Posted Mar 1 2010 12:42PM
Dribbles
Chris Wallace knows what it looks like, sending the second overall pick in the NBA Draft to Bismarck, N.D., because he hasn't shown much of anything with the big club.
Bill Duffy knows what it looks like, one of his bigger (literally) clients swinging and missing as a rookie center in the NBA, and having to be sent down to the minor leagues.
Bustbustbustbustbustbustbustbust.
But the general manager of the Memphis Grizzlies and the agent who is as big as any in the game today found that when it came to Hasheem Thabeet, they both agreed. Send him to the Dakota Wizards. Now.
"Practice is important, lifting weights are important, but you learn by playing," Wallace said on the phone Friday afternoon. "You learn what you can get away with, what you can't. Players want to play. Players need to play. Most teams are carrying 14 or 15, and you can't play all of those players all the time."
thabeet300.jpg
Hasheem Thabeet needed his D-League stint.
Ron Hoskins/NBAE via Getty Images
"He's gotta play," Duffy said by phone Friday night. "I'm less concerned with how it looks. This will give Hasheem a chance to show everybody what he can do. We were a proponent of it. No issues."
Well, that's what they told me, anyway.
There's no question that both sides have an incentive to spin this. Thabeet is the highest draftee to ever be sent to an NBA D-League team. His struggles as a rookie in Memphis have been unending and public. He has shown next to no offensive capabilities in the league, averaging just 2.5 points a game. And he's also failed to shine at what was supposed to be his strength coming out of Connecticut: shot-blocking and post defense. He was beaten out, fair and square, by Hamed Haddadi as Marc Gasol's backup, and coach Lionel Hollins informed Thabeet what Memphis' plans were on Wednesday.
But what are the Grizzlies supposed to do?
The alternative would be letting him sit on the bench in Memphis the rest of the season and calcify, losing what little confidence he has left, falling further behind other rookies that get regular burn. And isn't this exactly what the D-League is for; allowing young players who need to develop to get an opportunity to play, every night, to learn on and off the court what it means to be a pro? That Thabeet is a high-profile example of this doesn't mean the example is wrong. For a young man who has been playing organized basketball -- it must be stressed again -- for only six years, minutes are crucial to his development.
The Wizards (the D-League affiliate of Memphis and Washington) began a schedule last Friday of six games in nine days, including Sunday's, in which Thabeet totalled 19 points, 16 boards and six blocks in 38 minutes (the folks at Ridiculous Upside have a summary here). After that, Dakota has a week off.
The plan is for Thabeet to play those half-dozen games, then practice for a few days. After that, the Grizzlies will re-evaluate. Until then, the Wizards' coach, former Clipper forward Rory White, has been instructed to give Thabeet time and touches. A Memphis staffer is with him in Bismarck for the entire stint. Wallace will go there to see him on Wednesday.
"You look at other leagues that have had minor leagues for a much longer time than the NBA," Wallace said. "Baseball has guys going back and forth all the time. We look at this another piece in our toolbox ... any time you have young guys that are in that two-year window, you have to look at the D-League very carefully, because you have to get those guys some (playing) time."
Duffy says he's reached similar conclusions with some of his other clients, including Cavaliers rookie Danny Green, who was sent down to Cleveland's D-League affiliate in Erie this week along with second-year forward Darnell Jackson (though Cleveland recalled Green on Sunday). Duffy is in the process of discussing with the Suns whether their first-round pick, Earl Clark, should go to Phoenix's D-League team in Iowa now that Amar'e Stoudemire is sticking around for the rest of the season and frontcourt minutes are likely to dry up.
Wallace insists the Grizzlies have in no way given up on Thabeet. But he would not give a blanket commitment that Thabeet will be a cornerstone of Memphis' future, either, when asked if he could guarantee the team wouldn't look to move Thabeet after the season.
"Any player can be traded," Wallace said. "I never guarantee any player that that they can't be traded. You look at the league, a guy like Shaq (O'Neal) was traded. Allen Iverson was traded. Other than the young guys on a team that you're taking a look at, if you look at a game, most of the guys out there have been somewhere else ... Anything can happen. But we're not looking to 'dump him' at this point"...
• The new month begins with a week-long league-wide fundraising program for my friends over at Hoops for St. Jude, which raises money year long for the St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, one of the largest pediatric cancer centers in the world. Families who bring their kids to St. Jude's for treatment receive it, regardless of their ability to pay.
From today through next Sunday, NBA players and coaches will take part in fundraising activities. Schools around the country will also have fundraisers, with students taking part in a special basketball fundamentals curriculum designed by Nuggets coach George Karl to raise awareness of the need for greater physical activity among students. Karl, who has already donated $20,000 to St. Jude's, is continuing with his part in the program despite his diagnosis of throat and neck cancer last month. NBA coaches will wear "Hoops for St. Jude's" lapel pins all week in support of Karl.
The Lakers' Pau Gasol, the Grizzlies' Rudy Gay, the Rockets' Shane Battier, the Clippers' Steve Blake, the Pacers' Danny Granger and the Timberwolves' Kevin Love are each taking part in season-long donations per point for St. Jude's, and have each committed at least a $20,000 donation by the end of the season. Thirty NBA stars, including LeBron James, Kobe Bryant, Dwight Howard and Shaquille O'Neal, have donated autographed items that can be bid on during an on-line nationwide auction lasting through next Sunday at
www.hoopsforstjude.org. Fans can also make per-point donations for the remainder of the season in support of their favorite players on the website and receive the Hoops for St. Jude's pins with a $20 donation.
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