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Showing posts with label Hedo Turkoglu. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hedo Turkoglu. Show all posts

Sunday, June 14, 2009

HEDO'H! -- Get your NBA tid-bits and some live bloggin' a comin'



Chris Sheridan, the former AP basketball writer and currently the lead columnist of ESPN.com Insider section for NBA coverage, has a wonderfully insightful story currently posted on the options facing the Orlando Magic and their star player Hedo Turkoglu of Turkey.  Hedo has been the key contributor, glue-man, scorer, part-time point forward, tough match-up player that compliments Dwight Howard the Magic's all-star center as well as Rashard Lewis. the Magic's other bookend/swingmen scorer.  Turkoglu seemed to perform better without the presence of Jameer Nelson, the other Magic all-star who returned in the NBA Finals to play the point guard alongside Rafer Alston.  Nelson rejoined the team after returning from an injury suffered in mid-season.

Anyway, after Hedo missed two IMPORTANT Free throws in Game 4 (see 5:06 left in the fourth quarter) when the Magic were trailing, 77-76, we joked a bit that the back page newspaper headlines could've read:  HE-DON'T. But, things actually got worse for the young magic team and Dwight Howard bailed him out by missing two EVEN BIGGER free throws at the 11-second mark in regulation.  Keep in mind, Orlando led the pivotal game four, 87-82 with 1:34 left, but lost in overtime after two clutch Derek Fisher three-pointers.

Attention Magic fans: You may want to savor the sight of Hedo Turkoglu wearing an Orlando uniform Sunday night in Game 5 of the NBA Finals, because it may be the last time it happens.

Why?

Because the Magic may not be able to afford to keep him.

Turkoglu has a player option for the 2009-10 season for $7.36 million, but sources have told ESPN.com that Orlando's 30-year-old starting small forward is 100 percent certain to exercise his right to terminate his contract, which will make him an unrestricted free agent as of July 1.

At that point, it will become a question of what kind of contract Turkoglu can command -- and it will likely be five years at an annual price significantly higher than the $7.36 million he is forsaking. And then it will become a question of whether the Magic can move enough salary through trades to pay Turkoglu his market value while staying beneath the luxury-tax threshold, which was $71.15 million this season but could drop into the high 60 millions for the upcoming season.

"We're not a team that would relish being in the tax, and with that said, we have our work to do, and we'll do our due diligence in doing our work. We like Turk, and we want to keep Turk here in a Magic uniform, but there are some challenges in doing that," Orlando general manager Otis Smith told ESPN.com on Saturday. "Management doesn't want to be a tax team, but that doesn't mean it won't happen. We haven't been a tax team in three years, but that doesn't necessarily mean we won't be going forward."

Smith went on to say it'll come down to a question of what is reasonable and what is not.

And that is where his own history could come back to haunt him.

Almost every summer, there is one NBA free agent who ends up with a contract of eye-popping size.

Last year, it was Monta Ellis getting $66 million from Golden State. Three years ago, it was Ben Wallace getting $60 million from Chicago. The year before, it was Larry Hughes getting a $70 million offer from Cleveland as a restricted free agent -- an offer that Washington was unwilling to match.

And two years ago, it was Smith who opened the Magic's checkbook to Rashard Lewis, granting him $113 million for six years in a sign-and-trade deal with the Seattle SuperSonics.

Lewis is due to make $18.01 million in 2009-10 and Dwight Howard is on the books for $15.1 million, the two of them combining to take up more than half of Orlando's cap space. Also under contract are Tony Battie ($6.3 million), Jameer Nelson ($6.1 million), Rafer Alston ($5.2 million), J.J. Redick ($2.8 million), Anthony Johnson ($2.1 million) and Courtney Lee ($1.3 million), while Marcin Gortat will be a restricted free agent and Tyronn Lue, Adonal Foyle and Jeremy Richardson will come off Orlando's cap.

In order to clear the funds to re-sign Turkoglu and stay under the tax, the Magic may need to look for ways to move Alston, Battie and/or Johnson without taking back equal salary in return -- an extremely tall order in an NBA economy in which several teams will be looking to shed salary.

