Archive for the ‘NBA’ Category
Steve Blake & John Gilchrist Fight!
Friday, August 26th, 2011What I Learned from the 2011 NBA Draft About the State of Basketball at the Highest Level
Tuesday, July 5th, 2011Do you remember when the #1 through #10 players in the NBA draft where almost assured to have a 70% Thriller-Killer to Bust-Crème Puff Filler ratio? Do you remember when in the second round you could find guys who may be short on elite athleticism but LOOOOONG on collegiate resume and high on basketball skill and acumen? Do you remember when the matriculation from High School to college was largely unknown…but the bright lights, big cities, and making of one’s manhood on the hardwood (II) began in the toughest conferences of the NCAA’s Division 1? Do you remember when the only FIBA and Euro-ballers to make the jump were the Sarunas Marciulionis’, the Drazen Petrovics, the Arvydas Sabonis’, the Detlef Schrempfs, the Toni Kukocs and the Sarunas Jasikevicius (MD Terps dude) (yeah, some of those dudes came over without being drafted but you get my point where the talent level is concerned, on who and how international NBA players came about being a part of the “Greatest Show on Earth)…the crème de la crème of International players, the BEST the world had to offer was the second or third tier stars coming over. Yeah, occasionally the Spurs, who happen to have NBA scouts placed on Pluto, Jupiter, Mars, and every continent back here on Earth, would draft someone resembling Sergeant Shultz of Hogan’s Heros. Or, Abe Pollin would draft a brother from East Africa who was 7 foot 7 and could shoot 3’s and was more interested in the world cup than the NBA. But other than that, from top to bottom, the NBA Draft was teeming with tough morsels of talent raring to get at the vets in practice. Boys who had done all they could do with their amateur children’s collegiate career and were ready to swim in waters with no bottom, with sharks who had no consciences.Kyrie Irving is going to be a special point guard, Derrick Williams is more athletic than we give him credit for, and will be too skilled and quick for 4’s, and too strong and skilled for 3’s (If Jared Dudley can make it, why are we worried about Williams?). Enes Kanter reminds me of a combo of Pau and Marc, with some Kaman thrown in. Kemba is Kemba…a winner. Jimmer will teach you how to Jimmer, and Alec may be ok. And then there is Bismack…Bismack, Bismack, Bismack! It is not that I wish failure for Bismack, it’s not that I think he’s a bad guy. In fact, this isn’t REALLY about Bismack as much as he happens to be the poster child for what is wrong with the current trend in pro basketball. LOOOOOOOOOOOOOOONG on athleticism…I mean LONG! Dude’s vertical, his quickness, his potential, are all through the roof. His skill, his development, his IQ, is about as tall as a stacked pile of tissue paper containing 4 sheets. And Bismack wasn’t a 2nd rounder. No! Bismack Biyombo at 6’7” was the 7th overall pick. A lottery pick was used on a Ruben Patterson-like defensive specialist. Now, as you review the list of names drafted that night, beginning in the lottery, and juxtaposing it upon the draft’s storied history, you will ask yourself: “Self”, I say. “Where are the difference makers? Where are the stars? Where are the HOF’ers?”
As we left the lottery we had three types of player: 1) The athletic freak, minimal skill, 1 to maybe 2 collegiate seasons. 2) The highly skilled, underwhelming talent who played 3 to 4 years, headed towards a Duhon-ish career. 3) The EURO…the Euro players who have been playing professionally, a number of them since 15 and 16 years old, have a jumpstart on the other two types as they’ve (a) been playing with grown men in their 20s and 30s, (b) had coaching from professional eat-sleep-drink-feed-my-family coaches whose job is to make them a complete, well rounded, money generating, win-getting production center. But, they are largely unknown quantities to everyone but the Spurs and those that watch FIBA. Then you face the buyout clauses with their current clubs, the fact that they have no merchandising value, and a fan that came to see a built/born/bred in the US product.
The draft is just one more indication of the huge plunge into mediocrity and inferior product the league is facing. No longer is there a premium placed on honing skill, mastering craft, and marrying athletics to talent, skill, heart, and IQ. The premium is placed on what you can sell and/or market, how fast you can get to the marketplace (with a largely unfinished product), how much Sportscenter airtime you can get, and who you can copy-cat your moves and game from. And so…we have an inferior product. An entire generation enamored with high-flying and getting rich as opposed to winning and being the best. The uber-athletes have flawed games and low IQs, and to take a gamble on the draft, the weak athlete develops himself to the peak of his talent and pinnacle of ability. But alas, if the natural order of things were set right, he’d be a D-Leaguer, a CBA’er, or in Euro-League. Hell, if you want to be accurate about the situation, certain players wouldn’t be in major D1 programs if the attention to really teaching the game and developing talent was held to the proper standard. WE, the fans would see a better quality product, and every draft class would be filled with talent and not just top-heavy outliers.
