Sunday, August 29, 2010

Season 27 shorty

Sacramento sweeps Oklahoma City in first two games of season...the second behind Wes Montgomery's 31 points.

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Playoffs Championship Game

HOUSTON -- June 20, 2010...A day that will live in infamy. Or in this case, "famy," because there was nothing infamous about the Charleston Rebels winning the championship game over the Houston Iguanas 81-73 and capturing their first championship in the long history of the original franchise.
(And Felipe, for your information as requested, the only other teams still in search of that elusive, coveted basketball on the envelope are Oklahoma City, Seattle and Sacramento.
Once again, the team quickest out of the gate won this game, and in this case the Runnin' Rebs raced to a 21-14 first-quarter lead and were never headed. The muddy Mississippi blues man, Hall of Famer Jonny Cockaroo was again the MVP of the contest for the second consecutive game, and the one-time cut pile castoff let out a rebel yell for the ages as the game expired.
The Iguanas, bridesmaids for the third time since their last title in Season 12,trailed by 20 points at one point in the third quarter, but came roaring back to within nine points with 15 time units remaining in the game. But the huge early deficit was too much for Houston to overcome, even on their home court.
Tyler Masterson offered the following observation:
"son.of.a.bitch.

the MBA continues to baffle statisticians, the PhD thesis paper of a local student, 3 years in the making, now has to be thrown out as his theory on Houston's 13 game win streak and their championship destiny has to be discarded. What a crock; there is no justice in this league."

Phil Davia's reaction was a tad more measured. He said
"Unbelievable!! Last night, I saw a large group pf people racing down the street with Rebel flags and I became worried. But now I know the reason why!! I hope that was the reason......

"Anyway, I had a feeling Charleston would do it.

"After the celebrations, I'd like the MBA archivist to tell me which teams have still not won a championship."

The Game 5 breakdown was as follows

After knocking at the door in a losing finals result in Season 25, the Charleston Rebels needed and achieved two consecutive victories to bring home the first championship in their long history.

Charleston 81, Houston 73


Charleston 21...43...67...81
Houston....14...33...50...73

Game MVP--Jonny Cockaroo, Charleston
Top Scorer--Jonny Cockaroo, Charleston, 20 points
Top Rebounder--Jonny Cockaroo, Charleston, 8
Tops in Assists--Jinx Bluzemen, Tubes Mullard, both of Houston, 4
Tops in Steals--Tubes Mallard, Houston, 2
Other Top Scorers--Tubes Mullard and Davis Mastersoy, both of Houston, with 16; Benny Gumm and Sammy Zazooch, both of Charleston with 15 each.

The playoff MVP was Jonny Cockaroo...the second time he's won it. The first was in Season 18 as a rookie with Philadelphia, making it the longest time between MVP awards for any MBA player. Jonny has staying power...he's a hootchie, cootchie man.

Closing Season 26 notes
Retiring this season were the following

From the cut pile
Tico Ticotac, Gerald Masterson, Rupert Ritzik, Wa Wa Chuckles, Joe Dokes

From Milwaukee
Gob O'Goo (starting center)
Hy Potanuse

From Charleston
Kippy Kinski (starting two guard with a long, glorious career who led team in playoff scoring at 16.9 per game during championship run.)

From Philadelphia
starting guards Sammy Sampson and Ross "Cement Head Harris"...two season ago the Phobia lost both starting forwards

From Oklahoma City
Chopstix Curry
Dragon Chu Chu (both subs)

From San Jose
Felipe Jazzman (starting two guard and intricate part of team's recent resurgence)
Cuba Chance (longtime backup center)

From Sacramento
Frank Pettis (sub guard with four rings who played key roles for Philly and Milwaukee title teams

From Dallas
Johnny Quickly (oft-injured rebounding maniac at forward..relegated to bench recently)

From Seattle
Pics Gitter (sub forward)

Saturday, June 19, 2010

PLAYOFF FINALS – Game 4

Charleston 75, Houston 54



CHARLESTON -- There will be a winner-take-all Game 5.

The Charleston Rebels put the first serious ass-beating on their opponent in this Season 26 Finals, routing the Iguanas of Houston 75-54.

