
jvflail
Apr 23, 2008 Nov 23, 2009 7 104
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If not Blake Griffin, Why Not...
Sorry if this is premature (or been covered elsewhere), but talking about the current season is too painful.
If the sky falls and we get the 5th overall pick, what do people think about Dejuan Blair (assuming he comes out early and we can fit him under the luxury tax)?
Projections have him going in the late-lottery/mid-first round, but I'd have no problem if the Wiz take him higher. Sure he's short (6-7 in high-heels), but he's a chiseled 265 lbs. Ignoring Etan Thomas, there's no one on our roster even close to his strength. Actually, there's no one on our roster you can consider strong at all(Think about it: our "strongest" player, Brendan Haywood, barely outweighs Lebron James, never mind the Shaqs, Dwight Howards, and Carlos Boozers out there). Plus, Blair's got a freakish 7-3 wingspan, he rebounds like his life depends on it, and apparently has a work ethic engine that won't turn off. He's a burlier, less-refined Elton Brand. Sure, his shot needs work, but he runs the floor well and will get tons of put-backs.
After watching Jamison get constantly out-muscled on defense, Darius Songaila's awful rebounding, and Blatche's consistent softness all year long, there should be no argument Blair's skills are tailor-made to improve our crappy team.
p.s. If we draft Thabeet, I'm canceling my DirecTV NBA package and downgrading my fandom to passive. How many unskilled string beans do you need on one team?
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Mid-Season Grades
41 games down. It feels like 410. The following grades are based on a very scientific process which is too complicated to explain.
Antonio Daniels: He gets a D minus. Not only does he look older and slower, but he also seems to infect the PGs he's supposed to back up with the injury bug.
Mike James: He gets a D. Yes, he was brought into a bad situation, but that's no excuse for missing as many open shots as he has. A "scoring" guard who can't make open shots = worthless. The only thing saving him from an F is his soon-to-be-expiring contract.
Javaris Crittendon: I'm gonna give him a C minus. In many ways, he reminds me of a younger AD. He can't shoot worth a lick, but he's athletic, plays tough D, and has pretty good vision. I wouldn't mind him being my back up PG for the next few years.
Gilbert Arenas: He gets an A (A in this case stands for Anfrenee Hardaway).
Deshawn Stevenson: He gets an F plus. I don't want to beat the guy up, but I don't remember a player having a worse half-a-season. He gets the plus because he has a good attitude and he hates Lebron.
Nick Young: I'll give him a C plus. His productive streaks have been extremely productive. His disappearing acts have been Houdini-like. But the more he plays, the more comfortable he looks. Over the next 41, I'd like him to realize how important he is to our success and for him to play with more fire.
Caron Butler: B plus. I'd like to give him an A, but he's had a lot of unforced turnovers this year. Many of them have come during crunch time. I know he's had to press and that he's playing with some bad teammates, but he needed to find some way to pull out a few more of those last-minute in-the-balance games. That being said, his shot over Granger was 100% nasty.
Dominic McGuire: C plus. I love the rebounding and the defense, but the thing that impresses me the most is his nonchalance about the box-score stats. On a team with 3 bonafide scorers (AJ, GA, and CB) and a competent center (BH), his role would be perfect. Unfortuantely, we're dealing with reality and his offensive limitations are still glaring.
Oleksy Pecherov: F. A few shots here and there mean nothing. He either needs to starting hitting his 3-ball with regularity or stop taking them altogether. What's worse is that he's a non-factor in all other facets...except jokes.
Antawn Jamison: A minus. Unlike Caron, I do not hold AJ accountable for games decided in the 4Q. He proved to me a long time ago that he's a 1Q-3Q player. That being said, he's having a great year stats-wise, but more importantly, he has not been shy about calling people out. Sure, he sounds whiney sometimes, but this team needs more fire, not less.
Andray Blatche: C plus. He didn't make the big leap necessary for us to go anywhere this year, but he also didn't fall on his face. As poorly as he played under EJ, he was playing just as well (if not better) just before his injury. If this team ever gets healthy and his role turns into something he can manage, Blatche could really thrive.
Javale McGee: a rock-solid B. Since I was expecting nothing, his contributions have been all the better. His good plays are so spectacular that they more than make up for his constant mistakes. If there is a greater power in this universe, it has to make up for the agony of this franchise by letting Javale turn into the monster he's shown flashes of being.
Etan Thomas: His expiring contract gets an A plus.
Brendan Haywood: Incomplete. There's no way he makes such a difference, is there?
Eddie Jordan: F. He tried to win with offense using no legit center, pg, or sg. His inattention to defense bordered on criminal.
Ed Tapscott: F. He's tried to win with defense using no legit center, sf, or pg. His inattention to Javale McGee has bordered on criminal.
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The WENDYs (Wizards END of Year awards)
Just thought I'd throw these out there. I'm still too emotional after yesterday's loss to post something intelligent.
