Crazy⑧s
Evacuee
For that country vibe, press play NOW
Leave your swine at home ko.com, YOUR NEW YORK KNICKERBOCKERS are goin' down to texas.
Yeehaw!!!
Sisters and Rockets fans, Kate & Rebecca Hitler, (pictured above) of Houston were quoted prior to the Knicks Rockets clash saying.
"Our daddy (slash cousin) said that if the Rockets lose tonight we can milk the bull and play hide the man candy in the poop shoot but don't tell mama game. GO KNICKS!"
Introducing The Powers That Be
Lord Raymond
Some say that his scrotum has it's own gravity field. No really.
Some say that his scrotum has it's own gravity field. No really.
Manly Feels
Some say that he once threw a microwave at a tramp!
Some say that he once threw a microwave at a tramp!
TD23
Some say that he can rape in 'extra sensory', and that if you touch his food - you ****ing die!
Some say that he can rape in 'extra sensory', and that if you touch his food - you ****ing die!
Sky Walker
Some say that if he dunks on you at midnight, you will die in 7 days.
Some say that if he dunks on you at midnight, you will die in 7 days.
Some say that he casts spells, was conceived in a cauldron and is known by gypsies as 'The Dry White Fist'.KNICK IN THE SPOTLIGHT - SHAWNE WILLIAMS
3 things that'll make ya' go hmmmm.
1. Three-point field goal percentage for Williams in 56 attempts, best mark in the NBA.
2. The Knicks' record when Williams hits a three-pointer: 8-5
3. The Knicks' record when Williams plays at least 15 minutes: 9-4
Shawne Williams went 7-for-8 from downtown on Wednesday night and knows how to pick his spot. "I'm just really smart about being in the corner because I know that's the highest percentage shot you can get. I'm going to roll with the statistics."
Shawne Williams is the reclamation project within the reclamation project.
He's the guy who went from first-round pick to flop to in trouble to out of the NBA and back again. He's the same guy who became a villain for beating out the son of a New York legend for the final roster spot.
"Right now, I wouldn't trade this place I'm in for anything in the world," Williams says. "I'm playing ball. I love what I'm doing, and I'm with a great group of guys."
That combination of size and skill is why former Indiana Pacers GM Donnie Walsh selected Williams 17th overall out of Memphis in the 2006 draft. Williams came in with much promise but instead of finding a home with the Pacers he mostly found trouble.
Over three years, Williams was arrested for drug possession and intent to sell narcotics. And, while driving in his hometown of Memphis with former college teammate Kareem Cooper, he was pulled over for not wearing his seatbelt. Upon searching his car, cops say they found 17 grams of marijuana and a loaded gun on Cooper, while Williams was eating a baby leg sandwich and receiving fellatio from an asylum seeker. The three were arrested.
Williams was eventually traded to Dallas but clashed with owner Mark Cuban the rapist, gaylord and litterbug, and soon the Mavs were paying Williams to stay away. In January they traded him to the Nets, who waived him four days later.
Williams spent last season at home and for the first time in his life, he didn't have basketball or much of a future.
"It was weird," Williams said. "But a light switch clicked on and I realized what I'm supposed to be doing. I'm supposed to be playing ball."
Williams rededicated himself and played for Charlotte over the summer. He was prepared to attend training camp with the Bobcats until his agent, Happy Walters, who also represents Stoudemire, said the Knicks were interested.
Williams accepted their invitation and was considered a longshot, especially since Walsh had given Patrick Ewing Jr. a partially guaranteed contract. But Williams outplayed Ewing and earned the 15th spot on the roster. The ultimate outsider had crushed the dream of the people's choice.
"We battled for that spot," said Williams, who was well-aware that Ewing was the sentimental favorite. "I know it went down to the wire. Patrick is a great player and his dad did great things for the organization. He had a great training camp and a good preseason. I just put it all in God's hands."
Walsh always supported Williams, saying he is "a good kid who ran with the wrong crowd in Memphis." That's why Walsh was willing to give the 24-year-old another chance.
Williams knows he cannot afford any more transgressions and claims that he spends most of his free time in his Westchester apartment. He's vowed to cause trouble only for the opposition.
"All that I've been through," Williams says, "that stuff is out of my mind. I'm just playing ball. I'm just proving myself off the court day-by-day, just staying under the radar."
