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<title>HOOPLOG: Zydrunas Ilgauskas</title>
<link>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/zydrunas-ilgauskas/index.php</link>
<description>NBA basketball news, rumors, insider analysis and more from around the country.  Updated hourly by Team RxSN.</description>
<copyright>Copyright 2009</copyright>
<lastBuildDate>Thu, 06 Apr 2006 09:56:12 -0800</lastBuildDate>
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<item>
<title>Ilgauskas Unsure of Status After Hurting Ankle</title>
<description><![CDATA[    THE PLAIN DEALER in Cleveland reports, &quot;Zydrunas Ilgauskas left Tuesday's game against the Philadelphia 76ers after spraining his left ankle early in the first quarter. Ilgauskas did not return and he did not play Wednesday night against the Knicks. Ilgauskas is not sure if he will return Saturday against the New Jersey Nets.&quot; 
            ]]></description>
<link>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/ilgauskas-unsure-of-status-after-hurting-ankle.php</link>
<guid>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/ilgauskas-unsure-of-status-after-hurting-ankle.php</guid>
<category>Zydrunas Ilgauskas</category>
<pubDate>Thu, 06 Apr 2006 09:56:12 -0800</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>Cavs&apos; Ilgauskas out with sprained ankle (AP)</title>
<description>    Zydrunas Ilgauskas missed Cleveland&apos;s game at New York on Wednesday night with a sprained left ankle, but the Cavaliers hope to have him back Saturday at New Jersey. Ilgauskas was hurt in the first quarter of Cleveland&apos;s victory over Philadelphia on Tuesday night, and the Cavaliers decided to sit him out against the NBA-worst Knicks.
            </description>
<link>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/cavs-ilgauskas-out-with-sprained-ankle-ap.php</link>
<guid>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/cavs-ilgauskas-out-with-sprained-ankle-ap.php</guid>
<category>Zydrunas Ilgauskas</category>
<pubDate>Wed, 05 Apr 2006 19:16:13 -0800</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>Will there be any fight in the Cavs tonight?</title>
<description><![CDATA[    	<p>A. Sherrod Blakely of <a href="http://www.mlive.com/pistons/stories/index.ssf?/base/sports-1/1141038618118610.xml&#038;coll=1">MLive</a> gives the rundown of the skull crackin' that went on early in Sunday's beatdown of the Cavs, with Sheed nearly decapitating Zydrunas Ilgauskas (resulting in 5 stitches for big Z).</p>
	<blockquote><p>"I thought that Rasheed got a little upset and hit him on purpose," [Cavs coach Mike] Brown said. "It didn't look like from my vantage point, that he went for the ball." </p>
	<p>Said Ilgauskas: "I think he (Rasheed) was frustrated because I caught him with an elbow and then he hit me back. Just have to let the officials handle it." </p>
	<p>Wallace acknowledged the elbow by Ilgauskas bothered him. </p>
	<p>"I know I'm not gonna start by cracking a cat in the skull if I didn't get elbowed first," he said. </p></blockquote>
	<p>You might think getting whacked in the head intentionally would motivate the Cavs to put up a fight.  But unable to match the intensity of the Boys in Blue throughout, Cleveland simply buckled under pressure.  That doesn't bode well for their chances in tonight's matchup, as the two teams head down to Cleveland to finish their back-to-back.  The Pistons will surely be ready to remedy their last trip to Quicken Home Loans Arena [catchy name, guys], which <a href="http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/boxscore?gameId=251231005">ended 2005 on a sour note</a>.  In addition, the last time Bron Bron played at home&#8211;a <a href="http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/recap?gameId=260224005">102-94 loss to the 'Zards last Friday</a>&#8211;he was booed by his own fans.  Guess the honeymoon has ended, huh?</p>
	<p><a href="http://www.mlive.com/pistons/stories/index.ssf?/base/sports-1/1141038618118610.xml&#038;coll=1">Wallace leads the way, teammates follow, in win against Cavs</a> [MLive]</p>

