Expert (adj): having special knowledge of or skill in a subject
If you scan the stats of the Los Angeles Lakers, you will find six players who are currently hitting 3-pointers at a clip several percentage points higher than their career averages.
Part of this has to do with the maturation of Andrew Bynum and the sudden need to double him on the blocks, thus freeing L.A.'s shooters.
But a lot of credit should be given to the team's resident expert, assistant coach Craig Hodges.

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Despite winning two titles and three consecutive 3-point contests with the Bulls, Craig Hodges was out of the NBA for 13 years.
"I went from making $600,000 a year to making nothing," Hodges said. "No one would take my calls, no one would give me a chance. I went from helping a team win it all, to all of a sudden not being good enough to play for the worst team in the league.
"Do I think the league had it out for me? You tell me."
Blackball (v): to exclude from membership by casting a negative vote
Hodges' story goes a little like this: He buddied up with the Nation of Islam's Louis Farrakhan, challenged black athletes -- including teammate Michael Jordan -- to do more in their community, and showed up at the White House in 1992 wearing a dashiki. While there, he handed the first President Bush a letter urging him to address what Hodges called the injustices inflicted on the black community.
A short time later, Hodges was cut.
"I was outspoken, but I wasn't disrespectful," he says. "I was never in trouble for drugs, or guns or raping women or anything like that. I just wanted to help my community, and that made me a troublemaker.
"What I did at the White House embarrassed the league, and it made a lot of people uncomfortable, and they did something about it."
Conspiracy (n): a secret agreement between two or more people to perform an unlawful act
Commissioner David Stern has always denied any plot against Hodges after the incident. In fact, he said he was there with the Bulls at the White House that day and told Hodges he liked his attire.
Besides, at the time, Hodges was an undersized shooting guard who couldn't stop a mannequin from getting to the rim. In his final year in the league, he missed 26 games because of injuries and was playing less than 10 minutes a game.
However, when he was on the court he was still hitting 37.5 percent of his 3s. More importantly, he had an intimate knowledge of Chicago's famed triangle offense -- the kind of knowledge that could have helped opposing teams defend it.
"I played for Tex Winter for four years at Long Beach State," Hodges said. "I knew the triangle offense better than Phil Jackson. People want to say my skills were declining. That's debatable. But you can't say my knowledge of the game couldn't help teams win games. And nobody could shoot like me.
"Nobody."After failing to get a single team interested in him, an angry and desperate Hodges sued the league and its owners in 1996 for blackballing him for his "black militant" views.
He lost, of course.
It's difficult to prove a league that was 80 percent black at the time was being run by a bunch of racist whites.
Still, it is curious that a player who's a career 40 percent 3-point shooter, who just hit 45 percent of his 3s in the playoffs en route to helping his team win a championship, and who never had a technical foul called on him in 10 years, couldn't get at least a tryout invite from a single NBA team. Not a Dallas squad that finished the 1992-93 season with 11 wins and three guards who shot less than 20 percent from 3? Or how about a 25-win Sacramento roster that included 5-foot-11, 153-pound Stan Kimbrough, who played a grand total of 65 minutes in his two-year NBA career? Hodges wasn't good enough to compete against that?

Andrew D. Bernstein/NBAE via Getty Images
Hodges, pictured at far right, joined the Lakers coaching staff in 2005.
McKinney, a onetime Clippers teammate of Hodges, denies making that statement.
"I never heard of a leaguewide conspiracy to keep Craig out," says McKinney, who is now a broadcaster with the Timberwolves. "I've been there as a player myself. Jobs are scarce, and you are desperately trying to hang on. It didn't make sense for me to bring him in for a tryout because I knew there wasn't a snowball's chance in hell he'd make the team.
"I'm not sure why the other teams didn't bring him in you'd have to ask them."
Irony (n): apparent perversity of an event or circumstance in reversing human intentions.
Hodges' story is full of it.
Irony, that is.
Like how the coach who cut him from the Bulls -- and essentially out of the league -- was the one to welcome him back.
Or how prominent members of the very community he sacrificed his career to help were unwilling to help him get that career back.
And I'm not just talking NBA types.
"I asked Jesse Jackson to help me and he wouldn't," Hodges said. "I asked Johnnie Cochran to represent me and he wouldn't. I don't want to talk bad about the dead but he represented O.J., but he wouldn't help me.
"That's messed up."
Yeah, it is.
Which leads to the question of
Regret (n): feeling or sorrow or repentance, etc., over an action or loss, etc.
As in "Craig Hodges has no ""I was able to play 10 years in the league and I won championships," he said. "So no sour grapes on my part.
"But at the same time, I'm disappointed because I did what I felt I needed to do to help my community, and it cost my grandchildren millions of dollars. It cost my community millions of dollars because I wasn't able to invest that money and give back."
Unsung hero (n): see Craig Hodges.
LZ Granderson is a senior writer for ESPN The Magazine and a regular contributor to Page 2. He can be reached at l_granderson@yahoo.com.
BLACK HISTORY MONTH

BLACK MAGIC
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