The Rebels, featuring balanced scoring, tough defense and dominant rebounding, sprinted to a 20-12 first-quarter lead and were never headed thereafter. The first quarter continues to be a key in this series.

The Iguanas were again held to under 50 percent shooting for the game (48.0). Only one Houston player, Dingo Dog Taylor (14 points) managed double figures in this one as the Iguanas were held to their lowest point total of the season. Meanwhile, all five Charleston starters scored 13 or more points, with two-guard Kippy Kinski leading the way with 18. This was the last home game in Kinski’s illustrious career, all eight seasons spent with Charleston.

Trailing 37-28 in the second quarter, Iguana hopes of catching up suffered a severe blow when point guard Jinx Bluzemen went down with an injury for the remainder of the contest. He is expected to return for the big Game 5 contest in Houston.

Neither team has lost a home game in the Finals.



Houston…..12…32…44…54

Charleston 20…39…55…75



Game MVP—Hall of Famer Jonny Cockaroo, Charleston 13 points, 9 rebounds, two blocks, one steal

Top Scorer—Kippy Kinski, Charleston, 18 points

Top Rebounder – Jonny Cockaroo, Charleston 9

Top Assister – Benny Gumm and Kippy Kinski, both of Charleston, 4

Tops in Steals – Tubes Mullard, Houston, 2

Blocked Shots – Jonny Cockaroo, Charleston, Davis Mastersoy and Zooch Managoogie, both Houston, all with 2.

Other Top Scorers—Dingo Dog Taylor, Houston, Benny Gum, So Ca Toah and Sammy Zazooch, all Charleston, all with 14 points.

Sunday, June 13, 2010

Finals--Game 3 in Houston

Houston 70, Charleston 63

With another hotly-contested 70-63 victory over Charleston, the Houston Iguanas are now one game away from winning their first championship since Season 12. As in the Game 2 Charleston triumph, the winning team jumped out to what proved to be an insurmountable first-quarter lead. Houston, led by game MVP Jinx Bluzemen (24 points) led 20-9 after one. The lead grew to 19 in the second quarter when Dingo Dog Taylor (17 points) popped in a three-point-shot, was fouled and converted the free throw to make it 34-15.
But Charleston, though in a deep hole, was not yet buried. The Rebels, led by Kippy Kinski (18 points) hit the boards hard, out-rebounding Houston 31-18 in the game and closed to within eight of their adversaries at the end of the third quarter. They got within five at 65-60 when Hall of Fame center Jonny Cockaroo grabbed an offensive rebound and slammed it home with 11 ticks left. Iguanas coach Doug Fresh, claiming that Cockaroo pushed off to get the important board, was then called for a technical foul. Benny Gumm of Charleston made it 65-61 and Charleston had the ball thanks to the technical.
But Kinski, pressured by Tubes Mallard, threw away the ball in what turned out to be Charleston's last good hope.

Charleston 9...27...44...63
Houston....20..41...53...70

Game MVP-- Jinx Bluzemen, Houston, 24 points, 4 assists, 2 blocked shots, 2 rebounds
Top Scorer--Jinx Bluzemen, Houston, 24 points
Top Rebounder--Jonny Cockaroo, Charleston, 9
Tops in Assists--Jinx Bluzemen, Houston, 4
Tops in Steals--Tubes Mallard, Davis Mastersoy and Dingo Dog Taylor, all of Houston, with 1 each
Other Top Scorers--Kippy Kinski, Charleston 18; Dingo Dog Taylor, Houston 17: Zooch Managoogie, Houston, 15.

Game 3 Notes: Houston shot under 50 percent for the third consecutive game, going 28 for 61 (45.9 percent), but continued to shine at the free throw line (11 for 13). In the finals, Houston is 22 for 24 from the line.
Houston 7-1 center Davis Mastersoy is the league's tallest player and the top playoff rebounder thus far at 5.6 per contest. But he's having a bitch of a time scoring, going up against two of the top defensive centers thus far in the playoffs, rookie Max Payne of Dallas and Jonny Cockaroo of Charleston. Mastersoy is shooting an anemic18.1 percent from the field (5.4 points per game) and has taken the most shots on the team, which accounts in part for the team's bad shooting percentage thus far.
Charleston's All-League guard and top scorer Benny Gumm continues to struggle in the finals thanks to the defense of Bluzemen. In Game 3, Gumm, an 18.9 per game scorer in the regular season, was held to just 10. He has scored just 28 points in three finals games.