<div class="feedflare"><a href="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/detroitbadboys?a=8FFTdhkt"><img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/detroitbadboys?i=8FFTdhkt" border="0"></a> <a href="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/detroitbadboys?a=KeDn1Fzj"><img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/detroitbadboys?i=KeDn1Fzj" border="0"></a> <a href="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/detroitbadboys?a=Q80JXhZV"><img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/detroitbadboys?i=Q80JXhZV" border="0"></a></div>
            ]]></description>
<link>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/will-there-be-any-fight-in-the-cavs-tonight.php</link>
<guid>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/will-there-be-any-fight-in-the-cavs-tonight.php</guid>
<category>Zydrunas Ilgauskas</category>
<pubDate>Mon, 27 Feb 2006 12:23:25 -0800</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>Center of Attention</title>
<description><![CDATA[    
<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
<p class="MsoNormal">Thought I’d throw up a special weekend column, since I’m not sure I’ll have one for tomorrow since it’s a holiday and all. Before we get into the situations to pay attention to, I thought we should check in on some of the centers who recently won starting jobs and were popular pick ups over the past couple weeks. I expressed skepticism about all of them for various reasons, and for the most part it looks like it was pretty well-founded. </p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Francisco Elson</span>: 7.8/6.7/0.6, 0.7 steals, 1.1 blocks, 55% (31-of-56), 28.9 mpg in 9 starts</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Ike Diogu</span>: 9.4/4.5/0.9, 0.1 steals, 0.6 blocks, 62% (28-of-45), 24.1 mpg in 8 starts</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Eddie Griffin</span>: 6.6/6.0/0.7, 0.4 steals, 2.6 blocks, 0.3 3s, 43% (24-of-56), 22.4 mpg in 9 starts</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">I know that centers are tough to come by in deep, two-center leagues, but there’s still just not a lot of value up there. Elson is the only one getting acceptable minutes, but even his 29 per game might be considered a disappointment considering that not just <span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Marcus Camby</span>, but also <span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Kenyon Martin</span>, has been out for the majority of those nine games. He’s doing about what I expected him to do – basically a <span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Rasho Nesterovic</span> impersonation – and while he’s not been an embarrassment, those who were hoping for 12 and 8 with close to 2 blocks per game just had unreasonable expectations. Diogu has proven to be a stud in FG%, but if he can’t be on the court enough to take even 6 shots per game, he won’t be able to help you all that much. He’s nowhere close to an asset in any other category. As for Griffin, have more typestrokes been unnecessarily wasted on a single player? </p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<u>
<span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Three Situations to Pay Attention To</span>
</u>
<br>
<span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Los Angeles Lakers</span>
<br>After just writing about how much space has been wasted writing about Eddie Griffin, it seems pretty silly to follow that up by writing about <span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Kwame Brown</span>. As much as we want to call Griffin a disappointment and a tease, it doesn’t even begin to compare to Kwame. But there seems to be a recent shift in Kwame’s game and might be making him a more reliable – if one-dimensional – fantasy option. In his fifth season in the league, Kwame has shown an extremely limited offensive game. His touch around the basket hasn’t developed at all, and while his jumper looks decent at times, he’s never been able to hit it with any consistency. Phil Jackson seems to have realized that – and maybe Kwame has as well – and isn’t asking Kwame to score. Last night’s 18-point “breakout” game was the first time since Nov. 14 that Kwame attempted 10 shots in a game. He’s been recast as someone who’s main duty is to attack the boards, especially on the offensive end. Brown averaged 1.9 offensive boards per game in November, 2.5 per game in December, and is up to 3.3 per game so far in January. The fact that many of his shots are coming off these offensive rebounds is helping his FG%. In six games since re-entering the starting lineup, he’s shooting 54%. Here’s his overall line in those six starts:</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">8.8/8.2/1.0, 0 steals, 0.5 blocks, 54% (21-of-39)</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">It’s pretty comparable to most of those “hot” pickups listed above, but without that secondary category to help out in. Although Brown has no steals in those six games, that’s the one category he’s most likely to offer some help in. He averaged nearly a steal per game while seeing 30 mpg in 03-04, which is pretty decent for a big man. If he remains in the starting lineup he could average somewhere around 0.8 steals and blocks per game, which isn’t spectacular, but isn’t terrible. Expecting any consistency from Kwame is probably pretty foolish at this point. A game like last night’s is still the exception, not the rule. But if he can keep pounding the boards and converting some of those putbacks, he might be able to emerge as something better than just another <span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Reggie Evans</span>. </p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Indiana Pacers</span>
<br>Let’s take a look at <span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Jeff Foster</span>’s line so far in January:</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">7.3/9.4/0, 0.4 steals, 0.4 blocks, 61% (22-of-36)</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Again, not too different from the lines of those Elson/Diogu/Griffin group. Foster is quite similar – and the exact opposite – of Kwame Brown. Like Brown, he seems to be a one-category helper who is pretty consistent in that one category, but doesn’t have much of a shot of helping out elsewhere. Unlike Kwame, Foster seems to be getting the most out of his talent while Brown is getting only a portion. Foster’s upside is extremely limited – he will not score, he will not get blocks. But if you want a boost in rebounds – and only rebounds – he is probably one of the best guys you can grab. I’m not at all a fan of one category specialists because they leave you with holes in too many other categories, but situations get dicey sometimes, especially at center. I thought I was in the perfect situation earlier this year with <span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Yao Ming</span> and <span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Rasheed Wallace</span>, with a very capable backup on the bench in <span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Brendan Haywood</span>. Then Yao went down and Haywood became completely ineffective right around the same time. I ended up dumping Haywood, because he just wasn’t worth using. Since I’m in a daily changes, cumulative roto league, I decided to simply take the beating at center and go way under my projected games limit rather than try my luck with the dregs available on the waiver wire. My strategy is to use quality games when you have them. Right now I have a lot of point guards playing well, so I’ll go over the projected pace there and make a trade from there at a later date, even if it means not getting the best return. But in weekly H2H leagues, this strategy doesn’t work. So guys like Foster might be the best option available. And if you’re strong in blocks thanks to non-centers like <span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Andrei Kirilenko</span>, <span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Shawn Marion</span> or <span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Paul Gasol</span>, Foster can at least give you the boards you need from a center. He’s averaging 9.9 rpg in his last seven contests, and that’s in just 24.4 mpg. With <span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Jermaine O’Neal</span> iffy, he might see even more time. Foster’s no savior, but at least you know what you’ll be getting.<span style="font-size:+0;"> </span>
</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Dallas Mavericks</span>
<br>Did someone in your league pick up <span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">DeSagana Diop</span> yesterday? It happened in my league, and I’ll admit I was about to make the move myself and was beaten to the punch by about five minutes. I’m not going to lose too much sleep over it, but man, I sure could have used that help in blocks. There’s no denying that Diop is a blocks machine – he’s second in the league blocks per minute, averaging 2.0 bpg in just over 17 minutes, which is rather ridiculous. But the big question is this – even with his ascent to the starting lineup, how much more playing time will Diop actually receive? In last night’s game he saw just 20 minutes, although it’s hard to read too much into that since the game was over early and <span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Adrian Griffin</span> was the only player in the game to play more than 30 minutes. One of the many problems with Diop early in his career was his total lack of conditioning, and while he’s gotten better, it’s hard for someone to start consistently playing more than he ever has and to do it at a high level. This is Diop’s fifth season in the league and he’s played more than 30 minutes in a game a grand total of <i>two</i> times. This is one of the same arguments I made against <span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Al Jefferson</span> even after he joined the starting lineup and he hasn’t broken the 30-minute mark at all in 8 starts. Avery Johnson hasn’t given up on <span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Erick Dampier</span> yet, and this could be one of those old-fashioned “motivation” benchings, although it might take more than that to motivate a guy who’s going to get paid $53 million over the next five seasons no matter what. </p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Some people want to think of Diop as a poor man’s <span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Ben Wallace</span>, but a homeless, penniless Ben Wallace might be more like it. Like Wallace, Diop can help out in steals; he averages 1.3 steals per 40 over his career, which isn’t bad at all for a center. Unfortunately, he also shares Big Ben’s inability to put the ball in the basket. While he’s shooting 45% this season, he’s a career 37% shooter. And it would be a miracle if he could ever get his FT% up to 50%. While he won’t shoot nearly enough in either category to hurt you too much, it’s still worth noting. The Mavs are an extremely deep team. They don’t need to have a center out there at all times, as they can get by with <span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Dirk Nowitzki</span> at the five for stretches. The Mavs need Diop to be at his most energetic whenever he’s out there, so it’s probably not in their best interests to have him out there for 32-35 mpg. Grab him, stash him, start him if you need him, but if there’s one lesson that his column should make you realize, it’s that finding serious help at center on the waiver wire is almost always more fantasy than reality. </p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">
<u>Comet Gain</u>
</span>
<br>
<span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Chris Kaman</span> – Wow. Just, wow. Not only a top center, but a dominant overall force the past couple weeks. Might not last when <span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Elton Brand</span> returns, but he’s looking more and more like a legit #1 center.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Samuel Dalembert</span> – Like Kaman, not just a top center lately, but an absolutely dominant force. He’s not missing – including from the line – and he’s swatting away everything in sight (which unfortunately for the 76ers means many obvious goaltends). His 37 mpg so far in January is huge for a center.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Ben Wallace</span> – The old Big Ben is back; 13.8 boards and 2.7 blocks so far in January. Now about that 29% from the free throw line in that span…</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<u>
<span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">The Hold Steady</span>
</u>
<br>
<span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Rasheed Wallace</span> – Has slowed down a bit, his rebounding leaves a lot to be desired from a C, but he’ll keep raining in those 3s and getting the blocks.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Zydrunas Ilgauskas</span> – He’s staying healthy, he’s hitting his shots, and is more than respectable on the boards and in blocks. A steadying force in the middle.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Brad Miller</span> – A couple of down games recently, but he’s still one of the top 30 or so fantasy players in the league.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<u>
<span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">The Fall</span>
</u>
<br>
<span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Shaquille O’Neal</span> – You knew you were punting free throws; but 15/10 with just 1 block per game in January leaves a lot to be desired.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Brendan Haywood</span> – Back in the starting lineup after a two-game absence, but still too inconsistent to be counted on.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Joel Przybilla</span> – Nothing more than a blocks specialist now that <span style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">Theo Ratliff</span> is on a run of good health. </p>
<p class="MsoNormal">I’ll do my very best to answer any relevant big man questions in the comments here, so feel free to ask away on guys not mentioned (or mentioned) here. </p>
</div>

