Carlos had 23 and 8 last night. He seems to be playing himself into shape right now after a slow start, an unfortunate commonality among NBA veterans.
For the year he is at 15 and 8 in 29 minutes per game.
Normally with someone who transfers away, like say Jamal, Boateng, or Olek, I would say no. No ill-will towards them (in fact I rooted for Jamal at Cal when I was in SF), but they chose to leave and not be a part of the family. Elliott didn't have a choice. When your mother is sick and may not have much time left, going back home is hardly a choice.
So, to answer your question: yes, I certainly consider Elliott a part of the Duke family, same as I would Luol and Kyrie, who also played one year. (I would argue Kyrie was in a similar situation: is being the #1 draft pick really or returning to school much of a choice? I'd say not really...) Tough to compare them to a player like Battier who played all 4 years, embodied the team first, defensive minded approach that defines Duke, but yes, I consider all 3 very much a part of the family.
I do not know if Grant's contract has a no-trade clause in it, but Grant and his family are very happy in PHX and I think his family has played a part in why he has decided to stay there on several occasions: he originally signed in '07, then picked up his player option in '08, resigned with the team in '09, picked up his player option for '10, then resigned in '11.
Perhaps equally important, PHX likes Grant: on both resignings, PHX increased its original offer to match outside interest. Clearly there is a strong mutual attraction there.
That said, he has garnered significant interest during his last two stints in free agency, and I could see him as a valuable asset to a contender (and has an expiring contract no less).
Q "Why do you like Duke, you didn't even go there." A "Because my art school didn't have a basketball team."
I love Grant as well. But might as well point out that he was absolutely abused and torched by Kobe last night who dropped 48 on him. Grant didn't fare too well going 1-12. He has done well guarding Kobe in the past but maybe age has caught up to him on the defensive end. Kobe looked like a young buck again out there.
"Just be you. You is Enough."
RE: Kyrie
I thought this was interesting
Evan (St. Paul)
Is the Rookie of the year Rubio's to lose?
Chad Ford
(1:32 PM)
At this point yes. Weird fact. If Rubio wins ROY, he'll be the third player from the draft class of 2009 to do. That's got to be some sort of record. Tyreke Evans in 2010, Blake Griffin in 2011, Ricky Rubio in 2012.
In anyone is interested, here is a good highlight reel of Kyrie against Charlotte. His drive at 2:25 is simply amazing.
Here's a good writeup of Kyrie and Grant in advance of their meeting this evening (Cavaliers vs Suns):
Suns veteran Grant Hill, Cavaliers rookie Kyrie Irving bookend the career lifespan of NBA players
http://www.azcentral.com/sports/suns...ie-irving.html
Nice...JJ led scoring for the Magic last night with 17, his 4 free throws down the stretch helped seal the win. JJ logged 27 minutes, Duhon had 3 pts in 16. Neither Nolan nor Elliot Williams got off the bench in the same game.
Q "Why do you like Duke, you didn't even go there." A "Because my art school didn't have a basketball team."
Kyrie ranks #1 in my "Oh, what might have been" list for Duke players.
Via Espn
What to do with Boozer and Noah
12:52PM ET
Chicago Bulls
Top
Comments
During last season's playoffs, Bulls coach Tom Thibodeau often elected to sit his starting frontcourt of Joakim Noah and Carlos Boozer in the fourth quarter of tight games in favor of the defense of Taj Gibson and Omer Asik.
And now 12 games into the 2011-12 season, that theme has continued, as Noah and Boozer have sat in the fourth at times. And it appears it's not just their D that's keeping them on the pine, as ESPN's John Hollinger notes in his Thursday chat.
From Hollinger, a possible solution to this growing concern in Chicago:
ESPN's John Hollinger
With Noah-Boozer chemistry an issue, Boozer may need to become sixth man for Bulls
"it's getting to be an issue. Boozer and Noah, for whatever reason, have never meshed as a frontcourt tandem. On paper it looks good; on the court it's a mess. Thibs may need to start Gibson, use Boozer as a sixth man and get Booz and Noah the bulk of their minutes away from each other. Using Boozer this way might have the secondary effect of preventing him from killing Luol Deng by playing him with both the starters and the second unit and resting him for 20 seconds each half."
Hm, thanks for sharing. Didn't realize this was an issue. Is it "on-court chemistry" in that they just can't seem to get on the same page or is it an issue where they don't like each other or at least don't like playing with each other.
I also thought defense was Noah's specialty?