"We have a plan, we're in motion on the plan. Yeah, it would be a key loss to lose Turk because he's been such a vital part of what we do for a number of years," Smith said. "But that doesn't necessarily mean we're going to break the bank to keep him or not break the bank to keep him, it's just that he's a vital part of what we do."

The work Smith must do to keep Turkoglu will begin after the NBA Finals end and will continue through June 30, when the draft will have passed and teams have a better idea of what the leaguewide financial picture looks like going forward. This year, the moratorium on signings has been shortened from eight days to seven, and July 8 is the date that pen can first touch paper.

Based upon conversations with numerous league sources, ESPN.com has learned enough information to lay out the most plausible scenarios regarding Turkoglu moving forward:

Staying in Orlando

How much space can the Magic clear and what do they consider a reasonable price for Turkoglu? Anything too far north of a $10 million starting salary might tilt the scales toward unreasonable for their situation. Furthermore, what remains to be seen is whether Turkoglu would stay in Orlando at a price below market value.

Signing with Detroit, or going to the Pistons in a sign-and-trade

Detroit has Allen Iverson ($21.9 million) and Rasheed Wallace ($13.7) coming off the cap, and would like to get as far as $23 million under the cap, which would give the Pistons the ability to acquire two high-level free agents. Impacting their financial equation will be Kwame Brown's decision this month on whether to pick up his player option of $4.1 million for next season, and Joe Dumars' efforts to move Amir Johnson's expiring $3.6 million deal without taking back an equal contract in return.

If the Pistons find themselves stuck with both of those players, their best option to make a pair of impact acquisitions would probably involve moving Tayshaun Prince (owed $21.5 million over the next two seasons) as part of a sign-and-trade deal for an unrestricted free agent, whether it is Turkoglu, Carlos Boozer, Lamar Odom or someone else.

Signing with Toronto, or going to the Raptors in a sign-and-trade

The recent Jason Kapono-Reggie Evans trade took $1.2 million off the Raptors' cap commitment for next season, and they could get roughly $10 million under the cap by shedding Patrick O'Bryant (who has only a partial guarantee). If the Pistons yearn for another free agent more than they covet Turkoglu, the Raptors become more of a factor. Toronto also still holds the NBA rights to Carlos Delfino, who could be used in a sign-and-trade.

Signing with Portland, or going to the Trail Blazers in a sign-and-trade

Because Darius Miles went back on the Blazers' books for $9 million midway through the 2009-10 season, their cap space for the upcoming season has shrunk to somewhere around $7-9 million, depending on whether they renounce their rights to overseas players Petteri Koponen and Joel Freeland.

Some sources, while cautioning against Portland's proclivity for subterfuge, are saying the Blazers covet a point guard upgrade from Steve Blake more than they covet a small forward upgrade from Nicolas Batum. If that's the case, they might decide to swing an uneven trade, salary-wise, in which they use their cap space to bring in a top-tier point guard rather than Turkoglu or another small forward.

Going somewhere else

Possibilities include such teams as Sacramento (where Turkoglu began his NBA career), which could acquire Turkoglu via a three-team sign-and-trade that would be brokered by Memphis or Oklahoma City, two teams with an abundance of cap space. The Grizzlies and Thunder themselves are not expected to be interested in Turkoglu, given that they have his position filled and are undertaking youth movements.

Chris Sheridan covers the NBA for ESPN Insider. 

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

93-88 - It's Winnin' Time

Time-out late in the fourth quarter.  magic lead 93-88 at the 6:17 mark.  Orlando's O-Rena crowd pumping the volume.  Hedo Turkoglu - the Glue- is looking sharp.    Get to your TVs or radios.

Sunday, March 16, 2008

Ramble On ... Knopfler, Red Rocks and a new Sports Museum


Mark Knopfler will tour the USA and Canada this summer, promoting his new CD, "Kill to Get Crimson." There is nothing better than a summertime concert at Red Rocks in Colorado. I will have a tough time trying to tuck that trip into a busy summertime, but a show at New York's Summerstage in Central park or a new hometown gig in Boston in July is more realistic.

