Latest Magic Stories
Posted: Nov 7th 2009 1:30AM ET by Tim Povtak (RSS feed)
Filed under: Magic

ORLANDO -- After three seasons of banging his head against a wall,
J.J. Redick finally has proven he belongs in the
NBA.
He never thought it would take this long.
Redick may have come into the league as one of the most celebrated college basketball players in recent history, but it has taken a complete remaking of his game and his attitude to finally carve his niche.
"I've been thinking about it recently, and maybe I wasn't ready to do this last year, or my second year, and certainly not as a rookie,'' Redick said Friday night after helping the
Orlando Magic hold off the
Detroit Pistons 110-103. "I could not have stepped in and played well like this, but I've learned how to be a pro. And that wasn't easy.''
Posted: Nov 4th 2009 11:35PM ET by Tim Povtak (RSS feed)
Filed under: Magic

ORLANDO -- Coming to the defense of his All-Star center,
Magic coach
Stan Van Gundy didn't criticize the officials Wednesday night -- he didn't want another fine -- but he was clearly critical of the way
Dwight Howard is being officiated this season.
Howard, the biggest, strongest, best center in the
NBA, is being unfairly penalized, according to Van Gundy.
"He gets penalized for being so strong. We give guys an advantage in this league for being quick, but we penalize them for being strong like Dwight,'' Van Gundy said after Howard finished with 11 fouls in the last two games combined. "If you hit a perimeter guy on a drive the way they are allowed to hit Dwight all the time around the basket, it would be a flagrant foul.''
Posted: Nov 4th 2009 11:35AM ET by Brett Pollakoff (RSS feed)
Filed under: Celtics, Heat, Lakers, Magic, Mavericks, Pistons, Rockets, Suns, Trail Blazers, NBA Last Night, Thunder

Welcome to the NBA FanHouse podcast, where our writers get together a few times a week to talk about everything going on in the world of hoops. Want to participate? Leave a comment, or follow us on Twitter @NBAFanHouse. Posted: Nov 3rd 2009 10:00AM ET by Brett Pollakoff (RSS feed)
Filed under: Cavaliers, Celtics, Heat, Lakers, Magic, Mavericks, Spurs, Suns, NBA Power Rankings

We're just a week into the season, so don't get mad if your team isn't where you might have expected. It's just that if we go by what we've actually seen, as opposed to what's been predicted, then this is for the most part where teams should fall based on their early performances. But if you're offended by the spot your favorite team holds, fear not: they likely have 79 regular season games remaining to right the ship.
Posted: Nov 2nd 2009 11:00AM ET by Brett Pollakoff (RSS feed)
Filed under: Grizzlies, Hawks, Lakers, Magic, Nuggets, Raptors, Suns, NBA Last Night
Every night there are some stupendous, silly, stupid, or downright outlandish individual lines from around the lig. Doing Lines lets you know which one tops the list.It's not every day that we get to see a player hit for 40 points or more in an NBA game. So on Sunday, when we had three different players meet or surpass the mark, it's definitely something worth discussing.
Especially when two of them did it in the same game.
Posted: Oct 30th 2009 11:12PM ET by Tim Povtak (RSS feed)
Filed under: Magic, Nets, NBA Injuries
Vince Carter was about to deliver one of those "don't-you-wish-I-was-still-here" games Friday night in New Jersey, when he fell to the floor clutching his left ankle midway in the second quarter.
Carter, traded by the Nets to the Orlando Magic this summer, had 16 points in his first 15 minutes before he left with a sprained ankle. X-rays were negative and he told reporters that "hopefully,'' he could play Sunday in Toronto.
His mother, who was there, described it to the Orlando Sentinel as a "mild sprain.'' It happened on a drive to the basket when he stepped awkwardly on the foot of New Jersey guard
Devin Harris.
Posted: Oct 29th 2009 3:40PM ET by Tim Povtak (RSS feed)
Filed under: 76ers, Magic

ORLANDO --
Elton Brand sure seems like a nice enough guy -- respectful, courteous, thoughtful, engaging. He works hard, too.
Yet he also is beginning to look like an albatross hanging around the neck of the Philadelphia 76ers, the guy with the contract that will prevent them from building a serious contender in the coming years.
Brand, 30, is starting his 10th season in the league, but just the second year of that five-year, $80 million contract he signed as a free agent two summers ago. Although the Sixers were convinced that signing him was wise back then, they are having serious reservations now about the move.
It's one painful decision they would like to have back.
Posted: Oct 29th 2009 1:45AM ET by Tim Povtak (RSS feed)
Filed under: Magic, NBA Twitter

ORLANDO -- Stephanie Fisher thought it was just another internet scam when she signed up to follow
Dwight Howard on Twitter (
@DwightHoward) two months ago, and up popped a message saying she was a lucky prize winner.
Yeah, right, she thought.
The message said she was Howard's one millionth follower, which meant she had won a trip for two to Orlando to meet the
Magic star and watch the opening game Wednesday night against the
Philadelphia 76ers.
"I didn't believe it at all,'' she said after the game. "So I just ignored it at first.''
Posted: Oct 28th 2009 11:28PM ET by Tim Povtak (RSS feed)
Filed under: 76ers, Magic

ORLANDO -- When the
Orlando Magic signed out-of-work
Jason Williams this summer to a one-year, minimum wage contract, they made it sound like he was coming merely to be an insurance policy, giving them a past-his-prime, third point guard in case the bottom fell out on the other two.
He's obviously going to be more, a lot more for a real good team.
Williams, 33, is no longer the flashy, wrap-around-passing entertainer he was earlier in his career in Sacramento, but he looks refreshed and ready to play at a high level once again, adding another strong weapon to the defending Eastern Conference champs.
A year off certainly did him well.
Posted: Oct 28th 2009 8:40PM ET by Tim Povtak (RSS feed)
Filed under: 76ers, Magic

ORLANDO -- To many who follow the NBA, it doesn't seem that long ago that Isiah Thomas and Bill Laimbeer led the
Detroit Pistons -- the famed Bad Boys -- to their second consecutive NBA title in 1990, cementing their place among the great teams in league history.
It was two days after
Jrue Holiday was born.
Holiday, a rookie guard for the
Philadelphia 76ers, isn't just the youngest player in the NBA this season. He also earned the distinction of being the first person born in the 1990's to be on an NBA roster.
That makes a lot of us feel old.