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Yao & Yi 2008-09

  • Thread starter Thread starter rikhardur2
  • Start date Start date
Yao monikers?

Yao monikers?

Is there an official Yao moniker? I'm designing a Mural in Chinatown (Manila, Philippines) that has Yao's towering graphic on it along with a caption that states his moniker or nickname.

I'm down to these choices and Google's not helping either.

Chairman Yao

The Dynasty

The Shanghai shake (based on RBK's suggestion on Yao's post up move consisting of shoulder to pivot shake.)

Just wanna share it, anymore moniker's I'm not aware of? (obviously) Additions are most welcome.:)
 
明王:Ming King(has special meaning in Chinese)
胡子明:Mustache Ming
明帝(皇)Ming Emperor
小巨人:little giant
品品:pin pin
...........

the last one is a somewhat derogatory term.
Indeed I think there are no less than 10 nicknames of Yao in China.
 
Is there an official Yao moniker? I'm designing a Mural in Chinatown (Manila, Philippines) that has Yao's towering graphic on it along with a caption that states his moniker or nickname.
Please, please, please take a high quality picture when you finish. I didn't know you were a graphic designer. I really want to see this!
I'm down to these choices and Google's not helping either.

"Chairman Yao" is probably the most common. I think Stevie Francis tried to call him "Dynasty." This guy says some basketball players like Yao just don't need nicknames.
 
Great commentary about Yao Ming:
For Yao, One and Done is No Longer An Option - by By Fran Blinebury, Yahoo! Sports, April 21, 2009

While his teammates were out on the floor hoisting jump shots, flicking in finger rolls, taking their final warm-ups for the start of the playoffs, Yao Ming was sitting on the Houston Rockets’ bench with his head bowed, his eyes closed and his arms crossed on his lap.

It was the last time he was silent all night.

Yao exploded like a hand grenade in a china [porcelain] shop, and now the conventional wisdom says it’s the Portland Trail Blazers who must pick up the broken pieces.

That’s because Yao did virtually anything he wanted against the defense of Joel Przybilla and Greg Oden. He shot a perfect 9-for-9 from the field, 6-for-6 from the free-throw line for his 24 points, grabbed nine rebounds and blocked two shots in a stunning and decisive 108-81 victory in the series opener.

He was confident. He was comfortable. He was ready to lead. He was not ready to celebrate.

“Get out of the first round,” Yao said. “Get out of the first round. Get out of the first round.”


It is the mantra in his head and the thorn in his side. For all of the attention that’s been given through the years to Tracy McGrady’s failure to win an NBA playoff series, Yao’s ledger is not quite as thick, but just as empty.

Yao was the Rockets’ center when they were whipped by the Los Angeles Lakers in 2004, blew a 2-0 lead to the Dallas Mavericks coming home to Houston in 2005 and leads of 2-0 and 3-2 to the Utah Jazz in 2007. Then he watched helplessly with a broken bone in his left foot as the Jazz eliminated the Rockets in the opening round again last season.

All of which is why Yao has often used the same response this spring to every question this side of: How’s the weather?

“Get out of the first round. Get out of the first round. Get out of the first round.”

Yao wears it like a hair shirt, an uncomfortable, irritating reminder that for all of his accomplishments in the NBA, he has not done the one thing that matters most – win in the postseason.

So there he sat on the Rockets’ bench as the clock counted down to the start of another playoff season, reflecting as a way of motivating himself.

“I just think what is important for me,” Yao said. “My wife, my family and these games. I think that’s how we win – mentally.”

It might as well be an anvil dangling from a thick chain around his neck for the way Yao feels the weight, which is just one more way that he is different from McGrady.

While T-Mac can jump and soar and perform amazing feats on a basketball court, Yao was simply born big. While McGrady – in his prime – could instinctively do things with a ball that others only dreamed about, Yao had to toil continuously to make that 7-6 frame into a seven-time All-Star center.

