NBA offseason 2016-2017...NBA offseason best in sports....This offseason is lit to the 3rd degree!!

In comparison to the guards picked before him, he's the shortest of the group.
The concern was his peremeter game was not strong enough to offset his short wing span and dwfensive issues. Similar to the concerns with Monk, thought was hes a man without a position and more of a 2g which at 6-2 hes theoretically too small to play
 
The concern was his peremeter game was not strong enough to offset his short wing span and dwfensive issues. Similar to the concerns with Monk, thought was hes a man without a position and more of a 2g which at 6-2 hes theoretically too small to play

He'll be fine at 1. Smith really was on a shitty team in NC. Monk has to bulk up to guard two's. I know Charlotte is looking to pair him with Kemba like they did with Lin.
 
Height? He's the same height as Steph and Dame lillard with way more athleticism
I remember hearing that Scouts felt Dennis Smith wingspan was shorter than what they preferred. I think he had the shortest of all the guys in the top 10...so he won't block shots....oh well lol. Scouts nitpick the dumbest shit....what was wrong with Teddy Bridgewater? His knees were too small lol?
 
He'll be fine at 1. Smith really was on a shitty team in NC. Monk has to bulk up to guard two's. I know Charlotte is looking to pair him with Kemba like they did with Lin.

Yeah you watch Dennis play with actual guys who have NBA experience and he looks like a point guard out there. To be honest I think his playmaking was undersold.
 
http://www.philly.com/philly/sports...ers-have-spot-for-him-20170710.html?mobi=true

Jonah Bolden looks ready for NBA, but do Sixers have spot for him?
Updated: JULY 10, 2017 — 7:15 PM EDT

@PompeyOnSixers | kpompey@phillynews.com


LAS VEGAS – Jonah Bolden has proven that he’s capable of playing for the 76ers next season.


In summer-league games, the 36th pick in the NBA draft has shown that he’s the type of the player the Sixers covet.

Bolden has displayed the athleticism needed to contribute in the Sixers’ up-tempo style of play. Although his shooting has been inconsistent, he possesses the shooting range needed to effectively space the floor. And the 6-foot-10 forward has showcased the stellar shot-blocking and pass-deflection skills that the team craves.

He’s definitely talented enough to be a member of the 2017-18 team.

POLL
Who’ll adapt to the NBA game more quickly?
  • Markelle Fultz
  • Ben Simmons



“That’s what I wanted to show,” said Bolden, who played this past season in Serbia.

But although things could change, he’s scheduled to play with KK Crvena zvezda in Belgrade, Serbia, this coming season. The 21-year-old Australian signed a two-year contract with the professional team on June 10. If need be, Bolden won’t have a problem getting out of his contract. His buyout is for $675,000.

As good as he is, the Sixers really don’t have a spot for him night now. That’s one of the reasons he’s scheduled to play in Belgrade.

NBA rosters will expand from 15 to 17 players next season under the new collective bargaining agreement. The 16th and 17th roster spots will be two-way contracts. Two-way players will go back and forth from the NBA to the G-League, formerly the NBA Development League.

Still, it’s going to be tight.

The 15 players under contract for the Sixers next season are Markelle Fultz, J.J. Redick, Amir Johnson, Joel Embiid, Ben Simmons, Dario Saric, Timothe Luwawu-Carrabot, Jerryd Bayless, Jahlil Okafor, Justin Anderson, Furkan Korkmaz, Nik Stauskas, T.J. McConnell, Richaun Holmes, and Robert Covington.

Alex Poythress is a candidate for one of the two-way deals and Bolden could be eligible as well. However, NBA teams are allowed to bring two-way players up for a maximum of 45 days. After that, they would have to sign the players to the regular 15-man roster. In that case, the Sixers would have to release someone to make room for Bolden.

Because he is slated to stay overseas for now, that gives them roster flexibility. However, the former UCLA player has been effective in the summer leagues.

Bolden struggled from the field, making just 37.9 percent of his shots in last week’s three Utah Jazz Summer League games. However, he still averaged 10 points, 5.3 rebounds, 1.3 assists, 2.0 steals, and a league-best 2.30 blocks.

