This week we look at the Utah Jazz's international players, Andris Biedrins, Tony Parker and Manu without Tim Duncan, Anderson Varejao's holdout, Andrew Bogut's career thus far, discuss Hedo or Memo, and introduce Kyrylo Fesenko. Every Wednesday during the NBA season, interbasket takes a closer
look at ten international NBA players that has caught our eye. (This week is for period 11/29 - 12/05/2007)
The Warrior's Steady-Hand
When one talks of the Warriors most will first think of Stephen Jackson
and Baron Davis. Then they'll think of Monta Ellis, Al Harrington, and
Matt Barnes. Those five maybe the faces and the heart of the team, but I think the efficiency and work down-low of Latvian center Andris Biedrins is
hugely-underrated.
Biedrins is averaging 10.1 rebounds, and the 12
players that average more rebounds per game than Biedrins, Biedrins
averages the least amount of minutes. Did I mention that he leads the
league in FG% too?
Game by game, Biedrins stats may look inconsistent, but it's more
the coach and style than the ups-and-downs of the 6-11 center with long
arms and great hands. Don Nelson loves his small ball, and he'll start
Harrington in the middle against teams with dominant centers, as he did
with Dwight Howard. And Harrington played the majority of minutes when
they played Yao Ming. So although Biedrins is good for a double-double
each game, Harrington's effectiveness in hitting threes determines
Andris's playing time about 30% of the time.
I think Nelly may be learning that though Biedrins isn't going to
draw opposing centers outside 10-feet, Biedrins is very effective in
the pick-and-roll with Baron Davis.
Dare I say that Andris more than held his own against Dwight Howard
too and I don't think it was a coincidence that the Warriors started
their run when Biedrins was in the lineup.
I am not complaining about Nelson at all. Being in the bay area, I'm
lucky to catch many of the Warriors games; and they've perfected the
up-and-down, shoot-the-first shot-offense while still getting back to
scrap on defense. Additionally, Nelson was the one that first gave
Biedrins (and Ellis) his shot, I just wish Biedrin's minutes were more
consistent.
Hedo or Memo?
When it came down to whom was the better Turkish player - Memo Okur or Hedo Turkoglu,
the last couple of years had only strengthen my belief that Memo Okur
was the better player. But things have flipped around this season. Both
players are playing for teams that have great records and are
contributing, but it's Turkoglu this year that is having the better
season, not just of the two players, but of his career.
I've always thought that Hedo Turkoglu's decision making towards the
end of games has been terrible, but I have to commend his play this
year. He is key to Orlando's start, I would even go to say that outside
of Dwight Howard, he is the most important player on the Magic. I have
no qualms in saying that Orlando wouldn't be near where they are at
this point of the season without him.
Thus far, Hedo has scored in double figures in every game this year
and though his shooting percentages have taken slight dips, his
offensive stats have skyrocketed. His eighth season in the NBA,
Turkoglu is averaging career-highs in points this year (18.6), rebounds
(6.1), and assists (4.1).
It's early, and outside of a complete collapse, the Magic should be
in the playoffs this season. To me, this is the time when Hedo will
prove his worth to me. As I mentioned earlier, his decision making has
never been great, and when the Magic are in a close playoff game this
year, Hedo is their only truly-playoff-tested player. Let's see if he
has learned from his mistakes.
Mehmet Okur
on the other hand has never had problems hitting in the clutch. Even
last year in the playoffs when he hit a cold streak, he still found
ways to hit a couple big time shots when they counted. But unlike Hedo,
Memo is having a rough start to the 2008 season.
He truly had a great season last year; not only because he was one
of the main cogs on an up-and-coming Jazz squad, he was also named to
the NBA all-star team after putting solid numbers, and earned himself a
reputation for hitting clutch shots.
But things have dropped this year - maybe because of Andrei
Kirilenko's renewed involvement (see below) and the continuation of
Boozer's dominance -- however, Okur is playing roughly around the same
amount of minutes an only shooting 1.5 less shots a game than last
year, so it just might be a matter of raising his shooting percentage.
"I just go out there and play,"
Okur said. "(Carlos) Boozer, Deron (Williams), Ronnie (Brewer) — those
guys, they step up their game, especially on offensive end. So I just
want to try to shoot open shots," Okur has taken the team-first perspective when talking about his productivity this year "I'm
gonna do what I'm doing out there because Boozer is doing a great job
on the block, and Deron creates open shots for us. ... If I'm open, I'm
gonna shoot it. If not, I'm gonna pass to whoever's open."
In addition to Memo shooting problems on the court, Okur went down
with a slight injury that caused him to miss a game. He did come back
strong the next game with 25 points in a win over Miami.
Who is Kyrylo Fesenko?
With the aforementioned injury to Memhet Okur (and to Carlos Boozer), 7-1, 288lbs Ukranian center Kyrylo Fesenko got called up from
the Utah Flash, his NBDL team, for the Jazz's game against the Los
Angeles Lakers Friday.