While T-Mac throws up his arms and nods toward his supporting casts when it’s pointed out that he is the only NBA scoring leader (two times) in league history to have never won a playoff series, Yao sees the Rockets’ shortcomings as his personal burden. While McGrady now spends his time during these playoffs in Chicago rehabbing his left knee that underwent microfracture surgery in February, Yao sat powerlessly and painfully on the bench for every game last season following surgery on his broken left foot.

Two years ago, before entering the playoffs against Utah, McGrady proclaimed, “It’s all on me.” Then after the Jazz won the series, he shrugged and said, “It was never on me.” On that night one year ago when the Rockets were eliminated in Utah, Yao sat on a training table inside the locker room with tears running down his face because he could not help.

It is a burden that Yao carries representing two vastly different constituencies and cultures that both expect the same high level of success. He literally stands head and shoulders above the other celebrity symbols of China’s rising power in the 21st century. He is constantly aware of the weight of 1.5 billion countrymen resting on his shoulders. Yao also knows the Rockets made him the No. 1 overall pick in the 2002 NBA draft with the expectation that he would carry on the franchise’s MVP tradition at center in the footsteps of Moses Malone and Hakeem Olajuwon, both of whom carried their teams to the NBA Finals.

At 28, now finishing his seventh season in the NBA, Yao understands that time and careers have a way of slipping by quickly and he hears the seconds and the seasons ticking loudly inside his head.

“You only get so many years and so many chances,” he said. “I am tired of waiting for the next year.”

So even in another season when the Rockets suffered another crippling injury, there was more resolve than regret in the response of Yao. Who would have believed that Ron Artest could prove to be a better Robin to Yao’s Batman than McGrady? Who would have thought the Rockets could roll on to a 22-8 conclusion to the regular season after T-Mac shut it down? Who could have envisioned such a dominating start to the playoffs?

Perhaps the huge man sitting on the bench with his head bowed, his eyes closed and his mind on one thing:

“Get out of the first round. Get out of the first round. Get out of the first round.”


It’s Yao Ming’s mantra and his millstone.
 
Portland 107 Houston 103

Portland 107 Houston 103

Yao was held to 11 points on 3 of 6 shooting but made 5 out of 5 charities. He also hauled down 8 rebounds.
 
Click the link to read the full commentary.
Yao Helps Lift Rockets - by John Ludden, Yahoo! Sports, May 5, 2009

...So as Yao lay on the court late Monday, his face filling with pain, his Rockets only five minutes from beating the Los Angeles Lakers for the biggest upset of these playoffs, Morey had reason to fear the worst. They all did, and that’s why what happened next says something about these Rockets, too.

This time, they didn’t stay down.

These aren’t T-Mac’s Rockets anymore. They know how to take a punch, and Monday night’s 100-92 series-opening victory over the Lakers proved that more than ever.

Having finally escaped the first round for the first time in a dozen years, supposedly just happy to be in the Western Conference semifinals, the Rockets outplayed the heavily favored Lakers through three quarters. After L.A. rallied to take the lead with about eight minutes left in the game, the Rockets answered with their own run – only to watch Yao collapse in a collision with Kobe Bryant...

...Yao stayed on the floor for a few minutes before being helped to his feet. He took one step, nearly collapsed, took another, and nearly went down again before finally limping off the court toward the locker room. He never made it.

Yao stopped in the tunnel, squatted to flex his knee, then pushed himself against the wall to stretch some more. Within a few minutes, the Rockets looked up to see their giant center walking back toward them.

“It was like Rocky coming back out there,” Adelman said.

Yao promptly floored the Lakers with a 20-foot jump shot. He would go on to add six more free throws, scoring eight of his 28 points in the final 3½ minutes to keep the Lakers at bay.

Afterward, Yao sounded embarrassed about the scare he gave the Rockets, refusing to call his sore knee an injury. Bryant had collided with him, banging knee on knee hard enough that Yao told the team’s medical staff it felt like a hammer hitting him. But he also knew he wasn’t seriously hurt. Once the Rockets – Morey included – saw the replay on the overhead scoreboard, their own fears melted.

“Nothing to worry about,” Yao said.

