Category: Rumors & Gossip (Page 218 of 225)

Durant edges Horford for ROY honors

The Seattle Times is reporting that Kevin Durant will win Rookie of the Year.

Kevin Durant, who led all first-year players in scoring, assists and free-throw percentage, will be named the NBA’s rookie of the year and become the first Sonics player to win the award.

Two league sources confirmed Durant outdistanced second-place finisher Al Horford, an Atlanta forward. The sources spoke anonymously because the official announcement is scheduled for Thursday.

In my year-end awards column, I made the case for Al Horford, but predicted that the sportswriters would go with Durant due to his high scoring average.

ROY is a two-horse race between Kevin Durant and Al Horford. There’s no doubt in my mind that Durant is going to be a superstar, but Horford has the edge efficiency wise (16.5 to 15.2) and has done it in three fewer minutes a game. In the end, I think voters will gravitate towards Durant’s 20.1-point average (along with his unequaled potential), but Horford has a big edge in rebounds, FG% and PPS. Let’s not forget that the Hawks are playoff-bound while the Sonics have the second worst record in the league. There’s something to be said about the timing of Horford’s arrival in Atlanta and their sudden development into a playoff team, albeit a bad one.

I think Horford has the edge, but Durant will probably win it. Given the fact that KD has played his best ball in the second half of the season despite having virtually no help, it won’t be a huge travesty if he goes home with the trophy.

Horford deserves the award, but Durant won it. Life goes on.

I’m now four-for-four in my predictions, but the MVP is the big one, and I have the feeling I backed the wrong horse.

LeBron/DeShawn, Josh Howard, MIP and more

It’s kind of sad that the most compelling thing about the Cavs/Wizards series is all the drama surrounding the ongoing feud between LeBron James and DeShawn Stevenson, though I have to admit I love hearing clueless announcers describe the insult in LeBron’s comparison of DeShawn to Soulja Boy. Then Soulja Boy shows up and meets Stevenson before the Wizards go on to blow the Cavs out in Game 3. Apparently, LeBron bought a private room in a club that night and played a new Jay-Z song in which he disses Stevenson. Caron Butler and his squeeze were in the club and when they heard the song, they left. On and on it goes. Oh yeah, the Cavs are up 3-1 heading back to Cleveland.

Hedo Turkoglu won the Most Improved Player award, making me three for three in my year-end award predictions. The award was well deserved as Turk’s Efficiency Per Game jumped 56% and he played a large role in the Magic’s emergence this season. Turkoglu won the award going away, with Rudy Gay and LaMarcus Aldridge coming in second and third. Former lottery picks simply have a tough time winning this award because the press expects them to make a leap early in their career. Voters are more likely to give it to someone that comes out of nowhere (and no one saw Turkoglu’s season coming).

The Suns dodged a bullet in Game 4 by jumping all over the Spurs. No NBA team has ever come back from being down 3-0, but the Suns have a shot. (Granted, it’s a long shot.) If they can find a way to win Game 5 in San Antonio, they’ll get the opportunity to tie the series at home. I’m mildly optimistic because it seems like they made some adjustments guarding the Spurs’ pick and roll, and Boris Diaw has taken on the challenge of guarding Tony Parker. Given all that has happened thus far, the Suns have to be thinking that the series is a lucky Tim Duncan three away from being tied up, 2-2. They know they can play with the Spurs and they just need to take it one game at a time.

I’m really starting to enjoy watching the Jazz. I played for Bo Ryan on one of his national championship teams at UW-Platteville, and Jerry Sloan has the Jazz playing like we did. Take care of the ball, cut and pick hard, get good shots and play defense. They always make the extra pass, rarely take a bad shot, and it translates to wins. Ryan’s teams overcome a lack of athleticism by outwitting their opponents, and the Jazz are doing the same thing. I don’t know how Jerry Sloan hasn’t yet won Coach of the Year, but if we’re willing to give the MVP to Kobe as a career achievement award, we might as well reward Sloan as well.

I’m a Josh Howard fan and a proponent of the legalization of marijuana, but I have to wonder about the timing of his comments. Apparently, Howard has a history of partaking, so when a writer brought it up as a possible reason for Howard’s less-than-stellar performance in the playoffs, he took issue and said that he only smokes Mary Jane during the offseason. This, of course, flies in the face of the NBA’s substance abuse policy and the interview has become a giant distraction for the already distracted Mavs. I like Josh and I like Dirk, but I have to say I enjoy watching Mark Cuban and his league leading $105 M payroll get knocked out in the first round. Cuban made his fortune during the internet boom, which means he basically sold an idea for lots and lots of money. I’m not blaming him for being in the right place at the right time, but that’s all it was, right? Now he owns the Mavericks and that makes him an expert on putting a team together… Only he just traded away his second-best young player for a washed-up point guard and it looks like his Mavs are going to make their second consecutive first-round exit. Ouch.

