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1ST ROUND SEATS AVAILABLE

Home Game 1 $225/pair (seats 1-4)

Home Game 2 $225/pair (seats 1-4)

Home Game 3 $250/pair (seats 1-4) SOLD

ONLY IF NEED BE:

Home Game 4 $250/pair (seats 1-4)

2ND ROUND

Home Game 1 $275/pair (seats 1-4)

Home Game 2 $275/pair (seats 1-4)

Home Game 3 $350/pair (seats 1-4)

ONLY IF NEED BE:

Home Game 4 $400/pair (seats 1-4)


3RD ROUND

Home Game 1 TBD (seats 1-4)

Home Game 2 TBD (seats 1-4)

Home Game 3 TBD (seats 1-4)

ONLY IF NEED BE:

Home Game 4 TBD (seats 1-4)

FINALS

Home Game 1 TBD (seats 3/4)

Home Game 2 TBD (seats 3/4)

Home Game 3 TBD (seats 3/4)

ONLY IF NEED BE:

Home Game 4 TBD (seats 3/4)

All the tickets listed above are located in Section 321 Row 7 (second row in this section as it starts at 6) Seats 1 through 4 are available so you can bring the whole fam. OR can be sold in pairs. Except FINALS! Only seats 3 & 4 are available because we are going… unless you make me an offer I cannot refuse! lol These are our season ticktes which means you will get HARD COPY TICKETS.

THE PRICE IS FOR A PAIR OF TICKETS = TWO TICKETS!!!

THERE IS NO PARKING PASS JUST TICKETS FOR THE GAMES… IF YOU WANT MORE THAN ONE SET… WE CAN WORK SOMETHING OUT. PLEASE BE AWARE I HAVE THESE TICKETS SELLING ELSEWHERE… SO IF YOU WANT A CERTAIN GAME AND DO NOT PAY FOR THEM RIGHT AWAY… I CANNOT GUARANTEE THAT YOU CAN HAVE THE TICKETS.

DEPOSITS WILL BE ACCEPTED, MUST BE HALF OF THE PRICE AND IS NON-REFUNDABLE!!!

ALL TICKETS ARE AVAILABLE ON A FIRST PAY FIRST GET BASIS.

ALL GAMES THAT ARE NOT PLAYED WILL BE REFUNDED!!!

I can guarantee you that the tickets will go up the closer we get to the playoffs. Cash and Paypal are accepted.

Kobe Bryant believes anyone that doubts the Los Angeles Lakers chances this year is “mentally challenged.”

By way of Slam Online, and after the beat down OKC put on his Lakers, Kobe spoke out about the Laker naysayers.

“‘Anybody who counts us out is challenged,’ Bryant said. ‘They’re mentally challenged. Am I happy with how we play every single night? Of course not. But I’m content with where we are overall and where I think we can go.

‘Let them doubt all they want. That’s the way it always is. People talk and doubt and criticize all the way up until you win a championship, then it’s: ‘Oh, I knew it all the time.’ That’s just how it is.’”

Emphasis mine. While I understand where Kobe’s invective rhetoric comes from, he needs to do a better job with his diction. As someone that’s been around actual mentally challenged people, it’s not the most politically correct or accurate way for Kobe to express his frustration. 

Regardless of his word choice, I am eagerly awaiting what Kobe does in the postseason. We might see something special. 

PHOTO: Harry How/ Getty Images

Not even two minutes into the 3rd quarter of last night’s game against the Golden State Warriors, with 16 seconds left on the shot clock and a 6-point lead, Los Angeles Lakers’ center Andrew Bynum walked up the court and shot a 3-pointer from the top of the key.  If you’re into this sort of thing, the video is available to watch here.

He missed.

I wouldn’t say he missed terribly.  The shot had a nice touch, but fell right of center.  The Warriors rebounded, but couldn’t even get the ball past half court before Lakers’ head coach Mike Brown ventured down to the end of his bench to substitute Josh McRoberts for the still 24-year old Bynum.  Andrew would not see action the rest of the quarter, and only a scant few minutes in the fourth, as LA struggled to maintain it’s lead over the undersized Warriors team.

