Dream Team Draft - rankings due Sunday night

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My new pick:


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Antonio McDyess

I think people forget just how good McDyess was before the injuries. At his best, he gave you 21ppg, 12rpg, 2apg, 2.3bpg, 1.5spg. That's pretty scary. And, he's proven to be productive off the bench. He was a great athlete and it's a shame he had so many injuries because he really did look special.

All you have to do is watch this mix to see what a freak he was in his younger days.

[yt=McDyess - Perfect PF]SQC5g7yezgs[/yt]
 
RASHEED WALLACE

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Originally selected out of the University of North Carolina by the Washington Bullets (now the Washington Wizards) as the fourth pick in the 1995 NBA Draft, Wallace was named to the All-Rookie second team following his first season. Following the same season he was traded to the Portland Trail Blazers in exchange for Rod Strickland and Harvey Grant. He had a career-high 42 points against the Denver Nuggets in 2000 and was a key member of the Blazers team that made it to the Western Conference Finals that same year. Wallace had a career best 19.4 points per game in 2002 for the Blazers.

In 2004 Rasheed Wallace helped power the Detroit Pistons to the NBA title and obtained his first championship ring. In Detroit, Wallace became known for selfless team play and integrated with Ben Wallace to form the core of the Pistons' smothering defensive game. He dubbed the duo "Wallace x 2" shortly after he arrived in Detroit in 2004.

As of 2007, Wallace is one of the most versatile power forwards in today's game. He is a legitimate two-way threat, and always known for being tough on defense and potent on offense. Charles Barkley has been quoted as saying that Wallace has the ability to be the "best player in the NBA."[20]

On defense, Wallace has established himself as a smothering post presence, playing with great intensity and previously forming one of the great defensive frontcourts with Ben Wallace and Tayshaun Prince. Because of his height, athleticism and long arms, he is considered notoriously hard to post up against. He has established himself as a perennial NBA All-Defensive Team candidate.

On offense, he is capable of making almost any play, from a slam dunk to a long 3-point jump shot. Earlier in his career, he had mostly been a low post weapon, with an arsenal of moves reminiscent of another low post artist, Hakeem Olajuwon, but later added a solid midrange shot and even extended his range beyond the arc. Rasheed Wallace has credited his years at North Carolina in becoming a technically and fundamentally sound player. He is criticized for playing too much on the perimeter as opposed to down low, where he is arguably more efficient.

Earlier in his career, he was widely considered a volatile player, and regularly led the NBA in technical fouls, setting a still-standing league record with 41 in 2000-2001. This problem has continued into his Piston days; Wallace again led the league five seasons later with 16 technicals. He used to be dubbed by NBA announcers as a "Walking Technical Foul". However, he did not get involved in the Pacers–Pistons brawl of November 19, 2004 in any way other than as peacemaker, being commented on by the ESPN announcers for "doing an excellent job" at keeping the two teams separate. Later, he entered the crowd area to try and calm down Stephen Jackson and Ron Artest. Rasheed received no penalties (due to avoiding any acts of violence or rulebreaking/lawbreaking).

I wanted size, defense, shotblocking, attitude, and a bigman who can stretch the floor..

His best years?
2000-2001
19.2PPG/8RPG/3AST/2BLK/1STL .501% FG SHOOTING .331 THREE POINTERS

by the way, He's partnered with his buddy Ben Wallace..

who wants some ;)
 
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I'm taking...

Earl "The Pearl" Monroe (Black Jesus)

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I need a great point guard to back up Tim Hardaway and I have one now. Before the arrival of "Magic" Johnson there was another "Magic" -- "Black Magic," also known as "Earl the Pearl." He was Earl Monroe, a dazzling ballhandler and one-on-one virtuoso who made crowds gasp with his slashing drives to the hoop. He also is the innovator of the spin move. Along with Doug Christie in my second team, they will be a devastating backcourt coming off the bench. Christie will be the defensive stopper, Black Jesus will set up the offense.

Lacking great speed and leaping ability, Monroe compensated with a feathery jump shot and a patented spin move that he initiated by bumping up against an opponent and making contact before spinning away to launch one of his unorthodox shots. Most of all, Monroe made his mark with his uncanny moves to the hoop. Employing a hesitation dribble or perhaps a double-pump or triple-pump fake, he would slip past mystified opponents and drop in layups.

