HAWKSVILLE – We apologize in advance for interrupting your viewing of the NBA Finals with hypothetical questions about the Hawks, but admit it, you’ve seen enough of the Los Angeles Lakers and Orlando Magic to last all summer.
But what if Mike Bibby moves on?
And Zaza Pachulia, too?
What if Flip Murray finds a new home?
And Josh Childress stays in Greece?
What if all these hypothetical scenarios we’ve been speaking of recently go up in smoke between the draft and training camp?
What if the Hawks can’t keep their team together because of finances, dumb luck and the aggressive pursuit of their free agents by other teams?
Like most of you, I’ve (foolishly) been operating under several assumptions the past few weeks. But after speaking with several NBA players, coaches and other sources around the league over the last week, it seems we’ve all been a bit too optimistic about the chances of all these guys reuniting next season.
“Unless I’m mistaken, getting all these guys in uniform for next season will cost a whole lot more than the Hawks are used to spending,” one Eastern Conference front office man told me Monday afternoon. “Check their roster and see how many guys they spent serious money on. It’s a short list. They inherited Bibby’s big deal and now that’s gone. They signed Joe [Johnson] and Josh [Smith] to their deals. Beyond that, there wasn’t a single guy on their roster they spent mid-level money on, not one, and that says something.”
When I asked him to elaborate, he had an interesting take what we’ve watched the past few years, the last two in particular.
“They got more out of their money than a lot of other teams these last two seasons,” he said. “That’s good while it lasts. It just doesn’t last forever. Sooner or later you have to pay to win in this league. The Hawks have gotten away without paying that price the past two years. They’ve done some things that their payroll suggests they shouldn’t have. But those days are probably over, because the teams they leapfrogged in the standings the past two years are not going to stay down forever.”

There's a possibility Mike Bibby and Josh Childress have worn Hawks jerseys for the last time in their NBA careers.
That’s probably true. But maybe they just made wise decisions about how to spend. They didn’t spend the kind of money championship teams do, but you have to crawl before you walk. And the Hawks crawled for years.
One player pointed to last summer’s free agent season as proof that the Hawks didn’t exactly swing for the fences and insisted that their frugal ways will come back to haunt them eventually, perhaps as soon as this summer.
“They waited until the last minute on [Smith] and had to wait for Memphis to put something on the table to get a deal done,” he said. “They lost the other Josh to Greece and then filled the holes with role players. Let’s be real man, and I’m not disrespecting anybody but signing Randolph Morris, Othello Hunter and Thomas Gardner doesn’t translate into championship moves. That sounds more like a team worried about spending some real money. And to players, that’s the kind of franchise you don’t want to deal with when you’re a free agent.”
That’s the real question for the Hawks this summer. Are they going to spend the money required to compete at the level they’ve become accustomed to the past two years?
This summer is about dollars and sense. The Hawks have to spend their cash wisely or all the work they’ve done the past few years could disappear by Labor Day.
Keeping Bibby, if that’s what the Hawks intend to do, won’t be easy. Anyone expecting Bibby to work for anything less than the mid-level is dreaming. In a league where starting point guards are at a premium (and starters that shoot as well as Bibby command even more attention), the price usually starts at the mid-level and rises. The key in the Bibby situation will be the length of the contract. If three years works for both sides (and I can’t see why it would not), then I can see the negotiations having some legs. If not, get ready for a divorce on the grounds of irreconcilable (financial) differences.
Pachulia clearly wants to come back here. He said as much during our conversation last week. But he’s been here before, in free agent land, so he knows what a player wants doesn’t always jive with the reality of his situation. Unlike when the Hawks nabbed him from Milwaukee four years ago, teams aren’t spending as freely as they were then. Still, Pachulia was a bargain four years ago at $4 million per season. He’s a bargain at that price now if the Hawks can swing it. But with the lack of quality bigs running around the league these days, that $4 million price tag might not be enough to retain Pachulia’s services.
Murray’s destined for a substantial raise from the $1.5 million the Hawks paid him last season. You don’t put together the type of season he did without seeing a surge in interest for your services. The Hawks have the benefit of being the one team in the league willing to take a chance on him last year. But sentiment crashes into reality and loses all the time in the NBA, particularly during free agency. If the Hawks want to keep Murray, a serious raise is in order.
