Friday, April 4, 2008

Keep it going


- Keep that momentum going. We'll know if Wednesday night was a mirage by how they play tonight against LA and Sunday against Phoenix. A bleak season could bust out with some hope with 1 win and a close loss, or 2 wins this weekend.

Energized Dallas Mavericks a little shocking

02:32 AM CDT on Friday, April 4, 2008

Jason Kidd came bounding off the bench and delivered a flying chest bump to Eddie Jones moments after he threw down an alley-oop dunk the other night against Golden State.

Josh Howard repeatedly attacked the basket without trepidation. Jason Terry hurtled out of bounds to save a loose ball, resulting in a reverse layup when Kidd delivered a nifty pass to Howard.

There were primal screams and fist pumps galore.

Then there was Dirk Nowitzki lumbering up and down the court with an injured ankle and knee, doing everything he could possibly do to lift the Mavericks past the Warriors.

The Mavs – who ran a tired Golden State team playing its fourth game in five nights into submission – is the team we need to see play each of the final seven games this season, not the group of tin men we've seen way too often against the Western Conference's best teams.

Now the players won't like that characterization. Neither will Avery Johnson. Or Mark Cuban.

But it's true.

How else do you describe a team that was 0-10 with a propensity for losing in the fourth quarter against teams above .500 until their triumph over the Warriors? Have you forgotten the loss against Golden State earlier this week, when the players said they didn't come out in the third quarter with the proper intensity?

Shoot me an e-mail when you figure out how that happens. If the Mavs were a top seed in the West, then I'd understand, but they're in the midst of a nine-team battle royal for their playoff lives.

Some of the responsibility falls on the shoulders of the Little General. After all, teams are supposed to take on the characteristics of their coaches. Without hesitation, Avery will tell you about the toughness he displayed as a player and how he fought through adversity and how he maximized every ounce of ability in his 5-11 body to play 16 NBA seasons.

All that is true, but it doesn't matter in some respects if he can't figure out how to consistently get his team to play with the same mentality he did.

Certainly, we can agree that professionals, most of whom earn millions per season, shouldn't need inspirational words from a coach to play their best basketball every game.

The reality, however, is they do need their coach to inspire them from time to time.

Johnson is a fantastic public speaker. He just wrote an autobiography titled, Aspire Higher.

Well, it's time for Johnson to use some of those same motivational techniques to get his players to reach their potential every night. Anything less and the Mavs will still figure out a way to miss the playoffs, despite having essentially a three-game lead over the Warriors.

But it's also up to the players. They must absolutely, positively play with the same passion, effort and urgency over the next two weeks as they did against Golden State.

No one said it would be easy. It's not. And it doesn't mean they'll win every game, because the grind of the NBA schedule can humble even the best teams. The Mavs, though, have used up nearly all of their margin for error.

In the process, they have proved to us they're not good enough to beat the other top teams in the West without their best effort.

It's that simple.

The Mavs, on the verge of missing the playoffs with a loss to the Warriors, finally showed us the mental toughness and mettle they've lacked much of the year. Desperation can do that.

Admittedly, I didn't see it coming. I figured they'd lose. As a pragmatist, I tend to see things as they are – not as players and coaches think they will be or could be or could have been.

And this team has shown us little against the conference's best teams since the Kidd trade.

"The word 'swagger' has several letters in it," Johnson said. "And we don't want to stop on the 's.' We need to keep going."

If they can't, then their playoff exit will be even shorter than last season's six-game debacle.




- It appears the matchup troubles with Golden State are no longer present.



Matchups improved for Dallas Mavericks against Warriors

07:54 PM CDT on Thursday, April 3, 2008
By EDDIE SEFKO / The Dallas Morning News
esefko@dallasnews.com

Every NBA team makes personnel decisions that don't always work out, either in the short term or the long run.

The Dallas Mavericks may have been on the beneficial end of a move by the Golden State Warriors, judging from the way Josh Howard played against Stephen Jackson on Wednesday. The Warriors' small forward was 1-of-11 from the field and had just two points in 32 minutes.