Fesenko, who would also leave the game with an injury, did well in his short NBA debut -- accumulating six points and seven rebounds in only 11 minutes.
Fesenko is a physical, energetic, and agile center. Constantly
moving, looking for contact, aggressive with hair-flying. The way
Kyrylo plays, I can see him being a more-effective Zaza Pachulia.
His
naivete might be his biggest asset, he doesn't come into the NBA afraid
of anyone and though light-hearted off the court, his intensity
on-court will be hard to match. The 20-year old kid wants to dunk the ball like Shaq every time he touches it " I like (Shaq's) animal rage under the basket, his power," he said. "When you look at him even on TV, you are afraid of him. He is huge, big..."
While trying out for the Pistons last year, Fesenko got a chance to meet his childhood idol Shaquille
O'Neal. So what did Fesenko when he had a chance to chat with his
basketball hero? He reportedly told Shaq in a half-joking fashion "I will dunk over (you), if (you) play one or two more years."
This kind of humor and blase attitude off the court has apparently made quite an impression on the Utah media and his Jazz teammates, even though he's only been a in Utah a month or so "He might be so unaware, he plays well," said Carlos Boozer speaking of Fesenko's
In his only NBA game thus far, Fesenko was hit on the side of the
head Chris Mihm while attempting to rebound a missed shot. He left that
game, but was activated for the next game against Miami, but with Okur
and Boozer back from injury, Fesenko didn't play norget the chance to dunk on Shaq (he also didn't play last night against Seattle).
Things, however are looking up for Kyrylo as his short 20-day stint in the NBDL has made an impression on Jerry Sloan "His
demeanor out here is 100 percent better than what it was when he left.
Not even playing basketball, just being around his teammates and being a little bit more professional about what he's doing." And Fesenko wasn't phased when he moved to the D-League, "I want to play in D-League and to be here, to get enough of game time to adjust to American basketball," he said before being called up "I
repeat it 100 time, I am not upset about it. I glad to be here. What
can be better than to have enough of game time — and a guaranteed
contract with the NBA?"
I guess it's Utah Jazz talk this week. I would be remiss to not mention Andrei Kirilenko's progress this season. His renewed perspective has him filling up box-scores again including
the third triple-double of his career (that seems odd that he wouldn't
had had more by now) -- 20 points, 11 rebounds, 11 assists, 6 steals
and 4 blocks.
The great thing about Kirilenko, for Kirilenko fans, Utah Jazz fans
and Fantasy teams that have him on their team -- it's never just points
or rebounds or assists, whenever he is on his game -- you can always
account on great block and steal numbers too.
Andrew Who Again?
Has there been any #1 draft pick in the last ten years that has flew under-the-radar as Andrew Bogut
has thus far? In his third season, the 7-0 center from Australia is
having another decent season by putting up 12.6 points, 8.6 rebounds
and 2.3 blocks, but I really haven't heard anything about him; there
just isn't much discussion of Bogut. Has he shown any potential to eventually become worth a #1 pick overall?
What I am saying is personally, I haven't heard anything about
Bogut, and for being a #1 overall pick, that's a little odd to me.
We're still tracking the progress of Andrea Bargnani. Everyone knows all about LeBron James and Yao Ming. We're still talking about Allen Iverson
and Tim Duncan. Greg Oden hasn't put on an NBA jersey and we're still
talking about him. We know that Olowakandi and Kwame Brown were
complete busts; that's been discussed and proven. So what of Andrew
Bogut?
Is it because he is playing in Milwaukee and no one cares outside of brewtown? I mean, I feel Yi Jianlian will consistently get more press. The question is, what can we expect from the
Australian center? The #1 pick of 2005 hasn't really had the chance to
become the focus point because of the Milwaukee's perimeter-orientated
offense with great guards Mo Williams and Michael Redd.
I wonder whether it's because Bogut hasn't asserted himself enough.
The brash, confident, and dominant college player that we saw at Utah
has yet to surface. Is he still learning the NBA game? Can anyone in or
outside of Milwaukee let me in on what's going on?
Will Anderson Varejao Still be a Fan Favorite if he Returns to Cleveland?
So Anderson Varejao
decides to sign an offer sheet with the Bobcats... 3 years for 17
million... The Cavs have said that they'll match the offer, but as of
this writing nothing is solid. Varejao can opt out of the deal after
the second season and become an unrestricted free agent - which is
likely in either case.
Why? I think it's plainly obvious that Andy is settling for 5.5
million a season and playing for the Bobcats for transparent reasons.
Nothing wrong with playing with the improving-Bobcats, but if the
choice is to play for $5.5 million on the maybe-playoffs Charlotte
Bobcats or play with LeBron James and the Cavs, the Eastern conference
champions? Andy's got dollar signs in his eyes still.