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

Finals--Game 2 in Charleston

Charleston 63, Houston 58

The Charleston Rebels held off the Houston Iguanas 63-58 in Charleston, evening up the championship series and ending the longest winning streak in the history of the MBA.
Led by Hall of Fame center Jonny Cockaroo (22 points), the Rebels came out smoking, establishing a 10-point lead at 21-11 after the initial quarter.
Like Houston, Charleston boasted one of the toughest MBA defenses during the regular season and put it on display in this victory. The 58 points scored by Houston tied the Iguana's lowest total of the year which came in a loss to Charleston on the opening game of Season 26.
Charleston began the game with a 9-0 run, from which Houston never completely recovered. Houston, behind the efforts of forwards Dingo Dog Taylor (13 points) and Zooch Managoogie(12 points) extended a lot of energy to tie the score 46-46 late in the third quarter. But Charleston scored the next eight points of the game and put things basically out of reach.
Up 54-50, Charleston got a pair of key buckets by retiring two guard Kippy "As If I Had To Tell You" Kinski (14 points) to make it 58-50. A jumper by Rebel point guard Benny Gumm (10 points) made it 60-50 and the double-digit lead sealed the fate of the Iguanas.
For the second game in a row, Houston was held to under 50 percent shooting (44.8).

Houston.....11..25..46..58
Charleston..21..34..49..63

Game MVP--Jonny Cockaroo, Charleston, 22 points, 6 rebounds, 1 steal, 3 blocked shots
Top Scorer--Jonny Cockaroo, Charleston, 22 points
Top Rebounder--Sammy Zazooch, Charleston and Davis Mastersoy, Houston 7 each
Tops in Assists--Tubes Mullard, Houston, 6
Tops in Steals--Tubes Mullard, Houston 2
Other Top Scorers--Kippy Kinski, Charleston 14; Dingo Dog Taylor, Houston 13

Sunday, June 6, 2010

Finals--Game 1 in Houston

Houston 61, Charleston 58

Rare is the MBA game where a winning team shoots 42.6 percent, but that was the case in game one of the championship best of five round captured by the Houston Iguanas 61-58 over the Charleston Rebels.
This is win No. 13 in a row for Houston, and it is a league record. The Iguanas continue their victory skein, winning big, and winning ugly, winning with their bench and winning with their defense.
Against the Rebels, they hit five threes, a team record for the season from a team that does not depend on the trey. Basically, the Doug Fresh-coached team does whatever it has to in order to get on the left side of the ledger. A stifling defense was key in this one.
Veteran point guard Jinx Bluzemen (21 points) led the way for Houston, leading both teams in scoring, grabbing a team-high 8 rebounds, popping in a pair of 3-pointers and even jamming one home on an offensive putback. He was also a perfect 3 for 3 from the foul line and held All-League guard Benny Gumm to just 8 points.
This was a tight one almost all the way through. A medium jumper by Sammy Zazooch (8 points) of Charleston tied the score 34-34 at the half and Rebels guard Kippy Kinski (17 points) knotted the score again 56-56 late in the game before fouling out a few time units later with his team trailing 58-56.
Soh Cah Toa (14 points) tied it again 58-58 on an offensive rebound putback off his own miss with seven ticks left setting up the Houston heroics.
It was Zooch Managoogie (12 points) who provided them, driving to the hole, scoring and then hitting a free throw on the play to secure the lead with five time units remaining.

