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Greek Teen Benefits From NBA Rule Change

Discussion in 'NBA Draft' started by Rockets34Legend, Jun 24, 2003.

  1. Rockets34Legend

    Rockets34Legend Contributing Member

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    Now this would be a good pick...check out this Baby Shaq!

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    Schortsanitis is the youngest beneficiary of a deal struck between the league and the players' union in February, with the NBA dropping its opposition to players who turned 18 in the 45 days preceding the draft from being eligible.

    "The change in the rules was something that gave me an advantage, but it doesn't mean that it's right," said Schortsanitis, who was dubbed "Baby Shaq" last season while playing for Iraklis in the Greek League. "I think they want kids to go to college."

    The first two picks in Thursday night's draft will be a recent high school graduate, LeBron James of Akron, Ohio, who will be chosen by the Cleveland Cavaliers (news).

    "Our tickets sales are up dramatically," vice president of marketing Tad Carper said.

    All but certain to be drafted second overall is a Serbian 7-footer, Darko Milicic, who turned 18 last week. The third pick is expected to be Syracuse freshman Carmelo Anthony, who is the oldest of the expected top three picks. He turned 19 less than a month ago.

    "I don't think we've ever felt as much excitement about a crop of new players coming in," deputy commissioner Russ Granik said.

    Despite the buzz surrounding the three teens, the NBA's public stance is that it would prefer a minimum age requirement of 20. Granik and commissioner David Stern reiterated that position during the NBA Finals (news - web sites).

    "It's really about ... those preteens who think that the road to the NBA is a road to riches, and a certainty, when in fact it may be the least certain thing in their lives," Stern said Monday by telephone.

    Schortsanitis, a muscular 255 pounds, measured 6-foot-8 1/4 without sneakers as the Knicks brought him in for a second workout. When the half-Greek, half-Cameroonian teenager first emerged on the international basketball radar last fall, he was reputed to be 6-11.

    He hopes to be drafted in the first round because it guarantees him a three-year deal. There were six international players taken in the first round a year ago, 11 more in the second round.

    This year, those numbers could be reversed based upon many of the mock drafts circulating the Internet. Another 17 international players are eligible, along with 29 high school players and college underclassmen.

    Schortsanitis comes from a European basketball culture in which the most promising young players turn professional in their early teens.

    Schortsanitis, who became a pro at 14, agrees that an age restriction of 20 might be a good thing — although it's not stopping him from pursuing an NBA career. Scouting reports have praised his strength, footwork and speed, though even he admits his jump shot is not NBA-caliber.

    "I have the opportunity, so I'm here," said Schortsanitis, who juggled his pro career while also attending high school in Thessaloniki, Greece.

    In the NBA, the trend of drafting players seasoned by several seasons of college basketball has changed in the past few years. Several of the league's best young stars — including Kobe Bryant (news), Tracy McGrady (news), Kevin Garnett (news) and Jermaine O'Neal (news) — successfully made the jump directly from high school.

    With the emergence of talented foreigners — Dallas' Dirk Nowitzki (news) (Germany), Memphis' Pau Gasol (Spain), Houston's Yao Ming (China) and San Antonio's Tony Parker (France) and Manu Ginobili (Argentina) — the emphasis of many NBA teams is shifting toward international prospects.

    "What's happened is that over the past 20 years the European game has caught up, and it has caught up because of they have concentrated on fundamentals," Knicks coach Don Chaney said. "Those guys come over here much more skilled in terms of the basics."

    Chaney watched as Schortsanitis worked out alongside Zarko Cabarkapa, a perimeter-oriented 22-year-old Serbian forward who shot 68 percent from the field last season in 19 games for his club, Buducnost.

    "From grade school on (in America)," Chaney said, "the focus should be on fundamentals rather than dunking and jumping over the basket."
     
  2. Rocketman95

    Rocketman95 Hangout Boy

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    This is related to the Rockets how, exactly?
     
  3. mfclark

    mfclark Member

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    It might be...if he were around when the Rockets pick. Not happening.

    Oh yeah, and wrong forum.
     
  4. Rockets34Legend

    Rockets34Legend Contributing Member

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    Umm, the reason posting this article was this is a candidate that the Rockets can get. And yes, it is in the wrong forum. Oh, well...
     
  5. verse

    verse Contributing Member

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    gooooo sophshorts!! :D

    i've heard of him before, and he sounds like someone who is definitely worthy of our pick, assuming he's available. he could provide us with the beef we're looking for at the power forward position. he also would make it a little more viable to trade griff + ? for the #4 pick, where we could select tj ford.

    i'm not suggesting sophshorts will step in and be the starting power forward. i'm thinking along the lines of starting motay and using sophshorts as a beefy backup.

    next years lineup could easily look like this:

    tj ford/francis
    francis
    posey/nachbar
    motay/sophshorts
    yao ming/cato

    we could sign a FA guard @ the MLE and have a solid 9 man rotation.
     
  6. Rockets10

    Rockets10 Contributing Member

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    he's goin first round, no doubt. unless we move up, he'll be gone.
     
  7. Rockets34Legend

    Rockets34Legend Contributing Member

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    But man, isn't he huge? He sort of looks like Chris Webber.
     
  8. DonnyMost

    DonnyMost be kind. be brave.

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    I like his uniform..

    HELLA COOL!
     
  9. finalsbound

    finalsbound Contributing Member

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    So he just turned 18? He's about 6'9 with sneakers? No doubt, the boy could grow a little more. But anybody dubbed "Baby Shaq" won't be up at 44, bank on it.
     

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