Month: February 2008 (Page 10 of 30)

Spurs acquire Kurt Thomas

The trade deadline is today, but in a deal yesterday, the Spurs acquired Kurt Thomas from the Sonics. In return, Seattle receives Brent Barry, Francisco Elson and a 2009 first round pick.

“We need things that they don’t and they need things that may not fit here right now,” Spurs general manager R.C. Buford said. “Hopefully the addition of Kurt will strengthen our playoff push.”

“I think the landscape of the West has put a premium on interior defense,” Buford said. “Now with the trades of recent days, that’s only improved.”

Thomas was the odd man out in Seattle as soon as the team decided to give Robert Swift more minutes. All three players have expiring contracts, so there’s no real salary cap advantage for either team. The Sonics are stockpiling young players and picks, and saw an opportunity to get another first round pick for Thomas. Ironically, when the Suns initially traded Thomas to Seattle, they also included two first round picks, so the Sonics have now garnered three first round picks for taking on Thomas’ $8 million salary for a season. They’ll likely use these multiple picks to move up in future drafts. It will be interesting to see how this strategy pans out.

As Buford mentioned, this move was a response to the Pau Gasol and Shaquille O’Neal trades made by the Lakers and Suns, respectively. Thomas’ job will be to defend big bodies so that Tim Duncan doesn’t have to. For a time, it looked as if Elson would fill that role, but he wasn’t able to get much traction in San Antonio. The Spurs will miss Barry’s sharpshooting; he’s one of the best three-point specialists in the game. I think this move is a vote of confidence for Ime Udoka, who should see increased playing time off the bench.

I would have liked to have seen the Spurs use Barry and Elson to trade for Mike Miller, who is on the trading block in Memphis. But they chose size over offense in Thomas.

Manny wants to finish his career in Boston…today

Manny “Being Manny” Ramirez said Thursday he wants to finish his career with the Boston Red Sox.

“I want to stay here, but it’s up to them if they want to bring me,” he said. “But if they don’t want to bring me back, that’s fine. I know I’ll be a free agent after ’08 so that’s another thing that I’m looking forward (to).”

The slugging left fielder is in the last year of an eight-year contract. Beyond that, the team has options for the next two seasons at $20 million each.

“It’s up to them to say, ‘OK, we’re going take (the option). It’s not up to me to go into the office and demand a four-year deal, whatever,” the 35-year-old Ramirez said. ” No, I’m going come here to play the game, finish my year. If they want me to come back, I’ll come back.”

Okay, it’s Thursday right? By 5:00pm Friday let’s see if he’s singing the same tune. This guy changes his mind more than Bill Parcells in a contract year.

A-Rod brings a little controversy to camp

When discussing baseball’s drug-testing policy Wednesday at Yankees’ spring training camp, third basemen Alex Rodriguez raised some eyebrows after saying he was tested “9 or 10 times” last year.

A-Rod said he understood all of this, and made the point by noting that he was drug-tested “nine or 10 times” last season. It seemed to be his way of putting the situation in context, noting that he had to be clean because of what he called baseball’s “very strict (drug-testing) policy.”

The problem is that apparently no player would be tested that many times in a season unless he had tested positive for amphetamines or otherwise given MLB reason to target him.

A-Rod seems to be the kind of guy who says thinks at times just to hear himself talk. He doesn’t really think before he makes comments and therefore leaves himself open for criticism. If he were to just take a moment to think about what’s coming out of his mouth, I’m willing to bet the media would get off his back.

« Older posts Newer posts »