The Sport Count

Entries tagged as ‘Portland Trailblazers’

The Count Preview: Northwest Division

October 27, 2008 · No Comments

'Melo swore to me that Denver will definitely go over .500 this season...'

The division that makes up roughly half of the continental United States looks to have some exciting stories this season, with the inaugural season for Oklahoma, the Oden Explosion in Oregon and the traveling comedy that will be Kevin Love’s away games. There’s also last year’s playoff contenders in Denver and Utah, both looking to repeat .500+ records in the tough Western Conference.

Denver Nuggets: After unceremoniously dropping Camby to the Clippers for $4.72 in change and two cans of Tecate, GM Mark Warkentien went ahead and picked up Chris Andersen to fill the huge, inescapable void that Camby’s absence will leave in the Nuggets’ defence. Obviously, Mark Warkentien doesn’t play fantasy basketball, or he’d realise the mistake he made. In fact, it’s a move that suggests Mark Warkentien doesn’t even watch basketball.

This error will be compounded during the All-Star break when the reformed Andersen injures both himself and ‘Melo trying to stop the Chubby Gangster from having a second bump at the wheel of his Escalade, while The Answer sits in the back saying ‘that’s nothing, I did shit ten times worse than that. Do it.’ Cue the police arriving and Denver having to start Linas Kleiza and Sonny Weems for the rest of the season.

Portland Trailblazers: Is anyone not excited about the Blazers this season? Brandon Roy, LaMarcus Aldridge, Jerryd Bayless and Greg Oden. The Blazers’ front office have got to be hoping this year or next year is a ring year, because that is a whole lot of massive contracts they’re going to have to offer soon. The highlight of the season will be when Oden throws down a dunk so monstrous he lowers the entire Pacific shelf 9-feet, and half of Los Angeles disappears into the ocean.

Oklahoma City Thunder: The first game is a sell-out as every season ticket-holder shows up. The Ford Center retains this adrenaline-fuelled atmosphere, with Oklahoma creating a few early upset wins. Then Kevin Durant pulls a hammy, and everyone realises they don’t know the names of the rest of the team, save 23 frat boys who turn up to yell ‘hey, Castro Supreme!’ at Chris Wilcox and high-five each other.

David Stern receives a note from the entire population of Seattle saying ‘Dear David, do you see what you’ve done? You shit.’

Utah Jazz: Let’s look at this objectively. They’ve got two gold medallists in Deron Williams and Carlos Boozer, supported by Mehmet Okur and former All-Star Andrei Kirilenko, with some exciting upside in Ronnie Brewer and Paul Millsap. Even Kyle Korver is good for something. And they’re being coached by Jerry Sloan. If they don’t push deep into the playoffs, the entire franchise should be dropped to the D-League.

Minnesota Timberwolves: Now that everyone has worked out that Al Jefferson is All-Star material, and teams have begun collapsing on him, there will be pressure on the rookie Kevin Love to pick up some of the slack. Unfortunately, he won’t, and Minnesota fans will divide their time between bitterly tracking O.J. Mayo’s exciting rookie season, and betting on the spread Vegas is offering on Kevin Love’s foul-to-points ratio.

Posted by: Alex

Read the Atlantic Division preview here.

Categories: On The Court · Sport Count Guide
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The Roster Rater: Boston Celtics

September 8, 2008 · 2 Comments

Last week, The Roster Rater examined the toilet that is the collective salaries of the New York Knicks. This week, focus shifts to their Atlantic Division competition, and reigning NBA champions, the Boston Celtics.

contracts justified by the humour alone.

The Big Three: contracts justified by the humour alone.

The Boston Celtics | Total Salary: $80,046,767

There was a time, not too long ago, when Danny Ainge was looked upon with scorn and genuine suspicion. He was a front office mistake, a walking testament to the Old Boys Network that places unqualified former players into positions of power. Each off-season, Ainge would boast of ‘youth movements’ and ‘moving forward’ and ‘getting better next year,’ but each year the Boston faithful were treated to bad signings, average draft picks, and a team that simply could not gel. Paul Pierce wanted out. The team floundered. The glory of Celtic teams passed seemed a million miles away; TD Bankworth represented misery and lost hope, Boston fans dreaming of the parquet floor of the Boston Garden.

Then, thank the basketball gods, the Celtics moved forward. The team, packed with upside-heavy youngsters and inoffensive rookie contracts, was in the perfect position to pounce when the next superstar hit the trading block.

Ray Allen was brought into Beantown and, all of a sudden, Kevin Garnett could imagine himself leaving the dark green of the Wolves behind for the light green of the Celts. And, well, you know how that turned out: the Celtics were reintroduced to their long lost friend, the Larry O’Brien Trophy.

