Efficient Improvement FTW

Field Goal % is the most underrated category from my little understanding of fantasy basketball. Last night when I was up doing mock drafts I noticed this most in the middle of the 7th round when Channing Frye, Lamar Odom and Trevor Ariza all went in a row. I was gobsmacked. C’mon people, pay some attention. You will often hear about the 10 from 13 effort by random player X but what you never hear are the constant 6 from 14 efforts which slowly destroy your team week after week (*cough* Caron Bulter)

This season there have been some changes to players who normally would be a FG% black hole. I’ve got my take below, including some players who might be regressing this season as well.

Winners

Aaron Brooks: AB already had a massive jump in field goal percentage last season (up 2.8%) to 43.2%. But that is still super low and with 16.2 attempts per game, downright nasty for your teams efficiency. This season, Yao Ming is back in the middle. Kevin Martin is around for a full season. Brooks doesn’t have to be THE guy anymore or carry a team for long stretches. He can get it done when required, have more open looks from deep and won’t have to force shots up that aren’t there. His attempts per game might take a hit, but it is sure to do wonders for his efficiency. Another big jump (45%+) is a real possibility.

Hedo Turkoglu: The Turkish Jordan is renowned for shooting brick after brick, which he can do every night. In Toronto last season, he was a terrible 41% on 9.1 attempts per game. Basically, he was not really feeling it in Canada and should be very happy to return to south of the border. With Nash running the team still, Hedo will have a role. Unlike Brooks, he doesn’t have the talent surrounding him to make his life easier yet in my eyes, you just can’t be that bad again. He is never going to turn into Nene yet you can expect an improvement to about 43-4% on 12-13 attempts per night.

Brandon Jennings: Ugh. That is the one word to describe his season in terms of efficiency last season. The kid can score (55 points never went astray). But 37% on nearly 15 shots per game is an absolute category killer in it’s own right. You would need Pau Gasol and Dwight Howard just to balance it out to something respectable. This one falls into the Turkoglu category in that this will never happen again. The Bucks have got new talent (Maggette, Gooden) who can score when given the opportunity. Last season it was just Jennings and Bogut. This season there is the added experience factor plus others to help out. He’s still going to shoot poorly relative to other point guards however it will be a lot less worse than last go around. 42% on 16 attempts.

Eric Gordon: Gordon already has a +45% career field goal percentage over 140 games. Impressive for a shooting guard playing with the Clippers. He has never been a go to option but has always been there to gather points at a pretty decent clip (about 16 per game). Due to his injury last year, we never saw that sophomore jump which is so common in the league. He was in and out of the team and playing hurt. The best indicator is that his confidence was way down (a 6% drop in FT% demonstrates this easily). His experience on Team USA and his more prominent role on the team will see his scoring increase alongside a better rate. I am thinking a typical Ray Allen season of about 18 points, 46-47% shooting and 2+ threes made. You could do a lot worse at the shooting guard spot.

O.J Mayo: Here are some facts about O.J Mayo. He has not missed a game in the NBA. Despite playing a reduced role on his team in his second season, his stats did not decrease. His FG% jumped 2 points last season to 45.8% despite not attempting any additional threes. This things all point to a marque season for the guard out of USC. As a young player, his additional experience will start to gather, he has shown he can co-exist with Rudy Gay on the floor. I’m betting Zach Randolph and Marc Gasol don’t prove to have the same combined season they did last year. 45.8 is already a pretty high figure but I think Mayo can touch 47% this season on a similar number of shots as last year, making him one of the most efficient shooting guards around. It’s such a pity he doesn’t have PG eligibility this season for all those people out there who love to punt assists (try Jamal Crawford instead)

Losers (just quickly)

Everyone here loses because of a teammate and the subsequent change in team environment.

Mo Williams will be asked to perform heavy minutes this season with an extremely heavy workload. No LeBron means more defensive pressure and less open looks, camping out in the corner for three. It’s just going to be nasty efficiency wise but he should make up for it with other increases. I also think the same thing will happen to Deron Williams. Sure, he is still a first round pick, but you can’t under-estimate the bond him and Carlos Boozer had on the pick n’ roll. Al Jefferson is a completely different player who will take a lot of getting used to and one area this will affect is his FG%. Channing Frye plays a position which demands a low FG%. The Suns motley collection of forwards (Hedo, Hakim Warrick, Josh Childress) aren’t going to get the job done like Amar’e could. Nash needs people to give the ball to but Frye is going to see so much pressure rushing at him whenever he jacks a long ball, it will take it’s toll. Finally, Andrea Bargnani is in the same position. Except 1000 times worse. Chris Bosh might be underrated this season in fantasy but he was the heart and soul of that offense. A lot of people are talking up Bargnani this year but please factor in the inevitable drop off in FG% which results in the added pressue to be the number one option, with a total lack on inside game and inability to draw fouls. It’s going to be long ball after long ball and it’s not going to be pretty most nights.

Potential WOW possibilities for fantasy 2010-11

There are always surprises in any given NBA season. Who would’ve thought last season Gerald Wallace would actually play that many games? How about rookies who actually make an impact which wasn’t happening in the past? It’s a surprise because it wasn’t expected (duh) but there are some possibilities which you can dream about and try to visualize. The following are ranked from most probable to least probable in my eyes and should be taken with the appropriate grain(s) of salt. The levels are my attempt to categorize and anyone on this list will provide a little to a lot of risk but the reward if it comes off is delicious.

“Brett Favre deciding to keep playing”: You really won’t be that surprised in this happens because it probably will, only with a shit load of ESPN coverage attached to it. LeBron James could average a triple-double. It’ll be amazing if he does, but will anyone think after the fact that  he didn’t have it in him? Lots to be angry about, a renewed motivation to succeed and national coverage up the wazoo. John Wall has shown it all summer and now well into the pre-season but people still have him pegged as a 5-6th rounder most places I look (did see him in the 20s for one draft). Is it impossible to imagine him finishing in the top 20 this season with averaged close to 17 and 9 along with all the gravy? Not really. After the likes of Tyreke Evans and Stephen Curry last season, you know rookies have the ability to put up the big numbers, it’s just a matter of time. That doesn’t make it any less impressive.

“Michael Jordan keeping his mouth shut until Christmas”: This is a bit less likely to happen however as the owner of a franchise, you never know. Every time I see the name Derrick Rose in the off-season, it’s always accompanied by the words “improved jump shot”. Despite this happening about every September, there is nary a shred of evidence. But surely it’s going to arrive one day? You can’t shoot 1000 shots a day and regress. Well, maybe you can, but not if you have Rose’s ability. I’m not believing this until I see it, but if you wanna go out on a limb, this is the last facet of his game which will transform him into a fantasy monster. Anthony Randolph must be happy for a new home but he has some stiff competition for minutes in NYC which is a rarity. With Amar’e manning the power forward role and Turiaf/Mozgov chewing up minutes at Center, it’s going to be interesting to see where he fits in. He has a history of not living up to the hype but on sheer athleticism he will get his shot. You’ll need to grab him before #60 I reckon in most leagues despite him being a complete 50/50 at this stage. Elton Brand is not having the same about of hype. People got burned bad last year by punting on him and it seems like no-one is ready to trust him. With an average draft rank at the moment of 88.7 (yahoo leagues), it’s not like you have to reach for him. But with Coach Collins looking to beef up his role and re-establish him as a go to man, it’s not like it’s a totally crazy pick. He has history of performing and while he is over 30, I can see a lot of upside relative to that average pick.