Childress added to a bench that includes Pachulia, Murray, Mo Evans and whatever player the Hawks could take with the 19th pick in the June draft would be a massive upgrade over what they used during a 47-win season. But three different sources I’ve spoken to in recent days insist that they don’t expect Childress to return to the NBA this summer (he has until July 15 to opt out of his Greek contract or remain there for another season). The dynamics of his situation in the NBA haven’t changed from last summer. He’s still a restricted free agent and would be subject to dealing with a Hawks organization that couldn’t get a deal done with him last summer. So it was a serious miscalculation of mine to blindly assume he’d bolt Europe for the comfort of the states.
“I don’t know why he would come back,” a Western Conference scout told me. “There’s so much uncertainty in the league this summer. Teams are holding back because of the economy and plotting for the summer of 2010. Plus, he’s still bound by restricted free agency, which means he can’t really come back and shop around for the best situation. If the Hawks didn’t get a deal done with him last summer I don’t see any way they get one done now. No way.”

Two years into his NBA career no one is sure if Acie Law IV is the answer at point guard for the Hawks.
With Childress subtracted from the potential mix, that leaves the Hawks with gaping holes on the roster heading into the draft and free agency. And from all the conversations I’ve had, the Hawks are torn between using the 19th pick and Speedy Claxton’s contract (along with other potential considerations) to grab an established point guard or gambling that the player they deem worthy will still be available at 19.
Another split, from what I’ve gathered, is that there remains some debate as to whether any of the point guards available in this draft are better prospects at the position than Acie Law IV, who despite having spent two years on the roster still has to answer major questions about his readiness to not only be a potential starter but a solid rotation player.
The Hawks’ previous front office regime was notoriously unimpressed by point guards in past drafts. Chris Paul was “too small,” Deron Williams worried them because his “body looked too soft” and Rajon Rondo was a “reach” with the fifth pick, just to highlight a few of the explanations given for passing on three big time NBA starters at the position. That sort of faulty logic led the Hawks to draft picks like Shelden Williams (a reach if ever there was one) and botched free agent signings like Claxton (who was Paul’s backup when the Hawks whisked him away from the Hornets for a cool $25 million).
I won’t pretend to speak for Hawks GM Rick Sund, who has not indicated that he has any sort of prejudice against rookie point guards. But I also won’t assume that he’ll address the Hawks’ point guard situation in the draft.
There’s just so much work to be done in such a short period of time. For once, I can honestly say I wouldn’t want to be the Hawks’ general manager right now.
MY SPLIT SCREEN IS WORKING THESE DAYS. I’M WATCHING THE FINALS, TOO. I’m watching Orlando suffer through the same things the Hawks did when they faced Cleveland in the Eastern Conference semifinals and the same thing the Cavaliers did when they fell to the Magic in Eastern Conference finals.
Some teams just present matchup nightmares for other teams. The Magic and Lakers are about as evenly matched as two teams could be in the Finals. Spot for spot up and down the rotation there are compelling matchups (my man Mickael Pietrus did his thing again, pushing Kobe Bryant late, sinking two free throws in the final 30 seconds to help seal his team’s Game 3 win). You can’t ask for much more than that at this stage of the season, save for the somewhat tiresome Van Gundy family reunion going on every game night (Stan’s a riot from the national anthem to the post game presser but I’ve listened to just about all I can take from Jeff on the broadcast).
One thing I noticed that’s been bothersome I have to ask you to weigh in on. Is there a more disappointing player in all of these playoffs than Andrew Bynum? I know the Lakers’ big man has already had to battle back from two serious knee injuries in his young career, but he doesn’t have any bounce at all.
He’s a shell of the dude the Lakers refused to give up in any deal a couple years back and for the life of me, I don’t see why. I don’t see anything in Bynum that would make him untouchable other than he’s a legitimate 7-footer. And these days, that’s just not enough.
Like most people whose team of interest is already do for the season, my attention has shifted dramatically in the direction of the NBA draft.
I know it’s fool’s gold, thinking teams are going to find answers to all their problems in a shallow draft. But what else can we bank on?
Combining my two pet topics of the month, I came up with another theory that requires your input.
After watching the Magic shoot a blistering (and Finals record ) 62.5 percent from the floor to win Game 3, I wonder if some teams will have the guts to rethink their draft strategy and identify the best shooters available?
For a team like the Hawks that would mean giving serious consideration to a player like North Carolina’s Wayne Ellington with that 19th pick. If Ellington’s still on the board, chances are there won’t be a better shooter or offensive player the Hawks could take in that range. I know he doesn’t address a particular position need for the Hawks (point guard or center) but he does address a skill need (the Hawks are in desperate need of more quality shooters).