            ]]></description>
<link>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/center-of-attention.php</link>
<guid>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/center-of-attention.php</guid>
<category>Shawn Marion</category>
<pubDate>Sun, 15 Jan 2006 19:41:34 -0800</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>Ilgauskas Day-To-Day With Sprained Knee</title>
<description>    Cavaliers center Zydrunas Ilgauskas has a sprained right knee but is expected to play Tuesday night against Atlanta.
            </description>
<link>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/ilgauskas-daytoday-with-sprained-knee.php</link>
<guid>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/ilgauskas-daytoday-with-sprained-knee.php</guid>
<category>Zydrunas Ilgauskas</category>
<pubDate>Mon, 12 Dec 2005 16:48:38 -0800</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>12/2/05 Box Score:  Sonics 115 Cavaliers 108</title>
<description><![CDATA[    	<p>Tonight&#8217;s <a href="http://sports.yahoo.com/nba/boxscore?gid=2005120225">unoffical box score</a> and Game Flow link.</p>
	<p><a id="more-217"></a>     </p>
	<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="100%">
	<tbody>
<tr align="center">
	<td>
	<p><a href="/nba/teams/cle?ReBlogSessionID=4f6fd32c1ef8d9a05d15dcb81d01c0c5"><br />
  <img src="http://us.i1.yimg.com/us.yimg.com/i/us/sp/v/nba/teams/1/80x60/cle_2.gif" border="0" height="60" width="80"/></a></p>
	<p>
	</p></td>
	<td width="370">border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="0" width="100%">
	<tbody>
<tr>
	<td class="ysptblbdr2">
	<table class="ysptblclbg3" border="0" cellpadding="5" cellspacing="0" width="100%">
	<tbody>
<tr>
	<td>
	<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="100%">
	<tbody>
<tr class="ysptblbdr2">
<td colspan="15" height="1"></td>
</tr>
	<tr align="center" bgcolor="#dedec6">
	<td rowspan="5" class="ysptblbdr2" width="1"></td>
	<td height="18" width="10">&nbsp;</td>
	<td>&nbsp;</td>
	<td rowspan="5" class="yspwhitebg" width="1"></td>
	<td class="yspscores" width="25">1</td>
	<td rowspan="5" class="yspwhitebg" width="1"></td>
	<td class="yspscores" width="25">2</td>
	<td rowspan="5" class="yspwhitebg" width="1"></td>
	<td class="yspscores" width="25">3</td>
	<td rowspan="5" class="yspwhitebg" width="1"></td>
	<td class="yspscores" width="25">4</td>
	<td rowspan="5" class="yspwhitebg" width="1"></td>
	<td class="yspscores" align="right" width="35">Total</td>
	<td class="yspscores" width="65"></td>
	<td rowspan="5" class="ysptblbdr2" width="1"></td>
	</tr>
	<tr class="yspwhitebg">
<td colspan="13" height="1"></td>
</tr>
	<tr class="ysptblclbg5" align="center">
	<td height="23" width="10"></td>
	<td class="yspscores" align="left">
      <b><a href="/nba/teams/cle?ReBlogSessionID=4f6fd32c1ef8d9a05d15dcb81d01c0c5">Cleveland</a></b>
    </td>
	<td class="yspscores">30</td>
	<td class="yspscores">18</td>
	<td class="yspscores">31</td>
	<td class="yspscores">29</td>
	<td class="ysptblclbg6" align="right">
      <span class="yspscores">108</span>
    </td>
	<td class="ysptblclbg6" align="right"><span class="yspscores">Final</span>&nbsp;</td>
	</tr>
	<tr class="yspwhitebg">
	<td colspan="2"></td>
	<td colspan="8" height="1"></td>
	<td colspan="2" class="ysptblclbg6"></td>
	</tr>
	<tr class="ysptblclbg5" align="center">
	<td height="23" width="10"><img src="http://us.i1.yimg.com/us.yimg.com/i/us/sp/gr/or_arrow.gif" border="0" height="15" width="7"/></td>
	<td class="yspscores" align="left">
      <b><a href="/nba/teams/sea?ReBlogSessionID=4f6fd32c1ef8d9a05d15dcb81d01c0c5">Seattle</a></b>
	</td>
	<td class="yspscores">26</td>
	<td class="yspscores">32</td>
	<td class="yspscores">23</td>
	<td class="yspscores">34</td>
	<td class="ysptblclbg6" align="right">
	<p>      <span class="yspscores"><b>115</b></span>
    </p></td>
	<td class="ysptblclbg6" align="right">ss="yspscores">&nbsp;</td>
	</tr>
	<tr class="ysptblbdr2">
	<td colspan="15" height="1"></td>
	</tr>
	</tbody>
</table>
	</td>
	</tr>
	</tbody>
</table>
	</td>
	</tr>
	</tbody>
</td></tr></tbody></table>
	eams/sea"><br />
  <img src="http://us.i1.yimg.com/us.yimg.com/i/us/sp/v/nba/teams/1/80x60/sea.gif" border="0" height="60" width="80"/><br />

	
	