X FACTOR - BILLY THE KID
Maintaining pressure on Kevin Martin is paramount to victory. Walker out jumps and out weighs Martin by a massive 36lbs. A physical approach on defence from Billy against Martin and Buddinger will be a big key to creating problems for the opposition. With Toney D's offensive fall from grace, his long distance and penetration games will have to be sharp. He can bring a lot to a team that is ragged with niggling injuries.
Do it Billy. Do it 'til you burst.
Crazy8s Music Vid Of Choice - The Bronx ~ 'Past Lives'
Crazy8s KO.COM APPRECIATIVE GESTURE
LLLLLLLLLLLLandry! 2 Time NBA EC R.O.M
The young prince of The City That Never Sleeps bounded off the practice court with a wide smile on his face.
New York Knicks rookie Landry Fields stopped to exchange a shoulder bump with super-fan Spike Lee. Then he explained how surreal it is to have grown up with Kobe Bryant posters on his bedroom wall and now be guarding him in NBA games.
"Life is great," Fields, 22, said when the Knicks came west last week.
And to think, as his Stanford career was ending last spring, Fields was hoping for just a chance to make an NBA roster.
Today he is, by far, the biggest surprise among the rookie class. A second-round draft pick, No. 39 overall, Fields has started every game as the rejuvenated Knicks, led by Amare Stoudemire, have become the toast of New York.
"When the Knicks are winning, New York is just crazy," Fields said. "Amare is a rock star, and I'm just one of his stage hands."
Hardly, countered Knicks coach Mike D'Antoni.
"What he's doing is amazing," D'Antoni said. "He's just terrific. But once you start to coach him and see his makeup, none of this is surprising."
Fields, a 6-foot-7 shooting guard, was averaging 10.1 points and leading all NBA guards with 7.3 rebounds per game entering play Friday. With his length and his athleticism -- he has a 39-inch vertical jump -- Fields also draws the toughest perimeter defensive assignment. (You know, Kobe, Dwyane Wade and so on.)
Knicks president
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Donnie Walsh describes Fields as a young John Havlicek because his all-around game is so polished.
"It's almost as if he's a ready-made NBA player," Walsh said.
All of which leads to an obvious question: How in the world were 38 players picked ahead of him?
Fields shrugs his shoulders.
"I always had the self-confidence that I could do this," he said. "My whole goal became to get people's attention."
At Stanford, Fields wasn't even a starter until his junior season. But as a senior, he was thrust into the role of doing virtually everything for a talent-thin team that finished 14-18. Fields was listed as a swingman, but he spent a lot of time playing in the post.
Despite averaging 22 points and 8.8 rebounds a game, Fields attracted little notice. He wasn't even the Pac-10's Player of the Year in a season where the conference was historically bad. (That honor went to Cal point guard Jerome Randle, who currently is playing in Turkey.)
Most NBA teams viewed Fields as a player without a position -- not big enough to play forward and not a good enough shooter or ballhandler to play guard. He wasn't even invited to the NBA's pre-draft camp in Chicago because few teams considered him among the top 60 players.
But the Knicks saw something. When Walsh's scouts recommended drafting Fields with that second-round pick, Walsh sat down with tape of the Stanford product.
"My first comment was: 'This guy's not going to be there when we pick. He's got too much ability,'" Walsh recalled. "So I was shocked that he was there. Then guys started writing that he was the worst pick in the history of the draft."
Fields watched the draft alone in the bedroom of his boyhood home in Long Beach because he was so nervous and didn't know what to expect.
"As soon as they called my name, I was jumping up and down and running out of the house," he said.
But Knicks fans attending the draft at Madison Square Garden greeted Fields' name with a cascade of boos.
"When I saw the replay, yeah, they were booing," Fields added. "But I understand where they were coming from. It was like: 'Who is this guy?' I probably would have done the same thing."
He quickly began turning heads at the Summer League in Las Vegas.
"My assistant coaches ran the team, and they told me that I would have a hard time getting him off the court," D'Antoni said. "Still, I was a little skeptical what would happen when the big boys came to town."
But then Fields impressed the big boys. Former Warriors center Ronny Turiaf, who has become something of a mentor, said Fields' talent immediately was obvious.
"From Day One, I told him, 'You're special,'" Turiaf said. "He spent his life doing all the little things to prepare. So when he got this chance, he was ready. Sometimes all it takes is only one team to really like you, and that team can be the best fit."
