Month: February 2006 (Page 2 of 14)

Don’t hate J.J.

I’m an avid Duke fan (since the ’86 Johnny Dawkins-led team lost to Louisville in the NCAA finals) and I often wonder why there is such an anti-Duke sentiment these days. Then I think about how I root against the Yankees, Lakers, Wolverines, and to a lesser extent the Patriots, and I realize why. Nobody likes a winner. As much of a frontrunning crowd we can be locally, we’re definitely like the underdogs nationally. It probably stems from the whole Revolutionary War thing…but I digress.

For me, Duke epitomizes all that is right about college basketball. Coach K gets his kids to play hard on both ends of the court each and every night, and that’s not common in today’s game.

Enter J.J. Redick, who is by far the sport’s most reviled player. On one hand, I can see why a lot of people dislike the guy. During his first two seasons, he was bratty as hell, talking sh*t and/or bobbing his head after every made bucket. But the last two seasons, I’ve seen him grown from a cocky kid into a confident man. Oh, and he’s arguably the best shooter that the game has ever seen.

ESPN’s Pat Forde wrote a nice article about the other side of J.J. Redick.

The kid had been an immediate success in Durham, maybe too immediate for his long-term good. He averaged 15 points per game as a freshman and 15.9 as a sophomore, helping the Blue Devils to the Final Four. But after a come-from-ahead loss to eventual champion Connecticut in the national semifinals — in which Redick missed a crucial late shot — it was time for a critical re-evaluation of the prodigy’s progress.

Redick was crushed by the UConn loss and stumbled through a depressed period. He didn’t get a whole lot of sympathy from the Duke coaches, who gave him this tough-love appraisal of his game: You’re overweight, underdisciplined and uncommitted to fulfilling your potential.

“He had to make a decision,” Duke assistant Chris Collins said. “We told him, ‘You can be a good player for four years and be on good teams. Or do you want to be great?’ It would require drastic changes in his lifestyle and a commitment he’d never given. That was a moment of truth for him as a basketball player.”

So he listened to the criticisms from the coaches, accepted them and got down to the task of reinventing himself.

“We regimented his whole summer,” Collins said. “Every hour of every day was accounted for, and he followed it. Now it’s become who he is.”

Who is he now? A disciplined, superbly conditioned athlete who has become the leading scorer in Duke history and soon will be the leading scorer in Atlantic Coast Conference history.

Said J.J.: “Early on in my career, I definitely had an annoying persona, a brash persona on the court. I’d talk trash or head-bob after making a shot. A lot of that stemmed from insecurities. I wasn’t sure how good I could be or who I was.

“I still might grin — I won’t use a cussword, but you know what grin I’m talking about — on the court. But that’s just because I’m having fun. I try to be humble. I realize that any talent I have is a result of God’s blessing. I don’t feel the need to [talk trash] as much anymore.”

In this weekend’s game against Temple, Redick did break the ACC scoring record. It’s quite an accomplishment, considering that the record lasted for 51 years.

And while I understand all the hate, I sure don’t agree with it.

Fantasy Baseball Q&A: Keepers and draft prep

The calendar is about to flip to March, which means it’s time to start thinking about two things: NCAA hoops and fantasy baseball.

So what’s on your mind? Struggling with some keeper decisions, or wondering when it’s safe to take Roger Clemens, Barry Bonds and Randy Johnson? Maybe you want someone to tell you you’re crazy for thinking Michael Young is a better bet at short than Miguel Tejada, or that this is the year Mark Prior wins 20 and strikes out 220.

Sleepers, keepers, drafts, busts, rookies, risks; whatever fantasy baseball questions you’ve got, post them here and we’ll give you our thoughts.

And remember: Opening Day is April 2!

The first-annual Atrocious GM Summit

ESPN’s Bill Simmons hit one out of the park with his facetious first-annual Atrocious GM Summit, which brought some of the league’s current and former atrocious GMs together for a frank conversation.

My favorite bit – Simmons interviews former Knicks GM Scott Layden about what current GM Isiah Thomas has done:

Simmons: So you like what Isiah has done?

Layden: Hell, yeah. Take the Francis trade, if it happens: Logically, it makes no sense because Francis and Marbury are the same player — expensive, shoot-first point guards with huge entourages and attitude problems who have never won anything. Even if you’re getting Francis for nothing, it still makes no sense on paper.

For example, let’s say you spent $3,000 on a living room sofa two years ago that you didn’t really like. To make the sofa stand out a little less, you bought a leather chair for $2,200 that doesn’t match –.

Simmons: Marbury is the sofa and Jamal Crawford is the chair in this case?

