassell.

    "I had the ball at the foul line and Sam was [unguarded], so I would have thrown it to him backwards," Brand said. "I knew to get him the ball in that situation regardless of how he was shooting earlier. That's what he loves to do."

    Said swingman Quinton Ross: "We call him 'Big Game' — that's his new nickname around here. It seems like he just gets it done in the clutch every game."
     
  17. tinman

    tinman 999999999
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    don't forget MAXWELL.
    [​IMG]
     

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