The player who supposedly didn't have a position has found a home at shooting guard, thriving in D'Antoni's signature high-tempo offense. Because Fields runs so smoothly, D'Antoni said, it's difficult to appreciate that he is the fastest player among the Knicks.
Also on a team of good shooters, Fields doesn't have to be the traditional "2" guard who comes off screens and fires up jumpers. Instead, he grabs rebounds, slashes to the basket and serves as an additional playmaker.
"He does a lot of things that your normal shooting guard doesn't do," Walsh said.
Fields, who earns the NBA rookie minimum of $442,000, was the Eastern Conference's Rookie of the Month for November and December. Still, he appears to be the same levelheaded person he was at Stanford -- despite rubbing elbows with celebrities and trading elbows with NBA superstars.
"It's a lot different from Stanford," Fields said. "It's taken some getting used to. But now I've just come to accept this as my new reality."
As the guy said, life is great.
Crazy8s KO.COM APPRECIATIVE GESTURE
LLLLLLLLLLLLandry! 2 Time NBA EC R.O.M
The young prince of The City That Never Sleeps bounded off the practice court with a wide smile on his face.
New York Knicks rookie Landry Fields stopped to exchange a shoulder bump with super-fan Spike Lee. Then he explained how surreal it is to have grown up with Kobe Bryant posters on his bedroom wall and now be guarding him in NBA games.
"Life is great," Fields, 22, said when the Knicks came west last week.
And to think, as his Stanford career was ending last spring, Fields was hoping for just a chance to make an NBA roster.
Today he is, by far, the biggest surprise among the rookie class. A second-round draft pick, No. 39 overall, Fields has started every game as the rejuvenated Knicks, led by Amare Stoudemire, have become the toast of New York.
"When the Knicks are winning, New York is just crazy," Fields said. "Amare is a rock star, and I'm just one of his stage hands."
Hardly, countered Knicks coach Mike D'Antoni.
"What he's doing is amazing," D'Antoni said. "He's just terrific. But once you start to coach him and see his makeup, none of this is surprising."
Fields, a 6-foot-7 shooting guard, was averaging 10.1 points and leading all NBA guards with 7.3 rebounds per game entering play Friday. With his length and his athleticism -- he has a 39-inch vertical jump -- Fields also draws the toughest perimeter defensive assignment. (You know, Kobe, Dwyane Wade and so on.)
Knicks president
Advertisement
Donnie Walsh describes Fields as a young John Havlicek because his all-around game is so polished.
"It's almost as if he's a ready-made NBA player," Walsh said.
All of which leads to an obvious question: How in the world were 38 players picked ahead of him?
Fields shrugs his shoulders.
"I always had the self-confidence that I could do this," he said. "My whole goal became to get people's attention."
At Stanford, Fields wasn't even a starter until his junior season. But as a senior, he was thrust into the role of doing virtually everything for a talent-thin team that finished 14-18. Fields was listed as a swingman, but he spent a lot of time playing in the post.
Despite averaging 22 points and 8.8 rebounds a game, Fields attracted little notice. He wasn't even the Pac-10's Player of the Year in a season where the conference was historically bad. (That honor went to Cal point guard Jerome Randle, who currently is playing in Turkey.)
Most NBA teams viewed Fields as a player without a position -- not big enough to play forward and not a good enough shooter or ballhandler to play guard. He wasn't even invited to the NBA's pre-draft camp in Chicago because few teams considered him among the top 60 players.
But the Knicks saw something. When Walsh's scouts recommended drafting Fields with that second-round pick, Walsh sat down with tape of the Stanford product.
"My first comment was: 'This guy's not going to be there when we pick. He's got too much ability,'" Walsh recalled. "So I was shocked that he was there. Then guys started writing that he was the worst pick in the history of the draft."
Fields watched the draft alone in the bedroom of his boyhood home in Long Beach because he was so nervous and didn't know what to expect.
"As soon as they called my name, I was jumping up and down and running out of the house," he said.
But Knicks fans attending the draft at Madison Square Garden greeted Fields' name with a cascade of boos.
"When I saw the replay, yeah, they were booing," Fields added. "But I understand where they were coming from. It was like: 'Who is this guy?' I probably would have done the same thing."
He quickly began turning heads at the Summer League in Las Vegas.