Charleston 15 34 43 58
Houston....16 34 50 61

Game MVP--Jinx Bluzemen, Houston, 21 points, 8 rebounds, 2 assists.
Top Scorer--Bluzemen, Houstin 21
Top Rebounder--Sammy Zazooch, Charleston 9
Tops in assists--Benny Gumm, Charleston and Tubes Mullard, Houston, 3 each
Steals--Zooch Managoogie, Houston, 2
Other Top Scorers--Dingo Dog Taylor, Houston, 19; Kippy Kinski, Charleston 17

Game 1 Notes: The 58 points was the lowest total of the season for Charleston. The Rebels' previous low was 63 in their regular-season loss to Houston.
Houston was 10 for 10 from the free-throw line.
Houston center Davis Mastersoy had a bitch of a time against Jonny Cockaroo, going 0 for 10 from the field.
Benny Gumm, the top Charleston scorer, had another bad offensive game, scoring just 8 on the heels of a 4-point game against San Jose.

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

Round 1, Game 3 in San Jose

Charleston 72, San Jose 71

In one of the greatest and wildest games in MBA history, the Charleston
Rebels defeated the defending league champion San Jose Fighting Amigos 72-71
to advance to the finals for the second consecutive year.
Talk about your madman games. After the closest first quarter in this
series, Charleston took commanding control in the second quarter, going on
an early run and leading by as many as 11 points before the Amigos reeled
them in to trail 34-29 at the half. The third quarter ended with San Jose up
56-55, setting up the wild and wooly fourth.
In the final quarter, the lead changed hands five different times as the
two worthy foes fought desperately to avoid elimination. It did not look
good for the visiting Rebels when All-League guard Benny Gumm, who was in
foul trouble all game, picked up foul No. 5 early on and left the game with
a paltry four points. Behind forwards Sagittal Occlusal and Ed Masterson,
San Jose broke free of the lead-changing pattern and gave their team a 69-65
lead as the game wound down.
Then Charleston lost power forward Soh Cah Toah to fouls, but they were not
dead yet. When Hall of Famer Jonny Cockaroo scored the second consecutive
Rebels bucket, the game was tied 69-69 with 12 time units remaining.
Moments later, one-time Rookie of the Year two guard Kippy Kinski (17
points) drained a medium jump shot to give the surging Charleston team a
71-69 lead.
Then, with four time units remaining, all hell broke loose.
Following a missed Charleston shot and subsequent battle for the rebound,
San Jose¹s Felipe Jazzman and Charleston¹s Jim Linzy began a free-for-all
fight that resulted in both players getting booted from the game and
technical free throws being awarded to both teams.
Hall of Famer Cockaroo hit his charity shot for the Rebels, but
soon-to-be Hall of Famer Occlusal missed his, leaving his team with a
three-point deficit and precious little time remaining.
The Fighting Amigos then won the jump ball, keeping hopes alive. Center
Zlatko Korkovic then immediately drained a medium jump shot to pull his team
within a point, but the defending champs could not get the ball back before
time ran out.
The Rebels will now face Eastern Division foe, the Houston Iguanas for
the Season 26 MBA title. The teams split their two-game regular-season
series, with Charleston¹s opening game win against Houston accounting for
the Iguana¹s only loss this year.
Houston has won three titles, the last coming in Season 12 while
Charleston, experiencing it¹s best two-year stretch in team history, goes
after it¹s first championship.

Game MVP--Ed Masterson, San Jose, 23 points, 3 rebounds, 3 assists
Top Scorer--Ed Masterson, San Jose, 23 points
Top Charleston scorer--Hall of Famer Jonny Cockaroo 22 points
Top Rebounder--Soh Cah Toa, Charleston, 7
Tops in Assists--Felipe Jazzman, San Jose, 5 (in his last game ever)
Tops in Steals--Felipe Jazzman, San Jose, 2

