The 2006-07 NBA season having reached its symbolic
midpoint, this Sunday’s All-Star Game has me considering a hoop thought or two.
From All-Star snubs to local trade talk, pro basketball is never short on
headlines, now, is it?

  • A year ago, Memphis fans were celebrating Pau Gasol
    becoming the first All-Star in Grizzlies history (including the franchise’s six
    years in Vancouver). Gasol held himself well in Houston, too, pulling down a
    game-high 12 rebounds. But a year later? Having missed two months while
    recovering from a broken foot, Gasol didn’t even make this season’s list of
    All-Star snubs (more on that later). He’s instead the focus of trade talk, with
    the likes of Portland (Zach Randolph) and Chicago (Ben Gordon and/or Luol Deng)
    rumored to be on the phone lines with Griz president Jerry West.
  • I’m not going to pretend to know what will happen with
    the bearded face of the Memphis franchise, but take this to the bank: if Gasol’s
    traded, it will have more to do with unsteady ownership than with the
    improvement of our local team. Anyone with eyes can look at the Grizzlies roster
    and see the talented youth that surrounds Gasol: Hakim Warrick, Rudy Gay, even
    the injured Kyle Lowry. This is not a team devoid of hope, or a squad that has
    grown old together and has collectively reached the downside of its career
    curve. Certain to get a top-four draft pick come June (one that could land a
    future cornerstone in Greg Oden or Kevin Durant), the Grizzlies have a better
    chance of reaching .500 a year from now — with Gasol, mind you — than other
    teams (Boston, Philadelphia, Charlotte) near the bottom of the NBA standings.

    But then there’s the ownership catch. With Michael
    Heisley especially eager to find a buyer in the aftermath of the Brian Davis
    fiasco, having a figure on the expense side of his balance sheet that totals
    more than $12 million a year the next three seasons (Gasol’s salary) is hardly
    bait for that buyer. Buy low, remember. When the trade deadline arrives February
    22nd, it’s economics that may shove Gasol out the door.

  • Every February there’s debate over the players
    elected by fans to start the All-Star Game, and their relative merits when
    compared with the reserves selected by coaches. Why not reinvent the game’s
    format, and have a team of elected players (the top five vote-getting players at
    guard and forward, and the top two centers) face a team of coaches’ choices? And
    when fans are foolish enough to elect injured players to start (see Yao Ming and
    Shaquille O’Neal), the fans’ team gets to fill its roster only after the coaches
    have chosen their twelve. Something tells me one of these squads would have a
    little extra motivation, an ingredient sorely needed once the game starts.
  • I find the media storm over Carmelo Anthony’s
    All-Star “snub” to be nothing short of offensive. Here’s a player who has missed
    more than a third of his team’s games, the result of a suspension for having
    been a central figure in the December 16th melee between the Nuggets and Knicks
    at Madison Square Garden. For a league that’s obsessed with its image to
    consider spotlighting such a player merely two months after his punch-and-run
    night in New York would be the height of hypocrisy. Which is precisely what we
    have, now that commissioner David Stern (the man who endorsed Anthony’s
    suspension) has added ‘Melo to the Western Conference All-Star roster. Pardon me
    for hitting the mute button on my remote when Anthony’s introduced Sunday.
  • Six players will be playing in at least their sixth
    consecutive All-Star Game this Sunday: Tim Duncan (9th), Kevin Garnett (10th),
    Kobe Bryant (9th), Allen Iverson (8th), Tracy McGrady (7th), and Dirk Nowitzki
    (6th). Nowitzki is the only one never to have been elected by the fans.
  • Frank Murtaugh is the managing editor of Memphis magazine. He's covered sports for the Flyer for two decades. "From My Seat" debuted on the Flyer site in 2002 and "Tiger Blue" in 2009.