"I will shoot all you Asian ******s. Do you remember the Vietnam War? I'll kill y'all just like that." - Jason Williams to an Asian fan.


 
 

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Sunday, 12 July 2009

Summer league round-up: Milwaukee Bucks

View the Bucks summer league roster.

- Joe Alexander: If you had expected the Joe Alexander/Scott Skiles marriage to end well for Joe Alexander, then.....well, you're an idiot. Alexander is going to be a hollow shell of his former self, destroyed, a broken man, by the he gets free from the oppression and the tyranny of Scott Skiles's leadership. Skiles is a geezer and a great defensive coach with an always amusing hairline and the permanently contrite face of an "angry looking man" (a real quote, yet sadly not mine), but if there's one thing he hates it's players who repeatedly make defensive mistakes. And Joe Alexander is a player that repeatedly makes defensive mistakes. John Hammond, do yourself a favour, and trade Alexander while you can still get someone like the calibre of J.J. Hickson for him. Because if you don't do it now, you'll only get less later.

(It also didn't help Alexander that he supposedly receive an in-house suspension from his team for digging all up in the bones of one of the cheerleaders, which is depressingly against the rules. If I knew which one it was, I'd oblige you with a picture. But I don't.)

- Paul Delaney: In part three of my exceptionally long draft diary (no one really read parts two and three; I might have to make it about 9,000 words shorter next season), I mentioned how I had seen Robert Vaden of UAB play one game, a game in which he shot 0-17. Well, Paul Delaney was Vaden's backcourt mate at UAB, and last year he averaged 16.1 ppg to Vaden's 17.6 ppg, on 9.8 FGA per game to Vaden's 15.4 FGA per game, on 5.8 FTA per game to Vaden's 2.9 FTA per game, on 56% shooting to Vaden's 40% shooting. Indeed, only one other player in UAB's small rotation shot over 45% - 6'8 junior forward Howard Crawford. Delaney led his team in field goal percentage, steals and assists, while being second in scoring and fourth in rebounds. Yet Vaden is the one that gets drafted. Alrighty.

- Dominic James: James isn't actually going to be with the Bucks summer league team. He was initially announced as a part of the roster, but he sprained his ankle sufficiently badly that he can't now play, and had to be replaced. This is the same guy who broke his foot down the stretch of his senior season, with his team making an NCAA tournament run, and finally killing his already tenuous draft stock. He can't catch a break, it seems. And I totally intended that pun.

- Brandon Jennings: I want to like Brandon Jennings. How can anyone not? It's the year 2009, yet Jennings still rocks out a hi-top fade with a slight mohawk finish. That's to be applauded. However, considering Jennings' poor play last year, his less than humble quotes from before draft night and that whole Joe Budden thing, he's making himself hard to like. Nonetheless, I'm open minded about this. So wow me, BJ. (Giggidy.)

- Amir Johnson: Here's why I don't think nearly as highly of Amir Johnson as Bucks fans seem to do; he's now played 4 years in the NBA and he's still going to summer league. You can argue that this is just so that he gets familiar with the team, and they with he, but bollocks to that. He's going to summer league because he still plays like a rookie. He still fouls at a ridiculous rate, and his offensive skills still don't really exist. And that's a guy you're paying $3,941,667 to next year (not what it sucrrently listed ont he salaries pages). Good luck to you with that, but I#d temper those expectations if I were you.

- Luc Richard Mbah A Moute: If Joe Alexander is emblematic of the Scott Skiles regime, then so is the Fresh Prince. Offensively challenged (his eFG on jumpshots last year was .318%), Mbah A Moute nonetheless played big minutes at three positions due to his defensive skills, versatility, and ability to not make too many mistakes. Many of these minutes came at the expense of Alexander, whose offensive upside had to defer to Mbah A Moute's defensive abilities, even when mired in a 34 win season. It's no knock on Lermam, who's a straight baller, but that's just the Skiles way. It's going to work, too, when the Bucks make the playoffs next year. But after that, brace yourself, because his shelf life is usually short.

- Will McDonald: McDonald will be 30 before next season starts, and he's still never made the NBA. He's had a few summer league stints (the Warriors in 2003, the Heat in 2004, the Celtics in 2005) but he's never signed in the NBA, not even for training camp. It's not held him back though, as he has turned in a good European career on some big name teams. As evidence of that, last year McDonald was the starting centre for Tau Ceramica, and averaged 9.1 points and 4.4 rebounds in the Euroleague. McDonald is not a good rebounder, at all, but he can score the ball. And if you're an offensively skilled 6'10 American, the NBA will pay some attention to you.

- Jodie Meeks: Meeks has already signed a three year contract, where he will backup Charlie Bell, the backup to Michael Redd. Those two dodgy contracts will expire eventually, so there's hope yet for Meeks ever seeing the court.

- Juan Palacios: Someone asked me for a Juan Palacios update back in January. So I gave them one. (Remember, I take requests.) Nothing really changed since then; Palacios' end of season averages were basically the same, and he's continued his four year long trend of getting worse and not better. Yet for some reason, the NBA is interested in him anyway. Palacios also appeared on the Kings summer league roster last year, but he played all of three minutes. They took a few too many players, to be honest. 17 players for 5 games is a bit much.

