Nolan Smith dawing interest and Bulls, Hawks and Thunder most likley to pursue... (1 Viewer)

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BigGameDamian

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http://www.oregonlive.com/blazers/i...ee-agent_nolan_smith_little_used_in_port.html

No matter what happens the rest of his career, Nolan Smith has accepted that he will always be linked to Kenneth Faried.

After every mammoth dunk, every dizzying double-double, every hustle-infused highlight-reel moment Denver's "Manimal" unleashes, somewhere, some disbelieving Trail Blazers fan will curse under his breath: "He should be a Blazer."

"I don't blame them," Smith said. "I don't blame them at all. Seeing what he's doing, seeing how he plays when he's on the court with his team, it's very easy to say, 'Damn, we could have had him.' But they could have had Michael Jordan, as well. It's part of the draft. They're mad at Greg Oden, too. So you can just add me to the guys they can be mad at."

And there's no question Blazers fans are mad. The team's decision to select Smith one spot ahead of Faried with the No. 21 overall pick of the 2011 NBA draft is one of several personnel moves that led to last season's roster implosion and this season's rebuild. As Faried quickly blossomed into a beastly difference-maker in Denver, Smith disappointed in Portland, rarely cracking the rotation and rarely contributing meaningful minutes.

Smith's two-year tenure in Portland will come to an end this week and it's only fitting that he'll face Denver -- and Faried -- today in one of his final games with the Blazers. But as he leaves Rip City, Smith prefers not to dwell on his past failings, but rather to focus on rediscovering his game and prove there is a place for him in the NBA.

"This is a business and things in this league happen in time," Smith said. "You have to get to a team where you're in their plans. That's one thing I'm looking forward to this summer in free agency. I'm going to get to a place that wants me, that wants me to be myself and play my game. If you think about it, there's no telling what would have happened with (Faried) if the Blazers drafted him. He might have been playing behind LaMarcus (Aldridge) and maybe his opportunity wouldn't have come. His opportunity in Denver didn't come until Nene got hurt. But Kenneth got an opportunity and Kenneth made the most of his opportunity -- in Denver. So now all the Portland fans can be mad."

Smith's perspective is that he was never given a fair shake in Portland. Last season's NBA lockout stalled and complicated his development from Day 1. A harried training camp sabotaged the Blazers -- and Smith's growth -- and a frenetic season that was heavy on games and light on practices shackled a player that earned first-team All-American honors and was named the Atlantic Coast Conference Player of the Year as a senior in college.

But what about this season? Smith had a full summer, a full training camp and a full slate of practices and games to show his value. The Blazers have been desperate for bench production since opening night and Smith never seized the opportunity. He was unable to beat out Ronnie Price in training camp and, when Price went down with an ankle injury, never was able to gain the trust of coach Terry Stotts.

Smith says it's hard for a player to show his talent and develop a feel for the NBA during a three- or four-minute shift. Team insiders respond by saying that, while Smith worked hard behind the scenes in practices and workouts, he never showed enough ability and confidence to earn a rotation spot.

The aggressive, multifaceted player from Duke who scored in bunches and shut down opposing guards on defense has been absent in Portland as Smith has struggled to run a team, handle defensive pressure and shoot with consistency. He's averaging just 2.8 points and 0.9 assists, while shooting 37 percent from the field, in 7.3 minutes per game this season.

"I'm not one to make excuses," Smith said. "I don't point fingers. I don't blame anyone for anything that's going on. This just wasn't the right situation for me. And I think everybody can see that. I'm just going to learn from it and move on. I'll always be happy that the Blazers drafted me with the 21st pick. They made my dream a dream come true."

So what's next for Smith? Like Luke Babbitt. Like JJ Hickson. Like Sasha Pavlovic and Jared Jeffries, Smith's tenure with the Blazers will end this week and he will not be coming back. Sources close to Smith say there will be a host of teams poised to offer him a second chance, with the Chicago Bulls, Atlanta Hawks and Oklahoma City Thunder likely be the most aggressive pursuers.

While Smith wasn't willing to discuss his interest in other teams, Oklahoma City, in particular, certainly would be an intriguing option for the 6-foot-2 combo guard. For starters, the franchise's reputation for developing young talent is second only to the San Antonio Spurs in the NBA. And more importantly, Smith has a deep, lifelong connection with Thunder coach Scott Brooks.