In two games in the NBA Summer League, Bolden is averaging nine points on 58.3 percent shooting. He’s also averaging seven rebounds, 1.5 assists, 1.5 steals, and one block.

The only thing that Bolden hasn’t been able to consistently do in both summer leagues is make three-pointers. He’s shooting just 31.5 percent from deep in the five games.

But the Sixers aren’t concerned. Bolden has shown that he can contribute in other ways when his shot isn’t falling.

“The beauty of his intrigue is defensively he can rim-protect,” said Sixers assistant Lloyd Pierce, who is coaching the summer-league squad in Vegas. “Defensively, he can get out in the perimeter to use his length and athleticism to be a pest on the ball.

“And offensively, his athleticism, he can finish around the rim, and we know that he can make three-point shots.”

Bolden played for FMP Belgrade last season. Showing versatility, he played both forward positions and was named the Adriatic League’s top prospect. He averaged 12.9 points and 7.2 rebounds and shot 41.9 percent on three-pointers.



I would buy out Okafor's lazy ass and sign Dude. He's definitely a player! :yes:
 
Again: "You're mostly right but I think you're reaching for reasons #2-5 and not putting #1 front and center where it should be."

I wasn't suggesting you didn't know anything.

This is from just two years ago:

Most of these moves were unremarkable. Each came with a plausible rationale: a failure to meet expectations, a clash between coach and players or coach and management, a vague call for change.

But this three-year flurry of firings, each unrelated to the next, produced an unintended cumulative effect: a dramatic decrease in black head coaches in the NBA.

By the time all vacancies had been filled this summer, there were seven—a 50 percent drop from three years ago, and the lowest total in 16 years.

"That's not enough," said Silas, who is now retired after three decades in the NBA coaching ranks. "There are more guys that understand how to coach basketball. And they should have a chance."​

THERE IS ALWAYS A PLAUSIBLE RATIONALE!

Seven out of thirty team leaders even as a possibility is unforgiveable in a league where three out of four players are black. (And even then, the number of non-black players is inflated for public relations.) The record for black coaches is less than 50% of the spots. And it is worse for other management positions.

So it's sad when "we all know" supposedly but the conversation is centered around every possible excuse rather than the dominant fact of the reality.
 
Y'all never heard of the big man bias in NBA coaching? That's why Kareem never got a shot

Some big men have gotten a shot, though they have been disproportionately (and, at times, solely) white. And, taking big men out of the picture, the majority of guards who become coaches are white while a supermajority of possible guards who could become coaches are black. So while there is an anti-big man bias, that plausible rationale can't be a sufficient explanation.

"Definitely, from our view, it's harder for a big man to become a head coach," said the Bulls' 6-foot-10 Nazr Mohammed. "The perception is, 'the big dumb guy.' I'm not saying it's true. It's a perception. 'The big, dumb, clumsy big man, how's he gonna coach?' But we've had some great ones. Dave Cowens. Paul Silas. Phil Jackson!"

Of the 20 current coaches who played in the league, only one -- Houston's Kevin McHale -- was a classic NBA big (and a Hall of Famer at that). In recent memory, Bill Cartwright, Kurt Rambis, Iavaroni and a few others have held the top job but the list still is short.

http://www.thesportsfanjournal.com/...a-teams-have-a-coaching-bias-against-big-men/

I wonder why "the big dumb guy" sticks to Patrick Ewing but not Kevin McHale. :hmm:
 
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In comparison to the guards picked before him, he's the shortest of the group.

Let's not forget how Dame was doing it when he got to the league




Jr Smith has out of this world athleticism

I think Phil's last fuck up for the road was not drafting him

New York would have loved him.

He has a chance to be a prime Baron Davis/Steve Francis

 
Jr Smith has out of this world athleticism

I think Phil's last fuck up for the road was not drafting him

New York would have loved him.

He has a chance to be a prime Baron Davis/Steve Francis



Only hesitation with Smith is the guys he's compared too production fell off a cliff when their athleticism begin to wane. He's gotta make sure that jumper is solid and fill out on his game throughout his career ala' Billups
 


Man, i'm looking forward to what Golden State puts on the floor next year.

