Tag Archive for 'Cheikh Samb'

Amir bulks up, Cheikh draws interest

A. Sherrod Blakely has a brief update on Amir Johnson and Cheikh Samb in his summer league preview:

Johnson, who appeared in 62 games last season, appears to have bulked up some this summer for what the Pistons anticipate will be a breakout season for him.

[…] “We think he can be an X-factor type player, a guy that can make plays above the rim, athletically on the defensive end and the offensive end,” Dumars said. “He’s a young guy that has more athleticism, more speed and energy than anything we have up front. Where we are as a team right now, it’s imperative that we have a player on the floor like that right now.”

How much has Amir bulked up? We’ll find out on Friday when Detroit kicks off the summer league with a televised game against the Lakers on NBA TV. I’m just as curious, if not more, about Cheikh Samb’s progress, especially after reading this high praise from Dumars:

Dumars has similar praise for Samb, a player he acknowledges has progressed at a rate quicker than the Pistons anticipated.

Dumars said some front-office executives have reached out to see if he was willing to part with Samb.

“This kid can stroke it; I mean really, really stroke it,” Dumars said. “I know I got a 7-foot-1 guy who is coming, in a hurry. He is a guy that I think, in certain situations, can help us this season.”

I love the fact that Samb has a nice jumper, but he needs to keep drinking milk and eating spinach if he’s even going to dress this year, let alone get into any games. That said, he’s definitely a guy to keep an eye on in Vegas this year — it’s his third trip out there since being drafted in 2006.

ASB’s article also talks about some of the other lesser-known guys on the roster, and suggests that journeyman Will Bynum has the best chance at actually making the Pistons’ roster as the No. 3 point guard behind Chauncey Billups and Rodney Stuckey.

(Also, quick question: are any of you planning on attending the summer league? I know there were some rumblings in the comments a while back about possible plans, but did any of those come together? If so, leave a note in the comments. I’ll be out there July 16-21, and while this is a working trip, I always have time for loyal DBB readers.)

Las Vegas Summer League notes

Keith Langlois revealed a few interesting names that will be playing for the Pistons on the summer league:

Dee Brown, the former Illinois All-American who played with Utah as a rookie two years ago, will be on the Pistons’ roster. Sammy Mejia, last year’s second-round pick, was going to be but he sprained an ankle recently and won’t make it. Alex Acker will also be on the team and has a shot at sticking with the Pistons next year.

Because the Pistons will have three draft choices on the team – as well as Rodney Stuckey, Arron Afflalo, Cheikh Samb and Amir Johnson – they won’t be filling it up with a bunch of other notable players. That’s an unusual number of players for a Summer League team who have already cinched roster spots or have realistic NBA futures.

In case you missed it, here’s the schedule:

July 11 - Detroit vs. L.A. Lakers, 5:00 p.m. PST on NBA TV
July 13 - Detroit vs. L.A. Clippers, 7:00 p.m. PST
July 15 - Detroit vs. Milwaukee, 3:00 p.m. PST
July 17 - Detroit vs. Dallas, 1:00 p.m. PST on NBA TV
July 18 - Detroit vs. Charlotte, 3:00 p.m. PST

Unless noted, the games won’t be televised. Once upon a time it was possible to purchase some kind of video package to watch games (or at least highlights) online — no word yet if that will be an option again this year. I hope so, because that’s a stacked roster, at least as far as summer league rosters go.

Thursday’s Layup Drill

Real life is keeping me away from the computer, but the internet doesn’t stop! A few topics worthy of discussion:

  • All this Tim Donaghy stuff. I don’t really know what to think anymore. For the most part, I have a hard time believing there’s been some kind of league-wide conspiracy — Mark Heisler of the LA Times agrees (via Nate Jones) — but the evidence does seem to be mounting.
  • Then again, bad calls have existed for a long time.
  • It’s important for a head coach to be flexible — games are won and lost on in-game adjustments — but Michael Curry is taking this literally. From Coach’s Network:

    A few years ago he would visit Michigan State and play pick up ball with some of the MSU players in the off-season. A few things I noticed about the professional player before, during and after the games with the young, eager Spartans.

