Posts Tagged ‘NBA’

I dominate WaPo chat

Thursday, January 31st, 2008

Ivan Carter and Michael Lee had a Wizards/NBA chat on Washingtonpost.com yesterday and I dominated, getting 3 questions answered. Here they are:

1.

19th and L: Michael, how is it possible that the Nets could be interested in trading Vince Carter when they just signed him to an extension this off-season? Especially considering there was little interest for him then, when he could be had without giving up players?

Michael Lee: Have you seen Vince play this season? He’s been so inconsistent. He drifts from game to game. He has no desire to attack the basket, no desire to dunk. He just tosses up weak fadeaways and calls it a day. It’s driving Jason Kidd crazy, if you haven’t noticed.
But I heard that Nets ownership, not basketball operations, pushed to keep him at that $62 million price tag. If you had to choose between Kidd and Carter (Vince, not Ivan), you’d rather have Kidd, right? You know he’s going to bring it every night . . . that he doesn’t have a migraine.

2.

The District: Michael, there are several teams that arent doing as well as hoped this year (Hawks, Bobcats to name two) and yet have some attractive pieces. Do you see a Josh Smith or someone like that being traded?

Michael Lee: I see somebody getting fired in Atlanta before I see Josh Smith getting moved. He is on the verge of superstardom and has nothing to make you want to give up on him (no matter what has been said about his attitude). You just don’t find players like Smith - someone who is capable of getting you 20 points, 8 rebounds, 5 assists, 5 blocks and 5 steals in one game - all the time. He’s an incredible athlete and he’s just 22. Why would you trade him?

3.

Washington, DC: Does anyone really have a sense of whats going to happen this summer with Gilbert? He says he wants to play for a winner, well the Wizards have shown they are pretty good even without him. I’m wondering, given Jamison’s situation, which is the first piece, Jamison getting figured out or Arenas?

Ivan Carter: To me, it all starts with Arenas because he’s going to eat up the largest chunk of cap space. Once he gets done, Antawn is next but first, Antawn will have a chance go gauge his worth on the open market. Right now, it’s going up.

The trick, kids, is to mix up your locations.

Never thought about that

Wednesday, December 12th, 2007

Interesting question asked in today’s Wizards/NBA WaPo chat:

Washington, D.C.: Strange question, but how do they decide which basket the teams will shoot at in the first half? Is it visitor’s choice?

Michael Lee: Typically, it’s the visiting team’s choice, but they usually respect the home team and let them start on whatever side they usually begin the game.

You learn something new everyday kids.

Monday, November 19th, 2007

Marc Stein says that Jamison, Butler and Arenas make up the 8th best trio in the league. That feels way too low but with the 0-5 start to the season its hard to argue.

Wilbon inconsistent on Kobe for Gilbert

Saturday, November 10th, 2007

Let me say to begin with that I’m a big fan of the WaPo and ESPN’s Michael Wilbon, have been since I was a wee child. Having said that, Mr. Wilbon was a tad inconsistent when the Kobe for Gilbert trade rumors were swirling a couple weeks ago. Here’s Wilbon in his column on Friday, November 2:

So, what’s next? If I was serious about trading Kobe I would call the Wizards about Arenas, who at 25 is four years younger than Kobe and much cheaper at the moment.

And if I ran the Wizards I’d say: Thanks, but no.

Start, as everything does, with the money. Arenas makes $11 million while Kobe makes $21 million, plus gets a 15 percent lump sum in a trade clause. So, the Wizards would have to include at least a couple of other players. Maybe Antawn Jamison or two of the younger players the Lakers probably aren’t interested in. Kobe loves Caron Butler, so he probably wouldn’t sign off on any deal (Kobe has to approve the trade) that would send Butler back to the Lakers, and the Wizards would be crazy to deal their best two players anyway. If the Wizards did that they’d be the Washington Lakers, a team with nothing more than Kobe.

Ok, so Wilbon doesn’t think the Wizards should trade Gil for Kobe. Or does he? Here’s Wilbon in WaPo chat he did earlier that same week:

Should be paying attention in class, Md.: Oh Mr. Wilbon! I’ve been surfing the Internet and I saw that there are rumors that the Wiz are considered a dark horse for Kobe. Gilbert for Kobe, is that really a good idea?

Michael Wilbon: I’d do it…Why not? Gilbert’s going to be a free agent soon enough anyway since he can opt out…So why not pursue Kobe? Ernie Grunfeld and Mitch Kupchak are friendly. That makes sense. Question is, what else would the Wizards have to give up? Would you do it for Gilbert and Jamison? I would NOT do it for Gilbert and Caron. Nope. But Gil and ‘Twan…As much as I like those guys and want to see what the team can produce this season, I’d do that. Yep.

Wait, what? Didn’t he say the exact opposite in his column? Now I know everyone has the right to change their mind but it would be nice if Mr. Wilbon would provide some reasoning as to why in the span of a few days he flip-flopped on this.