And so this draft served to confirm what I already know. Basketball is dying much like Hip Hop. A carotid artery is constricting tighter and tighter. Oxygen and life’s blood is being restricted and growth has stopped. You have to look no further than the current labor issues as another indirect indicator. An inferior product loses money, an inferior player is a bum, and a bum shouldn’t be there. He shouldn’t have been in the draft and the fan shouldn’t have to pay to see a guy who can jump over a house but can’t shoot a 15-footer, dribble with his left, or hit over 75% from the line.
Tune back in as I explain how all of this plays into where the labor agreement is, and why only 8 teams out of 32 are profitable. Some say contraction is the answer. I say it goes way deeper than that. The system from 11 years ago and on needs revamped (why are we now ranking the top 7th graders? ).
Bradley “B. Austin” Anderson of The War Room, for War Room Sports
2011 NBA Mock Draft
Thursday, June 23rd, 2011Here is my first and final 2011 NBA Mock Draft. There is no way I will get every pick correct. There might be trades, and then there are NBA GM’s who have no clue what they are doing. My picks are based on logic and where I believe players should fall according to team needs and what I’m hearing from the few connects I’ve acquired over the past couple years since my days at broadcasting school.
2011 NBA Mock Draft (First Round): 1 Kyrie Irving Cleveland 2 Derrick Williams Minnesota 3 Enes Kanter Utah 4 Jonas Valanciunas Cleveland 5 Brandon Knight Toronto 6 Jan Vesely Washington 7 Kemba Walker Sacramento
8 Tristan Thompson Detroit 9 Kawhi Leonard Charlotte 10 Klay Thompson Milwaukee 11 Alec Burks Golden State 12 Jimmer Fredette Utah 13 Marcus Morris Phoenix 14 Nikola Vucevic Houston 15 Markieff Morris Indiana 16 Bismark Biyombo Philadelphia 17 Chris Singleton New York 18 Marshon Brooks Washington 19 Kenneth Faried Charlotte 20 Iman Shumpert Minnesota 21 Tobias Harris Portland 22 Tyler Honeycutt Denver 23 Donatas Motiejunas Houston 24 Jordan Hamilton Oklahoma City 25 Jeremy Tyler Boston 26 Nikola Mirotic Dallas 27 Reggie Jackson New Jersey 28 Justin Harper Chicago 29 Norris Cole San Antonio 30 Shelvin Mack Chicago
Brandon Pemberton of Brandon on Sports, for War Room Sports
My Top 60 Prospects for the 2011 NBA Draft
Thursday, June 23rd, 2011The NBA Draft is tonight at 7pm and here are my top 60 prospects available. This was finally composed after watching these guys play during the past college and Euroleauge seasons. I had help from my friend John Dimopoulos of http://www.eurojohnbball.com with scouting reports of the Euro guys. Make sure you go checkout his site as well. He knows his stuff. I watch the games and I rank the players according to how I feel they will translate to the pro game and also on potential of growing once getting to the NBA.