Saturday, May 29, 2010

Round 1 Game 2 in Dallas

Houston Iguanas 81, Dallas Demons 76

The Houston Iguanas dispatched their mortal in-state enemies, the Dallas Demons 81-76 to complete a first-round sweep and advance to the MBA championship for the third time in the past six seasons.
Houston power forward Dingo Dog Taylor led the attack for the Iguanas, scoring 30 points. The win marks the 11th consecutive victory for the Houston club, which lost the season opener to Charleston and hasn't been defeated since.
The two Texas teams got off to a fast start, with Houston, behind Taylor's 10 first-quarter points, taking a 26-21 lead at the first break. That five-point advantage was retained by the Iguanas at the end of the second and third quarters and at the conclusion of the contest. The Demons, to the delight of their fans, did take a momentary lead halfway through the fourth quarter, when sub guard Hughes Kettner stole the ball, drove the length of the court and slammed one home to give his team a 72-71 lead. But Houston sucked it up to dominate the rest of the game.
Free throws were a huge factor in this game, with the Iguanas, usually a below-average shooting team, going 17 for 20 from the line, getting 11 more points from the charity stripe than did the Demons.
The Iguanas shut down the powerful 1-2 rookie combination of 7-foot center Max Payne and All-League power forward Stuffy Pipes. Payne averaged 14.6 points during the season and Pipes 20.2, but against the Iguanas, neither managed a double-digit scoring average.
The Iguanas now await the winner of the next game between Charleston and San Jose to see who they play for the title.

Game MVP--Dingo Dog Taylor, Houston (30 points, 2 rebounds, 3 assists, steal)
Top Scorer--Taylor, 30
Top Rebounder--Max Payne, Dallas 5
Top Assists men--Jinx Bluzemen, Houston and California Dan Masterson, Dallas with 4 each
Top Steals--May Payne, Dallas and Hughes Kettner, Dallas with 2 each
Tops in Blocked shots--Max Payne, Dallas 6
Top Dallas scorers--Major Hassle and Cattamus T. Rex 16 each

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Round 1, Game 2 -- At Charleston

Round 1,Game 2 in Charleston

Charleston Rebels 83, San Jose Fighting Amigos 64

The Rebels of Charleston did a complete reverse on San Jose in Game 2, pounding the defending champs to even up the series in this best of three first-round series.
Charleston point guard, All-League first string for the last two seasons, Benny Gumm, went off in the first quarter to the tune of 16 points, including a trio of treys to lead the initial outburst from which the Amigos never recovered.

Game MVP-Benny Gumm (28 points, 6 rebounds, 2 assists)
Top Scorer-Benny Gumm (Kippy Kinski added 20 for the second game in a row for the Rebels...Sagittal Occlusal led the Amigos with 22.
Top Rebounder--Sammy Zazooch, Rebels 7
Top Assist Man--Funsy VanSlochum, Amigos, 3

Saturday, May 22, 2010

Round 1, Game 1 -- At Houston

HOUSTON 75, DALLAS 61

The Houston Iguanas showed precisely why they are who they are in game one of this latest Texas showdown. The Iguanas shot a paltry 49.2 percent, which, usually, in the MBA, is a guaranteed loss...but won by 14 points.
They did it with a smothering defense that allowed the rival Demons just 50.9 percent shooting, out-rebounding their opponents 28-19.
Also, the Houston team featured balanced efforts from all five of its starters and excellent support from its bench. Nobody was spectacular, but all contributed.
The Iguanas jumped to a 20-11 first quarter lead, then trailed the Demons at the half 36-33 before finally dominating the fourth quarter 20-10 to coast home to a win.

Game MVP--Tubes Mullard, Houston guard, (18 points, 4 rebounds, 2 steals) and Zooch Managoogie, Houston forward, (18 points, 5 rebounds, 1 assist).
Top rebounder--Davis Mastersoy, Houston center, 9 rebounds.
Top assist man--Jinx Bluzeman, Houston guard, 5 assists.
Top steals man--Jinx Bluzeman, Houston guard, 2 steals.

Monday, May 17, 2010

SEASON 26 PLAYOFFS - Round 1, Game 1--At San Jose

SEASON 26 PLAYOFFS - Round 1, Game 1--At San Jose

San Jose 82, Charleston 65

The defending champion San Jose Fighting Amigos came out of the playoff gate swinging with a decisive 82-65 win over the Charleston Rebels in this rematch of last season’s finals.
Charleston led 24-17 after one quarter, but the league-leading defense of the Fighting Amigos took over from there.
Fresh off the best regular season in franchise history (9-1), San Jose was led by the game’s MVP, Sagittal Occlusal, who has captured every major award for which he was ever eligible. Occlusal had a game-high 23 points. Felipe Jazzman, who will retire after the playoffs, added 18 with three steals and point guard Funsy Van Slochum had five assists, two steals and 14 points.
Kippy Kinski led the way for Charleston with 20 points.