If gambling were legal….#2

Thursday, November 1st, 2007

Suns/Sonics Over 223

Record: 1 for 3

‘07-’08 Wizards/NBA Preview

Wednesday, October 31st, 2007

The long wait is over: tonight the Wizards kick off their ‘07-’08 season with a trip to Indiana to face the Pacers. I thought I’d go on record with some of my thoughts for the upcoming season.

Things are a bit odd for the Wizards right now; while Gilbert Arenas is getting more attention then ever, the Wizards as a team are kind of being written off. Part of this is do the splashy imports to the Eastern Conference (hello KG, Zach Rudolph and, I guess, Rashard Lewis) and part is because Washington did little to change its own roster. Now some people are saying that a team that had the best record in the East at the All-Star break last year won’t even make the playoffs this year (I’m looking at you Bill Simmons. Indiana better then the Wizards? Are you out of your mind?).

I know I’m a hopeless homer but I like this year’s Wizards team a lot. First, we’ve got one Gilbert Arenas, playing in a contract year. You can basically book on 30 a game from him, with maybe (fingers crossed?) some better D this year? I actually don’t like Brendon Haywood at all but with Eddie Jordan having no choice but to play him with Etan Thomas out I think Haywood does well this year (finally). Butler’s a stud and will continue to be the heart and soul of this team. Jamison….is Jamison. I understand he’s a good guy in the locker room and all but Jamison, to be frank, drives me crazy. Way too many 4-15 nights from him. DeShawn Stevenson is the teams best defender, which isn’t saying much, and I kind of think he loses minutes this year in lineup shuffles.

Our bench should be much improved. We’ve got Darius Songalia for the whole year. Antonio Daniels still looks spry and he and Darius run that pick and roll to perfection. Nick Young adds scoring off the bench (certainly more then Jarvis Hayes did/nt last year), although little D. Rookie forward Dominic McGuire looks like one of those glue guys that every good team has. Don’t really expect much from Roger Mason and Oleksiy Pecherov.

But here’s who really has me excited this year: Andray Blatche. Yeah he’ll hear a lot of prostitution jokes but he’s looked really good in the preseason and I think he’s going to breakout big time this year. With Etan out for the year (barring a miracle) Blatche is going to be getting a lot of time at the 5 backing up Brendon and I think that’s a pretty great fit for him. The great thing about Blatche is that he’s a natural rebounder and a pretty good shot-blocker, two Wizards needs. If Blatche plays the way I think he can this year then that will propel the Wizards in to the upper echelon of NBA teams.

Enough talk. Here’s how I see the season playing out:

Eastern Conference
1. Celtics (Division Winner)
2. Bulls (DW)
3. Wizards (DW)
4. Raptors
5. Detroit
6. Cleveland
7. Orlando
8. New York

Western Conference
1. Suns (DW)
2. Rockets (DW)
3. Denver (DW)
4. Dallas
5. Spurs
6. Utah
7. Memphis
8. Lakers

MVP: Kevin Garnett
Rookie of the Year: Kevin Durant
Most Improved: LaMarcus Aldridge
Coach of the Year: Rick Adelman
6th Man: Leandro Barbosa
Defensive POY: Kevin Garnett

Finals prediction: Rockets over Celtics in 6.

Lots to argue with there I’m sure.

Gilbert for Kobe?

Tuesday, October 30th, 2007

Yesterday I was scrolling through my news aggregator and I stumble upon a post by the guys at DC Sports Report entitled “Kobe to DC?“. Naturally this piqued my interest so I clicked through and the post was centered around a blurb in Sam Smith’s column in the Chicago Tribune.

Here’s what Smith wrote:

Agent Zero going Hollywood?
One general manager on the periphery of the Bryant talks says he believes the “dark horse” to make a deal with the Lakers is the Washington Wizards. The consensus is the Wizards have hit a plateau, but have the star power in Gilbert Arenas to make a deal.

Arenas is talking about opting out of his contract after this season. He’s from Los Angeles and has become a star, one of the league’s highest-scoring players and an engaging personality who would embrace the Hollywood scene. He would meet the Lakers’ demands for an All-Star player if they trade Bryant.

“Watch out for them,” the general manager said, meaning the Wizards.

The Lakers probably would want a power forward, which the Wizards don’t have. The biggest obstacle, though, may be Bryant’s no-trade clause, along with the fact he hasn’t indicated any interest in Washington. Still, with Bryant, Antawn Jamison and Caron Butler, the Wizards would have a three-star set that could match up in the East.

Now Sam Smith is fairly well known for tossing out all sorts of trade rumors, thats basically his whole shtick, so I took that with a grain of salt. But then DC Sports Report updated their post to include a Marc Stein quote from an ESPN.com chat he did:

Real enough that I wouldn’t call it a rumor. Washington’s interest, I’m told, is super genuine. What we don’t know yet is whether Kobe would be amenable to Washington. But the Lakers would be hard-pressed to do better than a package that apparently features Gilbert Arenas and Andray Blatche . . . as long as Gil were willing to agree to extension with his hometown Lakers as opposed to opting out at season’s end.

getting involved in the Kobe Sweepstakes and I’ve since heard that there’s legit smoke here. We’ll have to see what Kobe thinks of sharing a city with the president, since he wields more power than anyone in the NBA with the only active no-trade clause.

