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Spurs get Richard Jefferson

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broham Posted: 06-29-2009 2:13 PM

Congrats to antonio - a most unheralded but superb move for the Spurs, I can hardly conceive of a better fit for that team.

 

Jefferson add takes weight off of Spurs' power players

http://www.nba.com/2009/news/features/art_garcia/06/26/jefferson.trade/index.html

By Art Garcia, NBA.com
Posted Jun 26 2009 8:01PM

NEW YORK -- Tony Parker likes the trade for Richard Jefferson. A whole lot.

"It was great for us," Parker said earlier this week. "It's going to help. That's what we wanted, is to get somebody younger, very athletic and is going to make stuff happen."

The Spurs didn't make much happen in the Playoffs this past season, bowing out uncharacteristically in the first round against bitter rival Dallas. Not having Manu Ginobili had plenty to do with the five-game loss, but so did San Antonio's lack of depth beyond their triple threats.

Contenders can often overcome injuries, especially in the early rounds, and move on. The Spurs didn't compete against the sixth-seeded Mavericks with Manu out, illustrating the gaping holes on the roster. Matt Bonner and Roger Mason Jr. and George Hill were nice stories all season. They just weren't 20-point scorers.

Jefferson is.

Duncan, Ginobili and Parker together can make up for the scoring deficiencies of those around them, yet if either is out, which has become a common occurrence lately, the Spurs struggle. While Jefferson won't be asked to score 20 a night, like he did with the Bucks or in New Jersey, the 29-year-old slasher will ease the burden on his new teammates.

Parker and his fellow All-Stars were kept abreast of the Jefferson dealings throughout the process. "They tell us what they're thinking," Parker said of management, "and then they call us when it happens."

Manu should benefit most by likely returning to his sixth-man duties, as Gregg Popovich monitors the minutes of the soon-to-be 32 year old who's finding it harder to get through a season unscathed. After playing on iffy ankles last season, having a less-taxing role could increase the Argentine's effectiveness and efficiency.

And having another weapon to play off also helps Duncan and Parker. Teams can't double three guys at once.

"I'm very happy that we're adding talent," Parker added. "You don't want to go back and have the same team every year. I think it's going to help.

"We'll see what happens because everybody is loaded in the West."

As much as Jefferson would have helped against Dallas, the real target of the upgrade is the newly-crowned champs. San Antonio, even before the trade, was as good as any team in the conference outside of the Lakers if everyone came back healthy. Parker believes Jefferson gets the Spurs right up there with Kobe's crew.

"Now you have to prove that on the court," he said.

San Antonio isn't the only title hopeful beefing up this week thanks to a loaded deal. (The Spurs gave up three expendable vets in Bruce Bowen, Fabricio Oberto and Kurt Thomas.) The two squads that battled for the East crown went Olympic, with Shaq joining LeBron in Cleveland and Jefferson's old Jersey running mate Vince Carter headed home to Orlando.

The Spurs aren't done, though they won't be part of the great free-agent chase of 2010. The $29 million left on Jefferson's deal eliminates any shot at a big-ticket item next summer, and Pop and general manager R.C. Buford are OK with that.

There's no one out there, Pop said, that makes more sense than Jefferson in Bowen's old spot. Ron Artest and Shawn Marion are intriguing this summer, but the Arizona-ex is a better fit in San Antonio's team-first system. Spurs fans will hearken back to Sean Elliott, another Wildcat, when Jefferson races out for an easy dunk or spots up for a corner 3.

The focus now is up front. Bonner and Ian Mahinmi are the only other bigs under contract, besides Duncan. "They got to get some help for Timmy," Parker said. Rookie draft pick DeJuan Blair may turn out to be option. Popovich is certain a quality backup power forward could be had for the mid-level exception.

"I don't think we're finished," Parker said. "I think we're still going to make something happen. We have to improve. Everyone in the West is very talented."

The Spurs, at least for now, more than most.

 

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And if they get Oberto back i give this trade a plus/plus.

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And then they get the man with no ACLs in the 2nd round of the draft...

