BRUINS’ PAILLE TO HAVE FACIAL SURGERY AFTER BEING HIT BY PUCK

Boston Bruins forward Daniel Paille is going under the knife.

The 27-year-old winger is set to undergo facial surgery on Wednesday after taking a puck to the face in the third period against the New York Islanders on Monday night.

Bruins general manager Peter Chiarelli released details of the injury in a statement on the team’s website on Tuesday afternoon.

Paille is currently listed as day-to-day with a broken nose and facial lacerations that resulted from the incident. The Steve Staios shot that hit Paille made contact with his visor first before cutting his face and nose. He stayed down on the ice immediately following the injury but was eventually able to leave under his own power.

Dressing for all of Boston’s 13 games this season, Paille has two goals and a minus-one rating.

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Local fan take: Eagles would benefit from end of lockout before draft

The Philadelphia Eagles are in an interesting position. As it stands, the NFL and the players are in the midst of a big legal battle. A judge will decide in the next couple weeks if the lockout will end as a result of the decertification of the NFLPA. I live in Philadelphia and have been an Eagles fan my entire life. Perhaps more than any team, the Eagles stand the most to gain by having this lockout end prior to the NFL Draft. The reason for that is Kevin Kolb(notes).
I am not endorsing a trade of Kolb. In fact, I like Kolb and believe he could have been the quarterback of the future here in Philadelphia. However, this is Michael Vick’s(notes) team for now. As such, the Eagles are likely to trade Kolb. After all, he deserves a real chance to start. Kolb is in high demand due to his experience and upside. There are many teams who are seeking a quarterback for the 2011 NFL season. Among those teams are Arizona, Minnesota, Buffalo, San Francisco, and Jacksonville among others. All have high draft picks would be appealing to the Eagles.
Of course, a lockout means the Eagles cannot conduct any business deals. Therefore, there is a chance they could miss the window of dealing Kolb for a high first round draft pick. That would be huge this season. The 2011 NFL Draft is loaded with defensive line prospects, an area the Eagles are sorely lacking. The Eagles could also benefit from an elite player in the secondary. This draft is all about defense, and the Eagles could use the high draft pick to rebuild an area that they desperately need help.
If the lockout persists through the NFL Draft, there would be no real reason to trade Kolb. The Eagles have the biggest trade chip in the NFL, but it might not mean anything. If the lockout ends, the Eagles will likely be able to take their pick among a handful of teams who want Kolb. That is why they have the most to gain by the lockout ending. As a football fan, I just want the whole thing to be over with. As an Eagles fan, I want the whole thing to be over with even faster. If the Eagles are going to lose Kolb, this is the time to do it.
Note: This article was written by a Yahoo! contributor. Sign up here to start publishing your own sports content.
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NBA PM: Can Magic Play Sans Howard?

