Tuesday Bolts – 6.30.09
Oklahoma City ranked 28th on Steve Aschburner’s top free agent destinations: “Oklahoma City: The talent on the
roster, and the brainpower in the front office have lots of admirers, and the Ford Center fans can be among the league’s most active and loud. But there’s no cachet to being the first franchise in, at the big league level, and the Thunder will need to win soon to convince young players to stay or come aboard.”
Darnell Mayberry with some great analysis about the Paul Millsap rumor: “He’ll create a logjam. Where will Millsap play? The Thunder isn’t really worried about positions right now. The team is playing Green out of his customary small forward position at power forward just to get him the most minutes as possible. But acquiring Millsap will either move Green to the bench (highly unlikely) or mean Millsap will continue coming off the bench (making him one of the league’s most expensive reserves). Add to that, Green already plays 37 minutes, mainly at power forward, and Durant plays 39 per game, mostly at small forward. There is little wiggle room in the rotation at those positions (unless you want to move Durant back to shooting guard, Green back to small forward and cut off minutes for Thabo Sefolosha and third overall pick Harden. Again, highly unlikely).”
Layup Drill on the Harden pick: “James Harden was not only one of the best talents available, but fits well into the Thunder’s plan. The pick solidifies Russell Westbrook as their Point Guard of the future and gives them a solid scoring punch at the Shooting Guard position. Harden is one of the more NBA-ready prospects, and will be able to contribute immediately. The lefty can shoot well, uses his solid frame to rebound and has been praised for his highly unselfish game and ability to feel out the game. This again fits well for the Thunder, who have a lot of options in Kevin Durant, Jeff Green and Westbrook.”
Kevin Durant’s basketball camp started yesterday: “The Oklahoma City Thunder star opened the three-day camp Monday at Heritage Hall High School. About 350 boys and girls between the ages of 7 and 14 are participating in the camp, which was formerly hosted by All-Star point guard Chris Paul of the New Orleans Hornets. Durant just finished his first season playing in Oklahoma City, finishing sixth in the NBA in scoring. He was the Rookie of the Year during the 2007-08 season. Campers paid $199 to attend the camp, although some scholarships were available through the Urban League of Greater Oklahoma City.” And Adrian Peterson’s camp just wrapped up too. Good time to be a sports camper in Oklahoma. (Picture KD put up on Twitter)
The Thunder appear to be close to hiring another assistant: “The Thunder is expected to soon announce at least one new addition to its coaching staff, but two names have been linked to the position. Former Sacramento Kings assistant coach Rex Kalamian has interviewed for the job, according to a source. J.B. Bickerstaff, the son of former head coach Bernie Bickerstaff, who most recently served under Kevin McHale with the Minnesota Timberwolves, has also received interest from the Thunder.”
D.J. White isn’t having your normal summer: “While most of his teammates left town at the end of the season, Thunder forward D.J. White has remained put for the most part. White, coming off an injury-shortened rookie season, said he is trying to make up for lost time. The last two-plus months have allowed him to do so. After missing the season’s first 75 games with a benign tumor in his jaw, White has spent the off-season bulking up and doing plenty of skill work. He said he’s already up to 235 pounds, and said he’d like to tack on five more. Whether at the Thunder practice facility or back home in Tuscaloosa, Ala., White has remained busy. “I’m pretty much feeling like my old self,” White said. “I’ve had a chance to do a lot of things I haven’t done in the past couple of months. I can workout fully, no restrictions. I can lift weights. I can eat what I want to. I feel good right now.”
A perfect example of why Sam Presti is a step ahead of all other general managers: “The last thing we needed to do was be demanding and assertive. Not now,” Kahn said. “I don’t know how this is going to play out. There could be a lot of twists and turns. But I don’t feel any self-imposed pressure that this needs to be resolved or concluded in any short fashion.” Kahn said he didn’t know how the Rubio situation was “going to play out.” Presti did. That’s why he passed on Rubio and that’s why the Thunder’s moving forward with an exciting new player and Minnesota is scrambling to figure that thing out.
The Baseline previews free agency: “There isn’t often a strong crop of free agent centers, and this year is no different. Mehmet Okur should wind up back with the Jazz. If your team is looking for a center, it’ll be sorting through Zaza Pachulia, Marcin Gortat and Rasho Nesterovic.”
Some impressive words from Shaq about Blake Griffin: “My (10 year old) son is starting to play now, and I don’t like to let him watch players that are really, really fancy. Of course, I’ll let him watch Kobe, LeBron, T-Mac (Tracy McGrady). But I show him Blake Griffin and I say, ‘Shareef, this is the dude you should watch and pattern your game after.’ Because my son, when he’s older, I think he’s going to have the same body type — 6-10, muscular, freakish athletically.”
