Former Orlando superstar, Shaq, talks about the Orlando Magic and what they need to do to keep Dwight Howard and get back to the Finals.
Video Rating: 4 / 5
Former Orlando superstar, Shaq, talks about the Orlando Magic and what they need to do to keep Dwight Howard and get back to the Finals.
Video Rating: 4 / 5


Dunks from this event are available to our followers only www.twitter.com Werm was also at this event, but my firewire went to hell during the capping of this, Sorry for the lack of updates it’s been crazy over this way lately but a full HD Weekend recap will be released this week of this event as well as information regarding our Jump Program and Merchandise that will be available at the end of the month!
Video Rating: 4 / 5
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8:30 PM ESPN
From the Orlando Magic press release:
The Orlando Magic will try to utilize their Game 1 defeat to the Boston Celtics as a wake-up call and a reason to exert even more effort at practice as they gear up for Game 2, which tips off on Tuesday at 8:30 p.m. ET on ESPN. Game 1 obviously didn’t go as planned for the Magic, but as this team has proven all season long, they are driven to Sunday’s loss was the first defeat for Orlando since April 2. It had won 14 consecutive games, including an 8-0 start to the postseason. “Our team has responded to everything,” Magic Head Coach Stan Van Gundy said. “Our guys aren’t going to fall apart.” The best news from Game 1 was that the Magic battled back from a 20-point deficit, 17 in the fourth quarter, to close within two in the final 10 seconds. They showed tremendous determination and resilience, but Boston managed to hit its free throws to seal the victory. “It’s going to be a battle,” said Vince Carter, who led Orlando with 23 points. “It’s going to be a war.” The outcome of this series may come down to how well Dwight Howard, the league’s best defensive player, performs. The four-time All-Star didn’t find his offensive rhythm in Game 1, finishing with 13 points on 3-of-10 shooting from the field. “I just have to come back in Game 2 and not try to force anything,” Howard said. “But at the same time just still be aggressive.” But, Orlando doesn’t think rust had anything to do with it. “We were just anxious,” D12 said. “I think they did a lot of good things on defense.” Game 2 now sets up to be the most important contest of the year for the Magic. It’s extremely rare for teams, especially when they started the series at home, to overcome a 2-0 deficit and advance. bounce back from adversity.
Many NBA critics and spectators are already blaming Orlando’s meager shooting performance (5-of-22 from 3-point range) on the extended layoff. While the Celtics just came off an exhilarating series triumph over the top-seeded Cavaliers on the Eastern Conference Semifinals, the Magic earned rest for their dominant performance against the Hawks.
Here is the complete preview from Yahoo! Sports.
Adrian Wojnarowski of Yahoo! Sports details in his column about how tough the Boston defense really was in Game 1.
Here is a column from cbssports.com columnist Gregg Doyel that is very harsh on the Magic’s Dwight Howard.
Bleacher Report writer Adam Davis writes how the Magic showed their toughness in the Game 1 loss.
The Magic are 7 point favorites at -330 odds to win Game 2.
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8:30 ESPN
Here is an excerpt from the Yahoo! Sports preview:
“We’ve won there before, and there’s no reason we can’t do it again,” forward Rashard Lewis said Friday as the Magic prepared for Game 3. “Boston came to us and beat us twice on our home court, so it’s happened before. Why can’t we do it? Why can’t it happen again?”
Orlando was one of two teams—Atlanta was the other—to win twice in Boston this year. The Magic also remember coming to town in last year’s playoffs, when they beat Boston twice—including the Celtics’ first-ever loss at home in a seventh game—to advance to the conference finals.
“Last year, Boston never lost a Game 7 on their home floor. We went in and beat them,” Lewis said. “It can happen.”
Here is the complete preview from Yahoo! Sports.
The Celtics are 3 1/2 point favorites at -170 odds to win Game 3.
For the series, the Celtics are -500 odds to win, while the Magic are +375 underdogs.
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8:30 PM ESPN
The Magic have been getting roasted in the national media for their Game 3 performance, this column by Mike Freeman of cbssports.com being an example.