For the second time in his seven-year NBA career, Magic center Dwight Howard is averaging 37.7 MPG, which means that he’s on the floor for roughly 80% of every game in which he plays.
That other 20% may not sound like much now, but the playoffs are rapidly approaching and Orlando no longer has Marcin Gortat to come off the bench. So how can the Magic get some positive minutes while their best player sits?
“It’s a joint effort,” reserve swingman Quentin Richardson told HOOPSWORLD. “We all have to go in there and try and get rebounds and protect the paint and do things like that so it’s definitely a joint effort from everybody.
“For the most part, it’s crazy, he’s playing a lot of minutes,” Richardson continued. “There’s not a whole lot of time he’s not out there dominating the inside and keeping himself out of foul trouble and staying on the court. It’s fortunate we don’t have to worry about that a great deal.”
But Orlando may have to worry about it in the near future. Coach Stan Van Gundy cut Howard’s minutes down to around 32 or 33 a game in the month prior to the playoffs last year and will likely do so again this season. And even when Howard is logging major minutes in the playoffs, the time he spends off the court may very well determine the outcome of the game. Superman has to sit sometime.
The two most integral replacements are sharpshooting power forward Ryan Anderson and starting power forward Brandon Bass, who, despite standing 6-8 in sneakers, slides to the block in Howard’s absence.
“We need to go a little harder and focus on the rebounding because when Dwight’s in the game, he’s a rebounding machine, and obviously on the defensive end, we need to focus more on the rotation,” Anderson told HOOPSWORLD. “Me and Brandon Bass playing the 5, we’re not so used to that. We’re used to playing the four.
“So we’re just focusing in and trying to come to shootaround ready, come to the game prepared,” Anderson continued. “Personnel is big. We need to just know every big man on the court. I think we’ve done a pretty good job of just focusing on the things that Dwight does when he’s on the court—the rebounding, the defense, the rotation—things like that.”
Typically when Howard exits, Bass slides down to the block on offense while Anderson sets up shot in the corner. Orlando may be playing without a true center in those circumstances, but they’ve been able to steal a decent amount of minutes with this lineup. In fact, in the 53.7 minutes that Anderson and Bass have teamed with Gilbert Arenas, J.J. Redick and Jason Richardson, the Magic have rebounded 53.5% of missed shots while scoring 1.13 points per possession and yielding .93 points per defensive possession (+21 on the season), according to 82games.com’s latest tabulations. It’s not easy, but the Magic are finding creative ways to play without Howard for few minutes per night.
“I try to,” Bass told HOOPSWORLD when asked if he can replace Howard. “It’s tough. When Dwight’s not out there, it’s tough for us. We try to set a lot of pick and rolls, hit me for the rolls and hopefully the defense will collapse and we can get open shots.
“Every day we’ve been trying to get better at improving offensively and defensively, mainly on the defense,” he continued. “Like I said, when Dwight’s out of the game, we run a lot of pick and rolls we all have to make small plays. I basically roll. I post up when I get opportunities.”
Both Anderson and Bass have given Van Gundy plenty to smile about. The former has hit 38.7% f his 3-point attempts this season and is grabbing 5.4 RPG in only 21.7 minutes of action per night while the latter is making 50.6% of his field goals and scoring 11.1 PPG. Most importantly, Bass has been so good at imitating Howard for short stretches that Anderson hasn’t had to alter his approach when he checks in.
“I think it’s pretty similar because Brandon’s a low-post guy on the offensive end, so my role doesn’t really change,” Anderson said. “Either way, our offense stays the same. I think with Brandon, he can spread out on the perimeter too. He can pick and pop. I think it’s pretty tough to guard us either way—when Dwight’s in the game or when he’s not because [Bass] is a versatile big guy.”
Of course, the onus of replacing Howard doesn’t just fall on Bass. Over the season’s final few weeks several players—possibly forward Earl Clark—will have to step in to give the big man some rest. And the better the Magic are at doing that in March and April, the easier it will be in May and June.
Don’t forget, Howard has already been suspended one game for accumulating 16 technical fouls (Orlando lost to Portland that night) and he could face more suspensions for his 18th and 20th violations. The Magic have a firm hold on the fourth seed in the playoffs, but seven such infractions in the postseason could put Howard in street clothes at a most inopportune time.  That’s why it’s imperative that Orlando hammer out a firm Howardless strategy now, before the stakes get too high.
“I’m sure that’s something will have to safeguard and work on,” Richardson concluded. “But that’s why this is a joint effort. Everyone needs to put in the work to do this.”
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Beware of ‘Fragile’ Flying Objects
Hawks coach Larry Drew said his team is “a little fragile right now” before Wednesday’s loss to the 76ers, the Associated Press reported. Atlanta is 7-14 in their last 21 games, largely because they’ve been playing teams like Miami, Denver, Chicago and Philadelphia.
But tomorrow they play the lowly Nets, which is going to be a pretty depressing test for Hawks fans. Either Atlanta pulls it together and creams an inferior opponent that could be without it’s best player (Deron Williams), or the season will continue to erode in front of Drew’s eyes.
The Hawks hold a two and a half game lead over the 76ers for the fifth seed, but that is of little consequence. Whether Atlanta plays Boston, Miami or Orlando in the first round, they’re going to lose unless they make some major changes.
One ominous sign for Hawks fans is be point differential. Of the top eight teams in the East, all but two have a positive point differential. Those two are the eighth-seeded Pacers, and, surprisingly the Atlanta Hawks who have been outscored this season by 0.4 points per game. For a team that started the year 6-0, they’re suddenly surrendering without much of a fight.
Drew believes the problem may have to do with heart, because the Hawks haven’t been showing much of them when the other team starts scoring.
“It’s something I’ve been preaching it seems like every day this month, about how to respond to runs,” Drew told reporters. “This game is a game of runs. Teams make runs. You make runs. You respond to it and we just don’t respond to it well at all. It looks like we lose interest, lose confidence. We just don’t handle it well.”
All-Star guard Joe Johnson doesn’t have a much better assessment either.
“We’re a team that sits here in this locker room and talk all the time about what we want to do and what we need to do,” he told the AP. “Then we go out on the floor and do things that are out of our character or that’s not within ourselves. It makes us all look bad. Until we get that part of the game down, then we’re going to continue to look bad.”
The Hawks play the Nets Saturday night at 7 p.m. on NBA TV.
Check Out: Kentucky vs. Ohio State from Newark, NJ
The top-seeded Buckeyes have always had the inferior basketball program in their Ohio River rivalry with Kentucky Wildcats, but things are different in the postseason.
Oddly enough, UK has never beaten OSU in the NCAA Tournament (0-5). Do the Wildcats have enough to do that this year?
Check out this budding regional rivalry at 9:45 P.M. on CBS.
FYI—My Twitter handle has changed to @alexraskinNBA.
Check Out HOOPSWORLD’s March Madness Coverage
Make sure you check out our NCAA Tournament coverage. Yannis Koutroupis, Luke Byrnes, Tommy Dee, and Coach Anthony Macri have the scoop on the latest happenings.
More Twitter:  HOOPSWORLD has launched a new Twitter module where we will be releasing more breaking news and insider-type information via Twitter. Make sure you are following all of our guys to insure you are getting the very latest from our team: @stevekylerNBA, @AlexKennedyNBA, @jfleminghoops, @TheRocketGuy, @EricPincus, @joelbrigham, @alexraskinNBA, @stephenlitel, @TommyBeer and @YannisHW.
NBA Chats:  Susan Bible will host her weekly NBA Chat tomorrow at 11am, if you want to get an early start. You can always find the next chat here: Upcoming NBA Chats.
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Lakers look to stay hot