Brooks played two seasons with Smith's father, the late Derek Smith, in Philadelphia from 1988-90, and the families have been close for decades. Derek was a groomsman in Brooks' wedding and Nolan, then a young boy, was the ring-bearer. Brooks is Nolan's godfather.

And while it appears Smith's career has reached a crossroads, Brooks has no doubt there is a place for him in the league.

"He's definitely an NBA player," Brooks said. "Sometimes you've just got to keep working and get your opportunities. He's a great kid, he works hard and he has a good skill level. But a lot of times, it doesn't always work out the way you want it to. But he's still here, he still has an opportunity to keep playing and keep improving. I know him. He's a great kid and he's going to continue to work hard. That's what he does."

Smith also takes solace in the plight of Los Angeles Clippers point guard Chauncey Billups, who bounced around among five teams before finding his niche with the Detroit Pistons in his sixth NBA season. Billups went on to play in five All-Star games, earn an NBA Finals MVP award and lead the Pistons to an NBA Championship.

"Chauncey Billups is somebody I talk to all the time," Smith said. "He told me it took him five teams before he got comfortable and got to prove himself. It takes time. It takes time, it takes a situation and it takes opportunity -- a real opportunity -- to prove yourself. He tells me to keep working hard, bring it every single day in practice and work on my game. So that's what I'm doing."

Is Smith destined to become the next Chauncey Billups? Or will he become another first-round bust who never found his place in the NBA?

Only time will tell. But as Smith prepares to leave Portland for a new opportunity, he does so with fondness for his first professional home. It's been a frustrating, disappointing two seasons, but Smith insists it's not the end.

"I feel like it was a great two years, as far as being a part of this team, being a part of this city," Smith said. "Living here was great. And all in all, it was a great two years, as far as me growing as a person, dealing with ups and downs, which I've dealt with before. So now I just look forward to a brighter future, more opportunity and I'm excited for next year."

-- Joe Freeman
 
Smith also takes solace in the plight of Los Angeles Clippers point guard Chauncey Billups, who bounced around among five teams before finding his niche with the Detroit Pistons in his sixth NBA season. Billups went on to play in five All-Star games, earn an NBA Finals MVP award and lead the Pistons to an NBA Championship.

"Chauncey Billups is somebody I talk to all the time," Smith said. "He told me it took him five teams before he got comfortable and got to prove himself. It takes time. It takes time, it takes a situation and it takes opportunity -- a real opportunity -- to prove yourself. He tells me to keep working hard, bring it every single day in practice and work on my game. So that's what I'm doing."

LOL! Yes Nolan, keep telling yourself you're the next Chauncey Billups.
 
Nolan can play

I agree. I'll root for him throughout the league. I don't think he's ever going to be a star, but I think a few years from now, people could end up talking about him the way they do Jack now.
 
I don't think so. I liked Jack, I saw promise in him, but I don't see that promise in smith. He seems like a nice guy, so I'll root for him to succeed, and prove me wrong, but I doubt that will happen.
 
Nolan Smith is garbage. He really doesn't do anything well.
 
He should pick the team which will give him the most minutes to develop, not OKC.
 
I will never hold a grudge against Nolan. Not his fault where he was picked.

I also don't think he'll ever make any other level except backup. He's a step slow and his jumper takes too much time to get off.
He won't fix those things.
 
I could see Nolan being a good NBA player in time he just has to learn how to finish at the rim.
 
He'd be a perfect complement to Kirk Hinrich. The Bulls would be able to put out a pair of guards who can't shoot better than .375.
 
I think the article kinda misses the point re fans' disappointment with Nolan. IMO, for most fans it isn't that they look at Faried's box score and conclude the Blazers picked the wrong guy. Pretty much every fan I know with at least two functional brain cells knew before the pick was made that the Blazers should pick Faried before Smith. The box scores and the eye test are just proof the fans were right and management was wrong. And that will always piss fans off, because even though we like to think we're pretty smart, deep down we believe management should be smarter. That's what they get paid for. Because picking Nolan before Faried was such an obvious gaff, I can only conclude, as most of us did at the time, it was part of the wink-wink deal we made with Denver. Problem is, that part of the deal just adds insult to injury.
 
Sounds like an intelligent guy. But I couldn't help but read the thread title, "Nolan smith d[r]awing interest..." and my mind automatically filled in various D-league team names.
 
