Buck Harvey: Someone won’t be Bird, MJ for long

In the span of a month, Dirk Nowitzki and LeBron James have come a long way. One is Larry Bird, the other Michael Jordan.

That’s some rise for two guys who, over a combined 21 years in the league, have won two games in their NBA Finals history.

But that’s the way of the tweeting, blogging, 24/7, everybody-has-to-say-something world. Wait a few days, and Mark Cuban might even become likable.

Wait a few weeks, though, and something else will happen. Either Nowitzki or James will lose, and the reaction will be harsh as one of them returns to what he was before.

That’s the way this world works, too.

Today they are what they have been this postseason, which is spectacular. Each returns to their second Finals at the peak; if Nowitzki hasn’t been the best in the playoffs, then James has.

The Spurs have beaten both in the postseason, but they’ve lost to Nowitzki while appreciating how outrageous his ability is. Antonio McDyess said recently Nowitzki’s signature move, his step-back jumper, is “one of the toughest” shots he has ever faced.

The move is unblockable. Worse for a defender, the difference between the shot itself and the fake is a twitch.

But Nowitzki could always shoot, which is why Rick Pitino compared him to Bird as long ago as 2000. Now Nowitzki is playing with certainty that wasn’t always there.

Just as Pitino went for the easy association — skin color and height — others have, too. “Nowitzki may be as close to Larry Bird as the NBA has to offer,” wrote an Associated Press columnist this month.

And after Nowitzki scored 12 points in the final five minutes of regulation in Game 4 against Oklahoma City, Brendan Haywood followed along. “A lot of people compare him to Larry Bird, and this is why,” Haywood said.

James has heard the same, albeit with different historical references. An ESPN scouting analyst compared him this weekend to Jordan, Magic Johnson, Scottie Pippen and, just for fun, Derek Fisher.

That’s more impressive than merely being another Bird. “He did not win the regular-season MVP,” the analyst wrote of James, “but anyone who does not see James as the WBP (World’s Best Player) after this postseason is simply not being objective.”

But it’s what someone else said last week that made news. “Michael Jordan is probably the greatest scorer to play the game,” Pippen said on ESPN radio. “But I may go as far as to say LeBron James may be the greatest player to ever play the game because he is so potent offensively that not only can he score at will but he keeps everybody involved.”

That’s one opinion, and here’s another: Had Pippen played without Jordan in, say, Atlanta, Pippen would never have been named one of the NBA’s 50 best.

And when they rename the top 50? James and Nowitzki will be there; Pippen won’t.

Still, the way James is playing draws these kinds of superlatives. As it is with Nowitzki, these are men dominating the game as only the best have.

That’s why what Jason Terry said about Nowitzki last week applies to both. “I don’t think anybody is questioning his greatness right now,” Terry said.

But that’s “right now.” Wait until one of them fails. Wait until everyone is reminded that Nowitzki went out in the first round in three of the previous four years. Wait until the clips are shown again from last season, when James appeared to quit against Boston.

Losing will crush one of them. There will be tweets and blogs, 24/7. Everybody will have something to say, and this much is guaranteed.

One of them won’t be Bird, or one of them won’t be Jordan.

bharvey@express-news.net

Popovich praises O’Neal for his style

By Mike Monroe
mikemonroe@express-news.net

Shaquille O’Neal exited laughing at his official retirement news conference on Friday, and it was his humor and zest for life that Spurs coach Gregg Popovich said he most admired about the center who earned four championship rings during 19 NBA seasons.

“I always felt he had more fun than any NBA player of all time,” said Popovich, a Spurs assistant coach when NBA scouts first took notice of a Cole junior named O’Neal who was dominating Texas high school games in 1988 and 1989. “He seemed to enjoy himself more than any player. He competed to win, but his intelligence and humor were always there. He enjoyed the spotlight; he used it, he played with it and I always got a large kick out of it.”

O’Neal’s official announcement came Friday at his Orlando-area home, where the humor Popovich admired again was on display.

Hours after the Knicks announced that Donnie Walsh was stepping down as their general manager, O’Neal interrupted his announcement to take a fake phone call from the Knicks.

“Yes?” he said into the phone. “For real? You want me to apply for the Knicks general manager job? I’ll fly up right after the press conference.”

It was just such irreverence for a game too many take too seriously that Popovich appreciated.

“His personality was infectious and I thought his sense of humor was wonderful for the league and the fans,” Popovich said.

The Spurs’ coach said O’Neal is “in the conversation” when basketball historians debate the greatest centers ever to play the game, and Popovich credited him with changing the notion of how the game’s biggest players should approach the game.

“How a big man should play or how he has to play historically wasn’t true any more after Shaq,” Popovich said. “He was really complete. People never gave him credit for that, but he was a force offensively and defensively and he was a very willing passer and he would play with that, too. If you doubled him he could kick it to other people and he got better at that as time went by. He never got credit for being that complete type of player at his position.

“He obviously ranks amongst the best. He’s in the same conversation with all the other greats we know about over the years. I don’t try to rank them. The conversation is what it’s about.”

The first time Popovich saw O’Neal in person, during O’Neal’s college career at LSU, he came away astounded.

“I thought he was a phenomenon,” he said. “I couldn’t believe somebody was that big and that mobile, that those two would go together. At the same time he had great coordination. To be as big as he was and have that just amazed me.”

Popovich recalled how difficult it was watching his battles with the Spurs’ great big men, David Robinson and Tim Duncan, without losing focus on the rest of the game.

“I always had to make sure I didn’t get lost in just that dynamic because it was so easy to just be mesmerized by those people playing against each other and you could lose sight of everything else going on out on the court,” he said. “Your eyes just gravitated to those guys as the game progressed. You had to discipline yourself to think bigger than those two, but the game always seemed to revolve around them.”

Pop’s $6M yearly contract tied for fifth among all sports coaches

With the recent retirement of Los Angeles Lakers coach Phil Jackson, Gregg Popovich now is tied for second among the NBA’s highest-paid coaches.

Forbes Magazine reports thattrails only the new five-year deal recently signed by Boston’s Doc Rivers among NBA coaches. That contract will pay Rivers $7 million per year. New York Knicks’ coach Mike D’Antoni also makes $6 million per year.

New England Patriots coach Bill Belichick is the highest-paid coach, according to industry analysts quoted by Forbes. Belichick is estimated to be making $7.5 million per season.

Forbes . It reads: “The NBA version of Belichick, Popovich just keeps winning year after year, bagging a few titles along the way.”

Here is Forbes’ list of the highest salaries for North American sports head  coaches

Bill Belichick, New England Patriots                     $7.5 million

Mike Shanahan, Washington Redskins                 $7 million

Doc Rivers, Boston Celtics                                        $7 million

Pete Carroll, Seattle Seahawks                                 $7 million

Gregg Popovich, San Antonio Spurs                     $6 million

Lovie Smith, Chicago Bears                                       $6 million

Mike D’Antoni, New York Knicks                            $6 million

Ken Whisenhunt, Arizona Cardinals                     $5.75 million

Tom Coughlin, New York Giants                             $5.25 million

Mike Tomlin, Pittsburgh Steelers                            $5 million    

Source: Forbes  Magazine