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Thread: Denver Nuggets

  1. #551

    McMahon blamed Kroenke for not believing his team was good enough to still be playing in mid-May.

    “The fans in Denver had a lot more faith in making the playoffs than the owner,”
    hahahah now this is funny.. way to go Vince!

    “we may be holding an event in a parking lot somewhere.”
    basin mag street basketball Lakers & Nuggets ani..

  2. #552
    Quote Originally Posted by lunateec22 View Post
    Lakers sako ani (di ba 'cher?)...


    yeah! heheheh





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    Last edited by Archer sensAtion; 05-19-2009 at 12:15 PM.

  3. #553
    Nuggets in 6! BEAT L.A.

  4. #554
    Quote Originally Posted by Archer sensAtion View Post

    yeah! heheheh





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    .
    murag lingaw kaau melo sa match up nila kobe ow hehehehehe smiling pa kaau ang ako idol...

  5. #555
    hehehehe si vince jud oie gisulti pa jud ang iya hunahuna sa issue na walay salig ang owner sa nuggets nga makalapos sa 1st round hehehehe pro ok lang mas gnahan ko mutan-aw sa NBA oi kaysa sa WWE nga pulos ra arte.... y lami nah wrestling maypa UFC.... pro kinahanglan ma resolve na nila ang schedule unsaon nalang ug sa parking lot mag duwa si melo ug si kobe hahahaha lingaw man sad guro

  6. #556
    C.I.A. icon_king's Avatar
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    beware of mr. bigshot and the birdman

  7. #557
    bai Archer ... basin i PoweBomb neh si Carmelo neh Batista! kai suko ra ba si Vince McMahon ai! hehehe!

    WWE vocal over booking problem

    NEW HAVEN, Conn. -- World Wrestling Entertainment thrives on outlandish story lines and characters, but the company finds itself embroiled in a real-life controversy with the Denver Nuggets. And WWE's bombastic owner is making the most of it.

    The plot: Who has rights to Denver's Pepsi Center on Monday -- the Nuggets, hosting their first Western Conference final since 1985, or the WWE's traveling TV soap opera?

    WWE chairman Vince McMahon, the promoter who helped transform professional wrestling into prime-time television entertainment, fired the first salvo Monday. In interviews with ESPN, he loudly called out Nuggets owner Stan Kroenke and challenged him to a steel-cage match. (Is there any other way to resolve a grudge?)

    "Quite frankly, it's my view that Stan Kroenke should be arrested, should be arrested for impersonating a good businessman, because he's not a good businessman," McMahon said on ESPN. "A good businessman doesn't book a World Wrestling Federation live televised event on Monday night realizing that his team in all likelihood would not make the playoffs."

    WWE spokesman Robert Zimmerman said the company reserved the Pepsi Center on Aug. 15 and had already sold more than 10,000 tickets for its the Monday Night Raw event. He said the organization expects a sellout, with tickets ranging from $20 to $70.

    But the Nuggets are planning to play Game 4 of the NBA's Western Conference finals against the Los Angeles Lakers on Monday at the Pepsi Center, the team's home floor.

    It's worth noting, however, that the bottom line at most arenas is still the bottom line.

    "The facility is just as important, or in some cases, more important than the franchise itself," explains Wayne McDonnell, a professor at the New York University Tisch Center who used to handle scheduling logistics at Madison Square Garden.

    Which is one way to explain how the Pittsburgh Penguins recently found themselves getting iced by Yanni and the Nuggets currently find themselves in a smackdown with McMahon.

    Earlier this month, a Yanni concert scheduled for Mellon Arena in Pittsburgh -- along with a number of other events, including WWE -- forced the Penguins and Washington Capitals to play playoff games on back-to-back nights, first in Pittsburgh, then in Washington.

    The Nuggets, Colorado Avalanche and the Pepsi Center are all owned by the same company. Squeezing every penny out of that building through ticket sales, concessions, parking, luxury suites and souvenirs for all events -- even those not involving the primary tenants -- helps pay the multimillion-dollar salaries that keep the teams in business.