I heard from a very good source within the organization that everybody was on board with drafting Faried except for minutes before the draft one team psychologist spoke up when they had a vote and said that there was red flags with his personality. Paul Allen listened and the rest is history. The team psychologist has now been let go and management is still taking the blame for that humungous fuck up.

Such as life with Paul Allen as the owner.
 
Every team in the NBA has two PGs who are better than him. I don't see where the minutes are.
 
I heard from a very good source within the organization that everybody was on board with drafting Faried except for minutes before the draft one team psychologist spoke up when they had a vote and said that there was red flags with his personality. Paul Allen listened and the rest is history. The team psychologist has now been let go and management is still taking the blame for that humungous fuck up.

Such as life with Paul Allen as the owner.

The psychologist probably didn't like that Faried has two moms.
 
Nolan has to be in the conversation for worst player in the nba
 
I love that he throws out MJ and Oden as examples of the fanbase being pissed off.

Almost nobody wanted Durant over Oden. Pretty much everyone was screaming on draft night about passing on Faried.
 
I heard from a very good source within the organization that everybody was on board with drafting Faried except for minutes before the draft one team psychologist spoke up when they had a vote and said that there was red flags with his personality. Paul Allen listened and the rest is history. The team psychologist has now been let go and management is still taking the blame for that humungous fuck up.

Such as life with Paul Allen as the owner.

Your source's obvious agenda is to defend management. Allen doesn't place one shrink above all the basketball experts he pays for.

Although I admit that fear of the Oregonian probably made them think twice about a long-haired Muslim raised by 2 black Muslim lesbians.

What happened is that Coach K, Nate's boss, effusively praised his player Nolan to Nate. Nate took his orders from his boss and pushed for Nolan.
 
Your source's obvious agenda is to defend management. Allen doesn't place one shrink above all the basketball experts he pays for.

Although I admit that fear of the Oregonian probably made them think twice about a long-haired Muslim raised by 2 black Muslim lesbians.

What happened is that Coach K, Nate's boss, effusively praised his player Nolan to Nate. Nate took his orders from his boss and pushed for Nolan.

My source has no agenda. He never liked management to begin with. He's closely associated with our interim coach from last year.
 
Kaleb's shoeshine boy was in the draft room shining shoes when the shrink overrode all the expensive experts?
 
I heard from a very good source within the organization that everybody was on board with drafting Faried except for minutes before the draft one team psychologist spoke up when they had a vote and said that there was red flags with his personality. Paul Allen listened and the rest is history. The team psychologist has now been let go and management is still taking the blame for that humungous fuck up.

Such as life with Paul Allen as the owner.

I know Portland is lucky to have a guy like Paul Allen but I really do hope it's Neil Oshley that is making the decisions for this team.
 
JJ Hickson and Kevin Faried are very similar players. Hickson actually edges him out stats wise. So even if we had drafted Faried we'd be in the same boat we're in now, needing an interior defender. An advantage would be, that Faried would make better trade bait because he's on his rookie contract.

I'd rather have Hickson/Faried as the starting PF, because I like PFs with inside toughness that can finish inside.
 
I heard from a very good source within the organization that everybody was on board with drafting Faried except for minutes before the draft one team psychologist spoke up when they had a vote and said that there was red flags with his personality. Paul Allen listened and the rest is history. The team psychologist has now been let go and management is still taking the blame for that humungous fuck up.

Such as life with Paul Allen as the owner.

A very good source, aka your ass. They spend weeks analyzing players and studying film, then some psychologist pipes up at the last minute and they pick Smith?
 
JJ Hickson and Kevin Faried are very similar players. Hickson actually edges him out stats wise. So even if we had drafted Faried we'd be in the same boat we're in now, needing an interior defender. An advantage would be, that Faried would make better trade bait because he's on his rookie contract.

I'd rather have Hickson/Faried as the starting PF, because I like PFs with inside toughness that can finish inside.

Ummmmm, Faried is a way better defender than Hickson. The difference is night and day.
 
JJ Hickson and Kevin Faried are very similar players. Hickson actually edges him out stats wise. So even if we had drafted Faried we'd be in the same boat we're in now, needing an interior defender. An advantage would be, that Faried would make better trade bait because he's on his rookie contract.

I'd rather have Hickson/Faried as the starting PF, because I like PFs with inside toughness that can finish inside.

How about this guy?



By the way,how impressed have you been with Hickson when Aldridge sits out? Not exactly dominant, eh?
 

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