Some teams aren’t going to wait until the draft to start adding shooters. Philadelphia pulled off a trade Tuesday for one of the league’s best shooters, stealing Jason Kapono from the Raptors for Reggie Evans.
Kapono, even in limited minutes, can change the game for the 76ers just by parking on the perimeter and posing as a deep threat. That’s a weapon teams will need, especially in the improving Eastern Conference. I suspect this won’t be the last trade of this kind we’ll see between now and draft night. Teams are going to be forced to explore every option they can to improve without adding salary.
Finally, and before I forget, the best NBA news of the week comes not from the Finals or the draft but from the real plague of the league – brutal officiating. We’ll have three fewer relics to pick on next year if this report in the Boston Globe is true.
Reportedly Jimmy Clark, Luis Grillo and Jack Nies are taking their combined 73 years of experience/service to the retirement village with them. Adios fellas, the hecklers will miss you.
514 comments Add your comment
Astro Joe
June 11th, 2009
11:33 pm
Now who was asking about Courtney Lee and playing time? And I said if Pietrus hadn’t been injured, dude would have been competing with Reddick for cameo appearances? Pietrus is a playa… on both ends of the floor.
Melvin
June 11th, 2009
11:34 pm
Why is Nelson even in the game. He’s been ineffective and turnover prone…
Melvin
June 11th, 2009
11:37 pm
Slow down Astro. Lee has contribute important mins thur out the playoffs…
Melvin
June 11th, 2009
11:39 pm
Where is the 100 million dollar man Lewis been at tonight???
Rollins Tree
June 11th, 2009
11:40 pm
It feels like 3 years ago since the Cavs playoff series. Right?
Dizkey
June 11th, 2009
11:41 pm
Hey, I don’t read well. So, if anyone has echoed my comments above, then I apologize a trillion times. But…Hawks must improve their interior defense. Zaza is a nice piece off the bench, but he ain’t no enforcer in the middle. He just pretended to be one when he headbutted KG in 08. Who should $und acquire that can provide defense and rebounding at the center position? Good phawkin’ question. True centers are tougher to find than Waldo. But, Senor $und gets paid to do so. Therefore, he must rise to the challenge. Atlanta is best, when D creates offense via the fastbreak. I don’t wanna hear any noise about contracts or fantasy GM crap. If the Hawks want to contend, GM $und needs to also acquire Battier. This versatile player is able to provide stellar perimeter defense. Can you say that about any current Hawk(s)? I know, Mario West had a few good moments, but let’s get real. Also, Bibby must go. He’s too old for another year of the Woody philosophy. After 82 games of playing heavy minutes, he’ll wear down in time for the playoffs, just like this past season. So will JJ, just like this past season. But, JJ cant’ be replaced. Flip must be re-signed, because he can provide a spark when Johnson is “tired” or “kind of quits.” At PG, we need youth, tenacity, speed. Ty Lawson, Ray Felton just a few options. As far as Childress goes, ET says phone home. I’ll be your best friend. LMHFAO! (HF= Hawks Fan).
P.S. Alonzo Mourning is MEAN on Pros Vs Joes. Can’t shoot free throws, though.
Melvin
June 11th, 2009
11:42 pm
My goodness, Dwight Howard is a beast. He’s one effective left hand move away from being unstoppable…
Melvin
June 11th, 2009
11:45 pm
Hedo or Hero…
RealSquawk
June 11th, 2009
11:46 pm
Ball Movement
Options
Game Plan
O have I missed you.
Dizkey
June 11th, 2009
11:54 pm
Hate to see that 3 by Fisher. C’mon Orlando! Please don’t let this LA hater down!
Melvin
June 12th, 2009
12:01 am
Does Nelson have some incriminating pictures of SVG or something. He’s pull a Woody move tonite. Bench a player that played well in the previous game.
Reggie
June 12th, 2009
12:01 am
Alston is so pissed right now.
Reggie
June 12th, 2009
12:02 am
Oh Kobe.
Melvin
June 12th, 2009
12:03 am
Is Alston even sitting on the bench????
Dizkey
June 12th, 2009
12:03 am
Skip to the lou.
Melvin
June 12th, 2009
12:05 am
Did he skip to the locker room early..
Dizkey
June 12th, 2009
12:07 am
Always hurts, when you miss 15 FTs. Make just 1 more in regulation and the game never sees OT!