“The 0-5 49ers clinch their division by New Years Eve”: It’s amazing to think that this is an actual possibility but that’s just how bad the NFC West is this year (sorry for non-NFL fans). This isn’t even the worst category! Well, you might cringe at some of the names coming up but I really think there is a 20-30% chance of them hitting the big time (again) and dominating for long stretches of time. Vince Carter is not the guy he used to be. He is wasting shots, turning the ball over and doesn’t know how to be the crunch time scorer Orlando really lacks. But that said, he can still put the ball in the hoop when he tries, can pass a ball and chip in all around the court. If his motivation is high, if Orlando have it’s groove on from the start of the season AND if they are as pissed off about the Heat as they tell everyone, then Carter is going to be a nice addition. People are really ripping on him (and deservedly so) and he is in free fall in most draft lists. But you don’t just lose talent, it just rests dormant until the right time. I’m not expecting this to work out well but if it does, Carter will be a prominent piece on many fantasy rosters which end up winning their respective comps. Some people don’t care about contract years. Silly fools. Andrei Kirilenko is coming into his contract year and needs to perform if he is going to get another payday. The dude can’t rely on his body anymore and he is never going to average those past insane 5+ combined STL/BLKs yet he still holds value. Obviously a lot depends on his body. I can see him slotting onto this Jazz team though like a glove. He doesn’t have the pressure to score a bunch of points (D-Will, Jefferson will be the main options) while still being surrounded by fairly weak defensive players (or below average rebounders). I say AK has that small window to make a big splash at some stage during the season, stringing together some pretty impressive weekly totals. Andrew Bynum is probably a top 3 player on ‘Do Not Draft’ lists at the moment. It’s painful to own him. Week after week, his potential is there in flashes but the amount of games he missed or plays very limited minutes kills owners every matchup. Yet there is this inescapable feeling I get in my bones about him. He is so young, so talented and so freakin’ tall. He is still the future of the Lakers if they want him to be. I don’t have a very high opinion of his body being able to stay connected in all the right places….. but. It’s always the but. The potential is basically limitless. Plus, you can grab him in Round 9-10 in most leagues these days because of his history. I’m not advocating, just dreaming.

“Landing on the Hudson River…. when it’s frozen”: This will not happen unless divine intervention occurs on the basketball court. Still, if it does happen, just sit back and admire because you won’t be able to do anything else. I have always had this crazy fantasy which sits at the back of my head whenever I see Dwight Howard mentioned. Secretly, he knows how to hit free throws. He is just waiting to unleash it because he is such a stand up bloke and doesn’t want to destroy morale in the league by being so utterly dominant. Now I know this is outlandish and, to be frank with myself, pretty stupid on many levels. But if I can teach my under 12 kids to shoot free throws, then one day, Howard is going to wake up and be able to hit free throws. He just has to. It’s like gravity or some shit. It doesn’t have to make sense but there are a whole bunch of laws which only really smart people understand. Getting a bit off topic, but the one thing which gives me the shits more than anything about professional basketball players is not being able to hit their free throws! There is no-one stopping you, no-one abusing you. Just you and the basket. If you have to take 5000 per day over the off-season, then you do it. One person who can hit free throws and is over 7 foot is Yao Ming. Now it doesn’t take a genius to work out that Yao didn’t play a game last year and has walking disaster written all over him this year (limiting minutes, no back to backs, lots of support around him). How much is too much to ask for.. 55 games? 65? 70+? I’m not sure but if I see him anywhere near a draft spot around round 9, I know I’ll be there is a hurry because if everything does go right (and I realise I’m living in a fantasy here), he is going to provide first round value. %’s, points, boards, blocks. There is not much better than that. Perhaps my optimism is blinding me as I walk down towards th sunset yet I care not for at the moment, as I am blissfully unaware of the dangers ahead. All I see is a 1.37% chance of an 82 game season which draws me in, closer and closer.

13 Predictions

I see lots of lists everywhere I look on basketball blogs at the moment. The internet + fantasy + basketball = lists. Why aren’t I getting in on that action I asked myself? Probably because I don’t do anything the easy way was the response. BUt times, they are a changing. So here is a proper list, with an arbitrary number of points on a specific subject.

13) Kevin Martin will play more games than Gilbert Arenas and also have more fantasy value. Boom. Take that email argument from two days ago. This came out of a discussion with my Gilbert Arenas loving house-mate who thinks that Arenas is about to turn into the next incarnation of Pistol Pete Maravich. Apparently when John Wall is the savior, miraculous things happen to players who have lost their way. I call absolute balony on the grandest of scales. I do think Arenas will provide fantasy value but a top 5 SG? Nope. Lead the league in 3PTM? Nope. He will continue to shoot a terrible clip for FT% and manage a way above average TO rate for a SG. Kevin Martin on the other hand is about to light it up, Rockets style. He is playing for a smart coach and embedded in the highest basketball IQ team in the league. He has zero pressure on his shoulders with Yao and Brooks running the show. I can easily see 20+ points per night, with multiple threes, a wicked FT% and best of all, a career high FG%. He will miss time but 70+ games is to be expected.

12) DeMarcus ‘Boogie’ Cousins will win fantasy rookie of the year. This is mainly because of what he won’t do, as opposed to what he will do. John Wall will also put up big numbers, but like every rookie point guard to ever have played, his FG% will be somewhere in the dirt and his turnover numbers will be through the roof. Cousins has the advantage of being a big man who comes in as the most NBA ready rookie of those selected in the lottery. For fantasy, this means relatively low turnovers, higher FG% while still doing things like score, board and block. There are no negatives here people unless he has a brain explosion. The more I see of Cousins, the more I get this feeling that Sac-Town are going to fall in love with him and Evans running the place ragged. While he might initially battle for minutes, by Week 6 he will be playing 30+ night in, night out. You can’t keep a good thing down.

11) Chris Bosh, Dwyane Wade and LeBron James will all average within 4 points of each other. Every time the Heat get mentioned, all I see are camera flashes and smirks on faces accompanied by a loud groan from the NBA masses. It has already reached that point. However this is not just a story about one player. Or two. It’s going to be about all three. People will look back and Chris Bosh could well be the reason why this all worked out fine, or why it all crashed in flames. He has to want it at least a thousand times more than his play in Toronto suggests. He will get his points in all kinds of manners which we can’t even understand yet. Left unguarded under the basket, dropping 18 foot jump shots with no-one chasing him down, alley-oops from distance. This season will have it all for Chris Bosh and that means points, points and more points. I’ll put it officially at 22.9 per game, which would be more than enough to stay within the margin of Wade and James. It also makes him a very attractive fantasy option, one of a handful of 20/10 guys out there. He still probably can’t block, but those points will be some of the most efficient in the league.

