You are forgetting that we will really only have nine players under contract going into the expansion: Steve Cat Yao JJ MoT Boki Spoon Pike Cato We can protect eight, so I don't see us losing two players in our top six rotation.
I didn't transcribe it or anything, but I can remember most of it. They asked JVG to assess Yao's season. VG basically said Yao made significant improvements overall, especially defensively, but his first two seasons he has had a steep decline in the month of April, and that must be corrected. He said Yao needs to make a year-round effort with his conditioning to make sure he doesn't run out of gas at the end of the season. He was asked to assess Francis the same way and said Steve often took the blame for losses but didnt get much or any credit for victories. He said Steve was a large reason we had 5 players averaging double figures, and that he made big improvements on the defensive end. He came up huge in the playoffs and in the second half of the season, Jeff saw a much bigger effort on his part to prepare for games. He said Steve wouldn't really work as a 2 guard, and can't be compared to Iverson that way, it would be unfair for Steve to be asked to guard the 2's of the other teams. He assessed the 4 position, was asked about Cato and Taylor being both good at one thing (Cato defense, Mo offense) and how most other teams have one guy starting who can do both. VG praised Cato a lot saying he was asked to be a starting 4 when he is really a solid backup 5, and he exceeded expectations. He said we didn't have trouble as much against big 4's but against quicker 4's like they have in Dallas, Phoenix, and Seattle. Interestingly, he didn't mention Mo at all, he just had praise for Cato. (hmmm..maybe it is Mo that is on the way out, heh heh) JVG said he will not watch much of the remaining playoffs live, he prefers to watch them on tape so he can analyze things better. He can't watch Miami games, he is too nervous for his brother. He will most likely not be a guest commentator on TNT or any other network during the playoffs, he said he wouldnt be able to be objective when he is working for a team, he prefers to be committed to helping build the Rockets into the championship contender that the city of Houston deserves. That's about all I can remember, hopefully that helps. Maybe it will be on the 610 webpage at some point, if it isn't already. later, Jeffster
Is she satisfied with the deep post position? Or does she feel the backdoor option needs to be explored more?
Steve doesnt have to gaurd the other twos he can guard the point guards on defense and play as the 2 guard on offense rite can't he do that?
w/o having the rules in front of me i think you can protect as few as you want. the most you can protect is 8. and even if you don't have 8 guys under contract, you have to leave at least one unprotected. i think there was a thread about what charlotte was looking for in players and i'm pretty sure none of it sounded like mo t. plus, charlotte can't take more than 1 player from each team.
And I'll bet Steve and Cat's ball handling problems drive her crazy - WAY too much dribbling when she wants them to take it to the hole strong.
She needs: 1) Quick ball movement; 2) Deep penetration; 3) Knock the hole strong; 4)yell after the shot! 5) enjoy the exitement!!
I agree. The one guy with the greatest length on the Rockets isn't good at taking it to the hole. At PF we've got a guy with incompetent hands who can't finish. Our guards jack it up all the time without first satisfying their obligations to get things going down low. Even though the Rockets showed amazing endurance this season, they have to get better at keeping their poise, and not losing it before the end.
Charlotte will not take Taylor even if he's left unprotected. Charlotte will only be taking a)young low priced players with good upsides. There won't be many of those available. b) guys who are going into the last year of their deals and have team options for this year, c) guys making the minimum or d) players that they are compenstated to pick. The common ones mentioned are a 1st rounder each for picking Jahadi White and Elden Campbell. Charlotte is expected to keep very few players from the expansion draft. It is true that Charlotte can pick a player and then cut them and that player's salary doesn't count against their cap. But keep in mind that Charlotte does still have to pay off the remaining guarenteed money on the players contract. So in the case of Campbell and White, they effectively end up paying $3M to $4M each for a couple of first round picks. As far as Taylor goes, there's no way that we could compensat them enough to get them to eat the $30M or so left on Taylor's deal. Selecting Taylor and keeping him isn't in their plans either. Charlotte is planning to go young and to be bad for a few seasons and build through the draft (i.e. high picks) and free agency. My guess is that Charlotte doesn't pick any of the Rockets.
