Toronto Raptors' T.J. Ford (R) makes
a pass in front of Houston Rockets' Yao Ming during the second half of
their NBA basketball game in Toronto, March 16, 2007. Yao Ming scored 23
points and 12 rebounds, and the Houston Rockets never trailed in a 114-100
victory over the Toronto Raptors on Friday night. [Reuters]
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TORONTO - A broken leg and a 32-game injury absence put an end to MVP talk
that had been lavished on the Houston Rockets' Yao Ming.
But with their big centre back in the lineup and steadily returning to his
dominating early season form, the MVP banter has been replaced by playoff buzz.
The Rockets have yet to enter the rareified orbit occupied by Western
conference rivals the Dallas Mavericks, San Antonio Spurs and Phoenix Suns. But
with a 114-100 victory over the Atlantic leading Toronto Raptors on Friday they
have won five-of-seven since Yao's return to close in on the Utah Jazz and the
fourth seed in the West.
Before his injury, Yao was laying the foundations for his best season in the
NBA, averaging 25.9 points and 9.3 rebounds a game to prompt plenty of MVP
speculation.
The 7-foot, 6-inch Chinese giant has not yet matched that type of production
in his return but underlined his value to the team with a 23-point and
12-rebound contribution against the Raptors.
"Better," Yao told Reuters. "It's still up and down, I've played seven games
but of course not 100 percent like I was before injury so it will still take a
few games.
"My fitness is pretty good but I need to find some more consistency."
When Yao crumpled to the floor on December 23 in the first quarter against
the Los Angeles Clippers many thought Houston's playoff chances collapsed with
him.
But led by some offensive heroics from Tracy McGrady and a gritty defensive
effort, the Rockets went 20-12 in Yao's absence to stay in the chase in the
ultra competitive Western conference.
Since Yao's return McGrady has not let up, continuing to spark the Rockets
attack and pouring in 24 points as the Rockets stopped the Raptors' four-game
win streak.
"We want to be playing our best ball going into the post-season," McGrady
said. "We've got teams that are ahead of us, Dallas and Phoenix, those guys are
already in championship form.
"It's possible (to get a top seed), that's what we're working for, the top
three seeds are pretty much set right now but we're working to get that home
court advantage."
Yao insists he is still some distance away from being back to full fitness
but coach Jeff Van Gundy said he has no interest in percentages, just that his
all-star centre is ready to play.
"I don't get it, if you play you have no excuses so just play," Van Gundy
said. "Do the best you can and that's what he's doing.
"He (Yao) is had some good moments, he's had some struggles but that's no
different then anybody anytime. We obviously need him to play well. I don't know
where he's at, I'm glad he's back now he has to get on the board."