Showing posts with label NBA Summer League. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NBA Summer League. Show all posts

Sunday, September 16, 2012

NBA News 2012: Is Rookie Michael Kidd-Gilchrist Healthy?

Michael GilchristMichael Gilchrist (Photo credit: Wikipedia)Many of you have expressed curiosity about Charlotte Bobcats rookie Michael Kidd-Gilchrist’s health, after he sat out all but one summer-league game in Las Vegas with a sore knee.

If Saturday is any indication, he’s just fine.

After initially indicating he would not play in Kentucky’s charity game (it’s still unclear why he said that to Kentucky media), Kidd-Gilchrist was pretty impressive Saturday: 32 points on 15-of-32 shooting from the field.

http://www.hoopsworld.com/is-rookie-michael-kidd-gilchrist-healthy/
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Friday, July 27, 2012

NBA News 2012: Blazers’ Lillard draws raves

Trail Blazers logo since the 2002–03 seasonTrail Blazers logo since the 2002–03 season (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
The Portland Trail Blazers have made a plethora of moves since Neil Olshey took over as general manager on June 5, none more important than taking Damian Lillard with the sixth pick in the draft.

Lillard, a 6-3, 195-pound point guard out of Weber State, stole the show at the Las Vegas Summer League with his sterling play, averaging 26.5 points and sharing league most valuable player honors with Memphis guard Josh Selby. Lillard is expected to step right in and start for the Blazers next season.

Portland has had summer league MVPs before. Qyntell Woods and Jerryd Bayless come to mind, and neither panned out with the Blazers. But Lillard is close to a can’t-miss prospect, according to those around the league.

“Lillard is going to be terrific,” Cleveland coach Byron Scott said.

“He has a very bright future ahead of him,” Miami coach Erik Spoelstra said. “He has a chance to be special.”

“He plays the pro game — great speed, no hurry, knows how to play,” Boston coach Doc Rivers said. “He can shoot the ball, he can score when he wants to, but he also knows how to run a team. That’s nice.”

http://www.hoopsworld.com/blazers-lillard-draws-raves-for-summer-league-play

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Sunday, September 12, 2010

NBA News 2010: Devin Ebanks Setting The Bar High

Devin EbanksImage by jgrove via Flickr
Devin Ebanks wasn't supposed to be a second round pick. Three years ago, he was one of the top high school players in the nation and looked like a future lottery pick. He was putting up impressive numbers, dominating national tournaments and camps, and being recruited by the top college programs in the country.

So how did the Los Angeles Lakers land Ebanks with the forty-third pick in this year's draft? After two solid seasons at West Virginia, the twenty-year old forward was overlooked in a class that was loaded with wing players. Despite being one of the better athletes in the group and possessing the kind of potential not usually found in a second round selection, Ebanks sat in front of his television and watched as other players came off of the board in front of him. 

He's happy to be in the league, but he's not ready to forget what happened on draft night. Going into the Las Vegas Summer League, Ebanks – along with fellow Lakers rookie Derrick Caracter – felt this was the perfect environment to show teams what they missed out on. Both were, at one time, projected to be top picks and had slipped into the second round. 

"We both had chips on our shoulders because we felt like we should have went higher and our chemistry is great," Ebanks said. "I actually played with D.C. when I was younger, back in high school, so we knew each other's styles a little bit. It turned out to help us a lot in Vegas."

Throughout the week and a half, Ebanks and Caracter put on a clinic, averaging a combined 30.4 points and emerging as two of the best rookies in Vegas. That wasn't a surprise to Ebanks.

Even if he doesn't play big minutes during his rookie campaign, the young forward knows that he'll have plenty of opportunities to develop and learn from the veterans ahead of him on the depth chart.

"I spoke to Lamar when I first got to Los Angeles to practice for the Summer League. When I signed my contract, I spoke to Ron Artest when he was out there. Both of them were excited for me to get out there and hopefully I can just learn behind them because they have great NBA experience," he said.

