Post#1228 » by JimMurray » Sat Dec 26, 2009 11:48 am
I don't want to make this a knee jerk reaction, but Kobe has to be penalized for how the Lakers came out today and laid an egg in primetime. I don't think Kobe turned it into a 1 on 1 competition; once the Lakers fell behind by 20, Kobe and Lebron both had 8 shots. Nobody on the Lakers was hitting anything, and he went into panic mode once they fell behind by a large margin. Not going to blame the officials, even though there were some missed calls, the aggressor will always get calls in their favor. That's how it is.
It's stupid to say who is ahead of who at this point after 28 games, but the onus is on Kobe to respond. He lost significant ground today and that can't be overlooked. You can't get punked at home in prime time by the guy who is supposedly 2nd in the MVP race. Although in fairness, today's victory had VERY LITTLE to do with Lebron. When Moon, West, Varajeo, Williams and Shaq shoot 26-36, it's going to be tough to win no matter what happens. The Cavs played probably about as well as they could possibly play at this point, and the Lakers played as bad as they could possibly play. Props to Lebron for showing his professionalism in keeping his guys composed through an unusually ruckus L.A. crowd.
I'm no longer going to listen to Cavs fan tell me they have a terrible supporting cast. That's just garbage. You and I both know that the Cavs supporting cast is better than you want to admit. It's not LA glamorous, but it's pretty damn effective, especially when they run the offense and it's not all Lebron Iso all the time.
My Updated MVP rankings
1. Lebron
2. Kobe
3. Melo
4. Dirk
I base my decision on this. The Cavs are 20-5 after starting the season 3-3 with all the drama in the background, and Shaq missing a couple games. The Lakers at 23-5 are two missed shots away from being 21-7, which would be a half game behind the Cavs current 23-8 mark. Not to mention, the Cavs now have a head to head win over the Lakers on the road. Even with the soft schedule that has been afforded the Cavs by virtue of playing in the East, that has been offset by the Lakers home heavy schedule thus far, and no matter how you want to spin that (the Lakers tougher schedule competition wise), it is what it is. Aside from that, and Lebrons superior numbers, I can't make an honest argument for Kobe at this point after seeing what I saw today. It's on Kobe to get it back in Cleveland come January 21st. Virtually every reason I supported Kobe as MVP was violated today by how soft the Lakers came out.
Now every team goes through lulls in a 82 game season, and perhaps that's what today was, perhaps they go on from here in rampage mode and destroy everybody; but they've left some questions that need to be answered; Kobe included if he's looking to win a 2nd MVP this year.