Baby Davis didn't make the cut for 2010-11 predictions

10) Jameer Nelson will storm back into some form and be one of those pesky point guards that seems to have a blinding week for your opponent but against no-one else. Two seasons ago, despite playing only 42 games, Nelson was the bee’s knees as a second tier point guard. He has never been one for a cache of assists but he has the ability to turn it on when required. In that 2008-09 season, he averaged 2 3ptm, 1+ steal and amazing efficiency. His drop off has been pretty substantial since then, as he struggled with injury and the arrival of Vince Carter. But Nelson is the glue guy for Orlando this season. Carter hasn’t proved anything and may get moved before the deadline. Rashard Lewis is stuck in major funk from which I don’t think there is an escape. The thing is, this Magic team is only good enough when it really counts when Jameer is in top gear. Chris Duhon and Jason Williams are capable but small spells will be the order of the day. If the rumors about Dwight Howard’s offensive game (I think I’ve heard this one before though) are true, it’s only going to contribute. I’m not advocating you take Nelson anywhere in particular for your squads just that he’ll bounce back and cause some pain for opponents at some point during this season. He is too good not too.

9) The proliferation of the 1-1-1 guy. Last season we only saw two players actually record more than 1 three, 1 steal and 1 block every game over the course of the season and they are called Durant and James. Many others were close, but close sorta don’t cut it in my books. This season, there will be a rash of 1-1-1 players crowing their talents from the treetops. A certainty you can add to the list is Dwyane Wade. But let us focus on some more low key guys. Whatever you think about Channing Frye, as he seems to be a pretty polarising player in fantasy circles, he should average more than 27 minutes a game and in turn, nudge up his steals (0.8) and blocks (0.9) from last season to walk on hallowed turf. Andrea Bargnani should easily make this list but can’t steal a ball worth a damn. Last season he only managed 0.3 per game. Lazy? Perhaps but if he is going to be ‘da man’ in Toronto, this will have to change. There are a pair of Knicks (Gallo and Azubuike) who will be there about. If you are a Rudy Gay believer (and I’m not) then his 0.8 3ptm and 0.8 blocks totals are disappointing for a player of his ability but I don’t see him busting many balls on the court given his massive pay day. The most promising candidates though are those who were short, but only managed to play limited minutes. Nic Batum and Michael Beasley fit the bill here. And a flier? Troy Murphy only averages 0.4 blocks per game but playing alongside Brook Lopez and coming across with help defense could, in some far off fairy land, bump this total up.

8) Serge Ibaka will start for the Thunder and become the Chris Anderson for the next decade. The playoff series against the Lakers was Ibaka’s coming out party. Despite losing that series, Air Congo as he is affectionately known to OKC supporters was a monster. Against the best big combination in the league and the eventual NBA champions, Ibaka held his own defensively for long periods of time (25 minutes per game) over the 6 games. He isn’t exactly an offensive mega star in waiting but with Durant and Westbrook as teammates it’s not exactly an issue. But he can block. And block and block. So, instead of picking Chris Anderson with that 11th round pick, aim for Ibaka in the 10th instead just to make sure you nab him.

7) Old guys will continue to make fools of the haters out there. I’m talking mostly about three guys. Marcus Camby, Steve Nash and Jason Kidd. For the past two years I have been railing against anyone who brings their names up, deriding them for believing in players who cannot keep doing what they do. Yet they keep on keeping on regardless of what anybody says. Perhaps this is my personal mea culpa, an apology to what I believe have been overrated old fantasy stars but in reality they are just plain fantasy stars like everyone else. Steve Nash led the league in assists last year. Marcus Camby finished the season with a top 25 overall fantasy rank regardless of what system you use. Jason Kidd has missed 3 games in the past 2 seasons while throwing down three pointers with alarming regularity (+2 per game) and amazing accuracy (+40%), not to mention the 9+ assists and 5+ boards. Each of these guys have slid down draft boards over the past month because of concerns about age but what makes this year so much different? Nothing.

Steve Nash as he was originally intended

6) Twitter will make you more competitive in your league. If you are reading this blog, you probably know what twitter is. That said, unless you are a junkie, this isn’t going to apply to you. You know those people, scanning their phones every 15 seconds not because they got a text message from an actual friend but because they racked up another 3 @ replies. Those people. Well, they have an advantage over you and your reliance on Rotoworld to update you on the latest player movements, injuries and form. You are officially 1-2 hours behind the twitterati who if this were last season, have already picked up Darren Collison as Chris Paul is still sitting on courtside wondering what just happened. Twitter explodes at key moments because someone is always watching the news as it’s happening and this news spreads like wide fire, first on Twitter then to other parts of the internet and finally to the mainstream. If you think catching the scores on SportsCenter when you get home is going to cut it in 2010-11 for your fantasy news, you have another thing coming my friend.

5) Elton Brand will be the player who most outperforms his Average Draft Position. I know this is a big call considering it’s normally some rookie or super back up who was not even drafted in the vast majority of leagues, but I think Brand is just going to kill it this season. This comes from someone who dislikes watching 76er games so much, if it happens to be one of the two televised games that week in Australia, it doesn’t get tivo’d. Doug Collins is on the record as a big Brand supporter. He is fully recovered from his injury. All signs point to a massive boast. One the other side, his name is often mentioned as a 4th or 5th option at PF and nowhere I read is even the least bit excited in him. Perhaps wisely, but I don’t understand how a player with as much talent as he obviously does can continue to suck for so long. 34+ minutes, 19/9 with 2+ blocks.

4) As opposed to the above, Paul Pierce will be the most disappointing player related to his ADP. On the latest yahoo big board he is late 4th round. Pierce was a great player. He led his team when it was going through the worst era of the franchise. He led the league in scoring. He adapted his game when necessary over the past three seasons. But he looks OLD. With KG fit and better than ever (compared to the last two seasons anyway), Rondo taking on more and more responsibility and the combination of Ray Allen and Nate Rob in the backcourt and Shaq and Jermaine O’Neal in the front spells the least reliance on Pierce since he was a rookie. He will still get minutes, still do that annoying head fake, draw the contact crap that has been his bread and butter for years but the excitement and the bang for your buck is way over. 14-15 points with filler (2-3 assists, 3-4 boards, 1.2 3ptm) is fine for the Celtics this season but the problem is, that’s not 4th round material.

A picture tells 1000 words

3) Kid Delicious (aka Kevin Durant) will be the most dominant fantasy player since Garnett’s 2003-04 season. The gap between KD and whoever ends up as the 2nd option is going to be spectacular (barring injury). Sure, he is a consensus number one pick everywhere you look, but his dominance is going to be unbelievable. Box scores are literally going to explode with goo half way through the 3rd quarter. I’m big on going over the top, so let’s not stop at the 2000 word count. Toss out the pencil, grab your permanent marker and write this down: 33 points, 9.5 boards, 50/40/90 with 1.8 threes, 3+ steals/blocks. Eat it Chris Paul. (post script: as I was finishing this post up, this was on twitter about KD and partying. EXACTLY why he is number 1)

2)  Tyreke Evans will play beautiful, exquisite basketball for the Kings but this will not translate into first round talent. I just saw this tweet from Steve Alexander (head of Rotoworld NBA) saying that he is going late first round/early second round in all of his drafts. Which makes me sick. There is no doubt he is an ungodly talent on the basketball court but one quarter of pre-season hoops against the Clippers does not mean he can shoot threes or make free-throws all season long. Sorry, just the truth.

