Cavaliers’ James again tipped to win MVP honors

October 23, 2008
Cleveland Cavaliers forward LeBron James was tipped to win the NBA’s most valuable player honors on Wednesday, but may find himself playing less games in order to do so.

James was picked by 56 percent of the league’s general managers to secure the MVP title, ahead of Los Angeles’ Lakers guard Kobe Byrant, who won the title last season and was chosen by 37 percent of managers to repeat the feat.

It was the third successive year James has been tipped for MVP honors, though his coach Mike Brown suggested he may be forced to rest the player in more games this season.

"It’s something we talked about before the season started," Brown told reporters after James sat out the 97-79 pre-season loss to the Detroit Pistons on Wednesday.

"We sat down and talked about the possibility of getting him a game off, two games off, especially after all the basketball he has played."

James has been a virtual ever-present in the Cavaliers since the team chose him as the number one draft pick straight out of high school in 2003.

He started 79 regular season games in his 2003-04 rookie season, 80 in 2004-05, 79 in 2005-06, 78 in 2006-07 and 74 last season and has averaged more than 41 minutes per game.

However he, along with Bryant, spent the off-season helping the US "Redeem Team" to win gold at the Beijing Olympics and neither has had much opportunity to recharge their batteries.

While James is favored to earn MVP honors few believe it will be enough to carry the Cavaliers to the title, with 46 percent of general managers picking the Lakers to avenge last year finals loss to the Boston Celtics.

Just 19 percent of general managers believed the Celtics would retain their title.
 

China issues wanted list for Olympics terror plotters

China Tuesday released a wanted list of eight "terrorists" it said had carried out attacks aimed at the Beijing Olympics and were bent on separating the restive western region of Xinjiang.

It said the eight were all Chinese nationals and members of the East Turkestan Islamic Movement (ETIM), a group listed by the United Nations as a terrorist organization in 2002 with links to Al Qaeda.

"The eight are all key members of the ETIM, and all participated in the planning, deployment and execution of all kinds of violent terrorist activities targeting the Beijing Olympics," Wu Heping, a spokesman with the Ministry of Public Security, told reporters.

Wu said they had carried attacks on targets in China and overseas, but provided no details.

Resource-rich Xinjiang, strategically located on the borders of Central Asia, has been rocked by sometimes violent unrest this year, including the killing of 16 armed police just before the August Olympics, blamed by China on Muslim militants seeking an independent state they call East Turkestan.

China in April said it had foiled a number of terror plots targeting the Olympics by two separate organizations which had included suicide bomb attacks and kidnapping athletes.

A statement handed out by police named Memetiming Memeti, 37, as the head of the ETIM.

Memeti, also named "Memetiming Aximu" among other aliases, had depatched more than 10 ETIM members to China and "certain Western Asian countries" to collect funds, explosives and carry out terror attacks on targets in China and overseas, the statement said.

The other suspects — Emeti Yakuf, Memetituersun Yiming, Memetituersun Abuduhalike, Xiamisidingaihemaiti Abudumijiti, Aikemilai Wumaierjiang, Yakuf Memeti and Tuersun Toheti — had variously been involved in planning attacks, leading terror cells, training and recruiting.

Wu called for international cooperation to track them down.

"We hope that relevant international governments and law enforcement departments can carry out investigations into these eight terrorist suspects according to the law, and if their whereabouts are discovered, that they be arrested and handed over to China," Wu said.

Many of Xinjiang’s 8 million largely Muslim Uighurs chafe at the strict controls on religion that China enforces and resent influxes of Han Chinese migrant workers and businesses.

Uighurs make up slightly less than half of the region’s people, and most of the rest are Han.

Dilxat Raxit, spokesperson for the World Uyghur Congress, dismissed the list as an excuse for China to crack down on Uighurs demanding greater autonomy for Xinjiang.

"The list has political motives," Raxit told Reuters by telephone. "They have produced no evidence to support these claims."