By MahyarMahyar3. Monday, March 19, 2012 4:10:38 PM
End, Final, Finish
Hi people,It's Mahyar the admin of Basketball Club:
I made this group when i joined Opera.I have made it the largest Sport group on Opera.After 1 year i have joined Facebook because Opera made some changes and i don't like them,They also banned my account for a while so that i lost everything about my account.Opera made it hard to find friends and communicate here.
It's for last time that i did login here.I appreciate all Fans.This group will not have anymore activities but you can still use it by Comment and shoutbox.
I will be happy if you add my Facebook account that i have written that link on my account.
Thank you alot people.
Best Regards,Good Luck,Bye.
MAHYAR 3/19/2012
Admin's E-Mail:Immortal.mahyar1992@gmail.com
By MahyarMahyar3. Tuesday, June 21, 2011 11:10:33 PM
Dallas Mavericks, NBA championship 2011

The Dallas Mavericks won the NBA championship for the first time in franchise history with a 4-2 win over the Miami Heat in the 2011 NBA Finals.
Avenging what happened five years ago in perfect turnabout style, the Dallas Mavericks won their first NBA title by winning Game 6 of these finals in Miami 105-95 on Sunday night — celebrating on the Heat's home floor, just as Dwyane Wade and his team did to them in the 2006 title series.
Jason Terry scored 27 points, Nowitzki added 21 and the Mavericks topped the Miami Heat 105-95 in Game 6 of the NBA finals on Sunday night. The Mavericks won four of the series' last five games, a turnabout that could not have been sweeter after seeing the Heat celebrate their first title in Dallas after Game 6 of the 2006 finals.
By MahyarMahyar3. Sunday, April 17, 2011 8:53:36 AM
Michael Jordan, the legend
AKA Michael Jeffrey Jordan
Born: 17-Feb - 1963
Birthplace: Brooklyn, NY
Gender: Male
Religion: Christian
Race or Ethnicity: Black
Sexual orientation: Straight
Occupation: Basketball, Actor
Party Affiliation: Democratic
Nationality: United States
Executive summary: God's gift to basketball, clearly
Father: James R. Jordan Sr.(b. 31-Jul-1936, d. 23-Jul-1993 murder)
Mother: Deloris Jordan
Brother: James R. Jordan Jr. (b. 1957, US Army, XVIIIAirborne)
Brother: Larry Jordan (b. 1962)
Sister: Deloris E. Jordan
Sister: Roslyn M. Jordan
Girlfriend: Robin Givens (ex-, uncertain)
Girlfriend: Tyra Banks (ex-, uncertain)
Wife: Juanita Vanoy (b. 13-Jun-1959, m. 2-Sep-1989, div. 29-Dec-2006)
Son: Jeffrey Michael Jordan (b. 18-Nov-1988)
Son: Marcus James Jordan (b. 24-Dec-1990)
Daughter: Jasmine Mickael Jordan (b. 7-Dec-1992)
High School: Laney High School, Wilmington, NC
University: University of North Carolina
Bill Bradley for President
Naismith Award (male) 1984
John R. Wooden Award 1984
NBA Rookie of the Year 1984/85
NBA Most Valuable Player 1987/88
NBA Most Valuable Player 1990/91
NBA Most Valuable Player 1991/92
NBA Most Valuable Player 1995/96
NBA Most Valuable Player 1997/98
Basketball Hall of Fame 2009
NBA Top 50 Players
Sports Illustrated Sportsman of the Year 1991
Associated Press Athlete of the Year (male) 1991
Associated Press Athlete of the Year (male) 1992
Associated Press Athlete of the Year (male) 1993
Order of the Long Leaf Pine
Endorsement of Hanesbrands Hanes underwear
Endorsement of McDonald's 1993
Endorsement of MCI 1998
Endorsement of Nike
Omega Psi Phi Fraternity
Endorsement of Walt Disney World 1991
Paternity Test
Risk Factors: Gambling
SPORTS FRANCHISE HISTORY
Charlotte Bobcats Majority owner (pending), 2010-
Charlotte Bobcats Minority owner, 2006-10
Chicago Bulls 1984-93
Chicago Bulls 1995-98
Washington Wizards 2001-03
FILMOGRAPHY AS ACTOR
He Got Game (1-May-1998) Himself
Space Jam (15-Nov-1996) Himself
By MahyarMahyar3. Sunday, February 27, 2011 4:30:56 PM
NBA ALL STAR 2011
GAME
EAST 143
WEST 148