Dizkey
June 12th, 2009
12:10 am
Oh, nooooooooooooooooooooo!
Najeh Davenpoop
June 12th, 2009
12:13 am
Orlando has shot 18 free throws in the 4th quarter and overtime while the Lakers have shot zero. Clearly, the only explanation can be that the refs are biased against the Lakers. This must all be part of David Stern’s master plan…
Melvin
June 12th, 2009
12:13 am
Missed FTs and coaching lost this game for the Magic.
Dizkey
June 12th, 2009
12:15 am
Pau Gasol doin’ work. Game AND series pretty much over. Pietrus might as well knock his block off. Ain’t much left for Orlando to lose.
niremetal
June 12th, 2009
12:16 am
Never seen so many missed free throws…
Dizkey
June 12th, 2009
12:23 am
Just like a missed Magic FT, I’m gone! Goodnight, everybody.
kirkinga
June 12th, 2009
12:28 am
Let’s not forget to recognize Jameer Nelson for his Bibby-esque defense on Derek Fisher allowing the tying shot in regulation and once again the Lakers take advantage to force OT and a commanding lead in the series.
Hoops
June 12th, 2009
12:35 am
The Lakers are just better! I want the series to go seven, but it looks like the Lakers in 5. That’s two games in a row that missed free throws have cost the looser the game. Kobe is Kobe. Fisher stole the show, but Ariza came up big!
Maybe the Magic will get mad @ Pietrus and trade him to the Hawks!
A Tribe Called Quest
June 12th, 2009
12:43 am
Well, after LAL clinches the title, we can see Woodson’s excuse next year when people question him:
“We beat the NBA champs by a sizeable margin”
HawkKingBibby
June 12th, 2009
1:07 am
The Magic choked but then again the Lakers didnt exactly seize the moment either. The refs kind of seized it for them. Thats 2 ot games won by LA where there were horrible calls in the Lakers favor. DWIGHT HAS GOT TO MAKE ONE OF THOSE FREE THROWS THOUGH. As much as I would love to see the Hawks in the nba finals, if they were losing OT games like this I dont think my heart could take it.
Big Ray
June 12th, 2009
2:07 am
Hand this thing to the Lakers already. Thirteen days until the draft.
Jhan,
I don’t see Sund doing anything that puts Al Horford on the bench. He’s a starter in this league.
Astro Joe,
True, we have rebounding issues. There are ways to solve them. It’s not the rebounding that makes me think twice about having a lightning quick pg. It’s the fact that we just don’t RUN. We’re actually made for it, but we don’t do it. As others have mentioned, the switches on defense have kept our bigs out of position a lot.
Having said that, Josh Smith has made things difficult with a lack of effort, and injuries to Horford and Marvin haven’t helped either. Health and committment to rebounding, along with an added low post presence (via free agency or otherwise) would help a lot. It all sounds so simple, doesn’t it?
Samuel
June 12th, 2009
6:39 am
Looks like the Magic have been going to the Mark Price school of FT shooting. You don’t deserve to win. Pietrus should get suspended for that last foul. That leaves C Lee on Kobe all night in game 5. It’s ova.
What was SVG thinking by leaving Nelson in the game on defense that last play.Should have gone with Lee.
Forget Patty Mills. “No more midgets please”!!!
Sekou Smith
June 12th, 2009
8:00 am
I agree with Steamboat, my man Pietrus was trying to knock Gasol’s spine loose. He might have to take a seat for Game 5.
And this thing with Rafer Altson and Jameer Nelson has been handled terribly by the Magic. It’s not the only thing that’s costing them but I’m leaning to it being the most critical mistake that’s been made. Alston played great in Game 3 and then you yo-yo him again. And then Van Gundy’s post game dismissal of the experience factor … he’s out of his league.
I still think the Magic send this thing back to LA, but there shouldn’t be more than one game out there.
Sautee
June 12th, 2009
9:23 am
Astro Joe,
I wasn’t responding to your “lack of rebounding” post because I was in the Patty Mills camp. Not at all.
I just fail to see why we don’t take advantage of a nightly mismatch we have with our young bigs, and put them in a position for easy baskets. It’s insanity, when all it takes is effort and energy. And THAT could be done even at our current rebounding rate.
And to be clear, I’m NOT advocating some kind of “D’Antoni get a shot off in 7 seconds bull”.
Just take advantage when we can a few times a game, and not make offense SO hard. You KNOW our bigs can consistently beat their man down the court, so if THAT is an advantage WHY, OH WHY do we not use it? Insanity.