	<tr>
	<td colspan="3" height="7"></td>
	</tr>
	

	<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="100%">
	<tbody>
<tr>
	<td height="7"></td>
	</tr>
	</tbody>
</table>
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	<td colspan="13" class="ysptblhdr" height="18">
            &nbsp;Cleveland
          </td>
	</tr>
	<tr class="ysptblthbody1" align="right">
	<td class="yspdetailttl" align="left" height="18" width="18%">&nbsp;Name</td>
	<td class="yspdetailttl" width="6%">Min</td>
	<td class="yspdetailttl" width="8%">FG</td>
	<td class="yspdetailttl" width="8%">3Pt</td>
	<td class="yspdetailttl" width="8%">FT</td>
	<td class="yspdetailttl" width="8%">Off</td>
	<td class="yspdetailttl" width="6%">Reb</td>
	<td class="yspdetailttl" width="6%">Ast</td>
	<td class="yspdetailttl" width="6%">TO</td>
	<td class="yspdetailttl" width="6%">Stl</td>
	<td class="yspdetailttl" width="6%">Blk</td>
	<td class="yspdetailttl" width="6%">PF</td>
	<td class="yspdetailttl" width="8%">Pts&nbsp;</td>
	</tr>
	<tr class="ysprow1" align="right">
	<td align="left">&nbsp;  <a href="/nba/players/3602?ReBlogSessionID=4f6fd32c1ef8d9a05d15dcb81d01c0c5">D. Gooden</a></td>
	<td>32</td>
	<td>5-8</td>
	<td>0-0</td>
	<td>1-2</td>
	<td>5</td>
	<td>7</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>1</td>
	<td>1</td>
	<td>11&nbsp;</td>
	</tr>
	<tr class="ysprow2" align="right">
	<td align="left">&nbsp;  <a href="/nba/players/3704?ReBlogSessionID=4f6fd32c1ef8d9a05d15dcb81d01c0c5">L. James</a></td>
	<td>45</td>
	<td>14-27</td>
	<td>0-5</td>
	<td>6-8</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>3</td>
	<td>8</td>
	<td>1</td>
	<td>1</td>
	<td>3</td>
	<td>1</td>
	<td>34&nbsp;</td>
	</tr>
	<tr class="ysprow1" align="right">
	<td align="left">&nbsp;  <a href="/nba/players/3121?ReBlogSessionID=4f6fd32c1ef8d9a05d15dcb81d01c0c5">Z. Ilgauskas</a></td>
	<td>30</td>
	<td>3-6</td>
	<td>0-0</td>
	<td>4-4</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>5</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>2</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>2</td>
	<td>4</td>
	<td>10&nbsp;</td>
	</tr>
	<tr class="ysprow2" align="right">
	<td align="left">&nbsp;  <a href="/nba/players/3251?ReBlogSessionID=4f6fd32c1ef8d9a05d15dcb81d01c0c5">L. Hughes</a></td>
	<td>47</td>
	<td>5-13</td>
	<td>1-3</td>
	<td>10-13</td>
	<td>1</td>
	<td>3</td>
	<td>6</td>
	<td>6</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>5</td>
	<td>21&nbsp;</td>
	</tr>
	<tr class="ysprow1" align="right">
	<td align="left">&nbsp;  <a href="/nba/players/3045?ReBlogSessionID=4f6fd32c1ef8d9a05d15dcb81d01c0c5">E. Snow</a></td>
	<td>22</td>
	<td>1-2</td>
	<td>0-0</td>
	<td>0-0</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>3</td>
	<td>6</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>2</td>
	<td>2&nbsp;</td>
	</tr>
	<tr class="ysprow2" align="right">
	<td align="left">&nbsp;  <a href="/nba/players/2627?ReBlogSessionID=4f6fd32c1ef8d9a05d15dcb81d01c0c5">D. Marshall</a></td>
	<td>30</td>
	<td>4-8</td>
	<td>2-6</td>
	<td>4-4</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>5</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>3</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>4</td>
	<td>2</td>
	<td>14&nbsp;</td>
	</tr>
	<tr class="ysprow1" align="right">
	<td align="left">&nbsp;  <a href="/nba/players/3322?ReBlogSessionID=4f6fd32c1ef8d9a05d15dcb81d01c0c5">D. Jones</a></td>
	<td>25</td>
	<td>5-10</td>
	<td>5-10</td>
	<td>1-1</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>2</td>
	<td>1</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>1</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>1</td>
	<td>16&nbsp;</td>
	</tr>
	<tr class="ysprow2" align="right">
	<td align="left">&nbsp;  <a href="/nba/players/3827?ReBlogSessionID=4f6fd32c1ef8d9a05d15dcb81d01c0c5">L. Jackson</a></td>
	<td>4</td>
	<td>0-2</td>
	<td>0-1</td>
	<td>0-0</td>
	<td>2</td>
	<td>2</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>1</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>1</td>
	<td>0&nbsp;</td>
	</tr>
	<tr class="ysprow1" align="right">
	<td align="left">&nbsp;  <a href="/nba/players/3018?ReBlogSessionID=4f6fd32c1ef8d9a05d15dcb81d01c0c5">A. Henderson</a></td>
	<td>3</td>
	<td>0-1</td>
	<td>0-0</td>
	<td>0-0</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>0&nbsp;</td>
	</tr>
	<tr class="ysprow2" align="right">
	<td align="left">&nbsp;  <a href="/nba/players/3692?ReBlogSessionID=4f6fd32c1ef8d9a05d15dcb81d01c0c5">M. Wilks</a></td>
	<td>1</td>
	<td>0-0</td>
	<td>0-0</td>
	<td>0-0</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>0&nbsp;</td>
	</tr>
	<tr class="ysprow1" align="right">
	<td align="left">&nbsp;  <a href="/nba/players/3722?ReBlogSessionID=4f6fd32c1ef8d9a05d15dcb81d01c0c5">S. Pavlovic</a></td>
	<td>1</td>
	<td>0-0</td>
	<td>0-0</td>
	<td>0-0</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>0&nbsp;</td>
	</tr>
	<tr class="ysprow2" align="right">
	<td align="left">&nbsp;  <a href="/nba/players/3970?ReBlogSessionID=4f6fd32c1ef8d9a05d15dcb81d01c0c5">M. Andriuskevicius</a></td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>0-0</td>
	<td>0-0</td>
	<td>0-0</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>0&nbsp;</td>
	</tr>
	<tr class="ysprow1" align="center">
	<td align="left">&nbsp;  <a href="/nba/players/3505?ReBlogSessionID=4f6fd32c1ef8d9a05d15dcb81d01c0c5">Z. Hamilton</a></td>
	<td colspan="12">DNP - Coach&#8217;s Decision</td>
	</tr>
	<tr class="ysprow2" align="center">
	<td align="left">&nbsp;  <a href="/nba/players/3466?ReBlogSessionID=4f6fd32c1ef8d9a05d15dcb81d01c0c5">I. Newble</a></td>
	<td colspan="12">DNP - Coach&#8217;s Decision</td>
	</tr>
	<tr class="ysprow1" align="center">
	<td align="left">&nbsp;  <a href="/nba/players/3847?ReBlogSessionID=4f6fd32c1ef8d9a05d15dcb81d01c0c5">A. Varejao</a></td>
	<td colspan="12">DNP - Coach&#8217;s Decision</td>
	</tr>
	<tr class="ysptblbdr3">
	<td colspan="13" height="1"></td>
	</tr>
	<tr class="ysptblclbg5" align="right">
	<td align="left" height="18">&nbsp;<b>Totals</b></td>
	<td>240</td>
	<td>37-77</td>
	<td>8-25</td>
	<td>26-32</td>
	<td>8</td>
	<td>30</td>
	<td>21</td>
	<td>13</td>
	<td>2</td>
	<td>10</td>
	<td>17</td>
	<td>108&nbsp;</td>
	</tr>
	<tr align="right">
	<td align="left" height="18">&nbsp;<b>Percentages:</b></td>
	<td>&nbsp;</td>
	<td>.481</td>
	<td>.320</td>
	<td>.812</td>
	<td>&nbsp;</td>
	<td colspan="7" align="left"><b>Team Rebounds:</b><br />
             14           </td>
	</tr>
	</tbody>
</table>
	<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="100%">
	<tbody>
<tr>
	<td height="7"></td>
	</tr>
	</tbody>
</table>
	<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="100%">
	<tbody>
<tr class="yspsctbg">
	<td colspan="13" class="ysptblhdr" height="18">
             &nbsp;Seattle
          </td>
	</tr>
	<tr class="ysptblthbody1" align="right">
	<td class="yspdetailttl" align="left" height="18" width="18%">&nbsp;Name</td>
	<td class="yspdetailttl" width="6%">Min</td>
	<td class="yspdetailttl" width="8%">FG</td>
	<td class="yspdetailttl" width="8%">3Pt</td>
	<td class="yspdetailttl" width="8%">FT</td>
	<td class="yspdetailttl" width="8%">Off</td>
	<td class="yspdetailttl" width="6%">Reb</td>
	<td class="yspdetailttl" width="6%">Ast</td>
	<td class="yspdetailttl" width="6%">TO</td>
	<td class="yspdetailttl" width="6%">Stl</td>
	<td class="yspdetailttl" width="6%">Blk</td>
	<td class="yspdetailttl" width="6%">PF</td>
	<td class="yspdetailttl" width="8%">Pts&nbsp;</td>
	</tr>
	<tr class="ysprow1" align="right">
	<td align="left">&nbsp;  <a href="/nba/players/3663?ReBlogSessionID=4f6fd32c1ef8d9a05d15dcb81d01c0c5">R. Evans</a></td>
	<td>15</td>
	<td>0-0</td>
	<td>0-0</td>
	<td>0-0</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>4</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>1</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>2</td>
	<td>0&nbsp;</td>
	</tr>
	<tr class="ysprow2" align="right">
	<td align="left">&nbsp;  <a href="/nba/players/3275?ReBlogSessionID=4f6fd32c1ef8d9a05d15dcb81d01c0c5">R. Lewis</a></td>
	<td>36</td>
	<td>11-20</td>
	<td>4-9</td>
	<td>0-0</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>3</td>
	<td>2</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>2</td>
	<td>26&nbsp;</td>
	</tr>
	<tr class="ysprow1" align="right">
	<td align="left">&nbsp;  <a href="/nba/players/3715?ReBlogSessionID=4f6fd32c1ef8d9a05d15dcb81d01c0c5">N. Collison</a></td>
	<td>24</td>
	<td>3-9</td>
	<td>0-0</td>
	<td>2-4</td>
	<td>2</td>
	<td>8</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>2</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>5</td>
	<td>8&nbsp;</td>
	</tr>
	<tr class="ysprow2" align="right">
	<td align="left">&nbsp;  <a href="/nba/players/3080?ReBlogSessionID=4f6fd32c1ef8d9a05d15dcb81d01c0c5">R. Allen</a></td>
	<td>44</td>
	<td>8-22</td>
	<td>4-10</td>
	<td>1-2</td>
	<td>3</td>
	<td>6</td>
	<td>5</td>
	<td>2</td>
	<td>4</td>
	<td>1</td>
	<td>1</td>
	<td>21&nbsp;</td>
	</tr>
	<tr class="ysprow1" align="right">
	<td align="left">&nbsp;  <a href="/nba/players/3717?ReBlogSessionID=4f6fd32c1ef8d9a05d15dcb81d01c0c5">L. Ridnour</a></td>
	<td>28</td>
	<td>4-7</td>
	<td>1-2</td>
	<td>0-0</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>1</td>
	<td>7</td>
	<td>1</td>
	<td>1</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>2</td>
	<td>9&nbsp;</td>
	</tr>
	<tr class="ysprow2" align="right">
	<td align="left">&nbsp;  <a href="/nba/players/3180?ReBlogSessionID=4f6fd32c1ef8d9a05d15dcb81d01c0c5">D. Fortson</a></td>
	<td>14</td>
	<td>2-4</td>
	<td>0-0</td>
	<td>1-2</td>
	<td>2</td>
	<td>6</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>1</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>2</td>
	<td>5&nbsp;</td>
	</tr>
	<tr class="ysprow1" align="right">
	<td align="left">&nbsp;  <a href="/nba/players/3522?ReBlogSessionID=4f6fd32c1ef8d9a05d15dcb81d01c0c5">V. Radmanovic</a></td>
	<td>26</td>
	<td>6-9</td>
	<td>1-2</td>
	<td>1-1</td>
	<td>3</td>
	<td>5</td>
	<td>2</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>1</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>4</td>
	<td>14&nbsp;</td>
	</tr>
	<tr class="ysprow2" align="right">
	<td align="left">&nbsp;  <a href="/nba/players/3639?ReBlogSessionID=4f6fd32c1ef8d9a05d15dcb81d01c0c5">R. Murray</a></td>
	<td>24</td>
	<td>7-11</td>
	<td>0-1</td>
	<td>10-12</td>
	<td>1</td>
	<td>5</td>
	<td>3</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>1</td>
	<td>1</td>
	<td>1</td>
	<td>24&nbsp;</td>
	</tr>
	<tr class="ysprow1" align="right">
	<td align="left">&nbsp;  <a href="/nba/players/3900?ReBlogSessionID=4f6fd32c1ef8d9a05d15dcb81d01c0c5">D. Wilkins</a></td>
	<td>25</td>
	<td>3-3</td>
	<td>0-0</td>
	<td>2-2</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>1</td>
	<td>1</td>
	<td>2</td>
	<td>1</td>
	<td>2</td>
	<td>8&nbsp;</td>
	</tr>
	<tr class="ysprow2" align="right">
	<td align="left">&nbsp;  <a href="/nba/players/3106?ReBlogSessionID=4f6fd32c1ef8d9a05d15dcb81d01c0c5">V. Potapenko</a></td>
	<td>4</td>
	<td>0-0</td>
	<td>0-0</td>
	<td>0-0</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>0</td>
	<td>1</td>
	<td>0&nbsp;</td>
	</tr>
	<tr class="ysprow1" align="center">
	<td align="left">&nbsp;  <a href="/nba/players/3240?ReBlogSessionID=4f6fd32c1ef8d9a05d15dcb81d01c0c5">R. Brunson</a></td>
	<td colspan="12">DNP - Coach&#8217;s Decision</td>
	</tr>
	<tr class="ysprow2" align="center">
	<td align="left">&nbsp;  <a href="/nba/players/3413?ReBlogSessionID=4f6fd32c1ef8d9a05d15dcb81d01c0c5">M. Cleaves</a></td>
	<td colspan="12">DNP - Coach&#8217;s Decision</td>
	</tr>
	<tr class="ysprow1" align="center">
	<td align="left">&nbsp;  <a href="/nba/players/3308?ReBlogSessionID=4f6fd32c1ef8d9a05d15dcb81d01c0c5">M. Moore</a></td>
	<td colspan="12">DNP - Coach&#8217;s Decision</td>
	</tr>
	<tr class="ysprow2" align="center">
	<td align="left">&nbsp;  <a href="/nba/players/3951?ReBlogSessionID=4f6fd32c1ef8d9a05d15dcb81d01c0c5">J. Petro</a></td>
	<td colspan="12">DNP - Coach&#8217;s Decision</td>
	</tr>
	<tr class="ysprow1" align="center">
	<td align="left">&nbsp;  <a href="/nba/players/3829?ReBlogSessionID=4f6fd32c1ef8d9a05d15dcb81d01c0c5">R. Swift</a></td>
	<td colspan="12">DNP - Coach&#8217;s Decision</td>
	</tr>
	<tr class="ysptblbdr3">
	<td colspan="13" height="1"></td>
	</tr>
	<tr class="ysptblclbg5" align="right">
	<td align="left" height="18">&nbsp;<b>Totals</b></td>
	<td>240</td>
	<td>44-85</td>
	<td>10-24</td>
	<td>17-23</td>
	<td>11</td>
	<td>38</td>
	<td>20</td>
	<td>8</td>
	<td>9</td>
	<td>3</td>
	<td>22</td>
	<td>115&nbsp;</td>
	</tr>
	<tr align="right">
	<td align="left" height="18">&nbsp;<b>Percentages:</b></td>
	<td>&nbsp;</td>
	<td>.518</td>
	<td>.417</td>
	<td>.739</td>
	<td>&nbsp;</td>
	<td colspan="7" align="left"><b>Team Rebounds:</b><br />
             11           </td>
	</tr>
	</tbody>
</table>
	<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="100%">
	<tbody>
<tr>
	<td height="7"></td>
	</tr>
	</tbody>
</table>
	<p><center>____________________________________________________________</center></p>
	<p>PopcornMachine&#8217;s GameFlow (will be added when posted)</p>
	<p>20 assists to 8 turn overs as a team.  Would like to see more asssits, but that ratio is very nice.<br />
As I was watching part of the game, Fortson was standing next to Donyell Marshall.  I was reminded of just how wide Danny&#8217;s body is.  He was two Marshalls wide, Marshall looked like a twig, like a piece of Danny&#8217;s hair had fallen off and was trying to get it&#8217;s own rebound.<br />
Nice to see 3 Sonics with 20pts in a game, and Flip got to the line like a demon.  It is concerning thought that he had over half (12 of 23) of our FTA&#8217;s.<br />
9 steals as a team is great, and we won the battle of the boards by 8.
</p>