With the Rockets, there’s always reason to worry. Nothing has ever been simple for them. Midway through last season, they looked like the West’s top challenger to the Lakers but then lost Yao to a stress fracture in his left foot. Two seasons ago, Yao missed six weeks after fracturing the bone under the same knee he hurt Monday.

Yao held up well this season, missing only five games, but his teammates couldn’t say the same...

...Once McGrady declared himself done, Adelman made sure of this much: The Rockets would grow around Yao. He knew they would miss McGrady’s playmaking skills in the fourth quarter, as they have at times. But he also knew these young Rockets would defend and play hard...

The Rockets delivered another on Monday. Aaron Brooks helped splinter the Lakers’ defense. Artest shot well enough to score 21 points. Battier hounded Bryant long enough, Barry said, to know “what flavor of gum he was chewing.” Bryant scored 32 points but needed 31 shots to get them.

Battier sets the tone for these Rockets, as much in the locker room as on the court. After Lakers guard Sasha Vujacic cracked him with an elbow, Battier walked off the floor with blood streaming down his face. He needed four stitches to close the gash over his eye. Earlier, Bryant had tried to hogtie him during a scramble for the ball.

The Rockets had lost all four of their previous games with the Lakers this season, collapsing in the final quarter of the past three. After Monday, however, it was the Lakers who were answering questions about their toughness. Andrew Bynum played only six minutes in the first half because of foul trouble. Pau Gasol delivered an uninspired game that looked like it had come straight from last season’s NBA Finals.

...Jackson didn’t seem all that worried about his team’s performance...

... The Rockets walked into their building and beat them, playing like they belonged on this stage, like they didn’t know they aren’t supposed to win this series.

“‘Underdog,’ that’s a word I just learned a couple days ago,” Yao said.

He smiled.

“It’s like NBA say: ‘Where amazing happens.’ ”

For one night, at least, amazing happened. Yao limped back into the game and into the series. Maybe these Rockets aren’t so fragile anymore.

And maybe everyone should feel a little less certain how this is going to end.
 
I just heard on ABC that Yao's foot is broken. :( I can't find an article on the internet yet...
 
yes his broken would approximetly 12 weeks to heal yao must take abreak in the offseason and come back because he is not taking any breaks and in the series against the lakers he was playing most of the game and playing every year with china in the summer thats very hard for player in his 226 cm not getting injured
 
I just heard on ABC that Yao's foot is broken. :( I can't find an article on the internet yet...

Here are some:

http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/sports/6416739.html

“Yao Ming had an initial test taken in the early-morning hours on Saturday following the game,” Rockets team physician Dr. Tom Clanton said in a statement. “The original diagnosis of the left ankle sprain was based on the results of that test. Further diagnostic procedures performed later in the day revealed a hairline fracture on the top of his left foot. In order for the bone to heal properly, Yao will need to immobilize the foot by wearing a walking boot. No surgery is required, and he should be able to resume his regular workout routine sometime between the next eight to 12 weeks.

http://sports.yahoo.com/nba/news?slug=ap-rockets-yao&prov=ap&type=lgns

HOUSTON (AP)—Yao Ming(notes) will miss the rest of the playoffs because of a broken left foot.

The Houston center limped off the court late in the Los Angeles Lakers’ 108-94 victory over the Rockets on Friday night. Yao missed Saturday’s practice to get treatment and the team said the 7-foot-6 All-Star would be re-evaluated on Sunday.

But the Rockets announced later Saturday night that further examination of Yao’s injury revealed a hairline fracture. The Rockets say Yao will need 8-12 weeks to recover, though no surgery is required.

The Rockets and Lakers play Game 4 of their Western Conference semifinal series on Sunday. The Lakers lead the series 2-1.

Yao had 19 points and 14 rebounds in Friday’s loss, his sixth straight double-double. But he was noticeably limping by the fourth quarter and finally hobbled off the court in the final minute, with the outcome decided.

Yao has been the focal point of the Rockets’ offense since Tracy McGrady(notes) had season-ending knee surgery in February, and Houston finished 21-8 without McGrady. Yao has been plagued by serious leg and foot injuries in each of the previous three seasons, but played in 77 games in 2008-09.