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Just to be sure you spotted it, here's a clip from a recent Richard Sandomir take-out on the Sports Museum of America in downtown New York City. My buddy, Lynn, is working the lines to secure original memorabilia to display at the museum. I hope to help him out. Click on the "Ramble On" headline above for the complete article... Here's a clip:

Luring Sports Fans of All Seasons to Lower Manhattan

By RICHARD SANDOMIR
FROM a second-floor arched window at 26 Broadway, near the start of the Canyon of Heroes ticker-tape parade route in Lower Manhattan, Philip Schwalb can see beyond the Battery to the Statue of Liberty. He watches tourists heading to Liberty and Ellis Islands and thinks about those who will honor the fallen of 9/11 at the World Trade Center Memorial when it is done.

From his perch in John D. Rockefeller’s old Standard Oil Building, Mr. Schwalb is confident that his own institution, the new Sports Museum of America, will thrive.

“For me, it’s clear,” he said last month, amid two stories of construction that is expected to be done for an early May opening. “Sports are truly transcendent, like music and art, which can take you away from the mundane. And like music and art, sports transcend cultural barriers.”

Mr. Schwalb’s ambitious plan to build a sports Smithsonian came to him as he walked through the nearly empty Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in Springfield, Mass., on Sept. 10, 2001, his 39th birthday. What if this hall were near Lady Liberty and Wall Street? he asked himself. What if he made a museum that not only appealed to fans with artifacts and interactive exhibitions — the tangible manifestations of sports history found in halls of fame around the country — but also inspired and educated them?

“It’ll be flat-out fun,” Mr. Schwalb said, describing the fruits of that vision seven years ago. “But our test is to make it intellectually stimulating and emotionally moving.”

Carl Weisbrod, president of Trinity Church’s real estate division and ex-president of the Alliance for Downtown New York, is enthusiastic about the museum.

“There are few really attractive, magnetic paying attractions in Lower Manhattan,” he said. “The museum is very appealing for tourism, at a natural location that will pick up a huge amount of pedestrian traffic from the Statue of Liberty.”

Mr. Schwalb, who once worked for Edwin A. Schlossberg’s design firm, first financed his idea by borrowing $120,000 against his credit cards. The stake enabled him to create plans that led to raising $57 million in tax-exempt Liberty Bonds, a federal program created to spur post-9/11 development in Lower Manhattan, and $36 million in private investment.

Mr. Schwalb predicts that the museum will have one million visitors its first year, several times the attendance of halls of fame in more distant locales, like the one devoted to baseball in Cooperstown in upstate New York; to boxing in Canastota, even farther upstate; and to professional football in Canton, Ohio.


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DO YOU WANT TO DANCE?


No St. John's. No New York team? Well, please do as I do. Adopt Davidson College as your NY team, with Coach Bob McKillop leading the way. (No, it's not a cop-out, Joe! - He's my high school coach!)

In case you didn't see it, Davidson earned a place in the NCAA men's basketball tournament and ran a perfect 23-0 mark in the Southern Conference. They await their opponent to be announced today on CBS' selection show.

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Is there anything more annoying than golf fans yelling, "Get in the hole," when someone tees off on a par 3? Answer: Yes. The guy with a cell phone in his hand waving to the TV from behind the plate at a baseball game.

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Mark Cuban should take a look at this note from Orlando's Brian Schmitz before he criticizes his own players and suggesting they skip playing with their national teams. Both Tukoglu and Steve Nash excelled with their respective NBA teams after break-out summers with their national teams, Nash's coming back in the summer of '99 when he led Canada to a nearly impossible dream of qualifying for Sydney 2000:


Turkoglu credits Turkish team for his big season

By Brian Schmitz, Sentinel Staff Writer

March 9, 2008

Magic SF Hedo Turkoglu traces his success this season to playing for the Turkish National Team last summer. He said Saturday that he plans on playing for his native country again this summer in the EuroBasket 2009 qualifier -- and hopes he can bring the NBA's most improved player award back home.

"Maybe I can get most improved player. . . . that would be good for everybody to be proud of," Turkoglu said.

