Friday, July 25, 2014

NBA 2004

1.  Kevin Garnett: Was the MVP of the league.

He was first team All-NBA and All-Defense.

KG was an All-Star starter for the sixth straight season.

Garnett was NBA player of the month in December, January, February, and April.

He led the league in rebounding (13.9) and FGs (804) while playing all 82 games.


Garnett was 3rd in the NBA in scoring at 24.2 points per game.

He averaged five assists and over 2 blocks per game while shooting 50% from the field.

He had an amazing 71 double doubles in 82 games.

The Big Ticket led the T’Wolves to the best record in the West with 58 wins.

Behind Garnett, Minnesota advanced past the 1st round for the first time in franchise history.

In Game 2 vs. Denver he posted a triple double with 20-22-10 and added three blocks.

In the 2nd round vs. the Kings averaged 24-15 and 3.4 blocks per game.


In Game 3, Garnett had 30-15-5 blocks to led the Wolves past Sacramento by 1 to go up 2-1 in the series.


In Game 7 he carried his team to the conference finals with 32-21-5 blocks in 46 minutes. The Wolves escaped with a 3 point win.

In the West Finals he had 30-19 in Game 5 to force a Game 6.


The Timberwolves would eventually lose to the Lakers in the Western Finals. Minnesota won the Midwest Division in their best season in franchise history.

2. Tim Duncan: Was first team All-NBA and 2nd in the MVP voting.

He was 2nd team All-Defense and an All-Star.

Duncan finished 8th in scoring (22.3), 2nd in rebounding (12.4) and 4th in blocks (2.7).

He shot 50% from the field.


Timmy lead the Spurs to the #2 seed in the West with 57 wins. They also led the NBA (tied with Detroit) in scoring defense; yielding just 84 points a game.


He opened with 20-11 in a Game One win over LA.

He put up 21-21 and 4 blocks in Game Five vs. the Lakers. Duncan canned what appeared to be the game winning fall away jumper.

The Spurs would  fall dramatically on a shot by Derek Fisher.

Duncan averaged 22-11 in the playoffs as San Antonio lost in the 2nd round to the Lakers.

He earned a bronze medal with Team USA in the Olympics. He had three double doubles in tournament.

3. Ben Wallace: Helped led the Pistons to an unexpected NBA title.


Wallace was also 2nd team All-NBA and a starter at center for the East All-Stars.

He finished 2nd in the league in blocks (3.0), 3rd in rebounding (12.4) and 8th in steals (1.8).

Big Ben scored 9.5 PPG in playing 81 games.


The Pistons finished second in the East with 54 wins.

In the first round against the Bucks, Wallace averaged 10-13 3 blocks and 2.6 steals in the five game series.

In Game Seven in Round Two vs. New Jersey he went 8-10 from the field (18 points) and grabbed eight boards as Detroit advanced to the East Finals.

B-B-B-B-Ben sparked Detroit’s upset of top seed Indiana in the East Finals. He averaged 8-15-3.2 blocks, as the Pistons won in six games.

Again Detroit pulled off an upset over the Lakers behind the play of Wallace. In the title clinching game he had 18 points, 22 rebounds and 3 steals.

Wallace finished the playoffs averaging 10-14 2.4 blocks and 1.9 steals per game.

The Pistons won their first title since the “Bad Boys” 14 years earlier. They led the NBA allowing just 84 points per game.







Monday, July 7, 2014

2004 College Basketball

1. Emeka Okafor: Was the MVP the Final Four after leading UConn to the national title.

He was the NABC Player of the Year. He also was the Big East Player of the Year.

Okafor was the national defensive player of the year for the second straight year. 


He led the Big East and was 2nd in the country with 4.1 blocks per game.


The Huskies center was a consensus All-American.

He was 6th in the Big East in scoring (17.6)

He led the conference in rebounding (11.5) and field goal % (60%).

Okafor helped the Huskies past #9 Pittsburgh in the Big East final with 11-13 and 4 blocks.



The All-American had 14 games with at least 20 points and 10 rebounds.

Despite foul trouble in the first half Okafor powered UConn past #5 Duke in the final four with 18-7 (all 18 in the second half) in just 22 minutes. He led UConn back from down 8 in the final 3:15 to a one point win.

Okafor hit the go ahead put back with under 30 seconds to go.

UConn coasted to its second title in six years 82-73 over #14 Georgia Tech. The Huskies led by 25 with 12 minutes to in the game.  Okafor had 24-15 on 10-17 shooting.

Okafor was the only collegian named to the USA Olympic team and played briefly in two games and earned an bronze medal.

Connecticut went 33-6, 12-4 in the Big East. They won the conference tourney. They were #7 in the final poll after being #1 in 7 weeks.



2. Jameer Nelson: Was named player of the year by nearly every media service including the AP, Sporting News, US Basketball Writers.

He was a consensus All-American and Atlantic 10 Player of the Year.

Nelson was also named A-10 All-Defense team.


The player of the year was 2nd in the A-10 in scoring (20.6), assists (5.3) and steals (2.8).

He shot 39% from three and 79% from the free throw line.

Jameer opened the season with 20-8-10 performance in a seven point win over #3 Gonzaga.  One of his nineteen 20 point games.




He had 24 pts, and 7 asts in the Sweet 16 win over #17 Wake Forest, outplaying freshman Chris Paul.

In his last three games of the tournament he played, Nelson played 119 of 120 minutes.

The Hawks fell in the final seconds to #4 Oklahoma St. in the regional final.

St. Joe’s finished #5 in the final poll and earned a #1 seed in the NCAA tournament. They were 30-2.

3. Ben Gordon: Was the most outstanding player of the West Region of the NCAA tournament. He also was the MVP of the Big East tournament.


Gordon scored a NCAA tournament high 127 points (21.2 PPG).

He played at least 38 minutes in each of Connecticut’s first five tournament games.

He was 1st team All-Big East and on the All-Final Four team.

The junior guard was 5th in the Big East in scoring (18.5), and free throw % (82.9). He was 6th in assists (4.5), while grabbing almost five boards per game.

Gordon led the conference in three point shooting; converting over 43% from beyond the arc.

In the Big East final against #9 Pittsburgh, he had 23-8 to lead the Huskies to the Big East title.

He torched Alabama for 36 in the regional final on 11-19 shooting and 10-11 free throws.

In the Final Four, he scored 18 vs. Duke and 21 in the Final vs. Georgia Tech.

UConn  won its 2nd national title in six years.