Spanning his 7-year NBA career, Andrew Bynum has taken 7 threes, making one (two nights ago, in a loss to the Memphis Grizzlies).

It is not against the rules for a center to take a 3-point shot.  Off the top of my head, Mehmet Okur takes them, Andrea Bargnani takes them, Spencer Hawes takes them.  Manute Bol took them.  Pau Gasol of the Lakers, who plays the center position each and every game for the same Los Angeles Lakers, has taken 19 of them this season alone.  So why would first-year coach Mike Brown punish Bynum after launching his own?

Because he missed? If that shot had gone in, would Brown have pulled him?

I’m certainly not lobbying for Bynum to start taking more shots from deep.  I clearly see the error in him launching basketballs from 24 feet away.  If I had my druthers, Bynum wouldn’t move from directly underneath the rim on both ends, he would never put his arms down, and he would have his entire skeleton fortified with the indestructible metal alloy, adamantium.

Andrew Bynum shouldn’t take 3-point shots because he is simply not effective at making them.  However, by the numbers, a lot of Lakers, in a lot of different positions, are not effective either.

The Lakers 3PT% during the 2012 NBA season:

Andrew Bynum: 25% (1-4)
Pau Gasol: 26% (5-19)
Metta World Peace: 26% (33-125)
Kobe Bryant: 28% (73-254)

If Mike Brown wants to punish someone for taking and missing a bad 3-point shot, he can stand in the middle of a huddle, put on a blind fold, point his finger, spin himself in a circle, and bench the player he stops on.  There are only two teams worse at making 3’s in the NBA, and one of them is the Charlotte Bobcats, which is, as we all know, a franchise that should be put on a rocket ship and blasted into the sun.

When asked about the very public censure (the Lakers played on NBATV’s Fan Night), Brown said, 

“That’s something that I felt could have taken us  out of rhythm, and so that’s why I took him out of the game.”

Ohhhhh!  I get it.  It’s not that Bynum took the shot, it’s that it was taken outside the flow of the offense?  Mike Brown, I’d like to introduce you to Mr. Kobe Bean Bryant…

I’m not defending Bynum or his errant shot (Kevin Ding did that far more beautifully than I ever could).  My issue is with Mike Brown.  Brown needs to be consistent with his actions, his coaching.  If you’re going to punish someone for hurting the offense, you better punish everyone who does the same.  Different sets of rules for different players will breed contempt.  Pau Gasol, like Bynum, is a seven footer who should be operating predominantly from the post, yet Gasol’s taken multiple ill-advised three point attempts with impunity.  Pau spoke to the press about Bynum,

“That’s not his game. Hopefully it’s just one bad game, it’s out of the way.  We’ll be fine. Andrew understands.”

I’m sure Bynum appreciates the lecture.  Let’s take a look at the first 135 seconds of the Lakers loss to the Grizzlies 3 days ago:

10:52 - Pau Gasol misses 16-foot jumper
10:33 - Pau Gasol misses 19-foot jumper
10:15 - Pau Gasol misses 17-foot jumper
09:45 - Pau Gasol misses 17-foot jumper

Please, Pau Gasol, tell me more about who should be taking what shots.

So what does Brown do after Gasol misses the Lakers’ fourth shot in a row to start the game?  Nothing.  He didn’t bench Gasol for playing outside his strength.  He didn’t bench Gasol for repeatedly making the same mistake over and over.  Yet, two days later, Brown does punish Bynum, and Gasol decides to be didactic?

“I guess, ‘Don’t take 3’s is the message, but I’m going to take another one and I’m going to take some more, so I just hope it’s not the same result.”

- Andrew Bynum

You know what kind of people hate inconsistent treatment, and public emasculation?  24-year old kids like Andrew Bynum.  He’s been watching Kobe Bryant jack shots for 7 straight years, doing exactly what’s been asked of him without complaint, to the tune of back-to-back championship titles.  He’s been underestimated, relegated to third wheel status behind Gasol, and sometimes fourth behind Odom, injured and understandably frustrated with his career to this point.  Now he’s finally healthy, coming into his own during a wild, unpredictable season, while learning a new system on both ends of the court, still adjusting to play with a ball-dominant Kobe Bryant, and waiting in the paint for the rebound off Pau Gasol’s missed 3-point shot, and you’re wondering why he’s lashing out?

