RealGM Basketball

New Jersey Nets Wiretap

Could it be a Kings-Nets affair?

One might want to ask thyself what exactly the New Jersey Nets and the Boston Celtics are trying to achieve. In the last three games it has been the Nets who have jumped out to the lead only to have the Celtics mount a strong comeback before we get into the real game; can the Nets hold on? With the teams following such a common theme it almost feels scripted to the point where we expect the Nets to create a lead and for the Celtics to come back.

New Jersey could not in Game 2 when Boston stole the win, coming back from 21 down at the third quarter break to create history, but in the last two games – last night included – it was the Nets who were able to hold on to create a three games to two buffer and more importantly move within one game of a trip to the NBA Finals.

"One win from going to the finals is a heck of an achievement," Nets Coach Byron Scott said. "But we still haven't achieved anything yet. Our objective is to get there. Not get one game away from there."

"It ain't over," responded Celtics guard Kenny Anderson. "It definitely ain't over. We've got Friday. We've got to come at it real hard Friday."

"We didn't lose the game because of (the start)," Antoine Walker said. "We lost the game because they switched to a zone, threw our rhythm off a little bit. We were prepared for it, but not as much as they played it."

Out West there is another interesting battle in progress, the Sacramento Kings overcoming their own woes to, like the Nets in the East, hold a three games to two advantage over their opponent. The Lakers are lucky to even remain in the contest, a little luck and a twist of fate allowing Robert Horry to hit the game winning three pointer to sink the Kings by one solitary point in Game 4. Horry, camped outside the arc, barely moving to catching the ball slapped by the Kings Vlade Divac under the basket off a Shaquille O’Neal lay up, caught and shot the ball in one motion as time expired to bail out the Lakers after both Kobe and Shaq had missed their chances to send the game into overtime.

Despite lucky breaks and being facing elimination in Game 6 Friday Los Angeles, in many people’s eyes, still remain the favorites. Each game thus far has been relatively close and each game could have went either way. The total margin from the last two games is only two points, the lowest margin possible, which shows how close this series has been, but despite having to win the next two games in order to keep their season alive the Lakers still believe they will overcome the odds.

"They've been better in three games," Rick Fox said. "We've been better in two. So we plan to be better on Friday and have it all wash out on Sunday."

"The TV doesn't lie," Robert Horry said. "Video doesn't lie. You can see certain things that should have been our way. Same way (the Kings) felt about my shot (in Game 4). They snuck one, we snuck one. So we're even."

It has been an entertaining third round of the playoffs, that is for certain. But can both the Lakers and the Celtics back up their talk and take the next two games, including the seventh game on the road? For now the ball is on their own courts, and only they can stop the 2002 NBA Finals from being a Kings-Nets affair.

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Celtics fans go too far with Kidd, Nets?

It is common practice in each NBA arena for the supporters of the home team to ‘heckle’ with players from the opposition, in most occasions the star player. Players accept this as part of the job, a part of being thrust into the limelight. Just as the ability of each player can vary the aggressiveness of each fan cannot be grouped together either, but a case could be made in both instances that if one person leads others will follow. It might be a part of the game, but when does it get too much?

Jason Kidd and the New Jersey Nets believe that the fans at the Fleet Center in Boston did cross that invisible line two nights ago after supporters taunted the New Jersey star as a ‘wife beater’. Kidd said he can take the abuse reports Fred Kerber of the New York Post, but the fact that his wife and three year old child were seated near the hecklers was the part that worried Kidd.

The comments did have some truth to them, stemming from an incident from 2001 where Kidd, then with the Phoenix Suns, was arrested on domestic abuse charges for allegedly striking wife Joumana in the mouth after an argument.

"It bothers me because I can't protect them in the sense of me playing," Kidd said. "I'm worried about them, but at the same time, I'm trying to win a ball game. They should enjoy it as much as the people in Boston should."

Kidd was not the only one out of the Nets camp disappointed with the chants.

"Obviously, there are people who are idiots," said Net coach Byron Scott. "That's hitting below the belt."

"Ignorance. A- -hole people, man. This is a man's personal life," said Kenyon Martin. "I heard Joumana was sitting by one guy, and he had that [stuff] painted on him. You don't need [stuff] like that, man. If you saw him on the street, he probably wouldn't say nothing to nobody . . . He probably ain't got no friends."