Kevin Garnett | $24,750,000 | 4 years

Yes, sure, this is a great deal; KG brought glory back to Boston, finally ridding the Garden of the Ghost of Len Bias, and he’s the reigning Defensive Player Of The Year. We get it!

My issue is the future. You’ve got a guy who is literally anti-clutch, who has dedicated the last 31 years of his life to getting a ring, and now he’s got one. So what happens next? Does he fire up for next year? Does he go missing for the next three years like he did in throughout much of the playoffs? Does he throw in his jersey, preparing himself for a serious run at next year’s World Series of Poker?

Now that he has that ring, will the desire still be there?

Paul Pierce | $18,077,903 | 3 years

Do you pay $18M to a guy who out-performed the MVP to become the Finals MVP, went clutch to make up for KG’s inability to do so, and consequently captained his team to an NBA Championship? Do you spend this money on athlete described by LeBron as having the second best footwork in the game?

Everyone in the world: ‘Yes.’

Ray Allen | $17,388,430 | 2 years

The good news: Ray is a shooter, and shooters age better than most.

Unlike point guards, spot-up shooters aren’t constantly copping big hits in the lane. Unlike big men, they don’t have 250+ pounds bearing down on their fragile little ankles. Indeed, a shooter can remain effective as long as his wrists aren’t broken, and his eyeballs work.

The bad news? Ray is, for the most part, only a shooter. You’re paying him big money to sink big buckets, and if he isn’t hitting them, you’re wasting cash. Cut to the post-season just past, games six and seven against Cleveland, both series clinchers: Ray goes 4-14 in seventy minutes. That hurts.

It comes down to this: as his age creeps upwards, can Ray stay hot more often than not?

Kendrick Perkins | $4,078,880 | 3 year

Our buddies over at PerkisaBeast.com got it right with their URL. This a great contract for a dude who is more than a great role player — he’s a solid starter. When KG goes missing, Perk is the man, and you can conceivably see him linking up with a Rondo to form a poor man’s Hornets when the Big Three start nodding off in their armchairs.

A white man, yesterday.

A white man, yesterday.

Brian Scalabrine | $3,206,897 | 2 years

Look at these averages from last season:

  • 6.2 points
  • 5.6 rebounds
  • 2.8 assists

Most people would agree that such solid numbers are easily worth $3M to a championship winning side. Those figures are exactly the sort of output you want from your role guys. Only, ah, hmmm… the catch is, those are per-36 minute averages. Brian averaged 10 minutes per game last season, so in reality, his averages were more like this

  • 1.8 points @ .309 FG%
  • 1.6 rebounds

That’s disgusting.

We’ll have to assume the humour of having a big idiot idiot redhead on an Irish-influenced team makes up for his lack of performance

Eddie House | $2,650,000 | 2 years

On a bad team, House would be a liability. Imagine him signed to the Isiah-era Knicks, where players signed contracts first, shot second, and played defense last — he’d be called on to carry the offense, and grotesque inefficiency would ensue.

Place him on a good team, however, and House is a serious asset. He’s energetic, spreading the floor, shooting without thinking, contributing short bursts of hustle and gusto. He’s a classic 8th or 9th option — unpredictable, but sporadically deadly. And he’s paid accordingly (take note, Jannero Pargo).

Rajon Rondo | $1,646,784 | 1 Year

You’ve got to love rookie contracts. At this price, Rondo is an absolute steal.

He’ll no doubt be appropriately compensated when his contract is up, but until then Rondo is doing alright: he has more than enough gold coins to buy bows, elixirs, and extra mana.

JR Giddens | $957,120 | 2 years

Some things to know about JR Giddens:

  • In 2005, he was stabbed in the calf in a bar fight, requiring 30 stitches
  • He has his first initial - J - tattooed on his left tricep, and his last initial - G - tattooed on his right tricep.
  • He was selected 26 June this year with the 30th overall pick, and just weeks later declined to train with the Celts at their mini-camp because he hadn’t signed a contract.

Stupid tattoos, a violent history and a bad attitude? Those are the makings of an NBA superstar.

Darius Miles | $1,070,118 | 1 years

No one expected to hear these words used to describe a contract signed by Darius Miles: not bad.

Not bad at all. At such a low price, Miles could spend training camp punching cones, playing Madden ‘08, and bathing in cough syrup, and he’d still be reasonable value. Despite the ‘career-ending injury’ which sent Darius packing from Portland, scouts and NBA heads claim Miles still has gas in the tank.

