Circa_1985_Fan
All-Star
Spencer Hawes=Joe Kleine

If Kenny Thomas was an expiring contract I would be ecstatic but unfortunately he has 3 years left on his deal. I'm just still pissed that we had 12 million in expiring contracts last year and we didn't use any of it and just let them go.
I normally don't highlight parts of articles but I thought it worth it this time.
I thought it especially interesting that Amick reported the Kings are among the most active in trade talks.
I had forgotten that we traded Jon Barry for Mateen "The Towel" Cleaves. That one was... awesome.![]()
I think more like a Brad Miller.Spencer Hawes=Joe Kleine![]()
if we draft spencer hawes, i will be irate!!! NO MORE BIGS THAT ARE SOFTIES!!!!!!!!
I think more like a Brad Miller.
same bibbinator from rgm??I dunno. I expect to be disappointed with whatever happens.
Bibby isn't going to work out on a rebuilding team, because of his salary and need for minutes. He needs to go, but where? And how many more KTs might we have to take back to move him?
I'd love to believe there is going to be some great surprise on Friday but I don't.
One small bright side is that Salmons can be traded easily. It gives GP some flexibility.
I disagree completely (well almost completely). People assume Miller and Hawes are a good comparison because of the rumored lack of defense. I am a huge fan of Pac 10 basketball (watch 5-6 games per week), and saw a TON of Hawes last year. Here is some more information about the guy...
He was the 4th ranked overall recruit for the 2006. The guys immediately ahead of him were Oden, Durant, B. Wright. He was ahead of Thad Young (6), Chase Buddinger (8), Brook Lopez (11) and Mike COnley (28). He garnered scholarship offers from Washington, UCLA, Arizona, Stanford (despite already getting the Lopez twins committed), Duke, Kansas, Connecticut, and North Carolina.
When recruited his pros/cons were listed as follows:
Pros- Hands, Low post scorer, work ethic
Cons- Defensive Presence, Strength, mid-range jumper
"Uses both hands at the rim effectively like few are capable of doing. Talented and skilled in the paint, he's got a variety of scoring moves. Can play facing the basket or in the post. Like most young bigs, strength will come and help his game. Loves to play and work on game."
Watching him play, he is the anti-Miller on offense. Would much rather operate from the post and has a VERY polished post game, especially for his age. DOES NOT play from the elbow. When he faces up, he faces up by turning out of his post move, and plays along the baseline. He is a decent passes, but certainly not a facilitator like Brad.
People knock his rebounding and point to 6.5 boards per game. First of all, he was a freshman who spent the first third of the season coming off the bench. He averaged 28 minutes a game to get his 6.5. It should also be noted that he played alongside John Brockman who is basically a bully who is out there to mix it up and rebound. Brockman averaged almost 10 boards a game, so to fault Hawes for not grabbing boards is to complain that people who play alongside Reggie Evans, Dwight Howard, Dennis Rodman don't get enough boards. Hawes showed ability to get tough rebounds late in the game, which is always a plus.
As for defense, Hawes is certainly not an athlete. However, he is a decent to good post defender, and he got better as he got more strength. He also averaged almost 2 blocks a game in his 28 minutes. A lot of his defensive "deficiency" comes from the fact that Washington played an up and down style similar to Phoenix of Golden State, and many teams in the Pac-10 also play that way. There are about 4-5 teams in the NBA that Hawes would be a defensive liability against. However, he played very well in games where teams slowed the tempo. He showed signs of being a good help-side defender, and some of his best defensive games were against teams that tried to run half-court offense (UCLA) or who tried to feed the post (Stanford- and Hawes played VERY good defense against Lopez).
He isn't Tim Duncan or Greg Oden, but he is much better than a lot of people realize. People see slow white guy and think bust. Vlade and Brad were both slow and unathletic, and were far from busts. Spencer brings different things than both of those guys did, and I think he can be successful.
If Yi and B.Wright are gone, and Petrie thinks Hawes is the way to go, I will get on board...
...Hawes is certainly not an athlete.
And that is exactly why Petrie should not draft him.
The NBA game has changed, and athleticism is at an all-time premium. Hawes is a skill player, and very good in his own right. I saw him play a few times in Pac 10 games last season, too, and he is not what the Kings need. We need to get more athletic, and I would take an ostensibly lesser big man than Hawes that was way more athletic, based on future potential to make an impact in an ever-growing-more-athletic NBA.