Perhaps here is the sweet shooting, ball handling small forward the Rockets are looking for: http://www.canoe.ca/Slam020310/nba_pick-ap.html NBA scouts flocked to tiny Mississippi town to see Qyntel Woods BOONEVILLE, Miss. (AP) -- Courtside seats at Bonner Arnold Coliseum are metal folding chairs. There's a stack of them against the wall, and it's first come, first served for a close look at one of the hottest commodities in basketball. A no-frills gym in a remote corner of Mississippi would seem an unlikely place to find a potential NBA lottery pick. But Northeast Mississippi Community College forward Qyntel Woods hasn't taken the usual path to stardom. At 17, Woods had to be coaxed into playing high school basketball. Less than four years later, he's pondering a jump from junior college to the NBA. B.J. Johnson, a scout for the Houston Rockets, recently made the trip to this town of about 4,000 people to see Woods. Watching just half a game from the gym's old wooden bleachers made him a believer. "He's already a lottery pick," Johnson said. At 6-foot-9, Woods is the tallest player on the court, his cornrows easily spotted above the crowd. The 220-pounder is also the highest leaper, the smoothest ball-handler, the most accurate free-throw shooter, and the best rebounder and shotblocker. Woods says he's been compared to Orlando Magic all-star Tracy McGrady -- and it's clear why. Showing off a deft crossover dribble, Woods drives around a defender, slashes to the basket and throws down a roundhouse right-handed dunk. Moments, later he swoops down the lane and slams back a teammate's missed shot. His mid-range jumpers aren't falling this night, but with a quick snap of the wrist, he gets the shot off anytime he chooses against overmatched defenders. Tony Finch, Northeast Mississippi's sports information director, says he's lost track of how many NBA teams have scouted Woods. His best guess is all of them. Woods, a Memphis native, signed a letter of intent in November to play for coach John Calipari at his hometown university next season. But the NBA is a definite possibility. "I don't know yet," he said. "I'm very comfortable with that decision. Playing under coach Calipari, I think he'll get me more ready for the NBA if I'm already ready. "My family will go into that decision and I'll make it after the season." Last year, the Boston Celtics made Kedrick Brown the first junior college player selected in the first round, taking him with the 11th pick. Woods says he'll enter the draft only if he is a top-10 pick, which is a distinct possibility. Some early projections have him rated right behind Duke guard Jason Williams and 7-5 Chinese center Yao Ming. Woods says he'll rely on Calipari, who coached in the NBA, to get a read on where he might be selected in June. "You have a lot of teams that want to get him at 18, 19, 16, 17, but if they had the 4th, 5th, 6th pick, they would never take him," Calipari said. "What we've got to find out is, is he a top-5 or -6 pick? And if he is, I'll be the first to tell him that he should go." Woods grew up fatherless and virtually penniless in South Memphis, a rundown and impoverished part of the city. Woods' father was murdered seven weeks after Woods was born. He is the middle child of three raised by Vanesia Woods with little money, but much love. Unlike McGrady and fellow all-stars Kobe Bryant or Kevin Garnett, Woods wasn't an adolescent phenom. He was 6 feet tall when he played on the freshman basketball team at George Washington Carver High School. He didn't play at all as a sophomore. But a growth spurt between 10th and 11th grades had him standing 6-foot-6 as a junior. That may explain why Johnson thinks Woods plays as if he's 6-2. "He probably can play guard," the longtime scout and former NBA player said. Woods, who was also a star pitcher and quarterback in high school, wasn't in love with basketball, but returned to the court at the behest of his best friend. "When he got into that first scrimmage game, ... it's been history ever since," Carver coach Bratcher Stevenson said. Fearful of injury, Woods' mother urged him to give up football. He didn't and Vanesia Woods' fears were realized when he injured his knee during his senior year in 1999. Afraid that sitting out would ruin his chances of being recruited, Woods and his mother decided he would play with a brace on his leg, rather than undergo the recommended surgery on his ACL. Woods averaged 23 points per game and led Carver to a state title on the bum leg. But the big scholarship offers didn't come. "That was really the only people that were looking at me, the junior colleges, because my grades weren't good," he said. Woods enrolled at Moberly Junior College in Missouri, a strong program in one of the top Juco leagues. At that point, the knee injury caught up to him. He had surgery and sat out a year. He hit the weights, grew some more and returned for the 2000-01 season better than ever. He averaged 24 points per game and showed surprising skills away from the basket. "I recruited him as an inside guy. We figured we'd put some weight on him and we'd have a nice player," Moberly assistant coach Travis Day said. "When we got him out there, he was one of the fastest kids with the ball we had." But he was eight hours away from his mom and falling behind in the classroom. Moberly coach Pat Smith said Woods would not have qualified academically to play this season had he stayed. "I wanted to be close to home," Woods said. Booneville -- about 75 miles from Memphis -- has been a perfect fit. "Basketball and school. That's all I can concentrate on here," Woods said. The competition in Mississippi is not as good as at Moberly, but Woods doesn't think it matters. "You can get better playing with your little brother in the backyard," he said. Woods averaged 32 points and 10 rebounds per game this season. On the night Johnson visited, Woods had 34 points and 13 rebounds in the Tigers' regular season finale. Whether two years of junior college basketball is enough to prepare Woods for the NBA could be a moot point. Teen-agers straight from high school made up three of the first four selections in last year's draft. "There's some guys that just got it," Johnson said. And he believes Woods is one of them. _____ Here is NBADraft. net's analysis on Woods: http://www.nbadraft.net/profiles/qyntelwoods.htm NBA Comparison: Tracy McGrady Strengths: (Based on hearsay) Possibly the most talented prospect in the entire 2002 NBA Draft if he declares. Has skills that are unteachable. Part