It seems to me that Varejao's plan is to play his #### off, opt-out when the time comes, and play
the free-agent game again trying to get his ridiculous 10/mil. Andy my
friend, you better pull in 20 and 10 this season to even get close to
that -- good luck. You're competing with a lot of other up-and-coming
Bobcats that have already established themselves offensively with the
Cats -- Okafor, the under-rated Raymond Felton, Gerald Wallace, Matt
Carroll, and Jason Richardson. Whoa, on second thought you better focus
on grabbing 15 rebounds, blocking 5 shots, and play D like Ben Wallace
circa 2004 in order toget the 10 mil you are looking for. Maybe the Bulls will sign you?
Seriously, I'd rather pay Fesenko 10x his salary, I think he has much more potential than Varejao.
Nash done with Canada? Steve Nash has said that he probably won't participate in next year's Olympics in Beijing even if Canada qualifies, and many believe that the two-time NBA MVP might be done with the Canadian National Team altogether.
Though Nash is saying that he is still undecided, he is leaning
towards not participating. citing his responsibilty to the Phoenix Suns
"I would say no, but I can't really talk about it until the situation arrives and this season's come to a conclusion," Nash said. "But in my mind right now, I'm not going to play for Canada anymore. I just can't do both."
Many speculate that when Canada decided to part ways with Jay
Triano, the Canadian National Team coach from 1998-2004 and a good
friend to Nash, they knew that the decision would not entice Nash to
come back.
Unlike many countries (and their press), Canadians aren't calling
for the Steve Nash's head. Overall, it seems they take a nicer and more
understanding approach to Nash's likely decision.
"We can't fault him." said Triano, whom is currently an assistant coach for the Toronto Raptor "Nash
has given so much over so many years. I mean, you can't expect guys to
play until they can't walk any more. Especially now, when he's playing
on a team that plays so deep into the summer."
Current national team coach Leo Rautlins was quoted as saying "(Steve's) got a young family, and he's got to do what he feels is best for him ... And whatever he feels is best, we all support him."
Coincidentally, Nash and his Phoenix Suns will be in Toronto tonight
to play the Raptors. Even with the disappointing news, no doubt the
Canadians will be giving the Victoria BCnative a warm welcome/thank you.
Tony Parker, Ginobili Bigger Factors than Ever
With Tim Duncan going down with an injury that will keep him out the next few games, it will be time for Tony Parker to quiet those critics that assert his success is only based on Duncan's inside presence. Given, the numbers of those critics have
grown smaller over the last few years, but when Duncan went down, it
was inevitable that I would come across something to that fashion.
While people drum up something to complain about the Spurs, they
continue rolling through the regular season again at 15-3, with the
second-best record in the league. And they're doing it with
less-reliance on Tim Duncan as Parker and Manu Ginobili are both averaging career-highs in points, FG attempts, 3pt FG attempts, FT Attempts, Assists and Rebounds.
Yes, without Duncan, they would be a different team, but the Spurs
wouldn't have had the last couple championships without the play of
Manu and Tony Parker. The fact that the Spurs are still successful with
less-effective Tim Duncan, shows that the Spurs are special and says a lot about the system Popovich has in place.
Every
Wednesday during the NBA season, interbasket takes a closer look at ten
international NBA players that has caught our eye. (This week is for
period 11/22 - 11/28/2007)
We start with some big news out of Toronto. Spanish small forward and Toronto Raptor Jorge Garbajosa is going to have another surgery on his leg.
Ok, that's not news. That happens all the time in sports, Stuart.
True, but there's an added layer to the situation; Garbajosa played
in the European Championships this past summer despite the Raptor's
strong advice to skip the qualifier and have surgery done on the same
injured leg that wasn't healing correctly according to the Toronto's
medical team.
Instead, Garbajosa chose to represent Spain, backed by Spanish
doctors that claimed further surgery was superflous. The Spanish team
wanted him so much that they took out a $1 million dollar insurance
policy that would cover his $4 mil salary had Garbajosa injured himself
during National team duty. Looks like the Raptors might be filing a
claim against that policy soon.
That's only the tip of the iceberg right now. With the Memphis
Grizzlies coming into Toronto tonight, it would have brought four
Spanish players in one NBA game -- Pau Gasol, Juan Carlos Navarro, and Jose Calderon
with Garbajosa on the sidelines. What should be a celebratory photo-op
at mid-court, has become a huge controversy in Spain and with one Pau
Gasol.
Pau Gasol and the Spanish press feel
as if the Raptors don't have Garbajosa's best interest in mind by
sending him off to surgery, but rather they're punishing him for going
against their will. Stay tuned...
On a sidenote: Would this have been the first time that four
international players from the same country played in the same NBA
game? I know the Houston-San Antonio game last week brought three
Argentines together, but can anyone remember four players? Maybe those
Sacramento Kings with Vlade and Peja?
For all our Spanish readers, there is a lighter side - Juan Carlos
Navarro is finally finding his groove. In the last three gamee, the
Spanish superstar has played his 34, 37, and 38 minutes -- by far his
highest total minutes logged this season. During that span, Navarro has
averaged 20 points, 5 rebounds, 4 assists, has shot 55% from the field
and 45% from three. Navarro had his first NBA double-double last night,
16 points and 11 rebounds (his previous high was 4 rebounds!). It seems
as both La Bomba and his coach are finally gaining confidence in...
well, Juan Carlos Navarro.
