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  • Heat general manager Randy Pfund, who helped Miami win the 2006 NBA championship as the highlight of his 13 years with the franchise, resigned Monday.

    Pfund has chosen to pursue “other business opportunities,” the Heat said in a release, without detailing any specifics of what that meant. Team president Pat Riley—who already had final say on virtually all personnel moves—will assume at least some of Pfund’s duties, which included overseeing draft preparation, scouting, salary cap management and player personnel decisions.

    “Randy Pfund has done a tremendous job for the Heat, helping to build this team into a champion,” Riley said in a statement. “His work ethic and contributions to the organization have been invaluable. I’ve known Randy for over 20 years and in addition to our great working relationship he has been a wonderful friend.”

    With Riley stepping down as head coach after last season and settling into a full-time front office role, it wasn’t clear how much room Pfund still had in the Heat decision-making process.

    A team spokesman said Pfund’s decision was not related to the recent promotion of Nick Arison, the son of Heat owner Micky Arison and a minority partner in the franchise, to vice president of basketball operations. Nick Arison will serve largely in an administrative capacity—not necessarily relating to personnel, the team said.

    But with that move, combined with Riley’s hiring of longtime friend Ed Maull years ago to assist him on the operations side, the Heat front office clearly had an abundance of voices.

    Pfund was expected to release a statement Tuesday further detailing his decision, the team said.

    “On behalf of the Arison family and my family, I would like to wish him continued success and happiness in everything he does,” Riley said.

    Pfund, who stayed largely out of the public eye during his tenure in Miami, perhaps made his biggest mark on the franchise during preparations for the 2003 draft.

    The Heat had the No. 5 pick that year and were in glaring need of frontcourt help, prompting speculation that the team would target either Chris Bosh or Chris Kaman. But Pfund insisted that Miami take Marquette guard Dwyane Wade, and Riley eventually agreed that Wade would be the pick.

    Wade led the Heat to a championship three years later.

    Riley credited Pfund again this summer, when the Heat had the No. 2 overall selection and chose Michael Beasley, even though there was a sense that Miami would have preferred not to take the Kansas State forward.

    Pfund, Riley said, was one of three people who “got me in a room and made sure that Mr. Beasley was going to be part of the Miami Heat.”

    It wasn’t clear how much time Pfund had remaining on his contract. He received an extension from the team last year, but the terms were never publicly disclosed.

    Pfund began coaching at a high school in Illinois in the mid-1970s, then went to Westmont College in Santa Barbara, Calif., where he worked for Chet Kammerer, who currently serves as the Heat’s vice president of player personnel. Eventually, Pfund was hired as an assistant coach on Riley’s staff with the Los Angeles Lakers, and after Riley left the West coast, Pfund took over as head coach for parts of two seasons in the early 1990s.

    When Riley came to the Heat, he hired Pfund again. Pfund, in turn, then brought Kammerer—who was also a Lakers assistant under Pfund—to the Heat as a scout, and the foundation for the team’s front office and personnel moves remained largely unchanged since.

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    • Dallas Mavericks forward Josh Howard took a first step toward repairing his damaged reputation Monday, saying he was sorry for disrespecting the national anthem.

      “I’d like to say that I’m truly and really am sorry for everything that’s happened in the last five months,” Howard said in a statement before taking questions from reporters on the first day of Mavericks training camp. “This is not the way I carry myself, not how I want to be portrayed. I’m sorry to everybody I’ve offended. I’m upset with myself and the way I’ve acted.”

      In a video posted recently on YouTube, Howard was shown at a charity flag football game. As the national anthem plays in the background, Howard approaches a camera and says: “‘The Star Spangled Banner’ is going on right now. I don’t even celebrate that (expletive). I’m black.”

      The video, which was widely viewed on the Internet, prompted blistering criticisms, including some racially charged e-mails that owner Mark Cuban posted on his blog.

      In his first public appearance since the video was posted, Howard said he loves his country.

      “It was me joking around,” he said. “Guys were out there making fun and I decided to get along in it. I wasn’t using my head. I guess the valuable lesson I did learn is that words really do hurt. You’re held accountable for what you say.

      “That’s not me. … I went to military school. I have friends that served in the military. I know how it is to wake up and salute the flag. The national anthem every game, I have my hand over my heart.”

      Howard had another off-court incident during the off-season when he was arrested in July after police said he was drag racing at 94 mph in a 55 mph zone.

