August 2008 Archives

August 30, 2008

The French Connection

So why did the Rockets take Frederic Weis' rights from the Knicks just to remove Patrick Ewing, Jr. from the roster?

As we said here a few blogs back after Little Fella went to Houston as part of the Ron Artest trade, the Rockets had no intentions of including either Sean Singletary or Ewing, Jr. -- the two throw-ins in the trade -- in their roster plans. Singletary was traded to Phoenix for DJ Strawberry last week.weis.jpg

The Rockets could have waived Ewing, Jr., but Rockets GM Daryl Morey knew Donnie Walsh had an interest in acquiring him. So to avoid a (rather minor) salary cap hit for waiving Ewing, Morey agreed to a trade that worked for everyone.

It had to be a player or a draft pick to make the deal work. The Knicks could have surrendered a future second round pick, but with so few picks in the next two drafts, Walsh couldn't afford it. The only contract (half-guaranteed) that the Knicks own that is comparable is that of Anthony Roberson's, and the Knicks have plans for him. So...what about the rights to a player?

Hmmm...are there any players out there the Knicks still own the rights too?

Hmmm....

Ah-ha! Bonjour, Frederic!

Donnie provided the NBA with a good chuckle and kudos to Morey for playing along. Doesn't mean anything to them (aside from a little salary savings and clearing a roster spot). Just now the Rockets own the lifetime rights to one Freddie Weis.

Of course Vince Carter owns Weis for life, too. Nasty.

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* - Just imagine the controversy right now if the Knicks wound up landing Monta Ellis in a sign-and-trade this summer. After locking up Ellis with a lucrative, long-term deal, the Warriors are now disturbed by the news that Ellis suffered a major ankle injury while working out at his home in Mississippi. My man Marcus Thompson III has the scoop on Golden State's skepticism that Ellis injured the ankle while working out. Glad I'm not in that circus, Marcus.

* - Starberman says Stephon Marbury has slimmed down to 200 pounds this summer. And here I recall being told by many of Stephon's loyalists that his weight was never an issue.

* - Speaking of weight, I think the Knicks get far more out of keeping Ewing, Jr. on the roster, even as the 15th man to wave towels and be the player the Garden faithful calls for in blowouts, than they do inking Jerome James' name on the inactive list 82 times this season.

* - I never like to delve into politics here (or anywhere) but I wrote on this blog a while back about Barack Obama's love and ability to play hoops. OK, I can dig it.sarahheathstatebb1982_1%5B1%5D.jpg

But wait, what's this? I'm already smitten with John McCain's VP choice -- she had me at "hockey mom" -- and further investigation reveals Sarah Palin starred on her high school basketball team back in the day. (That's her No. 22, on the right in a photo circulating around the internet....And, hey, don't sleep on Alaskan hoops. Just ask Carlos Boozer.)

So it's Nancy Pelosi meets Nancy Lieberman. Nice. They called her 'Sarah Barracuda.'

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August 29, 2008

Alas, Frederic Weis, we hardly knew ye

The Knicks have traded the rights to Frederic Weis to Houston for rookie forward Patrick Ewing Jr., ending the first-round bust's infamous non-career here.

So we thought it would be a good time to walk down memory lane and dig up one of the most humiliating moments in sports history, starring Mr. Weis himself.

Good karma: Ewing Jr. is a Knick

If it were April 1, I'd never believe it.

Donnie Walsh proved he has a sense of humor -- and maybe an ability to scrub clean a few stains on history -- when he pulled off a minor trade with some major juice.

Ewing for Weis.

Ya gotta be kiddin me.
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There are no guarantees that Junior will make this team. Right now he's No. 16 out of 15 spots but as Donnie said in the statement that Ewing will "have an opportunity here to compete for a spot on our roster." That -- and the good karma that comes with this move -- should be enough to make this a well-received move.

We've been talking about Ewing, Jr. here in Fixer Nation since May. I've said from the beginning he's the type of guy that fits best with the Knicks because he brings more than just basketball. He'll be great for the crowd, a terrific energy guy who knows exactly what the Garden experience is all about. He literally grew up in the place and has no problem waving towels and diving for loose balls.

And who knows, he's not big at barely 6-8 in sneakers and 225-pounds, but he has a tremendous vertical and a freakish 7-foot wingspan. He's not a bad shooter but doesn't have great range. Still, in a pinch he can give you maybe what you expected out of Balkman, but he's a far more intelligent player and a little more reliable mentally than my man Rey. (Aw man, crazy). That much we'll have to find out in camp.