Game MVP--Sagittal Occlusal, 23 points, 3 rebounds, 3 assists, 2 blocked shots

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

MBA FINAL REGULAR SEASON 26

MBA FINAL REGULAR SEASON 26

EAST
1st-- Houston Iguanas 9-1
2nd- Charleston Rebels 7-3
3rd- Chicago Gale 4-6
4th- Milwaukee Greyhounds 3-7
Last -- Philadelphia Phobia 3-7

WEST
1st- San Jose Fighting Amigos 9-1
2nd- Dallas Demons 5-5
3rd - Sacramento River Dogs 4-6
4th - Oklahoma City Lariats 4-6
Last - Seattle Stampede 2-8

League MVP--Sagittal Occlusal, San Jose Fighting Amigos
Rookie of Year --Wes Montgomery, Sacramento River Dogs
New Hall of Famer--Momadou Zongo, Chicago

ALL League First Team
Guard--Benny Gumm, Charleston, 8th season, (2nd time)
Guard--Wes Montgomery, Sacramento, rookie
Center--Jake Spoon, Seattle, 4th season, (1st time)
Forward--Sagittal Occlusal, San Jose, 2nd season, (2nd time)
Forward--Stuffy Pipes, Dallas, rookie

Top Scorers
Wes Montgomery, Sacramento 21.4 ppg (rookie)
Stuffy Pipes, Dallas 20.3 (rookie)
Benny Gumm, Charleston 18.9
Horn E. Goatweed, Seattle 18.0
Sagittal Occlusal, San Jose 17.6

Top Rebounders
Titfer Tatt, Oklahoma City 6.2
Jonny Cockaroo, Charleston 5.5
Benny Gumm, Charleston 5.4

Tops in Assists
Gus McCrae, Chicago 4.8
Funsy Van Slochum, San Jose 4.0
Jinx Bluzemen, Houston 3.3

Blocked Shots
Jake Spoon, Seattle 38 (beats old Season 8 record of 35 by Charleston’s J.D. Jedreat)
Bisquiero Cutoff, Milwaukee 35
Max Payne, Dallas 33 (rookie)

Steals
Tubes Mallard, Houston 16
Felipe Jazzman, San Jose 15
Dutch Pettis, Milwaukee 13

Free Throwing
Major Hassle, Dallas 81.6 percent (31 made)
Max Payne, Dallas 84.4 (27) (rookie)
Willy Nilly, Oklahoma City 90.9 (20)

3-point Shooting
Horn E. Goatweed, Seattle 82.5 percent (33 made)
Wes Montgomery, Sacramento 65.0 (39) (rookie)
Nipple Rings Raguski, Seattle 87.5 (14)

MVP Voting
1. Sagittal Occlusal, San Jose 32.2
2. Benny Gumm, Charleston 31.8
3. Stuffy Pipes, Dallas 28.7 (rookie)

All-Rookie Team
Guard-Wes Montgomery, Sacramento
Guard-Sanuk, Oklahoma City
Center-Max Payne, Dallas
Forward-Stuffy Pipes, Dallas
Forward--Deafman Glance, Milwaukee


ROOKIES
This has to be considered the best rookie class ever, perhaps attributed to Tyler being present on rookie-making day. It is the first time since Season 3 (Uncle Bob Masterson of Philadelphia and Saban T. Hawk of San Jose) that two rookies made First Team All League and the first time ever two rookies finished one-two in league scoring. Rookies Stuffy Pipes and center Max Payne led the Dallas Demons to the playoffs with a spectacular second-half push. Pipes, Wes Montgomery and Milwaukee’s Stuffy Pipes were their team’s MVPs and led their teams in scoring. Almost unbelievably, Pipes came to Dallas after he was cut from the San Jose Fighting Amigos. (Really bad move).

