reflections
Mavericks’ co-founder addresses PBU graduates

Keep Jesus Christ first in your hearts and minds when going
through your lives and careers, the co-founder and former part
owner of the defending NBA champion Dallas Mavericks told 108
graduates of Philadelphia Biblical University during Saturday’s
commencement ceremony.

“Your vision should always be to serve Christ and his kingdom,”
Norm Sonju said to those getting bachelor’s and master’s degrees
from the Langhorne Manor college.

“Don’t water that part down,” he continued. “If you do, you will
never reach your full potential. You have to decide what to
believe, the world’s standards that change all the time or the word
of the Holy Bible. This world is dying for leaders who have it
together, because most of them don’t.”

Sonju, 73, founded the Mavericks along with Donald Carter in
1980. He was part owner, president and general manager of the team
for 12 years and remained involved until the club was sold to Ross
Perot Jr. in 1996, who in turn sold most of his interest to the
team’s current majority owner, Mark Cuban, in 2000. Sonju remains a
big fan of the team, he said.

A devout Christian who lives in Dallas with his wife Carole,
Sonju told the PBU graduates that debt, both national and
household, is one of the biggest problems facing the United
States.

“Forty percent of Americans spend more than they earn,” he said.
“Control your debt. It will absolutely ruin you if you don’t. I
know many of you have college debt, but try to pay it off as soon
as possible. If you free yourselves from debt, it will free you to
honor and glorify the Lord.”

Since retiring from the Mavericks, Sonju has remained involved
in many pursuits, most of them Christian based. Among them is his
role as volunteer chairman of Camp-of-the-Woods, a 111-year-old
Christian family resort in the southern part of the Adirondack
Mountains in upstate New York.

Strive for excellence in your careers, but always with your
faith as the framework, Sonju told the graduates.

“Our Lord can use PBU graduates like you with a biblical world
view to make a positive difference in the world,” he said.

Jeremy Hay, a Bristol Township resident and 2006 graduate of
Harry S. Truman High School, received bachelor’s degrees in the
Bible and Education from PBU on Saturday.

“One of the reasons I came here was my mother Lora (who has
since died) worked here and I got free tuition,” he said. “But it
was mostly because this was where I felt God wanted me to be. I
love the faculty and other people here. This college has given me
great memories I’ll cherish the rest of my life.”

Hay said he plans be pursue a master’s degree in nutrition from
another college and then possibly become a health and physical
education teacher or a personal trainer-nutritionist.

Ruth Trego of Sunbury received a special award Saturday for
having the highest grade point average, 3.99, among the graduates.
Lauren Gingrich of Mount Joy was honored for having the second
highest GPA, 3.97.

The college holds graduation ceremonies in December and May,
with the much larger one being in May.

Originally located in Center City Philadelphia, PBU moved to its
105-acre campus in Langhorne Manor in 1979. It currently has 1,311
students and offers 44 undergraduate and 7 graduate degree
programs.

According to its mission statement, PBU “exists to educate
students to serve Christ in the church, society and the world as
biblically minded, well educated and professionally competent men
and women of character.”

Chris English; 215-949-4193; e-mail: cenglish@phillyBurbs.com;
Twitter: Twitter.com/courierc

© 2011 phillyBurbs.com . All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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NBA: Los Angeles Lakers trade Lamar Odom to Dallas…

The Los Angeles Lakers dealt unhappy forward Lamar Odom to the Dallas Mavericks on Sunday, a move that left Kobe Bryant perplexed.

The Lakers received a first-round draft pick in 2012 and a traded-player exception worth Odom’s salary this season, $8.9 million. The exception means the Lakers can obtain a player from another team by trading only a draft pick if the player makes less than $9 million. Teams have one year to use a traded-player exception.

“I don’t like it,” Bryant said of the trade. “I’ve known Lamar for a long time, and for the team itself, he’s meant a lot in terms of his versatility, his personality. He’s a big presence for us in the locker room, just from a team chemistry standpoint. He’s great at bringing guys together and things of that nature.

“I trust management knows what they’re doing. I let them do their jobs, I never get in the way, but it’s tough. You’re talking about Sixth Man of the Year last year. He played lights out.”

Bryant also didn’t like that Odom was sent to the Mavericks, who eliminated the Lakers last season with a sweep in the Western Conference semifinals.

The Lakers are expected to make a run at Orlando Magic center Dwight Howard by offering Andrew Bynum and the draft pick they received from Dallas. They also would take a high-salaried player who fits into the $8.9 million trade exception.

The Lakers said Odom demanded to be traded Friday. He was upset about being part of a proposed

three-team trade that would have sent All-Star point guard Chris Paul from the New Orleans Hornets to the Lakers. The deal was vetoed by the league, and Odom did not practice with the team the first two days of training camp, showing up only briefly each day.

