Saturday, June 25, 2011

NBA Draft Thoughts and Notes


Note: all images obtained from a Google image search at google.com

Note: all statistics obtained from ESPN.com unless hyperlinked

Biggest Winner: Washington Wizards
#6 pick: PF Jan Vesely, Czech Republic
#18 pick: SF Chris Singleton
#34 pick: G Shelvin Mack

European name, American game.


As if this team didn’t have enough swag with PF’s Andray Blatche and Javale McGee, they added a lot more with Vesely (who proclaimed Blake Griffin was the American Jan Vesely).  Like Griffin, Vesely is an outstanding athlete who is fearless in crashing to the rim, both off the dribble and in transition.  Unlike Griffin, Vesely isn’t particularly strong physically, and while he has a decent outside shot, he’s still very raw overall as a basketball player.  He’ll be a bit of a development project for head coach Flip Saunders, but watching him run the floor and catch alley oops from PG John Wall will be breathtaking and very fun to watch.


Further, the additions of Singleton and Mack add much-needed perimeter defense and leadership to a team in dire need of both.  This article did an amazing job of detailing the issues that plague the Wiz, most notably its shooting (and shot selection … ahem … Jordan Crawford … ahem).  Washington was in the bottom 3rd of the league in virtually every shooting category.  Now, neither Singleton nor Mack will provide much offensively, and won’t directly address the shooting woes from last season.  But perhaps their dedication to fundamentals and leadership in the locker room could help alleviate the street-ball mentality that permeates throughout the club.  They may accomplish this, they may not.  But it’s certainly worth Washington’s while to find out, and at the very least, they’ll be good character guys that will be rotation players for a long time in this league.

Runner-up: San Antonio, who traded PG George Hill for the #15 pick, SF Kawhi Leonard

Biggest Loser: Gs Jimmer Fredette, #10 to Milwaukee and dealt to Sacramento; and Kemba Walker, #9 to Charlotte (tie)

The savior of Sacramento? Only if he saves basketball in Sacramento.


As discussed on Friday’s NBA Today podcast, Sacramento traded back from the #7 pick to #10 for the right to add salary to a team whose finances are in such disarray that the team has threatened to move to Anaheim, get older, and added another ball-stopper in John Salmons to a team that already has G Tyreke Evans, PF DeMarcus Cousins, SG Marcus Thornton (and now rookie F Tyler Honeycutt, as well).  By all accounts, the Maloof brothers, the owners of the Kings, were in love with Jimmer, but the basketball staff convinced them that #7 was too high for him.  So they trade back and still take him at #10, and add another player to the roster who really can’t help them in any feasible way, yet will be paying him for the next 4 years.  Brilliant.

Lost in translation is poor Jimmer, a very likable, easy-to-root-for kid, to a club with considerable maturity issues.  He fits a huge team need with his incredible shooting ability, but will his teammates get him the ball enough for it to matter?  He’s the ideal fit for this type of team, and can make a considerable impact if given the chance.  The only question is if he will get that chance.  Jimmer deserved to go to better situation, but I have no doubt he’ll make this most of the current one.

On the other coast we have G Kemba Walker, sent to the worst NBA market in the league in Charlotte.  The Bobcats had a great draft, don’t get me wrong; Walker adds a winner’s mentality and a strong all-around game the lineup (though his size may limit him somewhat), and PF Bismack Biyombo brings youth and raw defensive and rebounding ability (but is a massive project).  I just hate the situation for Kemba, who is used to playing in front of electric crowds in the Big East and thrives in pressure situations, like the Big East tournament at Madison Square Garden.  Not even Kemba can save the NBA in North Carolina.

Have fun in basketball purgatory, Kemba.


Runner-up: New York (PG Iman Shumpert at #17)

Best Value: G Norris Cole, #28 to Chicago, dealt to Minnesota, dealt again to Miami

"Is that a fade or is that your hair running away from your face?!"


