English: Jerry Buss (LA Lakers owner) playing at the World Series of Poker (Photo credit: Wikipedia) |
A not-so-similar situation is taking shape in Minnesota, where the Timberwolves were thought of as this team on the rise and everyone expected big things from them. Unlike the Lakers, whose goal is that of another NBA championship, the Wolves were battling just to get into the playoffs for the first time since the Kevin Garnett era.
Instead, the Wolves are 19-31 following the All-Star break. If the season ended today, neither the Lakers nor the Wolves would make the playoffs.
That's where the similarities end. The Lakers have a serious lack of chemistry in meshing star players Kobe Bryant, Dwight Howard and Pau Gasol into a cohesive unit, resulting in one coach (Mike Brown) being fired and another (Mike D'Antoni) struggling. The Wolves have a serious lack of healthy and talented players, hampering their playoff quest.
Injuries have hit the Wolves hard, to the point where they have played some games short handed. Kevin Love has a hand injury. Ricky Rubio is back in the lineup, but is clearly not the same player he was before he hurt his knee--against the Lakers, as it happens. This opens the door for guys named J.J. Barea, Luke Ridnour and Nikola Pekovic to get some significant playing time.
Even coach Rick Adelman hasn't been immune. He took several games off to tend to his ailing wife, leaving assistant coach Terry Porter to man the bench.
A sense of despair lingers over the Wolves. Empty seats have returned to Target Center. Nobody talks about the playoffs any more. Instead, it's another year in which they're just playing out the schedule, and hoping the ping-pong balls don't doom them to another questionable Number One draft pick.
Glen Taylor, who has owned the Timberwolves since rescuing the franchise from going down the Mississippi to New Orleans in the mid-1990s, is in the process of eventually selling the team. To make it more attractive to a potential buyer, the least Taylor and/or General Manager David Kahn can do is to get more talent to go with Rubio and Love. Then you can stop making promises you can't keep to the fans.
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Speaking of the Lakers, their longtime owner Dr. Jerry Buss passed away Monday. He was 80.
Since buying the Lakers in 1979, Buss' teams have won ten NBA titles (16 in its entire history, dating back to when they were in Minneapolis). That's a span running from Magic Johnson, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Pat Riley in the 1980s to Kobe Bryant, Shaquille O'Neal and Phil Jackson in the 2000s.
Buss' efforts made the Lakers the most successful franchise in the NBA, attracting all sorts of celebrities courtside first at the Forum, and now Staples Center. It also helps that there hasn't been a pro football team in Los Angeles for nearly two decades.
The Lakers will go on with Buss' two children--Jim and Jeannie-- running the franchise. The question is: Are they up to the challenge of improving on their father's legacy? If not, there's no shortage of people who would love to have a crack at owning the Lakers.