Bobcats release Kareem Rush.

We could do a lot worse for a backup SG than Kareem Rush... But I still only want to see Wells gone next year if we can S&T him and Thomas for a real PF.
 
I've liked what I've seen of Rush... but in the case of Bonzi going, I wouldn't have Rush to replace him in the swingmen crop. He'd be one of the choices, but not the first or second (Jumaine Jones/Rasual Butler).
 
He's just a shooter. Such a good one he just got released by an expansion team. Sure you could add him and do worse. But "let Bonzi wlak, sign Rush" is a BIG loss in talent.
 
lol, someone inhaling too much of the 1929 ford truck exhaust fumes. bonzi > rush x 5. first of all, u try your hardest to get a S&T from bonzi. too much talent to let walk away for nothing. its basically like letting bobby jackson walk. anyhow, even if we could sign this guy. i wouldn't, he hasn't shown any progress since he's been in the league. he couldn't even get minutes as a spot up shooter on the LAKERS w/ KOBE & SNAQ.
 
He played well last season. This season he was starting for the 'Cats and seemed to be playing fine too, but got an injury or two and then fell out with them.

Didn't get minutes with the Lakers? He played in 72 games, got 15 starts, and averaged 17.2 MPG in 03-04, his third year.

Here's what Bobcats fans had to say, could be some bias:

http://www.realgm.com/boards/viewtopic.php?t=498261
 
Last edited:
KMart23 said:
lol, someone inhaling too much of the 1929 ford truck exhaust fumes. bonzi > rush x 5. first of all, u try your hardest to get a S&T from bonzi. too much talent to let walk away for nothing. its basically like letting bobby jackson walk. anyhow, even if we could sign this guy. i wouldn't, he hasn't shown any progress since he's been in the league. he couldn't even get minutes as a spot up shooter on the LAKERS w/ KOBE & SNAQ.

Kareem Rush was the reason the Lakers beat the TWolves in game six in the WCF 2004.
 
Ha, I remember that too kinda..

edit: Here:

Kareem Rush came from nowhere to hit six 3-pointers for the Lakers, who rallied in the fourth quarter for a win befitting their tumultuous season. They overcame Kevin Garnett, their constant bickering with the referees and O'Neal's horrific 7-for-20 free throw shooting to win the best-of-seven series.

But Rush, the second-year swingman who had 11 points in the entire series, made shot after shot from the perimeter. His 3-pointer with 3:22 to play gave Los Angeles a 10-point lead and sent the crowd into pandemonium.

"He's one of the best shooters on the team," O'Neal said as his young teammate beamed nearby. "I'm the guy that's always on him, and he responded. I didn't have to get on him too much (tonight)."

Though only five players remain from the Lakers' 2000 championship team, the current club has many similarities to the three-time titlists. The Lakers are almost invincible when even one of their role players hits his outside shots -- and Rush splendidly filled the role previously played by Glen Rice, Robert Horry and Rick Fox.

http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/recap?gameId=240531013
 
Last edited:
hoopsfan said:
Kareem Rush was the reason the Lakers beat the TWolves in game six in the WCF 2004.
I'd call that a bit of an over statment... there were a few other guys in purple who scored that night.;)
 
Bonzi>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>Rush.

Oh. Ok. I may have exaggerated by one ">".

But +Rush -Bonzi is a net loss anyway you slice it. The only way it balances is if tou add in +big man or some such that you get back for Bonzi.
 
cassell going down was the reason why the lakers won.... but rush is a damn good shooter and would be a nice addition.... and a young shooter would be better than an old one.....

but bonzi is way better than rush, but not at the price that he will be asking for.
 
As an aside, here's an "ouch" quote from the article about him being waived:

"The Bobcats are about two things -- hard work and maximum effort," Bickerstaff said. "With that in mind, we think it's best to go in a different direction with Kareem." :eek:

*smack*! (no idea if that's accurate or not, just amused at the backhanded kick in the butt on the way out of town).
 
"The Bobcats are about two things - hard work and maximum effort," Bickerstaff said. "With that in mind, we think that it is best to go in a different direction with Kareem."



...so why do you want to sign him again?
 
Well, he's a good shooter and has athleticism, but if he has a bad work ethic, I wouldn't want him. Would rather we'd go after Jumaine Jones or Rasual Butler if Bonzi's gone anyways. I honestly don't know what Bickerstaff is talking about, which was part of my reaction to it. As I never read anything about Rush like that until some stuff from Bobcats fans on RealGM, but nothing detailed.
 