Howard was guarding Jackson most of the time and, by the way, finished with 28 points, seven rebounds and five assists.

Turns out there's a reason Jackson wasn't nearly as effective against the Mavericks this time. He had 30 points in one game and 33 in the Game 6 clincher of their first-round playoff series last season.

"The problem is when we played against that team last year, I couldn't put Josh on Jackson because I needed him to guard Jason Richardson," coach Avery Johnson said. "Now, since they lost Richardson, Dirk has somebody to guard, whether it's [Kelenna] Azubuike or [Al] Harrington.

"Now Josh can try to put out Jackson, which we couldn't do last year because they were so small."

Last year, Nowitzki spent plenty of time on Jackson, and it was a matchup nightmare.

But the showing Wednesday was another sign that Howard is hitting a nice run at just the right time.

"My teammates look to me," Howard said. "I'm one of the top guys on the team. I'm not a rookie anymore. I've been around long enough. It's about responsibility."

Next up is the responsibility of guarding Kobe Bryant tonight.





- John Hollinger sizes up the West playoffs.



Forecasting the West: How will the top teams finish?

Much has been written about the incredibly compelling race in the Western Conference this season and the upcoming playoffs. Truly, this is the best playoff race the league has ever seen. Consider the fact that with two weeks to go in the season, not one Western team has even clinched a playoff berth.

Only three games separate the top six teams, and the first-place team is only 7½ games from being out of the playoffs entirely. On top of that, three teams that could win 50 games each are locked in a tight battle for the final two playoff berths.

So with the entire conference in the unusual situation of having two weeks worth of extremely meaningful games, it's time to break down where the Western playoff contenders stand, check out some of the numbers behind their performance, and look in the crystal ball at where everyone might end up.


New Orleans Hornets

Glass half-full: We had no crowd and no bench for half the season; now we have both.

Glass half-empty: Take away our pick-and-roll and we're screwed.

Key factoids you might not know: You might think that since the Hornets have the best point guard in the league in Chris Paul that they'd be an up-tempo outfit, but they're really not. Though they'll run when the opportunity presents itself, the Hornets are among the league's most deliberate teams when they get in the half-court. As a result, they play at the league's fourth-slowest pace.

Instead, here's a different secret to their success: They don't foul. You may not have that image of the Hornets since they have a tough-guy coach in Byron Scott and fierce frontcourt players like Tyson Chandler and David West, but this is the hardest team in the league to get to the line against.

New Orleans permits only .241 free-throw attempts per field-goal attempt, and the impact is enormous -- relative to the league average, this saves the Hornets about four points per game. Because of this, they're No. 6 in defensive efficiency, even though they're below the league average in both field-goal defense and forcing turnovers.

Remaining schedule: Pretty soft now that they've completed a wildly successful six-game Eastern road trip, going 5-1 with the only loss coming at Boston. Roadies against the Lakers and Mavs remain, as well as home games against Utah and Golden State, but the other five games are against losing teams.

Crystal ball says: No. 1 seed, here we come. The Hornets own the tiebreaker with San Antonio, so as long as they can go 5-3 over the final eight games and get to 57 wins, they should finish at least tied for the best record in the West and earn the top seed. The Playoff Odds of them doing this is 62.1 percent, so they're in pretty good shape. Not that it's any great reward -- they'd likely have to play the Mavs or Nuggets in the opening round.

San Antonio could push the Hornets down to No. 2, and the other team to watch is the Lakers. They still play the Hornets and will own the tiebreaker with a win.


San Antonio Spurs

Glass half-full: Relax, we do this every year.

Glass half-empty: This sure seemed easier when everybody wasn't 30-something.

Key factoids you might not know: San Antonio began its late surge even later than usual, not really turning things around for good until late March. But now the Spurs have won eight in a row and seem likely to be the No. 2 or No. 3 seed in the West.

