HurraKane212
RedHot-n-Rollin circa1984
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) but I love his game and I think he'd instantly make us a smarter, better basketball team. he doesn't need plays called for him to get his shots, he rebounds well for his position, he's versatile enough to play 2-4 (depending on matchups) he's a pretty good team defender and decent man defender, and he's got "glue guy" written all over him. Olympiakos fans threw a flare, plastic bottles and other items at Panathinaikos' bench during a timeout, sending the players scampering for safety. A timekeeper was slightly injured and part of the bench and the surrounding court had severe burn marks.
Enraged fans were trying to storm the court and would not listen to the pleas of Olympiakos players for calm. Riot police moved in to contain the supporters. About 200 fans clashed with police after the game and even tried to storm the locker rooms and interview room where the coaches were meeting with the media.
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/20...es/05/21/2030.ap.bko.greek.finals.riots.0338/
So here is the deal, JChill was not down with the whole "riots/throwing flares/mass violence in the middle of the game" thing and may want to come back to the US. His situation with ATL is no good, and he'd be an RFA. We could either sign him to an offer sheet, or do an S&T with ATL.
Ideas? Thoughts?
If we can just sign him to an offer sheet which is back loaded (e.g. the way Niko wanted to pay Sessions), we might get him for just capspace and still have lots of assets to trade.
If we do a S&T, I'd give them Sergio, Travis, Webster and the 24th for JChill signed to ~7mil a year.
Gives ATL some depth and more athleticism. Outlaw can backup the 3/4, Webster the 2/3, and Sergio can backup Bibby. Also gives the Hawks some flexibility in dealing with Marvin Williams and AC Law.
Portland is left with:
Blake/Bayless
Roy/Rudy
JChill/Batum
LMA/ Backup PF.
Greg/ Joel
we'd still have some capspace, and we'd probably buy a pick or two. We have the option of bringing guys over (PetKo {prob not this year}, and Freeland {deep on the bench}) as well as signing a vet minimum player or two.
Now, if we buy a pick, or two, we could pick up a pg/sg in a decent PG draft, say, Eric Maynor for instance (I personally hold no preference for who we pick, except I think Tyreke Evans is a very interesting player and I don't care too much for Stephon Curry, though with the Blazer rotation I just outlined, his shooting might be handy).
Maybe we use a 2nd rounder on Collison/Beaubois (SP?) or Victor Claver.
The potential downside to this is that JChill is pretty much our "move" if we have to take a bad contract (eg. Speedy Claxton at 5 mil). And our PG rotation would be Blake/Bayless, so we're hoping Bayless brings it.
If we didn't have to take back a bad contract, we'd have some capspace to try and get an upgrade at vet pg if it was desired, but we'd only have cash and picks to do it with.
I know not everyone agrees with me (what the fuck is wrong with you people!?!) but I love his game and I think he'd instantly make us a smarter, better basketball team. he doesn't need plays called for him to get his shots, he rebounds well for his position, he's versatile enough to play 2-4 (depending on matchups) he's a pretty good team defender and decent man defender, and he's got "glue guy" written all over him.
Having said that I'm not sure I'd part with both Outlaw and Webster in a sign and trade to get him. The problem I see is that even though Batum and Childress both have decent career 3PT%, (37% for Nic and 36% for Childress) neither is what you would call a volume shooter from behind the arc and you wonder if their fairly modest averages would hold up if they were asked to hoist 4+ attempts per game (granted Webster certainly hasn't been a lights out shooter either with his paltry 37% average on 3.4 attempts per game).
It's a tough call. Before we knew Batum could be as effective as he was as a 19 year old rookie I would have been all over trading for Chill, but I really do believe deep down that Nic is going to be a fantastic two-way wing in a couple of more years and I think we can get away with a rotation of Nic and Martel for a little while until he fully comes into his own -- in short I don't see the small forward position being as critical as addressing the need at point guard. If the team can sew up a trade to address the point and there is still cap space to bring a veteran banger and possibly do a sign and trade of Travis + Serg to get the rights to Childress then I'd be all over it.
I am not a fan of any of the players you have moving to Atlanta, but Sergio, Outlaw, Webster and #24 is simply way too much for Josh Childress.
so it's not Outlaw, Webster & Sergio for just Childress, the capspace cleared is used to obtain another starter (hypothetically Miller or Hinrich)yeah, I am basically giving up those players so that we get Chill and have capspace for a miller/hinrich deal
Martell is a 37% 3 point shooter for his careerMasbee said:If we give up Webster to obtain Childress, I would worry about our outside shooting from the 3 spot.
so it's not Outlaw, Webster & Sergio for just Childress, the capspace cleared is used to obtain another starter (hypothetically Miller or Hinrich)
or, Portland gives up 3 players who'd all likely come off the bench, for the 2 best players mentioned who'd both probably start.
