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Stephen Jackson

Mike Dunleavy Jr. is the final holdover from an era that most Pacers fans would like to forget. The only reason he ever came to Indiana was because he was one of the few players (in combination with Troy Murphy) who was so overpaid that a team would take on the at-the-time toxic deal/persona of Stephen Jackson. Now, poetically, Dunleavy Part II will join Cpt. Jack in Milwaukee to play together for the Bucks.

As first reported by Adrian Wojnarowski …

Free agent forward Mike Dunleavy will sign a two year, $7.5 million deal with the Milwaukee Bucks, league source tells Y! Sports.

Despite the fact that MDJ was acquired in an our-trash-for-yours deal, he turned out to be a surprisingly effective, for a time, in Indiana, logging a career year in 2007-08. In my eyes, he was the the best player on the team that year. Danny Granger had not quite broken out completely (that would occur the following season) and Jr. put up 19.1 points, 5.2 rebounds and 3.5 assists per night while shooting 47.8% from the floor and 42.4% from behind the arc (even while shooting 4.7 of them a game). More than that, he was the key facilitator on a team lacking ball-handlers. Granger, who still rarely creates his own shot even today, did so even less back then, instead relying on catch-and-shoot jumpers that were very often the result of ball movement initiated by Mike.

After that year, the wheels fell off somewhat. He only played 18 games the next season and was just off physically during the following one. Last year, he seemed healthy again for the first time since his career season, but he was mainly an outsider looking in on a team that no longer had him in its long-term plans. He got some run, but he was merely a part-time starter holding down the position by default until a rookie was seasoned to replace him. Still, he was a pro’s pro throughout.

He also did this. And this.

Best of luck in beer town. I think you’ll fit in fine up there.

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Stephen Jackson’s New Rap Video

by Jared Wade on October 3, 2011 at 11:51 am · 4 comments

In case you didn’t know, Stephen Jackson goes as “hard as a crowbar to ya glass jaw” since he’s “PA, Texas-raised” with “playa ways running through [his] veins.” Additionally, his “pockets keep Bucks like the same team [he's] playin fo’,” which presumably helps him look sharp with a “wrist nastier than Luke’s freaks” and necklaces that feature “Jesus heads for everyday: black, white or rose gold.”

Surprisingly, however, Stack Jack actually isn’t the worst MC I’ve ever heard. He’s at least better on the mic than 99% of athletes (including former Brawl co-participant Ron Artest) and even many full-time rappers that get play on the radio. Extra credit for telling the owners to shut up with an Eazy E sample. And shout out to Marquis Daniels at the 2:24 mark (I think).

(NSFW video via Complex)

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Recently, I entered the House the Bad Boys Built and Ron Artest nearly tore down: the Palace of Auburn Hills. Expecting to perhaps be threatened or harassed for my preferred outcome of Saturday’s Pacers/Pistons game in Motown, I was instead disturbed for entirely different reasons.

It wasn’t the fact that I was in Detroit during Spring Break, the free throw shooting of my favored team or even the final result that upset me. The problem was the atmosphere of the game.

In a city far removed from its team’s latest championship, the Detroit crowd was lively and responsive. The Pistons played a good game — certainly helped by their opponent’s 7-of-19 performance from the free throw line — and the crowd fed them energy.

Why does it matter that Detroit had a good crowd on a Saturday night home game in March? Great question. I’m glad that you asked.

The real problem is that it was a more energetic game than any of the dozen that I have been to in Indianapolis all year. This came in the building of a team that is effectively out of the playoff race and has very few, if any, long term answers.

As the regular season draws to a close, and the postseason vaguely threatens to disappear entirely, it is not unreasonable to take a quick glance to the Pacers’ future.