            ]]></description>
<link>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/12205-box-score-sonics-115-cavaliers-108.php</link>
<guid>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/12205-box-score-sonics-115-cavaliers-108.php</guid>
<category>Donyell Marshall</category>
<pubDate>Fri, 02 Dec 2005 23:42:58 -0800</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>O Dallas ... Checking In on the Mavs</title>
<description><![CDATA[    
<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">As if you needed anyone to tell you differently, <strong>Dirk Nowitzki</strong> is the unquestioned star of this team. Even when his shot isn’t falling, like the past couple games, where he’s shot a miserable 17-for-51, Dirk is still able to be a real asset. He still puts plenty of points on the board, makes his free throws, hits some 3s, grabs a ton lot of boards and throws in a block or steal. But there are some interesting trends for Dirk so far this year. He’s attempting 19.6 shots per game so far, which is the highest in his career. He’s being looked to even more on offense and seems to be taking more shots that he creates on his own, which aren’t always the highest percentage shots, hence his 44.7% shooting, lowest since his rookie season. He’s never shot below 46%, and you’d like to think he can at least get back to that number, but when you then see that he’s shooting a remarkable 46% from 3-point land on nearly 5 attempts per game, you start to think that it might actually get worse, not better. His owners would probably take the 1% hit in FG% to get an entire extra 3 per game, but that might be a bit much to ask. Dirk’s steals and blocks are also down from recent years, but you can feel more comfortable chalking that up to a small sample size so far. Earlier this week I talked about <strong>Kirk Hinrich</strong> not getting as many steals as past years, and then he turns around with a 5-steal game last night. Dirk has averaged between 1.0 and 1.4 steals and between 1.0 and 1.5 blocks each of the last five seasons. He’s at 0.5 and 1.0 right now, but it’s hard to see any reason why he shouldn’t end up at his averages. His assists are lower than any season since his rookie, but that’s one more likely to stay that way, given that he’s shooting even more. He scared some owners earlier this year with back problems, but he never missed a game and has never missed more than six in any season. He’s as much of a sure thing as there is, and that always makes him one of the best guys to put together a deal for.<br>
<br>I slotted <strong>Jason Terry</strong> at #32 on my preseason rankings, a bit higher than most other places I saw. But it was pretty much a no-brainer – here’s a guy who managed to finish 30th on the player rater last year in just 30 mpg. Now he was going to be locked in as the starting PG and #2 scoring option and he missed 9 games in the first six years of his career. This is the kind of guy to have on your team, because his perceived value is almost always lower than his actual value. And that’s the whole key to success, after all. He’s at #36 on the player rater right now and should stay in that general area all season. He’s a point guard who’s averaging just 4.1 apg, so it’s possible his owner is frustrated at the lack of assists. If you can make a move for him, I would highly recommend it. Like <strong>Mike Bibby</strong>, he’s a point guard, but is really more of a scorer and has never really racked up the assists. Save for a 7.4 apg season in Atlanta, he’s been between 4.9 and 5.7 in all of his other seasons besides his rookie campaign. He’ll likely finish around 5 per game, which is still a plus. He doesn’t have a standout number in any single category, which is another reason why his perceived value is probably lower than it truly is. But except for rebounds, he contributes across the board. OK, his 0.4 blocks will drop back down to his normal 0.2, but that’s normal for a PG. But it’s time to start considering whether he really has become a lights-out shooter. He never shot above 43.6% in Atlanta, but in his first year in Dallas he managed to shoot 50%. It was on just 9.3 shots per game, far down from 15 or so he averaged in Atlanta, so that seemed to be the logical explanation. But in 14 shots per game this season he’s still at a sterling 49%, and he’s even shooting more 3s. He’s still a 44% career shooter, and there’s still plenty of reason to except a somewhat precipitous drop in that percentage. But even keeping it in the 45-46% range will help him keep plenty of value there.<br>
<br>
<strong>Erick Dampier</strong> is one of those guys you just don’t want to mess with. He’s a pretty confounding player, actually. Just five minutes into last night’s game against the Bucks, Dampier had 6 points and 3 boards and seemed to be on his way to one of his good games. But in 23 more minutes he went 0-for-2 from the field and scored just a single point. This really isn’t that out of the ordinary for Dampier, either. The Mavs try to establish him as an inside presence early on, but he either gets himself into foul trouble or loses interest and the Mavs decide to go with <strong>DeSagana Diop</strong> at center or just use a smaller lineup. Dampier’s had just three useful games this season out of 14. That’s not a very good percentage. If you have him on your team, he’s the kind of guy that will make you make sure you draft two reliable centers the next season. Well, assuming you play in a two center league, which you should, because that can really separate the fantasy boys from the fantasy men. Depending on what league you are in, there are anywhere from 8 to 12 reliable fantasy centers around, most likely. And that includes guys like Zydrunas Ilgauskas and Raef Lafrentz who are prone to throwing up clunkers. As for Diop, yes, he blocks shots, but that is truly all he does. If you're starting him, you are probably in the middle of the pack, at best.<br>
<br>
<strong>Devin Harris</strong> I’ve written plenty about already. You know I love him, and Avery Johnson seems to like him too, as evidenced by all of the crunch time PT he’s been getting. But he still doesn’t want to start him. I mean, <strong>Darrell Armstrong</strong> getting the nod over you is one thing. He’s a seasoned vet who can bring a defensive intensity. But when an undrafted rookie like <strong>Josh Powell</strong> gets the starting nod before you do, that’s saying something. He’s still intriguing in the deepest of leagues, but since the very durable Terry is the one that’s blocking him from a starting gig, it’s hard to see Harris being a no-brainer fantasy starter this year. In time. I wrote about <strong>Marquis Daniels</strong> recently, too. He’s just playing a lot more passively this year. Here’s a guy who averaged 7.3 FGA per game in 18.6 mpg in his rookie season and 8.4 FGA per game in 23.5 mpg last season. So this season he’s averaging 33.2 mpg. At those rates, he should be averaging 12.4 FGA per game. But instead he’s at just 8.6. You can blame some of this on the me-first tendencies of many of his teammates – guys like Dirk, Terry, Josh Howard, <strong>Keith</strong> <strong>Van Horn</strong>, even Devin Harris are usually looking out for themselves. So Daniels has picked up some of slack with a career high 2.9 apg, but this isn’t an impressive number or really out of line with what he should be averaging with his increased time.<br>
<br>If <strong>Jerry Stackhouse</strong> ever comes back, it’s a lot more likely that he’ll mess up other players’ fantasy value instead of actually having any on his own. A guy who can only score, but does so while shooting 40% and doesn’t even start is the ultimate drag. If you can steal Josh Howard off his owner right now, I’d do it. It’s tough to make an offer for a guy who is out for two weeks, especially a fair offer, but Howard is a legit top 50 player and even though ankle injuries have a tendency to linger, I’ll trust in youth and think that he’ll have an easier time putting it behind him for good than an older player might. OK, that’s all the time for today…</div>