After playing under the largest microscope any team has ever faced in an NBA season, the Miami Heat simply did not have enough help around their 3 All-Stars to achieve their goal of a championship in their 1st season together (nor did they get enough production from those 3 stars in the final 3 games of that series, but I digress).  We knew the Heat would be great coming into the year, a top-4 team in the Eastern Conference.  What we didn’t know was whether a team of 3 of the top 20 players in the game, including 2 of the top 5, could will their team to a championship and be able to win despite not having any decent role players around them (which goes against the traditional NBA logic of needing 8-9 guys to win a title that we’ve seen for, oh, about 65 years).  Now we know: they can’t.

And moreover, without at least one substantial addition to the lineup, Miami may not return to the NBA Finals going forward.  Why?  Look at the Los Angeles Lakers and Boston Celtics over the past 4 seasons.  From 2008-10, Los Angeles reached the Finals 3 consecutive years.  Boston made the Finals twice over the span, and featured an even older corps than that of the Lakers.  These deep playoff runs have combined to have the effect of playing an entire additional season, on top of 3 82-game regular seasons.  And aside  from Kevin Garnett’s shortened season in 2009 and Andrew Bynum’s ongoing injury concerns, no significant core player on these teams sustained any serious injury over that timeframe.  At some point, that many miles over that short a period of time had to add up right?  And this year, we saw that: the Lakers completely disintegrated during Dallas’ 4-game pasting in the 2nd round, and Garnett clearly was not the same guy in games 4 and 5 against Miami after being the best player on the floor in Game 3.  The older you get, the less able you are to recover quickly from the punishment of NBA games and seasons.

At ages 29, 26, and 27, Dwayne Wade, LeBron James, and Chris Bosh may not seem all that old.  But the mileage on Wade is incredible, given the amount of responsibility he’s given his Heat team for 8 years, and the punishment he takes given his aggressive style of crashing into the lane and absorbing contact.  James is a much older than 26 from a basketball-prime standpoint, given that he came straight out of high school and has played 82-game seasons for 8 seasons, plus several deep playoff runs.

So now to the point I’ve taken so long to make: without an additional upper-tier role player or 2, it stands to reason that Miami’s stars will wear down earlier than they should, and will never reach the lofty potential they believed they would achieve at this event, nor match the expectations of the less-than-endearing public.

Enter Norris Cole.

Cole has a very low profile, given that he played his college ball at Cleveland State in the Horizon League (also the home of Butler), and not at one of the nation’s bluebloods.  But this kid can flat ball: 4-year starter, averaged 21.7 ppg, 5.8 rpg, 5.3 apg, 44 FG%, and 85.3 FT% in his senior year.  He’ll definitely be a rotation guy at the next level, and may step into the starter point guard spot in a year or two.  I like his game a lot, and he’s the type of player that can lighten the load on the Big 3 (or Unholy Trinity, which is my favorite nickname for the Wade/James/Bosh triumvirate).  And with an inexpensive rookie deal, Miami will have him under control cheaply for at least 3 years.

Miami still needs another big and a wing that can shoot (Mike Miller and James Jones could still fill those roles, but need to stay healthy), but Cole is an excellent step in the right direction, and is a steal at the #28 pick.

Runners-up: PG Nolan Smith, #21 to Portland; PF Kenneth Faried, #22 to Denver

Biggest Head-Scratcher: PG Brandon Knight, #8 to Detroit


Could be a great pick, but I'm still a little confused.


By all accounts, Knight is a great kid.  He was a model student at Kentucky, and is clearly skilled enough to be an NBA guard that he was drafted in the top 10 despite having just one collegiate season.

But he’s a combo guard, lacking the pass-first skills needed to be a true point guard, yet not having the size or shooting acumen to be an elite off-guard either.  And besides, don’t the Pistons still have Rodney Stuckey to play this position (whom they traded Chauncey Billups in 2009 to make room for)?  Desperate for size last year, they failed to find a suitable trade to move up to get PF DeMarcus Cousins and settled for the less-skilled Greg Monroe.  This year they sought size again, but with Bismack Biyombo and Tristan Thompson off the board, they settled for who was their best player on the board.  I don’t like to argue with this strategy in general, but given that Stuckey is still on the roster, and given all the moves that were made to accommodate him, this move is questionable at best.  And given the tragic fall from grace of GM Joe Dumars (59 wins just 3 years ago to an average of 32 the last 3 seasons, the epically awful Billups-for-Allen-Iverson swap, the combined $93 million given to Ben Gordon and Charlie Villanueva, the John Kuester debacle from last season), it’s hard to give this team the benefit of the doubt.