Worst case scenario? He’s a busted embarrassment, too unfit to make it through the ten games necessary to kill Kevin Pritchard’s soul (and the Blazers’ salary cap), and Ainge waives him. Best case? He’s a cheap, easy James Posey replacement, capable of attacking defenses, freeing up the wings, and inspiring the team with his relentless hustle. The reality is likely to be somewhere in the middle.

Patrick O’Bryant | $1,500,000 | 2 years

The Celtics would have signed Patrick Fitzgerald O’Bryant on his name alone. The actual figure he receives is completely arbitrary — if it took a max contract to get him, that’s what they would have paid. This was their opportunity to buy a mascot, to buy the essence of the what the Celtics are. In fact, they almost launched legal proceedings against Golden State for ‘drafting players whose parents named them for the sole purpose of playing for the Celtics.

When Patrick turned up in Beantown and his African-American heritage became evident, David Angell immediately flew in to develop a hit sitcom about it.

Tony Allen | $2,500,000 | 2 years

The good thing about Tony Allen is that he has the most Irish sounding name of all time, so having him on the Celtics just makes sense. I’d question whether that’s worth $2.5M, but if he gets injured he’ll be the perfect person to step into the mascot suit when Patrick O’Bryant’s actually getting some court time.

Leon Powe | $797, 581 | 1 year

Leon Powe’s personal story is actually worth $800k a year — if I had the money, I’d pay him that each year just so he could tell it to me each night on the team bus.

Gabe Pruitt | $711,517 | 1 year

Poor Gabe. After a pretty reasonable college career with the Trojans, you get drafted 32nd overall and are forced to play 4th-string point guard behind Rajon Rondo, Sam Cassell and Tony Allen. While you fight for minutes, Boston drops you to their D-League team, meaning you spend most of the season in Utah. Meanwhile, your college teammate Nick Young goes to Washington, where’s he’s given free reign to take atrocious triple attempts and to drive to the hoop in clutch-time to jack up worse lay-ups than DeShawn Stevenson.

If Gabe’s given more than 6 minutes a game, and is allowed to play more than 15 games, we’ll see what that $700k is really worth. With Sam Cassell gone and less competition for minutes at the point, I suspect it might be a bargain.

Glen Davis | $711,517 | 1 year

We like ‘Big Baby’. If you’re going to have a guy play less than two minutes a game, you want him to be on the minimum, and you want him to be able to step in when called upon. And you like the possibility he’ll one day develop into a starter. I think ‘Big Baby’ covers all of those bases with his gigantic bulbous ass.

One other thing that can be said about Big Baby’s contract: he’s better value than former LSU teammate Tyrus Thomas.

Posted by: Alex, Anton & James

Note: when expressing the years remaining on a contract, we’ve taken the team’s potential liability into account, meaning we assume a player will accept their player option. A team option is not considered a liability.

Categories: Roster Rater
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Counting Down: The Top 7 NBA Criminals

July 18, 2008 · 11 Comments

As reported on ESPN, Derrick Rose has recently been charged with reckless driving, as he was clocked going 40mph over the legal speed limit.

Tipping the hat to another Bulls draft pick of yesteryear, Jay Williams, Rose’s ridiculous behaviour didn’t surprise me. Not in the slightest.

Training for The Euroleague

Shawn Kemp: Training for The Euroleague

If you think of the NBA as a collection of around 400 guys, and think about the average crimes, misdemeanours and felonies they commit every season and each off season, it’s disproportionately higher than the societal norm.

Reminiscing over all of the charges laid against your Tinsleys, Melos, Lebrons, Kobes, Barkleys, Roses and Artests over the past few years got The Sport Count thinking. Who are the Top 7 NBA Criminals?

Shawn Kemp | Possession of Narcotics and Firearms | Power Forward

You know you’ve been in trouble when your Wikipedia page features ‘Legal Problems’ as a subheader.

The Reign Man was a consistent rebound, dunk and point machine throughout the course of his NBA career, but he also brought the heat off court with some great crimes. In fact, Kemp was the first man in NBA history to average a career quad double: points per game, child support endowments, comeback attempts and criminal offenses.

In 2005, the Reign Man was arrested for possessing 60 grams of coke and a semi-automatic pistol - which sounds like an amazing party if you’re somewhere in rural Bulgaria.

(To be honest, Kemp isn’t much of a crim, but his fall from grace has been so marked that we’ve included him. And because TSC editor and noted Kemp freak Alex Vitlin will vehemently post a defense imminently).

Isaiah Rider | Kidnapping, Assault, Grand Theft Auto | Small Forward

East bay funk dunker, over the shoulder three-pointer; Isaiah Rider is better known nowadays for being a criminal of the worst variety, and one of the baddest eggs to the play the game in recent times.