“To me, I would think it’s better to stay away,” Odom told the Los Angeles Times in a phone interview Friday. “You know, the energy and all. I don’t know how it’s going to go right now. It’s a little weird. … Right now, I’ll be a fan of the game from a distance.”

Pacers: Forward David West agreed to a two-year deal worth $20 million, according to the player’s agent, Lance Young.

West, a two-time All-Star who was drafted 18th overall by New Orleans in 2003, started 70 games for the Hornets last season, averaging 18.9 points and 7.6 rebounds before tearing the anterior cruciate ligament in his left knee.

Knicks: New York signed veteran guard Mike Bibby and re-signed forward Jared Jeffries,

Bibby could replace Chauncey Billups, on whom the Knicks used the amnesty clause to waive so they could afford Tyson Chandler’s four-year, $56 million contract. Bibby has averaged 15.2 points in 13 NBA seasons but struggled last season for the Miami Heat, managing only 3.6 points per game in 20 postseason starts.

Suns: Phoenix re-signed forward Grant Hill, who averaged 13.2 points and 4.2 rebounds in 80 games last season, his fourth with the Suns and 16th in the NBA. He agreed to a one-year, $6.5 million contract.

Trail Blazers: Center Kurt Thomas, 39, the NBA’s oldest active player, has a new home, agreeing to a deal with Portland.

Thomas played last season with Chicago, averaging 4.1 points, 5.8 rebounds and 1.1 assists in 52 games, including 37 starts.

What do you guys think about this.

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Judge Dismisses Perot Jr.’s Lawsuit Against…

DALLAS (AP) — A judge has dismissed a lawsuit in which former Dallas Mavericks owner Ross Perot Jr. accused current owner Mark Cuban of mismanaging the team.

State District Judge Craig Smith signed an order in Dallas on Thursday granting Cuban’s motion for summary judgment and denying all of Perot’s claims.

Perot filed the lawsuit in 2010, alleging that the Mavericks were insolvent and that a receiver should be appointed to manage their finances.

Cuban responded with a court filing that included a color photograph of Dirk Nowitzki holding the 2011 NBA championship trophy, surrounded by Cuban and other Mavericks players. The title was the franchise’s first.

Perot retained a 5 percent interest in the team after selling his controlling stake to Cuban in 2000.

(Copyright 2011 by The Associated Press.  All rights reserved.)

There is the quick update of the day.

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Judge dismisses ex-Mavs owner’s suit against Cuban
Judge dismisses ex-Mavs owner's suit against Cuban

Credit: AP Photo

Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban, right, arrives for labor talks between the NBA and the players’ association, Tuesday, Oct. 18, 2011 in New York. NBA commissioner David Stern said last week during an interview with WFAN radio in New York that without a deal Tuesday, when the sides meet with federal mediator George Cohen, his “gut” was that there wouldn’t be NBA basketball on Christmas. The man at left is NBA security agent Greg Robinson. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer)

Associated Press

Posted on November 3, 2011 at 4:49 PM

Updated
today at 4:49 PM

DALLAS (AP) — A judge has dismissed a lawsuit in which former Dallas Mavericks owner Ross Perot Jr. accused current owner Mark Cuban of mismanaging the team.

State District Judge Craig Smith signed an order in Dallas on Thursday granting Cuban’s motion for summary judgment and denying all of Perot’s claims.

Perot filed the lawsuit in 2010, alleging that the Mavericks were insolvent and that a receiver should be appointed to manage their finances.

Cuban responded with a court filing that included a color photograph of Dirk Nowitzki holding the 2011 NBA championship trophy, surrounded by Cuban and other Mavericks players. The title was the franchise’s first.

Perot retained a 5 percent interest in the team after selling his controlling stake to Cuban in 2000.
 

That’s all for today guys, i’ll be back to blog you tomorrow.

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Solving Problems: Mavericks Need To Stay Together

At the beginning of last season there were few people outside of the Dallas metropolitan area who believed in the Dallas Mavericks’ chances of winning an NBA Championship. Four years removed from their first trip to the Finals, where they lost to the Miami HEAT in six games, the Mavericks hadn’t advanced past the second round since. They earned the reputation of a team that was great during the regular season, but just couldn’t get it done when it mattered in the playoffs.

Their run in the 2011 postseason changed that completely.

Going into a first-round matchup against the young and tough Portland Trail Blazers, many expected the Mavericks to bow out early again. They were without two of their top offensive players in Caron Butler and Rodrigue Beaubois due to injury, forcing them to depend heavily on aging veterans Jason Kidd and Shawn Marion. They delivered, however, as the Mavericks bounced back after losing two straight with a 2-0 lead to advance in six games.