    Though the Penguins and Mellon Arena aren't co-owned, the bottom line is basically the same: A building that hosts an event normally makes somewhere between $100,000 and $500,000, and nobody wants to give up that kind of cash. That's especially true in Pittsburgh, where the arena is nearly 50 years old and doesn't draw as many top events as the newer buildings.

    "Underutilizing the facility can be a detriment to the organization in the long run," McDonnell said.

    McDonnell said sloppy clerical work and the never-ending quest to make money were the most likely reasons for the double bookings. Most arenas have schedules and calendars and contingency plans in place months and years in advance.

    The WWE-Nuggets imbroglio, he said, almost certainly was not caused by Kroenke's lack of faith in his team. Trying to stir the pot, McMahon said if Kroenke had really believed in the Nuggets, he wouldn't have been booking the arena during playoff time.

    "He's not sitting at his desk doing scheduling," McDonnell said. "The bottom line is, it probably doesn't sit well with the Denver Nuggets audience, thinking he doesn't have faith. But that's probably not the case. All you have to do is look at the players he acquired and the team he assembled."

    McMahon was not available Tuesday to comment, a spokesman said. On Monday, he told The Associated Press he couldn't tolerate the team "just simply throwing us out on our ear."

    A telephone message left for a Nuggets spokesman Tuesday wasn't immediately returned.

    Paul Andrews, executive vice president of Kroenke Sports Enterprises, issued a statement Monday night a bit more understated than McMahon. "We are working with the WWE to resolve the situation amicably," he said.

    The NBA, which sets the playoff schedule, is leaving it to the Nuggets and the WWE to work out the dispute.

    The conflict provides a welcome boost of publicity as the Stamford-based producer of live television wrestling matches tries to fill arenas and sell pay-per-view events amid the weak economy, branches into making movies, and deals with the fallout from a substance abuse and drug testing policy that has resulted in more than 30 suspensions since it began in 2006.

    "Vince McMahon is one of the greatest promoters of all time," said Alan Gould, senior media analyst with Natixis Bleichroeder Inc in New York. "Any publicity for wrestling is good publicity. It's almost free marketing for wrestling and the sport."

    WWE is promoting the arena dispute as the "Denver Debacle" on its Web site, which it said got 18 million U.S. unique visitors last month, more than than CBS.com, ABC.com, NBC.com, NFL.com or NBA.com.

    Jeffrey Thomison, an analyst with Hilliard Lyons in Louisville, Ky., who has been covering the entertainment industry for two decades, said he's never seen a similar conflict.

    "I don't think he's putting on an act here," Thomison said of McMahon. "He genuinely is upset."

    Monday Night Raw draws almost 6 million viewers weekly, making it one of the top rated programs on cable television, Thomison said.

    "The conflict has to be resolved very soon," Thomison said. "Monday Night Raw is a very valuable asset to the company."

    The WWE said its crews will be in Denver on Monday night, even if it means putting on a show in a parking lot.

    click here!

  8. #558
    paytira!!!hahahahaha...

  9. #559
    grabeha aning melo wui!

  10. #560
    Quote Originally Posted by basketballer View Post
    Nuggets, WWE in smackdown over arena confict

    By BRIAN MAHONEY, AP Basketball Writer 21 minutes ago



    Kobe Bryant(notes) and the Los Angeles Lakers are scheduled to be at the Pepsi Center in Denver next Monday night.

    Problem is, so are John Cena and a bunch of wrestlers—and they called it first.

    World Wrestling Entertainment said it is booked at the arena for an episode of Monday Night Raw, the same night the Nuggets are slated to host the Lakers in Game 4 of the Western Conference finals.

    WWE chairman Vince McMahon told The Associated Press he doesn’t believe there was “any malice, just ineptness,” on the part of Kroenke Sports, which owns the team and the building, but can’t tolerate the company “just simply throwing us out on our ear.”