Is this really Desagana Diop's
seventh NBA season? Yeah, I guess it is. The 25-year old came straight
out of high-school and was drafted eighth overall in the the 2001
high-school-crazy draft (that saw Kwame Brown, Tyson Chandler, and Eddy
Curry go 1, 2, and 4)
The 7-foot center from Senegal has finally found his niche averaging
great numbers (also career-highs) in rebounds (7.8) and blocks (2.4)
for the Dallas Mavericks - holding down the middle for the Dallas
Mavericks...
What's even more amazing, Diop has usurped Erick Dampier as
the starting center, the same Erick Dampier that proclaimed himself the second-best center in the
league (after Shaq)! Make that the third-best, Damp.
Vladamir Radmanovic
was never the face of consistency and level-headedness. Despite his shooting touch, size and
agility, Vladimir's career has been marred by a reputation of
a bad work-ethic, whining on his national team, and sever inconsistency from game-to-game. Add
all that to his lying about how he got a leg-injury last season (he
hurt himself snowboarding). Not a great legacy thus far.
Despite all that, Radman has started out the season with perhaps the
most promise. His points per game were holding steady at double-digits,
is hitting the long ball when he open, and the Lakers are wnning games
in the West. Radmanovic is shooting at a career-high clip almost across
the board.
And then it came down in a 102-100 loss to the New Jersey Nets in
which he shot 0-7 from three and a combined 0-10 from the field. He was
1-2 from the free-throw line and had 3 turnovers, all this in just 24
minutes. Even with his performance, Radmanovic is still shooting 44%
from three.
On the other side of the shooting spectrum, Steve Nash
hasn't missed from the free-throw line this season. Nash is 40-40 on
free throws this year. The only other player that hasn't missed a
free-throw this season is another international player - Darius Songaila of Lithuania. Songaila is 21-21. Previous to Nash's season-record, Yao Ming had a streak of 30 straight free throws made.
When Luis Scola
scored a then career-high 20 points against the Spurs last week, I
dismissed it as a mere coincidence. Though he was a Spur, Scola was
traded away before any real hard-feelings could be accumulated.
Now,
when Beno Udrih
went for 27 points (8-12FG, 9-9 FT), 5 assists and 4 rebounds in a win
vs. the Spurs. I have no doubt that Beno had a little more jump to his
step before and after the game against his former team.
Nenad Krstic
returned from his leg-injury this season and has been slow-going in regaining form. The
Serbian center is averaging career lows in all categories and has
played only 3 minutes in the last four games. It doesn't look good for
Krstic since the struggling Nets have won three of those four games.
Speaking of struggling Nets players - Bostjan Nachbar
is averaging more minutes, points, assists, steals, blocks,
FG-attempts, 3pt FG attempts and FT attempts this season but hasn't
been able to carry-over his efficient shooting percentages from the
previous year.
I respect Scott Skiles coaching, I do, but with the Chicago Bulls struggling, why isn't Viktor Khryapa
playing more? Or why was he not even activated? I am not one of those
guys that blindly love-on all international players, but did anyone in
Russia send Skiles a tape of what Khryapa did this past summer?
In the one game that Khryapa has played in this season, he scored 7
points (3-5), grabbed 5 rebounds, and blocked 2 shots in 21 minutes (he
also was 1-4 from FT and had two turnovers). This guy can play, plays
hard, and hits open shots, I really believe he needs another look.
Thank god he isn't Spanish, or Skiles would have Pau Gasol on his
back...
NBA Notes: Man, that Golden State vs. Phoenix Suns game was
fun to watch. Monta Ellis was the man in that game, blowing by Steve
Nash like a statue and hitting multiple jumpers over Shawn Marion. Baron Davis has nothing to worry about just yet (he's playing like a beast), but we're seeing a star in the making with Monta Ellis.
Every
Wednesday during the NBA season, interbasket takes a closer look at ten
international NBA players that has caught our eye. This week is for
period 11/15-11/21/2007.
(interbasket) - After three years of gathering splinters on the bench (and two
championship rings), and with Jacque Vaughn getting the backup PG
calls, little-used Beno Udrih was finally traded by the Spurs. The Minnesota Timberwolves then promptly waived the guard from Slovenia.
With the injury to Mike Bibby that will keep him out of action for
nearly two months, Udrih was then signed by Sacramento and is now the
team’s starting point guard. Beno had 23 points and 6 assists in
Sacramento’s impressive win over Detroit and is putting up 13 points, 4
assists 2.7 rebounds, and 1.1 steals in six games with the Kings before
he was injured in Tuesday’s game with a thigh contusion.
Unlike Udrih, Luis Scola
never got the chance to don a Spurs jersey, garner splinters and be on
the receiving end o####regg Popovich spit-filled tirade. Scola was
shipped off to Houston in hopes of more playing time and not taking any
minutes from fellow Argentine Fabricio Oberto. Scola came in with
high-expectations and many labeling him and Kevin Durant as the serious
rookie of the year candidates, but the transition hasn’t been nearly as
smooth as all had hoped. Scola was struggling to find his way, and from
a few games that I watched, it seemed his teammates had lost confidence
in his abilities.