As usual, the defense is the key. The Spurs have been in the middle of the pack offensively all season, but rank third in defensive efficiency. They're the league's best defensive rebounding team, pulling down 76.9 percent of opponents' misses, and as usual they defend the 3-point line with ferocity. San Antonio gives up the fourth-fewest attempts -- only 19.5 percent of opponents' shots are 3s -- and are second only to Boston in 3-point defense at 33.8 percent.

But the reason San Antonio is so close to the rest of the Western pack rather than head and shoulders above is that several key role players have begun declining. Bruce Bowen, Michael Finley, Brent Barry, Jacque Vaughn and especially Robert Horry have all seen their output diminish due to age, injury or both, and as a result, on too many nights Tim Duncan, Tony Parker and Manu Ginobili are left to carry the offense entirely. Barry's calf problem in particular has been a setback, because his still-deadly shot is an incredible deterrent to help defenders.

Remaining schedule: It's difficult. Road games against Utah, Portland and the Lakers are the most daunting part, but the home games against Utah and Phoenix aren't gimmies either. Only one of the seven games (home vs. Seattle) shapes up as an automatic win. The game against the Lakers will also determine who gets the tiebreaker; as a result it may end up deciding which team is the No. 2 seed and which is No. 3.

Crystal ball says: Chances are that the Spurs will win either four or five of these next seven games, which would probably be enough to get the No. 2 seed but not enough to win the division. To leapfrog New Orleans to No. 1, the Spurs probably would need to win six, unless the Hornets have an unexpected collapse down the stretch. The bigger question is probably whether the Spurs can hold off the Lakers for No. 2 -- if they'd even want to. The No. 3 seed, and a likely date with Houston, seems much more advantageous.


Los Angeles Lakers

Glass half-full: Once our injured guys come back we have more talent than anyone in the league.

Glass half-empty: Please don't hit Kobe's pinkie. Pretty please.

Key factoids you might not know: Here's one that might shock you. The Lakers employ one of the game's more renowned floppers in Derek Fisher, whose thespian skills most recently came into play on a controversial game-ending offensive foul against Golden State's Monta Ellis that could end up costing the Warriors a playoff spot.

But when it comes to forcing dead-ball turnovers (everything except steals), did you know the Lakers are last in the league? Isn't that amazing? You'd think Fisher's presence alone would make that impossible, but apparently not. Only 6.35 percent of L.A. opponents' possessions end in a turnover that isn't a steal; the league average is 7.21 percent.

Offensively, the Lakers are a rarity: A team that both gets to the line a lot and attempts a lot of 3s. Usually this is an either/or thing, but not in L.A.'s case. Bryant leads the way, averaging nine free-throw attempts, but Gasol, Lamar Odom, Ronny Turiaf and Andrew Bynum all have high free-throw rates. And everybody else lets it rip from deep, most notably Fisher, Sasha Vujacic, Vladimir Radmanovic and Jordan Farmar. And, of course, Bryant.

As a result, L.A. ranks ninth in free-throw attempts per field-goal attempt and seventh in 3-point attempts per field-goal attempt (only Orlando can trump L.A. in these two categories). Since they also convert 37.5 percent of those 3s, it's a big reason the Lakers rank third in offensive efficiency.

Remaining schedule: The Lakers have the kindest slate of any Western Conference contender. Only three tough opponents remain -- San Antonio, Dallas and New Orleans -- and all three games are at home. Of course, the Lakers just lost at home to Charlotte and Memphis, so they probably shouldn't be chalking up future wins just yet.

Crystal ball says: This is the hardest team in the league to figure. How long will Gasol need to get back to full strength? How much will Fisher be limited by his foot problems? What if Kobe gets hit on the pinkie? And when's Bynum coming back?

L.A. is only 7-6 in its past 13 games, and of those the Lakers really played well only once, in an admittedly impressive road win at Utah. The guess is that with Gasol back they regain some of their old mojo and get to at least 55 wins, which should be good enough for a division title and a No. 3 seed, given that they own the tiebreaker against Phoenix. That distinction between No. 3 and No. 5 will be enormous, since it's likely the difference between getting Utah or Houston in the first round.