- Chris Richard: The Minnesota Timberwolves have had a lot of bigs over the last two years. They currently have 8 under contract (Kevin Love, Al Jefferson, Craig Smith, Mark Madsen, Oleksiy Pecherov, Brian Cardinal, Darius Songaila, Etan Thomas), and have Shelden Williams and Jason Collins as unrestricted free agents. They just drafted Henk Norel in the second round, took Nikola Pekovic the year before, and took Loukas Mavrokefalidis in the 2006 draft. They've recently had illicit liaisons (however unsatisfying and brief) with Wayne Simien, Michael Doleac, Juwan Howard, Antoine Walker, John Edwards, Paul Shirley and Vin Baker, And in last year's training camp, they brought in former first round picks David Harrison and Rafael Araujo to fight for a spot. It's probably not surprising, then, that Chris Richard got squeezed out.

Richard was waived in last year's training camp - along with Araujo and Harrison - in favour of Jason Collins and Kevin Ollie, which probably destroyed his soul. He then went to the D-League, becoming the first overall pick of the D-League draft by the Tulsa 66ers. Richard then turned in a couple of underwhelming months, averaging 12.0 points and 8.3 rebounds, got named to the All Star team anyway, before breaking a bone in his back in late January. This represents his comeback. He's never going to be a Buck, though, because while the Bucks would love to be able to salary dump Dan Gadzuric, Francisco Elson and Malik Allen (sans Skiles), they can't. And therefore there's no roster spot available for him.

- Salim Stoudamire: Why the hell did the Bucks sign Salim Stoudamire? I don't know. They signed him in early April, just before the end of the season, and then never played him in any games. He signed through 2010, too, and even though the contract is not fully guaranteed, he's now on the books for a minimum salary greater than it would be if he signed him this summer instead (due to the league's reimbursement scheme thingy that I can't be arsed to explain). More importantly, they simply didn't need him, and now that they've drafted Meeks, they really don't need him. So why is he still here?

- Szymon Szewczyk: Szewczyk must be a popular surname in Poland, because there's at least 5 of them on the professional basketball circuit. Games of Scrabble must be brilliant over there, too. Szewczyk was a Bucks second round draft way back in 2003, whom they've never signed at any point, and whose draft rights they therefore still own. Most unsigned second rounders never signed because they sucked too hard (e.g. Ramon van de Hare), but Szewczyk's not had a bad career. Last year for Lokomotiv Rostov in Russia, he averaged 12.1 points and 5.9 rebounds in 24 minutes per game, numbers that improved to 14.3 points and 7.1 rebounds in the EuroChallenge. He's soon to be 27 years old, and his hairline has started to go, but he's done all right for himself, regardless of the non-existence of his NBA career.

- Mohammed Tangara: Tangara was name as the late replacement for Dominic James. And he's nothing like James. He's.......he's a hard one to find anything out about. Here's what I've got: Tanagara is from Mali (it's a country, geography fans!) and attended Mount Zion Christian Academy from 2003-04, the school more famous for churning out Tracy McGrady. From there, he went on to spend 4 years at Arizona, where his best statistical saw him rocket up the scoreboards with averages of 1.6 ppg and 1.0 rpg. He scored 39 points total in his four year Arizona career, with 34 of them coming in his sophomore campaign back in 2005/06. Then, via means I'm not entirely sure of (presumably got a redshirt in there somewhere), Tangara played a fifth season last year with the Chaminade Silverswords, a Division 2 team that you've probably never heard of. Once there, he averaged 14.4ppg and 8.7rpg, shooting 57% from the field and 83% from the foul line. Groovy. He finally did something, even if he had to go to Division 2 to do it.

Tangara is 25 years old next month, and measures in at roughly 6'8 and 248 pounds-ish. Which part of that back story is NBA calibre? You tell me. But I like the optimism. Maybe this two minute highlight reel of a half-naked Tanagara will reveal all:



....nope, still nothing. But his official website carries the amusing slogan, "Now Is The Time For Redemption," which would imply that Tangara is either a devoted Christian or a future homicidal maniac with delusion of religious grandeur. You decide.

For all future Mohamed Tangara questions, ask him yourself.

- Lorrenzo Wade: Wade is a decent size swingman who doesn't rebound, is a mediocre three point shooter and who turns it over way too much. He's a decent athlete and slasher, but so is almost everyone at the NBA level. And most of them don't have those other flaws. What I'm saying to you here is that Wade doesn't have NBA talent. No offense, Lorrenzo.

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Saturday, 7 March 2009

Where Are They Now, 2009; Part 50

- D.J. Strawberry is with Fortitudo Bologna, the same team as GMAC Bologna, but not the same team as La Fortezza Bologna. Can't stress that enough. Strawberry averages 14.7 points, 2.7 rebounds and 1.5 assists in Eurocup play, alongside 13.8 points, 3.5 rebounds and 1.2 assists in the Italian league. Strawberry is a combined 16 of 76 from the three point line, confirming once again that his major weakness is still a weakness.

