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Nov25
Game 13, The Wrapup (Warriors 111, Mavericks 103): Monta Ellis, exploder of myths
Filed under: The Wrapup; Tagged as: Andris Biedrins, Anthony Morrow, Anthony Randolph, Chris Hunter, Corey Maggette, Dirk Nowitzki, Don Nelson, Mikki Moore, Monta Ellis, Rick Carlisle, Ronny Turiaf, Stephen Curry, Stephen Jackson, Tim Duncan, Vladimir Radmanovic4 CommentsBy Geoff Lepper
48minutes.netWhen Monta Ellis came into the league, there was a school of thought (with his own coach being one of the adherents) that he wouldn’t succeed in the NBA because all he did in high school was just break down some poor, under-equipped defender from the Jackson Public Schools league and get to the rim.
He can’t do that in The League, the doubters said. Not regularly, anyways.
OK, so that myth just exploded on Tuesday.
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Oct30
The Morning Report: Anthony Randolph to start tonight, reportedly (in other news: a G2V-class yellow star was seen on the eastern horizon around 7:30 a.m.)
Filed under: Uncategorized; Tagged as: Amare Stoudemire, Andris Biedrins, Anthony Randolph, C.J. Watson, Channing Frye, Chris Mullin, Corey Maggette, Daniel Gibson, Dirk Nowitzki, Don Nelson, Jamario Moon, Marc Gasol, Mo Williams, Robert Rowell, Ronny Turiaf, Stephen Curry, Zach Randolph7 CommentsBy Geoff Lepper
48minutes.netAccording to Chris Broussard over at ESPN.com, the Warriors’ one-game experiment with starting Ronny Turiaf at power forward is over, with Anthony Randolph set to move into the lineup tonight in Phoenix.
Somebody cue Jim Nabors, and be sure to employ the “sarcasm” HTML tag:
Surprise, surprise, surprise!
Don Nelson used Turiaf on Wednesday because the Rockets were a small, depleted team that looked like a good matchup. It didn’t turn out to be so, but even if it had, Turiaf would still be heading back to the bench, for a multitude of different reasons. The biggest is this one: With Amare Stoudemire and Channing Frye, the Suns have two legitimate big men on the floor, negating any perceived matchup advantage Golden State might get with a Turiaf-Andris Biedrins combination at the start.
Frankly, it wouldn’t surprise me in the least if Nelson puts Corey Maggette into the lineup for Game 3 against Memphis next Wednesday, looking to create a mismatch with either Marc Gasol or Zach Randolph.
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Nov17
Stephen Jackson: Captain For Life
Filed under: Commentary; Tagged as: Al Harrington, Amare Stoudemire, Andris Biedrins, Anthony Morrow, Anthony Randolph, Brandan Wright, C.J. Watson, Caron Butler, Chris Bosh, Corey Maggette, Dirk Nowitzki, Jason Richardson, Josh Howard, Kelenna Azubuike, Kobe Bryant, Marco Belinelli, Marcus Williams, Michael Redd, Monta Ellis, Paul Pierce, Richard Hamilton, Ronny Turiaf, Stephen Jackson, Tayshaun Prince, Tony Parker, Yao Ming26 CommentsBy Geoff Lepper
48minutes.netMy take hasn’t changed from what I wrote several weeks ago on the subject of Stephen Jackson’s extension with the Warriors, which after weeks in the works was finally signed Monday.
In terms of pure production, Jackson deserves to be the highest-paid player on this team (or perhaps second-highest, if Monta Ellis had kept himself healthy). It’s almost an insult that he’s slated to pull down the fifth-highest salary this season behind Ellis, Al Harrington, Andris Biedrins and Corey Maggette.
But by extending Jackson now, the Warriors are tossing aside their previously iron-clad rules of dealing with a player only when the team has used up all of its possible leverage. I’ll be fascinated to hear the explanation for this exception, if any is forthcoming on the matter.
One interesting note: Jackson told me a couple weeks back that he wasn’t asking for the max, but the reported numbers — three years for $28 million — don’t reflect any money left on the table. The most the Warriors are allowed to give Jackson under the Collective Bargaining Agreement is $27.8 million — $8.45 million in 2010-11, $9.26 million in 2011-12 and $10.06 million in 2012-13.
Outside of the reasoning for why the Warriors would break with their own philosophy, here’s the biggest question: How will the signing impact the Warriors in the summer of 2010, when a whole raft of top-notch free agents is scheduled to flood the market?
There is no real hope that a player with the stature of LeBron James will be willing to come to Oakland when the lights of New York are beckoning to him. But having maneuverability in that timeframe — when teams will potentially be looking to offload players in order to make a run at UFAs such as Paul Pierce, Jason Richardson, Josh Howard, Dirk Nowitzki, Tayshaun Prince, Yao Ming, Kobe Bryant, Michael Redd, Amare Stoudemire, Tony Parker, Chris Bosh or Caron Butler — would afford a franchise the opportunity to recast its core, if that was deemed necessary.
With Jackson in the fold, the Warriors are set to spend $51.5 million in 2010-11 for an eight-man core of Jackson, Ellis, Biedrins, Maggette, Kelenna Azubuike, Ronny Turiaf, Brandan Wright and Anthony Randolph.
Based on the trend line of the last few years, my guesstimate of the 2010-11 cap number would be roughly $64 million. (That’s assuming the league’s revenue total continues to ramp up, which is probably on…
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