http://www.sacbee.com/content/sports/story/14272071p-15082534c.html
by Marty MacNeal
NBA draft not be-all, end-all
Wednesday's NBA draft is an opportunity for most teams to improve their stature through selections of college players. However, each of the past four champions has had an undrafted player in its rotation.
San Antonio won in 2003 and 2005 with Bruce Bowen playing an integral role. In 2004, center/forward Ben Wallace boosted Detroit, while Miami's Udonis Haslem excelled this season.
How to handle Bonzi?
Three days after the draft, the Kings will begin playing "Let's Make a Deal" with Bonzi Wells and his agent, William Phillips.
Wells, who will be 30 on Sept. 20, officially becomes a free agent at 12:01 a.m. Eastern time Saturday, and many observers believe he will be the top shooting guard available on the free-agent market. Phillips will have statistical support and the recent memory of Wells' superlative playoff series against San Antonio.
Wells, who averaged 13.6 points, 7.7 rebounds and 32.4 minutes in 52 games during the regular season, was a man among children during the six-game series against the Spurs. He averaged 23.2 points and a playoff-leading 12.0 rebounds per game, and his field-goal percentage of 60.9 percent was second only to Miami's Shaquille O'Neal, who shot 61.2 percent during the postseason.
Phillips, who says he expects to receive offers from other teams, will have data showing his guy belongs in the top seven or eight shooting guards, especially on a per-48-minute basis. The Kings will point to Wells' missing 30 games last season.
Phillips will say, Of those guys who played all those regular-season games, who showed up with the season on the line?
That's negotiating. And when it's time to make a decision, the team that shows the biggest and longest financial commitment to Wells likely will get his name on the dotted line.
As Wells' parent squad, the Kings can offer a sixth year and 10.5 percent annual increases. Other squads can offer a maximum five-year deal and 8 percent increases.
About the writer: The Bee's Martin McNeal can be reached at mmcneal@sacbee.com.
by Marty MacNeal
NBA draft not be-all, end-all
Wednesday's NBA draft is an opportunity for most teams to improve their stature through selections of college players. However, each of the past four champions has had an undrafted player in its rotation.
San Antonio won in 2003 and 2005 with Bruce Bowen playing an integral role. In 2004, center/forward Ben Wallace boosted Detroit, while Miami's Udonis Haslem excelled this season.
How to handle Bonzi?
Three days after the draft, the Kings will begin playing "Let's Make a Deal" with Bonzi Wells and his agent, William Phillips.
Wells, who will be 30 on Sept. 20, officially becomes a free agent at 12:01 a.m. Eastern time Saturday, and many observers believe he will be the top shooting guard available on the free-agent market. Phillips will have statistical support and the recent memory of Wells' superlative playoff series against San Antonio.
Wells, who averaged 13.6 points, 7.7 rebounds and 32.4 minutes in 52 games during the regular season, was a man among children during the six-game series against the Spurs. He averaged 23.2 points and a playoff-leading 12.0 rebounds per game, and his field-goal percentage of 60.9 percent was second only to Miami's Shaquille O'Neal, who shot 61.2 percent during the postseason.
Phillips, who says he expects to receive offers from other teams, will have data showing his guy belongs in the top seven or eight shooting guards, especially on a per-48-minute basis. The Kings will point to Wells' missing 30 games last season.
Phillips will say, Of those guys who played all those regular-season games, who showed up with the season on the line?
That's negotiating. And when it's time to make a decision, the team that shows the biggest and longest financial commitment to Wells likely will get his name on the dotted line.
As Wells' parent squad, the Kings can offer a sixth year and 10.5 percent annual increases. Other squads can offer a maximum five-year deal and 8 percent increases.
About the writer: The Bee's Martin McNeal can be reached at mmcneal@sacbee.com.