John Hollinger of espn.com details how the Celtics have been able to frustrate the Magic, and the outstanding play of Boston’s Rajon Rondo.
Here is the complete Game 4 preview from Yahoo! Sports.
The Celtics are 7 point favorites at -350 odds to win Game 4.
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8:30 PM ESPN
Columnist Ian Thomsen of SI.com details how Dwight Howard and Jameer Nelson stepped up for the Magic in Game 4.
Adrian Wojnarowski believes the Magic still have no chance of winning this series.
Here is the complete preview from Yahoo! Sports.
The Magic are 4 point favorites at -175 odds.
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8:30 PM ESPN
Boston center Glen Davis will be a game-time decision for Friday’s Game 6 against the Orlando Magic, but Celtics coach Doc Rivers was encouraged by what he saw of his valuable sub Thursday.
“Baby looked fine, but he still has to go through a couple of tests this evening,” Rivers said of Davis.
Here is the rest of the article from espn.com
Here is the complete preview of Game 6 from Yahoo! Sports.
The Celtics are 3 1/2 point favorites at -160 odds to win Game 6.
For the series, the Celtics are a -300 favorite to win, while the Magic are a +220 underdog.

In the last four seasons, no NBA team has attempted more three-pointers than the Orlando Magic. Coach Stan Van Gundy’s idea when he took over the club was to surround center Dwight Howard with four three-point shooters, giving the Magic five reasonably efficient scorers as well as creating space for them to operate. It’s worked, to varying degrees, for a number of reasons, including what it takes away; the Magic attempt fewer long two-point jumpers, on a per-possession basis, than any team in basketball.
As a consequence of their volume three-point shooting, the Magic endure repeated criticism that they are doomed to fail. “Live by the three, die by the three,” say the media and some fans. And indeed the team is just 6-18 under Van Gundy in the regular season when it makes five treys or fewer.
Orlando did not shoot the three-ball well in its regular-season games versus the Atlanta Hawks this year, which is, I believe, among the reasons some folks have picked fifth-seeded Atlanta to upset it when they kick off their playoff series Saturday night at Amway Center. In the four games, the Magic shot 19-of-84 (22.6 percent) beyond the arc. The prevailing wisdom is that Jason Collins’ one-on-one defense on Howard in the paint frees his teammates to stay closer to their men, denying them open attempts from long range.
The Hawks’ success in defending the three doesn’t appear to be a fluke, as it ranked fourth in the league in three-point percentage allowed (33.8) in the regular season. Still, the Magic, who shot 36.6 percent on threes for the year, ought to have done better than 22.6 percent against Atlanta.
No one player is solely responsible for tanking the Magic’s three-point mark against the Hawks in the regular season. The problem plagues the whole team, save for Jameer Nelson and Hedo Turkoglu, as the table shows:
| Player | vs. Hawks | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| 3FG | 3FGA | 3FG% | |
| Ryan Anderson | 3 | 13 | 23.1 |
| Gilbert Arenas | 2 | 9 | 22.2 |
| Chris Duhon | 3 | 9 | 33.3 |
| Jameer Nelson | 3 | 8 | 37.5 |
| J.J. Redick | 1 | 8 | 12.5 |
| Jason Richardson | 1 | 7 | 14.3 |
| Quentin Richardson | 0 | 7 | 0.0 |
| Hedo Turkoglu | 3 | 7 | 40.4 |
| TOTAL | 15 | 65 | 23.1 |
Taking away the three forces Orlando to look elsewhere for offense. Howard can only do so much, and Brandon Bass is the only other player in the team’s rotation who doesn’t take threes at a high volume. The Hawks can live with Howard taking long hooks from outside the paint, and with Bass firing away from 18 feet. They can’t live with Nelson unloading a bomb from the deep corner.