This was no April Fools' joke.
The timing was a surprise -- who cuts a guaranteed contract with nine games left in the season? -- but Kareem Rush's divorce from the Charlotte Bobcats was inevitable. The Bobcats released him Saturday, issuing a brief press release that included this cutting comment from coach-general manager Bernie Bickerstaff:
"The Bobcats are about two things -- hard work and maximum effort. With that in mind, we think that it is best to go in a different direction with Kareem.''
NBA teams don't typically take parting shots at their players. When I asked Bickerstaff to expand on that quote, he offered a bit more perspective:
"The young man has an abundance of talent, and I hope he realizes that.''
Three times in the past six weeks, I asked Rush what he thought of his future here. He was playing under a one-year contract, worth $3 million, with a team option beyond this season.
Each time Rush would respond with a detached shrug, and say he anticipated employment somewhere in the NBA next season, however it worked out.
I'm convinced that trait -- detachment -- doomed Rush here. Rush is a nice guy -- there's nothing malicious or mean-spirited in his personality -- but he left you thinking basketball was his job, not his passion.
Rush disputed that perception in an e-mail to the Observer Saturday night: "As for my work ethic being questioned, I feel people mistake my calm demeanor for a lack of effort, which is not the case."
When Bickerstaff was hired, he said the one thing he'd demand from his players was passion for their work. They'd inevitably be inferior in talent and experience most nights, so they had to try harder.
Generally, the Bobcats live by that standard. Gerald Wallace frequently crashes headfirst into the stands, chasing after loose balls.
Raymond Felton played two days after a car accident that would have left the rest of us sipping chicken soup under a soft down comforter.
Rush isn't a crash-into-walls kind of guy. But he had skills -- the ability to create and make a jump shot with the 24-second clock dying -- that the Bobcats severely lacked when Bickerstaff acquired him last season.
Bickerstaff cut a player of some use (Eddie House) to make room for Rush and sent two second-round picks to the Los Angeles Lakers to complete the transaction.
From then on, Rush was the closest thing the Bobcats had to a golden child. Miss shots? He still played. Hurt a lot? He still played. Poor shape entering training camp? He still played.
I asked Bickerstaff on Saturday why Rush ultimately failed here. Again, the coach's reply was brief.
"It's probably my fault,'' Bickerstaff said.
An attempt at translation: Bickerstaff indulged Rush long enough that the shooting guard must have felt he'd get an endless supply of second chances.
Saturday, the second-chance well ran dry.

http://www.charlotte.com/mld/charlotte/sports/basketball/nba/charlotte_bobcats/14244892.htm
 
hoopsfan said:
Kareem Rush was the reason the Lakers beat the TWolves in game six in the WCF 2004.

woooo, thanks for pointing out ONE game. i've watched him when he was w/ the lake show on league pass to see that kid is a scrub. if he's so great why didn't the lakers keep him?
 
KMart23 said:
woooo, thanks for pointing out ONE game. i've watched him when he was w/ the lake show on league pass to see that kid is a scrub. if he's so great why didn't the lakers keep him?

Great? That's an exaggeration, I don't think anyone has said he's great.

That one game was a huge game, btw, and in the WCF.
 
KMart23 said:
woooo, thanks for pointing out ONE game. i've watched him when he was w/ the lake show on league pass to see that kid is a scrub. if he's so great why didn't the lakers keep him?

I was commenting on someones else's comment...you're taking mine out of context.:rolleyes:

He was left unprotected for the Bobcats...same as Gerald Wallace....he's doing pretty good, why didn't the Kings keep him??
 
LA Daily News - Phil Jackson wasn't happy about one of his former players being released when the Bobcats let Kareem Rush go.

"I thought it was vindictive," Jackson said. "I don't like to see it because he's one of the guys that we nurtured here. He was contributing to us a lot in the championship (run) two years ago.

"When I came back, one of my first considerations was can we get Kareem Rush back here to play on this basketball club," Jackson said. "I do value his game and hope that he has a good career."

http://www2.dailynews.com/sports/ci_3666151
 
So much fuss over a guy who's been in the league 4 years and averaged 6ppg on 40% shooting.

As an aside:
Rush (shooter) career 3pt FG%: .345
Bonzi Wells career 3pt FG%: .337

Or:
Rush (shooter) career FT%: .695
Bonzi Wells career FT%: .712
 
More on the man of the past few days ;):

"This season Phil Jackson has exchanged insults with Dallas Maverick owner Mark Cuban and has been referred to as "one of the great complainers of all time" by Miami Heat Coach Pat Riley. Next up? General Manager-Coach Bernie Bickerstaff of the Charlotte Bobcats."

"(Bernie) Bickerstaff took exception to (Phil) Jackson's comments regarding the Bobcats' waiving of Kareem Rush and criticized Jackson's assertion that the move was "vindictive" because it was done with so few games left in the season. "Phil has that ability [to judge]," Bickerstaff sarcastically told the Charlotte Observer. "He was in our locker room … at our games."

"Bickerstaff also mentioned the tell-all book written by Jackson in 2004, in which numerous locker-room conversations were revealed and Kobe Bryant was labeled uncoachable at times. "He probably forgets he wrote a book for profit," Bickerstaff said. "So he has a lot of credibility."

"Kareem often expressed fondness of being back with the Lakers," said Rush's agent, Calvin Andrews. "If Phil's interested, we're interested. We'll take a look at it and see."

"So which is worse: Cutting a player with nine games left in the regular season, as Bickerstaff did with former Lakers guard Kareem Rush, or calling Kobe Bryant "uncoachable" in the pages of a best-selling book? There has been little mention of Jackson's book in his comeback season with the Lakers, but Bickerstaff brought it up Monday in responding to Jackson's criticism about the second-year Charlotte Bobcats' handling of Rush."

http://www.latimes.com/sports/la-sp-lakerep4apr04,1,6557086.story?coll=la-headlines-sports

http://www.dailynews.com/sports/ci_3668985

Man, Kareem Rush must feel like TO right now. :p
 
MY respect for Bernie Bickerstaff just increased 10 fold. Way to lay down the PJ smack!!!

:D
 
Back
Top