
To Infinity And Beyond
Few men have ever walked on the moon. But as Alvin Gentry recalls on TrueHoop TV, some that have weren't particularly impressed by the accomplishment. TrueHoop TV » Doc's message for Griffin »
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hiding it as the Heat met the media Monday at AmericanAirlines Arena. His situation will be a season-long topic of speculation as Miami seeks a third consecutive championship. “I’ll tell you right now how I’m going to handle it,” James said, “I’m not going to address it.” And then he talked about owing his team his focus and how his concern is winning another title and how mature the Heat is and how his potential opt-out (and Dwyane Wade’s and Chris Bosh’s, too) won’t be a distraction. Nobody has to explain himself, James implied. They have a professional goal, and the effort to achieve it won’t be sabotaged by after-the-fact business. The locker room won’t fracture. “We’ve got a veteran ballclub that’s heard everything and seen everything,” James said. “I know how delicate a team can be. I know how important chemistry and camaraderie are.” Here’s the thing: They’ll all probably opt-out, because doing so provides the player with flexibility. It’s the prudent move.

As crazy as it sounds, baseball was once celebrated for its speed. Into the 1910s — before all of the commercial breaks and visits to the mound — it was possible to play a game in under an hour, says the author Kevin Baker, who is writing a history of baseball in New York City.
To the game’s early poets, baseball’s fast pace was what made it distinctly American. Mark Twain called it a symbol of “the drive and push and rush and struggle of the raging, tearing, booming 19th century!” The 21st century, not so much.
AP Photo/Alex GallardoThe bar has been set much lower for the Lakers this season. They may be better off because of it.
Toronto to Miami, Carmelo Anthony went from Denver to New York, Dwight Howard has gone from Orlando to L.A. to Houston, and Chris Paul has gone from New Orleans to L.A. Oh, and Brooklyn raided Boston, and others. As one NBA executive lamented not long ago, “I swear, this league is 60% luck.” So maybe Drake becomes a point of entry, which combined with Tim Leiweke’s connections to Hollywood — and hey, CAA, which is a force in the NBA — Toronto becomes something other than an outpost. But alone, it’s window dressing, fizz. The All-Star Game won’t help much, either. It’s recently been held in New Orleans, in Orlando, in Atlanta, in Phoenix, after which their best players left. The All-Star Game is a billboard, but a blank billboard doesn’t do much good. And that’s why despite the presence of Drake, Rob Ford, NBA commissioner-in-waiting Adam Silver and Leiweke at the press conference, the most important figure remains Raptors general manager Masai Ujiri, who has spent the summer quietly sitting on the competitive fence, the Andrea Bargnani trade notwithstanding.Friday was media day for teams who will play overseas during the preseason, and some NBA players chose to cut out the middleman, sharing an inside look at the start of training camps on social media.
Just got the fresh cut ready for MEDIA DAY #LetsGooooo #PacerNation #G2Zone pic.twitter.com/dFNw1TtmPz
— INDIANA GEORGE HILL (@George_Hill3) September 27, 2013
This morning I've completed the team physical! Tomorrow we finally start training camp. I can't wait to get started!
— Pau Gasol (@paugasol) September 27, 2013
Miley Cyrus got nuthn on me. RT @masaki_307: A much needed lesson in #twerking for @katehweidner from @mikejames7 https://t.co/qKMBdUsN25
— Mike James (@mikejames7) September 27, 2013
Media day fun!!!!! http://t.co/wDbFlq2Oa3
— C.J. Watson (@Quietstorm_32) September 27, 2013
Back at it again! Media day with @kentbazemore20 fezzyfel @hbarnes and Instagram-less Steph, Bogut,… http://t.co/Hj51iOo1MG
— David Lee (@Dlee042) September 27, 2013
Media Day https://t.co/23sbbNNYQb
— Stephen Curry (@StephenCurry30) September 27, 2013
— Luis Scola (@LScola4) September 27, 2013
Media day #kslife #nba #kevinseraphinlife #mediaday @ Verizon Center http://t.co/MC0Tk1UlIX
— kevin seraphin (@kevin_seraphin) September 27, 2013
Just thinking about Media Day gives me a headache.
— Brandon Rush (@BRush_4) September 27, 2013
Media Day was a success!! Training Camp Starts tomorrow!! It's Time!! #RedNation
— Isaiah Canaan (@SiP03) September 27, 2013
For those who asked... Yes new number. pic.twitter.com/jKsJiApAXr
— Thabo Sefolosha (@ThaboSefolosha) September 27, 2013

Lakers find themselves surrounded in dysfunction, confusion and blue. Giant gold jerseys bearing No. 24 are being replaced by oversized blue shirts bearing No. 66. Lakers flags are being pulled out of car windows to make room for Dodgers flags. Worry about Steve Nash's legs have been muted over concern for Andre Ethier's shins. Bryant took a self-publicized high dive, yet more people were talking about the Dodgers going swimming. This columnist will not repeat the assumptions that led to the long-ago mistake of calling this a UCLA football town. The Lakers-Dodgers climate change could end by next summer, when the Lakers will have the money and space to bringLeBron James to town. But since the death of Jerry Buss, the Lakers have no longer been the Lakers, so who knows what happens next? Meanwhile, with the best and richest lineup in baseball and the money to keep it going, the Dodgers have again become the Dodgers, a team that owned this city even through the Showtime era, a group that has the economic stability to own it again.