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US Professional Basketball Tips Off Tuesday
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Several much improved teams will be trying to keep defending champion
San Antonio Spurs from earning their third NBA title in four years





Philadelphia 76ers' Chris Webber (4) gets past San Antonio Spurs' Tim
Duncan (21) to score during the first quarter of a pre-season game
Thursday, Oct. 27, 2005The National Basketball Association's 60th
season is opening with more than 100 international players in the
league, a pair of revered coaches on the bench, and a new dress code
that has made some players unhappy. Several much improved teams will
be trying to keep the defending champion San Antonio Spurs from
earning their third NBA title in four years.

The Spurs will have to fight off the challenge from at least half a
dozen teams with the talent to take the NBA crown if they hope to
repeat as champions.

San Antonio outlasted the Detroit Pistons in a dramatic seven-game
showdown in June's NBA Finals, but the Pistons return as a serious
threat to dethrone the Spurs along with Shaquille O'Neal's Miami Heat,
the Indiana Pacers, Phoenix Suns, Denver Nuggets and Houston Rockets.

Around 100 players on NBA rosters this season are from outside the
United States, and many of them are expected to make a large impact.
Spurs star forward Tim Duncan of the U.S. Virgin Islands, French guard
Tony Parker and playmaker Manu Ginobili of Argentina are key to San
Antonio's championship hopes.







Houston Rockets' Yao Ming (11), of China, dunks the ball as Utah
Jazz's Mehmet Okur, of Turkey, right looks on in the second half of a
pre-season game Wednesday, Oct. 26, 2005Two-meter-26 centimeter tall
Yao Ming of China has become the most dominant center in the Western
Conference and is expected to spark the Houston Rockets. Reigning Most
Valuable Player Steve Nash of Canada ignites the Phoenix Suns,
Germany's Dirk Nowitski powers the Dallas Mavericks and Peja
Stojakovic of Serbia and Montenegro leads the Sacramento Kings.

Other young players might also make their mark on the NBA. Former
Syracuse phenom Carmello Anthony could make the Denver Nuggets a team
to be reckoned with, while 21-year-old former Rookie of the Year
LeBron James has vowed to finally get the Cleveland Cavaliers to the
post-season.

Some contenders have special motivation in their quest for the NBA
championship. Shaquille O'Neal wants to prove he can win it all
without the Los Angeles Lakers' Kobe Bryant and coach Phil Jackson.
Ron Artest, whose suspension for most of last season after brawling in
the stands with Detroit fans destroyed Indiana's championships hopes,
returns to the Pacers looking for redemption. He says he has learned
his lesson.

"I reacted too fast. I should have thought about what I was doing at
that time. At the same time, like I have always said, I did not feel I
should be suspended 73 games," said Artest. "I am never going into the
stands again. It is not necessary. That was not necessary! Now, the
fans know they cannot do things like that, I know I cannot do things
like that."







Milwaukee Bucks rookie center Andrew Bogut, front, of Australia pulls
down a rebound in front of Denver Nuggets' forward Nene of Brazil,
Wednesday, Oct. 26, 2005And while the Milwaukee Bucks may not be a
championship contender yet, they should be much improved with college
Player of the Year and overall number-one NBA draft pick Andrew Bogut
of Australia at center.

Ten teams changed coaches in the off-season, but the two getting the
most attention will be Phil Jackson, who rejoins the Los Angeles
Lakers and Larry Brown, who has moved from the NBA finalist Pistons to
the New York Knicks.

Jackson will be reunited with Kobe Bryant, a player he once dubbed as
"uncoachable," on a Lakers squad that won just 34 games last season.
Jackson, whose .725 winning percentage is the best in NBA history,
says 46 wins during the 82-game season would be a success.

The Knicks won just 33 games last year, but Larry Brown says coaching
New York is his "dream job." Taking over struggling franchises is
nothing new for Brown. Seven of the eight professional teams Brown
coached substantially improved in his first season.

The last time these two high-profile coaches were on the court
together was in the 2004 NBA finals, when Brown's blue-collar Pistons
topped Jackson's star-studded Lakers. But do not look for either team
in the NBA Finals this season.

A controversial new league-mandated dress code will change the way
players look off the court. The code requires business casual attire
whenever players are engaged in team or league business. Suit coats,
sports jackets, slacks and dress shoes will replace throw-back
jerseys, baggy jeans and shorts and unlaced shoes or sandals. Gold
medallions, flashy jewelry headphones, sunglasses and floppy baseball
caps have been outlawed. Some players, like Antwan Jamison of the
Washington Wizards, like the new code.

"I love it. I went to [the University of North] Carolina so I am
accustomed to wearing a coat and tie every game," he said. "And you
know, there is nothing wrong with coming to your job looking
professional. So I think it has been kind of blown out of proportion a
little bit, but I have no problem with the dress code."

But other players, like the Philadelphia 76ers' star guard Allen
Iverson, think the code is an unfair attack on the hip-hop culture. He
says taking away players' individual style will make the league
"fake." Other players have called the edict "cultural censorship,"
while some have called the policy racist. The league says players will
be warned if their apparel is not up to code. But fines or suspensions
could follow if a player refuses to conform.