      He said he knows that there will be some fan backlash about his troubled summer.

      “I’ll try to win them back,” he said. “Whatever it takes me to do that, I’ll do it.”

      Howard also was criticized last season for saying in a radio interview during a first-round playoff series against New Orleans that he occasionally smokes marijuana. Later that same series, he angered coach Avery Johnson by throwing himself a birthday party after a Game 4 loss to the Hornets.

      “It was a rough summer for him, but I believe in his heart he’s a good guy,” teammate Dirk Nowitzki said. “He just made some bad decisions.”

      Howard said another mistake he made was not addressing the national anthem controversy when it first surfaced.

      “I didn’t do anything to correct it. I let a lot of stuff go,” he said. “It wasn’t me. I’m trying to move forward. This (the press conference) is the perfect opportunity. Everybody’s here. There’s nothing to hide. I made a mistake. I’m ready to move forward.”

      Rick Carlisle, who was hired as Mavericks coach after Johnson was fired following Dallas’ first-round playoff exit, visited Howard at his North Carolina home during the summer. Carlisle expects a strong season from Howard.

      “I know he’s going to be motivated both on the floor and in terms of how he represents this franchise,” Carlisle said.

      Howard, who enters his sixth NBA season, averaged 19.9 points and seven rebounds last season.

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      • Stephon Marbury doesn’t care. He says the New York Knicks can get rid of him.

        In remarks filled with contradictions and accusations Monday, the point guard stressed that the team’s problems last year went well beyond him.

        “I was being blamed for losses and I wasn’t even playing,” Marbury said.

        The Knicks didn’t win with him, and they couldn’t win without him. As they prepare to open their first training camp under Mike D’Antoni on Tuesday in Saratoga Springs, it’s still not clear which way they’ll try to do it this season.

        And that’s fine with Marbury, who is entering the final year of a contract that will pay him more than $21 million.

        “It doesn’t matter whatever they do, because basketballwise, I’m ready,” he said. “So it doesn’t matter to me. As long as I’m playing basketball, that’s the most important thing.

        “I have no feelings of what they’re doing, it doesn’t matter to me. Because once I get on the basketball court, I’ll show what I can do and that’ll be that. And if they feel like they have plans to do something differently, that’s OK. I understand that it’s a business and I’m not taking it personally at all.”

        Marbury was limited to 24 games last season, the worst of his career. He missed games for a variety of reasons, from a dispute with former coach Isiah Thomas to his father’s death, before shutting it down for the season in January following ankle surgery.

        He’s fully recovered now and has slimmed down, honoring new president Donnie Walsh’s mandate to get in the best shape possible. That still might not be good enough to earn him another season in New York.

        Though Walsh has never publicly said so, it’s been speculated since his arrival in April that he would waive or trade Marbury before the season. He doesn’t have a better option at point guard, but with Marbury having alienated teammates and his hometown fans with his behavior over the last few seasons, the popular belief was that the Knicks would be better off without him.

        Marbury couldn’t point to anything he would change about last season and didn’t even acknowledge a fallout with Thomas—though he blew off an early-season game after a disagreement over his role. But Marbury seems to recognize the damage he’s done to his reputation.

        “I’m every disease that you could possibly think of,” Marbury said. “So for me, I just want to approach it with playing basketball at a high level and I want to be able to change the way people think.”

        Walsh signed Chris Duhon over the summer, and he’s the favorite to start at point guard if Marbury is moved. Duhon said he’s prepared to fight for his spot, even if many think it’s going to be handed to him.

        “I came here to compete for a starting job, the opportunity to change an organization around back to where it should be as far as winning, and that’s all my main focus is,” Duhon said. “I’ve never been the guy that wanted things given to me, so I always wanted to go out and prove my worth and that I should be a guy that plays significant minutes. So that’s what I’m going to do.”

        Marbury has the same plan. After repeatedly saying he didn’t care if he left, he later said he wanted to win a championship in New York—even if it was after this year. Walsh and D’Antoni have both said he’ll be given a chance in camp, not wanting to judge any players without seeing them in D’Antoni’s system.

        Still confident at 31 that he can play at the level that earned him two All-Star berths, Marbury expects to quiet his critics—in New York or elsewhere.

        “I’m going to play basketball and I’m going to play at a high level,” Marbury said. “So it doesn’t matter to me. As long as I get on the court and once I get my opportunity, that’s it. Watch me play this year.”