Waiting for them were the two-time defending champion Los Angeles Lakers. The Lakers, who won the regular season series against the Mavericks 2-1, were extremely heavy favorites, but the Mavericks who played like they should have been the favorites. They made easy work of the Lakers, sweeping them in four games – highlighted by a 36-point trouncing in the decisive fourth game.

The Mavericks would need just one more game than that to eliminate the Oklahoma City Thunder in the Western Conference Finals to earn their second Western Conference championship in franchise history. Oddly enough, who was there waiting for them in the Finals? The team who beat them for the championship in 2006: the HEAT.

Back in ’06 the HEAT was a team loaded with former stars like Shaquille O’Neal, Antoine Walker and Gary Payton with a young Dwyane Wade leading the way. This time around, they were stocked up with three of the league’s best players currently in LeBron James, Chris Bosh and Wade. The three All-Stars joined forces last summer because they believed together there would be nobody who could stop them. That proved to be true through the Eastern Conference playoffs, where the Philadelphia 76ers, Boston Celtics and Chicago Bulls each failed to last more than five games.

It was back and forth through the first three games, with the HEAT winning Games 1 and 3. Two losses away from finishing in second place again, the Mavericks dug deep. Players like Jason Terry, Marion, Tyson Chandler, Kidd and especially Dirk Nowitzki knew exactly how terrible of a feeling it is to come up short and didn’t want to experience it again. Plus, there was no telling if they would ever be in this position again as they aren’t positioned for the future anywhere near as nicely as the HEAT are.

Playing with a now-or-never mentality, the Mavericks won the next three games and the 2011 NBA championship. It was extremely vindicating for Nowitzki and Kidd in particular. Now the two future Hall of Famers will never be associated with the group of great players who were unable to win a championship. It was also very rewarding for owner Mark Cuban, who poured his heart, soul and millions upon millions of dollars to revive Mavericks basketball, and the very underrated head coach, Rick Carlisle. Carlisle, who never got the credit he deserved as a head coach at his previous stops, will now finally be undeniably recognized as one of the best in the league, which he’s been for several years.

As the defending champs, there aren’t a whole lot of changes that the Mavericks need to make. Aside from the addition of Chandler in the offseason, they weren’t much different looking from the team that lost in the first round of the 2010 playoffs. The strength of this team is in their chemistry and all of the experience that they have.

The recent news of the owners backing off of their demand for a hard cap is great news for Mavericks fans, because even if there is a stiff luxury tax penalty for going over the cap, it’s safe to say that Cuban is going to be willing to pay it in order to keep this team together.

Prior to the start of the lockout, the Mavericks were engaged in serious discussions to re-sign unrestricted free agent Chandler. One Western Conference executive said that they weren’t even looking at Chandler as an option in free agency because they knew Dallas would keep him. Chandler made it seem like otherwise when asked, but knowing Cuban it’s hard to imagine him letting Chandler go elsewhere. His inside presence was too vital to their success; he would be extremely difficult to replace.

Butler’s value is really hard to gauge at this time. Missing the second-half of last season with a broken leg didn’t help his value much, but teams know his abilities. He’s a complete player and an intense competitor, someone with the type of drive that the Mavericks are going to need to have around in order to go for two-straight championships. The Mavericks will probably be reliant on nobody overpaying for Butler and getting some kind of a hometown discount in order to keep him. If he goes elsewhere, veteran forward Corey Brewer will be ready to step up in his place.

Jose Juan Barea, another big key to the puzzle, is also an unrestricted free agent. A draft-night deal for Portland Trail Blazers guard Rudy Fernandez seemed like a precautionary move by the Mavericks in preparation for Barea’s potential departure. They’ll undoubtedly make a run at keeping him, but Barea’s stock has really risen over the last year and there will be some competition for his services. While the Mavericks would like to keep him, his price tag may be too high to match based on what they have to replace him. Waiting in the wings eager to play is sophomore guard Dominique Jones. A healthy Beaubois will also be looking to take some of the playing time that belonged to Barea last season.

Re-signing Brian Cardinal, DeShawn Stevenson and Peja Stojakovic ranks a little bit lower on the priority list, but they won’t be overly expensive if the Mavericks indeed want to bring them back. Of the three, Stevenson is the one they need to keep the most due to his defensive prowess.

Repeating as champions is no easy task to say the least, but the Mavericks will be equipped to make a serious run at it as long as they can keep this team together as much as possible.

Senior NCAA and NBA analyst Yannis Koutroupis will be hosting his weekly chat on 9/30/11 at 11 am EST. You can get your questions in here.

Not much else going on in the NBA world today.

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