Odom and Artest will definitely take Ebanks, a fellow Queens native, under their wings next season. But even with the "say Queensbridge" connection, Ebanks has already started to give fans in Los Angeles flashbacks to a different forward that used to wear purple and gold.

After finishing the Pre-Draft Camp in Chicago, the Trevor Ariza comparisons started. The two had almost the exact same measurements in almost every category. Height, weight, vertical leap, standing reach, lane agility drills, and the ¾ court sprint; you name it and the two forwards had eerily similar numbers. With his perimeter defense and athleticism, Ebanks says that Lakers fans have made him well aware of the similarities. 

"I've heard that a lot," said Ebanks. "We definitely do have a lot of similarities in our games, but we're two different players and I'm just going to try to play the way I usually play."


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Wednesday, September 8, 2010

NBA News 2010: Washington Wizards Center JaVale McGee: The Year of The Beast

JaVale McGee goes hard to the rim for a monste...Image via Wikipedia
The Washington Wizards went from being a perennial playoff team to one of the worst teams in the NBA to one of the potential surprise teams heading into the 2010-11 season.

The smart money points to John Wall being the main reason for the positive outlook, but third-year center JaVale McGee may just open some eyes come October.

But has he done enough to become the inside presence the Wizards have lacked for so many years?

A first-round selection in 2008, McGee was a relatively unknown prospect from the University of Nevada-Reno. He was lanky and his game was unpolished, but he had the kind of athleticism that had to be harnessed in some way shape or form. He has played sparingly through his first two season, playing behind Brendan Haywood and coming off the bench when struck by inconsistency, but McGee has shown improvement each year.

He showed even more in the Wizards Vegas Summer League by growing an inch and adding some muscle to his frame. He even got a look from the U.S. National team for this year's World Championships.

While he did not make the national team and Summer League play is worlds away from the regular season in terms of competition and defense, McGee averaged 19.5 points on 69-percent shooting and nine-and-a-half rebounds in the Wizards' five games.

His length and athleticism have allowed him minor success thus far, but he will need to refine his game to be the beast he let the world that was watching the Summer League know he can be.

If there was one thing apparent in McGee's first two years, it was his excitement.

After a monster dunk or big block, he would storm down the court like he had just beaten the world. Passion is great, but sometimes his would get the better of him and it would lead to a bad play on the other end of the floor.

Based on his physique, athleticism, and positioning, it is no stretch of the imagination to envision McGee as Dwight Howard 2.0. Howard was a defensive player and a rebounder, first and foremost, before developing his offense around the basket. McGee wasn't expected to be a centerpiece, and hasn't had that type of focus in his training.

Superstars are rarely born overnight, and they rarely last for decades afterward. McGee has a nose for the rim, whether off of pick-and-roll situations, following shots, or just running the floor. With Wall and Arenas as starting guards for Washington, running the floor will be the norm for McGee and the Wizards. In tandem with the finesse style of post-mate Andray Blatche, McGee has the opportunity to get a lot of offensive put backs.

He is a bit behind in terms of coming into his own, but only because of the turmoil around him and his asthma. Rest assured, resting beneath the lanky, baby-faced exterior is a double-double machine waiting for the season opener to start churning out the stats and stuffing the box score.

Wall may get the headlines and press coverage, but this is the year of JaVale McGee.


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Tuesday, September 7, 2010

NBA News 2010: Which Rookie Will Make the Biggest Impact in 2010-11?

Blake Griffin, basketball player for the Oklah...Image via Wikipedia
The obvious pick for Rookie of the Year at this point would be John Wall, the No. 1 overall pick of the Washington Wizards, who already started drawing rave reviews after NBA Summer League.  

Standing in his way will be Blake Griffin, the No. 1 pick from 2009 who gets re-classified as a rookie after missing all of last season with a broken kneecap; DeMarcus Cousins, the No. 5 pick from this season and his former teammate from Kentucky; and Evan Turner, the No. 2 pick of the Philadelphia 76ers, among others. Needless to say, if Wall's dreaming of being the third straight point guard ROY, he's got his work cut out for him.


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