Posts tagged ‘Sean Williams’
Dooling Officially a Net, Roster Rounding Out
by Michael - posted Tuesday, July 22nd, 2008
Monday the Nets officially acquired combo guard Keyon Dooling in a sign and trade with Orlando after days of speculation. 16 players under contract, 15 roster spots, you do the math - Thorn is not done. Check out the latest podcast, as I dive into Dooling and more:
- Keyon Dooling Officially a Net
- Clarifying my Stance on the Najera and Hayes Signings
- Nets Ready Infantry for Rocky Mountain Revue in Utah
- Roy Rogers Coming to A Bench Near You
- Nenad, Marcus, Sean: Coming or Going?
- Spin Around the NBA Hot Stove
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Tags: Brook Lopez, free agent, Keyon Dooling, Marcus Williams, New Jersey Nets, podcast, Roy Rogers, Sean Williams, Show Notes, Trade
Summer League Wraps Up
by Michael - posted Saturday, July 12th, 2008
You laughed, you cried, you agonized - the schintillating games and storylines of the 2008 Orlando Summer League. Alright, it’s not exactly the playoffs. In fact, it’s not much more than an inter-squad practice, a more organized extension of the pre-draft camps, with structed 5-on-5 games, and a few veterans mixed in.
For now, summer league is our only evaluation tool for progress. Early indications, Brook Lopez can play center in this league, Sean Williams still can’t play in this league. Lopez displayed adeptness in the post scoring almost 20 points a game, more importantly improving each day. Williams showed no ability in the post, picking up right where he left off last season. The Stanford rookie even recored more blocked shots than Williams in slightly more minutes.
The team posted a 4-1 record, which means…well, NOTHING. When players can record 8 fouls and keep playing, you can throw the proverbial record books out. However, this week did confirm my beliefs that Lopez and CDR will both make contributions as rookies. CDR more so than Anderson, even though the Nets selected the Pac-10 leading score 19 picks ahead of CDR - and don’t think he’ll forget that. I envision Lopez finding his way into the starting lineup at some point in the first half of the year. He’s simply better than Josh Boone. CDR will crack the Top 8 for this team, unless they decide to play these veteran free-agent signings by virtue of experience.
If you’re scoring at home, here are the Nets final stats:
Nets 2008 Summer League Stats
Drop your comments on the summer performance here. More on the free agent signings later. But here’s a hint - I have a strong opinion on it. Stay tuned.
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Tags: 2008 Orlando Summer League, Brook Lopez, CDR, Chris Anderson, Chris Douglas-Roberts, New Jersey Nets, rookies, Sean Williams, Stanford, Summer League
Summer League Wish-List
by Michael - posted Sunday, July 6th, 2008
1) Sean Williams MUST Dominate – No if’s, and’s, or but’s, the only Net from last season’s regular rotation needs to assert himself. Williams will match-up against a host of rookies and players that will never see an NBA roster, he needs to be the best player on both ends of the floor. Taking plays off and not hustling are inexcusable. With experience under his belt, Williams is viewed as a leader for this Summer League team, and must do so by example.
At a skill level, Williams has an opportunity to show his offensive repertoire. Last season he displayed flashes of a foul line jumper and a jump hook. Now is the time to refine it, and show he is capable of more than highlight reel dunks. On defense, we know he can jump through the roof to block shots. The question remains if he can stay out of foul trouble, and actually play solid man-to-man defense rather than trying to block every shot in sight. If he keeps finding himself out of position, Lawrence Frank may need a visit to Hair Club for Men when he gets back to Jersey.
2) Rookies Ready to Contribute – Alright, they have only been pros for about two weeks, it takes time to assimilate to everything. Summer Leagues do not make or break careers, in fact they mean very little in the bigger scope of things. However, Lopez, Anderson, and CDR will all have a chance to prove to Frank that they can step in and contribute. They can earn a lot of equity with the coach with solid efforts here.
And that’s where it starts – Effort. The first thing coach will look for is consistent effort and hard-nose, tough defense. If any of them can prove that, it will earn playing time. Otherwise, Lopez will get a chance to prove he can score with his back to the basket and generally be a presence inside. Joakim Noah and Aaron Gray are the only other NBA-caliber center/7-footers in Orlando. Can Anderson fill shooting gap for the Nets, and can CDR slash his way to enough scoring to become VC’s backup.