of the new breed of NBA players, of the Tracy McGrady, multi-skilled, ultra athletic types. A do it all player. One NBA insider I spoke to said he will be a top 3 pick and may end up the best player in the entire draft class.Comparing him to McGrady, he probably isn't the run jump athlete but his handle and shot are better. More importantly, "He's a good kid. I've met him and talked with his family, and he may not have taken the usual course to the NBA, but he's a good kid." Very versatile, extremely skilled wing player, with great size and quickness. Can handle the basketball extremely well at 6-9, scores with a variety of moves to the basket, and has a nice shooting stroke. Explosive player with very good scoring ability. Weaknesses: The Juco stigma. Kedrick Brown paved the way, jumping from a Juco player to being a lottery pick. However, he has had a slow start in Boston struggling for minutes. There will be no shortage of NBA scouts following Woods development this season. Recruiting analyst Bob Gibbons says that some pro scouts are calling him another Tracy McGrady. Here's what Gibbons had to say about Woods: A team that may surprise a lot of people is Memphis. They've got the best juco player in the country in this Qyntel Woods (6-8, NE Mississippi JC). Talking to NBA scouts that have been to see him, they think he's Tracy McGrady. He can play point guard, second guard, small forward. I've talked to three NBA scouts that have been down there and they say if he comes out he would be taken among the top two or three picks. Of course, for (John) Calipari -- who's already lost Amare Stoudemire (6-10, Orlando), who will definitely go pro -- the challenge is to keep Woods by saying, "I can get you better prepared to go to NBA."
Well that article sure does make him sound great, but who knows. The more talent that enters the draft, the better.
Everything that I have read about this guy is positive....I have even read that unless the team with the # 1 pick is in dire need of a point guard, that Woods could go #1.
My only question that I ask is ...did he get his knee fixed? It seems as though from the article, he just played through it. I wonder if he would pass a physical
from the article... "Woods enrolled at Moberly Junior College in Missouri, a strong program in one of the top Juco leagues. At that point, the knee injury caught up to him. He had surgery and sat out a year. "
What I want to know is this the kind of injury that you can recover from fully or one that's going to burden you and give you a much shorter career?
I saw him play this year! long story, but ended up at a junior college game down in mobile. dude is a phenom. I did not really know him until we watched the game. Kid is Kobe/Mcgrady/Carter esque! Still needs to work on his range, but when his range is not working, he is good enough to make up by playing D, posting up and getting up and down the floor. He scored 30 points and did not even show much range. He had a lot of steals and post up type stuff. He does have great shooting form though--his shot spins so fast that it snaps the net! The juco stud that was drafted last year has nothing on him. This kid will start on some teams right now. Will still need to learn to be patient and pick his shots, but he can leap and run with the best.
I really would love to have this guy, just as much as Yao Ming. Truth is, there's no way we get this done unless we get rid of either T-Mo or Rice.
It would be nice to get him... but looks we are headed for the 8th pick and He won't be around.... Also the way Toronto is playing we almost certainly won't have their lottery protected pick... Hope I'm wrong
There is always the NEXT big thing...every draft, and most of this guys don't amount to squat. This team does not need to get younger, we need some established players. I am tired of waiting for the youngsters to develop. GRRR !! DaDakota
I'm not so sure about that. Darius Miles looks great. Curry and Chandler have both looked good ever since they finally started getting significant minutes. So far, the bust rate for high schoolers doesn't seem much more than for college players... probably because only "can't miss" guys declare in the first place. I want the Rockets to win now, too... but I don't want them to pass up a player with much more potential for some guy who could help a little more the first couple of years. GRRR !![/quote]
We have a bunch of established players: Walt Williams, Kevin Willis and Glen Rice. Other than their years of experience, they've firmly established a place on the IR.
If Rice is back to any kind of form, then the small forward we draft should be a rotation guy, but not necessarily have to be starter quality for the next two years. He could then step in when Rice's contract expires. I bet Rice will be none to happy if a rookie starts over him, anyway. He will end up sulking like he did in LA and NY.
I'm hoping that Glen Rice won't play the last year of his contract. Actually, I was hoping that him retiring after next year would be the main ingredient to us possibly trading for Rashard Lewis. I like the guy on our team, but not for the MAX. I know Glen makes 7M, but hey, better Lewis than Glen for 7M, right?
I not saying I don't disagree with you. But how do you move Rice, without taking an even more burdensome contract back in exchange? I know NY will still be paying part of Rice's salary, but I still think he is untradeble at this point. Unless we want to trade him for an Ostertag or a Yogi Stewart, which we wouldn't want to do. The best option may be to ride his contract out.
Don't know about that. His contract expires in Duncan's FA year. We won't be making, or be able to make, a run at him. In fact, suddenly Denver sounds like a good place to send him. They're looking for cap space that year right? What could they POSSIBLY give us though? 3-way trade? Who knows. Now that I think about it, Rudy wouldn't even continue a discussion if someone asked for Rice. He'd just say no.
A question for montgo,can Woods shoot better than Morris? Every new player obviously needs to increase their range especially if they are going to play in the NBA,but do you think he can improve quickly into a 3 point shooter? I wonder if you had the opportunity to see him make any layups or to see if he can finger roll the ball.
Imagine Woods and Wagner on the same team at Memphis. Thats kinda crazy when you think about it. And as far as the draft I still say Gooden or bust. Gooden can play the five and add the inside force the Rockets need.