Second-Biggest Head-Scratcher: SG Klay Thompson, #11 to Golden State

New coach Mark Jackson preaches defense. Hard to see how Thompson fits than plan.


Warriors brass have spent the last 2 years telling us G’s Monta Ellis and Stephen Curry can be a successful backcourt duo, that they can play off one another, no problem.  Clearly that theory must be out the window.  Thompson brings a similar skill set to the table (skilled athlete, great shooter), which will likely force one of the two young guards out of town.  And given that Ellis has been mentioned in rumors galore this offseason, it’s not difficult to see the writing on the wall.  One possible scenario: Ellis to the Timberwolves for a package surrounding the #2 pick, Derrick Williams.  As much as the Warriors are stacked with great shooting guards who can’t defend, the Wolves are stacked with small forwards (even more so than they are point guards, contrary to popular belief), and have nothing at the 2-guard position.  Now if only the lockout weren’t going to kill the 2011-12 season, we might actually be able to talk about this.  Sigh.

Timberwolves analysis

As much as I like Derrick, I liked Kanter more.


Once again, I’m totally and utterly befuddled by anything David Kahn does (drafting point guards with consecutive top-6 picks in a single draft, not announce a coach’s firing until the day after the draft even though it is painfully obvious that the coach is not coming back, etc.), and the 2011 draft was no exception.  After fielding countless offers for the #2 pick but finding nothing worthwhile (which is a nice way of saying he offered his trash for another GM’s treasure, who probably countered with “either you put Love in this deal or we’re hanging up”), the Wolves went ahead and took the most NBA-ready player in the draft in PF Derrick Williams.  Unfortunately, there are several problems with this pick: the team already has an All-Star at power forward (Kevin Love), and a ridiculous amount of small forwards (Wesley Johnson, Michael Beasley, and Anthony Randolph).  As soon as the pick was made, I announced on Facebook that Williams would be traded by the end of the night, as the Wolves have plenty of other needs (center chief among them), and Williams’ value was far higher than anyone else’s on the roster (aside from Love).  I was personally advocating for Enes Kanter, who is easily the best Euro in the draft and along with Kevin Love would have made rebounding against the Wolves a fool’s errand.  Look, I really like Derrick, and I think in the right situation he could be a borderline All-Star.  But that situation is not in Minnesota.  Kanter should have been the pick.  Sadly, my pleas fell on deaf ears.

More ridiculousness ensued later on, as I anxiously awaited the #20 pick.  And of course, Kahn and his legion of well-respected international scouts (no really, they actually are well-respected) decided on Donatas Motiejunas, the token toolsy yet soft-as-a-pillow European who looks great working out against chairs in an empty gym but won’t cut it on a floor with other actual basketball players who are, you know, tough and physical NBA players.

My sorrow was mediated for a short while, as I heard the pick had been flipped along with 2009 draft bust Jonny Flynn in a 3-way deal that netted a 2013 1st-round pick, and Norris Cole, whom the Bulls had selected with the #28 pick (and Brad Miller too, but that’s really not exciting, since Miller stopped being good 5 years ago).  As mentioned above, I really like Cole and believe he’ll be a quality scorer off the bench in the league for a long time.  But of course, just like with Mario Chalmers 3 years ago, the Wolves dealt him too, for some Euro named Bojan Bogdanovic (who has buyout issues and likely won’t arrive here for at least another year or 2) and a future 2nd-rounder or cash considerations (and then he was traded for a future 2nd-round pick and more cash).