Photos courtesy of the Orlando Sentinel. and Flickr.

Scott Skiles in as Bucks’ new coach?

This is still considered a “report,” which is journalist-speak for a “strong rumor,” but the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel is reporting that the Bucks are on the verge of naming Scott Skiles as their new head coach.

Continuing to make significant progress in their negotiations, the Milwaukee Bucks might be ready to name Scott Skiles their new coach in the next day or two.

The Bucks initially considered a number of coaches from an available pool of candidates that includes former NBA coaches Rick Carlisle, Larry Brown, Jeff Van Gundy and Mike Fratello but indications are that the Bucks have zeroed in on Skiles, who was fired in December as coach of the Chicago Bulls.

“The search is continuing,” [Bucks GM John] Hammond said Sunday. “We’re making progress and our goal, as stated before, is to react quickly.”

Asked if the Bucks had decided that Skiles is their man, Hammond said, “We will not discuss individual names of candidates at this time.”

Skiles is a highly coveted commodity who has been linked to coaching vacancies in New York and Memphis as well. It has also been rumored that Skiles might bide his time to see if Miami Heat coach and President Pat Riley stepped aside as coach to pursue Skiles as the new Heat coach.

Regular readers know I’m a Bucks fan, so getting this hire right is especially important to me. Part of me would love to see Larry Brown get the job, but he’s pretty flaky and there’s a good chance that he wouldn’t be around very long. On the other hand, it’s conceivable that Skiles would be the strong leader that the franchise so desperately needs.

The Bucks were one of the league’s worst defensive teams and Skiles is known for his commitment to that end of the floor. The main knock on him is that he’s not widely considered a “player’s coach” because he rubs players the wrong way. But most good coaches do. The worry is that, this season, the Bulls started to tune him out. Still, he went to management and said that the team needed a new voice, so he prompted the change.

The Bucks don’t really have a player that is bigger than the team, so it’s worth the risk if Skiles can whip this team into shape. Milwaukee is currently building around Andrew Bogut, Michael Redd and Mo Williams, who are all good character guys, even if they don’t always pull the team in the same direction.

But that’ll be Skiles’ job, won’t it?

I predict if Skiles does in fact take the job, the Bucks will be playoff-bound next season.

Bucks fire Krystkowiak

New Bucks GM John Hammond (formerly the VP of the Detroit Pistons) acted quickly in his first few days on the job and fired head coach Larry Krystkowiak.

Krystkowiak, who was named head coach on March 15, 2007, won 31 of 100 games with the Bucks.

The Bucks will immediately begin their search for a head coach. Former Detroit Pistons and Indiana Pacers coach Rick Carlisle and former Chicago Bulls coach Scott Skiles are expected to be considered, and it’s possible veteran Larry Brown could be in the mix. Brown, who coached the Pistons to the 2004 NBA championship, has said he wants to return to coaching.

There’s enough talent in Milwaukee to make the Bucks a perennial playoff team. The team has two terrific scorers in Michael Redd and Mo Williams, along with a promising front line that features Andrew Bogut, Yi Jianlian and Charlie Villanueva.

Being a long-time Bucks fan, I watched a ton of games this season and it’s clear that the team was lacking the chemistry necessary to win games consistently. I would typically blame the head coach, since it’s his job to take the talent that’s there and get those players to buy into his system. That simply didn’t happen this season.

The Bucks’ owner, Senator Herb Kohl, needs to make a serious hire, not another no-name, first-year gy. I love the idea of Larry Brown coming in and whipping this team into shape. He has led tremendous turnaround efforts in the past and his disciplined mindset still lingers in Detroit. The other two names mentioned – Scott Skiles and Rick Carlisle – are also known as serious hard-asses, but they don’t have the reputation that Brown has. I’d be a little worried about Skiles since he was unable to do much with a talented Chicago team this season, but any of these three hires would be an improvement.

Chad Johnson wants out of Cincy

After a few months of insinuations, Chad Johnson has officially asked to be traded.

Bengals wide receiver Chad Johnson left no room for doubt Wednesday: He wants out of Cincinnati as fast as possible and he doesn’t plan on reporting for any future Bengal function — mandatory or voluntary.

“Nothing has changed from what I’ve been saying for three months that I don’t want to play for the Bengals.”

Johnson made one of his strongest statements in saying he is not planning on reporting to any team functions because he wants to be traded.

“I want to be traded before the draft, and if that doesn’t happen, I want to be traded as soon as possible,” Johnson said. “I don’t intend on reporting to anything.”

As this was happening, I always got the feeling that he and the Bengals would repair the relationship and he’d be in Cincy this season. But it’s hard to go back from statements like these. (Though Kobe did it, so who knows.)

Possible suitors? The Raiders jump to mind, though they may not have the cap space after all their signings this summer. Wherever he lands, he’s the type of player that can shift the NFL landscape.

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