Friday, July 16, 2010

2010 NBA Summer League - Fantasy Sleepers

Maybe I'm wrong about the number 1 overall draft choice John Wall. He did turnover the ball at a ridiculous rate during the summer league games like I predicted. But I have to admit that he is a very, very good passer. Way better than I anticipated after watching him last night ...

John Wall (Washington Wizards)                   Games Played: 4                   Minutes: 32.3
FG%: 37.7% (26 of 69)                  FT%: 87.2% (41 of 47)                 3PT: 12.5% (1 of 8)
PTS: 23.5           AST: 7.8           REB: 4.0           STL: 2.5           BLK: 0.5           TO: 5.2

It was a major disappointment for the number 2 overall draft choice Evan Turner in this year's summer league. Not to mention that he will start at shooting guard for the Philadelphia 76ers on opening night ...

Evan Turner (Philadelphia 76ers)                   Games Played: 5                  Minutes: 27.4
FG%: 33.3% (13 of 39)                  FT%: 100% (19 of 19)                  3PT: 25.0% (2 of 8)
PTS: 9.4            REB: 5.6           AST: 2.8           STL: 1.6           BLK: 0.0           TO: 3.4

On the other hand, the Sacramento Kings took a risk on draft night and it has been working so far ...

DeMarcus Cousins (Sacramento Kings)                    Games: 4                   Minutes: 30.0
FG%: 40.9% (27 of 66)                   FT%: 73.9% (17 of 23)                  3PT: 0.0% (0 of 0)
PTS: 17.8          REB: 11.5          AST: 2.8           STL: 1.8           BLK: 1.0           TO: 5.3

Honorable mention for some non-rookies:

J.J. Hickson (Cleveland Cavaliers)                  Games Played: 3                 Minutes: 35.0
FG%: 62.2% (28 of 45)                   FT%: 58.6% (17 of 29)                  3PT: 0.0% (0 of 0)
PTS: 24.3           REB: 7.3           AST: 1.0           STL: 0.7           BLK: 0.3           TO: 3.6

Reggie Williams (Golden State Warriors)                   Games: 5                   Minutes: 31.4
FG%: 41.1% (37 of 90)                FT%: 82.4% (28 of 34)               3PT: 42.3% (11 of 26)
PTS: 22.6           REB: 4.4           AST: 2.8           STL: 0.4           BLK: 0.2           TO: 1.6

JaVale McGee (Washington Wizards)                      Games: 4                     Minutes: 29.0
FG%: 68.8% (33 of 48)                   FT%: 54.5% (12 of 22)                  3PT: 0.0% (0 of 0)
PTS: 19.5           REB: 9.3           AST: 0.0           STL: 0.5           BLK: 0.8           TO: 3.0

Hasheem Thabeet (Memphis Grizzlies)                    Games: 3                    Minutes: 32.3
FG%: 63.2% (12 of 19)                   FT%: 69.0% (20 of 29)                  3PT: 0.0% (0 of 0)
PTS: 14.7          REB: 10.0          AST: 1.0           STL: 0.3           BLK: 3.7           TO: 2.7

Thursday, July 15, 2010

NBA's Past And Present - Chris Washburn

Everyone should read this. A great article ...

Washburn Traveled Long Road to Recovery
- By Marc J. Spears

He was a 6-foot-11 giant delivered from the basketball gods by way of Jim Valvano. Chris Washburn had it all. A feathery touch. A guard’s handle. The strength of a center. So much talent, so much promise.

Twenty-four NBA drafts have passed since the Golden State Warriors made Washburn the No. 3 pick in 1986, 24 opportunities for Washburn to remember what he once had and quickly lost. The most celebrated free-agent class in the league’s history also has served as a harsh reminder for Washburn this summer. Had Washburn lived up to his potential, he could have banked his own millions and retired as one of the game’s greats. Instead, he left only as a cautionary tale.