His left foot has given him problems before.

Just four games before the end of the 2005-06 regular season, Yao broke the fifth metatarsal in the foot in Utah and missed the playoffs after surgery. In February 2008, Yao sustained a stress fracture in his foot and missed the postseason again, returning in time to play for host China in the Olympics.

After the Rockets’ practice on Saturday, Ron Artest(notes) said Yao told him that he’d be ready for Game 4. However, coach Rick Adelman prepared his team as if Yao wouldn’t be available.

“We have to play to our strengths,” Adelman said. “Everybody has to play to their strengths and understand what they can do to help us win. You do it collectively. There’s strength in numbers, and that’s what we have to understand.”

The Rockets went 3-2 without Yao during the regular season and 19-8 without him in 2007-08. A total of 12 players missed 179 games for Houston this season, and the Rockets still managed to go 53-29.

“We’ve won without people all year long,” Adelman said. “It’s just one more case. You can’t dwell on who’s not here. You have to dwell on who is here. These guys truly believe, if we go out and play the way we’re capable of playing, we can win a game.”
Play Ball! — Sign up for Yahoo! Sports Fantasy Baseball '09 to
 
U3144P6T12D4373373F168DT20090511052613.jpg


Rockets win game 4 without Yao Ming, 99-87.
 
http://www.netsdaily.com/?p=7917

Yi Jianlian is back in China, to “hang” with his parents and take a break from basketball, his first in nearly two years. By August, he’ll be back on the court at the FIBA Asia Games. In spite of his late season fall-off, the Nets are confident he’ll be worth the wait. Rod Thorn, Lawrence Frank, his best friend on the team, Bobby Simmons, and Yi himself all believe his best days are ahead
 
Rockets win game 4 without Yao Ming, 99-87.
I'm very happy that the Rockets won, but I'm still pessimistic about their chances.
Lakers in a Worry-Free Zone -- May 11, 2009, by Johnny Ludden, Yahoo! Sports

...the Rockets plowed the Lakers on Sunday afternoon, routing them 99-87 in a game in which they led by as many 29 points. And, yes, they did so without Yao Ming(notes), Tracy McGrady(notes) or Dikembe Mutombo(notes). With Ron Artest(notes) missing 15 shots. With a starting center who needs a booster seat to reach Yao’s dinner table...

The Rockets are wounded, hungry, filling with belief. On Saturday night they learned Yao would be shelved for the remainder of the playoffs because of a hairline fracture in his left foot. Then they did what they’ve done for the second half of this season: They played hard.

“We were joking that everyone but us got the memo that we weren’t supposed to show up,” Rockets forward Shane Battier(notes) said.

The Lakers should still be heavy favorites to advance; teams often play with a renewed purpose after losing a star player only to run low on fuel a game or two later. But that’s not the point. With a chance to take control of the series, the Lakers couldn’t even be bothered to compete. They didn’t close out on shooters. They watched the Rockets beat them to the ball. They even allowed Artest to comically throw a 60-foot inbounds lob to Aaron Brooks(notes) for an alley-oop basket at the third-quarter buzzer.

...

“Are we embarrassed?” Jackson said, miffed that Los Angeles Times columnist T.J. Simers even suggested the possibility. “No, we’re not embarrassed. Houston played great. Give them some [bleeping] credit.”

The Rockets deserve credit, bleeping or otherwise.
Brooks delivered an electric performance, splintering the Lakers for a career-best 34 points. Battier helped limit Kobe Bryant(notes) to 15 points while scoring 23 himself, 11 of which came in the game’s first six minutes. Chuck Hayes(notes), all 6-foot-6 of him, contributed nine rebounds and four steals while starting in place of Yao.

...

With Yao no longer clogging the lane, the Rockets freed Brooks to attack off screen-and-rolls. Pick-and-roll defense isn’t a new problem for the Lakers. One year after their embarrassing Finals loss to the Boston Celtics, they continue to view defending as occasional option rather than necessity.

...Still, it’s one thing for the silly national media to portray Yao’s loss as an end-all, be-all moment for the Rockets. It’s another for the Lakers to also treat it as such. These Rockets have fought through adversity all season. They don’t plan to stop.

