Calendar

March 2010
S M T W T F S
« Feb    
 123456
78910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
28293031  

BattlePass FightFeed. MMA and COmbat Events via RSS.

Blog Networks



Loaded Web - Global Blog & Business Directory
NBA

Donnie Swings and Misses: Revisiting June’s Draft

Despite the 2009-10 NBA Season being a week old, I have come to the decision that Donnie Walsh blew it in June’s Draft when he had the number eight overall pick. I understand that Walsh had his hands tied when Stephen Curry and Ricky Rubio were already picked but I still cannot come to terms as to why Donnie Walsh believed that with their lottery pick Jordan Hill was the best option.

In my mock drafts, specifically leading up to the actual night of, I pegged the Knicks selecting Hill only because of the admiration the organization had for the former Wildcat. It is obvious though that there were two players that Walsh should have selected two guys before the thought of Hill crossed their minds. Ty Lawson and more specifically, Brandon Jennings, fit the Knicks plans and design and unfortunately, Donnie swung and missed…big time.

Hill has played in one game this year and has played a grand total of two minutes. Now no one thought he would come in and be a rookie of the year caliber type of player but no one thought he would be this far behind in terms of getting up to NBA speed and development. Compare those stats to Ty Lawson of the Denver Nuggets who is currently averaging 9 points and 3 assists in a backup role to Chauncey Billups in less than 20 minutes of play. I always thought Lawson would be a guy who could perfectly fit the bill with D’Antoni’s run and gun style. He is averaging a 5:1 Assists/Turnover ratio. That is how you play point guard folks.

Without Blake Griffin, Brandon Jennings has stolen the spotlight for this year’s rookies putting up ridiculous numbers for the Milwaukee Bucks. With a line of 22 points, 4 rebounds, and 5 assists, Jennings has stolen the show and makes the departure of Ramon Sessions a forgotten thought. While he drew criticisms for leaving Arizona to play in Italy, Jennings has proven the inconsistency shown overseas was all a fluke, and his American game translates much better.

So where does Jordan Hill fit? Mike D’Antoni has already converted Wilson Chandler to the 4 to play similarly to Shawn Marion when D’Antoni was in Phoenix and he has David Lee at center. With Gallo and Al Harrington also being able to play the 3 and the 4, the need for Hill is perplexing. If Donnie Walsh felt there was a pressing need for a big man, why did he not draft Brook Lopez over Gallinari in 2008? Has Gallo proven anything in the NBA besides the fact that 75% of his shots this season have been 3 pointers? If I wanted that, give me Jason Kapono for a fraction of the money and draft Lopez.

The track record for Donnie Walsh’s draft picks have been less than impressive. Here are a list of the first round picks since Walsh began drafting with the Indiana Pacers.

The Good: Reggie Miller, Rik Smits, Al Harrington, Danny Granger,

The Bad: George McCloud, Dale Davis, Travis Best, Erick Dampier, Vonteego Cummings

The Ugly: Malik Sealy, Scott Haskin, Eric Piatkowski, Austin Croshere, Primoz Brezec, Fred Jones, David Harrison, Jonathan Bender, Shawne Williams

The names don’t lie. Walsh has put all of his chips onto the table by acquiring expiring contract after expiring contract. If Walsh is unable to land Lebron James, what will the reaction be then from Knicks fans? With no 2010 first round pick (which would have surely land them in the lottery) when can the Knicks address the point guard situation? Can Toney Douglas actually assume the full-time position next year? Doubt it. All Knicks fans can do now is watch Jordan Hill continually disappoint hopefuls by sitting on the bench while Brandon Jennings continues to soar in Wisconsin. Who knows, maybe he will start to take Packer fans minds off of Brett Favre.

MMA

Gettin’ Paid: UFC 104 Salaries

It seems like forever since we’ve done one of these, but the last few UFC’s have been in places that don’t release salary, I guess. Anyway, it’s back.

Before we take a look at the salaries, here are a few of my observations.

  • Ben Rothwell gets paid a lot. The heavyweight made 50,000 in a loss to Cain Velasquez. For his first fight in the UFC, and for being a guy that almost no one knows about, that’s a bundle.
  • Lyoto Machida is yet another main event fighter with no win bonus. We saw this with Brock Lesnar a few months ago, and now The Dragon gets his pay upfront too. It’s a little shocking to me that the UFC would guarantee the full 200,000 grand regardless of the outcome of the fight.
  • Joe Stevenson’s 94,000 to fight in the middle of a card has got to drive Dana White crazy. I’m pretty sure tht he is still on that big Ultimate Fighter contract, but to pay a guy who isn’t in title contention that much has got to irk the boys at Zuffa.
  • And finally, who thought that Chael Sonnen would get paid more than Yushin Okami? Before all the injuries, Okami was considered a top middleweight. Sonnen is a journeyman who everyone thought was being served up for slaughter.

Anyway, here’s the full list, courtesy of MMA Weekly.

MAIN EVENT FIGHTERS

-Lyoto Machida $200,000 (no win bonus) def. Mauricio “Shogun” Rua $155,000

-Cain Velasquez $70,000 (includes $35,000 win bonus) def. Ben Rothwell $50,000

MAIN CARD FIGHTERS

-Gleison Tibau $38,000 (includes $19,000 win bonus) def. Josh Neer $14,000

-Joe Stevenson $94,000 (includes $47,000 win bonus) def. Spencer Fisher $26,000

-Anthony Johnson $30,000 (includes $15,000 win bonus) def. Yoshiyuki Yoshida $12,000
*Johnson forfeited 20-percent of his $15,000 show money for missing weight

PRELIMINARY CARD FIGHTERS

-Ryan Bader $30,000 (includes $15,000 win bonus) def. Eric Schafer $13,000

-Pat Barry $14,000 (includes $7,000 win bonus) def. Antoni Hardonk $16,000
*Barry earned added bonuses for Fight and Knockout of the Night
*Hardonk earned an added bonus for Fight of the Night

-Chael Sonnen $54,000 (includes $27,000 win bonus) def. Yushin Okami $18,000

-Jorge Rivera $36,000 (includes $18,000 win bonus) def. Rob Kimmons $9,000

-Kyle Kingsbury $16,000 (includes $8,000 win bonus) def. Razak Al-Hassan $3,000

-Stefan Struve $14,000 (includes $7,000 win bonus) def. Chase Gormley $10,000
*Struve earned an added bonus for Submission of the Night

UFC 104 DISCLOSED FIGHTER PAYROLL: $922,000

UFC 104 AWARDS & BONUSES
(Each fighter was awarded $60,000)

Fight of the Night:
-Pat Barry vs. Antoni Hardonk

Knockout of the Night:
-Pat Barry

Submission of the Night:
-Stefan Struve

Get Adobe Flash playerPlugin by wpburn.com wordpress themes