Orlando can’t alter its strategy to suit Atlanta’s whims. It must continue to follow the offensive gameplan which has contributed to its winning more than two-thirds of its games in the last four seasons. That means high pick-and-rolls for Nelson and Turkoglu, with both ballhandlers trying to hit the roll man and the open three-point shooter with roughly equal frequency. It means firing away from the outside against a team that features no reliable perimeter defenders apart from point guard Kirk Hinrich. And it also means not settling for threes if there’s a better play available; getting to the foul line would be a good way to offset the three-point deficit the team will likely face, but Orlando doesn’t have any perimeter guys who draw fouls with any regularity.
The Magic’s chances in this series do not hinge entirely on their ability to make threes–they can advance on the strength of their defense alone–but they’d obviously do themselves a favor by making more than one-quarter of them.

Jason Collins might be among the least skilled players in the NBA. He also has the power to shift the balance of an entire playoff series.
When the Orlando Magic face the Atlanta Hawks in the Eastern Conference Quarterfinals beginning this Saturday, they’ll have to contend with Collins, Atlanta’s seven-foot defensive specialist. Collins’ task? Defend Magic center Dwight Howard, the league’s most efficient volume scorer, one-on-one.
Collins, no stranger to Howard, has a solid track record against Orlando’s superstar. Indeed, two of Howard’s worst offensive games as a pro came against Collins: as a rookie, Howard shot 1-of-5 for 2 points against Collins’ New Jersey Nets. Two years later, he missed all six of his shot attempts, managing just 1 point in 26 minutes, against New Jersey.
That success carried into this season as well, and credit first-year Hawks coach Larry Drew for trusting Collins against Orlando. Collins averaged 19.8 minutes per game against the Magic, compared to 11.4 against all other clubs. Though Howard still scored better than one point every two minutes against Atlanta–19.3 points in 37.1 minutes, to be precise–Collins limited his efficiency; Howard’s 43.1 percent shooting mark against Atlanta is his worst against any team this season.
Thanks to PopcornMachine GameFlows and ESPN play-by-play data, we can further isolate instances in which Collins and Howard played together. The results are staggering: in the 78:10 both players shared the court this season, Howard shot 14-of-33 (42.4 percent) and committed 13 turnovers. The data don’t tell us whether or not Collins actually defended Howard on each possession–he could have gotten caught on a switch, or lost in transition–but they nonetheless show Collins’ tremendous defensive impact.
As a bonus for Atlanta, Collins does more than bottle Howard up: he also limits his minutes by drawing fouls. In the teams’ most recent meeting, Howard committed two fouls against Collins in the game’s first four minutes, forcing him to the bench until the start of the second period. The score stood at 6-6 when Howard exited, but Atlanta had a 27-25 edge when he returned. In the first two minutes of the next period, with Howard back on the floor, the Magic went on a 9-0 run to take a five-point lead.
Collins drew eight of the 14 fouls Howard committed against the Hawks this season; five were offensive outright, and another two came in a loose-ball situation, which automatically gave Atlanta possession. Generally speaking, both teams play at slow paces, which raises the value of each trip down the floor. The Magic must limit their giveaways anyway, but especially ones which also tack a foul onto their best player.
The good news for Orlando is Howard utterly dominated the Hawks whenever Collins sat, which indicates it’s in the Magic’s best interest to saddle Collins with fouls to keep him on the bench. In 69 minutes versus the Hawks without Collins on the floor, Howard overwhelmed Atlanta offensively to the tune of 47 points on 13-of-16 shooting. That Howard attempted almost twice as many foul shots (31) as field goals with Collins benched indicates how vital Collins is to Atlanta’s success, as neither his backups (Zaza Pachulia, Josh Powell, and Etan Thomas) nor the other Hawk capable of playing center (two-time All-Star Al Horford) can muscle Howard out of the lane or limit his easy shot attempts.
That Atlanta views Collins as a “Howard Stopper” is not news; that much became clear when Drew plugged Collins into his starting five when his Hawks played the Magic for the first time this season. That Collins has enjoyed success against Howard isn’t exactly a surprise either. But now we know the extent to which the unassuming veteran can limit Howard. And those results are simply too eye-popping to ignore.
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