"Karl Malone has spent more time in a gym, than Corey Maggette has been alive." - Bill Walton


 
 

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Saturday, 4 July 2009

Summer league round-up: Chicago Bulls

View the Bulls summer league roster.

- James Augustine: Something weird happened to James Augustine last year, something which took me a while to figure out. He was drafted by the Magic in the 2006 draft, and signed a two year rookie minimum contract with the team. He stayed with the team for the whole two years, barely playing, and was then tendered a qualifying offer when the two years was up. The second year of his first contract was only 25% guaranteed until July 30th, and the rule with qualifying offers is that they have to be at least the same amount of guaranteed money and the same guarantee dates as the final season of the previous contract. So when Orlando tendered him a qualifying offer, Augustine accepted it immediately, and was thus under contract for the 2008/09 season for $972,581 (the amount of the QO = minimum salary + $175,000), of which $243,145 (25%) was guaranteed, witha guarantee date of July 30th 2008. Orlando waived him before that date, meaning that they essentially paid Augustine a quarter of a million dollars to have him under contract for two weeks in mid-July. Way to do that "creative financing" thing that you do, Otis Smith.

Augustine then buggered off to Spain, where he averaged 7.7 points and 6.1 rebounds in the Spanish league for Gran Canaria. Which isn't great.

- Tyrell Biggs: I saw a lot of Biggs in Pittsburgh last year, and it's tough to say what he was good at. He had a decent set shot, but little interior offense, no finesse, and a bad rebounding rate. He was a decent defensive player, fairly aggressive and physical, but he's also 6'8 and not of NBA size, so his NBA chances don't really exist. However, I wrote all this in a piece last week, and someone responded by telling that I "didn't know anything" and that I should "just shut up," for I did not acknowledge Biggs' magnanimous and gallant willingness to sacrifice all personal goals for the overall benefit of the team, something which he supposedly did by being a role player for four straight years. Or something like that. I guess one of us is right, at least.

- Brandon Costner: I watched Costner play one game last year. This is what I wrote about him:

Brandon Costner never seemed to know what he was doing, disappearing for long stretches, and then trying to force his way back into the action with some poor shots.


That can't be good. Costner averaged 13.3 points, 6.0 rebounds and 1.0 blocks in 29 minutes per game for NC State last season, which isn't that great and which isn't nearly as good as what his 17/7 sophomore year suggested he might become.

- Chris Davis: Davis averaged 14.8ppg, 4.3rpg and 3.1apg for Southern University last season. He shot 41% from the field. He's not making the team. Let's move on.

- Taj Gibson: Gibson will make the team, no doubt, but he's going to have to play bloody well to win over Bulls fans, who remain bitterly pissed off at him for not being Dejuan Blair. (And if you've read my draft diary, you'll know that I'm one of them. I'll back off of this stance soon, though.) If he can show some offensive skill, some pick and roll defense, and the ability and/or desire to rebound, then we will begin to cope accordingly.

- Taurean Green: Green spent one year in the NBA, splitting the 2007/08 season between Portland (the team that drafted him) and Denver (who traded him for Von Wafer to save some money at the deadline). Denver traded him to New York last summer as a part of the Renaldo Balkman deal, but New York wanted him only for his salary and he was waived instantly. Green then spent last year in Spain playing for CAI Zaragoza, averaging 10.7 points and 2.0 assists functioning largely as a specialist shooter. The Bulls could use a specialist shooter, which gives Green a chance, but they also already have Anthony Roberson, which might piss on Green's strawberries.

- Julius Hodge: Hodge was playing like LeBron James in Australia last season, averaging 26.3ppg, 8.0rpg and 6.0apg for the Adelaide 36ers, before leaving the team due to a pay dispute. That was his version of events, at least; his team doesn't necessarily agree. Although given Australian basketball's current problems with solvency, I tend to believe him. Either way, it ended acrimoniously, and Hodge closed out the year in France, averaging 12.4ppg, 5.7rpg and 6.1apg for Besancon in France. His shot is still completely broke, though - he hit only two three pointers combined in the Australian and French leagues (who employ the shorter three point line, remember), and was also a combined 55% shooter from the free throw line between the two. This probably keeps him out of the NBA once again.

- James Johnson: He's a power forward that's not Tyrus Thomas or Taj Gibson, so I like him already.

- Linton Johnson: Johnson was a signing for the Bulls late last season as some emergency playoff depth, and played a few minutes decently. He started his career with the Bulls, and was way less cringeworthy with us this time around than last time, so that was nice. However, he doesn't have much chance of coming back to the team - Luol Deng's return from injury, as well as the draftings of Johnson and Gibson, just took any potential minutes that the old Lintonian could have had.

- Nick Lewis: Lewis has been a professional for three years, and has spent at least parts of all three of them in the D-League. Last year, for the Bakersfield Jam, he averaed 15.0 points and 7.2 rebounds, while shooting 48% from the field, 38% from the three point line and 83% from the foul line. He also has a nice full head of blonde hair. If he could play any defense, he might have had a shot in the NBA before now. But he can't. So he hasn't.