3) Where is Cinderella? – Each year at least one unknown player emerges that impresses a team enough to receive roster consideration. This year more than most, the Nets need help off the bench, especially at guard and small forward. Julius Hodge, the local product, tasted life in the NBA briefly before an overseas journey. Rumor has it the Nets like what they see, and would consider him. Hodge now has a chance to prove it on the court. One desirable attribute he possesses is the versatility to play the point and off guard. A few other names to keep an eye on Will Conroy, Jaycee Carroll, and Jamar Butler – a trio of guards that play a position of need.
If Yi was not enough, the first Japanese player to don an NBA uniform is on the Nets roster: Yuta Tubase. The Nets are taking it international, following the league trend.
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Tags: Brook Lopez, Bulls, CDR, Chris Douglas-Roberts, Julius Hodge, Lawrence Frank, NBA Summer League, New Jersey Nets, Orlando, rookies, Ryan Anderson, Sean Williams, Summer League
Knockout Blow
by Michael - posted Monday, February 11th, 2008
Some people just need a wake-up call to get going. Vince Carter took a standing eight count after a shot to the face from Brandon Bass, following Richard Jefferson as the second Net knocked out in a week. When Carter returned to the floor later in the 2nd quarter, Nets trailing
The Nets ran off 21 straight points, only slowed by halftime, led by an array of dazzling Carter moves. Fade away jumpers, back cuts to the hoop for lay-ups, and the showtime drives to the basket off transition. Carter found the “zone”, rattling off 25 points on efficient 10-14 shooting after absorbing the elbow, en route to a game-high 29.
His partner in crime, Jason Kidd, commanded the game, dominating for a second straight outing. Assuming the floor general role, Kidd led the Nets to 21 fast break points, threading the needle on countless bounce passes to setup easy baskets. Toss in a few highlight reel lob passes among the 14 assists. Stats aside, Kidd controlled the game, forced the action, ran the offense, and even cracked a smile while doing it. Jason Kidd, enjoying the Nets play? Stop the presses.
Arguably more impressive than the Carter and Kidd offensive duo, was the Nets defensive effort. The high-powered Mavs managed only 84 points, and a combination of Boone, Sean Williams, Jefferson, et al. limited MVP Dirk Nowitzki to 4-16 shooting for a quiet 21 points.
Dallas shot only 36% from the field, but captured the first half lead with easy second chance opportunities, and a few layups on defensive breakdowns, leading to 18 first half points in the paint. When Carter reemerged the whole team came alive, started to box out and attack the defensive glass. Three-point defense, a recurring defensive problem for the Nets, excelled. The Mavs shot a putrid 2-18 from deep with the Nets contesting shots all night, ant Mavs having an off night.
In his second game back on the bench, Sean Williams excelled. Appearing refocused after Kristic replaced him the starting lineup, Williams provided a few highlight reel dunks and a thunderous block on a Nowitzki jumper that led to a Carter breakaway dunk, a microcosm of the night. He finished the night with 15 points, 8 rebounds, and two blocks, and exhibited good footwork in the post and nice touch from the outside. Rather than sulk after the demotion, Williams has stepped up.
The most promising play of the night might be a simple post move that resulted in two foul shots. Nenad Kristic caught the ball with his back to the basket, then put a quick baseline spin move to go by Josh Howard – reminiscent of the pre-ACL injury Kristic, the Kristic New Jersey needs. A small step, but Kristic emanated the confidence he lacked the first four games of his return, nailing a jumper, getting to the line, and crashing the boards for 8 rebounds. Knee problem, what knee problem.
While it’s only two games, barely a streak, this win was the most dominant outing of an otherwise disappointing season. Kristic, Carter, Kidd, a solid contribution from RJ, Sean Williams off the bench, suddenly the Nets have hope.
With Mark Cuban in full view, the Mavs starting PG JJ Barea netted zero assists as he watched Kidd tear his defense apart. Based on last night,
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Tags: Dallas Mavericks, Game, Jason Kidd, Nenad Kristic, New Jersey Nets, Sean Williams, Vince Carter, Win