1) Luol Deng will continue his domination of Rashard Lewis. This one is for my boy Jason over at fbasketballblog who is forever doubting the talents of Britain’s greatest export. If you are still reading, I’m sorry to end on such a middle of the road kind of thing but this is going to become my singular achievement for the season after the inevitable collapse of my fantasy teams by about week 15. Deng has been biding his time but now it has arrived. He has always flirted with being a major piece of the puzzle and now that Derrick Rose has matured a little, Joakim Noah is a beast in the middle and Kyle Korver is running around jacking threes, Deng is left to hit his stride and carry his load on offense. While Rashard Lewis might be making $19.5 MILLION US DOLLARS this season (this point needs to be emphasised over and over again with every bricked three point attempt), he cannot compete!

Why Keith Smart is not actually that smart

It’s been a strange month for fantasy basketball followers. So many questions, so few answers. Is Carmelo really going to play for the worst franchise in the modern era? Is Shaq actually going to help my fantasy team anymore than he is going to help Boston (ie: not a lot)? Did I make a mistake by drafting Greg Oden in the 5th round after he said he wasn’t going to play in the opener (nahhh)?

But for me, the two biggest questions are splitting my world apart at the seems. For the last 4 months, I have been spruiking Stephen Curry as the second coming of a strange Rajon Rondo/Anthony Morrow combination of awesomeness. To anyone who would listen (and I mean the three guys on my regular email chats who have little choice), I have been saying how I will draft him at #4 just because I can. After drafting Dwyane Wade #2 in 2008 and Kevin Durant at #4 last season, I feel ready to fully proclaim to the entire fantasy basketball world I am god’s gift to first round analysis. This was to be the icing on the freakin cake. I had started remembering where all the ‘experts’ had Curry on their lists (typically between 6 and 12). But that’s not HIGH enough I screamed to myself in front of a computer screen. While listening to the modest natured lyrics of Kayne West, I liked to imagine Mid-December when Curry had just produced another 40-13-8 game despite GSW losing by about 15. My smile was wide, my taunts stinging in their wittiness. The world was a glorious place in mid-december 2010 for my fantasy team.

Lo and behold. On one swift September night, my dreams were dashed. Keith Smart. My new nemesis. Do you know that his head coaching record is 9-31??? Even Don Nelson was better than that. Sure, it was with the Cavs the season before they got LeBron, but whatever. Today, I read this:

Smart said his style will be more structured than Nelson’s. His rotation, scheme, and use of players will be more traditional. That figures to be most evident on defense.

What?!?! He does realise he is coaching the Warriors right? This is exactly like when Kayne went all 808s on everyone. To add insult to injury, apparently Curry thinks the leaders in the locker room right now are David Lee and Scooter Boy. Well, isn’t that just dandy. Anyway, getting a bit more serious. Curry has definitely had a bit of a hit in value by recent events. I don’t like the chatter about less minutes, more defense and generally trying to win games instead of just accumulating stats. My first round resume might have to hibernate for the season because I am too depressed at the moment to even think about what happens if I land the 4th pick in my draft in 3 weeks. I am still in a frame of mind about just drafting him anyway and sticking the finger up at anyone who disagrees. But I feel my resume would suffer mightily.

(other notes from extremely limited research: the warriors have not had an all-nba player since 1994 when Sprewell was a first teamer; andris biedrins is a co-captain but didn’t get mentioned by Curry because he can’t shoot free throws; and most amazing of all… Jeremy Lin is freakin’ 6’3 and 200lbs… this kid is going to be a monster – apart from that last one, I’m trying to say that the Warriors suck)

The other question for me…. WHAT THE HELL DID MATT BUSER WRITE SUCH A SIMPLE TO UNDERSTAND STRATEGY ARTICLE THAT ALL OF MY FRIENDS HAVE NOW READ??? Thanks for nothing Matt.  But lucky for me, he missed a couple of strategies. The first, obviously enough, is to ignore turnovers. Oh wait. That’s not a strategy. It’s what every single ESPN writer advises you to do because they are fucking morons. It’s also what all my friends do anyway (see what I did there? Clever). But really, where is the ignore rebounds strategy? Maybe Buser had a deadline to meet, but seriously, how could that one not work. Kevin Love? Overrated. Ben Wallace? Possible the worst selection in the world. Drew Gooden? Please send me your cash. So, here is the Weakside Help guide to winning your league by ignoring rebounds;

Draft Deron Williams. This is the only value you will get in the first round.

Proceed to draft Josh Smith (2nd – you still need blocks/steal and he will be scoring this season), Steve Nash (3rd) and Andrea Bargnani if he is still available in the 4th, otherwise go for Kevin Martin or J-Rich, as both are set for monster seasons. Yeah, I went there.

This is where it gets tricky. You know you really wanna grab Channing Frye, but also know that he is a massive chump and swore you would never again have him on your roster. You should have thought about that before deciding to dump boards my friend. He is a must have in any strategy as ridiculous as this. At some point, throw in a sharp shooter or three (Ray Allen, Marcus Thornton or Baron Da…. Allen or Thornton will do). Now we need some blocks and FG%, without over paying for redundant rebounds. Did someone say Tyrus Thomas? Yeah I did. Round it out with big dudes who like to play small, or small guys who like to play small. My boy Luol Deng, Al Harrington, Nicolas Batum, Andre Miller and Kelenna Azubuike (only because I love his name)

Really. I don’t understand why no-one has ever done this before. I mean, if someone tweeted me this;

“@fourpointplay Guess what? Just drafted the maddest team eva – Williams/JSmoove/Nash/Bargs/Frye/Allen/Thornton/TyTHomas/Deng/Harrington/Batum/DreMiller/Kelenna…. Say WHAT!?”

I’d be super impressed that they; a) hacked twitter and somehow made the longest recorded tweet in the world, and b) actually thought they had any idea they knew what they were doing….

My point? Strategies are all well and good. Just make sure you know what you are doing and don’t pick a bunch of players someone suggests. Each team requires building and you are not always going to have the option to pick whoever you want in a specific round.

—-

While I haven’t blogged in awhile, I have still been reading a bunch of really good stuff out there. Can I just say, I love giggling at fantasy basketball posts and the below links made me giggle because…

of the awesome picture of Keanu wearing a helmet

people thinking Dwight Howard isn’t worth a first round H2H pick (and the thought of Jameer Nelson actually being able to get past Rajon Rondo)

I love Al Thornton’s new nick name

I was going to run a Weakside Help fantasy league this season, but since I have not blogged for a month and whatever, I presume no-one is actually reading this post so I think I will postpone till next year. If you are a bit of a loner and don’t have anywhere to play, head over to Razzball who are running three leagues. I’m sure GMTR will also run leagues. Whatever you do, don’t play in public chump leagues. If it’s really that bad, leave a comment and we’ll see if we can get one going.