MBZ
June 12th, 2009
9:27 am
Pietrus was just frustrated…But why would Gasol go for that dunk when they clearly had the game wrapped up? Anyway….
The draft is fast approaching and I hope Sund has a plan that will pan out for this team. That Toney Douglass guy seems like he would be a good fit and Alade Aminu seems like a good replacement for Solo… We might have to work a trade in the late second round to get it done if we like the local guys. The thing is, if Bibby comes back (which, to my dismay, he probably will) then we have to draft and be committed to groom a point guard. It is so frustrating to see the lack of vision through the course of the season not allowing Acie to play, not giving the bench a chance to develop and grow. As we saw last night, Phil Jackson played the entire team before the end of the 1st quarter. Mbenga didnt play a whole lot during the season but he knows his role and the coaching staff has confidence in him as a stop gap when guys get in foul trouble. And he came in and played good defense and had a nice block and did something positive. I think the only young player on the bench that Woodson has instilled confidence in is Mario West. He has zero offense, but he works like a madman and gets rewarded. How does a coach get a 1st round draft pick who was compared to Chauncey Billups coming out of college and make no attempt whatsoever do develop him. Why is the coach not held accountable for the growth of the team? This draft might not mean anything if the young guys we get ride the bench because our coach is to caught up in winning now. He runs the team as if we are in win now mode.Our growth is stunted when we run Joe Johnson into the ground every night. Our offense suffers when we dont run a system outside of iso-joe. Our defense suffers when Josh Smith is not held accountable on a nightly basis to put in the effort. Our rebounding is flat when we switch all the damn time. And we do the same thing. We need to give Marvin and Horford more touches. Give them confidence. Help them develop offensively. Give Acie the team to run for stretches. Nurture his game. Mark Price is on the couching staff for God sake………
I just think that this team’s offseason will be influenced by the coaching philosophy. We aren’t going to aquire a penetrating PG because the coach likes a shooting pg (Bibby). That, to me, is the biggest thing we need to address before training camp
The Truth
June 12th, 2009
9:28 am
I had been giving SVG much credit in making adjustments in the previous games despite some losses. But that bone-headed move of having Nelson in the game for all of the forth quarter exceeded any previous level of criticism compared to Woody. Nelson was ineffective on offense, a liability on defense in addition to being too short and injured. An example of this was when he gave Fisher too much space for an easy three with 11 seconds to go in the game. Rafer Altson should have closed the game out based on his play-off contributions. SVG is more interested in his player’s role status than winning a championship. To snob Altson this way in a critical playoff game may go down as the worst coaching move in the history of the NBA finals.
Astro Joe
June 12th, 2009
9:29 am
Ray, as I recall, Larry Bird’s Celtics were a very good fast break team. Certainly not because they were full of speedsters or athletes, but because they had 4 guys (front court and DJ) who were excellent rebounders. Having sprinters is fine but they need the ball. Consider that two of the best fast break PGs in history, Magic and Kidd, were also two of the best rebounding PGs in history. If we want to assemble a running team, we need to find some glass cleaners.
At this point, I’m on board with the best player available approach. We have too many FAs who may not return to assume that we are “loaded” at any position. Earl Clark, a PG (but make sure that he is a willing defender based on college footage), Mullens, Budinger or Ellington are all fine with me. And pairing #19 & Speedy for a vet is even better.
Astro Joe
June 12th, 2009
9:34 am
Sautee, I agree with that approach. When you do get the rebound, run. I have no problems there. Unfortunately, unless things change, that “run thing” won’t happen nearly as often with the poor board work. It’s the double edge sword of having a smaller, quicker front court who can’t/won’t put in the work to create more offensive possessions. How many times did we see the Cavs grab offensive rebounds and get multiple shots? I recall a former Hawk player who was really good at fighting on the boards. Had a really big afro and was also a very good finisher on the break. Oh well. He was real easy to replace.
dap01
June 12th, 2009
10:07 am
Great post MBZ!
kwooden1
June 12th, 2009
10:08 am
Looks to me that the HAWKS will have a tough time getting any value out of Speedy’s expiring contract. Their aren’t that many teams that need to clear space for the 2010/11 season. Hopefully teams have seen enough of Speedy to think he’s health and can produce something. Otherwise his 5M won’t bring back much. I still think we should keep Acie and draft Mullen or Tyler H. with the 19th pick. If they’re not available, then picking the best player on the board is fine with me.