    Without a quick resolution, McMahon plans to send his trucks to Denver.

    “That’s what we intend to do,” he said. “We’re going to show up.”

    WWE spokesman Robert Zimmerman said the organization secured the Pepsi Center last Aug. 15 and has already sold more than 10,000 tickets for the event. He says the organization expects a sellout, with tickets ranging from $20 to $70.

    McMahon blamed Kroenke for not believing his team was good enough to still be playing in mid-May.

    “The fans in Denver had a lot more faith in making the playoffs than the owner,” he said in a phone interview from Louisville, where Raw was taking place later Monday night.

    Denver is usually done with basketball by now. The Nuggets had lost in the first round five straight years, but as the No. 2 seed in the West are in the conference finals for the first time since 1985.

    The Nuggets referred comment to the NBA, which handles scheduling during the playoffs. Kroenke Sports also had no comment.

    However, the league is leaving it up to the team and the WWE to figure things out.

    “The Nuggets and the WWE understand that the date of Game 4 of the Western Conference Finals cannot be changed,” NBA senior vice president Mike Bass said. “We are confident that the Pepsi Center and the WWE will resolve their scheduling conflict.”

    Zimmerman said the Pepsi Center confirmed in March with the WWE that the organization wanted to keep the May 25 date, and sent a contract on April 15— the final night of the regular season—which WWE signed and returned. Tickets went on sale April 11.

    The conflict didn’t arise until Sunday, when the Lakers beat the Houston Rockets in Game 7 of the Western Conference semifinals. Had the Rockets won, Denver would have had home-court advantage in the next round, hosting Games 1 and 2 and putting the May 25 game in Houston.

    As of Monday afternoon, the schedule on the Pepsi Center’s Web site listed WWE for 6:30 p.m. local time and Western Conference finals Game 4 at 7 p.m. Tickets for the wrestling event could still be purchased online.

    McMahon said he couldn’t guess how much he would make from the show, but that canceling wasn’t easy because of how much is involved in moving his equipment, plus filling its obligated time slot on USA Network. Litigation is likely—but he plans to be putting on a card.

    “When you do have a date, you plan everything around it,” he said, adding, “we may be holding an event in a parking lot somewhere.”


    Quote Originally Posted by SQUiDnine View Post
    bai Archer ... basin i PoweBomb neh si Carmelo neh Batista! kai suko ra ba si Vince McMahon ai! hehehe!

    WWE vocal over booking problem

    NEW HAVEN, Conn. -- World Wrestling Entertainment thrives on outlandish story lines and characters, but the company finds itself embroiled in a real-life controversy with the Denver Nuggets. And WWE's bombastic owner is making the most of it.

    The plot: Who has rights to Denver's Pepsi Center on Monday -- the Nuggets, hosting their first Western Conference final since 1985, or the WWE's traveling TV soap opera?

    WWE chairman Vince McMahon, the promoter who helped transform professional wrestling into prime-time television entertainment, fired the first salvo Monday. In interviews with ESPN, he loudly called out Nuggets owner Stan Kroenke and challenged him to a steel-cage match. (Is there any other way to resolve a grudge?)

    "Quite frankly, it's my view that Stan Kroenke should be arrested, should be arrested for impersonating a good businessman, because he's not a good businessman," McMahon said on ESPN. "A good businessman doesn't book a World Wrestling Federation live televised event on Monday night realizing that his team in all likelihood would not make the playoffs."

    WWE spokesman Robert Zimmerman said the company reserved the Pepsi Center on Aug. 15 and had already sold more than 10,000 tickets for its the Monday Night Raw event. He said the organization expects a sellout, with tickets ranging from $20 to $70.

    But the Nuggets are planning to play Game 4 of the NBA's Western Conference finals against the Los Angeles Lakers on Monday at the Pepsi Center, the team's home floor.

    It's worth noting, however, that the bottom line at most arenas is still the bottom line.