- Lorenzo Mata-Real: Mata-Real played on the Lakers' summer league team last year, as did about 48 other people, where he challenged Ruben Wolkowyski for the "worst player I've ever seen" award. Mata-Real averaged more rebounds than points in two of his three seasons in college, not a good thing when you consider that he only averaged 4 rebounds. In Mexico last year, Mata-Real averaged all of 9.0 points and 5.3 rebounds, and remember that that was in the crappy Mexican league. He's a 6'8 interior player to boot. Where's the NBA resumé here?

- Bryan Mullins: Mullins, a good defensive guard with a jumpshot, was briefly covered in the Celtics round-up. Then again, I didn't really say anything there either.

- DeMarcus Nelson: Nelson has an unguaranteed contract with the Bulls next season, even though he didn't play in a single game with them last season. He was brought in at the very end of the year as defensive cover at the shooting guard position in case of emergencies, but wasn't needed. The Bulls are supposedly renewing their focus on defensive abilities with their personnel this season, and could as always use a bigger defensive minded guard. So Nelson has a chance of making the team again, unless his lack of offensive talent is deemed too painful on a team that was never great at offense in the first place just let its leading scorer for the last four years walk away in free agency. (It still stings a bit, this. Although I wouldn't have paid him $11.6 million a year either.)

- Anthony Roberson: I fleshed out Roberson's chances of making the roster in this Chicagonow.com piece. And remember; you can catch all Bulls news and views, including Anthony Roberson goodness, at chicagonow.com. Go go go go go! (Seriously, though, go. If you do, I'll get paid.)

- Josh Shipp: Shipp just finished his fifth season at UCLA, getting a medical redshirt in 2005/06 due to a bad hip injury. In his senior season, he averaged 14.5ppg on 50% shooting, which is pretty damn good from a shooting guard. Despite having not seen him (I have UCLA games that I keep meaning to watch), everyone tells me he should have been drafted. So that's nice for us, I think.

- A.D. Vassallo: Consdiering that the Bulls need shooters (see the Roberson link), Vassallo has a chance. Vassallo averaged 19.1 points, 6.2 rebounds and 2.6 assists in his senior season for Virginia Tech, shooting 45% from the field, 37% from three point range and 83% from the line. His major assets are his good size and strength, and a jumpshot that has legitimate NBA three point range. Since leaving school, Vassallo has been back in his native Puerto Rico, averaging 2.5 points, 6.7 rebounds and 4.3 assists for Caguas in the Puerto Rican BSN league (which takes place during most other league's offseasons). If he was 6'8 he'd probably in the league, and if he was as fast as John Salmons he'd probably in the league. But he's neither of those, so he's not in the league. Europe will love him, though.

- Luke Zeller: Zeller did largely Fanny Adams at four years in Notre Dame, rebounding badly, playing little defense, and being a specialist jumpshooter. He turned a fine high school career (he was formerly Indiana's Mr Basketball) into an underwhelming college career; Zeller averaged 4.9 points and 2.8 rebounds in his senior season, both of which were career highs. He worked out for the Bulls before the draft, albeit only because Gonzaga's Josh Heytvelt missed a flight, yet went undrafted anyway. Zeller's NBA prospects are even slimmer his left leg. His best chance in the NBA seems to be if some team out there gets confused and thinks that his first name is spelt with a "Tyler" (his superior younger brother currently at North Carolina). Or if his last name is spelt with a "Schenscher".

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Tuesday, 10 February 2009

Where Art Thine Presently, 31

- Anthony Lever-Pedroza is playing for a team called Soles de Mexicali, in a country that you can probably guess. About two hours ago, I watched a FIBA basketball magazine show that bizarrely and unexpectedly featured clips from a Soles de Mexicali game. I didn't spot Anthony James Norwood Lever Pedroza Durazo, though. Anthony James Norwood Lever Pedroza Durazo averages 20.3 points in three Liga Americas games; also on his team are former Timberwolves guard Dejaun Wheat (who barely plays) and former Suns centre Horacio Llamas (who averages 16.3 points and 7.0 rebounds). That unlikely duo are both 35, seeing out their professional lives at Soles de Mexicali - where fringe NBA careers go to die.

- Ron Lewis is in Israel, averaging 16.3 points per game for Ironi Nahariya. Impressively, Lewis has shot 94 free throws to 140 field goals, for a 1.51 PPS average. Less impressive is the 72% that Lewis is shooting from the line, and the 25% that he's shooting from three point range. But he's scoring at a very high efficiency anyway.

- Nick Lewis had a tryout in the Spanish LEB Gold to begin the year, but didn't sign, and went back to the Bakersfield Jam in the D-League. Building on his decent season of last year, Lewis is averaging 16.5 points and 7.7 rebounds per game, averaging 1.45 points per shot. I stand by that metric.