The Triple Double Threat

There are many things in fantasy basketball which light a fire in my belly. Brook Lopez, Greg Oden’s blocks per36, Kevin Martin at the free throw line. All delicious, all the time. But there is something even greater than all of those put together and that is the player who earns the right to be called a Triple-Double Threat (TDT). The TDT is a mysterious individual. Sometimes short, sometimes slow. Sometimes he will appear from nowhere, dazzle with his talents and then disappear for weeks on end. Now they are not the be all and end all of Fantasy ball, but 10+ in three different categories is something to behold and has the ability to totally swing a game week for the better.

For the 2010-11 Fantasy Basketball Season, there are some old timers, some new players and some surprises who could become the next TDT. They include;

Jason Kidd: Old Man River used to be the ultimate Triple Double machine. But last season, he topped out only twice. Reason? He couldn’t score enough baskets to reach 10 points. Kidd reached double digits 4 times in Boards and Assists without making it to 10 points. Poor effort on his behalf, but it shows he still has the fire within him to be a true TDT. Personally, I prefer my threats to be a bit bigger, a bit scarier and a more angry. Kidd fits none of these categories at all. Plus, he plays with Dirk. I bet that locker room is a barrel of laughs.

Rajon Rondo: The little green alien is the man these days when it comes to potential TDT. He had two triple-doubles in the playoffs alone last season, to go with his 2 from the regular season. However there were another four times last season when he was less than 3 combined boards/assists away from a triple-double. Did you hear that the Celtics aged even more during the off-season, except for their point guard? All this means more stats, more speed and more everything from the little guy. The TDT title is his to lose at this point, which is admittedly 8 weeks before the season even starts.

Andre ‘Don’t call me Iggy’ Iguodala: If you have to tell people to stop calling you something, you are a bit of a joke. AI9 as he prefers to be called (seriously?!) might not have actually accrued a trip-doub last season but was a constant threat, an important part of the TDT make up. Despite averaging 5.8 assists per game, Iggy only managed to break the 10+ assists four times in 2009-10. That means that, a) he is very consistent with his assists, and b) he is angry at me for calling him Iggy. With Evan Turner on board, together with the evolution of Jrue Holiday, I think his prospects for more stat stuffing triple-doubles might have diminished, however he can be the token guy who always makes a list like this.

Dwight Howard: D12 is the first player to make the list for something other than the stock standard points/boards/assists combo. The big fella doesn’t quite have the touch to rack up the assists, so instead uses two hands every night to count his blocks. Like Iggy before him, Howard didn’t actually manage a triple-double last season, but he did block 7+ shots four times, giving himself every chance. I’d love to see the big man do it as his smile would be wide enough to cover Stan Van Gundy’s belly.

Stephen Curry: As mad dog Nelson continues to bark orders which his players ignore, Stephen Curry continues to amass gigantic totals of everything. Lots of people used to get on board Chris Paul to get a quad-doub (4 categories with double digits for you mathematically challenged ball junkies), but my money is on Curry. The man steals a ball quicker than Iguodala falls over, which is very quickly. That said, Curry only actually achieved one trip-doub last season, so he is still a fair way from going to even greater heights.

Terrence Williams: T-Will is the next big thing in New Jersey, which is to say, he is relatively small fry to the rest of us. But man can the kid ball. When given the opportunity at the end of last season, he averaged 14 points, 7 boards and 6 assists over 7 games in April. The dude is a smooth operator who will surprise many this season with his ability to create stats from nowhere. A true sophomore TDT.

Boris Diaw: It pains me to put him alongside these other players but according to Hoopedia, he is “He is lauded for his unselfish, but assertive play, and his versatility also makes him a triple-double threat”. I have never seen anyone laud him for his assertive play, but whatever. They go on for a whole paragraph about his previous triple-doubles.  There is another reason he makes this list. In 2008-09, he had a pretty nice stat line of 14/7/7/7… until you realise that one of those 7′s  was his turnovers. Perhaps the only player in the league who is able to threaten a negative trip-doub, that being 10+ turnovers.

Some of these players are highly regarded first round picks in fantasy ball, others are just drifting along hoping you will pick them up so they can reach for that elusive goal of becoming a TDT.

(For the record, I know LBJ is probably going to average a triple-double this season. He is also a dick, thus gets no love)

Fantasy Basketball 2010: The First Round Dilemma Pt. 3

In this final part of our series, I’m going to glance at something many people shy away from because it looks too ghastly and unworkable. He’s heavy and he ain’t my brother… Dwight Howard ladies and gentlemen! In the Yellow corner, we have Pau Gasol, who despite being beaten over the head by my big stick when I was angry last week, has kindly agreed to show up again (for more beating). After reading all those Roto biased lists around the mainstream fantasy sites, you might already be blinking. How can we compare these two? Well, let me tell you. A well constructed team built around Howard will wipe the floor with most of the crud other people try and compete with. This is Head to Head ONLY. Remember that before you start ranting.

(Please note that this post is being written to this song on loop, so excuse me for the bad language)

Let me put it out right out there. I’ve never drafted Dwight Howard and might never do so. However, this isn’t about that. This is about if someone held a gun to your head and said “Howard or Gasol?”, what your answer would be (after clarifying that it wasn’t Marc Gasol because that is sensible). H2H fantasy basketball allows you do dump categories. Categories. Plural. My advice with Howard? Give yourself a competitive advantage and dump TOs along with FT%. This means instead of worrying about people cramping your style with their 3.5 turnovers per game (hello Monta Ellis), you can pick people well before other people even start considering them. Let me explain. You want to pick Stephen Jackson but you know people will laugh at you if you do it before the 4th round. However if you take out his FT% and his TOs, Jackson was ranked #34 last season. So go ahead and take him with your late 3rd round pick. No-one else is willing because he doesn’t conform to their standards of what ’3rd round value’ is, but he suits you perfectly with Dwight.

I know Dwight, I can't even believe we are debating this...

So, now we’ve established the way forward after we pick Howard, why should we pick Howard? Because quite simply, he has been a top 3 Fantasy H2H player in the last two seasons if you remove his FT% and TOs. That’s a pretty good reason right there. With league leading numbers in both boards and blocks, together with a pretty wicked FG%, you can literally bank those categories as long as you don’t pick like David Khan for the remainder of the draft. In some unsolicited advice, here are a list of players who go great with Howard – Rajon Rondo, Andre Iguodala, Josh Smith, Stephen Jackson, Tyrus Thomas (god love him), Tim Duncan, Andrew Bogut, Rudy Gay, Trevor Ariza, Antwan Jamison, Lamar Odom, Blake Griffin and my personal favourite, Andris Biedrins. Sure, most of them are big guys who have trouble with their FT% but you can also trade target guards who are apparently having trouble with their stroke and steal them with lower value players than would otherwise be necessary. Drafting Howard is a great option. But that’s only Part A. Part B is where it all succeeds or collapses in a massive pile of horse crud. On Howard personally, can I just say I also think you will see an uptick in his FT% this season, per offsetting his absolute negative status as a FT% killer. Further, his offensive game gets better every off season and eventually he is going to pull it all together. Remember: He is 25 years old and hasn’t even entered the prime of his career.