EL SEGUNDO, Calif. — When Shakespeare wrote “Beware the Ides of March,” he certainly didn’t have the Los Angeles Lakers in mind.
The Lakers spent the ides idle on Tuesday, taking an off day with their next game not coming until Friday at home against the Minnesota Timberwolves. Even though they were inactive, the Lakers made a move in the standings and took a half game lead for the No. 2 seed in the West over Dallas after the Mavericks’ 104-101 loss to the Portland Trail Blazers on Tuesday.
Los Angeles will play 10 of its final 14 games of the regular season at home as opposed to Dallas, which plays eight of its final 15 games on the road. Things are set up in such a way that the Lakers could hold on to the No. 2 seed and never relinquish it again over the final month of the season.
More on the Lakers
For more news, notes and analysis of the Lakers, check out the Land O’ Lakers blog from the Kamenetzky Brothers. Blog
“We’d like to be able to do that, but other people are going to have a hand in trying to stifle that and obviously we have Dallas another time before this season is over,” said Lakers head coach Phil Jackson. “But we have a number of very good opponents as we go through the rest of our season so we’re just trying to stay focused on one game at a time and not get to 14 games out right now.”
While 10 of the Lakers’ final 14 games are at home, 10 are also against teams with records .500 or better as of Wednesday, including two games against Portland (with one on the road), a game against Oklahoma City, a game against San Antonio and a rubber match against Dallas to finish out the month of March.
Pau Gasol expects Dallas to challenge Los Angeles for the No. 2 spot all the way until the finish.
“That will keep us on the edge,” Gasol said. “We didn’t have that last year. We didn’t have that motivation as far as nobody chasing us or chasing somebody in front of us and this year it’s not that way.”
Whether you look at it like a chase or simply recognize the Lakers are on a roll, March has been pretty remarkable for the Lakers thus far. They are 6-1 so far this month and with six more consecutive home games to finish it off before the calendar turns to April, they are eyeing a 12-1 month.
“We want to win every game on this home stretch,” said Andrew Bynum after L.A. beat Orlando on Monday. “That’s what we’re looking at. We have to win every game.”
In the Lakers’ version of March Madness, the month has traditionally been a point in the season when Jackson’s teams have found their groove. In the five seasons that Jackson has gone on to win a title with the Lakers, his teams have gone 58-22 (.725) in the month of March. Jackson’s overall winning percentage as a coach is .697.
“It’s spring time in the Rockies,” Jackson joked was the reason for the March success before offering a better explanation.
“We always talk about the fact that you got to save some energy and have a build-up at the end of the season,” Jackson said. “You can’t do that with a team that’s not playoff-bound or championship-quality, then you got to push them at the start. This team understands that this is the time to push it and to get really ready for what remains of this season and the postseason. It’s an opportunity for us, it’s remarkable and we treasure it.”
If the Lakers continue to win, they will not only strengthen their hold on the No. 2 seed in the West, but vault ahead of the teams that have better records in the East. Before Wednesday’s games, the Lakers trailed the East’s No. 1 team, Chicago, by a game and the East’s No. 2 team, Boston, by a half game in the overall standings.
While finishing the season as the No. 2 team in the West and ahead of every team in the East would assure the Lakers home-court advantage in every round of the playoffs except a conference finals matchup against San Antonio, Jackson said that home court takes a backseat to health when it comes to the Lakers’ priorities.
“[Home court] sits behind the health and well-being of your players,” Jackson said. “You have to be healthy and we’re trying to get guys there. We have a great opportunity during this period of time in March to do that. Our guys are tuned into the fact that our practices are going to be at home, they’ll have home-cooked meals and [sleep in their own] beds. Now’s the time for us to get really healthy as a team and have a lot of energy coming out [of the month].”
Dave McMenamin covers the Lakers for ESPNLosAngeles.com. Follow him on Twitter.