I can’t figure out which strategy Kahn is trying to employ.  Is it the Danny Ainge/Pat Riley ideal of gathering assets and flipping them for an established corps of veterans (like Ainge with KG and Ray Allen, and Riley with Shaq)?  Or is he from the R.C. Buford/Sam Presti school of nailing draft picks and building from within while not signing any average player to an extravagant, Dumars-like contract?  I tend to lean more toward the former, since Kahn’s track record of drafting hasn’t been stellar so far (*cough* Flynn *cough*).  And it’s not like this team has 2 top-15 players on it like Oklahoma City does, or even has a player that projects to reach that level.  But when he’s going to get a deal he likes and pull the trigger?  Or are other GMs so wary of his game of leaking everything to the media that they simply want nothing to do with him?  Whatever the case, given the youth of this team (the team was the 2nd-youngest in the league last year), youngsters have to be moved for veterans for this team to increase its’ moribund win totals from the 15- and 17-win levels from the past 2 seasons (and especially given the fact that the LA Clippers own the Wolves’ 2012 1st-round selection thanks to the Sam Cassell trade from 7 years ago that hasn’t been completed yet.  And you think I’m kidding.).  And no, Brad Miller is not enough.


Jordan Williams analysis

Sigh.

Well, you got your wish, big fella.  Sort of.  After quitting on his teammates by quitting school, Williams was an NBA draft pick, though he predictably fell to the second round, even in a ridiculously watered-down draft that was poor to begin with and made worse by several underclassmen electing to stay in school rather than not play during next season’s lockout.  Instead, Williams gets to rot, without any money (2nd-round picks don’t get guaranteed contracts), and not improve his game in any real tangible way (unless he pulls a Christian Ponder and organizes workouts himself, not likely).  Williams is light on his feet, has a nice touch around the basket, is a decent rebounder… and that’s it for positives.  Negatives: he’s generously listed at 6’10” (I believe he’s closer to 6’8”), which will severely limit his ability to be effective in amongst the trees he will face at the NBA level; while he was in much better shape as a sophomore than he was during his freshman campaign, he’s a barely average NBA athlete; he can’t shoot outside of 5 feet; he’s slow; and he was a poor defender in college (which won’t exactly get better at the next level).  Now he goes to New Jersey, where he’ll battle for a roster spot against overpaid journeymen bigs Dan Gadzuric, Johan Petro, and Brandan Wright for the right to back up Brook Lopez and Kris Humphries.

Look, I’m not going to say he’s definitely going to be a bust and be out of the league without a whimper in 2 years.  But isn’t the smart money on that scenario?  It’s such a shame too; with at least one more year if not two of development at Maryland, perhaps Williams could have led the Terps deep into March with an improved game (and better teammates).  With that would have come the recognition and publicity worthy of a 1st-round pick, and it would have been deserved, since he likely would have a much-improved game (I’d like to see him add a reliable jump shot and improve defensively, in moving without the ball, and in passing out of double teams).  Instead he chose the easy way out, to cut corners with false promises of NBA glory.  Good luck, Jordan; you’re gonna need it.

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Minnesota Twins Week 11: The Turnaround

This is the 7th edition of my weekly take on the week in review for the Minnesota Twins.

Note: all images obtained from a Google image search at google.com

Note: statistics obtained from ESPN, Fangraphs, Baseball Reference, and the Minnesota Twins page at MLB.com.

Record: 26-39

  • The turnaround
It's about time these two man the middle infield again. Except this time, they're switching spots.
Going into play on June 2, the Twins held pathetic 17-37 record, 16.5 games out of 1st place in the AL Central division, 12 games out in the wild card race, and an astounding 7.5 games behind the next worst team in the American League.  The team was so dreadful that the Star Tribune put together a 4-part series
that detailed just how dreadful the team was.


Coincidentally, the damning piece triggered a sudden run of success, as the Twins went to Kansas City and swept all 4 games, nearly won all 3 in Cleveland (settled for 2), and blew away the defending AL champion Texas Rangers in 3 of 4 games.  The team has turned around so dramatically that even Jim Souhan believes the Twins have a chance (and trust me, that’s saying something).  How have they done it?  I’m really not quite sure.  And that brings me to my next point…

  • This many injuries just isn’t fair
Just one of many afflictions to befall the Twins this season.