    1-He would stretch before the games. I don’t mean your typical touch your toes type stuff. I mean this guy really stretched! All parts of his body - he was focused on stretching! You’re probably saying what does stretching have to do with anything? I will tell you - when you stretch, it shows you care about your body and most of all your preparation. I see players who just walk into the gym and want to start playing. Stretching is preparation, a vital trait for the coaching business

    There’s some other good tidbits in that — read the whole thing. (hat-tip: Henry Abbott)

  • Dan Reed, president of the D-League, reflects on Curry’s contributions from his time as VP of the NBDL. (hat-tip: Matt Moore)

Last but certainly not least, Keith Langlois has another monster Q&A with Joe Dumars at Pistons.com. If I had more time I’d devote an entire post to this, so do yourself a favor and read the whole thing. Selected highlights:

Langlois: Veteran coaches, and I think we can cite a few recent examples, are usually leery about playing young guys. But even going back to Rick Carlisle, a first-time coach, he only went to Tayshaun Prince when it was kind of a desperate situation and it paid off. Do you expect Michael to be more or less leery about playing young guys?

Dumars: Coaching is a lot about personality. It’s your personality as a coach. Just as to sit in the seat that I sit in is a lot of my personality. Either you have the propensity to take risks and do the unconventional, or you don’t and you’re going to go the conservative standard way that everybody else does things. I like to think I came in and never worried aobut how everybody else was doing things. I was going to do things the way I saw it. You can expect the same thing from Michael.

Langlois: What do you think the odds are that Amir is a permanent part of the rotation next year?

Dumars: I think there’s a good chance you’re going to see him as part of that. We’ve always been high on him. We didn’t just become high on him. He’s a guy we have a lot of confidence in as a young player, just as we have confidence in Afflalo and Stuckey, we have the same kind of confidence in Amir Johnson.

Langlois: Is the plan for Cheikh Samb more of the same – some D-League time and back here as well?

Dumars: I think you’ll see a lot of the same stuff with Cheikh Samb next year – some D-League, some here, kind of back and forth. We want him to get some game-time experience and where he’s going to get that the most from is the D-League. But we also want him competing here at this level against these guys, too, because that’s going to help him get better. So just to keep him here year-round, only practicing, doesn’t make the most of him. And just to send him to the D-League and not having to go up against our guys is probably not best for him, so we’re going to give him a mixture of both, for sure.

Langlois: The Nazr Mohammed trade put the mid-level exception in play for you. You can use it without exceeding the tax threshold. What are you looking at with that – do you think you’ll use it on one player or split it over more than one? Any ideas?

Dumars: That’s once you find out what your roster is like. But the fact we have the ability to use the entire mid-level is a great chip for us going into this free agency. If we had gone into this summer without the ability to use the full mid-level, like we want to, that just limits what you can do. I like the fact we’re in position – doesn’t mean we’ll use it – but the fact we can is a huge chip for me when I’m sitting here putting a team together.

Dumars also said that Rodney Stuckey, Arron Afflalo, Amir and Samb are all playing in the Vegas Summer League.

There are a half dozen more questions I’d like to post, too. Dumars is always an interesting guy, but I think Langlois consistently does a good job asking the right questions. Kudos to both.

Saunders open to deep playoff rotation

For most of the year, we’ve been led to believe the rotation will inevitably get shorter in the playoffs. After all, that’s what conventional basketball wisdom says teams are supposed to do. A little bit ago, I argued that perhaps the Pistons ought to ignore that school of thought since their ability to bring a steady stream of rested players off the bench might be what’s kept the opposition on their heels for most of the year.

Now, with the playoffs on the horizon, it seems Flip Saunders is starting to come around. Here’s some comments from a recent radio interview (via Full-Court Press):

“If we continue to play the way we’re playing, maybe we do extend our bench the way it is right now and the way we’ve gone most of the season,” coach Flip Saunders said on The Stoney and Wojo Show on WDFN-AM Detroit.

While Saunders declined to name which players would be included in that rotation, he did say that Theo Ratliff would be amongst them as a situational defensive substitute.

The depth of the Pistons bench led Saunders to conclude that this year’s Pistons team is the best he’s coached.

“There’s probably five or six games we could have won this year if we hadn’t played as many young players, but I think it’s paying dividends for us right now,” he said. “I think because of the way the bench is and the depth that we have that this is probably our best team.”

Saunders specifically praised the play of reserves Amir Johnson and Walter Herrmann, who he called the second- and third-best players in Tuesday’s comeback win over Minnesota.