“I know I’m supposed to be a Hall of Famer,” Washburn said recently in a rare interview. “But I’ve come to realize that I’m in the Hall of Shame. …I see that I’m considered one of the worst draft choices. …I’m seeing that I’m part of being called a bust.”

Washburn can’t argue with the labels. In the nearly quarter-century since he left the NBA, Washburn has slept on the floors of crack houses and eaten from trash bins. He’s served time in the penitentiary and squandered the money he did make – all in search of his next high. His greatest victory never came on the court, but after a dozen stays in rehab centers. Somehow, Chris Washburn is alive and, he promises, clean.

Now 44, Washburn says he’s been drug-free for 10 years. He lives in Dallas and works for a home-mortgage company. His two sons, Julian and Chris Jr., have become college prospects in their own right, and if Washburn can give them anything, it’s the lessons he learned from his own mistakes.



Washburn grew up in Hickory, N.C., as a self-proclaimed country boy. He was friendly, quick with a smile and even quicker to trust. A free spirit, teammates called him. He also was immensely talented on the basketball court, becoming a three-time All-American in high school.

“I look back at him and I think about the great big guys that were coming out,” said Portland Trail Blazers coach Nate McMillan, who played with Washburn at North Carolina State and whose wife attended high school with Washburn.

“Some of the things that Shaquille [O’Neal] was doing, Washburn was doing as a forward-center who could run and jump and shoot. He could do it all. He had the talent to certainly be an All-Star.”

Washburn quickly learned that such talent also came with a benefit: Whatever he wanted, he got. Rarely did someone tell him no. An only child, he was accustomed to being coddled and that didn’t stop once he arrived at college.

“Anything that I did that was wrong, someone would take care of it,” he said. “Not having brothers and sisters, everything I did, I had to learn on a first-hand basis. When I did something dumb, instead of me taking the fall for that, they would keep cleaning it up, allowing me to have more rope.”

The basketball program at N.C. State, Washburn said, was among his biggest enablers. He had poor grades in high school, but that didn’t worry him. Nor did having to take the SAT.

“The coaches over there told me, ‘You already signed, you’re already in school, you just have to take the test just to get into college,’ ” Washburn said. “When they told me it didn’t matter what score I was getting, I went in for about 22 minutes. I just marked down [answers] … mark, mark, mark.

“If the coach told me I needed 700, 800 on the test to get to school, I could’ve got that. But when they said I didn’t need it, I didn’t need it.”

Washburn scored a 470 out a possible 1,600, barely above the minimum. Subsequent news reports about his poor score helped spur the NCAA to raise the minimum standards for athletes to gain admittance to college.

Still, that didn’t stop N.C. State from welcoming Washburn as part of a tremendous recruiting class that also included McMillan and another future NBA guard, Vinny Del Negro.

Washburn averaged 17.6 points and 6.7 rebounds as a sophomore and had a memorable 26-point performance in a victory over rival top-ranked North Carolina. The Wolfpack advanced to the Elite Eight of the 1986 NCAA tournament before losing to Kansas.

“The sky was the limit with his talent, size,” said Del Negro, who now coaches the Los Angeles Clippers.

Washburn’s self-destructive behavior also had few boundaries. He began drinking alcohol and smoking marijuana in high school, and shortly after the Wolfpack’s loss to Kansas, he said a player from another school introduced him to cocaine.

“Instead of being like, ‘Nah, I don’t do that,’ I wanted to be a part of the crowd,” Washburn said. “If they were doing it, why don’t I try it? And after I tried it, I never went back to school again.”

Washburn declared for the draft, and NBA scouts marveled at the depth of his skills. He could play inside and out, bang in the post and shoot from deep. The Warriors selected him with the third pick behind Brad Daugherty and Len Bias. Less than two days after the draft, Bias died from a cocaine overdose. Washburn learned of the news while he was at a New York Police Athletic League function. He said he was high.