- Sergei Lishouk is still with Azovmash Mariupol in his native Ukraine. Lishouk/Lischuk averages 7.3 points, 3.8 rebounds, 1.6 blocks and 3.0 fouls per game in the Eurocup, alongside 10.1 points, 4.8 rebounds, 2.1 fouls and 1.2 blocks per game in the Ukranian league. Since his rights were traded away by the Grizzlies last year, Lishouk can't even get to the NBA summer leagues any more, seemingly closing the door on the NBA career of this soon to be 27 year old underachiever, who did so well for about 12 months and who then didn't take it anywhere.

- Shaun Livingston has been rumoured to return to the Heat, although no one's given me a reason as to the purpose of this yet. Speaking of the Heat, most of their roster suck, and yet they're the fifth best team in the Eastern conference. It cannot overstated how good Dwyane Wade has gotten. He's managed to take an extra massive leap forward. And I didn't think he had another one in him.

- Randy Livingston retired at the end of last season and is now an assistant coach with his final team, the Idaho Stampede. Randy originally said that he was 99.5% sure that he was retired at the end of the 2005/06 season with the Chicago Bulls, but clearly changed his mind, and had a couple more good seasons in the D-League as well as one more short NBA stint with the Seattle Supersonics.

- Steve Logan has played a total of 24 games in the last 4 seasons. 19 of those were in the 2005/06 season. Since then, Logan has done the following; 1 game in Poland in November 2006 (1 point), 4 games in Israel in March 2007 (2 points, 4 assists), and one signing in Mexico in August 2008 (no games played). I do not know why his career has come to this. If you do, let me know at the usual address.

- David Logan is playing, unlike Steve, for Prokom Trefl Sopot in Poland. Other Prokom players already mentioned in this list have included Koko Archibong, Ronnie Burrell, Daniel Ewing and Pat Burke, with more to come. So they should be familiar to you by now, as should the Procol Harum jokes. Logan leads the team in scoring by miles, averaging 18.7 points, 3.2 rebounds. 3.7 assists and 2.2 steals per game in the Polish league, alongside 17.2 points, 3.2 rebounds, 2.7 assists and 2.4 steals in the Euroleague. David Logan, by the way, is a former NCAA Division 2 player of the year. This reminds me of what I wrote back during my Horace Jenkins update, in which I asked how many Division 3 players have played in the NBA. As far as I can tell, the answer is 7, but I don't know who all of those seven are. Jenkins was one, as is Devean George. Andy Panko's one minute NBA career gets him on this list, and Greg Grant managed a few years with a variety of different teams. But as for who the rest are? I don't know. If you do, usual address, etc.

- Raul Lopez is playing for Real Madrid, backing up my boy Sergio Llull. Lopez averages 6.6 points and 3.1 assists per game in the Spanish league and 5.9/2.8 in the Euroleague. However, he recently hurt his leg and will be out for three weeks, which probably means more time now for Pepe Sanchez. Speaking of, a post-Pepe Sanchez update update: Pepe Sanchez hasn't scored a single point since the last time we checked in on him. Nice.

- It was really hard to find into on Felipe Lopez, so you'd better bloody respect it now that I got it. Felipe is signed with Fuerza Regia Monterrey in Mexico, but he is also rumoured to be in talks with Saitama Broncos, a team in Japan's BJ League. (Giggidy.) The Broncos are coached by another ex-Jazz player, former WWE wrestler and double murder suicide victim David Benoit, which explains this otherwise random connection.



And finally, some predictions. Buoyed by my success at suggesting that Steve Francis should be traded to Memphis, I'm going to do something never before seen on this blog. In place of my usual approach of shitting all over everybody else's predictions, I'm going to try some of my own. It's a brave, out of character, and (some would say) foolish move, which puts the pressure on me to be sensible and insightful, two things at which I struggle mightily. But I'm doing it anyway, if only as an exercise in personal development. I intend to come out of this exercise as a better, well-adjusted person. Consider this before you write insulting comments below.

Excuses now made, let's run it.

1) Amare Stoudemire is going to the Bulls, if only because John Paxson is sick of hearing about the Pau Gasol thing. (In fairness, when he had an expiring contract, Jerry West didn't want it, and wanted Luol Deng and Ben Gordon. Then later, when the Bulls didn't have an expiring contract, it was the first thing Memphis wanted. The circumstances were a tad unfair.)

2) Unless there are other Pistons moves made, Alex Acker gets moved to Memphis, Sacramento or the L.A. Clippers at the deadline.

You heard it here first. Unless you've already heard it somewhere else, in which case you didn't hear it here first. Or unless they don't actually happen. In that case, you didn't hear them here at all.



(EDIT: Here's a third one - Bobby Jackson gets bought out by the Kings and signs with the Lakers. I'm calling it early.)

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