The Lakers still have a shot at moving up, because they still play both San Antonio and New Orleans and would own both tiebreakers with victories. They'll probably need to run the table or go 6-1 at worst, but the top seed remains possible. The Playoff Odds give them a 12.8 percent shot of pulling it off.


Utah Jazz

Glass half-full: Three of our starters have been All-Stars -- and the fourth one is Deron Williams.

Glass half-empty: We don't have to play any road games in the playoffs … do we?

Key factoids you might not know: The Jazz may be the best team in the West, even with their deplorable road record, mediocre defense and questionable outside shooting. Utah is only sixth in terms of winning percentage, but is first in the West in scoring margin at 6.9 points per game, which is a better indicator of future success. Despite some horrid road losses, overall they've played very well of late, taking over the top spot in the league in offensive efficiency and moving up to No. 2 in the Hollinger Power Rankings.

Longtime Utah watchers will take comfort in the fact that they're still the league's resident mad hackers, with opponents averaging a league-best .394 free-throw attempts per field-goal attempt. This fact alone makes it impossible for the Jazz to have a better than average defense, but at least there's a reward for all those reach-ins: Utah has the league's No. 1 steal rate, pilfering the ball on 9.2 percent of opponents' possessions.

Remaining schedule: It's tough. The Jazz play San Antonio twice, as well as Denver, Houston, Dallas and New Orleans, and they still need to snag a couple of more wins to secure the Northwest Division title.

Crystal ball says: With three home games and three road games left, it's obvious, right? The Jazz go 3-3 and finish at 53-29, holding off Denver for the division but possibly leaving themselves the challenge of winning three playoff series on the road in order to win the conference.


Phoenix Suns

Glass half-full: We've won 10 out of 13, and the three losses were at Detroit, at Boston and at Denver.

Glass half-empty: We're still only 13-9 with Shaquille O'Neal.

Key factoids you might not know: I slammed Suns president Steve Kerr for trading for Shaq; based on the contents of my inbox, it appears one or two Suns fans noticed this. I still have some misgivings about the deal, especially once you get into next year and the year after, but it's hard not to notice how well the Suns are rolling right now.

The key has not been the play of Shaq, who continues to have an insanely high turnover rate. (Seriously, how do you make three turnovers a game if you're taking only eight shots?) Rather, it's been his apparent impact on Amare Stoudemire. The Suns made this deal in part to move Stoudemire out of the center spot, so you have to give them credit for the results.

In 22 games at power forward, Stoudemire has been the best player in the league. No, really, he's been that good. He has averaged 29.4 points on 58.2 percent shooting and averaged nearly 11 free-throw attempts.

But the number that maybe is most important is 36.7. That's how many minutes per game he's played with Shaq, after averaging only 33.0 before the trade because he was in foul trouble too often. Stoudemire's foul rate is still fairly high, but it has declined just enough that he's able to play his regular minutes.

A pessimist would note the Suns have shot unbelievably well on 3s during the recent hot streak, and that's unlikely to hold up over an extended period. But if Stoudemire keeps playing this freakishly well it's not going to matter too much, because right now the difference between New Stoudemire and Old Stoudemire more than offsets the difference between Shawn Marion and Shaquille O'Neal. I'd have never thought that possible, but it's happening.

Remaining schedule: It could be worse. Road games against San Antonio and Houston won't be fun, but they have two gimmies (home vs. Minnesota, at Memphis), and they should be able to handle home games against Dallas and Golden State.

Crystal ball says: The way they're playing they might grab six of the final seven and steal the division crown from L.A. The unfortunate thing is they probably have to win six of the seven, because the Lakers own the tiebreaker. So the smart money remains on the Suns ending up with the No. 5 seed and a brutal first-round pairing against Utah.

It's possible they could move up to No. 3 even if they don't win the division, because the Suns still play San Antonio and will own the tiebreak with a victory. But again, this scenario pretty much depends on them winning at least six of their last seven.