This Star Tribune column detailed all the injury updates to the Twins’ injured players, but the player Twins fans have been clamoring for all season is finally within about a week of returning.  Former AL MVP Joe Mauer appears to be less than a week away from returning, and not a moment too soon.  The gap from Mauer to backups Rene Rivera (.193 BA, .590 OPS this season) and Drew Butera (.174 BA, .468 OPS) is arguably the biggest in the entire league, and has played a huge role in the Twins’ struggles this season.  I know it doesn’t seem that way, given Mauer’s weak performance from earlier in the year (9 games, .235 BA, .554 OPS, 1 extra-base hit).  But wasn’t it obvious that it was hurt?  Assuming good health (always a tough assumption with Mauer) and a pro-rated year (100 games) of production somewhere between Mauer’s 2009 MVP campaign (138 games, .365 BA, 1.031 OPS, 28 HRs, 96 RBI, 191 hits, 30 doubles) and pedestrian first year at Target Field (137 games, .327 BA, .871 OPS, 9 HRs, 75 RBI, 167 hits, 43 doubles) and a little more weight towards the 2010 season (2/3 vs. 1/3), his estimated line of production is this: 85 games (since I’m assuming he’ll be given plenty of rest), .338 BA, .924 OPS, 10 HRs, 51 RBI, 108 hits, 23 doubles.   Not bad for half a season, right?  And it’s certainly much better than the murderer’s row combo of Rivera and Butera would provide.

It’s not only Mauer who is due to return, but a whole host of players with good prognoses for their returns (with the possible exception of Joe Nathan, who probably still is several weeks away as he recovers from elbow soreness and searches for the command that made him so devastating at his peak).  The Twins are missing an astounding five opening-day starters (Denard Span, Tsuyoshi Nishioka, Mauer, Justin Morneau, Jason Kubel) as well as a 593-home run man Jim Thome.  It’s about time some or all of these guys return so the team is actually close to whole again, and so that they can more properly resemble the 94-win team of 2010 and more ably defend their AL Central title.

How this team is winning games is incredible.  Did you see the team Ron Gardenhire was running out there during the club’s latter 2 wins over Texas?  The team’s #5 hitters for those two games were Rene Tosoni and Luke Hughes!  Unbelievable.  Minnesota was running replacement-level players onto the field in their 5-9 spots in the batting order!  Among that group, only Danny Valencia is a player that should be playing every day, and he’s been mired in a season-long slump, batting just .218/.282/.329 (although his power production isn’t far off last year’s pace, as his 5 homers and 27 RBI through 64 games compare favorably to last year’s 7 homers and 40 RBI over 85 games in which he finished 3rd in AL Rookie of the Year balloting).

Somehow, the Twins have gotten a hot streak, and it should look no farther than its jitterbug Dominican middle infielder for one explanation why…

  • The curious case of Alexi Casilla

Keep that head on straight, son.

SS/2B Alexi Casilla has had a very peculiar career arc to say the least.  Acquired in a non-descript trade in December of 2005 for lefty reliever J.C. Romero, Casilla had a breakout 2008 campaign, becoming the everyday 2nd baseman and wielding a reliable bat in the #2 spot in the order (.281/.333/.374, 7 HRs, 50 RBI, 15 doubles, 108 hits in 98 games).

But somewhere along the way, Casilla’s mind wandered.  He has always been terribly inconsistent in the field, showing flashes of brilliance while also blowing much easier plays.  Even common-sense plays second basemen always make, such as covering the bag on a ground ball, escaped the immature Casilla.  Gaffes such as these don’t always make it in the box score, but when the second baseman is late covering the bag on a double play attempt, runners are often safe at first, giving the opponent extra outs and scoring opportunities, while taxing the pitching staff.  These mental mistakes plagued Casilla for much of the last two seasons, as he played just 149 games total over the 2009 and 2010 seasons.  Still, in a cost-cutting move and to increase the team’s speed, the Twins traded SS J.J. Hardy (earning $5.85 million in 2011) to Baltimore in the offseason, while signing Japanese infielder Tsuyoshi Nishioka to play 2nd base and installing Casilla (making just $875,000 this season) as the everyday shortstop.

The move flopped initially, with neither player hitting, Casilla’s mental blunders mounting at shortstop, and Nishioka’s unfortunate sustaining of a broken leg in an April 7 game at New York.  Casilla slumped to a meager .175/.230/.250 hitting line with just 14 hits, 2 doubles, 3 RBI, and 5 walks in 88 plate appearances over 28 games.

And then the light switch flipped on.