Most Valuable Player: This is tough. I go w/ Caron, because his best was better than Antawn's best. When Caron rolled this year, we won. When Jamison rolled, we won sometimes. As the Cleveland series indicated, we were at our most dangerous when Caron was at his.
Least Valuable Player: Gilbert Arenas. Has there ever been such a soap opera-ish knee injury? It's pretty clear now that "the face of the franchise" hurt much more than he helped this year. Hopefully, he can get healthy and come back for a strong 08/09, but his 07/08 campaign was all anticipation and no impact.
Most Improved: I'm giving this one to Haywood over Blatche and Stevenson. Brendan really impressed me several times this year, including during the Cleveland series. His free throws, his back-to-the-basket game, and his pass-receiving were all much improved over last year. Blatche improved too, but he was much more of a roller-coaster ride. Stevenson had some great moments and he hit more 3s this year than all his other years combined, but his maturity and shot selection still need serious work.
The OOBA (Out-Of-the Blue Award): Roger Mason started this year as the 12th guy on a 12-man team. He ended the year being our 1st guard off the bench. He was downright deadly on some nights and he caught the attention of the league (Lebron James in particular). Wiz fans should have really enjoyed Roger this year, 'cause he'll be wearing a new uniform, and sporting a $20-$30 million contract, somewhere else next year.
The Rookie of the Year: Since we only had 3, there is little suspense in this one, but its winner, Nick Young, is now put on notice. He had some nice rookie moments, but he needs to improve his defense so he can challenge Stevenson for the starting 2-guard spot. If he does (and I'm not sure how, by the way), our team will become instantly more explosive, athletic, and aggressive. Right now, however, his defensive liability outweighs his offensive potential.
The Welcome Back Award: Etan Thomas. At the beginning of the year, I said I could not endure another season with the Wiz's two-headed debacle of a center combo. Now, I don't see how we can succeed without it. The Cleveland series made it painfully obvious how much we need size and strength on the floor at all times. It's too much to ask of Haywood to be physical all 48 minutes and to stay out of foul trouble. Hopefully, this year has made them both realize their role (Haywood the starter and Thomas the back-up), and they can work together next year to give us good stability at the 5-spot.
The Funny but Useless Award: Pecherov. I know it was just his first year and that the team loves him, but Olesky needs to figure out what he's doing. Has any 7-footer ever spent more time behind the 3-point line? He may be able to make some outside shots, but he too often looked too soft and too afraid of contact. If he doesn't improve, he may go down the Jiri Welsch highway to ignominy.
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May Madness?
The notebook article in today's Post talked about the call for NBA playoff realignment and The Don's typical curt, condescending response to change. In a nutshell, the NBA commish said that other leagues don't realign when .500 clubs make the playoffs in their sports, so the NBA won't either. Don't you hate it when arrogant people make good points? For the record, I agree with him. Even if it isn't fair this year (see below), you can't tinker with your playoff format every year to fit the standings.
Whether you want realignment or not, all this talk got me thinking about what would happen if the NBA set up an NCAA tournament-style playoff format where the teams with the top 16 winning percentages squared off. If these playoffs started tomorrow, this would be the first round...
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Ridiculously Premature Playoff Speculation
Come April, we may not be able to speculate at all. So here's my rundown of the Wiz's chances if the playoffs started tomorrow.
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Roger Mason's Time to Shine
I had intended this post to ask what free agent pgs are available, but then I found the Washington Post blurb written the other day about the roster being "set" despite Gilbert's injury. Since Abe's stingy salary cap stance won't let us go fish for a free agent, it appears now that our back-up PG is none other than Roger Mason Jr.
3 months is a long time to go with Antonio "the human spill" Daniels manning the point. I love the guy, but he falls harder than a parachute-less sky diver every time he drives the lane. If he gets hurt (knock on wood), or even tired, Roger's the only guy with a PG next to his name in the Wizard's media guide.
Now, we've all watched him for 2 years at least, and I think it's pretty safe to call his pg skills suspect. He does a lot of spot-up shooting, I can count on one hand the number of times he's driven the lane, and his defense won't make anyone forget Gary Payton.
This leads me to think about the decision the braintrust made in training camp to go with Roger over Donnell Taylor. Roger's shot is undoubtedly better, but I liked Donnell's handle, athleticism, and defense much better. At the time the decision was made, I didn't think it was a big deal seeming how it was the last spot on the roster. Now, we're an AD sprained ankle away from the Roger Mason show and that makes me nervous.
So, now that it's relevant, does anyone agree that we should have kept Donnell? Were there $$ implications I'm unaware of? Could the Wiz have brought in anyone, during training camp or at any other time, who might have helped more?
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The Panic Button
The poll on the main page surprised me. I thought more people would be panicking. Maybe I've had too much coffee today. Maybe my knees are knocking a bit too easily. And maybe, just maybe, I shouldn't be panicking after just 3 games. But listen to me Wiz fans: the writing's on the wall and the words aren't pretty. This 07-08 team is in a bad way from the get-go, and there's no cavalry riding to the rescue.
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