Now, regarding the inclusion of Weis in this trade, which had to be only for comedic purposes: I asked around and was told that NBA teams had lifetime rights to a player they draft unless they renounce or trade or sign that player and he becomes a free agent. It's a problem for many European players, apparently. Weis never signed so even though they drafted him almost a decade ago, they still technically maintained his rights. Why the Rockets would want this guys rights is far beyond anything I am interested in hearing on the Friday before Labor Day weekend.

August 26, 2008

Memphis mulling Zach Randolph

We discussed this scenario not too long ago and apparently it is something that has remained on the minds of the Grizzlies braintrust. According to Grizzlies beat man Ronald Tillery's blog, there continues to be some internal discussions about whether or not Zach Randolph could be a good fit in Memphis.

The Grizzlies have some cap space to take on Z-Bo's contract but they won't take it for nothing. They also won't give up any of their coveted pieces for him, so forget OJ Mayo et al. Kyle Lowry? That's where I'd start if I were Donnie.

But Tillery suggests Darko Milicic, who suffered an Achilles tendon injury earlier this summer. He may be damaged goods, but he's a big you can use off the bench (say good-bye Jerome James) while his contract ($7 million and $7.5 million) melts off the ledger in 2010. Memphis seems to be interested in the Iranian center named Hamed Ehadadi. They also have Marc Gasol coming in this season, so they don't need size as much as they need a low-post scorer.

The last I heard, Donnie Walsh was in Indianapolis last week with his family taking some R&R after a busy few months making the transition from Indiana to New York.

But we know Donnie has shopped Zach around and there are teams that have him in mind. It's up to someone to call DW to make a deal at this point, I would think.

Stay tuned....

August 25, 2008

Thinking small (and about other things)

The formula you saw Coach K employ throughout the Olympics is mainly based on the philosophy Mike D'Antoni (and most of the rest of the world) believes is the best way to play this game. One thing the US always had on the court was an athletic big -- Dwight Howard or Chris Bosh, but rarely together, even against the huge Spainish front line -- and four versatile, interchangeable parts. Many times the "power forward" was someone such as Tayshaun Prince or Carmelo Anthony banging down low.

So from now on, let's not refer to it as the "power forward," which we coined for the Charles Oakley and Karl Malone types, and instead just call it the "4-spot." dantoniolympics0812.jpgNBA.com

Melo got some love for making an effort on defense (which is like rewarding your kid for washing his hands before dinner) in these Games, but you saw when he was overmatched he quickly got overheated. Melo has offensive skills (his outside shot started coming around later in the tournament) but if you had to rely on him as your four-spot defender all season he'd lose his mind by the all-star break.

Prince is an outstanding defender and very smart. He can get away with things in spots down low but better off using his length and quickness on the wing. Sure there were times LBJ jumped down to pitch in, but we know you don't wear out your superstar by asking him to bang.

Bottom line, Coach K preached defense and talked a lot about defense. But overall you could say that at times Team USA "sacrificed" on the defensive end for the good of the offense. Two bigs can make you too slow, which crushes Isiah Thomas' "power game" theory. So you take one away -- or at least exchange the "power" big for an "perimeter" big (see: Danilo Gallinari or, from D'Antoni's past, Shawn Marion) -- to be more effective on the offensive end and implore your players to play better "team" defense.

Obviously with the tremendous amount of talent Coach K had, this system (make no mistake, this is Mike D's philosophy...Coach K loved it so much he's incorporated it at Duke) worked so fluidly for the U.S.

How can it work for the Knicks? That is what D'Antoni had on his mind all day during his flight from Beijing to New York.

If you take away salaries and the need to improve the stock price for certain big contracts you'd like to move (Z-Bo, for instance), I think D'Antoni would prefer to start with Duhon-Crawford-Chandler-Gallinari and Curry as a five. And if you want to avoid starting a rookie, you go with the experienced Richardson at the 3 and slide Chandler to the 4 spot (he's strong enough to handle himself) similar to how he used Marion in Phoenix.

