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NFL

PFT: Tebow Won’t Slip Past First Round…

With teams beginning to be eliminated from playoff contention, it’s time to start looking forward to the off season. We’re having a pow-wow soon to decide what special features we’ll be hooking up this year, but for now, let’s start with this little tidbit from Pro Football Talk:

NBC’s Peter King reported during Football Night in America that he has spoken to 17 coaches and personnel executives over the past month, and that he has asked for predictions as to the precise spot at which Florida quarterback Tim Tebow will be drafted.

The average draft position? 33rd overall.

But King added that two coaches of “winning teams” said Tebow won’t get past their selections in round one.

Mike Florio goes on to mention his guesses of Jacksonville and Minnesota as the two teams. Jacksonville has been linked to Tebow purely for name value. They can’t seem to sell seats in northern Florida, and there is no bigger name down in college football country than Tebow.

As for Minnesota, I just can’t see it. Assume that we get one more year of Brett Favre just having fun out there, they still have an incredibly young, raw passer on the bench in Tavaris Jackson. To add another project in Tebow, that wouldn’t really make a whole lot of sense.

My guess? Someone wants to use him at another position. Where? I have no idea.

NFL

Football Outsiders: Teams Want Leinart...

YES. I have been having this argument with Jason for quite awhile now, and he kept playing the “There is a reason he isn’t starting” card. My counter has always been that Ken Wisenhunt hates him and just never gave him the chance because he was Denny Green’s boy.

Now, here comes Aaron Schatz from ESPN and Football Outsiders, one of Jason’s favorite sources, telling him that I’m right in ESPN the Magazine.

In his second season, Leinart started five games — his stats were once again above replacement level — before breaking his collarbone. Then last year, he lost his job in the preseason to a guy who went on to throw for 4,500 yards and lead his team to the Super Bowl. So is Leinart a dud or just a guy who doesn’t fit a particular offense as well as Kurt Warner fits it? We won’t know until some team gives him another shot. Which will happen. More than one personnel guy has told me that if he were to take over a team with a hole at QB, he’d call the Cardinals and try to pry Leinart away for a couple of midround picks.

I couldn’t agree more. Next season there are going to be a bunch of teams with new coaches and new GMs. The best thing that those gentleman could do is try and swing a deal for the former USC star, because he is good QB sitting on the bench behind a great QB in Warner.

USC quarterback Matt Leinart won the Heisman i...

Image via Wikipedia

I love being right.

NBA

NBA Trade Talk: Okafor Already On The Way Out?

After Byron Scott was rightfully fired, the New Orleans Hornets appear to be making their second major move of what is a very early NBA season. According to Rotoworld, the Hornets are discussing a deal that would send Emeka Okafor to the Kings for Kenny Thomas.

“The Kings are discussing a trade that would send Kenny Thomas to New Orleans in exchange for center Emeka Okafor. The move would be a salary dump for New Orleans, as Thomas’ $8.7 million is expiring this season. Okafor, on the other hand, is due about $62 million over the next five seasons.”

Even if this trade does not happen and the teams only reach the discussion phase, it is painfully obvious that now head coach Jeff Bower has given up on the year. At 3-7, the Hornets are a team in total transition. They have no bench to speak of, every single free agent pick (Peja, Mo Peterson, and James Posey) has been a huge disappointment, and now Chris Paul could be out several weeks with an ankle injury. Not only are they losing, but the games haven’t been close. Three out of their last four losses have been by 17, 16, and 20 points respectively. But with all that being said, does this trade make sense?

Even at 3-7, the Hornets do have a chance of making the playoffs. Right now the Kings and Rockets are pegged in as the 7th and 8th seeds. Do we really think they can last for the next 70 games? A healthy Chris Paul and David West along with Emeka Okafor could buy you an 8th seed in the West, but that shouldn’t be the answer. With little chance of making noise in May, maybe the Hornets should dump Okafor, land themselves in the lottery and pick amongst what is expected to be one of the deepest draft classes in years.

Now if I am the Kings, I do not touch Okafor with a ten foot pole. With the amount he is owed in the future, his production just does not equate that much money. Sacramento’s problem is not in the front court. Spencer Hawes and more specifically Jason Thompson have been on the rise and are seemingly reaching their potential. Okafor would detract from that progression. What the Kings need is another swingman that can play alongside Kevin Martin and Tyreke Evans, not a center.