Lots of Audio from today's press conference with Coach Van Gundy and interviews with the players: (Links to right or article) Jeff Van Gundy: • On his return to coaching • On Steve Francis’ play • On Yao wearing down • On off-season evaluation process • On team’s overall performance • Steve Francis: A productive season • Yao Ming: Consistency is the key • Eric Piatkowski: Expects to come back strong • Jim Jackson: Team needs mental toughness • Cutino Mobley: Driven to play http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory.mpl/sports/2540785 April 30, 2004, 8:41PM Rockets again left wanting more Playoff exit shows pieces missing By JONATHAN FEIGEN Copyright 2004 Houston Chronicle Jeff Van Gundy, ever the optimist, looked at the bright side. The guy can't help himself. He's just so cheerful. "You hope as guys get a sense for what the playoffs are like, they get hungrier and hungrier as a group," the Rockets coach said Wednesday about the team finally making the playoffs. The Rockets' first playoff berth in five seasons ended with a first-round loss to the Los Angeles Lakers in five games. But try as he might, Van Gundy doesn't kid himself, and neither do the Rockets. The Rockets might have gained something by getting to the playoffs, not that the experience left them much different. But more than ever, there is a sense the Rockets will no longer wait for the gradual, subtle development of veteran savvy to bring them to another level. To get perhaps a better understanding of where the Rockets are after the season, it might be worth looking at how they were going into the season. The foundation of their rebuilding was in place, and a new coach was starting with a blank slate. "I think it's an unusual show of confidence in a core group," Van Gundy said a few days before the start of training camp last fall. "It's an unusual show of confidence, trust, belief in a team that has been to the lottery four straight years, to keep it intact." The notion over the years was that circumstances kept the Rockets from realizing their potential. A season later, the core is still intact, and the lottery has been left behind. But the Rockets' season ended Wednesday with little more satisfaction than the previous four. The "resolve" that Yao Ming had said was missing against the Lakers seems to have been found. It is pointed at addressing the shortcomings the team could not solve during the season. "I'm determined to have a team that can compete for a championship, and that's what I have been trying to develop," Van Gundy said before the playoffs. "There is absolutely no frustration. But there is a lot of determination. Sometimes guys have made good progress. Sometimes our team has made good progress. Sometimes we sabotage our progress. "I have a good feel for what we need to do to get where we want to go to. I watched every game from last year. ... After two full years of watching, I have a good idea where we're at and what we need to get better. I'm going to keep that to myself. But I do know. I have a good feel." Van Gundy said later he was not talking specifically about roster changes, saying changing personnel is just one way to get what the Rockets need. But it hasn't been a secret he wanted the Rockets to become more a serious, determined, driven team. Van Gundy said the players already could have shown those qualities more consistently, but he left little doubt he would not spend another season searching. If disappointment this season could serve as motivation for next season, the Rockets could gain from pain, though that was the thinking after last season. "It's real tough," guard Steve Francis said. "The reality of it is we had games we so-called had late in the game, which we unfortunately lost and it didn't seem we could bounce back as quickly as we should have been able to. "It was a pivotal season as far as us getting a new system with a new coach, people saying myself and Yao wouldn't be able to play together, people saying Steve Francis and Jeff Van Gundy don't get along. "But I think it was a positive for us. We made a couple steps forward by just making it to this point by being one of the teams to play in the playoffs." There was progress made. But overall, the Rockets won two more regular-season games and one more postseason game than last year. "Your season is always summed up by your results," Van Gundy said. "It's very simple." In many ways, the Rockets were in the end what they had been all along. The Lakers' series did not expose their flaws but confirm them. In the game that ended their season, the Rockets were as frenetic as ever, committing 13 of 22 turnovers in the first half. They had 25 turnovers in Game 1. Kobe Bryant, playing with his usual high-speed, high-wire style, had six turnovers the entire series. The Rockets averaged 16.7 turnovers in the regular season, 16.8 in the playoffs. "You can only be who you are, and we've been that way all year," forward Jim Jackson said. "We haven't found a way to correct that. That's something that in order for us to move on, we have to get much, much better at that." Though the Lakers' intensity, especially defensively, did fluctuate, their poise never did. The Rockets, however, lost both games that came down to the final minute and were blown out in two of the three games in Los Angeles. "It starts with playing hard enough to win and, in the second half, we didn't fight hard enough to give ourselves a chance," Van Gundy said. When it was suggested the Rockets actually had matched the Lakers' talent but fell short in fortitude, Van Gundy let a smile slip and half-agreed. "I hope in the future we develop four Hall of Famers," he said. "That would be a great start. The Lakers have a cushion of talent that obviously is remarkable, probably a once-in-a-lifetime thing. Everybody else in the NBA is talented enough. I do believe tough, smart, intelligent, competitive teams figure out how to play a certain game that will carry them. Part of that is discipline. We need to make a number of improvements obviously." The Rockets have begun to retool around the inside abilities and potential of Yao but might still face a decision on the five-year backcourt mix of Cuttino Mobley and Francis. The combination was once a matchup nightmare for opponents. A team might have had one defender quick enough to match up when isolated against Mobley or Francis, but few had two. However, they now no longer complement each other as effectively despite Mobley's effort to be a more of a catch-and-shoot guard and Francis' effort to be more of a playmaker. But the failed promise and eventual loss of Eddie Griffin has been even more harmful. In Kelvin Cato and Maurice Taylor, the Rockets had a starting power forward with energy on the boards but no shooting touch, and a backup forward who was a consistent scorer but a rebounding liability. Griffin was projected to offer both. If the Rockets are to pursue a power forward to replace Griffin's lost potential or mix the strengths of Cato and Taylor, there are free-agent possibilities. The top targets, Rasheed Wallace and Kenyon Martin (a restricted free agent), are expected to remain with Detroit and New Jersey, respectively, and would only be interested in offers far more than the Rockets could offer. Mehmet Okur and Marcus Camby are considered in the next echelon, though Detroit and Denver have indicated strong interest in keeping them. Houston resident Antonio McDyess could be a possibility if his right knee is deemed sound. Memphis backup Stromile Swift is coming off his best season but has said he wants to remain with the Grizzlies. Washington Wizards free-agent forward Etan Thomas, who the Rockets looked at when he came out of college in 2000, also could be considered. The Rockets are as certain to look for help on the perimeter. Eric Piatkowski began the season on the injured list and never captured the form he had shown earlier in his career. Jackson played more this season than he had in one year during his career. Veteran Mark Jackson filled in as a backup point guard, but the 39-year-old is not considered a long-term solution. "This league is very cut and dry," Van Gundy said at the start of the season. "You either win or you lose, you're either a playoff team or a lottery team, or you're a championship team or an also-ran. That's it. You are what your record says you are, whether you are a coach, a player or a general manager. It doesn't matter what your stats are. It's not if you've got talent. You are going to be judged by how much you win."
Where in the offseason does the Expension Draft occurt, in relation to signing Free Agents and trading players? Where ever it is, it looks like the Rockets Management needs to get to work quickly as there is much work to be done to revamp the Roster before Training Camp.