Turkoglu, the first Turkish-born player to make an NBA roster, said he will play for the Turkish team to also lend his experience to young players. The team finished 1-5, good for 12th place, in the European Championships last summer. Turkey did not qualify for the 2008 Olympics.

" I'm going to play, probably. I'll see the situation and decide what's best for me, what's best for the national team," Turkoglu said. "Because I had a good summer last year and hopefully, having this kind of year, this experience, I can carry to the national team, help to the young guys."

Turkoglu, who turns 29 on March 19, said he hears from Turkish people who want to congratulate him for his breakout season. "I hear it all the time. I get a lot of phone calls when I go back, they're going to be like, proud. They're proud what I did so far. Even if I don't get all-star, they still call me all-star in Turkey," he said.

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Time Magazine ran a feature with "10 Questions for NBA Commissioner David Stern." Let me say this, before you read on, 'there's nothing like a Q&A where you get a question on the relocation of the Seattle SuperSonics from a guy in Budapest. Here's the text of the Q&A:

For 24 years, the NBA commissioner has helped globalize pro basketball. And this year's compelling season could lift the league out of a ratings funk. David Stern will now take your questions



What was your lowest point as commissioner, and your highest point? —Luiz Dias, Fort Worth, Texas

The worst has probably been having to suspend players for life for failing drug tests. Another was being at the announcement that Magic [Johnson] was HIV positive, when we expected to lose him. [The best] has been watching the U.S. and the world embrace the athletes of the NBA, who had earlier been described as "too black" for us to succeed.

How will you ensure that the NBA doesn't face baseball's problem with steroids? —Mike Diaz, Brooklyn, N.Y.

We test every athlete four times, at random, between the beginning of training camp and the end of the postseason. We contract that work out to an independent agency. We think it's working pretty well, although you never know until you read the newspapers.

Why would you let the Seattle SuperSonics relocate to Oklahoma City? You're moving away from an Asian-Pacific community to a much less diverse place. Can you explain your logic? —John Holm, Budapest

I guess my logic is that there are plenty of franchises that have jumping-off points to Asia. It could be the Bay Area; it could be Portland; it could be Los Angeles. And our Asian philosophy is more about being there. We have offices in Tokyo, Hong Kong, Shanghai and Beijing.

Many commentators openly allege that star players get favorable treatment from referees. Why has there been so little response from the NBA to this problem? —Madison Welch, Arlington, Va.
The criticism is not true. We have data to demonstrate that superstars don't get that treatment. I've just been hesitant to hold a press conference to announce the obvious.

Do you think the courtside dress code you put in place [in 2005] has had a positive effect? —Michael Blackwell, Cedar Falls, Iowa

I do. I viewed it as an opportunity to say to our players that there is this issue of respect, and we just have to wake up and focus on that. It's not the draconian dress code that people came to believe it was. You would have thought I'd said you had to wear a tuxedo or tails to a game.

Can you do anything to increase the number of game telecasts in India? We get only two games a week, which stinks. —Wamiqur Rehman Gajdhar, New Delhi

I completely agree. We're having intense negotiations now. In July our Basketball Without Borders, a clinic bringing in outstanding young talent from around Asia, is going to be held in New Delhi. So we're very interested in getting more games in the Indian market.

How do you stay sane when watching a cornerstone franchise like the New York Knicks embody utter incompetence? —Brian Smith, Fort Worth, Texas

We've had teams go through bad competitive cycles. I know the Knicks have had a rough stretch, but I tend to be an optimist and think success is right around the corner.

Will the NBA attempt to push back the minimum age to 20 [from 19] when the collective-bargaining agreement expires in 2011? —Kirk Henderson, Washington

Yes, we will. We think [raising the entry age to 19] has been very constructive.

Which NBA player do you enjoy watching most? —Ryan Gill, Portland, Ore.
I refuse to answer that. That's between me, the closed door and my high-definition Dolby surround-sound television set.

When was the last time you suited up and played ball? —Burke Hair, Chicago
That's a tough one. I quit 15 years ago, after my sons began to take away my advantage of using my behind to push them away from the basket.