SEASON SUMMARY
Amazingly, the only game Houston lost all year was the first game of the season when Tyler coached them and they got smoked by Charleston. Since then, the Iguanas have gone 9-0, despite having no All-Leaguers or noteworthy statistical leaders. This is a team without superstars that grinds out wins with a deep and talented bench and the best defense in the East.
Charleston’s Rebels return to the post-season for the second year in a row, while Chicago was totally disappointing, extending its non-playoff run to nine seasons, the longest currently in the MBA.
Milwaukee and Philadelphia, once mighty powers, finished fourth and last, respectively.
In the West, San Jose featured the stingiest defense in the league. The only team they lost to was Seattle, the last place team, which again had the best offense in the league, offset by the league’s worst defense.
Dallas, which was at one time 1-5 and left for dead, won its last four in a row, including a 77-64 victory in the last game of the season to clinch a playoff spot. They were led by rookies Stuffy Pipes (who missed three games to injury) and 7-foot defensive standout Max Payne. The Demons return to the playoffs after a one-year absence, giving them 9 playoff appearances in 11 seasons, the best run in history. They’ll clash again in the first round with Texas rivals Houston, who they have beaten the last three times they’ve met in the post-season..
Sacramento and Oklahoma City, forever on the playoff brink, needed to win their last game of the year to qualify for the post-season but neither could do it. Again.
PLAYOFF ACTION AWAITS.

Wednesday, January 6, 2010

SEASON 26 At The Half

SEASON 26 MBA
(at the half)
East Standings

1st--Houston Iguanas 4-1 (67.6 ppg, 65.6 oppg, 18.8 rpg, 4 division wins)
2nd -- Charleston Rebels 3-2 (75 ppg, 69.2 oppg, 23.6 rpg, 2 division wins)
3rd -- Philadelphia Phobia 3-2 (75.2 ppg, 77.8 oppg, 18 rpg, 1 division win)
4th-- Chicago Gale 2-3 (70.6 ppg, 68.8 oppg, 20.2 rpg, 2 division wins)
Last -- Milwaukee Greyhounds 1-4 (61.4 ppg, 66.7 oppg, 16 rpg, ) division wins)

West Standings

1st -- San Jose Fighting Amigos 5-0 (74.2 ppg, 62.4 oppg, 16.2 rpg, 3 division wins)
2nd-- Oklahoma City Lariats 3-2 (3-2, 79.4 ppg, 77.8 oppg, 24.2 rpg, 2 division wins)
3rd -- Sacramento River Dogs 2-3 (74.2 ppg, 75.4 oppg, 19.4 rpg, 2 division wins)
4th -- Seattle Stampede 1-4 (81.0 ppg, 85.8 oppg, 14.2 rpg, 1 division win)
Last -- Dallas Demons 1-4 (76.8 ppg, 86 oppg, 14.2 rpg, 1 division win)

Second Half Schedule

Chicago at Milwaukee
Dallas at Houston
Oklahoma City at Sacramento
San Jose at Seattle
Charleston at Philadelphia

San Jose at Sacramento
Seattle at Dallas
Charleston at Milwaukee
Sacramento at Oklahoma City
Philadelphia at Chicago

Houston at Chicago
Philadelphia at Charleston
Houston at Milwaukee
Dallas at Seattle
San Jose at Oklahoma City

Dallas at Oklahoma City
Philadelphia at Milwaukee
Chicago at Charleston
Houston at Sacramento
Seattle at San Jose
Philadelphia at Houston
Milwaukee at Chicago
Sacramento at Seattle
Oklahoma City at San Jose
Charleston at Dallas

Top Scorers

Wes Montgomery, Sacramento guard, 24.2 ppg (a rookie)
Stuffy Pipes, Dallas forward, 20.0 ppg (a rookie)
Benny Gumm, Charleston guard 19.6 ppg
Horn E. Goatweed, Seattle guard 18.2 ppg
Sanuk, Oklahoma City guard 18.0 ppg (a rookie)

News
Momadou Zongo, 3-point-shooting guard, now of Chicago, in his 12th season, makes the MBA Hall of Fame. He is the second active Hall of Famer along with Charleston center Jonny Cockaroo.

It is the year of the rookie...at the break, four, count 'em, four rookies are in the STARTING lineup for the West, by far the most ever to start. A fifth rookie is in the starting lineup for the East.