I think our starting five, (if they keep Bibby) can play with anyone. But they need another score off the bench. Especially a guy that sub for JJ. Villanueva can sub for Marvin or JS but that still leaves JJ playing a lot of minutes. Evans can play SG, but not like JJ. Flip is a combo guy, but Woodson likes subbing him for Bibby. Acie plays like a combo guard also, which I think is another reason he didn’t play much. Hopefully some team will be willing to part with SG for Speedy + someone else.
GO HAWKS!!!
O'brien
June 12th, 2009
10:08 am
I blame SVG for the loss. I agree there is no way you dont put Rafer in the game. Ha played well in every series so far (big shots, good defense). But SVG made the type of move that Woody would make. Go back to your “guy” and ignore the guy who’s been playing well so far. Alston plays better defense, and Fisher would not have been so wide open.
This also fuels the debate, if you are up 3, shouldnt you foul and send them to the line inside of giving them a 3 pt opportunity?
I also blame Dwight Howard. You can’t go 6-13 in a crucial game. And he has to make one of those FT to make it a 2 possession game. This reminds me of Nick Anderson back in the 90’s. Same thing. Missed 2 FT, Houston made a 3 to go to OT and went on to win the game, swept the series, NBA champions.
Melvin
June 12th, 2009
10:37 am
Obrien,
Wasn’t Nick Anderson part of the open ceremonies for the game. Talk about poetic justice…dah
Samuel
June 12th, 2009
10:39 am
You can excuse Howard somewhat. He’s been missing them all year but Turk’s really hurt them.
On running:
It’s more a mindset than anything. Rebounding too but more a mindset. Woody is a Larry Brown student. Nuff said.
The Old Celtics are a perfect example of a team without great athletes but would push the ball down your throat. No player has ever been fast enough to outrun a pass.
I always illustrate this with my players by letting the fastest one take off down the court and when they get about 3/4, I trow a pass which beats them to the baseline. Works every time!
Justin31
June 12th, 2009
11:03 am
Sekou, there are rumors floating on RealGM about olympiacos offering a huge contract to marvin. is that real?
A Tribe Called Quest
June 12th, 2009
11:16 am
Here we are witnessing SVG panicking. LOL Shaq must be rolling over in laughter in his mansion right now. Van Gundy is wayyyy too emotional a coach to win a title. Everything haunts/scares/freaks this guy out when it goes wrong
Ariose
June 12th, 2009
11:19 am
CP, A.J Price reminds me a lot of Mo williams. A scorer by nature and a deadly spot-up shooter. Maybe we should draft him? That way we can Nab Ellington in the 1st round…
niremetal
June 12th, 2009
11:19 am
The “Mike Brown’s job is in danger” BS is further proof of how risky it is to believe a word of what you read on the “new sports media” sites like Hoopsworld and Pro Basketball News. Unless you see a named source on the blog or a reference to a primary news source (preferably a local newspaper where the discussed team plays), believe what you read at your own risk. Even news sources like ESPN seem to make $hit up occasionally – remember the fiasco where ESPN said we were trying to trade Smoove and the draft pick that became Horford to Phoenix for Amare? And then the next day they reported that Steve Belkin had blocked the trade, despite the fact that Belkin had been kicked out of the ownership group and had absolutely no say in personnel decisions anymore?
Seriously – unless the source is a beat writer who actually travels with the team and talks to them on a daily basis, it’s caveat emptor with basketball news. If you get it off a blog or a “new media” web source, you’re really rolling the dice on whether you’re getting remotely accurate info.
Ariose
June 12th, 2009
11:20 am
Not sure price is a great playmaker though….but Bibby is the same way, save for the occasional lob over the top of the defense….
Ariose
June 12th, 2009
11:20 am
Nire, I agree.
Ariose
June 12th, 2009
11:22 am
Van gundy made a bad decision by not putting Alston back in the game. Nelson looked Timid out there, and other than Howard, Alston is the only other player who can consistantly score inside….
Melvin
June 12th, 2009
11:27 am
Ariose,
Think Curtis Jerrels in the 2nd round, man. Do I need to send you a link to remind…lol
bigstack19
June 12th, 2009
11:34 am
Hawks need a point guard so they will likely draft a 6ft 9in swingman.
Ariose
June 12th, 2009
12:12 pm
LOL@ Melvin. He keeps slipping my mind. That boy needs some more hype!!! Guess we’ll just have to create it around here!!1