EL SEGUNDO, Calif. — When Shakespeare wrote “Beware the Ides of March,” he certainly didn’t have the Los Angeles Lakers in mind.
The Lakers spent the ides idle on Tuesday, taking an off day with their next game not coming until Friday at home against the Minnesota Timberwolves. Even though they were inactive, the Lakers made a move in the standings and took a half game lead for the No. 2 seed in the West over Dallas after the Mavericks’ 104-101 loss to the Portland Trail Blazers on Tuesday.
Los Angeles will play 10 of its final 14 games of the regular season at home as opposed to Dallas, which plays eight of its final 15 games on the road. Things are set up in such a way that the Lakers could hold on to the No. 2 seed and never relinquish it again over the final month of the season.
More on the Lakers
For more news, notes and analysis of the Lakers, check out the Land O’ Lakers blog from the Kamenetzky Brothers. Blog
“We’d like to be able to do that, but other people are going to have a hand in trying to stifle that and obviously we have Dallas another time before this season is over,” said Lakers head coach Phil Jackson. “But we have a number of very good opponents as we go through the rest of our season so we’re just trying to stay focused on one game at a time and not get to 14 games out right now.”
While 10 of the Lakers’ final 14 games are at home, 10 are also against teams with records .500 or better as of Wednesday, including two games against Portland (with one on the road), a game against Oklahoma City, a game against San Antonio and a rubber match against Dallas to finish out the month of March.
Pau Gasol expects Dallas to challenge Los Angeles for the No. 2 spot all the way until the finish.
“That will keep us on the edge,” Gasol said. “We didn’t have that last year. We didn’t have that motivation as far as nobody chasing us or chasing somebody in front of us and this year it’s not that way.”
Whether you look at it like a chase or simply recognize the Lakers are on a roll, March has been pretty remarkable for the Lakers thus far. They are 6-1 so far this month and with six more consecutive home games to finish it off before the calendar turns to April, they are eyeing a 12-1 month.
“We want to win every game on this home stretch,” said Andrew Bynum after L.A. beat Orlando on Monday. “That’s what we’re looking at. We have to win every game.”
In the Lakers’ version of March Madness, the month has traditionally been a point in the season when Jackson’s teams have found their groove. In the five seasons that Jackson has gone on to win a title with the Lakers, his teams have gone 58-22 (.725) in the month of March. Jackson’s overall winning percentage as a coach is .697.
“It’s spring time in the Rockies,” Jackson joked was the reason for the March success before offering a better explanation.
“We always talk about the fact that you got to save some energy and have a build-up at the end of the season,” Jackson said. “You can’t do that with a team that’s not playoff-bound or championship-quality, then you got to push them at the start. This team understands that this is the time to push it and to get really ready for what remains of this season and the postseason. It’s an opportunity for us, it’s remarkable and we treasure it.”
If the Lakers continue to win, they will not only strengthen their hold on the No. 2 seed in the West, but vault ahead of the teams that have better records in the East. Before Wednesday’s games, the Lakers trailed the East’s No. 1 team, Chicago, by a game and the East’s No. 2 team, Boston, by a half game in the overall standings.
While finishing the season as the No. 2 team in the West and ahead of every team in the East would assure the Lakers home-court advantage in every round of the playoffs except a conference finals matchup against San Antonio, Jackson said that home court takes a backseat to health when it comes to the Lakers’ priorities.
“[Home court] sits behind the health and well-being of your players,” Jackson said. “You have to be healthy and we’re trying to get guys there. We have a great opportunity during this period of time in March to do that. Our guys are tuned into the fact that our practices are going to be at home, they’ll have home-cooked meals and [sleep in their own] beds. Now’s the time for us to get really healthy as a team and have a lot of energy coming out [of the month].”
Dave McMenamin covers the Lakers for ESPNLosAngeles.com. Follow him on Twitter.