Tip of the iceberg for Mike Brown.  Earlier this week, the head coach publicly benched Bryant, only with ESPN cameras this time, for playing exactly the way Kobe’s played his entire career.  Brown’s explanation? 

“I felt I wanted to make a sub at the time.”  

Here’s an idea, Coach Brown: instead of punishing both men in front of the cameras, talk to each behind them.  Give those players the respect a man, and multi-million dollar, championship athlete deserves.  And when you get frustrated again, Coach Brown, please remember: these Lakers’ go as far as Bryant and Bynum drag them.

This road will never be easy for the new coach.  Brown is replacing Phil Jackson, a man who is not only world-famous for dealing with team strife, but could earn the respect of his players simply by flashing his golden knuckles.  On the other hand, Brown’s résumé shows a history of weakness.  In his only other head coaching job in the NBA, Brown let LeBron James ran roughshod over Cleveland.  Could Mike now be over-compensating to avoid the same criticism?

This NBA season is different than any before it, with compressed schedules, accelerated travel, and no practice time, now more than ever head coaches need to be pillars of support and models of consistency for their players.  The only thing Mike Brown has done consistently is tinker with his lineups.  Two weeks ago, Josh McRoberts couldn’t get off the bench, and rookie shooting guard Andrew Goudelock was playing 15-20 minutes per game.  Now, it’s completely reversed.  A certain level of experimentation is expected for a new coaching staff and new offensive and defensive systems, but somebody remind the head coach there are only 16 games left.  NBA teams like to find a groove just before the Playoffs.  The Lakers will be lucky to have a locked rotation.

This core has won titles together, and it’s clear Mike Brown does not have their respect.  Bynum said he’d shoot more from distance.  Bryant called the coaching staff “inexperienced.”  Steve Blake was the starter “for the remainder of the season,” but Brown has changed course, and is still searching for the right mix off the bench.  To top it off, are the players now worried if they make a mistake they’ll be punished on cable television?  

Cats and dogs, living together…  All in a day’s work for Lakers’ head coach Mike Brown.

Think Derek Fisher could have helped with this mess?

@gotem_coach

Wonderfully written.

And I truly believe that Mike Brown has isolated most of this team. In the same way that some say Carmelo ‘got Mike D’Antoni fired,’ so to will happen to Mike Brown if he clashes with Kobe & Bynum, two players making about $40 million collectively this season. Reasons like this are why the Lakers probably should have gotten Rick Adelman when they had the chance.

(via fuckyeahlakers)

In case you turned the game off early, Andrew Bynum Makes A 3 Pointer vs Grizzlies. So we know he can make em. 

Andrew Bynum’s post game interview after being benched for taking a 3 pointer vs the Warriors

last 6 games with Sessions

Lakers Bench pts vs Other Team’s Bench pts
Lakers 31 points vs 19 points Twolves (Ramon comes off the bench)
Lakers 30 points vs 36 points Jazz (Ramon comes off the bench)
Lakers 29 points vs 26 points Rockets (Ramon comes off the bench)
Lakers 36 points vs 38 points Dallas (Ramon comes off the bench)
Lakers 13 points vs 34 points Blazer (Ramon starts)
Lakers 9 points vs 41 points Memphis (Ramon starts)

6 games before Lakers trade for Ramon
Lakers bench points vs Other Team’s bench points
Lakers 13 points vs 27 points Hornets
Lakers 18 points vs 37 points Memphis
Lakers 15 points vs 11 points Celtics
Lakers 15 points vs 19 points Twolves
Lakers 21 points vs 55 points Wizards
Lakers 7 points vs 32 points Pistons

Looks like Mike Brown finally put his foot down and Kobe was not too pleased.