DATE
February 20, 2011
ARENA
Staples Center
CITY
Los Angeles, California
MVP
Kobe Bryant
Attendance
17,163
Eastern Conference All-Stars
STARTERS
Derrick Rose-Chicago Bulls (G)
Dwyane Wade-Miami Heat (G)
LeBron James-Miami Heat (F)
Amar'e Stoudemire-New York Knicks (F)
Dwight Howard-Orlando Magic (C)
RESERVES
Ray Allen,Chris Bosh,Kevin Garnett,Al Horford,Joe Johnson,Paul Pierce,Rajon Rondo
HEAD COACH
Doc Rivers
Western Conference All-Stars
STARTERS
Chris Paul-New Orleans Hornets (G)
Kobe Bryant-Los Angeles Lakers (G)
Kevin Durant-Oklahoma City Thunder (F)
Carmelo Anthony-Denver Nuggets (F)
Yao Ming-Houston Rockets (C)
RESERVES
Tim Duncan,Pau Gasol,Manu Ginóbili,Blake Griffin,Kevin Love,Dirk Nowitzki,Russell Westbrook,Deron Williams
HEAD COACH
Gregg Popovich
*Yao Ming will not participate due to injury.
Kevin Love was named Yao Ming's replacement by NBA commissioner David Stern.
Sprite Slam Dunk Contest(January 5, 2011)
Blake Griffin, JaVale McGee, Serge Ibaka, and Brandon Jennings were all chosen to participate.
On January 20, it was announced that DeMar DeRozan would replace Jennings due to his foot injury.
WINNER
Blake Griffin-Los Angeles Clippers (68% votes)
Foot Locker Three-Point Contest
Paul Pierce,Ray Allen, Kevin Durant, Daniel Gibson, James Jones, and Dorell Wright.
WINNER
James Jones-Miami Heat (20 scores)
Taco Bell Skills Challenge
Chris Paul,Stephen Curry, Derrick Rose,John Wall, and Russell Westbrook.
WINNER
Stephen Curry-Golden State Warriors (28.2 seconds)
Haier Shooting Stars Competition
WINNER
Al Horford-Atlanta Hawks
By MahyarMahyar3. Thursday, July 22, 2010 10:53:47 AM
2010 FIBA World cup

The 2010 FIBA World Championship will be hosted by Turkey from August 28 to September 12, 2010. It is co-organized by the International Basketball Federation (FIBA),Turkish Basketball Federation and the 2010 Organizing Committee.
For the third time since 1986, the World Championship will have 24 competing nations, an increase from 16. As a result, the groups are each playing in different cities, with the knockout round being hosted by Istanbul.
GROUPS STANDING
A:
1. Angola
2. Argentina
3. Australia
4. Germany
5. Jordan
6. Serbia
B:
1. Brazil
2. Croatia
3. Iran
4. Tunisia
5. Slovenia
6. USA
C:
1. China
2. Cote d'Ivoire
3. Greece
4. Russia
5. Puerto Rico
6. Turkey
D:
1. Canada
2. France
3. Lebanon
4. Lithuania
5. New Zealand
6. Spain
By Amoore <3amiroslo. Thursday, April 8, 2010 7:56:08 PM
Basketball news
Posted Apr 8 2010 11:02AM
As Robin Williams once put it, spring is nature's way of saying "Let's party!" And nowhere is that more true than in the NBA, where the good teams gear up for the postseason and the less good teams start to count their defeats, er, blessings for what they might mean in the annual Draft lottery.
Unless you're the New York Knicks, whose seat at the table next month will be filled by the Utah Jazz, a byproduct of the oh-so-fruitful trade six years ago that landed Stephon Marbury in New York. The Jazz hold New York's lottery pick, which passed through Phoenix and now, finally, is unprotected. That could be a bonanza for a perennial playoff contender pushing, once again, toward a Northwest Division title and the No. 2 seed in the West.
It's being characterized as a minor blow by the Knicks, who prefer their player development faster, better and on someone else's dime and timetable. "I've built teams through the draft and that takes longer," Knicks basketball boss Donnie Walsh told the New York Daily News recently. "First, you have to get the players and they have to play together for three years. You're talking about something that could take seven years. I don't want to take that long. And I don't kow what the appetite in New York would be for something like that. You can do that in other cities."