I’ve actually tried very hard to like Pau Gasol. He played for years on a pretty average franchise. He did it with esteem and pride. He was not a dick when it came to winning. But despite this, I just don’t like the guy. Call me a hater, but that’s just the way I am. Recognising these facts, I’ll try to stick to the objective truth.

My favourite Pau Gasol picture ever.

Essentially, my argument boils down to this (in the post below about Pau Gasol):

Over the past three seasons with the Lakers, his FG% has steadily dropped from a high of 59% to 53% last season.

You know what I don’t like? A PF/C whose FG% drops consistently over 150 games with the same club. It’s just not very nice. What can we expect this year? Slightly less of everything. Gasol has a career average rebound per game of 9.0. Last season, he averaged 11.3. Yes he did play very well, but can we expect this again from a man who turned 30 in the offseason? Perhaps. But perhaps not. Can we expect his points to be maintained at such a high rate while the Lakers try and develop Andrew Bynum, who only just turned 23? Perhaps. Perhaps not. Will he play more than 75 games after missing 35 over the past three seasons? You know the rest by now. This is what is clear: Gasol is a first round draft pick in the vast majority of leagues. He is a very good fantasy player. He scores, boards, blocks and passes better than any other big man plus he is efficient. But with Gasol, at least in my eyes, you are unsure about his ability to turn it on, week after week, in a fashion that I want my big man to.

The end result? If you are not willing to punt categories, then Gasol is your man by a country mile. However Dwight Howard can be a very successful fantasy pick, even more so if you surround him by other players whose value increases by ignoring their faults. Relatively, it’s riskier – but hot damn, it’s exciting.

Endnote: I realise by putting in a photo with Pau Gasol and a Llama, I am probably not doing him justice. Sue me. If you want a Pau Gasol love blog, you can read all about it here.

C’mon man!

Real quick. ESPN and Yahoo have updated their draft lists and I want to make some mocking observations from my high horse.

I don’t know what Greg Oden did to the ESPN fantasy basketball guys, but he is languishing at #148. Sure, they might not have appreciated his special pictures in their editorial meeting, but this is craziness. If Oden isn’t off your board by #110, your league is adverse to being good. I’ve said it. There you go. Everyone knows he is a risk of breaking a leg again, but if last season with Tyreke Evans and Steph Curry taught us anything at all, it’s that risks are worth taking, especially in the 12th round. I do like T-Will and Anthony Morrow moving up, kudos and Darren Collison at #36 seems a tad high but a gamble, and I love that. We still don’t know if this is for Roto or H2H, or the categories. Please ESPN overlord, grace us with your knowledge.

Yahoo have gone with the old, chuck 4 people’s opinions in together and hope it makes a sensible list. I don’t know if this works particularly well. Example: When Mr Behrens (who I always pronounce in my head Biedrins) picks Derrick Rose at number 18 (I love Rose but 18?!) and everyone else leaves him out of their top 40. Who do I trust here? Anyway, their list is based on 9 cat Roto leagues which explains Howard’s position at #34. Other oddities. Biedrins has Amar’e at #22, Matt Buser has a man crush on Jason Kidd (#16) and Brandon Furston believes Brook Lopez is first round material. Overall, I think it’s a good representation of views and an interesting read. The best bit is that they dig into the top 30 of each position.

Fantasy Basketball 2010: The First Round Dilemma Pt. 2

Last week we checked out the argument for D Wade or Steph Curry in the first round. Given that I then went ahead and trashed my own advice in my first mock draft of the season (taking Curry at 9 and watching Wade go at 10), I don’t know how much stock you should put into the whatever ends up on the lines below. This time round, I think we’ll go with Danny Granger and Kobe Bryant.

Imma put it right out there and say on past form, it’s pretty hard to split these two. Kobe gives you better points, assists and FG%, while Granger has better threes, FT%, blocks and turnovers. The difference it split nearly down the line on boards and steals. Kobe has shown a capacity to play more games per season and that’s why he has tended to be a higher draft pick in the past. But here at weaksidehelp we are all about the future. Kobe was 32 last week. Granger is a relative punk, at just 27. Both first round picks? Yeah OK. But who do you want on your team this season?

Kobe Bryant has never been the fantasy darling of the NBA world. If it wasn’t KG hogging the limelight, it was LeBron James. Now it’s Kevin Durant. Bryant might be the toughest SOB on the court every night but his fantasy production is more akin to a reliable old clock, rather than knockout boxer who lands the massive blows. After playing every game of the 2007-08 and 2008-09 seasons, his broken finger gave him grief last year and he missed 9 games. However the most worrying sign for mine is that despite playing 4.6% more time per game last season than the season before, his stats flatlined. I know Kobe ain’t no standard Shooting Guard, but my senses start sensing when a shooters FG% dips, their 3FG% dips together with a significant increase in turnovers (0.6 more per game). Given the increase in playing time, there should have been a bigger jump in points (0.2), boards (0.2), assists (0.1) and steals (0.1) per game. With his usage up but production stagnant, it’s a nasty sign that the efficiency meter has been switched and the dreaded curse of 1000+ games has set in. I’m not going to write him off and I would still prefer 25/5/5 than a kick in the face, but at the same time, I’m actually worried that his form will continue to slide for fantasy purposes. Steve Blake will be running the point with flair. Matt Barnes will relieve pressure on the other end. In my eyes, it all points to Kobe still being Kobe, but just at a slightly reduced rate and a slightly reduced efficiency. There should be minimum 5 other players ahead of him on draft boards and then there are a whole bunch of 50/50 calls which will swing depending on the individual.

Danny Granger needs to learn how to stay on the court. This wouldn’t even be a discussion if Granger had managed to play 75+ games in the last two seasons. But the fact is, he has missed 35 games over that span of time. That’s a bunch of games to miss as many a fantasy owner will tell you (lesson: if you hear the words “When I took Granger at #4 ahead of Durant last season…”, switch off because the idiot doesn’t know what they are talking about). His reputation is soft as butter. That said, he has a new point guard who actually knows what to do (see you later Earl Watson), Troy Murphy has departed for greener pastures and the young turks of Hibbert, Hansborough and Rush have developed a little more. All of these things point to the Pacers being more competitive this year which I think means good things for his production. No more 4th quarter benchings. Granger becomes the man when it’s tight, which should be more often. His FG% rockets up because he isn’t playing with crud and doesn’t resort to bombing7.1 threes per game (!), basically giving up. I think Granger will be 26/6 this season, with 2.5+ threes, and a real threat for 2.5+ steals/blocks. If his turnovers stay where they are (2.5) and his percentages nudge up, it’s all gravy. Obviously by now you realise I am picking Granger over Kobe for my drafts but let me finish with this.