1. Kyrie Irving 6-3 191 PG Duke Fr.
2. Derrick Williams 6-8 248 SF/PF Arizona So.
3. Enes Kanter 6-11 259 PF/C Kentucky Fr.
4. Alec Burks 6-6 193 PG/SG Colorado So.
5. Tristan Thompson 6-9 227 PF Texas Fr.
6. Kemba Walker 6-1 184 PG UConn Jr.
7. Brandon Knight 6-3 177 PG/SG Kentucky Fr.
8. Kawhi Leonard 6-7 227 SF San Diego St. So.
9. Marcus Morris 6-8 230 SF/PF Kansas Jr.
10. Klay Thompson 6-7 206 SG/SF WashingtonState Jr.
11. Jan Vesely 6-11 230 SF/PF Czech Republic 1990
12. Jordan Hamilton 6-8 228 SG/SF Texas So.
13. Tyler Honeycutt 6-8 187 SG/SF UCLA So.
14. Markieff Morris 6-9 241 PF Kansas Jr.
15. Jimmer Fredette 6-2 196 PG/SG BYU Sr.
16. Donatas Motiejunas 7-0 224 PF Lithuania 1990
17. Chris Singleton 6-9 230 SF/PF Florida St. Jr
18. Marshon Brooks 6-5 195 SG Providence Sr.
19. Tobias Harris 6-8 223 SF/PF Tennessee Fr.
20. Jonas Valanciunas 6-11 240 C Lithuania 1992
21. Bismack Biyombo 6-9 243 C/PF Congo 1992
22. Justin Harper 6-9 228 PF Richmond Sr.
23. Norris Cole 6-1 174 PG Cleveland St. Sr.
24. Nikola Vucevic 7-0 260 C USC Jr.
25. Kenneth Faried 6-7 225 PF Morehead St. Sr.
26. Iman Shumpert 6-5 222 PG/SG Georgia Tech Jr.
27. Darius Morris 6-4 190 PG Michigan So.
28. Reggie Jackson 6-3 200 PG/SG Boston College Jr.
29. Jeremy Tyler 6-10 262 PF/C Tokyo Apache 1991
30. Shelvin Mack 6-2 205 PG/SG Butler Jr.
31. Josh Selby 6-3 195 PG/SG Kansas Fr.
32. Jon Leuer 6-11 223 PF Wisconsin Sr.
33. Malcolm Lee 6-5 198 PG/SG UCLA Jr.
34. Travis Leslie 6-4 205 SG/SF Georgia Jr.
35. Kyle Singler 6-9 228 SF Duke Sr.
36. JaJuan Johnson 6-10 220 PF Purdue Sr.
37. DavisBertans 6-10 211 SF Union Olimpija 1992
38. Nolan Smith 6-3 189 PG/SG Duke Sr.
39. Jimmy Butler 6-7 222 SF Marquette Sr.
40. Nikola Mirotic 6-10 225 SF/PF Real Madrid 1991
41. Cory Joseph 6-3 186 PG Texas Fr.
42. Jordan Williams 6-9 247 PF Maryland So.
43. ChandlerParsons 6-10 221 SF Florida Sr.
44. Andrew Goudelock 6-2 198 PG/SG Charleston Sr.
45. Charles Jenkins 6-3 216 PG/SG Hofstra Sr.
46. Matthew Bryan-Amaning 6-10 232 PF Washington Sr.
47. Malcolm Thomas 6-9 223 PF/SF San Diego St. Sr.
48. DeAndre Liggins 6-6 202 SG/SF Kentucky Jr.
49. David Lighty 6-6 216 SG/SF OhioState Sr.
50. Julyan Stone 6-7 200 PG UTEP Sr.
51. E’twaunMoore 6-4 191 PG/SG Purdue Sr.
52. Rick Jackson 6-9 242 PF Syracuse Sr.
53. Bojan Bogdanovic 6-7 195 SG/SF Fenerbahe Ulke 1989
54. Keith Benson 6-11 217 C/PF Oakland Sr.
55. Kevin Anderson 6-0 170 PG Richmond Sr.
56. Greg Smith 6-9 253 PF/C Fresno St. So.
57. Jon Deibler 6-6 197 SG Ohio St.Sr.
58. Jamie Skeen 6-8 242 PF VCU Sr.
59. Brad Wanamaker 6-4 208 PG/SG Pitt Sr.
60. Gilbert Brown 6-6 213 SG/SF Pitt Sr.
Dirk Nowitzki: The Purity of the Game in a Champion’s Mind
Tuesday, June 14th, 2011In the maelstrom of Reality TV and surreal comments that is the saga of the July 2010 Champions, the Eastern Conference Champions Miami Heat, we are doing a disservice to the true NBA Champions and one man in particular…Dirk Nowitzki.When subtly comparing and contrasting stars and teams, Chris Bosh made a profound inference. And if one reads between the lines, you know to whom he was really speaking: “There’s nothing extra. There’s nothing super. He [Nowitzki] was just himself. And in these situations, I think when you’re yourself and you play your basketball, the best thing always happen.”
“He’s worked very hard, for a very long time and he deserves it. I think we can take a page out of their book and really just pay attention to peoples’ work ethic and how much time they put into the game. Obviously, what we did wasn’t enough.”
When the clock struck triple zeros and the horn sounded, and the Dallas Mavericks officially became 2011 NBA Champions, Dirk bolted for the locker room. He didn’t join the growing group of elated celebrants at mid court…the team, coaches, cameras, and Dallas fans who had invaded American Airlines Arena as if it was the one in downtown Dallas. He was overcome by emotion and tears, and wanted those moments to himself.