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        • Of all the issues Doc Rivers had to deal with in his first summer as an NBA champion—replacing the free agents who left, working on his golf game, figuring out what to wear to the White House—there’s one thing that never came up.

          “I can’t imagine even seeing a laid-back Kevin Garnett,” Rivers said Monday. “I don’t think that will happen. So I don’t worry about that part.”

          The Boston Celtics coach gathered with his title-winning team for media day at its practice facility, where a shiny white 2008 championship banner is already covering the empty spot where Rivers pointed a spotlight last year— just in case anyone didn’t get the point. It was the NBA-record 17th title for the team, the first since 1986, and no one in the organization wants to go through a similar drought before Banner No. 18.

          “You do not get to a level and then step backward,” Garnett said. “It will probably be the hardest thing we’ve done, other than getting the first championship.”

          The Celtics won last season after one of the most dramatic offseason overhauls in NBA history, bringing in Garnett and Ray Allen to join with Paul Pierce in a new Big Three that managed, in its first year together, to add to the title cache amassed by previous Boston legends like Larry Bird, Robert Parish and Kevin McHale.

          But the original Big Three didn’t stop at one—they won in 1981, ‘84 and ‘86. And, after showing last season what a little championship hunger can do, the new threesome wants more, too.

          “You look around at all the banners, all the great teams, all the great players that have been here, they did it more than once,” Pierce said. “That’s what it’s going to take to get to that next level with the other Celtics greats.”

          The team begins that effort on Tuesday when they begin training camp in earnest at Salve Regina University in Newport, R.I. It’s not exactly Rome, where the Celtics trained last year as part of an effort to bring all of the new players together, but the mission is different this time, too.

          “The bonding is there,” Rivers said. “When you do something we’ve done, and we went on that long journey. That can’t go away. I don’t think we need to go to Europe again.”

          Rivers said the team had to deal with the pressure of being the favorite all last season, when it won its first eight games, opened 20-2 and cruised to the best record in the NBA.

          “We were on every magazine cover you could be on without actually doing something,” he said. “At least this year we’ve earned that right.”

          They’ll collect the rest of their spoils before the season opener on Oct. 28 against Cleveland and LeBron James, whom Boston dispatched in the Eastern Conference semifinals in an epic seven-game series. Past Celtics greats, and NBA commissioner David Stern, are scheduled to be in attendance when another banner is raised above the Boston Garden court and the players will get their championship rings.

          Then, if Rivers and the Big Three have their way, there will be no more talking about last season.

          “The three of us are not going to be answering a lot of questions dealing with ‘08,” Garnett said.

          After spending part of his summer talking to coaches—many of them retired, or from other sports—who have won back-to-back titles, Rivers knows what he has to do, too.

          “We need to shake ourselves out of the parade route,” Rivers said. “We won because we were a hardworking team. We have to get back to that.”

          Also Monday, backup point guard Sam Cassell showed up for media day and signed a new contract.

          Cassell had been in touch with Rivers during the summer, but the Celtics coach didn’t know if Cassell had decided to come back for another season with the team until last week.

          The 38-year-old Cassell joined the team in March for the playoff run, playing in 17 regular-season games before averaging 4.5 points in the playoffs.

          “I think if I put it out there, no doubt about it, I could probably play somewhere else,” he said. “Why would I?”

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          • This article was originally on a blog post platform and may be missing photos, graphics or links.

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              • Stream live NBA games, game replays, video highlights, and access featured NBA TV programming online with Watch NBA TV.