For fans of Herrmann, it seems we should see a lot more of him down the stretch. From Chris McCosky’s blog:

Back to the business at hand, if you guys were chomping at the bit to see more of Cheikh Samb, back off. It’s not happening. Here’s Flip Saunders after practice today:

“We’ll play him some, but it’s not like we say we’re going to play Cheikh a lot of minutes because I still want to play Amir a lot. I still want to play Maxey and play Walter, too.”

Samb’s an interesting prospect, for sure, but I have no problem whatsoever with this decision. There’s no chance that he’ll even be active for the playoffs, let alone getting any PT, whereas Herrmann has enough experience under his belt to think that he could step up in a pinch should the right matchup arise. Not saying it’s going to happen, but I don’t think it’d surprise anyone if it did.

Cheikh up

PistonsNation takes a look at Cheikh Samb’s progress with the Ft. Wayne Mad Ants.

Cheikh Samb is getting stronger

Krista Jahnke has an excellent article about Cheikh Samb’s development in the Free Press today:

“He’s unbelievably improved from training camp to now,” forward Antonio McDyess said. “Before, you could push him around, get shots off on him. Now he’s gotten so much stronger. This guy lifts weights so much, it doesn’t make sense. If he takes off his shirt, he’s pretty ripped up. It’s hard to push him off the blocks now.”

A lot was made about his beanpole frame when he was first drafted, but he’s made measurable improvements in his strength (above and beyond McDyess’ locker room observations):

In one test, strength and conditioning coach Arnie Kander has players stand a certain distance from a target on a wall and throw a medicine ball at it. The goal is to hit it hard, like a line drive. At first, Samb couldn’t hit it at all, even when using an 8.8-pound ball.

Now he can do it with a 17- or 18-pound ball, partly because he has gained 25 pounds in two years.

“And that’s pure muscle,” Kander said, “because his body fat has fallen a percentage or two.”

Even with an NBA body on the way, he’s still extremely short on experience — as Jahnke points out, he’s played all of 17 games on this side of the ocean, including preseason, summer league and the D-League. But if he can marinate down in Ft. Wayne for another year or so, he just might be legitimate rotation filler come 2009, be it late next season or early in 09-10.

Cheikh’s triple-double

In his second game back with Ft. Wayne, Cheikh Samb messed around and got a triple-double: 12 points, 12 boards and 11 blocks. (hat-tip: Quick Darshan)

Samb and Mejia are coming and going

With his dental and passport issues fixed, Cheikh Samb is returning to Ft. Wayne

Cheikh Samb, the 7-foot-1 center who was sent from the Detroit Pistons and played two games in Fort Wayne in mid-December before being sidelined with a broken jaw, is returning to the team.

“We should have Cheikh Samb coming in (Monday),” Ants president and general manager Jeff Potter said. “I just talked to him and he’s in his car and should be here.”

Samb played in back-to-back games Dec. 13 and 14 against Dakota, averaging 13.5 points, nine rebounds and four blocks.

… just as Sammy Mejia is leaving to accept an offer to play in Italy:

“Fort Wayne wasn’t the problem,” said Mejia, who missed the first 10 games of the NBA D-League season with a leg injury. “It’s hard to be in one spot, and everybody’s goal is not to be there. It’s a different kind of comfort being over there. Nobody who is part of the Mad Ants wants to be in the Mad Ant uniform. I got comfortable in a different kind of way.”

Even though Mejia happened to be playing for the Pistons’ D-League affiliate, the Pistons relinquished their draft rights to him when they released him in favor of Ronald Dupree at the end of the preseason. But still, he seemed like a nice kid and I’m happy that he’s found some place a little more comfortable to play. He was obviously Ft. Wayne’s best player, leading the team with 19.5 points and 8.4 boards a game.

The Mad Ants next play on Friday and Saturday, and if you really want to see Samb in action, don’t forget that all D-League games are now streamed online for free.

Samb is back

From Saturday’s Detroit News: Rookie Cheikh Samb was back with the team after spending more than a week in Senegal, Africa, taking care of a passport issue. Samb will spend the next week or so getting back into shape and then is expected to rejoin the Pistons’ D-League affiliate in Fort Wayne.

Cheikh’s in Senegal

I totally missed this from last weekend: “Pistons rookie Cheikh Samb did not travel with Detroit during their four-game road trip because he has back in Senegal dealing with what team officials describe as a passport-related matter. The matter is not considered serious and team officials anticipate him returning sometime next week.”