Author Topic: Luke Walton In the Finals  (Read 371 times)

tempo2

Luke Walton In the Finals
« on: June 18, 2009, 10:33:16 AM »
having watched all the finals games i was suprised at the flack walton took all season from the laker fans. he was brilliant in the finals off the bench in my opinion. he did everything right and was one of the many reasons the lakers won the title.
 

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Re: Luke Walton In the Finals
« Reply #1 on: June 18, 2009, 10:41:25 AM »
No doubt, Alot of peep's talked shit about him...
But besides Kobe, Nobody on the team can distribute the ball like Luke. IMO
Essential team II member.

(Still get's paid too much tho...lol)
 

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Re: Luke Walton In the Finals
« Reply #2 on: June 18, 2009, 10:43:18 AM »
His a great role player, not as good as pops, but then again pops is a Hall of Famer, but I think his more important to the Lakers than pops was for the Celtics and that's all that matters... hahaha
 

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Re: Luke Walton In the Finals
« Reply #3 on: June 18, 2009, 03:12:58 PM »
Yeah I give Luke props, he really stepped it up in the finals, I still cringed every time he touched the ball though.
 

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Re: Luke Walton In the Finals
« Reply #4 on: June 18, 2009, 04:40:50 PM »
Luke did step it up, but he sucked for 2 years straight before he finally started playing like he could.. dude is capable of being a 12-5-5 guy, but is seemingly lazy about shit..i think he stepped it up in the Finals because he had to. I wont be surprised to see him reverting to his old self come the regular season, though i hope he doesn't...i feel he's the type of player that steps it up in desperate situations (contract year, NBA Finals)..lets hope he can prove me wrong.
 

The Watcher

Re: Luke Walton In the Finals
« Reply #5 on: June 18, 2009, 11:35:47 PM »
http://www.theonion.com/content/news/kobe_bryant_proves_he_can_win

ORLANDO, FL—With the Lakers' 99-86 victory over the Magic in Game 5 of the NBA Finals, Kobe Bryant silenced critics by achieving what most had thought impossible: winning an NBA title with Luke Walton on his team.

"I was so sick of hearing people say how I couldn't do it with Luke out there," said Bryant, acknowledging that his teammate's deficiencies have overshadowed the Lakers since Walton was drafted in 2003. "It gets annoying to hear that question over and over, but you can't argue it. You can't deny it. You have to show that you can prevail alongside one of the worst small forwards in the game."

"Now I just want to kick back and savor the moment," Bryant added. "I feel like a huge 6-foot-8, 235-pound burden has been lifted from my back."

Bryant, who averaged 32.4 points a game and was named MVP of the NBA Finals, played with a fiery determination and lifted his Walton-compensation skills to an almost superhuman level, ultimately erasing any doubt that he was capable of greatness while playing alongside Walton.

According to Bryant, it was vital to step up his game and take on a leadership role in order to surmount the countless flaws in Luke Walton's game, which include playing a slow, hindering style of offense that relies on ruining pick and roll plays; clogging up lanes with an ungainly lumbering stride on the transition; and making slow, drifting passes to double-covered players.

In addition, Bryant said he tried to focus on making up for Walton's lack of production by scoring at least ten times as many points as the small forward.

While coach Phil Jackson said losing to the Celtics by 39 points in Game 6 of the 2008 NBA Finals motivated Bryant to succeed, he acknowledged that Kobe could not overcome Walton's utter lack of talent alone.

"Kobe certainly put up big numbers, but he also rallied this young group of players and took their play to another level with him," Jackson said. "Winning in the Luke Walton era took a total team effort. They should be proud of what they accomplished. You have to be at the very pinnacle of your game to rise above a player of Walton's caliber."

Bryant credited Jackson for working tirelessly to assemble the pieces necessary to fill the hole created when Walton joined the team. He also praised recently acquired players and veterans alike for handling the challenge of guarding Magic center Dwight Howard, defending perimeter shooters Hedo Turkoglu and Rashard Lewis, and keeping the ball out of Walton's hands to prevent him from screwing up their chance to win a title.

"We were able to prove all the doubters wrong because we had an excellent game plan that we executed at the highest level," said Bryant, who verified before each play that his teammates knew their assignments and were prepared to shutdown Walton's dominating awkwardness in the paint. "It was physically draining to limit Luke's missed scoring opportunities, but that's what it takes to win."

"Personally, I don't think Shaq could have won with Walton," Byrant added. "I'm not even sure Jordan could have."

Lakers luminary and part-owner Magic Johnson said that Bryant has proven himself to be the preeminent talent in the league, and that he was "astonished" the Lakers had even made the playoffs with Walton on the team.

Johnson was not alone in expressing his surprise.

"Believe me, what he did defies all logic," said Lakers small forward Luke Walton, adding that it was unlikely Bryant and the Lakers could win back-to-back championships with a player as indescribably mediocre as himself. "I'll admit it. I didn't think he could pull it off."
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Re: Luke Walton In the Finals
« Reply #6 on: June 19, 2009, 04:39:20 PM »
http://www.theonion.com/content/news/kobe_bryant_proves_he_can_win

ORLANDO, FL—With the Lakers' 99-86 victory over the Magic in Game 5 of the NBA Finals, Kobe Bryant silenced critics by achieving what most had thought impossible: winning an NBA title with Luke Walton on his team.