Here's how it has to work:

Eddy is your low-post guy but he has to be more of a decoy to open up the perimeter for your shooters (Jamal, Q-Rich and Chandler for the most part). You have to position Eddy much like the U.S. positioned Dwight Howard, where he did a lot of flashing into the paint to make the zone defense close up (trust me, teams will zone the spit outta the Knicks until they prove they can knock down shots) which then loosens up the perimeter.

It's up to Curry to make this work with constant movement in the offensive "set". However, in transition you can allow Curry to be the last guy down, the "trailer" on the play. Let him get in the way of the guards as he works his way down the floor, set high screens and then roll and even spot up for the occassional elbow jumper (Curry has the ability to hit them in rhythm, I've seen it after practice).

Whenever Lazy Eddy shows his ugly face, to the bench he goes. Simple enough.

The critical part of the game that Team USA figured out quickly (they were only the best players in the world) was that the ball had to be in constant motion. Consider that at the worst of times for the US offense, players were caught either doing too much one-on-one or holding the ball too long. Michael Redd did this several times when he was out there throughout the tournament. And as the games got more critical, Redd saw less time. There were times the Americans desperately needed someone who could get hot from the outside in a hurry (Redd) but they couldn't afford his tendency to hold the ball and stall the offense.

Therefore, this is why I don't think Stephon Marbury would work, from a strictly basketball point of view. Like Redd, you would think Steph's game is perfectly suited for this system. But if you learn anything from the Olympics (and the Renaldo Balkman trade) it's not like the Paul Westhead fun-n-gun at all. It's not just about get-it-and-go and get more shots off than your opponent and hope that leads to more makes. Stephon does play quickly, but more often than not he plays by himself or plays "off" his teammates rather than with them.

Hey, he got pretty damn far playing that way, but I think it's been proven more often than not that you don't win that way in the NBA game that is more and more moving back to being a team game like it was when Clyde, Pearl, Dave, Dollar Bill and The Captain were playing.

There is a great deal of quick thinking that comes with this style. A lot of read-and-react and discipline. This is what D'Antoni has to see come training camp and in time he'll have to make decisions on players not just based on talent, but intelligence. So you shouldn't focus so much on whether or not Q can hit shots, but whether Duhon can find him in the corner at the right time on the drive-and-kick. It's not about Eddy Curry posting up, but can Eddy catch it in the post, pivot and make that weakside pass to an open man? Can Jamal Crawford find catch-and-shoot rhythm coming off curls instead of needing the And-1 hitch to set up his pull-up?

These guys all can chuck-and-duck. No question. But recall the Olympics again...whenever the U.S. got itself into trouble was when it pounded the ball on the floor instead of passing it. The most important thing to keep in mind when you play in this system is movement. Catch it and do something...NOW. If you watched Team USA, there was a lot of that going on.

I'm really looking forward to training camp the most because -- as far as I understand it -- we're going to be allowed to watch practice. I am curious to see the adjustments Mike plans to make to develop his philosophy with the players he has on the roster. I want to see who gets it, who doesn't and who might be surprisingly more effective than we previously have seen (Jared Jeffries comes to mind).

The system is quite basic with basic fundamentals. Where it gets crazy is when the infinite options that can come out of each basic set start to develop. There will be an evolution process throughout the season as guys start to grasp the system. That process should also weed out the guys who simply don't fit.

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A few other observations from the Olympics:

* - A lot of controversy was stirred up about Becky Hammon's decision to play for Mother Russia in the Games after she was not in the mix for the U.S. team. So played because she could and because she wanted to (and I'm sure a few rubles made it even more attractive). Do you really think, however, that deep down the Olympic experience meant something special to her? I don't.

But I wonder why no one seemed as outraged by Chris Kaman, who played for Germany?

* - The way Chris Bosh played has me inking him way up on my grocery list in the Summer of 2010. If you can't get the Big Fish, landing Bosh as your anchor would be a major get. An intense, athletic and smart big like Bosh in the paint is a perfect fit for what D'Antoni likes to do. Bosh isn't a great post-up player, but he does everything else extremely well and he is growing into a leader.

* - Call it sucking up all you want, but I just like the way Mike Breen calls games. He has a genuine enthusiasm for this game and a tremendous amount of "legitimate" knowledge (which means he truly knows the game as opposed to making general observations).

* - I heard that China's original plan to extinguish the Olympic Flame at the closing ceremonies was to have Yao Ming reach up and snuff it with his two fingers.