With Tracy McGrady injured and unable to look Scola off, Luis
grabbed the opportunity to show off his wares - mid-range jumpshots,
rolls to the hoops to the tune of 10-11 shooting and 20 points against…
well, the Spurs. Coincidence? Probably. “It kills me to have him on that team,” Popovich said after the game, “Enough to make you spit.” Whoa, relax Pop, don’t go spitting. The man needs anger management!
Scola followed his breakout game with 20 points (on a career high 19
FG attempts), 11 rebounds and 4 assists against the Suns -
unfortunately the Rockets lost both those games and have lost 4
straight after starting the season off 6-1, but it’s good to see Scola
finally getting his confidence back. Hopefully when McGrady returns, the Rockets can incorporate the 2006 Spanish league MVP.
I love Manu Ginobili,
but really, I am tired of talking about how he’s having a fantastic
year and looks revived and is the most-exciting NBA player to watch
yada yada yada… luckily I can talk about his international backcourt
mate Tony Parker.
After a couple slow games, Parker torched the Hawks for 17 points in
the second quarter, and 31 points for the game last night. TP started
the season strong but has since settled; his stats so far this season
almost mirror the previous 3 seasons - 18 points, no more than 6
assists a game, 3.5 rebounds, 1 steal a game, 50% from the field on 14
shots a game. I thought Tim Duncan was supposed to the boring and
consistent one?
After having another 0 point outing, Juan Carlos Navarro
found his stroke in his eighth NBA game; going 8-9 from three-point and
totaling 28 points in their loss to New Orleans. With those eight
threes, Navarro tied a rookie-record for threes made (shared by Jason
Kidd and Chris Duhon). Since then Navarro’s shooting has been much
improved (it helps to go 8-9), following his record-setting night, he
has gone 4-8 and 4-5 to help offset his dismal start to the season.
Andrea Bargnani
has been an enigma this season. There doesn’t seem to be any pattern as
to if he’ll play well one game and awful in the next. The season’s only
eleven games deep and already Bargnani has had enough highs and lows to
fill a NBA schedule. The 2006 number-one draft pick started out the
season with 20.5 points, 5.5 rebounds on excellent shooting in two wins
for the Raptors - then couldn’t find his shot in the three consecutive
losses (32% FG). Bargnani was benched for five games which didn’t
improve his shooting confidence much (35%) before he was re-inserted
into the starting lineup last night in a heart-breaking loss to the
Mavs (he had 20 points and was 5-9 from three).
Golden State put a stop to their winless ways with more than a little help from their Latvian center Andris Biedrins.
In their two wins, Biedrins has averaged a monster double-double 19
points and 16 rebounds at 71% from the field. Before Wednesday’s game
against the Knicks, Biedrins was averaging a career high in minutes
(36), points (13.4), rebounds (11.1), assists (1.9), blocks (1.9), and
FT% (70%) (also personal fouls and turnovers, but that comes with the
territory of being more involved). Let’s all keep in mind that this is
only Biedrins fourth NBA season and he just turned 21 years old in
April. I think we’re looking at another international superstar in the
making….
Speaking of international big men, is Zydrunas Ilgaukskas
really only 32 years old? I guess he was the Greg Oden of his day,
looking much older than he actually is. It doesn’t help, despite his
soft touch and consistent midrange jumper, that he’s always been slow
and hulking around the basket which only served to emphasize his
Oden-ness.
After playing all 82 games in his first season, Zydrunas missed 155
games the next three seasons. However, since then Big Z has only missed
14 games in the last five seasons. And this season Ilgauskas is looking
like a beast on the boards, demolishing his career average by 4
rebounds per game. The Lithuanian giant is averaging 16pts, 12.1
rebounds, 1.5 blocks on 50% shooting and 84% from the free-throw in
nearly 34 minutes a game while holding down the middle for the Cavs.
Anderson Varejao who?
Anderson Varejao
who? Oh, him. Yeah, the guy that’s still holding out and wants
$10m/season (the Cavs are offering $6m). I like Varejao, but c’mon man…
someone really should send him a tape of himself playing, particularly
of that spin-move prayer during game three of last year’s NBA finals.
Really, this guy must have a warped sense of what he really brings
to the table. I am beginning to believe the accounts from the 2006
World Championships when Varejao’s elbow broke Greece’s three bones in
Nikos Zisis’ face. Varejao reportedly told him that Nikos didn’t
respect him enough, enough for him to elbow an opponents face - I am
seeing a little of that in his holding out.
The Dallas Mavs haven’t missed a beat — and that historically meant that Dirk Nowitzki
was tearing things up — but thats just not the case this season (before
last night when Nowitzki hit four straight 3-pointers in the final 1:41
of the third quarter to bring the Mavs back from a 24 point deficit
against Toronto).