"I was so sick of hearing people say how I couldn't do it with Luke out there," said Bryant, acknowledging that his teammate's deficiencies have overshadowed the Lakers since Walton was drafted in 2003. "It gets annoying to hear that question over and over, but you can't argue it. You can't deny it. You have to show that you can prevail alongside one of the worst small forwards in the game."

"Now I just want to kick back and savor the moment," Bryant added. "I feel like a huge 6-foot-8, 235-pound burden has been lifted from my back."

Bryant, who averaged 32.4 points a game and was named MVP of the NBA Finals, played with a fiery determination and lifted his Walton-compensation skills to an almost superhuman level, ultimately erasing any doubt that he was capable of greatness while playing alongside Walton.

According to Bryant, it was vital to step up his game and take on a leadership role in order to surmount the countless flaws in Luke Walton's game, which include playing a slow, hindering style of offense that relies on ruining pick and roll plays; clogging up lanes with an ungainly lumbering stride on the transition; and making slow, drifting passes to double-covered players.

In addition, Bryant said he tried to focus on making up for Walton's lack of production by scoring at least ten times as many points as the small forward.

While coach Phil Jackson said losing to the Celtics by 39 points in Game 6 of the 2008 NBA Finals motivated Bryant to succeed, he acknowledged that Kobe could not overcome Walton's utter lack of talent alone.

"Kobe certainly put up big numbers, but he also rallied this young group of players and took their play to another level with him," Jackson said. "Winning in the Luke Walton era took a total team effort. They should be proud of what they accomplished. You have to be at the very pinnacle of your game to rise above a player of Walton's caliber."

Bryant credited Jackson for working tirelessly to assemble the pieces necessary to fill the hole created when Walton joined the team. He also praised recently acquired players and veterans alike for handling the challenge of guarding Magic center Dwight Howard, defending perimeter shooters Hedo Turkoglu and Rashard Lewis, and keeping the ball out of Walton's hands to prevent him from screwing up their chance to win a title.

"We were able to prove all the doubters wrong because we had an excellent game plan that we executed at the highest level," said Bryant, who verified before each play that his teammates knew their assignments and were prepared to shutdown Walton's dominating awkwardness in the paint. "It was physically draining to limit Luke's missed scoring opportunities, but that's what it takes to win."

"Personally, I don't think Shaq could have won with Walton," Byrant added. "I'm not even sure Jordan could have."

Lakers luminary and part-owner Magic Johnson said that Bryant has proven himself to be the preeminent talent in the league, and that he was "astonished" the Lakers had even made the playoffs with Walton on the team.

Johnson was not alone in expressing his surprise.

"Believe me, what he did defies all logic," said Lakers small forward Luke Walton, adding that it was unlikely Bryant and the Lakers could win back-to-back championships with a player as indescribably mediocre as himself. "I'll admit it. I didn't think he could pull it off."


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Re: Luke Walton In the Finals
« Reply #7 on: June 19, 2009, 04:41:37 PM »
Yeah I give Luke props, he really stepped it up in the finals, I still cringed every time he touched the ball though.
lol,word...sasha as well
 

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Re: Luke Walton In the Finals
« Reply #8 on: June 19, 2009, 04:46:00 PM »
Yeah I give Luke props, he really stepped it up in the finals, I still cringed every time he touched the ball though.
lol,word...sasha as well
I didn't cringe when Sasha touched the ball. I already knew what was going to end up happening.
 

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Re: Luke Walton In the Finals
« Reply #9 on: June 19, 2009, 06:52:41 PM »
Luke was the recipient of "tough love." Looks like he finally got the message too... :)
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Re: Luke Walton In the Finals
« Reply #10 on: June 19, 2009, 09:18:43 PM »
the funniest was morrison....dude got zero love and stood there like he was about to cry.
 

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Re: Luke Walton In the Finals
« Reply #11 on: June 20, 2009, 01:17:12 AM »
he looked so uncomfortable. lol.


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Re: Luke Walton In the Finals
« Reply #12 on: June 20, 2009, 11:07:29 AM »
Luke did step it up, but he sucked for 2 years straight before he finally started playing like he could.. dude is capable of being a 12-5-5 guy, but is seemingly lazy about shit..i think he stepped it up in the Finals because he had to. I wont be surprised to see him reverting to his old self come the regular season, though i hope he doesn't...i feel he's the type of player that steps it up in desperate situations (contract year, NBA Finals)..lets hope he can prove me wrong.

that was on point.

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dexter

Re: Luke Walton In the Finals
« Reply #13 on: June 21, 2009, 12:16:22 PM »
Luke did step it up, but he sucked for 2 years straight before he finally started playing like he could.. dude is capable of being a 12-5-5 guy, but is seemingly lazy about shit..i think he stepped it up in the Finals because he had to. I wont be surprised to see him reverting to his old self come the regular season, though i hope he doesn't...i feel he's the type of player that steps it up in desperate situations (contract year, NBA Finals)..lets hope he can prove me wrong.
yea True
he rushes too much