            ]]></description>
<link>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/o-dallas-checking-in-on-the-mavs.php</link>
<guid>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/o-dallas-checking-in-on-the-mavs.php</guid>
<category>Raef LaFrentz</category>
<pubDate>Wed, 30 Nov 2005 08:46:41 -0800</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>On Camby</title>
<description><![CDATA[    
<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">In yesterday’s column, in which I ranked the top 20 fantasy players right now, I was able to hold off on the number one fantasy player thus far until 15, at which point I took a deep breath, winced a bit, and typed the name “<strong>Marcus Camby</strong>” into the column.<br>
<br>It’s not like I was actually drafting him, or trading for him, or that I really had put any stock into the guy whatsoever, but still, it was a tough decision to make.  You can’t ignore the stats, but you also can’t ignore these numbers: 63, 63, 46, 59, 63, 29, 29.  Those are Camby’s games played in the first 7 years of his career, and they were enough to label him fantasy death.<br>
<br>But then in ’03-04, a breakthrough – Camby stayed upright for a career-high 72 games, and then last year put up a respectable 66.  His combined 138 games the last 2 years are better than <strong>Tim Duncan</strong>, <strong>Kobe Bryant</strong>, <strong>Andrei Kirilenko</strong>, and <strong>Allen Iverson </strong>- and all of those guys are perennial first or early second round picks.<br>
<br>So how long must Camby play a bunch of games before fantasy players give him some respect?  Well, he’s certainly put a wrench in our wait-another-year-or-two-and-then-give-in strategy, as he’s erupted for 16 and 14 with 3.7 blocks, 1.4 steals, and 56% shooting.  All of a sudden, the critical time for Camby is right now.  Buy or sell?  Let’s examine:<br>
<br>First things first: there is no way Camby will continue to put up these massive numbers.  Eventually he’ll slip down to something like 14/11 with 2.8-3 blocks and shooting just under 50%.  Still, those are fantasy stud numbers, especially from a center.  And a player like that is worth way more than the 40th pick where Camby was drafted on average.  Now, granted, I don’t think his value is really in the mid-teens.  But to say that he’s an early-20’s type player isn’t much of a stretch.  With <strong>Nene </strong>out for the year, and <strong>K-Mart </strong>hurting, he’ll continue to play a major role for the Nuggets over the rest of the season – as long as he stays healthy.<br>
<br>That’s where the guessing game comes in.  How many games can he really be expected to play this year?  Well as DM said yesterday, I'm not a doctor - and I don't even play one on the Internet.  But there are examples of oft-injured guys who recover to be reliable.  Zydraunas Ilgauskas may be the best example, as he played just 29 games over two years early in his career, then rebounded with 66 games in ’01-’02, and has missed no more than 3 games in any of the last three years.  So it’s not unprecedented for an oft-injured guy to come through with a reliable couple of years.<br>
<br>I’m not going to venture a guess on how many games Camby will play, but I will say this.  Fantasy sports are all about gambling.  At the end of the year, the winner of your fantasy league at some point made a decision to take a chance and that chance came through.  Marcus Camby, right now, is one of those chances.  If your team is struggling right now, and you need to take a chance if you want any hope of making it to the top of the standings, going after Camby is a decent idea.  Even if your team is doing well, getting Camby at a discount could end up winning your league.<br>
<br>What’s fair value?  Well, DM and I agree that Camby right now is a top-30 value, taking the injury risk into account.  The more games he plays, though, the higher that value gets, so the time to strike is now.  So if you’ve got Camby, and don’t want the risk anymore, only deal him if you can get a top-30 guy for him.  If you want to try and add Camby to your team, and you can do it for less that that, than by all means pull the trigger.<br>
<br>It’s pretty rare that a guy can have such a critical year for his fantasy value at age 31, but that’s the situation Camby is in.  If you want to ride the wave, you’d better get on quick – but we won’t blame you for staying on the sideline.</div>

            ]]></description>
<link>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/on-camby.php</link>
<guid>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/on-camby.php</guid>
<category>Utah Jazz</category>
<pubDate>Wed, 16 Nov 2005 12:05:40 -0800</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>Overall Rankings: 31 to 60</title>
<description><![CDATA[    
<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
<a href="http://fantasybasketblog.blogspot.com/2005/10/overall-rankings-1-to-30.html">1 to 30</a>
<br>
<br>
<strong>31. Chauncey Billups</strong> – We love PGs here at FBB, and they don’t come more rock solid than this one.<br>
<strong>32. Jason Terry</strong> – No, seriously, we love PGs, especially ones who were able to finish 30th on the player rater while only getting 30 mpg. The FG% will go down (way down), but everything else will go up.<br>
<strong>33. Jason Richardson</strong> – J-Rich has only improved during his four years, and the Warriors are primed to be this year’s version of the Suns.<br>
<strong>34. Kirk Hinrich</strong> – News that Duhon and not Gordon will be his starting backcourt mate is a bit of a buzzkill.<br>
<strong>35. Zydrunas Ilgauskas</strong> – He’s proven he can stay healthy, but there are many weapons on Cleveland, whereas last year he was one of just three.<br>
<strong>36. Ben Wallace</strong> – That FT% hurts more than you think and he’s not the same as he was three years ago; still, there’s hope for a contract year rebound. Literally.<br>
<strong>37. Dwight Howard</strong> – It’s easy to get too excited about “what might be,” but he’s a stud in the making, no doubt.<br>
<strong>38. Emeka Okafor</strong> – Hope for a few more blocks than last year and that his back doesn’t get too cranky.<br>
<strong>39. Shaquille O’Neal</strong> – And even this might be too high. Let’s talk about Shaq for a moment. It’s near impossible to win with him on your team, that’s why you can’t do it unless he’s your fourth rounder, because you need that many studs to help you finish near the top in the other seven categories. Because kiss FT% goodbye. And for the love of god, don’t do something stupid and draft someone like Ray Allen or Chauncey Billups to “offset” Shaq. That’s just about the worst thing you can do, because it won’t even come close to bringing you out of the cellar, and you are wasting the value of a player like that. But therein lies the problem. Since you have to wait until the fourth (<i>maybe</i> third) round to realistically draft Shaq, unless you have already drafted players that compliment him, you probably can’t even afford to draft him anyway.<br>
<strong>40. Lamar Odom</strong> – Could be primed for a huge year, but this is his seventh season, so time might be running out; just not enough 3s, steals or blocks to be truly great.<br>
<strong>41. Larry Hughes</strong> – The steals and assists will go down, but he’s a solid all-around contributor.<br>
<strong>42. Andre Igoudala</strong> – Absolutely love his all around game; he’s an Artest in the making. That’s a compliment, by the way.<br>
<strong>43. Manu Ginobili</strong> – If only the Spurs weren’t so deep that he was limited to just 30 mpg.<br>
<strong>44. Corey Maggette</strong> – His FT% dominance can’t be overlooked, but other than that he’s an oft-injured, points-only swingman.<br>
<strong>45. Richard Jefferson</strong> – Like Odom and Maggette, lack of help in steals, blocks and 3s hurts his value.<br>
<strong>46. Michael Redd</strong> – Not a favorite around here, but he is top dog in Milwaukee, which counts for something.<br>
<strong>47. Andre Miller</strong> – Has missed three games in his career and averaged 8.2 apg after the break last year; that’s a nice and steady mid-round pick if there ever was one.<br>
<strong>48. Marcus Camby</strong> – Injuries are already bothering him; has the talent to justify being taken here (much earlier, actually), but he will always be a risk.<br>
<strong>49. Zach Randolph</strong> – If he can go 20/10 with percentages of 50 and 80, you can look past the rest of his game; he’s certainly The Man in Portland, which is mostly good, but might hurt his FG%.<br>
<strong>50. Rasheed Wallace</strong> – Center eligibility, 3s, blocks, durability make for a nice package.<br>
<strong>51. Cuttino Mobley</strong> – Bombs away. And away, and away, and away; could be back to old 40 mpg self.<br>
<strong>52. Donyell Marhsall</strong> – Have to think he’ll get his minutes once the rotation shakes out; fantasy God with enough PT.<br>
<strong>53. Rafer Alston</strong> – Moves into a perfect situation, especially if Sura won’t be available.<br>
<strong>54. Carlos Boozer</strong> – Not much at all separating him from Randolph.<br>
<strong>55. Richard Hamilton</strong> – Don’t take him any higher, but he’s durable and consistent.<br>
<strong>56. Tyson Chandler</strong> – We think he’ll be a better guy to have on your team than Camby this year.<br>
<strong>57. Josh Smith</strong> – If you can deal with some ups and downs, you’ll likely have a first place blocks finish to show for it.<br>
<strong>58. Chris Webber</strong> – Could be the steal of the draft at this spot … but probably not.<br>
<strong>59. Josh Howard</strong> – If Avery plays him as much as he says he’s going to, this will end up being low.<br>
<strong>60. Bobby Simmons</strong> – Going for steady, all-around contributors in the middle rounds isn’t a bad strategy.</div>