The Finals MVP had to be coaxed to take his bow…to even accept his award. Dirk was humble and showed a measure of deference to his team and supporting cast. The pinnacle of Dirk’s career, the culmination of all the millions of shots, countless hours, the ridicule of millions calling him soft, even more questioning his heart. Dirk Nowitzki accepted all that from the basketball world and media, and in contrast to another gentleman at another press related event, he didn’t respond with a defiant, childish, brash, disrespectful F**K YOU, or even a “I Told You So”…or an HBC: “Y’all Musta Forgot”. He merely accepted his station in history as a champion with humility and grace.
Dirk doesn’t seem to do much in the endorsement and advertising arena. No huge sneaker contracts, no beverage deals, no shameless self promotion (shout outs to Chad and Evelyn Ochocinco). He doesn’t want to be the billionaire baller. There is no Nowitzki Brand, but now, there is a Nowitzki NBA Champion.
Here is the man that committed himself, along with his owner Mark Cuban to making the Mavericks a relevant franchise. After decades of obscurity and laughing stock material, the Dallas Mavericks and Dirk Nowitzki “took their talents to South Beach!”
Bradley “B. Austin” Anderson of The War Room, for War Room Sports
LeBron James: Performance Befitting a King?
Monday, June 13th, 2011Last night as I watched the Dallas Mavericks win their third straight game and capture the first NBA title in franchise history, I still couldn’t believe how LeBron James wilted under the pressure in the biggest games of the season. James left the Cleveland Cavaliers to “take his talents” to South Beach and join Dwayne Wade and Chris Bosh in what was supposed to be a super power this season and for seasons to come. I had no real problem with him joining the Heat. He had no shot of winning with the Cavs the way they were constructed and I thought it was big of him to go to a team where he wouldn’t be the sole guy. It’s a known fact that it was Wade’s team and he had a proven track record of clutch play as he was the finals MVP in 2006. The only problem I had was with the whole “Decision Show”, and the WWE- like celebration the next day, like they had already won something. He asked for all of the ridicule and verbal thrashing he received because of these things.
Everyone who has followed my sports blog knows that after LeBron’s performance against the Celtics and Bulls en route to the NBA Finals, I finally thought James had ascended to “that level” of a player. I even went out and said he was now better than Kobe Bryant (http://warroomsports.com/blog/2011/05/12/lebron-scores-10-straight-to-close-out-the-celtics-is-that-clutch-enough-for-you/).
First of all, I would like to apologize to the “Black Mamba” for spewing that blasphemy from my mouth before LeBron even won a single title. But I really thought I had seen him take it to another level. He was closing out games down the stretch by hitting killer shots and after watching the way he defended Derrick Rose, I was sold.
But then came the NBA Finals and the unexplainable, passive play of the most physically talented athlete I’ve seen in my life. It’s just a flat out choke job, no other way for me to explain it. D-Wade said last night after the game that the phrase “choke job” is used too often in sports, and he might be right in some situations. But in this case, his homie, his teammate, was a flat no show when the Heat needed him the most. The Heat had a chance to take control of the series. They were up by 15 points in the fourth quarter with seven minutes and change to play and coughed up the lead, being outscored 22-5 to end the game. LeBron scored two points during the fourth period of the game, and didn’t make a single basket during the run Dallas went on to steal Game 2.
In six games, LeBron James scored 18 fourth quarter points. He seemed to defer to Wade and even to his other teammate when he could have forced the issue. He just seemed disinterested, passive, and scared to take over the game when he clearly was the most talented player on the court. Last year in the playoffs, James clearly quit on his team in Games 5 and 6 against the Boston Celtics and I couldn’t believe it. I can’t say he quit on his team this time around, but he wanted no part in making a difference in the outcome of this series. Watching him drive and dump the ball off to the likes of Juwan Howard and Joel Anthony instead of taking the shot himself was frustrating to watch.
Scottie Pippen’s (who played with arguably the best basketball player of all time) unmitigated gall to say that LeBron James was (or could be) better than Michael Jordan was irresponsible. I don’t know what personal vendetta he has with “His Airness”, but you see he later took those words back the next day. The lowest point outcome in an NBA Finals game by Jordan was 22 and I’ve seen him carry the Bulls to a victory and nearly pass out coming off the floor due to the flu. People also want to compare LeBron to Kobe Bryant, who might be the closest thing to MJ we will ever see, but Kobe never disappeared in the fourth quarters of games. And one thing I can say about Jordan and Kobe, they never loss for lack of effort. Yes, D-Wade made some costly mistakes in the 4th quarter of last night’s game, but he made those mistakes playing his game and going hard.