Supposedly from John Hollinger on Twitter last night:
 
 Did DeJuan Blair bring a hooker and a bag of coke to his workouts? There's no "risk" when you're picking this late.
I was on a message board, if you got time to kill scroll down to after 9pm to start seeing all the Blair comments

 

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Some love for Blair:

http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2009/writers/luke_winn/06/24/nba.draftnumbers/index.html?eref=si_ncaab

4. It's a weak draft, but who's a sure thing in the middle of the first round?

As long as you're not worried about DeJuan Blair's knees -- and I've had a few NBA scouts tell me they're not too concerned about repeat ACL tears -- the Pitt power forward is a solid pick.

During the Big East tournament, I used numbers to establish that Blair was probably the best offensive rebounder of the decade in college basketball, and he's by far the best offensive rebounder in this draft. After Hasheem Thabeet (and his 7-6 shot-swatting wingspan) is off the board, Blair is the next-best thing -- and a better bet than Arizona's Jordan Hill.

Here's how Blair's rebounding numbers -- per 40 minutes, pace-adjusted -- stack up against other high-profile big men in this draft:

Player Team OR/40PA DR/40PA
DeJuan Blair Pitt 8.1 9.9
John Bryant Santa Clara 5.5 12.9
John Brockman Washington 5.1 8.7
Jordan Hill Arizona 4.8 7.8
Hasheem Thabeet UConn 4.5 8.5
Blake Griffin Oklahoma 4.5 12.2
Taj Gibson USC 4.3 6.7
Tyler Hansbrough UNC 3.5 5.9
B.J. Mullens Ohio State 3.5 6.2
(Source: DraftExpress.com)

Here's how Blair's rebounding numbers stack up against the stats of quality big men (from their final college year) in the past three drafts:

Player Team OR/40PA DR/40PA
DeJuan Blair (09) Pitt 8.1 9.9
Kevin Love (08) UCLA 5.1 9.8
Michael Beasley (08) Kansas St. 4.7 9.9
Brook Lopez (08) Stanford 3.8 7.2
Greg Oden (07) Ohio State 5.0 8.5
Al Horford (07) Florida 3.6 10.0
Joakim Noah (07) Florida 3.9 9.1
Paul Millsap (06) La. Tech 7.0 8.5
LaMarcus Aldridge (06) Texas 4.4 6.6
Tyrus Thomas (06) LSU 4.2 9.5
(Source: DraftExpress.com)

Blair is as good a defensive rebounder as Love and Beasley, both top-five picks from last year's loaded draft. Only Millsap, who turned out to be a huge second-round score for the Jazz, came close to Blair's numbers on the offensive glass -- and Millsap was playing in the WAC, not the Big East. Blair may be a bit one-dimensional, as his offensive game away from the basket is extremely limited, but he's a lock to be a high-volume rebounder as a pro. In this year's talent pool, that's more than worth a pick in the 10-15 range.

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broham:

And then they get the man with no ACLs in the 2nd round of the draft...

Supposedly from John Hollinger on Twitter last night:
 
 Did DeJuan Blair bring a hooker and a bag of coke to his workouts? There's no "risk" when you're picking this late.
I was on a message board, if you got time to kill scroll down to after 9pm to start seeing all the Blair comments

 

 

Hollinger.  Really?  Sounds more like Simmons than Hollnger.

 

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With Duncan's window closing fast, the Spurs have apparently said to hell with the luxury tax and opened up the coffers...

... and added Antonio McDyess per the AP:

"SAN ANTONIO - The San Antonio Spurs landed free agent Antonio McDyess on Wednesday in another big offseason pickup for the aging NBA power that apparently isn’t ready to fade away just yet.

McDyess, who despite being 34 was among the most sought players on the market this summer, reached a deal with the Spurs and is expected to sign later this week, team spokesman Cliff Puchalski said.

Terms of the deal were not disclosed, but the Spurs had their full midlevel exception, worth about $5.85 million this season, to offer the 6-foot-9 forward. McDyess spent the last five seasons with Detroit, which also officially lost Rasheed Wallace on Wednesday when the veteran signed with Boston. "

http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/31807183/ns/sports-nba/

 

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I don't know that Dyess is up to starting, but he's a solid rebounder, a great team player, and dangerous from 10 feet.

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MROBISON your e-mail is full!

We might be doing a mock to update rankings (thinking via e-mail) you interested?

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