Category: NBA (Page 182 of 595)

NBA Draft Lottery: Who wouldn’t pick John Wall #1?

The NBA Draft Lottery is tonight, and as always, there is a lot riding on a few ping pong balls. Here is a list of the lottery teams (with their chances of winning the top pick in parenthesis) along with some discussion of their possible strategy if they do win the #1 pick.

ALMOST A SURE THING

Nets (25%)
The Wall-to-New Jersey/Brooklyn rumors have been strong all season, thanks to the Nets’ woeful record and Devin Harris’s struggles. Harris is now viewed as expendable, which means Wall would be a Net if the balls bounce their way tonight.

Wizards (10.3%)
Winning the right to draft Wall would allow the Wizards to cut ties with Gilbert Arenas and the franchise’s gun-toting past. It might also convince a free agent or two to sign for the chance to play with Wall.

76ers (5.3%)
Jrue Holiday is nice, but he’s not going to dissuade the Sixers from drafting a franchise-savior like Wall.

Pistons (5.2%)
See 76ers above but substitute “Rodney Stuckey” for “Jrue Holiday.” That is all.

Pacers (1.1%)
Indiana arguably needs a point guard more than any other team in the lottery, but with just a 1.1% chance of winning, they’re hoping against hope.

Grizzlies (0.7%)
Memphis would be buzzing with the arrival of Wall, who would seemingly be a great fit with O.J. Mayo, a re-signed Rudy Gay, Zach Randolph and Marc Gasol. Memphis would likely make the playoffs next season.

Raptors (0.6%)
The chances are very slim, but winning the right to draft Wall would offset the likely loss of Chris Bosh this summer. Neither Jarrett Jack nor Jose Calderon would be enough to convince the Raptors to draft Evan Turner.

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LeBron’s lawyer going after blogger

TMZ Sports acquired a copy of an email sent to Terez Owens that blasts the site for starting the Delonte West/Gloria James rumor:

In the email, Frederick Nance — attorney for LeBron and Gloria — says the report is “categorically false and per se defamatory.” Nance adds, “No thinking person could possibly believe such rubbish.”

The guys at terezowens tell us, “We think it’s a little fishy that they waited almost 4 days to fire this off.” They say they stand by their source, and they’re consulting with their lawyers. The story is still up on their site … for now.

When I first heard this story, I thought it was too crazy to be true. I guess we’ll have to see if all of the facts come out.

WCF Game 1: Kobe scores 40, Lakers roll

It’s going to be tough for the Suns to beat the Lakers if they let Kobe shoot 13-for-23 from the field and send him to the line 12 times, but that’s exactly what Phoenix did in Game 1. Lakers win, 128-107.

The Suns have defended pretty well in the playoffs, but the Lakers shot 58% from the field, 47% from 3PT, outrebounded the Suns 42-34, and only turned the ball over nine times. You’re going to win a lot of games with stats like these.

Pau Gasol was highly efficient, hitting 10-of-13 shots for 21 points. Lamar Odom added 19 points off the bench.

The Suns shot 49% and scored 107 points, so the problem is not on offense. Phoenix just couldn’t stop the Lakers.


Photo from fOTOGLIF

How does William “Worldwide Wes” Wesley figure into LeBron’s future?

About a month ago, I posed the question — Who is William Wesley? — and now his name is surfacing in reports linking LeBron to Kentucky head coach John Calipari.

The Chicago Tribune reported Monday that according to league sources, basketball power broker William Wesley — a friend of both James and Calipari — has been quietly contacting NBA teams that have coaching vacancies and salary cap space about the possibility of bringing in James and Calipari together.

James and Calipari have become friends through their mutual friendship with Wesley, who is considered one of the most powerful men in basketball. Wesley is part of the “family” that James referred to repeatedly in his postgame comments after the Celtics knocked James’ Cleveland Cavaliers out of the playoffs. Wesley was also reportedly involved in steering Rose and Tyreke Evans to Memphis when Calipari was coaching there.

Maybe it’s just me, but I don’t understand the love affair with John Calipari. He’s a terrific recruiter, but what is it about his 72-112 record with the Nets, along with his disappointing finishes in Memphis and Kentucky, that indicates he’s going to be successful in his next NBA head coaching gig?

Free agency is still a month and a half away, but if some NBA team hires Calipari, it could forebode LeBron’s arrival. And the way things look — the shadowy William Wesley will be right there in the middle of it.


Photo from fOTOGLIF

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