The bottom line is this: a player with his talent, the hype, the self-given nickname, the cocky attitude and arrogance, should expect to get ripped the way he is today and will continue to during this off-season and until he wins a title. And his post-game comments aren’t going to help him either. His whole “I’m better than you at the end of the day” attitude and the “my life is still better than yours” thing is just going to get him more” haters”. He acts like the fans are the reason why he was out-played by Jason Terry in a Finals playoff series. “Prince” James has no one to blame but himself for the lack of testicular fortitude it takes to win a title. He had more talent than he had in Cleveland and he still couldn’t get the damn job done. So until he wins a title, don’t dare compare this man to the likes of Jordan, Magic,Bird, Shaq, and Kobe. He doesn’t deserve it. You know what LeBron is? He’s the equivalent of having a 12-inch penis (pause) that doesn’t get erect. Ok, I’m done with this guy. I’m looking forward to the NBA Draft and hopefully a full 16-game football season.
Brandon Pemberton of Brandon on Sports, Blogger for War Room Sports
The King is Dead! Long Live the King!
Monday, June 13th, 2011The King is dead. Long live the King!
Or should I say The Kaiser? King James, with a little boot in the backside from Dirk Nowitzki and a brand of defense the likes of which Mavericks fans have never seen, has abdicated his NBA throne to the “Ghost-Faced Drilla” from Wurzberg, Germany. That’s right, the man so many had perhaps unjustly labeled soft and unable to lead a team to a championship now sits in the top spot of The Association’s monarchy.
Mavericks’ legend Mark Aguirre paid Dirk perhaps the highest compliment, “Answer me this: If you switched Dirk with Wade, or Dirk with LeBron, would the Mavs be in the Finals? No way.”
I must admit, during the first half of the series-clinching Game 6 victory, I was thinking I wouldn’t be able to publish this article; what with Nowitzki languishing in an unfathomable 1-12 shooting funk. But like so many times before, when the stakes were highest, Dirk was at his best, shrugging off the slump to seal the victory with five clutch buckets in the last 7:22 of the game.
“We’re world champions,” Nowitzki said after taking a private moment to wipe away a few tears of joy in the locker room. “It sounds unbelievable.”
It wasn’t always this way. I’ve been an avid Dirk defender over the years, but there have been moments when he just wasn’t able to put this team on his back and lead them over the hump. In the final three games of the 2006 Finals, Dirk went 20-55 and missed a number of key free throws down the stretch. In 2007, his MVP season, Nowitzki shot 38% from the field (2-13 in the clinching Game 6) as the Mavs became the first #1 seed to fall to a #8 (Golden State) in a seven-game series. 2008 saw another first-round playoff exit against Chris Paul and the upstart Charlotte Hornets. The next two seasons would end with second and first round losses, respectively.
This year, there was something different about Dirk. Perhaps galvanized by past failures, Nowitzki would not be denied. After a pedestrian regular season by his standards, Dirk turned it up a couple of notches once the playoffs started, playing his best basketball when it mattered most. When the Mavericks needed a big bucket or clutch free throws to overcome a huge deficit or seal a victory, Dirk delivered. He was clearly the best player in a postseason that culminated in a championship.
Now on to the man Nowitzki supplanted as king. Last season, in game 5 of the Eastern Conference Semifinals, Lebron James looked up and came to the perhaps premature realization that no matter how good he played, no matter how many spectacular dunks he threw down, he could never win a championship with the collection of talent around him in Cleveland—so he checked out of the series mentally, and the Cavaliers quickly followed suit. Lebron will deny it, but if it looks like a duck, sounds like and duck, smells like a duck…
Fast forward a little over a year to the NBA Finals, and the situation is very different, but it’s also the same. Lebron is a member of the most talented (if not the deepest) team in the league, yet he frequently distanced himself from the front lines of this pitched battle for the NBA Championship, deferring to Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh whenever possible. Actually, James’ fourth-quarter game of hot potato throughout the series was worse than deference, it was desertion. Pat Riley, Wade and Bosh, are thinking of asking for a $14.5 million refund. They’re thinking they recruited the wrong superstar.