* - Dwyane Wade professionally gained the most from the Olympic experience because he proved his game is back at an elite level. He, LeBron and Kobe were the three best players. But much of what he did was a result of playing with less pressure because of the talent around him, much like during his NBA championship season with Shaq, et al. Wade is physically back to his old self, but he can't go 82 games throwing himself into traffic like he does, so he'll have to rely on his supporting cast in Miami, which means Michael Beasley will have a big role to play there right from the get. Shawn Marion is playing for a contract, but at the 3 he may prove to be a fish outta water.

* - With London hosting in 2012, Great Britain will have a team in the men's basketball competition (the host city gets an automatic bid). Luol Deng is their best player (Ben Gordon also has British eligibility).laurenjackson.jpg

* - God bless the unitard and the Austrailian women's team for wearing it with pride.

* - Thank God, as well, that Marc Gasol didn't wear one. Dude looks like a melted candle.

August 22, 2008

Stephon didn't get paid

It wouldn't be summer without a major story related to the Starbury line. 40716947-05091749.jpg
But on this one you can't fault Marbury (unless you question his judgement in signing with a low-overhead retail chain that didn't spend money on national advertising).

Steph sez the bankrupt Steve & Barry's owes him $2 million. BHY S&B Holdings Llc won a bid to purchase the company for $168 million in an auction last month. Under the bankruptcy proceedings, as our Emi Endo reports, the new company would not be liable for the $2.19 million in royalties that Marbury claims Steve & Barry's never paid.

August 21, 2008

The Preseason Sked

Most of you have probably seen it by now. It was released this afternoon.

Wed., Oct. 8 at Toronto (Air Canada Centre) 7 p.m.

Fri., Oct. 10 at Philadelphia (Wachovia Center) 7 p.m.

Tues., Oct. 14. vs. Sixers (MSG) 7:30 p.m.

Fri., Oct. 17 at Boston (TD Banknorth Garden) 7:30 p.m.

Mon., Oct. 20 at New Jersey (IZOD Center) 7:30 p.m.

Tues., Oct. 21 vs. Celtics (MSG) 7:30 p.m.

Fri., Oct. 24 vs. Nets (MSG) 7:30 p.m.

Media Day is Mon., Sept. 29 and the first day of training camp is Tues., Sept. 30 at Skidmore College in upstate Saratoga. Practices there will be closed to the public so I'm not sure it will be worth the trip up like some Giants fans tend to make the trek to Albany.

Gabriel added to Walsh's staff

Former Orlando Magic GM John Gabriel has been hired by Donnie Walsh to run his pro scouting department and assist him with free agency and player evaluation. It says so in both the New York Times and the Daily News.

It doesn't say so in Newsday because I suck (and apparently some people either forgot my number or need to get it).

As he has said all along, Walsh will keep Glen Grunwald as part of his cabinet, along with Gabriel and Misho Ostarcevic, who followed Walsh from the Indiana Pacers and will be the Knicks director of player personnel.

Brendan Suhr, who served as Isiah Thomas' righthand man, was let go.

August 20, 2008

D'Antoni admits the obvious: Bulls are "better"

Tribune buddy KC Johnson has been in Beijing (only employees from the mothership get the good trips) and he did a story about the Chicago Bulls strange and meandering coaching search that included Mike D'Antoni and resulted in Vinny Del Negro.38816638.jpg

D'Antoni talked to KC about being romanced by both the Knicks and Bulls in that wild two-week courtship in May.

"I think the roster in Chicago is better and they've proved that," D'Antoni said in his typical straight-shooting manner. "For me, working with (Knicks President) Donnie Walsh was a plus." D'Antoni is quick to say he had no problems with Bulls management and says "they were great too."

"But New York is a great place and exciting and I just came to the conclusion for me that it's the best choice. Now we can argue and there was a list of do's and don'ts and all that. But at the end of the day, I just wanted to accept the Knicks' challenge."

That is consistent with what D'Antoni admitted when he chose the Knicks over the Bulls on May 10.

"I wanted to be in New York," he said at his introductory press conference. "We’ll see if that was the right decision. It was a gut feeling and Donnie played a big part in it and also the city of New York and the lure of Madison Square Garden."

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Just to touch on the information "Laurel" shared regarding Zach Randolph's contract. A look closer at the details shows the $2 million all-star incentive would only kick in if Z-Bo made the all-star team in each of his s