Jason’s take:

Was about to write about this so here’s my take.  The Hornets best bet is to tank this year, get a really high lottery pick and shed as many bad contracts as possible in the process.  Are they winning a title, or even a playoff series, with a core of Paul, West and Oakfor? No.  Paul will get pissed, turn down his 2012/13 option and flee the Big Easy as fast as he can  (effectively killing basketball in New Orleans.)  The Hornets have made the same mistake the Cavs did with LeBron.  They kept trying to put a band aid on their problems instead of surrounding their superstar, Paul, with young athletic talent he can grow with.  Look at what the Thunder have done.  Durant loves, and that’s an understatement, his teammates. Do you think he’s going anywhere when they are set up to have a dominant run?  Paul would be unhappy in the short term but cap space and throwing alley-oops to Derrick Favors would make him smile.

For the Kings…in a word yuck?  Have the Maloof’s really fooled themselves into thinking they have a good enough team to make a run now?  They have a nice young core (Evans, Thompson and Hawes) why would you take away playing time from them by trading for a mediocre injury prone defensive forward with a killer, understatement, contract.  Maybe, and that’s a giant maybe, you can make the 8 seed in the West with a starting 5 of Evans, Martin, Nocioni, Hawes/Thompson, Oakfor but isn’t that your ceiling?  Trading for Oakfor kills your cap space for the rest of eternity and essentially locks you into that group.

The NBA where stupidity happens.

NBA

Why Can't The Hawks Crash The Party?

It was assumed by every NBA analyst that only 5 teams (Lakers, Spurs, Celtics, Cavs and Magic) had a shot at the NBA title this year.

10 games into the season it’s way too early to read into things but at 7-2 the Atlanta Hawks are certainly making the case that they are a legit title contender.

What makes the Hawks so dangerous?

  • They can play any style of basketball.  They have a conventional lineup (Bibby, JJ, Williams, Smith, Horford) they can go small with three guards (Bibby, Crawford, JJ, Smith, Horford) JJ can even play the point if need be.
  • Their core (Williams, Smith, Horford) are all 23 years old.  It seems like any, or all of them can make the leap at any time.  Early in the season J-Smoove has been a monster.  He’s cut down on his outside shooting and become the player we all hope he would become.  His FG% has soared to .578 (up from .492 last year)
  • They have solid rotational pieces with Teague, Evans and Pachulia coming off the bench.
  • Joe Johnson is a star and no one realizes it.

You can make the case that a team like the Suns early season success is a bit of a mirage but it’s much more difficult to make that case with the Hawks.  They have the makings of a team that can contend for the title.

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.

NBA

Iverson Is Already Pissed, No One Is Suprised

So remember on September 9th, when I posted on this very site, that Allen Iverson was going to Memphis? I questioned just how long it would take for him to become angry with his role on a young team and well, last night marked the Answer’s first outburst. After playing in his first game of the season due to a hamstring injury, Iverson scored 11 points in just 18 minutes in the team’s overtime loss to the Sacramento Kings last night. According to NBA Fanhouse, this is what AI had to say post-game.

“I had no problems (with the hamstring). I had a problem with my butt from sitting on that bench so long. That’s the only thing I got a problem with.”

“Yeah I’ll be disappointed if I’m a sub this season. I’m not a reserve basketball player. I’ve never been a reserve all my life and I’m not going to start looking at myself as a reserve…To answer the question, “No, I’m not a bench player. I’m not a sixth man. Go look at my resume and that will show you I’m not a sixth man.”

Iverson needs to take a long hard look at guys around the league like Manu Ginobili, Ben Gordon, and Lamar Odom, guys who are more talented than he is at their stages in their career, yet embrace their sixth man role and do what is asked of them. Manu and Lamar have helped their teams win titles while Gordon has helped the Bulls reach the playoffs and almost pull of a first round upset over the Celts.

Looks like Iverson should have gone to the Charlotte Bobcats this season. That 79.8 points per game total they have notched so far is mightly woeful right now. And also, hasn’t Larry Brown heard this same crap before?

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