How has being the commissioner of the NBA affected your personal life? —Raphael Katz, New York City

Early on, it affected my ride on the train, because everyone had a solution that they wanted to propose to me. Over the years, it's effected my ability to go places privately. It's very intense, it takes away form other aspects. It is difficult, to a certain measure, for kids and spouses to deal with celebrity, in terms of the demands it makes on you and the absence of privacy.

The Seattle Sonics are probably going to move to Oklahoma City. You appear to be sending the message that communities need to shoulder enormous financial burdens to build arenas (which some think are unnecessary), while you let team owners make enormous profits. We are losing confidence in you and the league. How do you respond? —Tim DeJong, Cleveland
I welcome the criticism. I would say that a good number of our franchises are not profitable. So there are many owners who would raise their eyebrows at the charge that they are making enormous profits. I think that the ideal partnership is a private/public corporate partnership, and in Seattle, basically, the City Council said, "No." In fact, it engineered legislation that would make it difficult if not impossible for them to give any aid to the building of a new arena. And the state legislature said, "No." So we never got to the debate as to what the fair shouldering of responsibility should be, because we never were engaged in it. So that's my answer there. And, in an interesting kind of way, it's ok if somebody says they don't want to spend the money, they don't want to do the legislation, they don't want to have a referendum.

Do you feel the NBA has lost ground in popularity to other sports because it has become too synonymous with hip-hop ostentation? —Jens Jensen, Chicago
I don't think so. I think one watches the Grammys, one watches the fashion shows, and the reality is that sports, music, fashion - they're global trends. I knew that to be the fact when I saw Lee Iacocca appear in a Chrysler ad with Snoop Dogg. Or when water was being advertised by 50 Cent. You know, c'mon guys. We don't court it, we don't overly promote it. Charles Barkley took me to task for having Big & Rich at the Denver All-Star Game (in 2005) because they weren't hip-hop. I'm waiting to be criticized for having Branford Marsalis and Harry Connick Jr. as half-time entertainment [at the 2008 All-Star game] in New Orleans because it wasn't hip enough. We go with the flow, and do not have a hip-hop agenda.

What steps have you undertaken to minimize incidents or allegations of game fixing by the referees? —J. Raphael Licauco, Manila, Philippines

We're putting in new and more sophisticated computer programming and screens, to see what irregularities pop out. We're doing new background checks, in a deeper way, on a more continual basis. We're cutting off pre-game information for the referees, once they go into the locker room. We're in the process of setting up hotlines to receive particular types of information. And we're looking into a greater group of activities, some of which I would rather not publicize, but really go to insuring our game against betting irregularities.

How come the NBA is not targeting African countries like Sudan for prospective players? —Tarig Abdalla, Khartoum, Sudan
Actually, we have players from Africa. We've conducted our Basketball Without Borders program there - this will be our fourth year in South Africa. We have players from the Sudan, we have players from Senegal, we've had players from Nigeria. We actually have more games available in Africa over the air, both terrestrially and by satellite, than we do in India. We just made a deal with a telephone company so that folks in Africa can see the NBA on their cell phones when they're not watching it on TV. I think Africa is going to be the hidden gem for us.

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Bob Knight's commentary on ESPN makes me sick. He treats his co-workers (i.e. Mike Greenberg) in a condescending manner and with a lack of respect, much the same way he's treated media members and even his players over the years.

It's either Knight's way or the highway, of course.

Greenberg, in a Friday morning interview on the Mike & Mike radio show, avoided any type of confrontation with Knight as they discussed 'the things to look for' in an eventual NCAA champion. Knight chastised Greenberg for his lead-in question about 'why UConn lost to West Virginia,' stating that he had just told the audience that 'guard play, taking away the post play, not allowing easy baskets and some fire power' were the attributes to look for in an eventual champion.

Knight's insight - right on the money, I agree - was lost in the fact that he treated his co-worker as if he had a learning disability. I am sure Knight didn't even notice his condescending ways. Greenberg certainly allowed it to happen in the spirit of 'good radio.'

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If I were to do an 'expose' on the Spitzer situation, you would be sure to see the headline: "KRISTEN: WE HARDLY KNEW YE"

Did you see the "Client #9" tee shirts on sale?