Yeah, but not in Salt Lake City. Not lately, "lately" in this case spanning back more than a quarter century.
Fact is, sending a lottery pick to the Jazz is like hanging a top hat, white tie and tails in Jazz coach Jerry Sloan's closet. Are we sure they'll know what to do with it? Just as Sloan would push the monkey suit to the back while reaching for another pair of blue jeans, the Jazz have done all their winning under him with, well, the player equivalent of denim.
Utah has had a lottery pick only once since 1983. In 2005, the Jazz maneuvered up from sixth to select point guard Deron Williams at No. 3. Otherwise, this is a team assembled a lot like Tony Stark's first Iron Man suit, from a spare part here, a piece of scrap metal there. Have you looked at the Jazz roster lately? Even the Westminster Dog Show would bar them for lack of pedigree.
Six guys -- Carlos Boozer, Kyrylo Fesenko, Kyle Korver, C.J. Miles, Paul Millsap and Mehmet Okur -- were drafted in the second round, which means they were available to pretty much any team good or bad. Four more weren't drafted at all: Sundiata Gaines, Othyus Jeffers, Wesley Matthews and Ronnie Price were basically left at the curb with "Free" signs on them. Only Williams arrived in the NBA to much fanfare, and only Kosta Koufos and Andrei Kirilenko can join their playmaker in claiming first-round status.
Disclaimer: Boozer, Korver and Okur weren't Jazz discoveries, getting picked 35th, 51st and 38th respectively by other savvy and/or fortunate organizations. And even among the fellows who snuck in the league's side or back doors, there are some solid apprentice programs, such as Duke, Marquette, Creighton, Georgia and Louisiana Tech. Still, everybody who cooks in the NBA shops at the same grocery store. Not everyone manages to turn mundane ingredients into gourmet grub.
"Utah does very well at evaluating talent and picking up veterans, but the key there is that their leadership is top-notch," a veteran NBA scout told me. "That's on the GM [Kevin O'Connor] and management for letting the coach run the team, and making it clear that 'You don't second-guess the coach.'
"Millsap earned his contract [$32 million over four years, signed last summer] when Boozer was injured. But that speaks to Jerry Sloan -- he just plugs in the next guy. They've had some guys who haven't fit in but they get moved along. Every season they seem to bring up a couple [NBA Development League] players who do well. It seems like every year they're finding a back-up point guard somewhere."
Think of Utah's trade deadline-day decision to move Ronnie Brewer to Memphis for a future first-round pick -- good player off a good team, but nothing irreplaceable (especially if Brewer wasn't going to be re-signed this summer). No other NBA head coach is as comfortable, or as accomplished, at working with duct tape as Sloan.
The Jazz's ability to restock and repair, when other teams might be wringing their hands, is both a product of and a contributing factor to Sloan's unrivaled job tenure. And the biggest reason it works is that while most franchises are zigging in the Draft -- poking, prodding, gauging and predicting skills and brain types -- Utah is zagging. Under Sloan, the Jazz always have seemed to put a little extra emphasis on toughness, which was the No. 1 trait he brought to the league as a black-and-blue guard with the Chicago Bulls in the 1960s and '70s.
Landing and keeping a job in the NBA when you weren't drafted, like Matthews, requires toughness. Earning a call-up from the D-League and turning a 10-day contract into something lengthier, like Gaines and Jeffers, demands the same. You run your finger up and down the Utah roster and can find the same story, repeated. It's a proud and pugnacious tradition that works well with Sloan's system built on pick-and-rolls and defense, and it dates back to Karl Malone and John Stockton arriving as 13th and 16th picks (1985 and 1984, respectively) and exiting as Hall of Famers.
It isn't foolproof and the obvious retort from critics is, "Yeah, well how many NBA titles have the Jazz won?" But it is a sober and somewhat noble approach, one that becomes more noticeable at this time of year. While the Jazz are working hard for games in May, maybe even June, so many other teams -- with lottery picks already in the house -- are toting up their expiring contracts for salary-cap space in free agency. Or they're thinking about Ping Pong balls as if the Draft will mean salvation.
If Utah can patch this all together and chase a top seed in the mighty West, what's your team's excuse?
Steve Aschburner has written about the NBA for 25 years. You can e-mail him here.
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