Empty the Bench looks at the top 12 unrestricted free agents: “Mr. Ariza is one of my absolute favorite free agents this summer. He’s one of the youngest kids out there, his natural ability measures up with anybody available, he’s got tremendous work ethic, he constantly working on and improving his game and he’s already proven himself to be a winner. Oh, and on top of all that he’s a pretty good basketball player, too. Ariza is the rare defender who is both a strong man defender and an excellent vulture in the passing lanes. On offense he takes it to the rack hard and in the last year, especially in the 2009 postseason, he’s turned himself into a strong outside shooter.”
It’s looking like Marcin Gortat will be available: “Smith said the Magic haven’t given up on trying to keep Turkoglu, but they will have to go deep into the punitive luxury tax to re-sign him or promising center Marcin Gortat – and other players. They have only eight players on their roster, and need to at least add five more this summer. The Magic aren’t expected to be able to match offers for Gortat, a restricted free agent who made $770,000 last season as Dwight Howard’s backup. Smith indicated they would be out of the running if offers “were north of 5 [$5 million per season.]“

Great discussion here fellas.
@Kev
I’m not saying Gortat is a bad idea (at a reasonable price) or that Kaman is exactly what we should go for. I’m saying that either one makes more sense in different situations. And in this case, I think free agency will say a whole lot about Presti’s plans. If he makes a trade for an established center (Chandler, Kaman, to a lesser extend Biedrins) it will say that he feels the team can compete right away. If he signs Gortat or does nothing, it will say that he doesn’t believe he has the pieces yet and will be looking to the draft next year and future trades (after his pieces have rounded into shape) in order to put the finishing touches on.
I see your points – the next week or so should tell the tale . . .
@Royce
thanks Royce . . .
and thanks for all the great columns . . .
I’d say if Gortat asks for $6 million or more, Presti will definitely stand pat and wait for a cash-strapped team to try and move a center either now or before the deadline.
Plus, those two (probable) lottery picks make for awfully nice bargaining chips, that is unless Alabi, Aldrich, Jerome Jordan or Monroe reveal that they can dominate at the 5 spot in the NBA next year.
Adding on to what J.G. said, there are a lot of centers in next years draft that could prove over the next year to have great potential. Instead of the 2-center draft that we had last year, there will be several including Jordan, Alabi and others that have proven themselves to be defensive stoppers.
I think with our solid scouting, potentially 2 lottery picks, we could pick up another very good center to help build around.
Now in saying this, I will admit I’m on the Gortat bandwagon. I love his potential and I love that he is still only 25 years old. However, I want him at a bargain value, and if teams get crazy at his per minute averages (something stupid GM’s do all the time) then we will pull out. We will just have to wait and see when these teams start throwing offers at him…
I think Gortat is much more than stop gap. It’s about percentages when you are trying to figure a big guys ability, not raw points and rebounds.
By percentages we can really see what is going on. There were only 17 guys in the NBA last season who played at least 500 minutes, and grabbed at least 15% OF AVAILABLE REBOUNDS and blocked at least 4% of opponents shots while HE WAS ON THE COURT. Gortat is on the list, along with Dwight Howard, Yao, Birdman etc.
Gortat is protecting the basket at a rate comparable to those guys. He blocks more shots and rebounds better by percentage than Yao, Noah, Bynum etc. He is not a 7 foot stiff if you’ve watched him. He is a mean rebounder, shot blocker and hustler. And he plays very tough man defense.
He is absolutely worth 6 Mil a year. No doubt about it. This financial mess is really in our favor because few teams can afford to get in a bidding war for his services, and we are one of the teams that can. You can easily pay Gortat the jack it takes to sign him, and his salary will be paid for from the second season on when Watsons 6 million dollar contract expires after this season. Gortat is worth the risk.
Here is the list: http://tinyurl.com/mzyogt
@Joe
What he said.
Great post, Joe.
@Joe
totally agree, gortat is definitely more than a stopgap. and as kev said earlier, he’s very good on putbacks/pick n roll, so he isn’t useless offensively. he really is a cheaper version of chandler, except his foot isn’t falling off (and he plays better man defense). signing him in no way says that we aren’t trying to compete soon- i think he’ll be better than kaman next year, and by a wide margin.
Everyone is really hot on Gortat, I watched alot of basketball this last year and I haven’t seen NEARLY ENOUGH of him to sign him to a huge contract.
harden sucks
harden should not make the team steph curry is 10 times better
@dave
Haha and out of left field we’ve got a Harden hater! haha
What’s up dave? You won’t find too many around here to agree with you with that…
@dave
Wow, I just don’t know how anyone can top that in-depth analysis contrasting the overall merits of Harden and Curry.
@dave
Wait….Kev?
funny
@Kev
You know, I honestly wonder if other posters/blogs have as much in-depth discussion with lively debate AND have as much fun as we do here.
@J.G.
Doubtful. Royce has made this place one of a kind.
agree with your post and Keith’s. And kudos to Royce and Joe for keeping out the namecalling . . . love the discussion here . . .