Houston Rockets

Glass half-full: We're 34-9 since New Year's Day and 13-5 since losing Yao Ming.

Glass half-empty: We never won a playoff series even with Yao; now we're supposed to do it without him?

Key factoids you might not know: It seems obvious that the Rockets are worse off without Yao Ming … yet trying to find evidence for this is amazingly difficult. At the time Yao went out, the Rockets were 17th in offensive efficiency and second in defensive efficiency; today they're 16th in offensive efficiency and second in defensive efficiency.

In fact, the Rockets are 1.2 points per 48 minutes worse with Yao on the court this season. Of course, that's partly because he missed out on all those double-digit victories at the tail end of the win streak.

Nonetheless, late cracks have begun to show. The Rockets are 3-5 since their epic 22-game winning streak ended, with three of the losses by 20 or more. Tracy McGrady is the only Rocket who can reliably create a shot, and the strain is becoming apparent. His shot attempts went from 18.9 a game to 21.7 in a Yao-less March, and his shooting percentage went from 43.2 percent to 40.9 percent. He's not making 3s anymore either, because all his shots out there are off-the-dribble, under-duress tries rather than kick-outs from Yao -- he made just 23.4 percent in March.

Remaining schedule: Houston's schedule is extremely favorable, which could leave the Rockets in the hunt for the division crown if they catch a few breaks. They have two games apiece against the Sonics and Clippers, although roadies against the Nuggets and Jazz will be difficult.

Crystal ball says: Houston is in a tough spot, because if it doesn't beat either San Antonio or New Orleans in the Southwest Division, it means the Rockets probably draw either the Jazz or the Lakers in Round 1. So much for ending T-Mac's first-round streak.

Even with the soft schedule, Houston's most likely outcome is 54 or 55 wins, which is probably going to be one or two short of what they need to avoid the Lakers and Jazz in Round 1. Look for them to end up as the No. 6 seed, though if they beat Phoenix on April 11, they could improve to No. 5.


Denver Nuggets

Glass half-full: Nobody else has two big-time scorers like Allen Iverson and Carmelo Anthony.

Glass half-empty: Nobody else's games look more ragged. Is this the NBA or the Rucker League?

Key factoids you might not know: Denver has the league's best free-throw "defense." Its opponents have made only 72.8 percent from the line this season. While some might attribute this to the Nuggets' speedy pace (and high altitude) tiring out opponents or being especially clever in choosing whom to foul, the bottom line is that this is almost certainly just plain old dumb luck.

And it's a pretty friendly piece of luck at that. Relative to the league, it's earned the Nuggets about 0.7 points per game, meaning it's been worth nearly two wins. In a playoff race which may be decided by one game, that's enormous. So basically, the reason Denver is probably headed to the playoffs instead of the lottery is the fact that its opponents can't make a free throw. What a country.

Remaining schedule: A four-game road trip with stops in Golden State and Utah won't be fun, but of their final seven games, five look like wins. Obviously the April 10 game at Golden State is huge: win that and they're pretty much a lock for the playoffs.

Crystal ball says: With tiebreakers over both Dallas and Golden State and the most favorable schedule of the three, it's going to take a real effort for Denver to stay home for the postseason, especially since the Nuggets are playing their best ball of the season.

Peg them for 51 wins and the No. 7 seed, and mark them down as a tough out in the first round. Even if they lose to Golden State next week, the schedules and tiebreakers combine to make it tough for Denver to miss.

I should also mention that the Nuggets retain a chance to beat out Utah for the Northwest Division and earn the No. 4 seed. Denver would have to win their upcoming meeting in Salt Lake City, which would give the Nuggets the tiebreaker, and could afford to lose one game at most between now and the end of the season. The Playoff Odds tool gives them a 10 percent shot of pulling it off.


Dallas Mavericks

Glass half-full: Dirk's back and now all will be good.

Glass half-empty: Now we can disappoint everybody in the playoffs again.