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                • تنها یک روز پس از آنکه نشریه اقتصادی "فوربس" نام او را به عنوان نفر دوم در میان ورزشکاران تاثیر گذار جهان اعلام کرد، کوبی برایانت ستاره تیم بسکتبال لس آنجلس لیکرز در مسابقه اول فینال لیگ بسکتبال حرفه ای آمریکا 40 امتیاز کسب کرد تا نشان دهد مدعی رتبه اول در میان ورزشکاران جهان است. لیکرز که با غلبه بر دنور ناگتز در شش مسابقه به عنوان نماینده کنفرانس غرب به فینال NBA رسید در اولین مسابقه اورلاندو مجیک، قهرمان کنفرانس شرق را 100-75 شکست داد تا گامی مهم به جلو برداشته باشد. در این مسابقه که به واسطه رکورد بهتر برد و باخت لیکرز در فصل عادی، در لس آنجلس برگزار شد، فشار دفاعی لیکرز بیشترین سهم را در پیروزی این تیم داشت و مهار کردن دوایت هاوارد، ستاره بلندقامت اورلاندو (که پس از قهرمانی در مسابقات دانکینگ سال گذشته در محافل بسکتبال به "سوپرمن" معروف شده) عامل کلیدی پیروزی لیکرز بود. دوایت هاوارد که در مرحله فینال کنفرانس شرق، در حذف کردن کلیولند، مدعی اول قهرمانی فصل جاری، نقشی اساسی ایفاء کرد در حمله از هر سو مورد محاصره بازیکنان لیکرز قرار گرفت و تنها 12 امتیاز کسب کرد که 10 امتیاز آن از پشت خط پرتاب آزاد به دست آمد. از سوی دیگر لیکرز در حملات از هر موقعیتی برای نفوذ به سمت سبد اورلاندو استفاده کرد و بازیکنان تیم میزبان که علاوه بر شهروندان لس آنجلس مورد حمایت ستارگانی چون جک نیکلسون، لئوناردو دی کاپریو و اندی گارسیا قرار داشتند، 56 امتیاز خود را از زیر سبد به حلقه اورلاندو ریختند.

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                    • For Lakers, there's nothing to get too bubbly about, yet

                      Family members and close friends of the Lakers will take a charter flight to Orlando this morning, as is the custom whenever there's a road game in which the franchise can win a championship.

                      Indeed, one more victory, and the Lakers begin their off-season with a lot more smiles than they did a year ago.
                      There have been some Game 5 slip-ups on the road after the Lakers took 3-1 series leads.

                      They lost to Boston in Game 5 in 1987, 123-108, which happened to be the first game after Magic Johnson's "junior sky hook" won Game 4. The Lakers lost to Indiana by 33 points in Game 5 of the 2000 Finals after taking a 3-1 series lead on Indiana.

                      In both cases, the Lakers won the championship in six games.

                      "The players have to get away from the euphoria, not listen to what everybody is telling them," said assistant coach Kurt Rambis, a player on that 1987 Lakers team. "We have to be more focused and determined than the way Orlando's going to play Sunday night. In a lot of ways, Orlando's going to be relaxed. The pressure is off of them."

                      The Lakers won Game 4 thanks mainly to a pair of Derek Fisher three-point baskets that stunned the Orlando crowd at the end of regulation and again in overtime.

                      Fisher said it seemed like a "lifetime" since the Lakers last won the championship, in 2002. They were favorites in 2004 but were crushed by Detroit and flamed out in similar fashion last year with a 39-point loss in Game 6 against Boston.

                      "It feels new again," Fisher said. "That's why I'm laying everything that I possibly have out there to try to help this team."

                      The Lakers also got a hint of good news from Kobe Bryant, who has divulged little about his looming free-agency possibilities, but provided one word of guidance when asked if he could envision playing for any team besides the Lakers next year.

                      "No," he said.

                      Bryant, who will be 31 in August, can terminate a contract with two years and $47.8 million remaining on it in favor of a five-year deal worth about $135 million. He is expected to re-sign with the Lakers, who can offer more money and, apparently, more chances to win a championship than other NBA teams.

                      Meanwhile, Orlando seemed resolute despite losing its second overtime game of the series.

                      Center Dwight Howard, who missed two late free throws in Game 4, talked about giving Orlando fans something to look forward to "when we travel to L.A."

                      "You want me to get up here and say the season is going to be over?" Howard said during an interview session with reporters. "I believe that we're going to be going back to L.A."

                      The Lakers will be going back to L.A., win or lose. It will be known soon enough if they have a championship trophy with them.

                      Jackson fined

                      Coach Phil Jackson and the Lakers were each fined $25,000 by the NBA for criticizing the referees during a TV interview between the first and second quarters of Game 4.

                      Jackson said the referees were making "bogus" calls after Andrew Bynum, Lamar Odom and Pau Gasol were each called for two fouls in the first quarter.

                      "I don't know what the referees are seeing out there in this first quarter," Jackson told sideline reporter Doris Burke. "There's some bogus calls out there, I thought. We've got all our big guys in trouble -- Lamar, Pau and 'Drew -- so we're going to be at a deficit now starting out with these guys in a foul situation."

                      Jackson and the Lakers were also fined $25,000 each for his critical comments of referees after Game 4 of the Western Conference finals against Denver. He said after that game that there was "not equal refereeing."

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