- Brad Stricker has been on and off the Dakota Wizards roster all year, averaging 11 minutes, 2.6 points, 2.3 rebounds and 2.1 fouls per game. His playing time wasn't exactly consistent; his last ten games with the Wizards saw him play 5, 4, 3, 5, 2, 2, 8, 30, and 8 minutes respectively. Stricker eventually asked the Wizards for an unconditional release, as he wanted to play for a team closer to his home due to some family issue. He was granted it, and now plays for the Albuquerque Thunderbirds, where he averages 17.6 minutes, 3.6 points, 3.6 fouls, 1.8 rebounds and 1.0 blocks per game.

- Erick Strickland now works for the Mavericks in a capacity that I'm too confused to understand. Here's Erick himself with an explanation. Did you know that Erick Strickland's real first name is Demerick? Me neither. Fun fact.

- Rod Strickland is the director of basketball operations for the University of Memphis, while also taking classes there to finish his degree. Ever since his hire in 2006, Memphis have gone on to be slightly brilliant. Coincidence? Maybe. Maybe not. But, since Strickland's role entails things like organising travel plans, checking on student's academic scores, and scheduling visits for recruits, it probably is.

- Curtis Sumpter averages 10.8 points and 5.9 rebounds for Chorale de Roanne Basket, the third best team in France and the subject of a slightly seminal 1978 song by The Police.

- Bruno Sundov this week left Cibona Zagreb (in Zagreb) to join Vive Menorca (in Menorca). He also started the season with ASK Riga in Latvia. Sundov has not yet played for Menorca (who also feature Frederic Weis, so that's going to be a hell of a frontcourt), and he totalled only 16 points, 5 rebounds and 8 fouls in his 30 total minutes for Cibona in the Adriatic league (36 minutes, 13 points, 8 rebounds, 5 fouls in the Euroleague). However, for Riga, Sundov's numbers shot up to 18.8 points and 8.8 rebounds in the Eurocup, along with 14.8 points and 4.5 rebounds in the Baltic league. Somehow, though, the 7'3 Sundov has managed to block only 8 shots all season, in a combined 33 games and 621 minutes.

- Allegedly, Bob Sura's girlfriend stabbed him with some keys when she found him at a restaurant with another woman. These allegations and many more can be found here. Read with caution.

- Mike Sweetney is missing. Not just missing in that I can't find out anything about him, and not "inform the police" kind of missing. Just sort of missing. After never losing the necessary weight, even when the guaranteed money ran out, Sweetney's contract expired with the Bulls and he became a free agent in the summer of 2007. He has not been heard from since, and has not played anywhere, not even in summer league. Sam Smith mentioned in a column at some point last season that not even the players association could find him any more. Not even Facebook can help us on this one. I hope he's all right. If you know anything about Mike's whereabouts and well-being, let me know.

- Szymon Szewczyk - another one of those turn-of-the-century "let's draft a Euro! You never know!" second rounders, this one by the Milwaukee Bucks - is still in Russia with Lokomotiv Rostok. He's doing rather well at a decent standard of basketball, averaging 14.5 points and 7.5 rebounds per game in the EuroChallenge, as well as 12.3 points and 6.7 rebounds in the Russian Superleague. However, he's also now 26 years old, and was picked with the 35th pick, so it's still been one hell of a reach. (Still, it could have been worse. Players picked after Zoochick that year included Nedzad Sinanovic, Paccelis Morlende, Slavko Vranes, Ramon Van Der Hare and Xue Yuyang. You know about the lack of achievements by some of them already, and as we get further through this list, you can see just how little the others have done too. Should be fun!)

- Yuta Tabuse scratched around in the D-League for a few years, trying to find a route back to the NBA. He barely got off of the bench, though, and this season returned to his native Japan, where he speculated that a season of beastly numbers would get the job done. (His hefty paycheck this year won't hurt, either.) However, he hasn't exactly been as brilliant as he might have hoped for - for Link Tochigi Brex, Tabuse averages 34.1 minutes, 11.0 points, 3.2 rebounds, 5.6 assists and 2.3 steals per game, shooting 23% from three point range. Still, the assists and steals totals lead the JBL, so he's still one of the better players amongst weak competition.

- Finally, Chris Taft's career progression has been minimal. Taft played only 17 games in his underwhelming rookie season of 2005/06 with the Warriors, before suffering prolonged chronic back injuries, and was waived that offseason with a year still guaranteed on his contract. He then didn't sign anywhere until early 2008, when he played 8 games for the Rio Grande Valley Vipers, averaging 4.0 points and 2.5 rebounds. True to form, Taft is currently unsigned, but he has recently been approached by Philippines National Team Director Rajko Toroman about whether he would be interested in ecoming a naturalized Filippino citizen, with any deal contingent on the health of his back. Clearly, it's still not quite right.

Of this list, only D.J. Strawberry played in the NBA last season. We're scraping the barrel for you here today.

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