THE SPORT COUNT

Entries tagged as ‘Washington Wizards’

Decisions We Like: The Weekend Firings

November 25, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Eddie Jordan, left, graphically demonstrates what he thinks of Carlesimo's record while Carlesimo calls for the technical for such a horrible act

Wizards ex-coach Eddie Jordan, left, graphically demonstrates what he thinks of Carlesimo's record, while Thunder ex-coach P.J. Carlesimo, right, calls for the technical for such a horrible gesture.

The Sport Count team have never shyed in our convictions. From our utter conviction that “European” should never be used in the same sentence as “draft”, to our genuine adoration for Ron Artest, we wear our NBA hearts on our sleeves. And one thing we collectively can’t abide is abject coaching.

So the news that the Thunder have ditched The Choke Victim after a 1-12 start to the season came as a relief. While we never liked the franchise leaving Seattle, we all got behind the newly minted Thunder. This was a young team coming off a bad year, stripped of its star in Ray Allen, almost forcibly relocated, and emphatically in a rebuilding stage. All the elements of the underdog story were there. And it had Kevin Durant.

But then came the early struggles. The Thunder now boast the worst record in the Western Conference, and while we’re all aware of how raw the team is, they are better than one win. One single win. Durant, Green, Watson, Wilcox, Westbrook, and Collison are not a 1-12 team.

Fault, then, must lie with Carlesimo. We’re not particularly against the guy, and are sorry he had his life endangered by Count-endorsed perennial madman Latrell Sprewell. But with a young, rebuilding team, the Thunder front office made absolutely the right decision in ditching an inappropriate coach. Assistant Scott Brooks can’t do any worse for the remainder of the season, giving the Thunder time to find someone who will guide the franchise through these early struggles.

(While they’re at it, The Sport Count recommends they take another look at that logo. Could be bumming the guys out.)

And then there’s the East Coast. Ah, the sweet taste that was the Eddie Jordan firing, something that should have happened two years ago. A team boasting Antawn Jamison, Caron Butler and Gilbert Arenas can’t get past the first round, Eddie? Yes we’re aware of the injury struggles, and that they’ve had to face the monster known as Lebron-In-Playoff-Mode, but that’s unacceptable.

The lack of confidence in Jordan, however, has been solidified recently by a disgusting habit he’s developed since last season’s All-Star break: going to Nick Young in clutch time. As a recent example, just last week, the are Wiz down by 2 with 14 seconds on the clock against Atlanta, and possession. This cued instant agreement amongst the Sport Count team:

Here, Eddie Jordan goes to Nick Young who takes an ill-advised shot and the Wiz lose.

Nick Young subsequently bricked a lay-up and Atlanta converted on the other end, sealing the game. The real issue here is not only has Jordan’s coaching become so predictable that lay fans of the Wizards can pick his plays, but what plays he chose not to run – specifically, any involving All-Stars Antawn Jamison and Caron Butler, who were both on the court.

Enough is enough. Let’s hope Eddie wasn’t cut loose without explanation, because the future of his coaching career relies on, at the very least, this tiniest shred of what should be common knowledge: teams who look to Nick Young in clutch situations don’t win championships. They don’t even win games.

Posted by: Alex

Categories: On The Court · Signings & Firings
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The Count Preview: Southeast Division

October 28, 2008 · Leave a Comment

citizens are currently considering a motion by Dwyane Wade to rename the beach Dwyane Wade.

Miami's South Beach: citizens are currently considering a motion by Dwyane Wade to rename the beach 'Dwyane Wade.'

Miami Heat: With Shaq out of town, crime in Miami skyrockets, and the beleagured police force call on the heightened talents of their city’s basketball team to help out: Wade is able to run down and catch any thief on foot and most any thief in cars; Beasley talks such epic trash that even hardened criminals break down in tears; and Chris Quinn spends his off-court time mixing potions that either restore the flagging energy of Miami’s police force or add +1 to Marion’s mana.

Erik Spoelstra has marginal success in his first season as coach, taking Miami to 25 wins, largely due to the answers he gets to his coaching inquiries on Yahoo! fantasy forums. His off-court time is spent blazing up with Mario Chalmers and referring to Pat Riley as “Old Father Time.”

Charlotte Bobcats: What will Larry Brown bring to the franchise this year? It’s well known that Charlotte are probably one mid-level player away from genuine play-off contention, when things are going right. If J-Rich, Gerald Wallace, Okafor and Felton can contribute for a full season, Charlotte could pull off some surprising upsets and finish the regular season with a shot at the 8th spot.

This, however, ignores the very real possibility that Felton cracks it over the decision to draft yet another point guard who will challenge for his spot, and demands a trade, thus disrupting team chemistry — which will see Adam Morrison out for three weeks with an injured tear duct.

There are at least two further major concerns: is Gerald Wallace’s brain still functioning, and will another knock render him disabled; and what will be the atrocious decision Michael Jordan makes this year?

Atlanta Hawks: The big question on everyone’s mind will be the effect Josh Childress’ absence will have on Atlanta’s depth and presence off the bench. While this will be an unknown quantity until the season starts, The Sport Count has the answer to the second biggest question on everyone’s mind: yes, there is now a huge excess of weed in Atlanta as a result of Childress’ move.

