Month: April 2006 (Page 14 of 20)

Smoke and mirrors

Trust no one.

Fox Mulder would feel right at home as a GM in the NFL in the days leading up to the draft. Teams are pumping up players they don’t want and trying to drag down players they do. Take the Saints, who are bringing Matt Leinart in for a workout this week. Given the status of Drew Brees’ shoulder, it makes sense that they might use their #2 pick on Leinart as a backup plan. But Todd McShay has another theory [Insider subscription required]:

The Saints have been shopping their first-round pick since signing Brees, but they have not received the type of interest they had hoped for. With just two weeks left before the draft, they could be trying to drum up trade interest by courting Leinart. That would make Leinart’s workout for the Saints this week nothing more than a gigantic smokescreen to scare the Titans and Jets into trading up to get him.

The word out of Tennessee is that GM Floyd Reese’s opinion of Leinart differs with that of head coach Jeff Fisher and offensive coordinator Norm Chow. Reese appears to like Vince Young, while Fisher and Chow want Leinart. But is that all just a smokescreen as well? According to McShay, maybe:

Knowing all along that conventional wisdom would favor the Titans drafting Leinart because of his ties with Chow — USC’s offensive coordinator from 2001-04 — Reese could have expressed a preference for Young in order to throw off the Jets and keep them from cutting a deal with New Orleans to move up.

All of this posturing and out and out lying is what makes the draft so unpredictable. The Saints want to trade out of the #2 pick, but they still want OT D’Brickashaw Ferguson or DE Mario Williams, and they think they can get one of those players with the #3 or #4 pick. Whatever offers they’ve received thus aren’t up to snuff, so they bring in Leinart to get the Titans and Jets worried. The Titans, who probably want Leinart, know that the Saints probably aren’t going to take him and they want the Jets to believe that they might take Young instead, thinking that the Jets would be less likely to trade up if they thought Leinart would be there at #4.

Got that?

If it’s Tuesday…

…Ken Griffey Jr. must be on the DL. Hooo boy. Come on, fantasy owners, you knew this day was coming. Did you take another outfielder in the next round? Smart move.

And on that note, I present to you: Gigi’s list of Players Who Will Never Be Gashouse Gorillas: (yes, that’s where the nickname Gigi comes from, if you were curious, G.G.)
Ken Griffey Jr.
Josh Beckett
AJ Burnett
Nomar Garciaparra
Kerry Wood
Mark Prior (okay, I took him this year, but in the 23rd round, which is a steal even if he only starts five games)
JD Drew
Chipper Jones
Jim Edmonds
Armando Benitez
Magglio Ordonez
Frank Thomas
Ben Sheets

Who are your must-avoid fantasy players? And let’s try to keep the list to the perennially injured, not players like Cristian Guzman, who have no fantasy value.

Source: Morrison to go pro

A source close to Adam Morrison says he’s going pro and that he will announce his intentions on Wednesday. These “source” reports are only accurate about 80% of the time, so it’s not a done deal until Morrison announces.

ESPN has Morrison going #5 in their mock draft, but it’s hard to say where players will go without assigning draft picks to particular teams. They still have Joakim Noah and Al Horford in their mock, which doesn’t make a whole lot of sense considering the duo announced that they are staying another year. The mock at NBADraft.net has Morrison going third to the Bobcats.

It should be an interesting draft. Right now, there isn’t a consensus #1 pick, so many of the teams will be focusing on the player that best fits their needs. Once the lottery picks are set, we should have a better idea where players will be drafted.

Most Improved – three players to consider

Mike James – After Toronto traded Rafer Alston to Houston for James, the point guard responded with 20.4 ppg and 5.9 apg on .470 shooting from the field. Sure, the Raptors stunk, but James proved he could increase his productivity.

David West – Take away Jamaal Magloire and add Chris Paul and what do you get? Well, the Hornets got 17.1 ppg and 7.4 rpg from their 2003 first round pick, up from 6.2/4.3 the year before. With Paul and West, the team has a good young core to build around.

Boris Diaw – People will want to give Steve Nash credit, but Diaw has been terrific for the Suns, averaging 13.4 ppg, 6.9 rpg and 6.2 apg on .525 shooting from the field. Throw in the fact that he’s got four triple-doubles this season – two in the last two games – and it’s clear that the Suns got the better end of the trade they made with Atlanta in the offseason. They stole Diaw and two first round picks from the Hawks, who got Joe Johnson in return.

So there you have it, one player from a bad team, one from a mediocre team and one from a division champ. All due respect to James and West (along with Mehmet Okur and Chris Kaman, who also deserve consideration), I’ve got to go with Diaw, who played four positions for Phoenix and helped the franchise overcome the loss of Amare Stoudemire for the season. Not bad for a guy named Boris.

#5-seed in the East? It should be the Magic.

The Orlando Magic will not make the playoffs this year. After a 20-40 start, it was almost impossible for them to play in the postseason. But look at what the Magic have done since then:

1. They are 16-4 over their last 20. This includes a blowout win over the Cavs, a nine-point wins over Dallas and Miami, a 12-point win over San Antonio, and a victory against Detroit.

2. Dwight Howard, despite having maybe the goofiest player picture in the league, has averaged 17 points and 14 boards in the last 10 games. He is a stud and will soon be the league’s best power forward.

3. Over the same span, Jameer Nelson has averaged 18 points and five assists on .508 shooting from the field.

4. Hedo Turkoglu, a former Sacramento castoff, has averaged 19 points (on .550 shooting), five rebounds and three assists in the last ten games.

5. Darko Milicic, who came over in a trade with Detroit, has shown signs of life, averaging nine points, four boards and two blocks over the same period.

Watch out for the Magic…next year.

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