LAKERS NOTEBOOK: HAMBLEN IN NO MOOD FOR WORDS.Byline: Ross Siler Staff Writer EL SEGUNDO El Segundo (ĕl sēgŭn`dō), industrial city (1990 pop. 15,223), Los Angeles co., S Calif., on Santa Monica Bay; inc. 1917. Its products include navigation and computer systems, aircraft parts, office machines, telephone apparatus, and - The questions about Lakers See Lake poets interim coach Frank Hamblen Frank Hamblen is a National Basketball Association (NBA) coach and scout, and a college basketball player at Syracuse University. He has served as an interim head coach for two different teams; for the Milwaukee Bucks in 1992 and the Los Angeles Lakers in 2005. and his choice of words Noun 1. choice of words - the manner in which something is expressed in words; "use concise military verbiage"- G.S.Patton phraseology, wording, diction, phrasing, verbiage to describe the second half of Thursday's 117-96 loss to Denver were starting to add up Saturday afternoon when Chucky Atkins Kenneth Lavon "Chucky" Atkins (born August 14 1974 in Orlando, Florida) is an American professional basketball player currently with the Denver Nuggets in the NBA. spotted the man of the hour. ``There he is,'' Atkins said, following with a cheery cheer·y adj. cheer·i·er, cheer·i·est Showing or suggesting good spirits; cheerful: a cheery hello. cheer , ``What's up, Coach?'' Two days after Hamblen called out his team to reporters, the Lakers set about trying to salvage something from the final 14 games of the season, their seven-game losing streak already having matched the second longest in franchise history. Though Hamblen's words after the Denver game - ``The second half, I thought our guys quit, to some degree,'' he said - caused more than a minor stir, the coach was in no mood to let them echo when he spoke Saturday. ``That was the other night,'' Hamblen said. ``We're moving on from here.'' The rest of the Lakers chalked up what Hamblen said to the frustration of a coach fast running out of options, his team sliding to 10th place in the Western Conference standings, six games out of playoff position, doomed to miss the playoffs for the first time in 11 years. In addition, the fact that Hamblen did not say in the locker room that he thought the Lakers had quit - saving that analysis instead for the reporters waiting outside - only furthered the notion. ``I don't think he wanted to put us down by any means,'' Atkins said. ``I just think he's using that as a tool to try and fire us up and get us going. Any good coach would do the same thing.'' --Defense first: Several theories have been offered in recent weeks as to why the Lakers have struggled so much on defense. Atkins agreed with Hamblen's assessment that the Lakers didn't spend enough time on defense in training camp when Rudy Tomjanovich Rudolph Tomjanovich, Jr. (born November 24 1948, in Hamtramck, Michigan), nicknamed Rudy T., is an American former basketball player and coach. Early life Tomjanovich was born to an American family of Croatian descent. was coach. ``All the good teams that I've been on, we've had an offensive system and a defensive system,'' Atkins said. ``We didn't spend a lot of time on defense throughout any practices this season, so we just played it by ear and right now, we're struggling.'' --Shouldering the load: Forward Lamar Odom Lamar Joseph Odom (born November 6 1979, in South Jamaica, Queens, New York) is an American professional basketball player who currently plays power forward (also plays both forward spots and is a "point-forward") for the National Basketball Association's Los Angeles Lakers. had little problem shooting jumpers with his injured left shoulder Saturday and will be re-examined today with the possibility of playing against the Philadelphia 76ers at Staples Center This article has multiple issues: * Its neutrality is disputed. * It may contain original research or unverifiable claims. * It does not cite any references or sources. . Even if he risks further injury, Odom said it was important to return this season, rather than sit out the final 14 games. He had a plane ticket booked to Denver on Thursday but was not given the green light to play by doctors. ``If I'm healthy, I think it's important for us to still work on our chemistry and prepare for next season,'' Odom said. ``For myself, it will be a short summer, because we're all disappointed.'' --Small step: You have to read the fine print to find it, but Kobe Bryant's name and that of Nike are linked in a back-page ad for the new Air Huarache 2K5 in this week's Sports Illustrated Sports Illustrated is the largest weekly American sports magazine owned by media conglomerate Time Warner. It has over 3 million subscribers and is read by 23 million adults each week, including over 18 million men, 19% of the adult males in the country. . Bryant, who first wore the shoe on Christmas Day, reportedly signed a five-year, $40 million contract with Nike but had not appeared in an ad since he was accused of sexual assault nearly two years ago. The SI ad has a picture of the shoe, with nine purple-and-gold footprints (Arthur Murray-style) representing Bryant's dribble drop-step with the words ``kobe & the air zoom huarache 2K5 at nikebasketball.com.'' Ross Siler, (818) 713-3610 ross.siler(at)dailynews.com CAPTION(S): box Box: LAKERS vs. PHILADELPHIA - Ross Siler |
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