There isn’t even a need to embelish these - so I’m just going to list them.

Kidnapping, domestic violence, violating an Apprehended Violence Order, hit and run, resisting arrest, felony possession of cocaine, unlawful firearm possession, possession of a controlled narcotics substance, providing false information to a police officer, driving on a suspended license and, drum roll please, Grand Theft Auto.

Who are the next five?

(more…)

Categories: Off The Court · Sport Count Guide
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The Reading List: Miles To Hurt The Blazers?

July 8, 2008 · 1 Comment

No doubt you’ve heard that should Darius Miles — who looked good at a recent Boston try-out — sign and play with another the team, the Blazers would be on the hook for his $27,000,000 contract*. Which wouldn’t be great for their salary cap.

However, one Portland head isn’t too worried about Miles returning to form:

If he can come back near pre-injury form it’s guaranteed somebody, somewhere is going to give him a shot. His retirement was for legitimate, confirmed medical reasons, however. That, combined with what we’ve heard about Darius’ work ethic from various teams he played for in his healthier days, makes me think a full recovery is [unlikely].

*Always better to express bad contracts down to the last digit. Example: Stephon Marbury will make $21,937,500 this season. Even the $500 dollars tacked on at the end hurts in New York.

I never, ever thought I’d see a tattoo sillier than Luke Walton’s inexplicable bicep-based depiction of monkeys dunking basketballs. I was wrong:

Back in the summer of 2003, Shawn Marion got a tattoo down his right leg in Chinese lettering that was supposedly a translation of his nickname “The Matrix.” Only it wasn’t. I mean, it really, really wasn’t.

Rod Benson heads north:

As I walked around the breakfast buffet area, I did not see any thinly sliced ham that was labeled “bacon.” I figured there would be no reason to label it “Canadian bacon” because I was in Canada. The bacon that was appropriately labeled was the same chewy-crispy sliced pork that I was accustomed to. It could just be that hotel, but I have lost faith in Canadian bacon as a result of that morning.

Beasley put up 28 against Derrick Rose and the Bulls. Why is ESPN not televising the summer league? Even if they played it at 3am instead of World’s Strongest Man (episode #91381) or the 1998 NHRA Qualifiers, at least we’d have the chance to see that Beasley magic.

The Sport Count would love to see Darius Miles back in the NBA. Why?

Hoo! Bwooohedabegyaponermen!!. Translation: That was great. That was a great dunk he just did off that trampoline.

Posted By: Anton

Categories: The Reading List
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But How Old Are You Really?

July 7, 2008 · No Comments

There’s a lot of trickery in the NBA.

We’re talking guys with mad handles, crowds being distracting, Globetrotter-esque passing, the works. But there’s one talent available to only a select few players, those naturally gifted in a certain way; the ability to trick people with your looks. Specifically, looking eons older or younger than you actually are. The Sport Count brings you, in no particular order, its top five Age Trickers.

1. LeBron James | Cleveland Cavaliers | The man is now, allegedly, not quite 24 years old. Arguably the best player in the NBA, LeBron also tricks you by looking like a wizened old sage and, while this confuses you, he throws down monster dunks all over the shop.

Actual Age: 23
Tricking Age: 42

2. Jason Maxiell | Detroit Pistons
Maxiell was drafted in 2005. His trickery is so good though, that he looks like your Dad’s best friend. While you’re thinking about all the fun times he and your Dad had after school, he’s displaying his not inconsiderable upside by hauling in caroms and stuffing it.
Actual Age: 25
Tricking Age: 55

3. Chris Quinn | Miami Heat
Chris Quinn fooled the system. Everyone thinks he’s a college-educated kid who can play competent point guard. He’s not. He’s actually an elf, and finds it uncomfortable to be holding a basketball and not a longbow. So really, he’s doing okay.
Actual Age: 24
Tricking Age: 11
Elf Age: 700

4. Greg Oden | Portland Trailblazers
I don’t even have to explain this. The only thing worth mentioning here is that he has an incredible vertical leap for a 68 year old man.
Actual Age: 20
Tricking Age: 68

5. OJ Mayo | Memphis Grizzlies
OJ is in fact not a child basketball prodigy. If you look at him, you can tell he’s actually a successful San Francisco lawyer. Or that’s what his tricking talent suggests, before he totally runs the floor and you’re left standing there going “Huh? Nailing a triple? I thought he was about to serve me with an affadevit.”
Actual Age: 21
Tricking Age: 32

Posted by: Alex

Categories: NBA Mysteries · Sport Count Guide
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