            ]]></description>
<link>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/overall-rankings-31-to-60.php</link>
<guid>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/overall-rankings-31-to-60.php</guid>
<category>Orlando Magic</category>
<pubDate>Tue, 18 Oct 2005 09:59:37 -0800</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>2005 Fantasy Tiers by Position: Power Forwards.</title>
<description><![CDATA[    
<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">Taken early, a power forward can really help shape your draft.  Taking a center-esque PF like <strong>Elton Brand </strong>in the first couple rounds means you can hold off on a center for a good while.  Taking a PF that can step outside and knock down a three like <strong>Dirk Nowitzki </strong>early means you can wait a bit before taking a SG or SF, and concentrate on the scarcity positions.<br>
<br>Taken late, though, your options drop pretty dramatically.  Power forwards don’t go terribly deep, mostly because anybody listed as a F/C is undoubtedly going to be played as a center.  Luckily, there’s only one PF spot on your roster.  Still, it’s nice to have a couple of options at every position, so try to grab two of these guys:<br>
<br>
<strong>
<u>Tier One:<br>
</u>Kevin Garnett, Dirk Nowitzki</strong>
<br>
<br>These guys should be off the board after four picks – maybe three.  Garnett is up there with LeBron for the top player in the game, while Nowitzki might not qualify at center anymore, but still is an incredible value as a 7-category player.<br>
<br>
<strong>
<u>Tier Two:<br>
</u>Elton Brand, Jermaine O’Neal, Chris Bosh.<br>
</strong>
<br>These are your faux-centers.  They block.  They rebound.  They score.  If they qualified at center (as they all once did), they’d have incredible value.  But they don’t.  Still, with centers being at such a premium, guys who act like centers are pretty useful.  It may be the difference between reaching for a guy like Zydraunas Ilgauskas in the 4th and being able to wait for someone like Nenad Krstic in the 7th or 8th.<br>
<br>
<strong>
<u>Tier Three:<br>
</u>Dwight Howard, Rasheed Wallace, Pau Gasol.<br>
</strong>
<br>Admittedly, Chris Bosh likely belongs in this group.  But we here at FBB really like him this year.  Also, Rasheed Wallace probably belongs with the Centers, but seriously, he’s not a center.  We had to take a stand.  Anyhow, these guys all could end up with top-25 value, but could also end up somewhere in the 40’s on the player rater at the end of the year.  You can’t be terribly excited about any of them, but at some point they do become the best pick.<br>
<br>
<strong>
<u>Tier Four:<br>
</u>Carlos Boozer, Kenyon Martin, Chris Webber, Zach Randolph<br>
</strong>
<br>I’m not a huge fan of any of these guys.  All of them are injury risks, all of them have question marks on the court, and a two of them (Randolph and Boozer) are really 3-category guys, and that’s it.  Still, if they slip late enough and you can grab any of these guys in the 5th or 6th round, they could be great value.<br>
<br>
<strong>
<u>Tier Five:</u>
<br>Antawn Jamison, Shareef Abdur-Rahim, Tyson Chandler.<br>
</strong>
<br>These are some small tiers, huh?  But that’s just because this position is so thin and varied.  Here are the guys that you know you can have on your team and they’ll produce as long as they stay healthy.  They might not produce a ton, but they’ll at least have marginal value.<br>
<br>
<strong>
<u>Tier Six:<br>
</u>Donyell Marshall, Drew Gooden, Al Jefferson, Kurt Thomas, Darius Songaila, Troy Murphy, PJ Brown.<br>
</strong>
<br>This tier are guys who really have an outside chance of being really valuable, but could just as easily be terrible, but JUST good enough that you can’t drop them.  Every position has this tier – with Small Forwards it was the third tier.  Here, it’s the sixth.  DM is a huge fan of Donyell Marshall and he wants him to be much higher, but too bad!   I think Troy Murphy could just as easily be a Tier 4 or 5 player.<br>
<br>
<strong>
<u>Tier Seven:<br>
</u>Nick Collison, Eddie Griffin, Joe Smith, Kwame Brown, Vladimir Radmanovic, Udonis Haslem.</strong>
<br>
<br>This tier could really be broken into high-risk high-reward guys (Kwame, Griffin) and low-but-solid value (Radmanovic, Smith).  But we’re tired of all these three-person tiers.  Given injuries, playing time, etc., all of these guys might end up with mid-round value, but some things are going to have to fall into place before that happens.  Still, they’re all worth late-round flyers.<br>
<br>Tomorrow, we’ll wrap up positional tiers, with Centers.</div>

            ]]></description>
<link>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/2005-fantasy-tiers-by-position-power-forwards.php</link>
<guid>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/2005-fantasy-tiers-by-position-power-forwards.php</guid>
<category>Nick Collison</category>
<pubDate>Thu, 06 Oct 2005 08:54:32 -0800</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>Fantasy Basketball Mock Draft – Round Five</title>
<description><![CDATA[    
<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">(For rounds one, two and three, just scroll down)<br>
<br>Players already on the team are in parentheses.<br>
<br>Team A: <strong>Jamaal Magloire </strong>(J. Terry, R. Allen, P. Stojakovic, K. Garnett)<br>Team B: <strong>Rasheed Wallace </strong>(E. Okafor, R. Artest, S. O’Neal, L. James)<br>Team C: <strong>Corey Maggette </strong>(A. Iguodala, B. Davis, Y. Ming, D. Nowitzki)<br>Team D: <strong>Zack Randolph </strong>(M. Camby, C. Bosh, S. Marbury, S. Marion)<br>Team E: <strong>Cuttino Mobley </strong>(A. Miller, B. Wallace, J. O’Neal, T. McGrady)<br>Team F: <strong>Carlos Boozer </strong>(R. Jefferson, M. Ginobili, M. Bibby, A. Stoudamire)<br>Team G: <strong>Kenyon Martin </strong>(K. Hinrich, S. Francis, E. Brand, K. Bryant)<br>Team H: <strong>Rafer Alston </strong>(M. Redd, D. Howard, S. Nash, T. Duncan)<br>Team I: <strong>Rip Hamilton </strong>(R. Lewis, J. Johnson, J. Kidd, A. Kirilenko)<br>Team J: <strong>Tyson Chandler </strong>(Z. Ilgauskas, C. Billups, V. Carter, D. Wade)<br>Team K:<strong> Samuel Dalembert </strong>(L. Hughes, P. Gasol, P. Pierce, A. Iverson)<br>Team L: <strong>Bobby Simmons </strong>(J. Richardson, L. Odom, B. Miller , G. Arenas)<br>
<br>In the fifth round, for the first time since round two, we run into 12 players who are all in the same tier in our overall rankings (we’ll get to our overall rankings at some point in early October).  This is the last round of the draft where you are drafting a player who will unquestionably be on a roster all year long.  Starting in the sixth round, you’ll hear some names that at least have a chance of ending up on the waiver wires.  But not here.  Everyone here should be getting at least 30 mpg, and will make real contributions to your team. <br>
<br>Because everyone here was in a similar tier, the selections this round really took into account team needs more than player ability.  If after five rounds, you’re lacking at either of the scarcity positions, you could be in serious trouble.  And as we see here, only 2 teams are left without a center (Teams G and I).  Only one has no PG, but they do have <strong>LeBron James</strong>, who will contribute to assists like a PG would.  Put yourself in the position of the two teams with no center as yet.  Particularly in leagues like this one where teams are required to start two centers, you’re going to have to either pass up greater talent to select a center in the next few rounds or stick a couple of bums in the starting lineup every day.  Neither option is particularly appealing.  This is where the “Best Player Available” strategy can handcuff you.            <br>
<br>Tomorrow we’ll take a look at Round 6, the last round we did for this mock draft.  But before we do, anyone have any major disagreements with selections we’ve made?</div>

