Mike Monroe: Tears and some stark reality for Mavs

DALLAS — The Mavericks raised their 2010-11 NBA championship banner to the rafters at American Airlines Center on Christmas Day, and it was a little too much for Dirk Nowitzki.

The Finals MVP admitted he choked up and had to work hard to hold back a tear or two as he took in the emotional ceremony.

“There were a couple waiting to come out,” he said.

Dwyane Wade and Udonis Haslem understood the emotion. They felt the same way on banner night in Miami in 2006.

Then, the Chicago Bulls put a 108-66 humiliation on them that was far worse than the 105-94 blowout this season’s Heat handed the Mavericks in Sunday’s rematch of last seasons Finals.

To be sure, this was a Christmas Day massacre. Miami led by 35 in the third period, a margin big enough for Wade and LeBron James to laugh through serial miscues committed by the end-of-the-bench reserves in the fourth quarter.

The Heat on Sunday were a team with chemistry born of continuity taking maximum advantage of a team adapting to more than emotion. The Mavericks had two new starters, and by halftime, coach Rick Carlisle swapped out one of those for another newcomer.

“The Spurs ought to be feeling pretty good about now,” said Will Perdue, a member of their 1999 title team, who’s now a broadcaster. “There’s no team in the league that the 66-game season helps more than the Spurs. They’ve got all those guys back who have been in their program.”

Carlisle understands his team can’t be what it was last season when defensive standout center Tyson Chandler got most of the court time and backup Brendan Haywood logged just 18 minutes per game.

“I think it’s important to point this out and be very clear about it: Brendan Haywood is not Tyson Chandler,” he said.

Mavs general manager Donnie Nelson cut a smart deal when Chandler made it clear he intended to sign a free-agent contract with the Knicks. By negotiating a sign-and-trade deal, Dallas netted a trade exception that turned into former Laker Lamar Odom.

Odom’s Christmas debut was spotty. He made his first shot, missed his next five and got thrown out of the game in the third period after getting two quick technical fouls.

“This is a different system,” Carlisle said. “There are similarities with what we do with where he came from, but there are enough differences, so that’s going to be work — for us and for him. I see him being able to make the transition quickly because he’s a smart player, a skilled player and he can do a lot of things.

“But when you’re one of those kind of players and you’re playing all different positions on the floor, there’s more to digest.”

Odom’s reality-star wife, Khloe Kardashian, electronically voiced her objection to Odom’s ejection from a courtside seat. She didn’t see anything from her hubby that merited two techs, she tweeted to 5-million-plus followers.

Reality bites, Khloe. NBA refs don’t care what you think.

Odom, a versatile big man with exceptional skills, seems more optimistic than Carlisle that he can adapt quickly to a system that is less geometrically defined than what the Lakers played.

“At the end of the day, it’s just basketball,” he said. “From first grade to college to the NBA, it’s pick-roll on offense and help-recover on defense. Basketball is a universal language, so I’ll be all right.”

So will the Mavs, but Christmas Day gave the reigning champs an early clue that defending won’t be easy.

“The good thing is we’ve got a game tomorrow,” Carlisle said. “The bad thing is we’ve got a game tomorrow and Denver is going to come in here with a shot at the champs. It’s a situation where we’ve got to work to make quantum leaps as often and as quickly as we can as a team.”

mikemonroe@express-news.net

Spurs draft pick Joseph helps Canada deny Dominicans

By Mike Monroe
mikemonroe@express-news.net

MAR DEL PLATA, Argentina — Canada’s 12-point fourth-quarter lead had slipped to two in its match against a Dominican Republic team full of NBA talent at the FIBA Americas pre-Olympic championships Thursday.

Just 4.2 seconds remained after Domincan Republic’s Francisco Garcia nailed a 3-point basket, and the post-timeout trigger man for Canada’s inbounds play was former Texas star and Spurs first-round draft pick Cory Joseph.

What flashed through Joseph’s brain as the referee handed him the ball?

“No repeat of March Madness,” Joseph said after his six points, four assists and one perfect inbounds pass helped Canada score a 73-72 victory over a team that had NBA All-Star Al Horford, plus Bucks forward Charlie Villanueva and Garcia, a guard for the Kings.

Joseph was whistled for a questionable five-second violation in Texas’ NCAA tournament loss to Arizona in March, but Canada coach Leo Rautins had no qualms about trusting him with a key play that carried similar pressure.

“Actually, I saw that game, and I thought that was a quick whistle,” Rautins said. “No way it was five seconds.

“Given that, no worries.”

Joseph was the sole Spurs-related player in action on the third day of the FIBA event. Both Manu Ginobili’s Argentine team and Tiago Splitter’s Brazilian team were idle.

Joseph has moved into the starting point guard spot for Canada, which gave Brazil a tough go on Wednesday. He logged 22 minutes and 19 seconds against the Dominican Republic, making two of three shots and adding two steals, while committing only one turnover.

“We’re just trying to execute our game plan, and tonight I thought we did that very well,” Joseph said. “I’m just trying to get into the paint and facilitate.

“It was a great win, of course. They’ve got some NBA talent and some other great players, as well. Now we’ve gotten our first win of the tournament, and we hope to get more. We’ve got to focus on our game tomorrow and try to get another one.”

France 85, Israel 68: In Siauliai, Lithuania, Spurs guard Tony Parker scored 21 points as France earned its second win of the EuroBasket competition, overwhelming Israel 85-68 for its second win.

“As soon as Tony took over, it was over for us,” Israel coach Arik Shivak said.

The Chicago Bulls’ Joakim Noah had nine rebounds and nine points for France, while the Portland Trail Blazers’ Nicolas Batum had 15 points. Mickael Gelabale added 13.

Insured: Parker can play for Les Bleus

The French Basketball Federation has obtained sufficient insurance for its NBA players, clearing the way for Spurs guard Tony Parker and others to play in the Eurobasket tournament in Lithuania later this summer.

During the ongoing NBA lockout, the league has been either unable or unwilling to offer its standard share of insurance for international players to play in FIBA events.

As a result, the full burden of securing pricey insurance for players’ NBA contracts has fallen to the often cash-strapped foreign federations. Earlier this offseason, the 29-year-old Parker said he would not play for France unless his contract could be insured.

, France has accomplished that mission, lining up insurance for the roughly $130 million in NBA contracts on its roster.

Expected to join Parker for the start of Les Bleus camp today are fellow NBAers Boris Diaw, Nicolas Batum, Ronny Turiaf and Kevin Seraphin.

Chicago Bulls center Joakim Noah is also free to join the team, but could be held out due to an ankle injury. Phoenix’s Mikael Pietrus will skip the tournament while recovering from knee surgery.

News of the French federation’s success in solving the insurance issue came after a , though it is uncertain if it came as a direct results of those talks.