Hmmm. Could this be real? I guess they are at least talking about talking about it or something like that right? Now I’m getting a little excited, thinking about possibilities, etc. I love Gilbert as much as the next guy and would hate to see him go…but Kobe in DC? Best player in the league, here? Makes you pause, I’ll tell you that.

Then of course I read in today’s paper that Ernie Grunfield denies it all. Here’s Ernie:

“I don’t normally comment on rumors but there is no truth to this rumor,” Grunfeld said when reached by phone last evening. “We’ve never had any conversations with the Lakers or with anyone else about Gilbert.”

Oh. I guess I didn’t really expect Ernie to say anything differently but still, that kind of kills the fun of considering trade offers, doesnt it? Ivan Carter, WaPo Wizards beat writer extraordinaire, had more on his blog:

(cites Grunfield quote mentioned above) I heard the same from other folks with knowledge of the situation so I really don’t know what to make of Sam’s speculation or similar speculation via Marc Stein at www.espn.com. Now, in terms of Sam, I’ll say this: my man Sam had Kevin Garnett traded to the Bulls around 1,500 times over the last few years. I think he had Iverson moved nearly half as often. That’s Sam’s job: talk to folks around the league and throw out possible trade situations when he hears them. As any reporter will tell you, there are 5,000 “source” rumors for every trade that actually goes down. In the NBA, where many voices are whispering sweet nothings in many an ear, rumor is a way of life.

Here’s why I don’t see a Kobe/Wiz deal going down:

1. Kobe has a no-trade clause, a hefty trade kicker and it appears that his heart is set on Chicago. Now, if something floats out in the next few days that Kobe secretly loves the Redskins, has always wanted to visit Mount Vernon and really digs trips the Smithsonian when visiting the DC, you’ll know that there something is to this rumor. Believe this: Kobe is driving all of this and we’ll all know soon enough if he wants out of LA bad enough to step off the windy city and flirt with chocolate city. Until then, it’s all talk. Now, if Kobe shows up to practice tomorrow wearing a Caron Butler jersey……..

2. Would the Lakers really give up Kobe for a guy who is coming off of knee surgery and can opt out of his deal next summer? Where would that put them in a Western Conference that is top heavy with the Spurs, Suns, Mavs, Nuggets, Jazz and Rockets?

3. I would assume that if the Lakers are doing their jobs, they would demand Andray Blatche in any deal involving Kobe and that isn’t going to happen, not based on the things Blatche showed in preseason. You don’t trade 6-11, 260-pound 21-year olds with that skill set and a five-year contract that is only running you $15 million.
Not in a conference that has LeBron, Luol Deng, Rasheed, KG, Dwight Howard, Chris Bosh, Rashard Lewis, Zach Randolph, Gerald Wallace, Josh Smith and assorted other matchup nightmares lurking in every corner. If Blatche reaches his potential, he gives you a five-tool almost 7-footer who is just scratching the surface. Hard to trade that, even for Kobe.

Now, as we all know, things can change and that’s why the first three months of this season are going to be so interesting. By February, the Wizards should have a feel for where Gilbert is on that knee and have a feel for how the rotation is coming together. If Gilbert does his thing and the big three stay healthy and Blatche continues to come along, the Wiz should be one of the top two or three teams in the East and there would be no reason to blow it all up by trying to land Kobe. Also, we’ll know just how hungry Kobe is to go somewhere.

My educated guess is that the Lakers will sit back, see how Kobe reacts early in the season and evaluate their options come February. I do have a feeling that it’s going to kill him watching KG play with Ray Allen and Paul Pierce. Thing is, KG was put into prison by Kevin McHale while Kobe pretty much did it to himself.

Carter mentions a big sticking point I had in any proposed Arenas for Kobe deal: I love Andray Blatche and consider him close to untouchable. Blatche is going to breakout this year, is signed for the next 5 years at a very reasonable price, and is going to be a 7 foot stud. You can’t involve him in any deal, you just cant. I guess its all moot anyway, which I think is a good thing. But its fun to think about.

After the jump, for no real reason other then I think its interesting, Michael Wilbon’s answers to some questions on this subject in a WaPo Chat House session yesterday.

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Tuesday, September 4th, 2007

The always entertaining Kelly Dwyer, filling in for a vacationing Henry Abbott at True Hoop, gives us perhaps the definition of blogging with too much time on your hands: a live blog of a game between the Lakers and the Trail Blazers….over seven years ago.

Nick Young = nasty dunker

Monday, July 2nd, 2007

I feel considerably better about Nick Young (not that I felt bad) after watching him do a 360 BEHIND THE BACK DUNK! Dudes nasty. Video after the jump.

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Saturday, June 30th, 2007

SI.com’s Marty Burns gave the Wizards draft a “B”.