J-Smoove’s off-season signing to $58M should placate him enough to continue being ridiculous on the defensive end, and Joe Johnson should return to his marksmanship ways. With Al Horford only getting better, look for this team to still be in contention in the second round of the playoffs. Don’t look for Mike Bibby though, who will by that time have sprained both wrists, broken his neck, accidentally gnawed one of his legs off, and covered his head in so many bad tattoos he is no longer recognisable.

Washington Wizards: This is just frustrating. If Washington had their All-Star trio of Arenas, Jamison and Butler all healthy, they’d probably one of the most exciting teams to watch in the East. As it is, Antawn hurt himself before the season, Gilbert is unsurprisingly out due to his terrible rehab routine, Caron is almost as fragile as T-Mac, and starting Center Brendan Haywood is potentially out for the season. Talk about starting on the back foot. If the Wiz can overcome these injury concerns and post a reasonable record, it will be one of the great achievements of the season.

The one horrible inevitability is that injuries will mean Nick Young gets more court-time, which will result in him jacking up so many ill-advised shots that it’ll make Larry Hughes look like Ray Allen.

Orlando Magic: Is there any chance they won’t top the division? Dwight is continuing to put up the kind of numbers that destroy small towns, Turkoglu is coming off a career season that all the pundits think will be repeated, Rashard Lewis is playing well enough that you forget he gets paid as much as Kobe and 50% more than LeBron, and Jeff Van Gundy has been signed to ESPN to now Stan can stop worrying what his lovable-but-mentally-deficient brother is doing and actually concentrate on the game. All signs point to the Magic being a dominant force in the Eastern Conference.

The highlight will be when Dwight offers to correct the geological problem Oden caused on the west coast by starting his run-up in Philly and dunking the Chrysler building.

Posted by: Alex

Categories: Off The Court · Sport Count Guide
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The Rehab Diaries: Gilbert Arenas

September 23, 2008 · 3 Comments

The Sport Count team aren’t adverse to some opportunistic, muck-raking journalism when the occasion presents itself. We’ve got a hook up, a deep throat if you will, who gets us some of the hottest documents from the most secret locations — notably NBA players’ diaries, from NBA players’ dumpsters.

Anyone ever wondered why Gilbert has struggled so much to recover from injury? Ever wondered if it was bad luck, bad rehab processes or negligent professional counsel? Wonder no longer.

"Playing is fine, but street clothes is where your swagger shows"

"Playing is fine, but street clothes is where your swagger shows"

10:00am: Wake up, drink some Tang aka Rehab Juice. Tang actually makes your muscles heal faster. It’s a fact, one which I learned from my boy D-Wade, who drank nothing but Tang throughout the ‘07-’08 regular season.

11:00am: Call up my boy Nick Young, tell him the secret to running the point and getting paid as he enters a contract year (deep threes, baby. Contested triples). Counselling young people helps your mind, helping your mind helps your knees. I can’t see how it can’t! Everything is tied to your mind.

12:00pm: Aka the Xbox hour. Someone’s about to get fragged (I’m looking at you AndrewBynumBT). Maybe even telefragged. You never know with this baby. All this rest and mental stimulation is helping my knee like you wouldn’t believe. The Wii might be the best for fitness, but the Xbox has recuperation properties like Phoenix feathers.

4:00pm: Time for burgers and fries. The doc says that this is the perfect food for rehabilitation. I can practically feel the lettuce and mayo infiltrating the abrasions and scar tissue, breaking them down one at a time.

6:00pm: Siesta.

10:00pm: Hit the club. Crutches of course, so the structured movement helps me rehab whilst cranking that Soulja Boy ‘Tell ‘Em’ dance ’til dawn. I mean literally ’til dawn — DeShaun has paid the DJ $50,000 to not play anything else.

3:00am: Stand in front of the mirror for one hour before bed on one leg. I figure this can only help — that’s how much I’m determined to come back. That’s how much I want this, man.

I’d say I’ll be back in a month or so. The amount of things I’m doing to occupy my time… I can feel myself getting better.

Posted by: James

Categories: NBA Mysteries · Off The Court
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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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Gilbert Arenas: Makes Bold Claim, Repeats Self For Emphasis

July 23, 2008 · 1 Comment

It’s no secret that we’re huge Gilbert Arenas boosters at The Sport Count (see here, here and here).

We love him draining game winners he telegraphed two days ago, we love him laughing at Richard Jefferson’s plight, and we love that he cheats at Halo 3. All these things make him one of the big personalities in the NBA, and the Sport Count is all about personality.

So when we heard the Wizards had put on a big soiree to welcome their franchise player back for the next six seasons, we were all smiles. And those smiles just got bigger when Gil came through with some champagne Gilbert statements. Here’s what he had to say about the upcoming season:

We just want to get our fair shot when we’re healthy at the right time, because two years we showed what kind of team we are….We were rolling, we were top five in the league, and that’s what kind of team we are when we’re healthy. When we’re healthy that’s the kind of team we are, we’re a top five team in the league.

And that’s the kind of thing we love from Gilbert, when he says things like that. When he says things like that, that’s the kind of thing we love from Gilbert.

As for the Wizards losing in the playoffs to Cleveland again last season, Gil puts it down to this:

Tell Cleveland to play without LeBron. I don’t think they won a game last year.

It sounds obvious, but real beauty lies in this statement, as Gilbert has drawn an equivalency between himself and Lebron. By extension, he also draws these equivalancies:

  • Antawn Jamison = Anderson Varejao
  • Caron Butler = Wally Szczerbiak

It’s great to have you back, Gilbert.

Posted by: Alex

Categories: Off The Court · On The Court
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