Fans and pros alike loved Monroe for his array of entertaining shots and his special flair. "Put a basketball in his hands and he does wondrous things with it," said Bullets Coach Gene Shue. "He has the greatest combination of basketball ability and showmanship." In a New York Post interview, Baltimore teammate Ray Scott was less circumspect: "God couldn't go one-on-one with Earl."

In his best year, he averaged 26 ppg and 5 apg, many other stats weren't even tracked yet.

* Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame (1990)
* NBA champion (1973)
* 1× All-NBA First Team (1969)
* NBA Rookie of the Year (1968)
* 4× NBA All-Star (1969, 1971, 1975, 1977)
* NBA's 50th Anniversary All-Time Team (1996)
 
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Buck Williams PF


He was the guy that did the dirty work on the Portland Trail Blazer glory teams of the early '90s. Charles Linwood "Buck" Williams did not get the same recognition as Clyde Drexler, Terry Porter or even Jerome Kersey, but he certainly was a key to the success those NBA Finals Portland teams had. He would rebound like a demon, get you enough points on second-chance baskets and would make sure he did it at a very high clip. Buck was famous for his trademark goggles, and his regular double-doubles and solid field goal percentage.
 
On the clock:

bdouble013
tradepeja

My question is tradepeja has already timed out on his round 8 pick. Are we going to wait for 24 hours before his round 9 pick times out? I'm confused...
 
Okay...Apparently my question was moot as Loungelizard just skipped over tradepeja. Works for me, BTW...

Does this mean I'm up???
 
I don't think it was your turn yet...

Edit: VF I don't think that is really fair just to skip over him like that. If he comes back in the next 24 hours it really wouldn't be fair that we just skipped over him.
 
He already timed out for round 8 and hasn't been back. He did this in drafts last year, too, IIRC...
 
So what does everyone think? My thought that if he's timed out, he's timed out. When he gets back he can catch up on the picks he missed. If we wait for him for each round, this thing is dead in the water... If that's what you all think is the way to go, that's cool but I really think it's unfair to stop the whole draft over one person.

Any other thoughts?
 
I think Lounge Lizard's pick is fine because I really doubt that tradepeja would have picked Buck Williams. I guess VF is right about skipping over him. It would be good to have the commish here.
 
He's been on several times since too. The dreaded pop-up blocker again? TDPUB for short :cool:

TDPUB be damned. It doesn't take much effort to look at the "Private Messages" line right under your name in the upper right corner and see if you have any new messages...

Hold on and I'll check and see exactly when he was here last...

According to his profile, he was here at 6:26 p.m. today.
 
Um, could you guys focus on the topic at hand for a moment?

:p

Do I post my pick or wait for tradepeja or bdouble013 to show up?
 
TDPUB be damned. It doesn't take much effort to look at the "Private Messages" line right under your name in the upper right corner and see if you have any new messages...

Hold on and I'll check and see exactly when he was here last...

According to his profile, he was here at 6:26 p.m. today.

I know, I'm just saying. That was..hm...Gary's (I think) problem last year in the VG draft, at least I think that's what he said. Whoever it was, I'm pretty sure after a while I just let the draft continue. It was slow enough as it was.

Just my $.02 on the issue at hand
 
I think Lounge Lizard's pick is fine because I really doubt that tradepeja would have picked Buck Williams. I guess VF is right about skipping over him. It would be good to have the commish here.

So LoungeLizard's pick is okay because you don't think tradepeja would have picked Buck Williams but I have to wait?

Whatever...
 
I know, I'm just saying. That was..hm...Gary's (I think) problem last year in the VG draft, at least I think that's what he said. Whoever it was, I'm pretty sure after a while I just let the draft continue. It was slow enough as it was.

Just my $.02 on the issue at hand

I know. I followed what you said... sorry if it didn't come across in my response. :)
 
How about we wait for Slab to make his crazed power-mongering ruling? I think this is probably just on tradepeja's head and the draft goes on, but Slab would have the final call. He's The Man. The Pubah. The Grand Commish. The Thread Emperor. I think I may have to ban him just on principle to reaffirm my superiority. ;)

As an aside, VF21 has aked me to cover for her if she is not around by the time The Prince of Procrastination gets on to make his ruling.
 
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