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Monday, January 29
 
Ratliff? Houston? East Team is Ordinary

By Jeffrey Denberg
Special to ESPN.com

Let me start with a bit of disclosure here. I intensely dislike the NBA All-Star Game and I have not attended one since Dominique Wilkins was jobbed in the Chicago slam-dunk contest back in 1988.
Theo Ratliff
Theo Ratliff is the anchor for Philly, but is he really an All-Star?

I like the pure NBA game too much to go for this watered down competition. I don't need the Saturday sideshows, either. I see enough bad long distant shooting every night and Vince Carter post-dunk posturing on SportsCenter.

That said, let me tell you that I will not even bother to watch the fiasco in Washington two weeks hence. This is not a game. It is less than the usual exhibition because there will be only one All-Star team in the house. The East No-Star team doesn't belong, making it apt therefore that this season's renewal is played in Abe Pollin's house of marginally talented posers where the East is the home squad.

The combination of injury, illness and displacement of heroes has left the East a shambles. No Alonzo Mourning. No Grant Hill. So bad is the East, two guys who can't play get more than 900,000 votes.

Rice
Rice

Pip
Pip

Go back five years and see what's happened to the East. Shaq is in L.A. Scottie Pippen, Penny Hardaway, Patrick Ewing, Vin Baker and Terrell Brandon are scattered about the West and are much diminished in talent and stature. The Michael in retirement is Abe's henchman, whether he likes that or not. Glen Rice is a whiny Knick, Juwan Howard an overpaid extravagance on a bad Wizards team.

Hill's ankle is a mess and poor Zo has his dangerous kidney condition but remains the elected East center through public contempt for the rest of the mob.

I know, I know, I'm dissing some of your heroes. But riddle me this: Is Sixers center Theo Ratliff -- a valued role player on a terrific team -- really an All-Star? I don't think so. Check the stats -- 12.2 ppg., 8.1 rebounds? The centers in the East are so ordinary Ratliff looks good and the Raptors figure they can make a case for Antonio Davis (12.8 ppg., 10.8 rpg.), who isn't really a center at all, but a strong-willed power forward forced to play the middle on a team that can't clear break-even in a sea of mediocrity.

Mutombo
Mutombo

Dikembe Mutombo (8.4 ppg., 13.8 rpg.), whiling away his season as a chaperone for Lonnie Kruger's kids, has to be there even though he is much more adept at slapping the ball away from the basket than putting it in. Western refugee Brian Grant (15.2, 9.8) should be installed ahead of them all.

And since they've already sold this show to NBC, I've got a few ideas here, in time for Tuesday's coaches' announcement of seven reserves and David Stern's two replacement starters in the East.

  • One, let the East play with a squad of retired guys and a resuscitator. Isiah Thomas and Jordan at the guards, Dominique and Larry Bird at the forwards, Robert Parish in the middle.

  • Two, let the Sixers play the game as the East team. The 34-10 Sixers should beat an All-Star team from the best of the East anyway. I know Larry Brown will figure a way to win it. Allen Iverson will shoot 50 times, score 65, 70 (not impossible) and it's a cake walk.

  • Third? Set up some sort of lend lease plan, make it a game. This way the East can rent talent. Lay in the foundation of Iverson, Carter, Tracy McGrady. Then how about we rent Nick Van Exel and David Robinson, maybe Stevie Francis, Antonio McDyess, Michael Finley. All the aforementioned play in the East -- east of the Cascades anyway.

    Stackhouse
    Stackhouse

    Houston
    Houston

    If you ask me, borrowing Western oversights is a huge move up over guys like Allan Houston or Jerry (Pardon Me, While I Shoot and Miss) Stackhouse or Antoine (No Conscience) Walker.

    And if they won't do that, I have another idea: Put Charles Oakley on the team. Let Oak take out a few guys in the first quarter, see how things go from there. At least Oak is good at what he does.

    A look back at the past week

  • So before he missed the team plane to New York, J.R. Rider said he would go to the offices of the tabloid Post and complain about Peter Vecsey's expose on his after care lapse. Then he said he would not comply with the NBA's after care drug program because he feels he was unjustly convicted.

    Certainly, no one in Atlanta is surprised. "After what he did to this team last season, why would anyone be surprised," Hawks forward Roshown McLeod said.

    Former Hawks guard Bimbo Coles, now with Cleveland, said, "It's the same old story. He doesn't change. Nothing changes."

    Mutombo, whom Rider threatened last season ("My boys will take care of you in Oakland.") rolled his eyes and shrugged.

    When the Lakers signed Rider there was a prediction from this corner that Phil Jackson had tossed away a chance for another title. Okay, Kobe and Shaq are the principal protagonists, but isn't it amazing how Junior puts his face in the picture?

    Rider
    Rider

  • Two observations: It appears all the problem guys are playing in the West -- Kobe, Shaq and J.R. in LaLa Land, Rasheed Wallace in Portland, Jason Kidd in Phoenix, the rebellious Denver Nuggets, Olden "The Sheriff" Polynice in Utah, Mark Cuban from Outer Space. Back East, even Iverson is a model citizen.

    The Western teams are overrated. They only have good records because they have Eastern Conference teams to beat up on.

  • Dead men coaching: Byron Scott branded his Nets as losers. "We have a bunch of guys in there who are not committed to winning. They're not committed to winning; they're not committed to playing together ... It's very easy to be a loser in this league. Winning is hard."

    Meanwhile, Sidney Lowe threw a bomb at his bosses when he announced that the only reason Stromile Swift is starting is because he's under orders to do it.

  • A contender: After playing 36 minutes in a span of nine games during which he scored exactly two points, No. 6 overall pick DerMarr Johnson started in the Hawks' 101-90 victory over Cleveland Saturday, played 39 minutes with 19 points, 9 rebounds, 5 assists, 5 steals in a new role as shooting guard. "He reminds me of Tracy McGrady," teammate Roshown McLeod said.

    Jeffrey Denberg, who covers the NBA for the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, is a regular contributor to ESPN.com.





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