Layden: Precisely. And the room still looks bad. So now, you’re on Craigslist and you see that someone is selling another $3,000 sofa for $900 that’s almost exactly like the sofa you have. And there’s no way you would ever want two big, ugly sofas in the same room. It would just look ridiculous. But your mind-set is, “Hey, how can I turn down a $3,000 sofa for $900?” So you buy the sofa and stick it in the room, which is now cluttered with stuff since you also spent another $10,000 on some crummy art, a coffee table with support problems, two giant bookcases that have to be turned sideways, some wobbly end tables and a smashed sculpture that was patched back together with duct tape. But since it’s too late to go back, you spend another $5,000 on an interior decorator to make the room work. Well, you know what would happen? He wouldn’t be able to make it work. You bought too much crap.

See, this is why Isiah is a genius: He’s assembling the basketball version of that nightmare living room, and he has the fans convinced that either the expensive interior decorator — in this case, Larry Brown — will be able to make everything work, or he can somehow swap some of that furniture to one of his neighbors for a first-class piece of art. And he’s spending an ungodly amount of money! And you never hear rumors that he might get fired! I think it’s a tribute to him and his staff. He’s the best-ever at being an atrocious GM. He really is.

Thomas: Thank you, Scott, that means a lot.

He mentioned Craigslist. You gotta love it!

Couch Potato Alert

It’s shaping up to be a pretty good weekend of basketball, with four Top 25 matchups in college basketball, highlighted by the monster rematch between #2 Villanova and #4 UConn on Sunday. That game will definitely have NCAA tournament (#1-seeding) implications. In the NBA, the most appealing game is on Sunday, when the Cavs and Pistons face off. Though I’m definitely watching the Clippers/Lakers, hoping that the Clips can topple the overexposed Lakers.

College Hoops
Sat, 1:30pm: Michigan @ (12) Ohio St. – CBS
Sat, 3:45pm: (13) Boston College @ (14) N.C. State – CBS
Sat, 6pm: (22) Iowa @ (8) Illinois – ESPN
Sat, 9pm: (18) Kansas @ (7) Texas – ESPN
Sun, 2pm: (2) Villanova @ (4) UConn – CBS

NBA
Fri, 8pm: San Antonio @ Memphis – local
Fri, 8pm: New Jersey @ New York – ESPN
Fri, 10:30pm: LA Lakers @ LA Clippers – ESPN
Sun, 12:00pm: Cleveland @ Detroit – ABC
Sun, 7:30pm: Boston @ LA Lakers – ESPN

Portland needs a Mulligan

Do you think the Portland Trailblazers would like a do-over of the 2005 draft after this incident?

Portland Trail Blazers guard Sebastian Telfair was suspended for two games by the NBA for violating the league’s firearms policy.

The suspension stems from the discovery of a loaded firearm during a preflight inspection on the team’s private plane following a game in Boston earlier this month.

Telfair claims that the gun was his girlfriend’s and that he grabbed her bag by mistake. It just so happens that his girlfriend was leaving on a trip the same day and that she was traveling with a gun.

Believe that? I can give you one hell of a price on the Brooklyn Bridge.

The Blazers originally held the #3 overall pick and considered taking this year’s Rookie of the Year frontrunner Chris Paul with the pick, but ultimately decided that Telfair was their point guard of the future. Maybe he still is, but I have to think that bringing a gun onto the team’s private plane has to make them wonder – why didn’t we take Paul?

The two hardest positions to fill are point guard and center. Look around the league. It’s filled with capable and talented shooting guards and forwards. So I don’t blame the Bucks for taking Andrew Bogut with the first pick. Skilled seven footers are hard to come by and they already had T.J. Ford on the roster. And I’ve already talked about Atlanta’s decision to pass on CP3 with the second overall pick.

But what about Portland? What exactly were they thinking?

ESPN’s Chad Ford writes:

They eventually traded the pick to the Jazz for the No. 6 and No. 27 picks in the draft. They used the No. 6 pick on high school phenom Martell Webster. GM John Nash said after the draft that had the Blazers kept the pick, they still would’ve drafted Webster at No. 3.

Like Knight in Atlanta, Nash has blundered in Portland and might lose his job by summer over errors like passing on Paul. Nash said in an interview after the draft that he believed Telfair was “ahead of the curve” in comparing him to Paul. That clearly hasn’t been the case. There isn’t an NBA scout I’ve talked to who thinks Telfair is in the same league as Paul as a point guard or as a prospect. The Blazers missed badly on this one. Their love affair with high school stars, Telfair and Webster included, has left them in the NBA cellar.

Why would you pass on a proven floor leader like Paul for another high school phenom who plays small forward, the same position as Darius Miles and Ruben Patterson?

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