Marvin Williams is sick and tired of having to answer questions about the Atlanta Hawks’ mistakes

09 Oct
2012

In one of the most obvious instances of preseason tanking we've been around for, the 2004-era Atlanta Hawks decided to jettison most of the big names that led them to 26 wins during the 2003-04 season for a scab-y core bred to lose as much as possible in 2004-05. Youngish types like rookie Josh Smith and Al Harrington were brought in on the cheap, while expiring contracts belonging to Antoine Walker, Tony Delk and Tom Gugliotta dotted the roster. Kevin Willis played for these guys, and Jon Barry, too. Pig Miller, surreptitiously hiding that toothpick, saw nine minutes of action. This was a terrible team that won 13 games. On purpose.

Their reward for all that? The second pick in the draft. And, after the Milwaukee Bucks possibly did the Hawks a favor and selected Andrew Bogut first overall, the Hawks decided to draft North Carolina freshman Marvin Williams. He of the constant, "when all is said and done, Marvin Williams may have the best career of anyone in this draft"-analysis from those who happen to work on cable TV and be wowed by yet another fluid swingman with athletic gifts.

Chris Paul and Deron Williams were not chosen by Atlanta. Both have moved on to garner MVP consideration and starting roles on teams in Los Angeles and New York; even if they're not starting for that Los Angeles team or that New York team. Marvin Williams, having just turned 19 a week before the draft but having long before turned into a 6-9 glider with all-around potential, was selected by Atlanta. And, in his first season away from the Hawks, the current Utah Jazz veteran is kind of sick of talking about the 2005 draft.

From the Salt Lake Tribune:

"People talk a lot about expectations and living up to expectations," Williams said, "but I hit them up with the million dollar question every time. My question is: Whose expectations do I have to live up to?"

Williams is 26. The reliable outside shooter has averaged double digits every year he has played in the NBA except his rookie season. The Jazz acquired Williams in exchange for point guard Devin Harris to make room for newly acquired Mo Williams. An 18,000-seat community center bearing Williams' name is being constructed in his hometown of Bremerton, Wash.

Williams is content.

"I don't have to live up to anybody's expectations but my own," he said. "I have to look at myself in the mirror every night. And when I do that, I'm very satisfied with where I came from and what I'm working toward."

I'm good with that. You can beg Marvin to drive a bit more or wish he'd develop a steadier dribble and post-up game, but it's not his fault he's living up to someone else's mistake.

A mistake on several basketball levels, it should be noted. Former Hawks GM Billy Knight was the guy who took a chance on Pau Gasol in Memphis just four years earlier, but he's also the one who littered the Hawk roster with win-now shooters (Glenn Robinson, Shareef Abdur-Rahim, Jason Terry) and badly whiffed on the Williams selection.

Knight's excuse, shouted to the rafters after the draft and especially after his bosses overruled him on a sign and trade for Joe Johnson a month later, was that picking for need in the NBA draft is always a recipe for disaster. You always take the best player available, if you're selecting in the NBA lottery, because you can always find a replacement for your perceived need either in that draft (with a trade down, to acquire extra assets along the way) or a deal for a veteran later in the offseason.

And he was completely correct in that regard. Save for the fact that he didn't draft the best player available, in Marvin Williams. And that just about 10 out of 10 observers would tell you the same thing all the way back in 2005, even with Marvin's potential still in high regard.

Paul was considered the best player available. Williams, even before he shed his college heft, was considered just a step behind him. This isn't revisionist nonsense — the Hawks were criticized then as much as they are now. And even if you fully commit to the "take the best guy"-ideal, adding another wing in Williams to a team featuring Josh Smith, eventually Joe Johnson, and a player in Al Harrington that you just signed and traded for? Even in that regard, you're stretching it.

Especially on a team that started Tyronn Lue and 34-year-old Kenny Anderson for 66 games in 2004-05.

Williams, at this point, is no seat filler. He's an average player on an average team looking to improve its station. He's done well to come back from a debilitating back ailment, he's a massive upgrade on a Jazz team that was terribly outclassed at the wing position last year, and his expiring contract is a boon for both Utah and Williams' own personal interests. Life is good.

We pride ourselves on watching nearly every game, moving from day to day and not living with imprints created years ago. It's hard, though, to disassociate Williams from the particulars of his NBA initiation. That doesn't mean we're expecting him to play better basketball than Chris Paul or Deron Williams, we didn't expect that 88 months ago. It's just the primary anecdote behind his bio. So it goes.