Key factoids you might not know: The Mavs' 1-10 record against winning teams since acquiring Jason Kidd has been well-documented. But here's the thing: They actually played really well in that stretch, and only a flukish series of close losses prevented their record from being much better.

For starters, three of the losses were without Dirk -- two due to injury and one due to suspension -- so let's set those aside.

Now check out the other seven losses. They lost by 11 at New Orleans, three at San Antonio, four in OT against the Lakers, by six at Utah, two to the Lakers, four to Boston and seven to San Antonio. Combined, they lost seven games by a total of 37 points.

Those were Dallas' only defeats in that stretch. Meanwhile, the games against losing teams were all runaways: by 29, 25, 25, 20, 19, 16, 15, 13, 9, 8 and 7. No, hammering sub-.500 teams doesn't impress people nearly as much, but it's just as good a sign of a team's quality. In 11 games against losing teams, Dallas crushed pretty much every one.

So overall, they're 12-10 since trading for Kidd. But that's 12-7 when Dirk plays -- with an average scoring margin of plus-9.2 per game, which would easily be the best in the West. Everyone has focused on a series of consecutive close losses against good teams, which resulted more from bad luck than bad basketball, and ignored the fact that in all the other games Dallas completely outmatched its opponents.

What I'm saying, in a roundabout way, is that this team is being vastly underestimated at the moment. Yes, there are some issues here, and no, I'm still not particularly fond of the Kidd trade overall. But all the evidence since the deal says this team can hang with the West's elite, and now that they hammered Golden State last night it seems they'll get a chance to show it.

Remaining schedule: Dallas has the most murderous remaining schedule of any Western contender, with a home-and-home against Seattle providing the lone breaks. Otherwise it's on the road against Portland, Phoenix and the Lakers, and home dates against Utah and New Orleans.

Crystal ball says: Obviously, it all comes down to Dirk Nowitzki's ankle. Let's say this: I'm stunned he was able to come back from a high ankle sprain in less than two weeks and do anything, let alone lead a rout of Golden State. Clearly, he is an absolute freak of nature. This is normally a four-week injury, and often it lingers beyond that point.

By the way, how badly do you think the Mavs were chuckling to themselves last night as they watched Golden State take the floor and behold Nowitzki playing -- after a story leaked out earlier in the day saying he wasn't in the game plan. I have visions of Mark Cuban laughing diabolically throughout the game while stabbing a Don Nelson voodoo doll.

At any rate, because of the schedule they might have trouble doing better than 4-3 the rest of the way, even if Nowitzki plays. It would help if New Orleans is locked into their spot on the last day of the season, which is a possibility, because then the Hornets would likely play their scrubs and allow Dallas to roll.

But fortunately for Dallas, they are up two games on Golden State and own the tiebreaker, so it would take a collapse to keep them out of the playoffs now. Look for them to end up tied with Denver at 51 wins and get the No. 8 seed -- where they can try to turn the tables on what happened a year ago.


Golden State Warriors

Glass half-full: Nobody can catch lightning in a bottle like us.

Glass half-empty: Nobody can mail in games like us.

Key factoids you might not know: You might think this team is all about reckless abandon, but actually they have the second-lowest turnover ratio in the league, making miscues on just 12.9 percent of their possessions. That's pretty amazing given that they play the league's second-fastest pace, and it's a tribute to the skills of Baron Davis, Monta Ellis and Stephen Jackson to play so quickly without making errors.

Now if they could just be a little smarter with their shots. Golden State is second in the league in 3-point attempts per field-goal attempt: 29.8 percent of their shots are 3s. But they convert them at a rate well below the league average: 35.1 percent.

Golden State also has hurt itself with some self-inflicted damage on the defensive end. The Warriors are dead last in defensive rebound percentage, pulling down only 69.8 percent of opponents' missed shots, which is yet one more reason it should drive Warriors fans crazy that their best defensive rebounder, Andris Biedrins, has played more than 30 minutes in a game exactly once since March 7. On Tuesday he played just 16, even though he was the only Warrior with a positive plus/minus in a blowout loss to the Spurs.

