Playoff observations: Yao's balky knee, Farmar's clutch effort, more |
Story Highlights
Lakers-Rockets series, and NBA title, might hinge on Yao's healthForgotten Jordan Farmar gives Lakers a boost in Derek Fisher's absenceAmazingly, NBA has turned Ron Artest into a sympathetic figure |
Five thoughts from a night the Lakers made a bigger statement than any Derek Fisher linebacker moment: 1. Yao Ming's injury is the series. With Andrew Bynum struggling just to stay on the court for L.A., Yao at center was an obvious matchup advantage in the Houston column. Bynum is still too undependable, Pau Gasol is still about four inches and 60 pounds smaller, and Yao can power through, around and over either defender. If the sight of Yao badly limping through the final minutes of the Rockets' Game 3 home loss turns out to be an injury that forces him to the sideline, it's a turning-point moment for the entire playoffs. Based on the comments by coach Rick Adelman at the televised post-game press conference, the Rockets don't have much immediate news. It's an ankle injury. That's it. Yao said only that it's sore and that more will probably be known today, with everyone waiting for word as the series hangs in the balance. The available centers, just in case: nobody. If Yao is out Sunday, 6-9 Luis Scola might move from power forward to center and Carl Landry would move into the opening lineup. Or stationary Dikembe Mutombo, who went down in the first round, swipes at the ball with his crutches. 2. The return of Jordan Farmar. Farmar had four assists in the first quarter alone, helping the Lakers to an early lead. Diving on the floor for a loose ball and passing to Trevor Ariza for a dunk was an important image after being on the verge of falling out of the rotation. Coach Phil Jackson indicated afterward that Fisher would probably get the starting job back for Game 4, but that Farmar should retain a prominent role. 3. The NBA has done the impossible. Ron Artest has turned into a sympathetic figure. 4. Doc Rivers isn't even trying to fake it. Increasing the degree of difficulty when the Celtics are already down power forwards Kevin Garnett and Leon Powe, Rivers is not trusting the moment to anyone other than Perkins as the starting center, Davis as the starting power forward and Scalabrine as the big man off the bench, even though Scalabrine is a perimeter player and not a power player. Boston has a chance to get away with it because the Orlando power forward, Rashard Lewis, isn't a physical presence. Same thing in the first round against Chicago -- the Bulls interior players won't beat up anyone and couldn't capitalize on the Boston weakness. The Magic have Howard, though, and Rivers and the Celtics escaping this inside mismatch would be a major accomplishment. 5. Home stands. The Mavericks have a flickering hope because they were in both games in Denver in the fourth quarter, before being left behind, and shot 47.4 and 48.8 percent in defeat. Of course, they also gave up big numbers, but anything against the improved Nuggets defense is a good sign. Rowdy American Airlines Arena will be the toughest atmosphere the Nugs have faced so far in the playoffs and may be a greater challenge than anything they would see in the conference finals as well. Cleveland-Atlanta has already been settled. Maybe the Hawks, a team that plays much better at home, get one at Philips Arena, Saturday or Monday, but that's about where the realistic goals end.
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