    "The facility is just as important, or in some cases, more important than the franchise itself," explains Wayne McDonnell, a professor at the New York University Tisch Center who used to handle scheduling logistics at Madison Square Garden.

    Which is one way to explain how the Pittsburgh Penguins recently found themselves getting iced by Yanni and the Nuggets currently find themselves in a smackdown with McMahon.

    Earlier this month, a Yanni concert scheduled for Mellon Arena in Pittsburgh -- along with a number of other events, including WWE -- forced the Penguins and Washington Capitals to play playoff games on back-to-back nights, first in Pittsburgh, then in Washington.

    The Nuggets, Colorado Avalanche and the Pepsi Center are all owned by the same company. Squeezing every penny out of that building through ticket sales, concessions, parking, luxury suites and souvenirs for all events -- even those not involving the primary tenants -- helps pay the multimillion-dollar salaries that keep the teams in business.

    Though the Penguins and Mellon Arena aren't co-owned, the bottom line is basically the same: A building that hosts an event normally makes somewhere between $100,000 and $500,000, and nobody wants to give up that kind of cash. That's especially true in Pittsburgh, where the arena is nearly 50 years old and doesn't draw as many top events as the newer buildings.

    "Underutilizing the facility can be a detriment to the organization in the long run," McDonnell said.

    McDonnell said sloppy clerical work and the never-ending quest to make money were the most likely reasons for the double bookings. Most arenas have schedules and calendars and contingency plans in place months and years in advance.

    The WWE-Nuggets imbroglio, he said, almost certainly was not caused by Kroenke's lack of faith in his team. Trying to stir the pot, McMahon said if Kroenke had really believed in the Nuggets, he wouldn't have been booking the arena during playoff time.

    "He's not sitting at his desk doing scheduling," McDonnell said. "The bottom line is, it probably doesn't sit well with the Denver Nuggets audience, thinking he doesn't have faith. But that's probably not the case. All you have to do is look at the players he acquired and the team he assembled."

    McMahon was not available Tuesday to comment, a spokesman said. On Monday, he told The Associated Press he couldn't tolerate the team "just simply throwing us out on our ear."

    A telephone message left for a Nuggets spokesman Tuesday wasn't immediately returned.

    Paul Andrews, executive vice president of Kroenke Sports Enterprises, issued a statement Monday night a bit more understated than McMahon. "We are working with the WWE to resolve the situation amicably," he said.

    The NBA, which sets the playoff schedule, is leaving it to the Nuggets and the WWE to work out the dispute.

    The conflict provides a welcome boost of publicity as the Stamford-based producer of live television wrestling matches tries to fill arenas and sell pay-per-view events amid the weak economy, branches into making movies, and deals with the fallout from a substance abuse and drug testing policy that has resulted in more than 30 suspensions since it began in 2006.

    "Vince McMahon is one of the greatest promoters of all time," said Alan Gould, senior media analyst with Natixis Bleichroeder Inc in New York. "Any publicity for wrestling is good publicity. It's almost free marketing for wrestling and the sport."

    WWE is promoting the arena dispute as the "Denver Debacle" on its Web site, which it said got 18 million U.S. unique visitors last month, more than than CBS.com, ABC.com, NBC.com, NFL.com or NBA.com.

    Jeffrey Thomison, an analyst with Hilliard Lyons in Louisville, Ky., who has been covering the entertainment industry for two decades, said he's never seen a similar conflict.

    "I don't think he's putting on an act here," Thomison said of McMahon. "He genuinely is upset."

    Monday Night Raw draws almost 6 million viewers weekly, making it one of the top rated programs on cable television, Thomison said.

    "The conflict has to be resolved very soon," Thomison said. "Monday Night Raw is a very valuable asset to the company."

    The WWE said its crews will be in Denver on Monday night, even if it means putting on a show in a parking lot.

    click here!



    The SHOW must go on!
    Last edited by Motownkid; 05-20-2009 at 11:35 AM.

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