“I was down there doing something on athletes against crime,” Washburn said. “I had a whole box of tissues just wiping my nose, because at that point in time I was just snorting. Some dude asked me, ‘What you think about Len?’ I was like, ‘What you talking about?’ He then showed me a newspaper with an article.

“That shook me up for a minute. I couldn’t grasp it. I didn’t go to the funeral. It didn’t make no sense to me.”



Washburn said he stopped using cocaine after Bias’ death, but not for long. When the Warriors drafted him, he didn’t know the location of “Golden State.” He learned soon enough. Oakland, Calif., was nicknamed “City of Dope.” It didn’t take long for the Warriors to figure out their prized rookie had a problem.

“It was a year of highs and lows,” said George Karl, who was then the Warriors coach. “I remember the first day of training camp he was by far the best player on the court, and then you could slowly see him disintegrate.

“How to fix a drug problem has never been easy for a head coach. It’s a frustrating give-and-take. We obviously didn’t get it done there. Chris is one of the guys that I think threw away a lot of good basketball because of drugs.”

The Warriors brought in veteran center Joe Barry Carroll to help mentor Washburn on the court, but the rookie had little support once he left practice. Long used to getting his way, Washburn quickly discovered the Warriors veterans weren’t going to go easy on him. He had to carry his teammates’ bags, a traditional form of rookie hazing in sports, and when he happened to win a post-practice shooting contest for cash, the vets sometimes refused to pay him. “I was 20 years old in the Bay Area being a grown man, but still a kid,” Washburn said. “…I showed back at them in so many ways by getting high.”

To this day, Washburn wonders if Julius Erving could have become the mentor he needed. When the Philadelphia 76ers played the Warriors early in Washburn’s rookie season, Erving approached Washburn before the game and asked if they could meet afterward at the Sixers’ hotel. At the time, Washburn was living at the hotel. When Erving showed up to meet him, he was high.

“Do you know I stood there and looked at Dr. J through a peep hole until he left my door,” Washburn said. “I never opened it up. Would that have been my savior right there? I will never know. He extended a hand. I just didn’t accept it.”

Erving wasn’t the only person who appeared to want to help. Washburn eventually purchased a luxurious home in Oakland Hills where Reggie Jackson and Rickey Henderson were among his neighbors. Henderson, Washburn said, once came by to introduce himself.

“I shook his hand, slammed the door and went back to getting high,” Washburn said.



Washburn’s drug problem affected his work with the team. On some game nights, he’d arrive minutes before tipoff. He also stopped attending practices. The way Washburn looked at it, he stood to lose less money in fines if he skipped practice altogether ($10,000) than if he showed up and the team realized he was high (as much as $20,000).

“It was a progression,” said former Warriors guard Purvis Short, a teammate of Washburn’s. “After a couple weeks or couple months of that, you started to suspect there were some things going on. “There wasn’t a lot of information out there in terms of how to help somebody. There wasn’t a lot of information we had as his teammates on some of the things we could’ve perhaps done. We were out there more or less in uncharted waters.”

A little more than three months into his first season, Washburn checked into a drug rehabilitation clinic in Van Nuys, Calif. After returning to the Warriors in late March, he finished his disappointing rookie campaign averaging 3.8 points and 2.9 rebounds in 35 games.

Washburn’s stay in rehab didn’t help much. He continued to use, and his weekends often began with a trip to the bank. He’d withdraw as much as $20,000 to spend on drugs and prostitutes.

By Monday morning, he was back at the bank taking out more money. Of the $1.25 million he made during his brief NBA career, Washburn thinks he lost more than $1 million.

“If you look at the hookers I was buying back then, the hotels – paying for folks’ rent because I didn’t like sitting in folks’ houses and getting high with no lights on. I paid to have the lights on,” he said. “I was hanging with folks that didn’t have running water. We had to go in the bathroom and piss in buckets.

“I had a 6,000-square-foot house built on the side of a mountain, but I’m lying on the floor with no carpet, dirty, because I don’t want to leave the drugs.”



