Groupie tries to take Metta World Peace’s D**k out of his pants in club

Last time something like this Happen to 2pac he ended up with a  sexual assault charge .. Look at this chick trying to take Ron Artest penis out of his pants  in the Club… SMH we gotta do better  look at some of these ratchet chicks

CONGRATULATIONS LA LAKERS: 2010 NBA Champions!

How Can 4-Time Champion, Kobe Bryant, be 21st??

Kobe Bryant said this one was the “sweetest.” And he admitted it surely was the hardest.

Trailing by 13 points in the third quarter of Game 7, Bryant and coach Phil Jackson must have had that sickening feeling Jerry West experienced throughout the 1960’s against the Celtics when he lost six times.

But despite Bryant’s wayward shooting, he has his fifth championship ring, Jackson has his 11th coaching title, and the Lakers have their second straight championship and their 16th NBA title.

The desperate Lakers rallied in the fourth to spoil the “Boston D Party” and capture Game 7, 83-79 last night after a wild final minute at Staples Center.

Bryant won the “Bill Russell Finals MVP Award” with the greatest Celtic on hand, presenting it as the Staples floor became completely covered in purple and gold confetti.

“This is the sweetest, we know how bad the city wanted it,” Bryant said on the podium. “This is far by the sweetest because it was against [the Celtics]. And it was the hardest. I wanted it so bad it got the best of me.”

The Lakers’ “Road to Repeat” — after a series of bumps last night in which they shot 26 percent in the first half — reached a happy conclusion.

A 9-0 Lakers’ run midway through the fourth quarter put them in the lead for good, 70-64, as the Lakers’ defense outdid Boston’s in the fourth in a defensive war that became a fireworks show in the final minute.

Bryant, who admitted to being exhausted, finished with 23 points on 6 of 24 shooting and 15 rebounds, but he needed — and got — lots of help.

Bryant had played down the long Celtics rivalry all series. He fessed up last night.

“I was just lying to you guys,” Bryant said. “You know I’m a student of the game. I know every series the Lakers have played in. I was just a Laker nut and know every Celtic series, ever statistic. It meant the world to me, but I couldn’t focus on that.”

Bryant couldn’t have done it without Ron Artest, the lone piece added from last season’s championship team. The recently struggling Queensbridge native made hustle plays, scored 20 points and sank a huge final-minute 3-pointer, to win his first title.

“That was tough sledding,” Jackson said. “It wasn’t well done, but it was done.”

Jackson wouldn’t commit to a return with the Lakers.

“I got to take a deep breath, take some time and think about this,” Jackson said. “I’ll wait to make that decision in a week.”

Bryant already was lobbying for his coach to stay.

“He knows how bad I want him back,” Bryant said. “Let’s go for it again.”

Meanwhile, Celtics coach Doc Rivers realizes the inevitable about the fourth-seeded afterthoughts who painted this spring green. This aging core won’t be back in total, probably not even him.

“We’re not going to be the same team next year,” Rivers said. “I don’t think there was a dry eye [in the locker room].”

Meanwhile, Lakers owner Jerry Buss is one away from his goal to catch the Celtics’ 17 titles.

“I think we want it more,” Buss said in rare remarks. “Everyone abuses the line ‘Beat L.A., Beat L.A.’ It gives us a lot of energy to come back and take it.”

Pau Gasol (19 points, 18 rebounds) hit one of the biggest shots, scoring over a double team inside to put the Lakers up 76-70 with 1:30 left.

But the gutty Celtics wouldn’t quit. Rondo picked up an offensive rebound and fired in a corner 3-pointer to make it 81-79 with 15 seconds left. Reserve Sasha Vujacic made two mammoth free throws with 11.7 seconds left to give the Lakers a four-point bulge. Rondo missed a trey in the final seconds to end it, giving the Lakers their first Game 7 win over the Celtics after four heartbreaks.

Bryant, harassed by Ray Allen and a sea of green, played in a funk for three quarters and looked to be heading to another bitter Celtic defeat on the two-year anniversary of their Finals wipeout in 2008. Bryant was 5 of 20 after three-quarters before turning it on with 10 fourth-quarter points.

“I think he [Kobe] was a little too animated,” Jackson said.

The conventional wisdom across Southern California the past 48 hours was without burly defensive center Kendrick Perkins, the Celtics were toast. The Celtics were made seven-point underdogs in Las Vegas. But Rasheed Wallace did good in Perkins’ stead, and Kevin Garnett turned back the clock with an overpowering inside effort (17 points) and the Celtics sent an earthquake-scare across Los Angeles.

The Celtics burst to a 23-14 lead after one quarter, holding down an impatient Bryant to 1 of 7 shooting. Bryant finished the quarter, fittingly, by firing an airball.

The Lakers shot a horrifying 13 of 49 at halftime — 26.5 percent. They also were a jittery 6 of 12 from the free-throw line. Bryant, swarmed by green, was 3 of 14 in the half and most of them were stupid forces.

The Lakers were down 57-53 after three, with Bryant starting the fourth on the bench with a 5-of-20 ledger.

Boston built an 11-point lead with 9:45 left in the third, with Rondo running the offense to perfection.

-“The BklynBandette.” Mr. Hollywood’s Co-Defendant.