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Blazer fans:
youre not even a Rocket fan.. get a life.
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Blazer fans:
Tough luck![]()
Just make sure you're still active on the board after the Blazers win the series in 7, ok? Don't be a coward.
To me, the story of the series so far has nothing to do with the officiating. It's that the Rockets role players have stepped up with the Blazers focusing all the defensive attention on Yao (which includes being extra-physical with him, admitted explicitly by Pryzbilla before game 4), while many key role players for the Blazers have not.
It brings up a more thorny issue though: why is our star being manhandled without the guys manhandling him being called for fouls? Maybe he's only considered a star in the regular season, and not in the playoffs yet. Maybe the refs are calling the reputations: Houston has one; Portland doesn't.
And yet anyone who doesn't have his head stuck in a gutter realizes that Brandon Roy and LaMarcus Aldridge are stars in this league -- much more so than the players the Rockets have matched up against them. So there goes the "we don't get respect because they have more stars than us" tripe.
The Rockets have more role players that have been making plays at or around the basket (Scola, Landry, Lowry, Wafer). The Blazers role players have been shooting jumpers (Outlaw, Fernandez, Blake) or have been mostly non-participants on offense (Pryzbilla, Oden).
The shot charts for each of the four games does not support your statement. Both teams have had players from the bench make plays near the basket, but for both teams these are way in the minority.
As an example, nearly all of the Landry's and Scola's points have come from around 17 feet out at the top of the key. As I said in another post, I will probably spend some time in the next couple of days to determine the exact numbers for each player. Not really to prove any point, but because I am very curious what the results would be.
If the Rockets were devoting as much attention in denying Brandon Roy the basketball on nearly every possession, then they'd get called for more fouls as well. There's just no comparison between the amount of contact being allowed on your star on the perimeter, and the contact regularly applied against Yao in denying him post position.
If you want to make comparisons, compare the contact allowed against Yao to the contact allowed against Aldridge or Oden in the paint. But Aldridge and Oden in the low post isn't a regular part of the Portland offense the way Yao's post ups are for the Rockets, so there's less whistles for it.
And yet anyone who doesn't have his head stuck in a gutter realizes that Brandon Roy and LaMarcus Aldridge are stars in this league -- much more so than the players the Rockets have matched up against them. So there goes the "we don't get respect because they have more stars than us" tripe.
The Rockets have more role players that have been making plays at or around the basket (Scola, Landry, Lowry, Wafer). The Blazers role players have been shooting jumpers (Outlaw, Fernandez, Blake) or have been mostly non-participants on offense (Pryzbilla, Oden).
This is not true. Yao is in at least one National commercial that plays damn near every game. There isn't one Blazer player in a national commercial outside of Oden. Unfortunately, Oden can't stay in the game long enough to make any difference at all.
Roy got voted onto the all star team by coaches, Yao got voted in by the fans. I would bet that the majority of those fans had no idea who Roy was until this series.
As far as national attention, the Rockets are the only team with a Super Star on their roster.