Tags: , , Deron Williams, , Marvin Williams, mistake, , , regard, ,
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Chris Paul does not want a name for his pending free agency, but we’ll suggest a few anyway

02 Oct
2012

Over the past few seasons, some very notable NBA free agencies have earned expressive nicknames: Dwight Howard's Dwightmare of 2011, Carmelo Anthony's Melodrama of 2010, and the so-cataclysmic-that-it-could-only-get-a-boring-title Summer of 2010. Next summer, all-world point guard Chris Paul will become a free agent, which has many observers and general managers wondering where he'll end up. Will the Los Angeles Clippers prove enough to keep him long-term? Or will another suitor win him over?

Paul, for his part, does not want to turn this process into another distraction. Nothing will be drawn out — instead, he'll evaluate things at the end of the season and make a decision, without goofy puns. From Scott Howard-Cooper for NBA.com:

Chris Paul insists he does not need a fancy title for his upcoming free agency. No catchy name, and certainly not his own climate. This will not be another nine-month long searing migraine of fans in agony, the media tripping over itself and the Clippers being on the clock to find a trade, or else. Not if Paul has anything to say about it.

"At the end of the season, I'll evaluate everything. But it's no secret. Everybody knows I love it here," Paul said. "I love our team, I love everything that's going on."

This move makes sense, and not just in terms of what a protracted decision-making process would mean to Paul's public image. As a pending free agent, he holds all the leverage. At the same time, he knows that the Clippers have a chance to be very good this year and doesn't want to waste that opportunity. If things go poorly, he can always change teams in the offseason. If they go well, then he has a suitable home.

However, Paul is also leaving a very great opportunity for puns on the table. With that in mind, here are some very smart, not-at-all stupid suggestions for what we can call the run-up to his free agency:

1. The Apaulcalypse

2. Paul's Well That Ends Well

3. Christopher Palu's Project Runway

4. A Whiter Shade of Paul

5. Better Call Paul

6. Kids in the Paul

7. Shopping Paul

8. Basketpaul

9. Legends of the Paul

10. Paul Me Maybe

Try out your own in the comments. If we do enough of these, we can probably convince Chris Paul to be really annoying and immature, just like those who have come before him.

Tags: agency, , Carmelo, , , , , Free Agency, free agent, , Melodrama,
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Clippers’ Paul still rehabbing thumb, Griffin a go (Yahoo! Sports)

28 Sep
2012

Los Angeles Clippers forward Lamar Odom takes questions from the media at the Los Angeles Clippers training center in Los Angeles Friday, Sept. 28, 2012. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)

LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Chris Paul says he'll be ready to play by the Los Angeles Clippers' season opener on Oct. 31, which comes barely two months after the All-Star guard had right thumb surgery.


Tags: , , Griffin, , , , , , rehabbing, , , thumb surgery,
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Los Angeles Clippers point guard Chris Paul is one of three famous faces gracing the cover of the October issue of GQ magazine, joining actors Denzel Washington and Javier Bardem. GQ's Steve Marsh profiled Paul in CP3's hometown of Winston-Salem, N.C., giving readers a fly-on-the-wall view of a party celebrating Paul's parents' 30th wedding anniversary, a glimpse into the comedic back-and-forth he's established with his wife and longtime partner Jada (who "will punctuate Paul's cutting one-liners with her textbook eye roll, equal parts coy and dismissive" throughout the anniversary party, according to Marsh) and a general sense that even after seven NBA seasons (which have included five All-Star appearances and four All-NBA nods) and last season's move to L.A., the 27-year-old triggerman is still just a family man at heart.

The profile also offers a bit of on-court insight, though, gleaned when Marsh watches Paul playing during a workout at the practice facility of Wake Forest University, where CP3 starred for two seasons:

CP3 plays pickup like he's Peyton Manning anticipating a blitz: The gesticulation is ceaseless. He was talking to everybody in the gym: the guys on his team, the guys on the other team, even the guys waiting for next. The only person CP3 never talked to was the guy guarding him, because CP3 says he doesn't believe in talking junk. "I feel like I've worked so hard to get good," he would tell me later, "I'm expected to score on you."

That's a pretty amazing and succinct encapsulation of the kind of confidence possessed by the truly elite — those in whom incredible God-given talent meets constantly diligent preparation. It's also sort of a different take once famously offered by enigmatic Italian soccer player Mario Balotelli, a gifted striker for Manchester City in the English Premier League.

When asked why he doesn't celebrate (or even smile) after scoring goals, Balotelli said, "When I score, I don't celebrate because I'm only doing my job. When a postman delivers letters, does he celebrate?" Paul's premise is a bit of a variation on that theme — it's not that there's no joy in scoring, but rather that there's simply no need to bark upon overcoming, because what's happened is less some amazing feat of conquering than the inevitable sum of a years-long equation. It's not a big deal that I scored; I'm supposed to, because do you even see how good I am?

(Which, in and of itself, sounds like pretty good trash talk to me.)