"My assistant coaches ran the team, and they told me that I would have a hard time getting him off the court," D'Antoni said. "Still, I was a little skeptical what would happen when the big boys came to town."
But then Fields impressed the big boys. Former Warriors center Ronny Turiaf, who has become something of a mentor, said Fields' talent immediately was obvious.
"From Day One, I told him, 'You're special,'" Turiaf said. "He spent his life doing all the little things to prepare. So when he got this chance, he was ready. Sometimes all it takes is only one team to really like you, and that team can be the best fit."
The player who supposedly didn't have a position has found a home at shooting guard, thriving in D'Antoni's signature high-tempo offense. Because Fields runs so smoothly, D'Antoni said, it's difficult to appreciate that he is the fastest player among the Knicks.
Also on a team of good shooters, Fields doesn't have to be the traditional "2" guard who comes off screens and fires up jumpers. Instead, he grabs rebounds, slashes to the basket and serves as an additional playmaker.
"He does a lot of things that your normal shooting guard doesn't do," Walsh said.
Fields, who earns the NBA rookie minimum of $442,000, was the Eastern Conference's Rookie of the Month for November and December. Still, he appears to be the same levelheaded person he was at Stanford -- despite rubbing elbows with celebrities and trading elbows with NBA superstars.
"It's a lot different from Stanford," Fields said. "It's taken some getting used to. But now I've just come to accept this as my new reality."
As the guy said, life is great.
Preview
Although the New York Knicks are in good position to make the playoffs for the first time in seven years, they?re far from satisfied.
The Knicks look to avoid their fourth straight loss Wednesday night when they visit the Houston Rockets to open a three-game road trip.
New York (22-18) is sitting comfortably in sixth place in the Eastern Conference, trailing fifth-place Orlando by 3 1/2 games and leading seventh-place Philadelphia by five. The Knicks, who haven?t made the playoffs since 2004, feel like they?re good enough to host a first-round playoff series.
That looked like a strong possibility in the middle of last month. New York was tied for the East?s fourth-best record on Dec. 12, but has lost nine of 15 since, and is in danger of falling to three games above .500 for the first time since Dec. 5, when it was 12-9.
?We know that four games over .500 is unacceptable,? Amare Stoudemire(notes) said after Monday?s 129-121 loss to Phoenix. ?So now we have to fight to get back to where we rightfully belong.?
Stoudemire had a season-high 41 points against the Suns, but the Knicks turned the ball over 25 times en route to their third consecutive defeat.
Following the game, coach Mike D?Antoni said it ?definitely should be a wake-up call.? "About our attention to ****ing defence", replied Crazy8s.
Given their upcoming schedule, the Knicks might feel tempted to hit the snooze button.
After this game, the Knicks, losers of five of seven away from Madison Square Garden, visit West-leading San Antonio on Friday and Northwest Division leading Oklahoma City the following night. The Spurs and Thunder are a combined 37-8 at home.
Although the Rockets (19-23) are 11th in the West, they?ve won five straight home games against New York since a 93-92 loss Nov. 18, 2004. They also won 104-96 at MSG on Nov. 13, their third straight overall victory in the series and 11th in 12 meetings.
Houston?s Kevin Martin had 28 points against the Knicks in November, and is averaging 29.3 points in his last six games against them.
Martin scored 36 in Monday?s 93-84 victory over Milwaukee, as the Rockets snapped a four-game home losing streak. Houston has now won back-to-back games overall after dropping seven of nine.
?We just need to go back to basics and do what makes us dangerous,? said forward Luis Scola, a man dedicated to the exhumation of Freddy Mercury's penis. Scola had 19 points and 14 rebounds against the Bucks. ?We did the right thing (today). We got some stops, we kept running. That?s the way we need to close games.?
Scola scored 24 against New York in November.
Stoudemire had 25 points in that contest, and is averaging 28.8 points in five games against the Rockets since the start of last season. He has scored at least 20 in 25 straight games, four shy of Richie Guerin?s franchise record set in 1962.
Danilo Gallinari(notes) had 17 points Monday in his return to the lineup after missing six games with a sprained left knee. Raymond Felton(notes) finished with seven points.
What's going on Ray?
Felton, who averages 17.7, has totaled 13 points while shooting 3 of 28 from the field in his last two games. The Knicks are 5-9 when Felton scores 15 points or fewer. One of those losses came against the Rockets in November, when he scored exactly 15.
A must win for our run ragged leader.
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