...
 
CHN – Yao looks on the bright side after another frustrating end to NBA season

HOUSTON (NBA) - China's Yao Ming is taking the latest setback in his injury-riddled career in his stride.


Houston's 7ft 6in center battled back from a stress fracture in his foot to play at last summer's Olympics.

This season, after leading the Rockets past Portland in the first round of the NBA's Western Conference play-offs, Yao was engaged in a thrilling semi-final showdown with the Los Angeles Lakers when a hairline fracture found in his left foot on Saturday brought a premature end to his campaign.

Despite having had four of his seasons either interrupted or cut short by bone injuries, Yao does not think his career will always be limited by fitness problems.

"I don’t want to go that far," Yao said.

"I think about next season and playing in the future.

"All I can do is the right training, the right rehab, and play the game the best I can and stay with it."

Rockets team physician Dr. Tom Clanton admits that Yao is always at risk of injuries when considering Yao's size, "the biomechanics of his foot" and his history of injuries.

But Clanton said: "He will get through this and be completely fine. I believe he will have a long career and play many, many more years."

Yao believes last year's injury was more worrying.

"This time is more like I sprained my ankle and something happened to it," Yao said.

"It is a small fracture on top of my bone. At least there is no need for surgery."

The Rockets surprised everyone by overcoming Yao's injury to beat Los Angeles and level their series at 2-2.

Yao will have to be a spectator the rest of the way, though.

"Missing the rest of the series (is) frustrating, but you have to be positive," Yao said.

"It’s better than last year."

Houston coach Rick Adelman says the big man has all of his sympathy.

"I feel really bad for him," Adelman said in the Houston Chronicle.

"He’s played his tail off this year, played 77 games, got us through the first round, to have this happen now.

"The good thing is in two months’ time, he’s going to be OK. That bodes well for the future for us. You got to feel for him."
http://www.fiba.com/pages/eng/fc/news/lateNews/p/newsid/30166/arti.html
 
Season now over for Yao Ming, as the Lakers defeat the Rockets in Game 7.

U3144P6T12D4385545F44DT20090518060534.jpg


U3144P6T12D4385576F44DT20090518062820.jpg


Despite Yao Ming being injured, I think he had a solid season and of course he was able to get out of the first round without T-Mac. Another accomplishment for Yao as he made the All NBA 2nd Team once again. It's also a plus that Yao Ming doesn't have to compete for the CNT this summer, as I think I would only prefer to see Yao compete in the Olympics (and if really needed the World Championships).
 
http://www.nydailynews.com/sports/basketball/nets/2009/05/16/2009-05-16_nets_looking_to_move_yi.html

Coming off a season when he was demoted from the Nets' starting lineup to the bench because of his lack of production, Yi Jianlian might have played his final game in New Jersey.

Team sources say the Nets are interested in trying to deal the 7-foot small forward they acquired from Milwaukee last summer for Richard Jefferson. "They're talking about moving him,'' said a source.

Yi's struggles to improve his defense, rebounding and passing under Lawrence Frank didn't sit well with GM Kiki Vandeweghe, who engineered the deal with the Bucks. Yi averaged 8.6 points and 5.3 rebounds in 23 minutes per game, but was often privately criticized for looking only to shoot.

Meanwhile, in an effort to further save money, one plan has the Nets cutting their assistant coaches' salaries from $1 million combined to only $500,000.
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http://vod.cctv.com/html/media/sportsscene/2009/05/sportsscene_300_20090523_1.shtml

In an interview with Chinese TV, Yi Jianlian admits he’s failed to improve on “his personal shortcomings” since joining the Nets, saying that prepping for last summer’s Beijing Olympics had taken up much of his time. Yi also admitted the NBA is “a big challenge for me”. Meanwhile Lawrence Frank told a Chinese website Yi will work this summer are improving his upper body and hand strength.

Lawrence Frank also said in a interview that the Yi trade rumors are untrue:

http://video.sina.com.cn/sports/k/v/2009-05-21/154525422.shtml
 
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