Martell is a 37% 3 point shooter for his career
Childress is a 36% 3 point shooter for his career
Batum is a 37% 3 point shooter for his career
STOMP
We already have Rudy for what you're describing. Besides, I'm not so sure that running a guy around screens to get him an open three is the best offensive strategy. Webster was never that great at it, and it seemed to wear Rudy out this season. Running a PG rotation with two guys who can penetrate and kick it out is a better strategy. Yet another reason why upgrading the PG position is the most important thing to do this offseason.I tried to address this in my post above. There's a different kind of mentality between "opportunistic," last-resort, three point shooters and guys who make their living as 3 point specialists (granted, Martel has been no great shakes with that job description). You have to wonder that if you asked Childress and/or Batum to stand in the corner and hoist threes off of kickouts 5 times a game would their averages hold up? Batum doesn't have a large enough body of work to say for sure, Childress has always been a guy who takes threes as a last resort, and Martel at least has improved slightly in each of his 3 years, suggesting that he might eventually be a somewhat consistent 40%+ shooter from behind the arc.
Or you can look at it like I do, which is that Childress thought he was going to go over there and dominate, and when he didn't, he put his ass in a sling and headed home. That alone is good enough reason to not pick him up.
I thought he tore his ACL?
He might have at some point. But when I watched a checkup on him partway through the season, he was playing ok. Put it this way. I don't think the Euro team thought they got their moneys worth.
childress doesn't have the kind of game that dominates. he's a very solid all around player who is efficient in everything he does, but he's never going to take over a game. he didn't dominate college or the nba, why would he have thought he would dominate in europe?Or you can look at it like I do, which is that Childress thought he was going to go over there and dominate, and when he didn't, he put his ass in a sling and headed home. That alone is good enough reason to not pick him up.
i know this has been touched on before but last season webster took more 3s than childress has attempted in his 4 year career.Martell is a 37% 3 point shooter for his career
Childress is a 36% 3 point shooter for his career
Batum is a 37% 3 point shooter for his career
STOMP
I don't think that matters much, but I'd be interested in someone expanding on why I should think it does. These guys do shoot hundreds of jumpers a day in practice, I don't see why it's some huge deal that they might take a few more in an actual game. If you equalize Batum's minutes to Martell's, the disparity in 3 point shots isn't really that great... Per 36 minutes, Martell shot 5.4 in 2007-8 to Nic's 4.2 this last seasoni know this has been touched on before but last season webster took more 3s than childress has attempted in his 4 year career.
I don't think that matters much, but I'd be interested in someone expanding on why I should think it does. These guys do shoot hundreds of jumpers a day in practice, I don't see why it's some huge deal that they might take a few more in an actual game. If you equalize Batum's minutes to Martell's, the disparity in 3 point shots isn't really that great... Per 36 minutes, Martell shot 5.4 in 2007-8 to Nic's 4.2 this last season
Last offseason we had lots of posters making the same sorts of claims about Travis not being able to remain a good 3 point shooter if he were to increase his attempts. While shooting more then twice as many as he had the year before, his % did drop all the way from 40% to 38%, but I think thats more or less the same clip.
STOMP
but I can assure you that Martell did not usually take them with a hand in his face. Usually he enjoyed wide open looks from the side as the D collapsed on Roy's drives, and those were the same sort of looks that Batum benefited from last season. I'm sure that JChildress would know what to do with those sorts of looks as well.It has a ton to do with the way defenses play you. If you get the reputation of being a dead-eye, volume, three point shooter (Jason Kopono, Danny Granger, Ray Allen et al.) you're going to have a great deal of trouble getting free for your shots as compared to a guy who rarely takes them. Think about it this way, what happened to Rudy after about the second month of the season? Teams figured him out and realized that his biggest threat was spotting up for fadeaway three pointers on the wing, they forced him to put the ball on the floor and try to shake free, which dropped his % steadily over time. If you take Nicolas or Childress and have them jacking up volume 3 point shots defenses will adjust and play them much more closely, which means you'd probably see guys who didn't shoot all that well from the perimeter when uncovered, shoot that much worse with a constant hand in their face.
If you take Nicolas or Childress and have them jacking up volume 3 point shots defenses will adjust and play them much more closely
Last offseason we had lots of posters making the same sorts of claims about Travis not being able to remain a good 3 point shooter if he were to increase his attempts. While shooting more then twice as many as he had the year before, his % did drop all the way from 40% to 38%, but I think thats more or less the same clip.
you might be right, but then again players stats go up and down throughout the season. Travis was shooting a ridiculously high % from deep early on and was putting it up at least as often as he was later on.It's possible that 2% is just variance, but I think that might be evidence of the difficulty in shooting the same percentage at a higher volume.
Childress is big and agile, but not a distance shooter. What he brings is defense and an extremely good ability to drive and score. Especially on guys who are smaller than him, like when he's playing SG.
so I compiled some stats normalized out to 36 minutes from our three incumbent SFs and JChildress. I used the 2007-8 stats from Josh and Martell and last seasons from Batum and Outlaw. I bolded the winner in each category and underlined the stat of the outright loser. For ties in a category I let both guys share the notationI will say it again, he is not a difference maker for this team