Of course, the idea that Paul "doesn't believe in talking junk" might be a bit of a news flash for Pau Gasol, whom CP3 famously called "soft" after a testy exchange in the closing seconds of a hotly contested January game between Paul's Clippers and Gasol's Los Angeles Lakers. In case you don't remember what all transpired in that fiery moment, I'll let Y! colleague Adrian Wojnarowski jog your memory:

Yes, Chris Paul called him soft. And, no, Gasol didn't want to hear it. Gasol hasn't forgotten the Lakers traded him for Paul, and he hasn't forgotten most fans — and maybe most coaches and teammates, too — wish the NBA hadn't voided the deal. He doesn't forget it, and maybe this has something to do with him reaching down, patting Paul on the head late Wednesday and sending him into an absolute tirade.

"Don't touch the top of my head like I'm one of your kids," Paul seethed later.

As Marsh found out, Paul remains pretty ticked off about that whole thing:

Gasol made a tepid apology; six months later, Paul is still annoyed. "We call that sonnin'," he explains to me. "Like when I take Li'l Chris to the bathroom, I'll walk with my hand on his head. That's my son. You know what I mean? I understand that Gasol is that tall, but don't do to me what I do to my son."

OK, duly noted — no putting your hand on Chris Paul's head. Also, presumably, no taking Chris Paul to the bathroom, no asking Chris Paul to make the Blake face and no making Chris Paul an adorable mask. If we can avoid these missteps, everything else should be cream cheese.

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Clippers’ Chris Paul undergoes thumb surgery (Yahoo! Sports)

21 Aug
2012
LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Los Angeles Clippers point guard Chris Paul underwent surgery to repair a torn ligament in his right thumb, an injury that occurred last month before he played for the U.S. in the London Olympics.
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Create-a-Caption: These tag exhibitions are getting really serious

23 Jul
2012

I applaud your effort, Argentinian national squad player Federico Kammerichs. Sometimes you have to be willing to lay out to make that all-important contact, and the truly savvy players remember that competitors' feet remain in play at all times during live tag matches. When you're dealing with a player as quick as Chris Paul, you need to use every available advantage ... and even then, as we see here, it's not quite enough. Still, we can leave tag of the laser variety to those Area 55 heathens — give me the pure hand-to-foot combat of classic physical tag any day.

(Also, I'd like to thank colleague Eric Freeman for suggesting that the big, awkward-looking bearded dude who got dropped to the deck when CP3 blew past reminded him of me. As you all know, I too give it my all and still manage to flail about spasmodically on a regular basis, so I think Eric might be on to something here.)

Best caption wins the last desperate bastion of most failed taggers. Good luck.

In our last adventure: Kevin Durant and Chris Paul always buy a program because they like to keep score.

Winner, Kernst: Chris Paul: "Is that how you spell basquetball?"

Kevin Durant: "I don't know. I'll cheque."

Runner-up, Larry B.: "Hey Kevin, you can't read that. It says, 'For British Eyes Only.'"

Second runner-up, Chip: Chris Paul approves of Kevin Durant's "Hide the Playboy Inside the Program" trick.

Tags: Area, , , , , Federico Kammerichs, Kammerichs, Kevin Durant, , , Tag
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Create-a-Caption: ‘Wow, so it says here Luol really digs Afrobeat’

19 Jul
2012

I mean, it's true, but you're not wrong, Kevin Durant and Chris Paul — it is definitely sort of weird that they're putting stuff like that in the programs these days. Even weirder than how they spell "programme" over there. I'm not sure knowing that Luol Deng's preferred style of dance music will mean much when Team USA takes on Great Britain on Thursday, but you never know, I guess. Weird stuff can happen in international play.

Then again, maybe KD and CP3 aren't scoping Lu's favorite power jams at all. What do you think they're reading about? Best caption wins a different kind of English beat. Good luck.

In our last adventure: Rookie Dion Waiters has a veteran's understanding of how to accept in-game coaching — don't look your coach in the eye, blankly stare off into the middle distance and wait for the talking sounds to stop, then just go play. Advanced!

Winner, Dane H: "The key to a good fish-hook is to go in with a straight finger, then bend. Best defense by far."

Runner-up, Mojo: Coach appraises the progress on day three of the Cavs' beard-growing competition.

NOTE: A time-honored tradition, to be sure. Waiters seems to have a long way to go, but if he's viewing this as a playoff beard, he's got a lot of time on his hands. Like, a couple of years before the Cavs contend for the playoffs, at least.

Second runner-up, Joshua: "I'm not touching you. I'm not touching you. I'm not touching you."

NOTE: Repeat ad infinitum.

Tags: Afrobeat, , , , Dion Waiters, Kevin Durant, Luol Deng, , , , Weird
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