James was not gracious in defeat, lashing out at his and the Heat’s critics:
“All the people that were rooting me on to fail, at the end of the day they have to wake up tomorrow and have the same life they had before,” James said. “They have the same personal problems they had today. I’m going to continue to live the way I want to live and continue to do the things that I want with me and my family and be happy with that.”
“They can get a few days or a few months or whatever the case may be on being happy about not only myself, but the Miami Heat not accomplishing their goal,” James said. “But they’ll have to get back to the real world at some point.”
James’ latest big-moment disappearing act prompts us to reevaluate his motives for running out on his home-town-team instead of sticking it out through good times and bad, for better or worse (a-la a certain seven-foot German). Lebron claimed he joined Wade and Bosh in Miami so he could win multiple championships, but now there appears to be more to the equation than that. It looks more like Bron-Bron couldn’t bear the burden of leadership, of being his team’s hoops messiah. How else can you explain his habit of fading, no, sprinting into the background when the spotlight is squarely focused on him and him alone?
Compare this to the play of Nowitzki and his own teammate, Dwyane Wade, who combines physical brilliance with mental fortitude and inspirational leadership. Wade demands the ball at the end of games and James is all too willing to give it to him, especially on the game’s biggest stage. Confession: I wrote two versions of this article; the one you are reading, and one proclaiming Wade king if the Heat had won the series.
To be fair, perhaps LeBron James never wanted this mantle that was foisted upon him at the age of 18. He never dubbed himself “King.” Whether he wanted it or not, as the most physically-dominant player this game has seen since Wilt Chamberlain, the crown was his to wear. But now it appears that it was too heavy for those chiseled shoulders to bear. Who knows, maybe by the time the Kaiser is ready to cede the throne in a few years, LeBron will be ready to take it back. He need only look at the evolution of one Dirk Nowitzki to find a role model.
But until then, the Mavericks and their fans hope to win another title or two during Dirk’s reign.
Monta for Iggy???
Tuesday, June 7th, 2011This morning I wake up to check my email and I come across a report by Mark J. Miller of Yahoo sports (http://goo.gl/YsEgH) saying that there are strong rumors going around that the Golden State Warriors would be willing to trade guard Monta Ellis to the Philadelphia 76ers for forward/guard Andre Iguodala. ESPN’s and former NBA point guard Mark Jackson was named head coach last night and the Warriors are looking to make changes to their franchise. The trade makes some sort of sense for both teams and I’ll tell you why from my point of view.
The Warriors started a talented backcourt of Ellis and 2nd year point guard Stephen Curry, and they were effective offensively. But their lack of size and defensive ability was a hindrance all season. Both of them are only 6’2”-6’3” and teams would use their bigger guards to post up and put them in pick and roll situations. A trade for Iguodala would give the Warriors a bigger wing player to go alongside Curry and a legit defender that this team desperately needs. Golden State plays an up-tempo type of basketball and Iguodala would be the perfect fit.
The Sixers lacked a legit number one scoring option this season and because Iguodala was the highest paid player, most Sixers fans thought he should be that. But he’s not, and he caught hell during his career here after he signed that big contract a few years ago, for not developing into the player the Sixers thought he would. Monta Ellis would give the Sixers a legit scoring option on the perimeter and go to guy. Ellis has averaged 24.5 ppg over the last two seasons, but has the tendency to take shots early in the shot clock and makes no effort on the defensive end. He also has three years left on a contract paying him $11 Million per year.
I’m in favor of moving Iguodala for sure, but I don’t want another big contract back in return (like Rudy Gay). Monta Ellis is a good player, but is he good enough for the Sixers to avoid being a 7 or 8 seed yearly, and make it out of the first round of the playoffs? The right medley of front office decisions can take you from a laughing stock to a game away from the conference finals (check out the Grizzlies), and even though the Sixers will have to deal with the Miami Heat for the next five years, along with the Bulls and Knicks, they need to make progress.
I’m all about winning it all, not making lateral moves to just stay in the middle of the pack or stay afloat. The way the NBA is currently structured, the only way to get out of purgatory is to dump salary and/or get lucky in the NBA lottery and make the right draft pick. The Cleveland Cavaliers have a $14 Million trade exception they can use and if I were the Sixers, I would try my best to ship Iggy’s ass there. But hey, I’m not the General Manager. I’m just tired of the circle of mediocrity this franchise has displayed since the trip to the Finals in 2001. It has been a damn decade and it has to stop.
Brandon Pemberton of Brandon on Sports, Blogger for War Room Sports