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NFL, NFLPA get 24-hour extension for negotiations

The NFL and its players union have been granted a 24-hour extension to negotiate a new collective bargaining agreement.

CAPTIONBy Rob Carr, Getty Images

“To all the fans who dig our game, we appreciate your patience as we work through this, NFLPA executive director DeMaurice Smith said in a remark directed to NFL fans as he exited the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service building Thursday.

“We’re going to keep working. We want to play football.”

The current CBA was set to expire at midnight as Thursday changed to Friday and any number of outcomes could have followed.

“A day full of hard work, lot of good discussions,” said NFL lead negotiator Jeff Pash while praising the impact of federal mediators on the talks. “We’re looking forward to another day of discussions and keep at it as long as it takes.

“A lot of issues — it’s complicated.”

NFL Network’s Jason LaCanfora reported that tonight’s extension could be a precursor to a week-long extension.

“I don’t see how we can be that close right now unless somebody is going to pull a rabbit out of the hat; I just don’t see it,” said Redskins defensive end Vonnie Holliday, a player rep.

The sides participated in their 10th day of federal mediation Thursday, trying to stave off the league’s first work st0ppage since 1987.

Now the league and union have at least an extra day to strike a deal while the owners weigh the merits of a lockout, and the players ponder decertification and subsequent antitrust litigation.

If the players opt to go to court, they would do so with QBs Tom Brady, Drew Brees and Peyton Manning leading them as plaintiffs.

The current impasse has put free agency on hold — teams made a flurry of restricted tender offers on their players Thursday, tags which may or may not ultimately prove relevant — and will impact everything from offseason workouts to the health care of players long before it potentially jeopardizes the 2011 regular season.

Even President Barack Obama offered his two cents Thursday.

“I’m a big football fan,” he said, “but I also think that for an industry that’s making $9 billion a year in revenue, they can figure out how to divide it up in a sensible way and be true to their fans, who are the ones who obviously allow for all the money that they’re making.

“So my expectation and hope is that they will resolve it without me intervening, because it turns out I’ve got a lot of other stuff to do.”

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Wade’s Weekend of Activity Gives Him Time to Relax

At an appearance at a shopping mall here over the N.B.A. All-Star weekend, one boy asked him who the Heat’s best player was. Wade responded diplomatically and deferentially, mentioning LeBron James, Chris Bosh, himself and of course, the concept of team. “It doesn’t work without any one of us,” Wade said. “All you can say is, it’s Micky Arison’s team. He’s the owner of the Miami Heat.”

The off-season spectacle Wade shared with James and Bosh is now the in-season reality. For stretches before the All-Star break, Miami shredded doubts about whether its overwhelming talent could blend into a unified team. On other, rarer, occasions, the Heat wobbled, especially when matched against the proven Boston Celtics. Wade is already aware that there will be no real victories in the regular season, the Heat’s 82-game version of Catch-22.

“If we lose games, it was a bad decision,” Wade said. “If we win 20 out of 21, it’s ‘Well, they are supposed to do that.’ ”

For a weekend here, the three players who plotted to change the N.B.A. could exhale in the moments between the game, practices and media appearances. Wade’s two young sons, Zaire and Zion, accompanied him to their first All-Star Game.