Beginning with the May 15th loss vs. Toronto, Casilla has gone on a hitting tear.  In 27 games, Casilla has compiled 32 hits, 7 of them of the extra-base variety (6 doubles, 1 triple), 9 RBI and 10 walks while hitting .337/.402/.421.  He’s nearly doubled his production across the board of the same time frame, and has become the everyday #2 hitter.  With Nishioka due back this week, it is expected that Casilla return to his more natural second base position on a full-time basis, while Nishi becomes the everyday shortstop, at which he played the majority of his career in Japan.

But Casilla’s turnaround hasn’t been the only buoy the Twins have relied upon during the win streak…

  • Ben Revere’s ride
Keep this kid in the lineup, skip.

So what has a direct correlation with the Twins 9-2 outburst of success?  That would be the June 2 call to the majors given to OF Ben Revere, the 5-foot-9-inch mighty mite who won not one but TWO minor league player of the year awards in the Twins organization.  Just as I prophesized in an earlier column, Revere has been the breath of fresh air the big-league club has needed, infusing electric speed and an affable smile to the field and in the clubhouse.  Splitting time at all 3 outfield positions while Span is on the shelf with concussion symptoms, Revere has started all 11 games since his call-up, putting together a .292./.333/.313 hitting line with 14 hits while driving in 4 runs, scoring 9 more, taking 3 walks, stealing 3 bases, and striking out just 6 times.  He has been a tremendous spark at the top of the lineup (9 consecutive leadoff starts, and counting), and has likely caused an internal debate about his long-term future with the organization against that of Span.  If anything, Revere has forced his way onto the big-league club for sure, as he surely fits the team’s request for more speed that was instituted in the offseason.  Even if he returns to part-time duty and an occasional outfield start while hitting at the bottom of the order, he has played an instrumental role in the Twins’ resurgence, and should play a part of any run this team hopes to have over the 2011 seasons’ final 100 games.

  • Justin Morneau’s injury curse
Stay healthy, big fella. We need ya.

Alas, one would be remiss to not speak of rugged yet wounded Canadian 1B Justin Morneau, who simply cannot avoid an injury if his life depended on it.  Interestingly, the concussion he sustained last July that prevent him from playing the entire 2nd half of the 2010 season has been pushed the background, yet a myriad of maladies continues to afflict him (pinched nerve in neck resulting in shoulder weakness, a sore right wrist that kept him out of the last 3 games, etc.).  Unfortunately, Twins fans, these injuries will only go away with rest, and Morneau is as stubborn as they come when it comes to the rest vs. playing debate.  Morneau knows how much his team needs him to compete, and it eats away at him every time he has to sit a game.  He is likely to return to the lineup Tuesday against Chicago, since the wrist injury proved not to be serious enough for him to be placed on the Disabled List.  But Morneau is hitting just .225/.281/.338 this season with 4 homers, 12 doubles, and 21 RBI in 55 games; is this the Morneau we’ll get the rest of the season?

  • Looking ahead
Before interleague play hits full force, our old friend A.J. takes his talents to Target Field.

After playing an astonishing 40 of their first 61 games of the 2011 season away from Target Field (a cruel twist of fate given the team’s underperformance and ravaging by injuries), Minnesota is in the midst of a 10-game homestand that leads into interleague, which the Twins have dominated since its inception in 1997 (a 140-106 record, good for a .569 winning percentage that ranks 2nd in all of MLB).   After a 3-game set with the rival White Sox, Minnesota plays 15 consecutive games against the National League (3 home vs. San Diego, 6 away at San Francisco and Milwaukee, 6 home vs. Los Angeles and Milwaukee).  In 2006, the Twins used Interleague play as a springboard toward a 71-33 record over the final 2/3 of the season that saw the team overcome an 11-game deficit and steal the AL Central division from Detroit on the season’s final day.  In 2011, the Twins were 16.5 games behind division-leading Cleveland; on June 14, they sit just 9.5 back.  This team, this organization, simply has too much pride to go away quietly.  And with a heavily-stacked home schedule in front of them, a heavy AL-East slate behind them, and the knowledge that 6 regulars will be back on the roster in the coming weeks, there is hope for Minnesota in 2011.  Maybe not a lot of hope, but a little hope nonetheless.

And in baseball, anything can happen.