The answer to this question really sums up what sort of person you are when you play fantasy basketball. You have two choices with pretty similar outcomes statistically based. One has more upside but comes packaged with the greater risk (Granger) while the other has been producing the same high standard for a long time and even factoring in a slight decrease, is still great value at the right spot. I wouldn’t begrudge anyone taking Kobe over Granger but it probably does mean you are slightly conservative with your drafting and don’t like to have any fun (that’s a joke people, chill out). If you take Granger, you are basically a sucker for punishment. You know he misses a bucketload of games but you crave that challenge. Good luck to you my friend.

Fantasy Basketball Mock Draft (aka where I discover the need for practice)

I just finished up the first mock draft for the season (thanks to Jason @ fbasketballblog for hosting) and let me tell you, do I need some more practice!

First, here are the results and rosters. It was quite a lively field for a Thursday night in late August. Tippy from Fantasy Basketball Daily, Patrick from GMTR, Jason from fBasketballBlog, Doneycat from Talesof9cats and Justin from LIJAFBB (life is just a fantasy basketball blog) all showed up, as did some other guys who made for good conversation. It was 14 rounds, 10 team, H2H with 9 categories. Pretty simple stuff.

My immediate reactions when I look at my roster are that while I believe in the players I think are going to have major improvements this season, that doesn’t mean they should all be on the one team together. I had no hesitation taking Steph Curry at #9 despite the ridicule which followed. I would have really liked to partner him up with D Wade or Granger but Jason nabbed them back to back, leaving me with David Lee. This was my first mistake. It’s way too risky to have both your first picks on one team, let alone one team with a mad coach, new owners and an inability to win games. If I was after a big man who can shot FT% (which I was), it should have been Amar’e because he is going to tear it up in NYC. Strike 1. I can’t believe Patrick took Gasol at #4 however I have a feeling it was just to spite me. Mission completed. The winner after two picks, especially picking last, was Jason with Wade/Granger. It’s a bit insane that this could be common in ten man leagues because they both have such high ceilings. The rest of the second round was pretty standard (Lopez, Wallace, Anthony, Nash). Moving on.

Rounds 3 and 4 are normally where things get interesting in my eyes. Different opinions really come to the fore as specific teams start to take shape. With Curry and Lee on board, I decided it was time to jump on Bargnani (3rd) and Stephen Jackson (4th) to try and attempt some blocks, threes and steals. I was also picking players who tend to shoot great FT% but my turnovers are already leaking with Jackson and Curry. I still like Bargnani over the similar Troy Murphy this season but Jackon doesn’t really fit this team I think. Someone like David West (if I wanted to go big, he went #39) or Derrick Rose (small, went #36) would’ve been better. The big movers this year shined through in the 3rd and 4th round. Westbrook went at #26, Al Horford was #30 and Andrew Bogut was #35 despite his injury (which I still like, but many others don’t). I love Patrick’s Al Jefferson pick at #37 to go with Chaucey, Amar’e and Pau. Really gives that team some much needed grunt. All three of those big guys score a bunch and Jefferson’s FT dilemmas are offset by the other guys.

Who would you pick with the 5th if you already had Curry, Lee, Bargs and S.Jax?Ray Felton and O.J Mayo? Cool, come join the club. I had Nene and Joakim Noah on my ‘to pick’ list, but both went before I came round again. If Felton is a little bit of a reach at #49, I don’t know what that makes Mayo at #52. As I said before, I like both their upsides this year. Felton will be running the pick and roll and day long with Amar’e and the Knicks have such a good pace factor that even if he only manages 30-32 minutes a night with Toney Douglas getting some time share, that is still good for 6-7 assists, some threes and steals at a minimum. Obviously I am expecting more. Plus, he is exciting to own and it will be a bit of a rollercoaster ride. Here is a good rule for drafting as well. Don’t read other people’s stuff about specific players right before the draft. I knew Tippy liked Mayo but that doesn’t excuse him at #52. I also knew he wouldn’t fall to #69 which was my next pick but sometimes players just aren’t in the right position for you to draft them. This should have been a pass. Kevin Martin, Manu and J-Rich all went in the next 5 picks and any of them would have been the better options despite their health concerns. So, let’s call that Strike 2. Doneycat took KG at #53 which might not be a popular pick, is still a very good one. KG was third round value last year according to Basketball Monster and even with more of a drop off factored into his performance this season, I’d be happy to take him there. In case you’d like to know, John Wall was an auto pick at #60. Lastly, I think I will rename Round 6, “He who misses many games per season”. KG, Kev-Mart, Manu and Camby.

Do you like Andray Blatche at #62? I did about 2 months ago, but I’m not too sure about him now. Wall, Hinrich, McGee, Arenas are all going to need their touches. He was a bonafide superstar when there was no one else around but now there are and his stats will suffer because of it. This coming from the guy who just drafted Mayo at #52.

I feel my Round 7/8 combo pick either made my team or destroyed it. Blake Griffin and Yao Ming didn’t manage to play a game of NBA basketball between them last year, but have so much potential to dominate (well, as much as you can dominate in the 7th and 8th rounds) that it was easily justifiable to make both picks. All I can imagine right now is Griffin coming out of nowhere for the put back dunks and Yao standing in the post demanding the ball off Courtney Lee and Chase Buddinger who gladly give it up. Sweetness. Of course, I recognise the massive risk here but Andrew Bynum, Paul Millsap and Luis Scola don’t do it for me and they were the suggested picks for bigs at that stage. Marcus Thornton at pick #79 for mine is the best pick this draft. He has no competition for minutes, has already shown what he can do with Darren Collison and now gets to play with Chris Paul. You can bank the ridiculous numbers of threes and points coming your way. Other points of interest these rounds; Gilbert Arenas (#74) and Rashard Lewis/Luol Deng (#66/#67, this is only just the beginning Jason – I’ll be collecting the kudos by Christmas)

A bunch of talent left the board in Round 9. Hibbert, Jameer Nelson, Chris Kaman, Vince Carter and Tony Parker all made their way onto rosters. I went with Robin Lopez. I am excited for the big guy this year in Phoenix. Admittedly, after I picked I actually had a look at my team and saw Yao, Griffin, Bargs and David Lee. Probably didn’t need another Center candidate at this stage especially as I had my eye on Greg Oden as a sneaky late pick up. I figure though, if you draft a very good player, it’s not all lost as he should be easy to trade and improve your squad in the early days of the season. I’m giving myself a pass here. The Brazilian Blur was up next as I took Leandro Barbosa with my Rd 10 pick (#92). I said of him just the other day that his range was 62-90 so to get him here I was very happy. He beefs up my somewhat depleted guard stocks and is the perfect foil for prospective trades later on in the season if he really outperforms. Also in round 10 some big boys came to play. DeMarcus Cousins (#93), Elton Brand (#94) and JaVale McGee (#98). Who would’ve thought that at this time last season?

Before we press on, a very quick update on my team to date; Curry, Lee, Bargs, SJax, Felton, Mayo, Yao, Blake Griffin, Robin Lopez and Barbosa. Missing: A quality Small Forward. You get one guess at the next pick.