It was Wade’s seventh and the weekend is nearly a routine, a schedule packed a little too tightly with hurried appearances, handshakes and smiles with some basketball peppered in. He helped refurbish a women’s high school basketball court, promoted his shoes and staged a star-packed brunch for his foundation, at which his mother, Jolinda Wade, a pastor, said a blessing before the meal.

Wade also reflected on his career, the memorable summer of 2010, and the satisfaction he feels in having James and Bosh as his teammates in Miami. Wade said that the celebration in Miami last July— when he, James and Bosh stood onstage like rock stars — was their greatest shared triumph to date.

“We had a bull’s-eye no matter what,” he said. “We celebrated with our fans and they came out to support us. It was about Miami. It wasn’t about nobody else in the world. We were celebrating what we’ve done. We’ve done something that at the end of the day, it’s going to be history. No matter which way you cut it, this is history in the making and we celebrated it.”

James’s decision not to stay with the Cleveland Cavaliers caused an uproar and a debate about loyalty. Bosh’s decision to leave Toronto prompted questions about whether he was the same caliber player as the others. Wade probably had the most reasonable case for a transfer, but ended up being the one who stayed put.

The Heat had lost in the playoffs to Boston, the stopping point for many teams in recent years. It was then, Wade said, that he started thinking about his future in earnest. “I need more help,” he said about his thoughts at the time. “This is not going to cut it for the rest of my career. No matter if I scored 40 a night versus Boston, it wasn’t enough.”

Other, personal matters awaited resolution outside basketball. Wade settled a lawsuit over a failed chain of restaurants and engaged in a public and bitter custody struggle with his estranged wife, Siohvaughn, over their sons.

Free agency tugged and so did his hometown Bulls. Chicago represented being closer to his family and playing for the team he idolized growing up.

“In my heart, a piece of me wanted to put that jersey on,” Wade said. He added, “Depending on who went where, the Knicks would have been my third option.”

Wade called for a second meeting with Chicago’s management. Tragil Wade, Dwyane’s older sister, who guided him through a tumultuous childhood, started moving more of Wade’s foundation there, just in case.

“It was like Chicago, Miami, Chicago, Miami,” Tragil Wade said.

Bosh then narrowed his choice to Miami. Wade said. “I told him if he comes to Miami, I’m with him,” he said. And despite rumors to the contrary, Wade insisted that he did not know James’s selection until moments before James’s television special, “The Decision,” was shown on ESPN.

Miami (41-15) and Boston (40-14) are essentially tied for the best record in the Eastern Conference. In reality, there is considerable distance between them. Boston benefits from years of unity and a mix of veteran stars who went years without winning a title before finding one another.

The Heat is winless in three games against Boston, and Wade has struggled in each.

“Every great team, every great player, you go through a challenge,” Wade said. “Michael Jordan with Detroit, I was a Bulls fan. I watched it. Heartbreak year after year, losing. Eventually, you get over that.”

Wade is scoring about the same number of points as last season, while taking about one fewer shot a game. He is averaging career highs in shooting percentage, 49.7, and rebounding, 6.9.

Sometimes it seems as if Wade, 29, is a player who has been around longer than he has. He entered the league with a young Heat team, won a championship with Shaquille O’Neal, then dealt with injuries as the Heat collapsed and rebuilt.

“I went to probably being part of some of the worst basketball, some of the worst teams in Miami Heat history, and then right back into a championship contender now,” he said. “If you step back and look at it, it’s been kind of a whirlwind.”

It continued Sunday. Wade was impressive with 14 points in the All-Star Game, but he aggravated a lingering ankle injury, although it was not considered serious.

James, meanwhile, had a triple-double in Sunday’s game, with 29 points, 12 rebounds and 10 assists. Bosh scored 14 points.

Instead exchanging goodbyes as they had at past All-Star Games, Wade, James and Bosh will reconvene to play the Sacramento Kings on Tuesday. History, for a team truly manufactured on a championship-or-bust premise, awaits.

“I’m glad he’s getting back on that plane and going back to Miami with me,” Wade said of James, his weekend complete and a season about to resume.

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Hello world!

Welcome to Blog.com.

This is your first post, produced automatically by Blog.com. You should edit or delete it, and then start blogging!

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