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Kwame opens his big mouth again

Sat Apr 23, 2005 12:28 pm

Wizards Settle for a Loss
Lack of Intensity Ensures Playoffs Open in Chicago; Brown Grumbles: Nets 109, Wizards 101
By Michael Lee
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, April 20, 2005; Page D01

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J., April 19 -- The problem with Tuesday night's game was that the Washington Wizards were just a little too complacent. They already knew they would face the Chicago Bulls on Sunday in the first round and all that mattered was their playoff seeding: fourth or fifth.

The Wizards took the fifth. Following their 109-101 loss to the New Jersey Nets at Continental Airlines Arena, the Wizards guaranteed a trip to Chicago for Games 1 and 2 in the playoffs and made Wednesday night's game against the New York Knicks irrelevant.

Forward Kwame Brown was asked if he was upset that the team blew an opportunity to catch the Bulls -- who clinched the fourth seed with a win against the Knicks -- but he sounded as if starting the playoffs away from MCI Center was the preferred scenario. "I'll play on the road any day of the week," Brown said after scoring 14 points with eight rebounds. Then, he lashed out at the home fans who have booed him in recent games and intimated that they influenced Coach Eddie Jordan's decision to sit him during the last homestand.

"It's been like three games I've been ready to play, but the fans take it upon themselves to boo me when I miss shots," said Brown, who finished 6 of 13 from the field. "I missed [my first] two shots tonight. One was awful; it hit the other side of the rim. If we would've been in D.C., they would've booed; I would've been on the bench. Are you part of the problem or part of the solution? Booing me? Is that going to help out there? That gives the coach the mind-set that [the fans] can control when I play and when I don't."

Brown then laughed and said, "I like playing on the road."


After a miserable showing against the Nets (41-40), who scored the first 10 points of the game and led by 28 points in the third quarter, Brown and the Wizards left themselves no choice. "If we come out and play our basketball, it doesn't matter where you go," point guard Gilbert Arenas said. "Home court only matters in Game 7. Other than that, you have to win one up there anyway. Why not let it be the first two? Then you'll have them on their heels."

Guard Larry Hughes had a team-high 18 points and forward Antawn Jamison and reserve center Etan Thomas had 14 points apiece. Thomas added 11 rebounds. Arenas had his second straight bad game in New Jersey, finishing with just eight points on 2-for-7 shooting. He has combined to score just 15 points on 2-of-14 shooting at Continental Airlines Arena this season.

"I don't know what it is," he said. Arenas was attempting to be a set-up man instead of a scorer, but the problem was, whenever he jumped to pass, his teammates thought Arenas was going to shoot and they turned their heads as he threw away the ball. "I told them, 'I'm trying to get you the ball.' They said they ain't used to it," said Arenas, who committed five of the Wizards' 16 turnovers (the Nets converted them into 23 points).

The Wizards (45-36) had won the first three games against the Nets, but the Nets didn't have Jason Kidd -- or any sense of hope -- in the first two matchups. And when the Wizards defeated the Nets 112-88 on Jan. 4, Kidd was still finding his rhythm from offseason knee surgery and swingman Vince Carter hadn't fully adjusted to the team after being traded from Toronto less than three weeks before. Since that game, the Nets have gone 30-21.

Kidd finished with a game-high 35 points, 8 rebounds and 8 assists. "I thought we came out the right way," Jordan said. "We just don't have a guy like Jason Kidd, who is just fighting, fighting and clawing. When you're fighting for your life, there is a little bit more incentive, a little bit more aggressive than somebody who is in our position."

Early in the third quarter, Jamison dived into the front row to track down the ball and flipped it right to Kidd, who nailed a three-pointer to give the Nets a 56-31 lead. "At that time, it didn't matter what we did, it didn't go the right way," Jamison said. "We were just going through the motions from the get-go. I'm kind of disappointed, but that's how it goes. Not to take anything away from those guys. They played like they wanted it."


Hah! What an ass. Maybe if he stopped missing easy layups, the fans would go easy on him.

Sat Apr 23, 2005 12:52 pm

:lol: already read this, I laughed, he makes it sound like it's a priviledge for the fans to come watch him not play well. It is true that the booing dictates his minutes though because he plays about 7 minutes more on the road. Also he's averaging 8.6 PPG | 5.4 RPG | 45.3% FG | 63.1% FT on the road as opposed to 5.2 PPG | 4.4 RPG | 47.1% FG | 46.7% FT at home.



but...