You know it, Tyrus ‘In Yo Face’ Thomas. He might not fit the bill as quality small forward, but he will finally have the chance to play serious minutes in Charlotte and make an impact. He is a steal/block machine of the highest order and I think he is a steal at #109. George Hill was my next pick at #112. It’s not that I think he will be amazing or even a good player at San Antonio this season with Tony Parker but more a gamble that TP won’t play that many minutes. I feel Hill is exactly the type of player you want at this stage of your draft. Reliable but could be explosive depending on other things. I feel slightly less ill about my guard situation with him aboard for season 2010-11. Tippy was pretty happy to land Andris Biedrins for some reason. I really don’t like him this season. Ben Gordon is value at #105, as is T-Will at #103. Michael Beasley slipped all the way to #119, one spot after Anderson Varejao. I’d be happy with either of these guys as my 12th round pick.

To finish up, I punted on Serge Ibaka and Kelenna Azubuike (whose name I have typed so often in the past three weeks I now finally now how to spell it). I don’t even know if Ibaka will play many minutes with Cole Aldrich in town but I like him for 2+ blocks even with only 15 minutes per night. Azubuike is a different story. He might start for the Knicks and was once a 14 points per game dude in the Bay. I’m not expecting that here, but he can shoot the three and steal the ball as well. I’m banking on him being better than Wilson Chandler. However, after looking at some of the players still on the boards as we finish up who could have bigger impacts (Hansborough, Shane Battier, Drew Gooden, Thad Young etc), we will call this Strike 3. Batter Up.

Final Rosters:

West (Auto pick): Durant, Rondo, Bosh, Gay, Jamison, Wall, B Diddy, Jason Terry, Jeff Green, Jrue Holiday, Evan Turner, Maggette, J.R Earl Smith, Spencer Hawes

LIJAFBB: LBJ, Evans, Kidd, West, M Gasol, Camby, Blatche, Thornton, Scola, Andre Miller, Reggie Williams, Michael Beasley, D.J Augustin, Greg Monroe

Boogerboys: (Auto pick till 8th Round): CP3, Roy, J.Smith, Pierce, Nene, Manu, Caron Bulter, Ariza, Hibbert, McGee, T-Will, Varejao, Splitter, Lou Williams

GMTR(Patrick): Pau Gasol (…), Amar”’e, Billups, Al Jefferson, Mo Williams (insert Baby Crying, Auto Draft from here), J-Rich, Jamal Crawford, Paul Millsap, J.Nelson, C Frye, Calderon, Diaw, Thompson, Queensbridge Artest

Drafting Hungover: Dirk, Nash, Joe JOhnson, Rose, Z Randolph, Harris, Jennings, Bynum, Kaman, Ray Allen, Ben Gordon, Favors, Greg Oden, Casspi

ec236: Kobe, Lopez, Westbrook, Bogut, Love, Kev-Martin, R. Lewis, E. Gordon, Vince Carter, Harrington, Okur, Odom, Haywood, Roddy Buckets

FantasyGod(Tippy): D-Will, Melo, Monta, Duncan, Noah, Aldridge, Luol Deng, Arenas, Tony Parker, Brand, Biedrins, Okafor, S. Marion, Wilson Chandler (Rd 8 through 13 and he was drafting like it was 2007)

DoneyCat: Dwight, Wallace, Iggy, T Murphy, Collison, KG, Salmons, Morrow, Landry, DeMarcus, Childress, Chandler, Kleiza, Batum,

Me: Curry, Lee, Bargnani, S Jackson, Felton, Mayo, Yao, Griffin, R Lopez, Barbosa, Tyrus Thomas, George Hill, iBlocka, Azubuike

fBasketballBlog(Jason): Wade, Granger, Horford, Boozer, Gallo, Turkoglu, Brooks, A Randolph, Hickson, Stuckey, Dalembert, AK47, Mike Miller, Beno Udrih.

Best teams; split between LIJAFBB and Drafting Hungover (could’ve been Patrick if he didn’t abandon us for his child). Best pick; Thornton #79 and  Tiago Splitter #123. Thanks to Jason for organising, I’m sure we’ll see more of this in the near future.

Biggest lesson here; lots of mock drafts required before the season actually starts. Cheers for everyone who turned it, was a solid hour of entertaining chatter.

Fantasy Basketball pop quiz

Did you know that last season, according to Basketball Monster rankings in 9 cat leagues, Kobe Bryant was ranked 13th?! That’s right, just in front of Troy Murphy and sitting pretty behind Chris Bosh. Were owners who took him at the 4 spot last season happy with that return? Probably not. He did fade off with his broken finger but no excuses here! Give that he is one year older, that the Lakers finally have a point guard who can actually be a point guard when required instead of hitting one big shot every 4 playoff games and the fact that Andrew Bynum is going to destroy everyone in his path this year, I would wait on Kobe a little bit longer than normal this draft. If you have a thing for Kobe, he will still produce but I’m going to call his decline into 2nd round value a permanent thing this coming season. Think a 2008-09 Paul Pierce. Get’s it done when required but suffers overall.

Did you know that Larry Sanders for the Bucks averaged 3.2 blocks per game at Summer League? Sure, it’s SL but still, that is pretty epic. And as the news reports of Andrew Bogut sink in, you can be certain that Coach Skiles will give up some minutes for the big rookie. In his third and final year at VCU, he was a 14 and 9 guy with 2.6 blocks per game. He has the size and college experience to make a fantasy impact from the get go. A real steal in the very late rounds or straight off the waiver (but be quick!) as your season gets going. I wouldn’t be surprised if he has a Ben Wallace type of season from last year, lots of boards and blocks but not much on the offensive end. He also shows a flash of outside shooting ability, shown by his willingness to shoot the deep ball (1.2 attempts per game in Summer League).

Did you know that Charlie Villanueva is a freaking chump and you should not touch him with a 10 foot pole? I don’t care what anyone says about him going in the late rounds, you ask any owner from last year what they think of him and then go and look at the Pistons roster and you will find your answers. Greg Monroe, Austin Daye and my boy Jonas Jerebko are all young developing talent who could actually prove to be good players, unlike the ridiculously over paid chump who wears the number 31. I would prefer to pick no-one in the 13th round and wait to fill my spot after the first games of the season than have Charlie V sitting on my bench.

Finally, did you know that Yahoo Fantasy NBA has opened up for 2010? Bookmark it just over here. It’s actually only about 8 weeks till the season starts. Hot damn and I haven’t even done a prelim ranking list yet. Better get onto that. The front page tells me I finished 10th in the GMTR readers league and 2nd in the Self Esteem League. 2010 is the start of a dynasty, I can feel it in my bones. Hot tips: Tiago Splitter, Ray Felton and Yao Ming.

I’m in fBasketballBlog’s mock draft tomorrow morning so next up I’ll post some thoughts on good picks, bad picks and just downright crazy picks (I’m looking at you Doneycat)

OH! And before I forget. Is Fantasy Sports Insurance the greatest thing ever? Or am I just delusional?

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