With Josh Howard leading the team in scoring at 21.9 a game, Jason
Terry motivated by his sixth man role (with a starter-like 20.3), and
Devin Harris continuing to improve (15.4ppg), the Mavs can afford
Dirk’s slow start. Before his 32 point outing against Toronto last
night, Nowitzki was shooting at career lows across the board FG
(44.5%), 3PT (26.1%) and FT (78.1%). The last time Dirty has shot at a
lower percentage in his career was when he was a rookie (40.5% FG,
20.6% 3pT, and 77.3% from the FT); when everyone thought Don Nelson was
crazy for picking the wunderkind. No doubt Dirk will pick up the pace,
and if the other guys are rolling as they have been, the Mavs are going
to be even tougher.
I don’t know about you, but I have yet to be convinced of Sasha Vujacic. He keeps showing up on the Laker’s roster year after year, but I’ve never seen much out of him when I saw him play.
Looking at his stats this year, it might not be obvious that
anything has changed this year - but if you look deeper, you can see
that Vujacic is having a very promising start to the season. Currently,
the backup guard from Slovenia is averaging a career best in points
(6.5), in only around nine minutes a game, his lowest mpg of his career
thus far.
It’s not his points or assists, it’s Sasha’s efficiency from the
floor which has seen his shooting percentages near Steve Nash levels.
Given, thats not a fair comparison seeing as Vujacic shoots about 3.5
times a game, but instead of shooting at a low-30% clip, he’s hitting
over half his shots this year. “Sasha last year made every shot in practice — and couldn’t make one in a game,”Kobe Bryant said. “Now he’s starting to put `em together, so it’s cool.”
Other notes: Man, I would really hate to be an
opposing NBA center when Dwight Howard hits his prime. That guy is
seriously a beast; I’m talking Shaquille O’Neal
freak-of-nature-size-plus-athleticism-scary (and the terrible FT%).
D-#### (there’s got to be a better nickname than that) is putting up
22pts, 14rebs, and 2.4 blocks on pure overwhelming athleticism without
a go-to move or a back to the basket game.
( www.interbasket.net ) -- With a week or so into the NBA season behind us, interbasket is here to
report on the international players making news in the NBA.
Luis Scola
hasn’t shown much with the Houston Rockets thus far (3.4ppg, 4.6rebs,
1ast in 18 min) and all the xenophobes are out. I’ve already heard
this sentence many times “Look at Luis Scola, he is supposed to the be
the best player outside the NBA and…” It is a little shocking to me
that Scola hasn’t done more than he has, making the Spurs keeping Fabricio Oberto
over Scola look genius, but I am very confident that his name will be
in the rookie-of-the-year running by the end of the year. And teams
have better look out because when the 4-1 Houston Rockets mesh him into
their offense (and figure out their point guard situation), they’ll be
a very very tough team to beat.
Speaking of the Houston Rockets, one of the knocks against Rocket’s center is that Yao Ming
has been his lack of toughness, and one can infer that the critics are
looking at Yao’s size and then looking at his career rebounding (8.9)
and blocked shot numbers (1.8) as evidence. Now I understand that he
isn’t the fastest nor most-atheletic person on the court, but
admittedly Yao’s rebounding and blocked shot numbers should be much
better than they are. If the first four games are any indication (and
they normally aren’t) Yao Ming is finally getting it; hitting the
boards (11rpg) and blocking shots (2.6), it looks like Yao may average
a double-double this year, and for only the second time in his six-year
career,
Luis Scola isn’t the only international rookie struggling; he can
take some solace in a a couple other foreign rookies that were expected
to start off a little quicker this season. Spaniard Juan Carlos Navarro of the Memphis Grizzlies was supposed to come in and give familiarity and help to Pau Gasol,
and thus far he has only given the former. La Bomba is only averaging
4.0 on 23% shooting, all four of his field goals in his first three
games have been three-pointers, c’mon Navarro, where’s the floater?
Marco Belinelli
of the Golden State Warriors made waves, no shockwaves, during the NBA
summer league with his smooth quick-release jumper and he surprised
many with his ability to get to the basket on his way to a 37-point
outing. So far, Belinelli is struggling as much as the Warriors are
(0-4). Once the Warriors right the ship, Marco should have time to
adjust and improve on the 13.7 minutes, 4.3 points and 33% from the
field he’s shown early on.
Instead, the mystery of the 2007 draft, Chinese forward Yi Jianlian
has taken the lead as far as international rookies performing. After a
rough first couple games — Yi is showing he can hit the jumpshot, block
a few shots, and gather a lot of fouls in a short amount of time. The
latter can be worked on, but the Bucks love the potential that he has
shown, particularly his ability to hit the long-range jumper. He is
currently third in rookie scoring, behind Kevin Durant and Daequan
Cook, averaging 9.8ppg on 44% shooting as well as 4.8 rebounds, 2.0
blocks (4 fouls) in 26 minutes. Yi was #2 in Nba.com’s rookie report
for the first week of the season. Not bad!
Hey, anyone remember Peja Stojakovic?