Kidd realizes that right now these are only words coming out of the stands, but still has a fear that something even worse could be on the horizon.

"Some people might be impaired, so their judgment could be altered a little bit. In that case, you never know what can happen." What is happening, according to Gerry Callahan of the Boston Herald, is that Kidd is getting what he deserves.

‘There was one thing the hecklers who went after Kidd most definitely were not: Wrong. If you want to sympathize with a victim of cruel, vicious hecklers, save it for Mike Piazza. Jason Kidd is guilty as charged,’ writes Callahan.

‘Kidd is a wife-beater, confessed and convicted, and it's hard to imagine that anything a heckler shouts could be more evil than what the man did to his family a year and a half ago.’

So did the Boston fans really go too far with their debacle in front of Kidd’s wife and child, including the person who went as far as to paint ‘wife-beater’ on his back, or is Kidd and the Nets just being thin-skinned? There is a fine line between acceptable and unacceptable, and in this case only you can decide.

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Kidd felt his family was 'in jeopardy' in Boston

Apparently Jason Kidd has more to hate about Boston than the cockiness of the Celtic players.

According to Chris Sheridan of the Associated Press, Kidd felt that his wife Joumana and three year old son, T. J., were 'in jeopardy' from the Boston crowd on Monday.

"It bothers me. I can't protect them. I'm worried about them at the same time I'm worried about trying to win a ballgame," Kidd said. "You can't do that to somebody's family, put them in jeopardy for their safety. They came there to enjoy the game just like (Celtics fans) did."

I personally did see the fans with "wife-beater" written across their backs. The men sat in front of Kidd's family and would stand up to incite the crowd in taunts. While I feel this is a classless move on the fans part, Boston has always competed with the animals of Philly and New York for having the most viscious fans.

As for Kidd's comments that he felt worried about the safety of his wife and child, I feel he has little to worry about. Boston crowds are pretty peaceful in the stands when it comes to women and children, and there hasn't been major violence in the stands since the Patriots played on MNF in the '80s.

While I can't say what Kidd is feeling, I can go to that old refrain of "the media is to blame." Kidd's domestic abuse charges were well documented (as should be), but NBC is constantly showing Joumana in the crowd, mainly because she is hotter than most of the cheerleaders. TJ has also been thrust into the public eye as a local Jersey paper runs a "TJ Watch" and Kidd himself has brought his son to the podium for a post-game press conference.

Kidd, who paid a fine and attended anger management classes for striking his wife in January of 2001, said that he could personally deal with the chant of "wife-beater," but felt that his wife should be left alone.

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Nets May 2002 Archive

  • Nets escape another collapse

    Despite letting another 15 point third quarter lead evaporate with 17.

  • Celtics blaming refs

    As the Boston Celtics tried desperately to make history repeat last night in their comeback against the New Jersey Nets, Shira Spinger of the Boston Globe reports three guys wearing black and white striped shirts stood in their path.

  • Auerbach: Nets were too cocky

    Celtics legend Red Auerbach is not surprised that the New Jersey Nets choked two nights ago, and credits their shortcomings to one thing; cockiness.

  • Don’t count us out, says Jefferson

    Richard Jefferson believes it is natural for Boston folk to believe that his Nets are doomed with all the failure they have had to endure during the past, but it is not time for the Nets to pack up their things and head home just yet.

  • Four teams intertwined

    Last night it was Horry's turn to play hero

  • Choke City

    Paul Pierce and the Celtics made history yesterday

  • ‘What did I do?’ asks Jefferson

    Greg Logan of Newsday reports that one of the worst people to give advice on trash talking is Kenny Anderson, yet it is Kenny who is yapping it up to rookie Richard Jefferson as the Celtics and Nets prepare for Game 3 Sunday.

  • Pierce misfires but Celtics still win

    Paul Pierce played his worst game in this years playoffs, going 3-for-20 from the field, yet the New Jersey Nets still could not do enough to earn the win.

  • Rod Thorn wins Executive of the Year

    In a move which surprised no one Rod Thorn was yesterday named the NBA’s Executive of the Year the New York Daily News is reporting.

  • Refs calls frustrating Pierce

    The series started off with Celtics forward Paul Pierce making some comments along the lines of ‘no New Jersey Net can stop me’, but when the Game 1 show was stolen by Jason Kidd and his Nets it was Pierce who was left feeling as though he has been the victim of some questionable calls of late.