            ]]></description>
<link>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/fantasy-basketball-mock-draft-a-round-five.php</link>
<guid>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/fantasy-basketball-mock-draft-a-round-five.php</guid>
<category>Utah Jazz</category>
<pubDate>Thu, 29 Sep 2005 09:01:53 -0800</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>Fantasy Basketball Mock Draft – Round Four</title>
<description><![CDATA[    
<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">(For rounds one, two and three, just scroll down)<br>
<br>Players already on the team are in parentheses.<br>
<br>Team L: <strong>Jason Richardson </strong>(Lamar Odom, Gilbert Arenas, Brad Miller)<br>Team K: <strong>Larry Hughes </strong>(Pau Gasol, Allen Iverson, Paul Pierce)<br>Team J: <strong>Zydraunas Ilgauskas </strong>(Chauncey Billups, Dwayne Wade, Vince Carter)<br>Team I: <strong>Rashard Lewis </strong>(Joe Johnson, Andrei Kirilenko, Jason Kidd)<br>Team H:<strong> Michael Redd </strong>(Dwight Howard, Tim Duncan, Steve Nash)<br>Team G: <strong>Kirk Hinrich </strong>(Steve Francis, Kobe Bryant, Elton Brand)<br>Team F: <strong>Richard Jefferson </strong>(Manu Ginobili, Amare Soudamire, Mike Bibby)<br>Team E: <strong>Andre Miller </strong>(Ben Wallace, Tracy McGrady, Jermaine O’Neal)<br>Team D: <strong>Marcus Camby </strong>(Chris Bosh, Shawn Marion, Stephon Marbury)<br>Team C: <strong>Andre Iguodala </strong>(Baron Davis, Dirk Nowitzki, Yao Ming)<br>Team B: <strong>Emeka Okafor </strong>(Ron Artest, Lebron James, Shaquille O’Neal)<br>Team A: <strong>Jason Terry </strong>(Ray Allen, Kevin Garnett, Peja Stojakovic)<br>
<br>In round four of our mock draft, we’re seeing basically an extension of round three.  With only about one round left of “solid” players (more on that later in the week), your goal in the fourth has to be to start setting yourself up for the later rounds.  You want to be worried about team needs, but at the same time, you want to be able to take the best player available (BPA).  There’s nothing worse than really stretching for a guy this early just because your team is really lacking in a category so far.  So what you’ll see happening in our mock draft is that teams are settling for someone who at least comes close to qualifying as a team need and a BPA.<br>
<br>The fourth round, perhaps more than any other, is where your draft preparation will really come into play.  If you’ve ranked players about 50 or 60 deep, it will make your fourth round much earlier.  All you have to do is take your draft sheet, identify the 4 or 5 highest-ranked players, and then choose the one among those who best serves your needs.  Take, for example, Team H.  The top available players there (according to our lists) were Redd, Hinrich, Jefferson, and Miller.  We would have those guys ranked with Jefferson first, then Hinrich, followed by Redd and Miller.  However, we felt like this team needed some scoring punch, as it’s possible that neither <strong>Dwight Howard </strong>nor <strong>Steve Nash </strong>will put up 16 ppg this year.  The highest scoring player among our BPA’s was Michael Redd, so he was the choice there, despite the fact that we had ranked Jefferson and Hinrich ahead of him.<br>
<br>So, what teams do you think look the best so far?</div>

            ]]></description>
<link>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/fantasy-basketball-mock-draft-a-round-four.php</link>
<guid>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/fantasy-basketball-mock-draft-a-round-four.php</guid>
<category>Joe Johnson</category>
<pubDate>Wed, 28 Sep 2005 09:43:18 -0800</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>Ilgauskas officially signs contract</title>
<description>    As he was wrapping up the details of signing his new contract with the Cavaliers, Zydrunas Ilgauskas turned to general manager Danny Ferry with one small request.
            </description>
<link>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/ilgauskas-officially-signs-contract.php</link>
<guid>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/ilgauskas-officially-signs-contract.php</guid>
<category>Zydrunas Ilgauskas</category>
<pubDate>Wed, 14 Sep 2005 14:49:02 -0800</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>Ilgauskas Frank About Cleveland</title>
<description>    In the Akron Beacon-Journal, Zydrunas Ilgauskas makes it clear his time in Cleveland has not been all peachy. As Brian Windhorst tells it: ``At the end of the season, I knew there was a good chance I wouldn&apos;t be back....
            </description>
<link>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/ilgauskas-frank-about-cleveland.php</link>
<guid>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/ilgauskas-frank-about-cleveland.php</guid>
<category>Zydrunas Ilgauskas</category>
<pubDate>Wed, 14 Sep 2005 09:50:52 -0800</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>Jones 3 Point Show in Cleveland</title>
<description><![CDATA[    
<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"><p><a onclick="window.open(this.href, '_blank', 'width=50,height=50,scrollbars=no,resizable=no,toolbar=no,directories=no,location=no,menubar=no,status=no,left=0,top=0'); return false" href="http://www.vtams.biz/nfanimg/logos/Cleveland.gif"><img width="80" height="60" border="0" src="http://www.vtams.biz/nfanimg/logos/Cleveland.gif" title="Oops" alt="Oops" style="margin: 0px 5px 5px 0px; float: left;"></a></p>

<p>Link: <a title="ESPN.com - NBA - Cavaliers, Jones reach four-year, $15M deal" href="http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/news/story?id=2154564">ESPN.com - Cavaliers, Jones reach four-year, $15M deal</a></p>

<p><a href="http://www.nba.com/playerfile/damon_jones/index.html">Damon Jones</a> rolled the dice and found himself on the outside looking in with Miami. Let's see, he turned down the opportunity to play with <a href="http://www.nba.com/playerfile/shaquille_oneal/index.html?nav=page">Shaquille O'Neal</a> and be on a team that will be favored to win the Eastern Conference title.</p>

<p>With all the shooters on the Cleveland Cavaliers, i question what Jones' role will be. <a href="http://www.nba.com/playerfile/lebron_james/index.html?nav=page">Lebron James</a>, <a href="http://www.nba.com/playerfile/larry_hughes/index.html?nav=page">Larry Hughes</a>, <a href="http://www.nba.com/playerfile/donyell_marshall/index.html?nav=page">Donyell Marshall</a> and <a href="http://www.nba.com/playerfile/zydrunas_ilgauskas/index.html">Zydrunas Ilgauskas</a> all need their own number of shots. Where does Jones fit in? He can definitely be an offensive spark plug off the bench but his defense is questionable and that was one of the main weaknesses the team wanted to address this off season.</p>

<p>However, Jones will improve the 3 point range and accuracy of the team overall, stretching defenses with his range may give Hughes and James more space to work off each other, but let's face it, Lebron will still command a double team almost every trip down the floor.</p>

<p>The Cleveland lineup will either feature Lebron James as the starting point guard (a position he's played before), leaving Jones to come off the bench or Jones will be the starting point guard and will let James shift to the small forward with Hughes playing the shooting guard.</p>

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<link>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/jones-3-point-show-in-cleveland.php</link>
<guid>http://www.hooplog.com/nba/jones-3-point-show-in-cleveland.php</guid>
<category>Damon Jones</category>
<pubDate>Thu, 08 Sep 2005 10:12:54 -0800</pubDate>
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