Don Nelson took over as the Warriors’ general manager before the start of Washburn’s second season. By training camp, he’d seen enough and told Karl the team would be better off trading Washburn. On Dec. 15, 1987, they sent Washburn to the Atlanta Hawks for the draft rights to Ken Barlow. Barlow never played in the NBA.

“Everything negative,” Nelson recently said of Washburn. “Lazy. Bad attitude. With his skill level, you projected that if he did everything right, he could get better. He didn’t do anything right.”

Washburn said he would have been better off had the Warriors sent him to Utah or Portland. Atlanta, he figured, was no place for an addict, and he was right. His tenure with the Hawks covered just 29 games. By June of 1989, Washburn’s stay in the NBA was over; he’d failed his third drug test to earn a lifetime suspension from the league. His career had spanned a total of 72 games.

Washburn moved to Houston where he lived on the streets for a couple of years. “I was eating out of trash cans. I was sleeping in abandoned buildings, abandoned houses. I was doing whatever was needed to survive at that time,” he said. “I was staying in the same clothes for weeks, maybe months at a time to a point where the [drug dealers] I was buying my stuff from would even pay me to go and change clothes.”

Washburn eventually ended up in behind bars, serving 12- and 13-month sentences for drug-related offenses from 1991-94, the second coming after a parole violation. While in prison, he returned to the basketball court.

“A couple years prior to that I was on the NBA floor in front of thousands,” Washburn said. “Now I’m on the penitentiary floor playing against guys wearing flip-flops, Army boots. Instead of cheerleaders on the sidelines, we had guys with Kool-Aid on their lips and stuff painted on their face looking like girls. It was always like a movie for me. It was so surreal.”

Except it also was his life. When he wasn’t in jail, Washburn landed some jobs playing professionally in Greece, Switzerland, Puerto Rico, the Continental Basketball Association and United States Basketball League. Former NBA player and coach John Lucas, who has spent much of his career helping players fight substance abuse, helped shepherd Washburn into nearly a dozen rehab centers, none of which seemed to help.

Washburn says he finally went clean on June 17, 2000. A month ago, he said, he passed his decade-long run of sobriety. He claims food is now his biggest vice.

“I just got tired of reaching in my pockets and having no money,” Washburn said. “I got tired of asking my momma at 70-something years old for $20 or $30 being a grown man.”



Washburn now speaks to addicts on Saturdays at the Dallas Life Foundation Center. In February, Short saw Washburn at All-Star weekend and invited him to speak at the National Basketball Players Association’s Top 100 Camp in Virginia for high school players.

“It had a tremendous impact on the kids because Chris spoke from the heart,” Short said. “He just told it like it was.”

Washburn’s message: Stay humble. Learn from him. He had a chance to become a star in the NBA and he wasted it.

“Once I did find out I wasn’t special, it was hard for me to overcome,” Washburn said. “I only used the NBA to get through certain doors.

“The NBA opens up some doors that shouldn’t be opened up.”

This article is taken from here at Yahoo! Sports ...

2010-11 NBA Season Preview - New Jersey Nets

The new look 2010-11 New Jersey Nets

Starter / Bench:
PG - Devin Harris / Jordan Farmar
SG - Courtney Lee / Anthony Morrow
SF - Travis Outlaw / Terrence Williams
PF - Derrick Favors / Josh Boone
C - Brook Lopez / Johan Petro

source:draftexpress.com

2009-10 regular season: 12-70 (15th in East)

Player out: Chris Douglas-Roberts
Players in: Derrick Favors (3rd pick overall), Travis Outlaw, Anthony Morrow, Jordan Farmar and Johan Petro

(You really can't blame them for not being able to get something better after a 12-win season ...)

