1. Welcome! Please take a few seconds to create your free account to post threads, make some friends, remove a few ads while surfing and much more. ClutchFans has been bringing fans together to talk Houston Sports since 1996. Join us!

[Slam (slamonline.com) Article: T-Mac # 17 best player in NBA

Discussion in 'Houston Rockets: Game Action & Roster Moves' started by RocketsFAN3035, Oct 25, 2006.

  1. RocketsFAN3035

    Joined:
    Sep 13, 2003
    Messages:
    490
    Likes Received:
    2
    Haven't seen this anywhere, thought I'd share it. Past couple of weeks, Slam has been ranking the top 50 players in the NBA. I have a couple of questions about this list (like how Andrea Bargini made it, no offense to my boys at the Basketball Jones), but T-Mac is on the list (and Yao better be there soon). Here's the link:http://slamonline.com/online/2006/10/17-tracy-mcgrady/

    Here's the article:

    Tuesday, October 24th, 2006

    17. Tracy McGrady

    in NBA, Features, SLAMonline Top 50

    With summer dragging on and on and on before the NBA tips off, we’ve decided to initiate a multipart series that will be the definitive look at the best players in the NBA today.

    Over lunch at the Outback Steakhouse (word to Steve Irwin), your crack SLAMonline.com staff sat down and ranked the 50 best players in the NBA today. We realize that’s kind of ambiguous, but that’s how basketball is and that’s how we like it. Basically, though, we tried to list the 50 guys we think have the most value to their teams, right now, at this moment. This doesn’t mean they’ll never be traded, and it doesn’t mean they’re due tremendous contract extensions, but it does mean — since value is king in the NBA — that over the next month or so we’ll run down the 50 guys that we think are the 50 best players, right here, right now.

    Before long it’ll be time for our annual NBA team previews. Right now it’s time for some law and order…

    17. Tracy McGrady
    by Lang Whitaker

    There have been flashes of brilliance from Tracy McGrady for almost a decade now. He entered the NBA in 1997, a scrawny, spindly high school kid who was placed in Toronto, a world away from his Southern roots. And even after he arrived in the T-Dot, he was placed on the end of the bench and told to listen and learn.

    Thing is, he did. So much so that when he left for Orlando in the summer of 2000, the guy the players all call “Mac” immediately made his first All-Star team. One year later, he led the NBA in scoring. He was supposed to be teaming up with Grant Hill, but this was when Grant was going through his horrible ankle issues. Then things got testy, with T-Mac speaking out about the team’s management, and they sent him to Houston for Steve Francis. He finally went to the Playoffs in 2005, pushing the Mavs to the limit before getting blown out in Game Seven. It’s the furthest Tracy McGrady has ever been in the playoffs. He’s 27 years old, a six-time All-Star and five-time All-NBA selection and a tw-time scoring champ, but he’s never been out of the first round.

    If he was completely healthy, we’d probably have him ranked higher. But he hasn’t been completely healthy for a while. In fact, for every great memory of Mac — like the time he scored 13 points in 35 seconds to stun the Spurs — it’s impossible to think about T-Mac these days without injuries coming to mind. In fact, when I was in L.A. this summer to interview all the guys in the new adidas “It Takes Five” ad, at one point I found myself sitting on a couch with Mac in the lounge of the photo studio. Tracy put his leg up on an ottoman, because it was there and that’s what ottomans are for, dammit.

    Then Kevin Garnett burst in the room, his energy redlined as usual. He saw T-Mac’s leg elevated and he froze and asked Mac, “What’s wrong with your shi*t, yo?” T-Mac was fine, but the Big Ticket was just asking the logical question, considering T-Mac’s injury-riddled history.

    “Like last year, man, I don’t know, it was a freak accident,” Mac said when I asked him about his health. “I was healthy going into the season. First game of the season I was healthy, and you know, I had the best preseason of my whole career! And then when I come to practice after the first game, I go around one of my guys who went up for a layup, try to avoid Yao, I came down wrong and right then it hit me. I was out for a while and I was never healthy. It just kept bothering me throughout the whole season. Then I had stress on me, some off the court ****, and that hindered it a lot too. But now I’m healthy.”

    “Yeah, I feel like my normal self and sh*t. I can’t wait ’til October, because I had a bad year. My team had a bad year. It’s time for me to make some things happen, man, in the Playoffs. Other than just getting there and having a helluva first round.”
     
  2. kjames44

    kjames44 Member

    Joined:
    Oct 10, 2006
    Messages:
    177
    Likes Received:
    0
    That's cool that everyone feels he's 17th or 70th...only thing that matters is his play on the court. I think he'll be fine but he may not average 24-25 ppg...doesn't have to this year for us to win!
     

Share This Page

  • About ClutchFans

    Since 1996, ClutchFans has been loud and proud covering the Houston Rockets, helping set an industry standard for team fan sites. The forums have been a home for Houston sports fans as well as basketball fanatics around the globe.

  • Support ClutchFans!

    If you find that ClutchFans is a valuable resource for you, please consider becoming a Supporting Member. Supporting Members can upload photos and attachments directly to their posts, customize their user title and more. Gold Supporters see zero ads!


    Upgrade Now