Mike Dunleavy ($10.5 million), T.J. Ford ($8.5 million) and Jamaal Tinsley ($5.5 million) all have contributed about equal amounts since the switch to Frank Vogel, and all will be off the Pacers’ cap next year. This gives the team a considerable amount of wiggle room to sign new free agents to complement the assumed existing core of Darren Collison, Danny Granger, Roy Hibbert, Tyler Hansbrough and Paul George.

In a rapidly changing NBA, the question becomes: what will bring the players to Indiana?

We’ve seen from the recent migrations of LeBron James, Chris Bosh and Carmelo Anthony that money isn’t enough in every circumstance. Oftentimes it comes down to the existing players on the roster (also known as the “Miami Cheat” or “LeBron White Flag”) or location (also known as “Carmelo Takes Denver Hostage”). Unfortunately, the Pacers really don’t have either advantage on their side.

Don’t get me wrong: I’ve lived in Indiana my entire life, and with the exception of a few months-long excursions to perfect my Spanish, I don’t expect to leave anytime soon. But I’m not an NBA free agent, the majority of whom aren’t from the Midwest.

So if money isn’t enough to bring a big-time free agent to Indianapolis, what’s getting him here?

See, the problem in Indiana may be the weather: the cold-weather tendencies of the winter and the fair-weather tendencies of the fans. The Colts even had some trouble selling out this year’s home playoff game initially, and the Pacers can’t get a full house without help from either LeBron or fans from Chicago.

If I’m an NBA player, I’ve noticed this in my past trips to Indiana over the years. I’m not entirely sure that I want to spend the next three to five years of my career playing in front of a Conseco Fieldhouse half-full of lethargic supporters. I don’t know what the small market of Indianapolis, a city where the bars close at 2:00 and the winter lasts a full three months, has to offer me other than a paycheck. I’m going to think twice about playing almost 50 games a year over six months in an arena in the self-proclaimed capital of basketball where the fans can’t match the energy level of a destitute team in a city that just set a national record for population decrease.

If you’re reading this thinking that sounds ridiculously immature and shortsighted, you may not completely understand the mind of a millionaire athletic phenomenon in his 20s.

On November 19, 2004, Ron Artest and Stephen Jackson ran into the stands at the Palace of Auburn Hills; the Pacers have never been relevant since. As I sat less than a hundred feet from that very spot six years and change later listening to an invigorated Detroit crowd celebrate a fundamentally meaningless victory, I worried about how my team could ever return to what it once was if the fans just don’t really care.

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Beating the Bobcats

by Jared Wade on February 10, 2011 at 11:26 am · 1 comment

I didn’t see one second of the game last night as I was busy rescuing kittens from trees and helping grandmas carry home their groceries while you just sat there on your couch, selfishly eating nachos and watching basketball. Really altruistic guy you are. Way to go, jerk.

But a bunch of actually smart people did tune in to watch Indy hold on to beat Charlotte. Here’s what Kelly Dwyer had to say, which I thought was pretty eloquent. It’s not so much about the game as the team under new coach Frank Vogel.

Lots of running and confidence and pell-mell ball from the Pacers on Wednesday, but they also run good plays, and are paying more attention to detail now that they, well, want to. And while that’s not fair to former coach Jim O’Brien, it still is his fault. Even if it’s the players’ fault, if that makes sense.

Well put, KD.

As for the game, again, I have nothing to add. But The Basketball Jones did highlight Stephen Jackson’s final shot. They ask “Did Darren Collison Foul Stephen Jackson?”

Well … obviously he did. It’s really not a debate. Good for the Pacers that they didn’t call it, but that’s a fairly foolish challenge by Darren. Give credit to Cpt. Jack for forcing the controversy, but at some point you just need to let the guy throw a heave at the rim and hope for the best. Throw up a hand, sure, but your defense really isn’t going to have a lot of effect on a buzzer-beating prayer.

Check the play below. Also of note is DC’s reaction.

“I didn’t feel like I fouled him,” Collison said. “I made a play and whatever happened, happened. I’m not answering that type of question because I hate lying.”

Collison would be a good politician.

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