Remaining schedule: Probable losses remain in road games against New Orleans and Phoenix, but the others look very winnable. The key game is April 10 at home against Denver, but with Memphis, Sacramento, Seattle and the Clippers left, a 4-4 finish seems the worst-case scenario.

Crystal ball says: They pretty much screwed themselves with last night's face-plant in Dallas, and now might need to run the table to get to the postseason. Golden State has to beat Denver, certainly, but even that might not be enough because the rest of the Nuggets' schedule is easier and Denver wins the tiebreaker.

I'm projecting both Dallas and Denver to finish with 51 wins, which means Golden State needs to win 52 to get in ahead of them, requiring a 7-0 finish. Based on that schedule, it's not real likely, and the Playoff Odds tool agrees: Last night's loss dropped their odds to 31.0 percent, and it seems to me that's still overstating things.






- Stars win, have playoff matchup set versus the defending Champion, Anaheim. Ouch.



Dallas Stars draw Ducks in playoffs after 4-2 win

02:24 AM CDT on Friday, April 4, 2008
By MIKE HEIKA / The Dallas Morning News
mheika@dallasnews.com

GLENDALE, Ariz. – The Dallas Stars locked themselves into a first-round playoff showdown with the Anaheim Ducks on Thursday by taking a 4-2 win over the Phoenix Coyotes, but Stars coach Dave Tippett said his team wouldn’t start looking ahead to postseason play just yet.

"Our focus is totally on what we have to do right now, totally on getting our game where we have to get it," Tippett said. "They say, 'Know your enemy,' but we have two more games before we need to do that."

The Stars sat out Mike Ribeiro (flu-like symptoms), Brad Richards (overall soreness) and Marty Turco (coach’s decision) and still came up with a solid team effort. They will almost assuredly not have Sergei Zubov available in the first round of the playoffs after he went to Germany to have a procedure done that could help heal his sports hernia injury, but they still are starting to shake some of the dust from a miserable March.

With the win, Dallas is 2-0-2 in its last four games and moves to 44-29-7 (95 points). Sixth-place Colorado can only tie the Stars in the standings, and the Stars hold the tiebreakers. That means Dallas will play Anaheim in the first round. The only thing to be determined is who has home ice. The Ducks (45-27-8, 98 points) can clinch home ice by getting two points out of their final two games. The Stars need to get three more points than the Ducks in the final two games to move ahead in the standings.

"Any one of those teams is tough," Stars captain Brenden Morrow said when asked about locking up the Ducks. "We’ve had some great games against that team, and you’re going to have to go through them at some point, so we’ll have to do it in the first round."

The Stars say they need to continue to build their game, and they will get another chance tonight when they and the Coyotes fly to Dallas and finish the home-and-home series in a 7:30 p.m. game at American Airlines Center.

The Stars might get either Richards or Ribeiro back and will start Turco in goal, but the plan is the same – find a way to gain rhythm and momentum heading into the playoffs.

"Our work ethic, for the most part, was good," Tippett said. "We made some mistakes, but I felt we did a pretty good job for the lineup we had."

Tippett scrambled his lines and gave additional power-play responsibility to Philippe Boucher, Matt Niskanen and Joel Lundqvist. The trio responded with some big plays as Dallas went 2-for-5 with the man advantage. In addition, the defense pairs were solid in front of goalie Johan Holmqvist, who was playing his second game in a Stars uniform. Holmqvist played just one period March 15, allowing three goals on 12 shots before being pulled against the Vancouver Canucks.

"I thought it was much better than my first period at home," Holmqvist joked of a 21-save performance. "I thought it would be very hard to go into the playoffs off of that last game, so this felt good. I know I can play, and you just want to have rhythm and momentum going."

The Stars made a clear statement that they wanted to support their new teammate, who was acquired from the Tampa Bay Lightning on Feb. 26.