My 2010-11 season prediction: 28-54 (12th in East)

Wednesday, July 14, 2010

2010-11 NBA Season Preview - Phoenix Suns

The new look 2010-11 Phoenix Suns

Starter / Bench:
PG - Steve Nash / Goran Dragic
SG - Jason Richardson / Josh Childress
SF - Grant Hill / Jared Dudley
PF - Hedo Turkoglu / Hakim Warrick
C - Robin Lopez / Channing Frye

source:arizonarepublic

2009-10 regular season: 54-28 (3rd in West)
2009-10 playoffs: Western Conference Finals

Players out: Amare Stoudemire and Leandro Barbosa
Players in: Hakim Warrick, Hedo Turkoglu and Josh Childress

(They replaced their only inside scoring presence by adding more outside shootings ...)

My 2010-11 season prediction: 39-43 (10th in West)

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Mega Trio In Miami - Makes L.A. Worry

Although the Los Angeles Lakers owner Jerry Buss said a few days ago that he hardly worries about the new look Miami Heat, the Lakers are now trying to sign all free agents that the Heat are targeting. After Derek Fisher's meeting with the Miami Heat, the Lakers re-signed Fisher to a 3-year, $10.5 million contract ...

And Kobe Bryant is doing his part, too. He has already made multiple phone calls to Raja Bell, who said 2 months ago that the Miami Heat is his first choice, and will meet Bell in person later this week to make sure he signs with the Lakers, and not the other title contenders ...

After more pondering, the Charlotte Bobcats' head of basketball operations Michael Jordan backed out from a trade that would have brought point guard Jose Calderon to Charlotte. Instead, he decided to trade Tyson Chandler and Alexis Ajinca to the Dallas Mavericks for Erick Dampier, Matt Carroll and Eduardo Najera ...

Speaking of the Dallas Mavericks, they are about to get totally shut out this summer. The Denver Nuggets have signed Al Harrington, who was number 1 on the Mavericks' list of free agents, to a 5-year, $34 million contract. The money was made available after both the Nuggets and the Mavericks failed to lure Udonis Haslem away from the Miami Heat ...

To make up for the loss of Carlos Boozer, the Utah Jazz have obtained Al Jefferson in a trade with the Minnesota Timberwolves today ...

Monday, July 12, 2010

Mega Trio In Miami - And New York?

Since Udonis Haslem too has decided to give up money and re-signed with the Miami Heat, we are almost 90% sure of what the Heat will look like when the regular season starts ...

PG: Mario Chalmers / Jason Williams / Carlos Arroyo?
SG: Dwyane Wade / Mike Miller / Raja Bell / Jon Scheyer?
SF: LeBron James / James Jones / Matt Barnes?
PF: Chris Bosh / Udonis Haslem / Juwan Howard / Jarvis Varnado?
C: Joel Anthony / Zydrunas Ilgauskas / Jamaal Magloire

What strikes me the most here is that the Heat has never considered signing ex-San Antonio Spurs center Ian Mahinmi for the veteran's minimum. I mentioned his name in a couple of posts before because I knew he is one of those young talents who would take just a minimum offer. Naturally, the Dallas Mavericks signed him to a 2-year minimum contract earlier today ...

The biggest news over the weekend was that Chris Paul talked about forming his own "Big 3" with Carmelo Anthony and Amare Stoudemire in New York next year. In order for this to happen, Carmelo Anthony will need to turn down the 3-year, $65 million contract extension that the Denver Nuggets have already put on the table ...

In an attempt to save his job, the Toronto Raptors GM Brian Colangelo has decided to trade his entire team in hope to win some games next season. The Phoenix Suns have already agreed to trade Leandro Barbosa to the Raptors for disgruntled forward Hedo "nightclub" Turkoglu. He is now in discussion with the Charlotte Bobcats that will bring Boris Diaw and Tyson Chandler to Toronto in exchange for Jose Calderon and Reggie Evans ...

On a side note, the No. 1 overall draft choice in this year's draft John Wall had 18 points, 10 assists and 5 steals tonight after posting 24 and 8 in his first game ...