From The LA Times:

“When a reporter asked if it was correct to assume he was upset over the benching, Bryant said “of course I was. That’s an astute observation.” But Bryant refused to criticize Brown. “It’s…

Former Lakers point guard Derek Fisher is in Oklahoma City to finalize talks on a contract. Fisher was spotted at OKC’s Will Rogers World Airport early this morning with Thunder GM Sam Presti and other members of the Thunder front office. Fisher has reportedly been in final negotiations with the Thunder on a contract that would bring him to the Western Conference leaders after he clears waivers.

Oklahoma City does not have an open roster spot so the team would have to waive a player to make room for the five-time world champion.

Thunder forward Kevin Durant called Fisher, “a Thunder guy”, when it comes to character and leadership during a session with reporters before Oklahoma City’s game with the Utah Jazz. At that time Durant declined to speculate on whether a deal would get done.

MWP greets former Houston Rocket Yao Ming at last nights game in Houston. 

MWP greets former Houston Rocket Yao Ming at last nights game in Houston. 

The Los Angeles Lakers will exercise their team option on center Andrew Bynum, according to the Los Angeles Times. The move will give Bynum $16.1 million next season.

“He’s the starting center on the West All-Star team. Why wouldn’t we do everything we could to keep him here?” Lakers General Manager Mitch Kupchak said. “We’re ecstatic to have him on the team.”

In 41 games this season the 24-year-old has averaged career highs in points (18.1), and rebounds (12.9). He is also averaging 2.0 blocks and just 1.7 fouls per contest.

Last season for the Lakers Bynum aveaged 11.3 points and 9.4 rebounds in 47 games with the Lakers.

Shit just got real. Photo courtesy of @coachdavemiller

I have been a long time fan of Derek Fisher. I watched him play his very first NBA game during the NBA summer league here at Long Beach State. He has been a member of the Lakers ever since I have had season tickets and I have seen him play live hundreds of times. Yesterday, Derek Fisher was traded to the Houston Rockets for a young center/forward named Jordan Hill. Needless to say Lakers fans are not happy.

Among all starting point guards in the NBA Derek Fisher is probably the least athletic, slowest and possibly the worst in the NBA stat wise. However, stats is not why everyone loved Fish. Fish was the glue for the last 5 Lakers championships, and his presence on the court and in the locker room is what made him one of the most loved guys on this Lakers team. His demeanor off the court also set him apart from most NBA players, as he was easily approachable if you ever saw him in public.

One thing I do have to say is that most Lakers fans have been asking for this all season. From the start of the season all I have heard was “We need a better PG”; “Fish is too old”; “Fish needs to retire”. Then as soon as Lakers management makes that happen the entire city is up in arms. To be honest there would have been little to almost no playing time available for Fish after the addition of Ramon Sessions. Couple that with Steve Blake starting to flourish in the offense and Fish is at the very end of the bench at minimum.

In my opinion, Derek Fisher never suits up for the Rockets and returns to the Lakers for 1 game next season to retire in the purple and gold. His jersey will never be in the rafters but he will always have a special place in the hearts of all Lakers fans.

Thank you Derek for all you have done for the Lakers and the NBA. You will be missed.

foreverla:

It’s hard to put into words what he’s meant to this organization on the court, off the court. If you’ve seen or read the release that our owner Dr. Buss put out, I think that puts it as succinctly as possible what he means and what he meant to this organization. From the bottom of our heart, my heart, I thank him for his contributions and I wish him well… …I have not talked to Derek yet. I’ve talked to his representative and representatives and as you might expect, he’s probably not quite ready to have that kind of discussion. I don’t know if he’s spoken to anybody else in the organization. I do expect to speak to him shortly, perhaps today. Maybe tomorrow. I understand completely. It’s hard. It’s one of the hardest parts of a job that a general manager has – separating the emotions of a relationship that you built for many, many years, in this case over 10 years. He was drafted by Jerry West I believe in 1996 and now here it is in [2012] and he went away for a year or two and he’s been with us for many, many years. So, it’s a hard thing to do, but that is what general managers do. Part of our job is separating the emotion and keeping the franchise moving forward and that’s what we tried to do.” — Mitch Kupchak on trading Derek Fisher

Thank you Fish. 

See all of Kobe’s 81 points in 3 minutes. This is still amazing to watch!