Let me refresh your memory, Stojakovic was THE international player
several years ago. But now four years later, a couple injuries, and
two teams removed from his glory days in Sacramento, Peja’s reputation
has since suffered. Though his stats arent’t bad, Peja is no longer
mentioned in the top ten international NBA players, and maybe not even
top-15. How the three-time all-star is getting a fresh start and
running small forward for the New Orlenas Hornets. Peja has been
inconsistent in his first five games, but his game against the Lakers
deserves a mention, Peja went off for 36 points in their win. With
Chris Paul running the show and dishing, Peja hit 10-13 threes to set a
Hornets franchise record and to let the league know that Peja is still
around. Peja is only 30 years old, I hope he finds his way back up the
ladder to one of the elite international NBA players.
Manu Ginobili
is playing like a man possessed. Despite coming off the bench;
everyone in the league knows that Ginobili will be there to finish the
game. In just under 30 minutes per game, Manu is putting up 20.8
points, 4.8 rebounds, 5.6 assists and 2.6 steals. He spent the summer
resting instead of playing for his National Team and his performances
this season is showing what a rested Ginobili brings to the table “At
this point, I can really tell the difference” Ginobili said about how
rested his body has felt from taking the summer off. --Stuart Leung
News Around the World 10/31/2007: Belinelli, Scola Debut
( interbasket.net ) -- NBA Season Commences (International NBA Players Recap) - The NBA started it’s 2007-08 season last night with three games on the schedule.
The San Antonio Spurs received their 06-07 championship rings and
defeated the Greg Oden-less Portland Trailblazers 106-97. The Spurs
international players were huge in the win; Frenchman Tony Parker
scored 19 points, Manu Ginobili (Argentina) had 16 points, 8 assists and 5 steals, and Francisco Elson (Netherlands) scored 9 points with 5 rebounds.
Argentine superstar Luis Scola
made his debut with the reloaded Houston Rockets in their 95-93 win
over the Los Angeles Lakers. The former Tau Ceramica superstar played
only 8 minutes and accumulated 3 personal fouls, 3 rebounds and 1
turnover. “The court is different, the rules are different, the
players, everything is different,” Scola said. “But at the end of the
day, it’s just basketball.” I’m confident that Scola will find his way
- after all he was the ACB MVP and Fiba America’s MVP in 2007. Source: Luis Scola Set for NBA Debut (FIBA)
Yao Ming scored two critical baskets towards the end of the game and
finished with 25 points, 12 rebound, 3 assists and 3 blocks helping the
Rockets to overcome 45 points from Kobe Bryant.
Andrei Kirilenko
was back with the Utah Jazz and showed little effect from his
publicized trade demands over the offseason. The Russian 2007
Eurobasket MVP put up a typical statline — 9 points, 9 rebounds, 8
assists and 5 blocks in a 117-96 win over the Golden State Warriors.
This game also featured the debut of Marco Belinelli.
The rookie from Italy had an eye-opening summer league for Golden State
averaging 22.8 points (including a 37 point summer league debut), but
Marco only saw 12 minutes in his NBA debut and scored 6 points. French
hold-out Mickael Pietrus score 17 points and grab 5 rebounds for the Golden State Warriors.
( interbasket.net ) - With the start of the 2007-08 NBA season upon us, I’m sure David Stern has taken notice of a pattern from this off-season. I’m not talking about perennial Kobe Bryant drama or the KG trade, this involves names that aren’t all household names, but the direction of the moves are making the NBA Commissioner a little more than uneasy.
This 2007 summer has seen a number of players who have either left the NBA for leagues in Europe or have used the European leagues as leverage in their contract negotiations. Every day we come closer to the start of NBA training camps, and NBA heads should pay close attention to several situations that have already past and more importantly, to the outstanding issues that have yet to be resolved.
Vasillis Spanoulis, the little-used Greek guard that was pivotal in defeating Team USA at the 2006 World Championships and a benchwarmer for the Houston Rockets last season, has already decided he would rather return to Panathinaikos of the Greek league rather that ride the bench for another team in Texas - the San Antonio Spurs (the team he was traded to).NBa and the Euroleague
Not that big of news right? I agree. In of itself, it’s another case of Arvydas Macijauskas, a player that will be easily forgotten in the US. Though Macijauskas is a huge star in Europe, he never gained any traction in the NBA as the Lithuanian sharpshooter rode the bench for New Orleans during the 05-06 season. Macas, as he is known, chose to return to Europe after that one season. He chose more playing time rather than earning his time in the NBA. It makes more sense. It’s a matter of what’s best for the player in the short-term. That’s more than likely how Spanoulis will be remembered.
However in early September, Sarunas Jasikevicius, the Lithuanian guard that led his home-country Lithuania qualify for the 2008 Olympics, asked the Golden State Warriors to release or trade him. The Warriors chose the former and waived Jasikevicius.