After the game, Brown said he's entering the playoffs with a strong feeling of confidence. "I just want the fans to know that I have feelings too," Brown said. "I wasn't lashing out. I never want to battle with the fans. I need their support. I'm just saying, 'Support me.' I need it." . . .


http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/ar ... Apr20.html

Sat Apr 23, 2005 12:56 pm

I read that.. but I really think he needs to show more commitment to actually achieving his potential.

Sat Apr 23, 2005 7:15 pm

well, I don't blame the fans because he is the most garbage #1 pick since Olowokandi...
imagine...Tony Parker was picked last the in the first round of that draft...

Sat Apr 23, 2005 8:03 pm

Comments were pretty damn funny tho lol

Sat Apr 23, 2005 8:43 pm

I'm on his side with this one... sure he was a waste of a pick, but if in fact the fans booing is either putting him off his game and messing up his confidence, or influencing how much the coach plays him then in that position I'd be getting pissed off too.

Sat Apr 23, 2005 8:47 pm

He's even bigger bust then Drako lol.

Sat Apr 23, 2005 8:51 pm

Lpasso|SOR wrote:He's even bigger bust then Drako lol.


How on Earth do you come to that conclusion?

Sat Apr 23, 2005 9:04 pm

I guess he won't be staying in dc next season then. It kinda sucks that your team's fans don't like you.

Sat Apr 23, 2005 9:18 pm

fans are idiots....I find it at a lot of sports, hedging, booing, cursing out the refs, spitting on the coaches, pretty disgraceful behaviour....I've been at sporting events where fans boo the refs when they make a decision in favour of the opposing team even though the decision was clearly right....ahh well, society today, what can you say....

the fact is that Kwame didn't force Jordan to use the No. 1 pick on him, it ain't his fault he should have passed up millions of dollars and gone to college to work on his game and his confidence for that matter....

Sat Apr 23, 2005 9:21 pm

Jae wrote:
Lpasso|SOR wrote:He's even bigger bust then Drako lol.


How on Earth do you come to that conclusion?


Sarcasm Jae,sarcasm...

Sat Apr 23, 2005 9:24 pm

Darko ain't a bust yet as he hasn't had the chance to prove it....

as for Kwame, yeah, he's a bust....not a terrible player, just not worthy of No. 1 pick, although he did come out of a crap draft class where Shane Battier for the No. 2 or 3 pick....and he's better than the Kandi Man....

Sat Apr 23, 2005 10:25 pm

Kwame is likely better than Kandi, Kandi really was never that good, though up there as a center, 12-9-2 blocks, turnovers and a fair amount of fouls. I think Kwame playing 32 MPG could get better than that except for the BPG.

Sun Apr 24, 2005 2:28 am

I think it sucks that Kwame has to endure boos from the fans. Like Jae said, if the fans are messing up his confidence and affecting his playing time, then it's not helping him at all. I would bitch at the fans if I was Kwame, because encouragement is what he needs, not discouragement.

Sun Apr 24, 2005 6:03 am

Well it took 4 years too boo him, the Raptors genious fans were booing Araujo :roll:

Sun Apr 24, 2005 7:13 am

Kwame.. !! Don't be affected by those boos..
Hype yourself up.. with your determination!!

Sun Apr 24, 2005 7:22 am

fgrep15 wrote:Well it took 4 years too boo him, the Raptors genious fans were booing Araujo :roll:


Yeah, I hate that. Some fans in Toronto are stupid and were basically booing Araujo because he isn't top 10 material..... Well they shouldn't boo him, it was Rob Babock's fault for drafting him that high, so he can't be really blamed. Araujo does work hard though, and thats something that I'll always appreciate.

Same with Kwame, Kwame needs some confidence and cheers, since booing definitely won't help. I hate it when fans boo their own players.

Sun Apr 24, 2005 3:37 pm

What a whiny bitch. He should just play hard and ignore the jeers. It's also the coach's fault too, benching Kwame just because the fans don't like him.

Tue May 03, 2005 7:27 am

Gotta say it was a pretty heinous pick on Jordan's part.

#1 Kwame
#2 Chandler
#3 Gasol
#4 Curry
#5 RJ

Really you can't go wrong w/ any of those guys (now) except #1.

Tue May 03, 2005 8:23 am

Kwame will become a great Player if he would get some Confidence. Nobody is good when other People boo at you!

Tue May 03, 2005 8:47 am

not if you're reggie miller or any halfway decent nba player for that matter

Tue May 03, 2005 1:44 pm

Indeed. More than a couple of the greats attracted as much heat from hostile crowds as they did admiration.

Tue May 03, 2005 1:48 pm

Alot of great NBA players ahd to beat off boos... beign hated is called respect...
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