Nick Young being one of the best catch and shooters in the league from three is an underappreciated addition. He's going to be dangerous there.
 
Steve Kerr hopes JaVale McGee will re-sign with Warriors


The Golden State Warriors have 14 players signed to NBA contracts. With one spot left to fill, head coach Steve Kerr would gladly welcome back JaVale McGee-- if the center wants to re-sign with the team.

"I would love to have JaVale back. We all want him back," Kerr told the Bay Area News Group. "But we’ll see how all that goes. He’s a free agent, he’s exploring his options. He was great for us last year, such a good teammate, high energy. But we’ll see."

McGee played for the league minimum in 2016-17 and provided solid production for Kerr in his first season with the Warriors. In 77 regular-season appearances, McGee averaged 6.1 points and 3.2 rebounds.

If McGee signs with another NBA team, the Warriors could hold open the 15th roster spot for most of the season to reduce their tax bill in 2018. The Warriors are currently about $17 million over the threshold, which calculates to a $35.29 million tax bill.

http://www.espn.com/blog/nba/rumors...hopes-javale-mcgee-will-re-sign-with-warriors




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McGee as the 15th man is insane depth. I thought he should have been more of a priority because he played an important role behind Zaza and helps in their only weakspots, where signings like Nick Young amplify strengths. That's great but McGee's importance was enough to merit more than "but we'll see," IMO, from a strategic standpoint. Nick Young will be dangerous, as I said, but he isn't bringing anything they don't already have in abundance.
 
"+27 in a game his team lost," goddamn.

The idea that their scouting is on some New England Patriots shit ought to scare the rest of this league. If they are bringing in guys who can elevate their teams into the system that's the best at elevating marginal players, that's a problem for the rest of the NBA.

The reason it works is because rookies don't have to score. they can focus on everything else first.
that stat line in a game for him during the season is absolutely PERFECT.
other rookies aren't going to have that luxury.
 
Steve Kerr hopes JaVale McGee will re-sign with Warriors


The Golden State Warriors have 14 players signed to NBA contracts. With one spot left to fill, head coach Steve Kerr would gladly welcome back JaVale McGee-- if the center wants to re-sign with the team.

"I would love to have JaVale back. We all want him back," Kerr told the Bay Area News Group. "But we’ll see how all that goes. He’s a free agent, he’s exploring his options. He was great for us last year, such a good teammate, high energy. But we’ll see."

McGee played for the league minimum in 2016-17 and provided solid production for Kerr in his first season with the Warriors. In 77 regular-season appearances, McGee averaged 6.1 points and 3.2 rebounds.

If McGee signs with another NBA team, the Warriors could hold open the 15th roster spot for most of the season to reduce their tax bill in 2018. The Warriors are currently about $17 million over the threshold, which calculates to a $35.29 million tax bill.

http://www.espn.com/blog/nba/rumors...hopes-javale-mcgee-will-re-sign-with-warriors




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McGee as the 15th man is insane depth. I thought he should have been more of a priority because he played an important role behind Zaza and helps in their only weakspots, where signings like Nick Young amplify strengths. That's great but McGee's importance was enough to merit more than "but we'll see," IMO, from a strategic standpoint. Nick Young will be dangerous, as I said, but he isn't bringing anything they don't already have in abundance.


Damian Jones.

 
McGee as the 15th man is insane depth. I thought he should have been more of a priority because he played an important role behind Zaza and helps in their only weakspots, where signings like Nick Young amplify strengths. That's great but McGee's importance was enough to merit more than "but we'll see," IMO, from a strategic standpoint. Nick Young will be dangerous, as I said, but he isn't bringing anything they don't already have in abundance.



Man that foreign dude can light it up also...they warriors probably gonna put 150 on a few folks early in the season
 
Noel is like a twig in person. Was talking shit to him at Made in America last year. Cool dude

Hope he's the next Chandler for us.....well the healthy Chandler anyway....



I get what he's about to do.....he's about to probably be their #1 or #2 scoring option....he's gonna be jacking some shots up....he's gonna be motivated in a contract year.....Lakers signed him for 1 year so it won't fuck up their money next year.....i'm shocked a contender didn't look at him but shit I guess they couldn't afford him.
 
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