Since then, the European superstar has returned to the Euroleague and hasn’t missed a step, joining Spanoulis in Panathinaikos backcourt. Again, nothing earth-shattering, but Jasikevicius was one of the many international players that had a reputation in the NBA. If Sarunas had stayed, he could have found a job in the NBA - there are several NBA teams looking for an experienced leader on the floor and a proven winner.
At this point, you may be asking yourself “What are you getting at?”
Add Sasha Pavlovic to the mix. The guard-forward who had a breakout last season with Cleveland cannot come to terms with the Cavs on his contract extension. If the two sides don’t get any closer to signing a contract, Pavlovic and his agent have made it clear that they are ready to do more than just entertain talks with European teams that are interested in the Serbian’s services. As of this post, Pavlovic has missed every one of Cleveland’s preseason games.
Then there’s the case of Andrei Kirilenko, who led Russia to a gold medal at this year’s Eurobasket. The Eurobasket MVP announced through a Russian blog that he is willing to drop the remaining amount of his $63m contract and head back to Europe rather than returning to Salt Lake City to endure another season of Jerry Sloan. The former NBA all-star was explicit and adamant about his position and AK can certainly play anywhere in the world. AK has since been tight-lipped and is participating in Utah’s summer leagues and camp.
If it was only Spanoulis and Jasikevicius leaving, many would simplify the moves as frustrated Europeans unable to make it in the NBA. However, if an up-and-coming player like Pavlovic and former NBA All-Star Kirilenko decides to head home to play, I believe that signifies a trend that would immediately dilute the NBA talent pool and give rise to a competing league.
Just a five-six years ago, no one would believe that an
international player returning home would dilute NBA talent. In fact it
was more likely that they would believe it would actually enhance the
NBA’s talent pool. Back then, it was arguable. Now, however, is a
different era and the same xenophobic attitude will get you laughed out
of serious basketball conversations.
With the influx of international superstars into the NBA (Nowitzki,
Yao Ming, Manu Ginobili, Steve Nash), national teams from around the
world defeating the US in international competitions becoming less
jaw-dropping. And some of the top-European clubs defeating NBA teams in
friendly matches (Maccabi Tel Aviv defeating the Toronto Raptors (2005), FC Barcelona topping the Philadelphia 76ers (2006), and CSKA Moscow defeating the LA Clippers (2006)), there is no doubt that basketball is on more equal footing globally.
And that balance is especially apparent in the European leagues where the development and talent is second only to the NBA.
Though the best outside the USA, European leagues were historically
where older NBA players would see their last playing days out. They
were leagues for players no longer ready for prime-time or players
whose NBA careers never even began. Players that fell under these
categories included the likes of former UCLA-star Tyus Edney, Dominique Wilkins, Bob McAdoo, Toronto Raptor Anthony Parker, Louis Bullock, Scoonie Penn, and Trajan Langdon.
And it wasn’t only because the talent wasn’t strong in Europe, it
was also because the money wasn’t comparable nor as stable in Europe.
With the shrinking dollar against the Euro and the rising popularity of
basketball globally, that barrier isn’t nearly as obvious any longer.
And that is most apparent in the rumor reported by the Detroit Free
Press recently - Chris Webber has been offered a two-year contract by
Greek club Olympiakos for reportedly $10-12m/season. Not chump change
by any standard. If true, it would make Chris Webber the highest-paid
American player in Europe EVER. (Webber has sinced turned the offer
down)
It seems as if the scales may be tipping a little more in favor of
the European leagues. If the aforementioned players leave, it could be
an epiphany for other players (and their agents) like Anderson Varejao from Brazil and other free agents yet to sign for the upcoming season.
And it’s not just the European players; it’s becoming an issue for
even American-born players. Just these last couple months, three NBA
players (including Webber) made waves by utilizing the Euroleagues as
leverage for their NBA negotiations.
Charlie Bell, a former Michigan State player and current Milwaukee
Buck, threatened to sign with Greek team Olympiakos in order to escape
the Bucks. Bell isn’t a superstar, but he did average a respectable
13.5 points, 3 rebs, 3 assts and 1.2 steals last year - some NBA team
definitely could use him. Now, I realize that could have been a ploy by
Bell to get the Bucks to release him from his contract (they didn’t,
they matched the offer sheet by the Miami Heat), but the fact that he
and his agent used Olympiakos as leverage shows that this isn’t your
father’s Euroleague anymore.
There is the case of Dee Brown, the former Illinois-star and
promising, young NBA player decided to leave the Utah Jazz in favor of
Turkish club Galatasaray. Dee Brown, a bench player last season, says
it’s only temporary and hopes to catch on with another NBA club next
year.
Sure Webber declined the offer from Greece, and Kirilenko is in the
same NBA jersey despite his threats, as is Charlie Bell. I also believe
that Pavlovic and Varejao are likely to sign with the Cavs, it’s just a
matter of when. Americans will forget the loss of Spanoulis and
Jasikevicius, but the soft line has been drawn this past off-season.
What was unthinkable 6-7 years ago has become status quo. The next
natural move is for more and more players to not just threaten to leave
the NBA, but to leave the NBA for the leagues in Europe....click here to finish the article