  • MacCulloch shows Celtics plenty of beef

    Who said the magic of the 2000-01 season had run out for all of the Philadelphia 76ers? For Todd MacCulloch, things couldn't have worked out better.

  • Kidd brilliant in opening win

    While Paul Piece was laying claim that no one on the Nets team could guard him, Jason Kidd casually went about his business.

  • Nets and Celtics light it up as Sixers mutter in the dark

    Seven months ago, the Sixers were preparing to defend their Eastern Conference championship, and they were regarded as one of the serious contenders.

  • Walker yapping at Kenyon

    One of the key match ups to look for as the New Jersey Nets and Boston Celtics open there series at The Meadowlands today will be Antoine Walker against Kenyon Martin.

  • Report: Nets' Thorn Wins Executive of the Year

    Jason Kidd and Byron Scott missed out on post season awards, but it seems the New Jersey front office won't.

  • Future can wait for Kidd

    Despite having a stellar season with the New Jersey Nets from both an individual and team perspective, Jason Kidd is no closer to committing to the organization.

  • P.J. has faith in Nets

    While they are not quite past the Hornets just yet, but if the do (a mere formality?) then ex-Net P.

  • Baron vows Hornets not done

    Baron Davis is not in the Big Easy just yet, the All-Star guard still holding onto the belief that his team will find a way out of their 3-1 rut to the New Jersey Nets.

  • Campbell questionable for Game 4

    With the Charlotte Hornets down 2-1 to the New Jersey Nets and facing what possibly could be their last game in Charlotte, the team received some bad news yesterday.

  • NBC to cover Hornets

    As both parties wind down their respective tenures, the Hornets in Charlotte and the NBC televising the NBA, it looks as though the two parties will be hooking up for what could be the final hurrah of the Hornets in Charlotte.

  • Kidd anxious to play in Game 4

    Jason Kidd is still hopeful that he will be able to make an appearance in Game 4 of the Nets series against Charlotte, if he can see.

  • It’s Official: Duncan wins

    Tim Duncan was officially named the NBA’s Most Valuable Player yesterday, receiving 954 total points in the fifth closest MVP count in NBA history.

  • Hornets stitch up Kidd, Nets

    A bloodied Jason Kidd helped keep the Hornets alive

  • Hornets on last stand

    Down 0-2 and now back ‘home’, the Charlotte Hornets are in serious mode.

  • Carlisle Coach of the Year

    Move over Byron Scott, because it is Rick Carlisle who is expected to be named NBA coach of the year today.

  • No KIDDing, Duncan gets MVP

    Tim Duncan will be named the 2002 MVP on Thursday

  • Campbell wants consistency

    Elden Campbell wasn’t too happy with the referees in Game 1 of the Hornets playoff series with the New Jersey Nets, calling for the officials to be a little more consistent.

  • Mashburn situation worsens

    The Charlotte Hornets received bad news yesterday with Jamal Mashburn taking a turn for the worst, making him doubtful for Game 2 as well as today’s game.

  • Van Horn shows emotion, draws praise

    Has New Jersey forward Keith Van Horn finally revealed the raw emotion that the Nets have so desperately needed from him? In Game 5 against the Indiana Pacers Van Horn was aggressive, dunking the ball with force and then following up with three point baskets, shouting to himself, "They can't guard me!" The actions surprised many, including coach Byron Scott.

  • Kidd shows he is the MVP

    Last night showed once and for all who the MVP of the 2001-02 season, according to George Willis of the New York Post, after the All-Star point guard played himself into exhaustion to lift the Nets over the Indiana Pacers in double overtime.

  • Nets need the hunger

    After basically taking the night off in Game 4, which is how coach Byron Scott described it, the New Jersey Nets opened the door for the Pacers to force a do-or-die Game 5, where the winner will proceed and the loser will be done for the year.

  • Williams indicted on manslaughter charges

    The (AP) reports: Former NBA player Jayson Williams was indicted on manslaughter charges Wednesday in the shooting death of a limousine driver at his estate.

  • Kidd, Payton round out All Defensive Team

    Jason Kidd’s successful debut season in New Jersey continues to be a happy one for the All-Star guard, Kidd yesterday being named to the All-NBA Defensive first team.