"We wanted to kind of stick together and support each other coming back," Morrow said. "We did a good job in lanes and when they did get those opportunities, Holmer came up big."

It wasn’t a complete masterpiece, as the Stars came close to blowing a 3-0 lead in the third period when they allowed two goals in the final 6:09. However, Mike Modano scored an empty-netter, and that clinched the win and no worse than fifth place in the West.

"There were positives," Tippett said. "And we’ll take the positives right now."



- Say it ain't so Barch.....



- I need a pick me up after that. Aaron Downey to the rescue.





- The Rangers' defense and clutch hitting sucks a fat one. So nothing's changed from last year.



Texas Rangers' defense off to shaky start

Ailing Young, Kinsler make uncharacteristic errors in opening series

01:39 AM CDT on Friday, April 4, 2008
By EVAN GRANT / The Dallas Morning News
egrant@dallasnews.com

ANAHEIM, Calif. – The Texas Rangers' dugout was still bouncing as Josh Hamilton rounded the bases following his ninth-inning, go-ahead homer Tuesday. Amid the excitement, though, Michael Young and Ian Kinsler recognized the homer for exactly what it was: A reprieve.

The two combined for four errors in the first 17 innings of the season. The Rangers first loss could be directly attributed to shaky defense. Until Hamilton's homer, the team was in position to lose the second game for the same reason.

"It was just like 'OK, now let's tighten up the defense'," Young said. "We're not going to be able to make errors like we did and eke out wins all year."

Despite winning only one of three games in the season-opening series at Seattle, the Rangers displayed some nice attributes. They had some quality starting pitching from Kevin Millwood and Vicente Padilla. They had exemplary long relief from Jamey Wright. Their newly reshaped outfield, with Josh Hamilton and David Murphy, provided some of the club's biggest hits and biggest plays.

The middle infield's defense, considered to be one of the club's more stable areas, was shaky though. Perhaps that was due to fighting flu-like chills and fever during the first two days of the series. Young and Kinsler were nearly scratched from games with fevers above 100 degrees.

Regardless of the reasons, however, it did bring back memories of last year when fielding was a season-long issue. The year began with a sweep at the hands of the Los Angeles Angels in which the club made five errors. One by Young was key to a four-run Angels' first-inning in the series finale, which Los Angeles won, 5-3. The Rangers went on to lead the AL in errors and unearned runs allowed.

Becoming a better fielding team was one of the main themes of the off-season and spring training. In the first two games, though, both players had plenty of problems.

Young failed to field a squirming ground ball in the first game and was charged with an error. The error led to a Seattle rally. In the second game, he short-hopped a throw to first, creating an opening for Seattle to rally back from a 3-1 deficit to take a momentary lead. Also in the second game, Kinsler dropped a throw from catcher Gerald Laird that led to the Mariners' first run. In Seattle's three-run eighth inning, Kinsler tried to go to second with a ball for a force out, but moved too quickly and the ball squirted out of his hands.

"We just made some misplays, but we're not panicking on it," manger Ron Washington said. "We know that they will make the plays. It's going to get cleared up. Physical mistakes happen. I don't mind physical mistakes so much."

Young and Kinsler, along with Hamilton in center and Laird, should help the spine of the team's defense be sharper. Hamilton made three impressive running catches during the series. While there were three wild pitches with Laird behind the plate, he did throw out two of the four runners who tried to steal against him (it would have been three of four if Kinsler had held on to a Game 2 throw).

"I'm going to make more errors," Young said. "I feel like I butchered a ball. But the good thing was the team fought through it. We won that game despite making mistakes. That's a positive. But we can't do that all year."

The club seemed to understand that. The Rangers followed Hamilton's homer with their first "clean" game of the year.

Now, they hope to simply extend that streak.





- Paul Brogan Final 4 rap.
PAUL BROGAN - FINAL FOUR RAP


- Britney Spears rap.
PAUL BROGAN -- BRITNEY SPEARS RAP


- Shaq rap.
PAUL BROGAN -- SHAQ RAP

No comments: