Archive for September, 2006

Lindsey Hunter is for the children

Lindsey Hunter solidified his all-around good guy image on Tuesday while taking part in a grand opening for a Lansing elementary school library. From the Lansing State Journal:

All Lewton Elementary School students sported a smiles and white Pistons T-shirts during a powerful grand opening party Tuesday for the school’s new library.

Their first look at the transformed Pistons-themed room came with autographs from player Lindsey Hunter, a reading challenge linked to game tickets and a major surprise.

Not one - as originally planned - but all three former Lewton students who shared their education success stories received a $1,000 scholarship at the event.

After hearing the presentations, Hunter decided on the spot to personally donate an additional $2,000 to help all three.

“Any time I can help kids get excited about learning and reading, to see their faces light up, that’s the most rewarding thing for me,” said Hunter, who has helped cut the ribbon at some of the Pistons’ 10 other Live, Learn and Play Centers. “It gets better every time.”

Hoopla, surprise part of library opening [Lansing State Journal]

Korleone Young signs with Bnei Hasharon

Last October I asked, “what did happen to Korleone Young?”“Where in the world is Korleone Young?” After a bit of poking around, I discovered that while Detroit’s former second-round pick hasn’t been able to return to the NBA he’s had no trouble earning paychecks from basketball, playing everywhere from Australia, China, Russia and everywhere in between.

Well, add another notch “everywhere in between” — Young has just signed with Bnei Hasharon, an Israeli team that plays in the same league as the more famous Maccabi Tel Aviv. Sadly, though, Young’s reputation precedes him even on the other side of the ocean — the article by the Israeli news source Haaretz.com announcing his signing focuses almost entirely on his status as one of the NBA’s most well-known failed prep-to-pros projects instead of about what kind of player he is or what his projected role will be with his new team.

Nevertheless, it’s good to hear he’s still playing ball.

Korleone Young hopes to dump bad history with B. Hasharon [Haaretz.com]

Thursday’s links: Short and bitter/sweet

  • Matt discussed briefly last Saturday the strange case of Bonzi Wells’ free agency (basically, that no one wants him). Well, this story could be getting much worse (for Pistons fans, anyway). After turning down a modest sized offer from the Kings earlier this offseason — and then finding very little interest leaguewide in a contract-year phenom with questionable character — it seems that Wells’ agent is now trolling Miami waters hoping to snag the Heat’s mid-level exception. If Wells is anywhere near the player who gave San Antonio fits in last year’s playoffs, the Heat will be even tougher in ‘06-07. Remember, this team took two thirds of a season to gel after major offseason changes in the summer of ‘05. Now, with the majority of their roster returning, expect them to resemble the late-season/playoff Heat in ‘06-07 more than the team that stuggled with the league’s elite for much of the season.
  • NBA Roundup: ‘Law and Order’ edition! Today’s Free Press — in their recurring ‘NBA Roundup‘ column– updates us on the goings-on this week in the NBA. Normally this is the article where the freep would dump the latest Mateen Cleeves signing or news about the expansion Roanoke Rhinoceri of the WNBA developmental league. Today’s news? We get an update on Dale Davis’ Tasering saga;Well, in the interest of full disclosure, the article says very little of the Tasering, choosing instead to focus on the whole “legal” angle. But you know as well as I do — the only thing remembered from this story will be that DD got himself TASERED! POW! we receive news that Zach Randolph won’t be charged with sexual assault stemming from a police report filed in Oregon last month;For those who aren’t squeamish, check out True Hoop’s coverage of this story. I don’t care how you spin this, Zach Randolph is a bastard. and, as an added bonus, we learn that the courts don’t think it is that big a deal that Lee Nailon of the Cavs elbowed his wife in the face and threw a picture frame at her.

    NBA Action…it’s faaaaan-tastic! /sarcasm

  • Magic Number 10! Finally, to end this abbreviated links list on a good note… Ladies and gentlemen, after their 6-2 victory over the Chicago White Sox last night, your Detroit Tigers have lowered their magic number to 10! (Meaning that any combination of 10 Tigers wins and/or losses by the runner-up will clinch the Central Division for our beloved Tigs. The magic number for making the playoffs is even lower, but we want that Central Division title…and I’m too challenged mathematically to figure it out right now.) As always, stay with Mack Avenue Tigers for the latest news on the Old English ‘D’.
    (P.S. — thanks to the Detroit Tigers Forum at Worldcrossing for the Cookie Monster photo.)

Bonzi Wells’ agent talking to Heat [Sun-Sentinel]
NBA ROUNDUP: Pistons’ Davis has court date postponed [Detroit Free Press]

Who is Shaq’s favorite NBA player?

Every rare now and then, Shaquille O’Neal actually makes sense. From a Miami Herald article talking about his new real estate company:

”People sometimes ask me who is my favorite athlete. They expect me to say Chamberlain, Russell, Kareem,” said O’Neal, ticking off the names of former basketball greats. “But I say Dave Bing, because he did great things after basketball.”

Bing, a prolific scoring guard now enshrined in basketball’s Hall of Fame, runs a multimillion-dollar steel business in Detroit and is a civic leader there.

Shaq takes on real estate market [Miami Herald via SLAM]

Cleaning house, all links must go!

  • Bill Simmons may not be happy Joe Dumars is in the Hall of Fame, but the people in his hometown of Natchitoches, Louisiana certainly are. Here’s an appreciation of Joe. D’s induction from Natchitoches, with a nice story of how Dumars helped his hometown college feel at ease during their recent appearance at the Palace during the 2006 NCAA tournament.
  • Michael Jordan has famously called Dumars the best defender he’s ever faced. But would Dumars’ defense still be legal in today’s NBA? Henry Abbot from True Hoop points to explanation of why it wouldn’t be.
  • He’s gone but not forgotten: vote for the picture of Ben Wallace blocking Shaq’s dunk attempt in the Eastern Conference Finals as being NBA.com’s best picture of the 2005-06 season (or at least better than the run-of-the-mill Kobe picture that it’s up against). Man, that was a sweet block, though I’m not convinced that NBA.com picked the best angle.
  • SLAM has taken on the task of ranking the league’s top 50 players. It’s an arbitrary task to be sure, but it’s also given the opportunity for some notable bloggers to take a turn in the spotlight, from the basketball blog godfather Henry Abbott to everyone’s favorite J.E. Skeets . And did you see who’s nestled in at No. 49 between No. 50 Boris Diaw and No. 48 (and Central Michigan Chippewa) Chris Kaman? That’s right, our (former) boy Darko.
  • Also spotted on True Hoop: interesting viewpoints on Dave Cowens, the newest addition to Flip Saunders bench. Basketbawful takes issue with his promotion back to the big boys league after a dismal 5-23 season in the WNBA while Charley Rosen calls him the dirtiest player of all time:

    [The] dirtiest player in NBA history was Dave Cowens. Yes, he was skilled. Yes, he was tough. Yet his all-out aggressiveness was frequently mindless and downright sadistic. (In a bar-fight while he was in college, Cowens once bit off a large piece of an antagonist’s nose.) Cowens, more than any of his predecessors, was considered by his contemporaries to be the one player whose over-the-top brutality was most likely to send an opponent to the hospital.

  • Losing Ben Wallace was a blow, but just how bad has Detroit’s summer been? According to ESPN’s Marc Stein, their offseason moves rank 11th out of the 15 teams in the East. Who had the “best” summer? The Miami Heat, who haven’t added a single player but were able to re-sign Dwyane Wade and Alonzo Mourning.
  • Bonzi Wells was once considered one of the league’s top free agents, especially on the heels of a spectacular offseason. Sports Illustrated’s Chris Mannix asks: so, uh, why is he still unsigned? The Nuggets appear to be interested in him, and at least one writer things the Timberwolves should be. (Last two links via HoopsVibe)
  • Last but certainly not least: MGoBlog previews Michigan vs. Notre Dame. This is going to be huge!

Bill Simmons: Joe Dumars isn’t a Hall of Famer

Bill Simmons suggested earlier this week that getting inducted into the Hall of Fame doesn’t mean as much as it used to:

Take the case of Joe Dumars, a nice enough player who was inducted last weekend alongside two superior ones, Dominique Wilkins and Charles Barkley. Sure, Dumars was the one decent soul on those Bad Boys squads, a splendid team player who lifted his game when it mattered, a gifted defender who guarded MJ tougher than anyone. When the league struggled with character issues in the mid-90s, Joe D stood out for his class and professionalism. Watching him co-exist with the crotch-grabbing jerks on Dream Team II was like seeing Nic Cage stuck on the Con Air plane. Like everyone else, I like Joe Dumars. A lot.

Does any of that make him a Hall of Famer? Of course not.

Here’s his résumé: six All-Star Games, one Finals MVP, one second-team All-NBA selection, four first-team All-Defense selections. He was never a franchise player, much less a defining one. In fact, in certain pivotal playoff games (Game 5 of the 1990 Finals, for instance), Dumars sat in crunch time. Most damning of all is databasebasketball.com’s Hall of Fame monitor. The statistical engine assigns each player a score, with anything over 135 denoting Hall of Fame worthiness. Kareem scores the highest, with 833. Jordan scores 731; Barkley, 315; Wilkins, 142. Dumars? He gets a 105, trailing 33 retired players who haven’t made the cut.

[First of all, a clarification: Hall of Fame rules stipulate that a player is inducted solely by his playing career, not by any additional achievements as an executive after he hangs up the sneakers. Not everyone realizes this, but this is why Simmons doesn’t mention how Dumars won another title as the team president in 2004.]

I’m usually all about using stats to compare players, but you have to draw a line somewhere. Dominique Wilkins was certainly more flashy and he definitely put up better numbers over the length of his career… but what did being a stathound get him? Three trips beyond the first-round of the playoffs? Dumars played in the NBA Finals three times. He won twice, and by many accounts probably should have won all three.

Furthermore, to uggest that Dumars sat in crunch time in ludicrous. Detroit had one of the best three-guard rotations of all-time, and while there may have been a handful times that Vinnie Johnson was red-hot and played over Dumars, it certainly wasn’t hardly the norm.

As for the 1990 Game 5 example, people tend to forget everything that Vinnie did in that game — he didn’t just nail that last second shot with .007 left to win the game, he scored 16 points in the fourth quarter alone, including nine straight at one point to put Detroit in front after trailing for much of the game. He was absolutely red-hot, and it would have been ridiculous to take him out of the game for Dumars in the final seconds simply because of some kind of heirarchy of Dumars being the All-Star starter.

So Dumars sat, Vinnie played, and the Pistons won their second title in as many years beause of it. How can you look at that after the fact and find a way to fault Dumars? You play to win championships, not to accrue crunch time minutes, which Dumars certainly had enough of over the rest of his career.

Secondly, how can Simmons say Dumars wasn’t “a defining player”? As far as the NBA is concerned, Dumars defines “sportsmanship,” which is why they named their freaking award after him! If the titles, stats and individual honors don’t win you over, having an award created and eventually named in your honor should.

I could go on and on, but I don’t have the time, energy or desire to turn this into a player-by-player comparison of who belongs and who doesn’t. Heck, this wasn’t even supposed to be it’s own post — I was originally going to just throw it up as part of a big link dump — but after letting this stew in the back of my mind for the past week I ended up having more to say than I planned. To be honest, I actually really enjoy Simmons’ work for ESPN, but his biases for the Celtics and against the Pistons come shining through every time.

And honestly, I’m fine with that — he’s like most bloggers in that he doesn’t hide his allegiances but instead is quite proud of them. This time, though, I think he hid them, as I really doubt he’s being completely objective but instead is letting his disdain for the Bad Boys era Pistons to at least partially influence his opinion. Sure, I could be off base… or perhaps Simmons simply left that out to either strengthen his argument or save space (like all of his columns that appear in ESPN The Magazine, this was a little bit shorter than his usual 4,000 missives). Who knows, but either way, I disagree.

Building the Halls of Justice [ESPN.com]

Death, taxes and Carlos Delfino complaining to the Spanish press

Did you hear the news? Carlos Delfino is unhappy in Detroit! You’ve heard this one before, right? Well, this isn’t his same old gripes. This tihe me it looks like he’s naming other teams that have inquired about him, and if he isn’t traded to another NBA team he even suggests that he’d prefer to simply head back to Europe.

The message boards have been on this for about a week now, but as far as I’ve seen there hasn’t been a peep from the local beat writers. Why? I’m guessing it’s at least in part because, like all of Delfino’s other controversial interviews, his latest comments were from a Spanish-language article. Here’s the original version from AS.com published on Sept. 9, and here’s the (brutal) translation from Babelfish. I’m going to provide some translated excerpts below the jump and try to make sense of it all: Continue reading ‘Death, taxes and Carlos Delfino complaining to the Spanish press’

Sign of the times…

Proving that you’re never too late to finally arrive to the party, Detroit Bad Boys is finally on MySpace. What exactly does that mean? For starters, you can now view the general interests and favorite bands, books and movies of DBB as an entity (which, ironically, look awfully similar to the general intestests and favorite bands, books and movies of Ian and I as individuals).

Secondly, and if you were skimming you may want to slow down and read this closely, you can now show all of your other friends, family and co-workers just how big of a Pistons fan you are by being among the first to add DBB to your list of MySpace friends. I must admit, doing so doesn’t mean that we’ll loan you our pickup truck when you move (but that’s only because neither one of us owns a pickup truck). What it does mean, though, is that we’ll probably leave a comment on your page with a funny little picture like the one below. . . because that’s what people on MySpace do for each other. So check us out: www.myspace.com/detroitbadboysblog

What would Buddha do?
Buddha would add DBB as a MySpace friend, that’s what.

Pistons to add green in ‘06-07!

Could Cowens teach Sheed to master the short-shorts?

Dave Cowens as a Piston assistant, huh?

Desperation has apparently set in; the Boys in Blue are now hiring former Celtics to man the bench next to Flip Saunders. Who’s next, Dennis Johnson? McHale may be looking for a job soon; how about him? Anyone have Danny Ainge’s number?

Okay, okay…I’m kidding (sorta). In all seriousness, the addition of Hall of Famer Cowens to Flip’s coaching staff adds even more experience to the bench. Like the recently-added Terry Porter, Cowens is a former NBA head coach — most recently leading the Golden State Warriors to a combined 25-80 record in 2000-2001(ish) — and he just wrapped a season heading the 5-29 Chicago Sky of the WNBA. (For those of you scoring at home, that’s a solid 22% winning percentage from his last two resume bullets.)

“Such allure!” — you say.

But wait, prior to his recent failures, Cowens was thought of as somewhat of an up-in-comer, leading the Glenn Rice/Anthony Mason-era Charlotte Hornets to the playoffs in ‘96/97 and ‘97/98 (after the departures of Grandmama and Satan…er, Alonzo Mourning). And at the very least, you’ve gotta think that Cowens will have some helpful advice for the Piston bigs, right? Taking a look at his stats…wait a minute…

Cowens was a 6’9” center…(check)

Who was a monster on the boards…(hmm…)

And who was known for his intensity and hustle…(this is sounding very familiar)

But somehow he managed to shoot 78% from the free throw line for his career?!

Perhaps the Pistons are adding Cowens a year too late, no?

Report: Hall of Famer Cowens to join Pistons staff [ESPN]
Dave Cowens’ career stats [Basketball Reference]

Random YouTube gem