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Showing posts with label vince carter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vince carter. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 13, 2011

Newest Mavs Odom, Carter ready to help defend title

DALLAS (AP) -- Lamar Odom knows what it takes to repeat as an NBA champion.
The Dallas Mavericks are hoping a little of both -- Odom's experience and Carter's hunger -- can go a long way to help their title defense.

Vince Carter wants to know what it feels like to become an NBA champion.
The two newcomers were the stars of Mavs media day on Tuesday because of what they represent. They're the proof that team owner Mark Cuban is serious about winning it all again, which is something fans were questioning just a few days ago when the billionaire was letting the core of last year's team dissolve with the departure of free agents Tyson Chandler, Caron Butler and J.J. Barea.
Sure, adding two more players in their 30s keeps Dallas among the league's older teams. But they also should keep the Mavs among the best teams in this lockout-shortened season, especially with the other newcomers joining the mix, such as Delonte West and Rudy Fernandez.
"Having depth and having good guys that can play is part and parcel to being effective," coach Rick Carlisle said. "The deepest team that can stay healthy and stay together is the team that's going to have the best chance to come out of the West."
Late last week, things were looking bleak for Dallas' chances of coming out of the West when the Lakers were poised to get Chris Paul from New Orleans, with Odom part of the bait. Then the league blocked that deal.
The Lakers were still willing to get rid of Odom and the Mavericks were eager to get him. The deal was struck quickly, using a trade exception Dallas acquired from New York as part of another move that helped pave the way for Chandler to join the Knicks.
Odom was stunned the Lakers didn't want him around. He was glad the commissioner rejected the deal to New Orleans because he wanted to contend for a championship, not start over with a young team. He said he told the Lakers that if they had to deal him, Dallas topped his wish list.
"It's definitely surreal," he said. "It happened like that," he said, snapping his fingers.
Odom also felt disrespected because he never saw this coming. Over seven years, he won two titles and last season was named the league's Sixth Man of the Year.
"If somebody is telling you, `You can't be here, there's no more room for you,' you've got to understand that," he said. "I think it's because of how they did it that I took it so personally."
He wouldn't describe his initial thoughts about the deal to New Orleans, because, "I can't cuss." He appreciated Kobe Bryant speaking out against the trade, and found it curious that Los Angeles not only would send him to a conference rival, but to the team that swept the Lakers from the playoffs last season, ending their two-year reign as champs.
"Any time you make a sudden switch, it gets a little emotional," Odom said. "But I'm here now. I'm a Maverick. It's time to put the past behind me."
Since Odom left, there's been chatter about his reality show being a distraction to last year's team. He seems to believe that is revisionist history.
"It's something you've got to take with a grain of salt," he said. "I just wish that, if it was, somebody would've told me a little earlier. If it was, then I would've done something about it."
Odom also proudly noted that he had a great season while the cameras were rolling.
"You never know what's going to make you concentrate just a little harder, and I think it did," he said.
He's not sure whether the show will continue. He plans to discuss it with his teammates, coach and Cuban - not that he thinks it will be a tough sell with Cuban, himself a past and present reality show star. Heck, if anything, Cuban might want the show moved to the cable network he owns, HDNet.
"He seems like he's the kind of guy who'll like it," Odom said, laughing.
Carter -- a former All-Star and dunk champion -- became a free agent after the Phoenix Suns bought out his contract. He chose to sign with Dallas because he's at the point in his career where all that matters to him is "winning, and playing on a team that wants to win and knows how to win."
"I think they've shown all of that," he said. "My goal is to fit in with what they've accomplished and who they are. ... If we can continue like they've done before - just leave the egos outside, it's not about how many points you're going to score, it's how productive you're going to be for your team to win - with the firepower we have, we'll be fine."

Friday, December 9, 2011

Suns waive Carter, re-sign Grant Hill, add Telfair and Brown

PHOENIX (AP) -- The Phoenix Suns re-signed one of their most popular players, added two solid backup guards and unloaded a large portion of a very big contract.

Not a bad start to the first day of post-lockout free agency.

Phoenix signed swingman Grant Hill to a one-year, $6.5 million contract on Friday and followed that by signing one-year deals with Sebastian Telfair and Shannon Brown. The Suns also waived forward Vince Carter, meaning the team will only have to fork over $4 million of the $18 million he was due for the 2011-12 season.
Re-signing Hill was Phoenix's top priority in the offseason, in part because he's still productive and one of the NBA's best defensive players at 39, but also for his leadership abilities and close friendship with point guard Steve Nash, who's in the last year of his contract.
"He's just a real, real important part to our team, not just what he does on the court, which has been great since he's got here, but the leadership in the locker room and the professionalism he's shown," Suns coach Alvin Gentry said. "There's just so many things about him that were just so important for us to have him back on our team."
The NBA's second-oldest player, Hill has proven to still be an above-average player after past injury woes, averaging 15.8 points last season while routinely guarding the opposing team's best player.
Hill also has been valued for his leadership abilities and calm demeanor, not to mention being considered a key to keeping Nash from leaving.
Despite being one of the top targets in the free agent market, Hill decided to return to the desert for a fifth season.
"I think ultimately, (it) was just liking it here," Hill said. "From Robert (Sarver) in ownership, to management, to the coaches, the medical staff. I like my teammates, I like the fans; there were some very attractive situations out there, but I liked it here."
Hill was one of the NBA's best players after being drafted out of Duke with the third overall pick by Detroit in 1994. But he was eventually hampered by a serious ankle injury that limited him to 47 games from 2000-2003.
The swingman revived his career in Orlando and has played four steady seasons for the Suns, averaging 12.3 points. He is still one of the league's best defensive players, often matched up against players like LeBron James, Chris Paul and Kobe Bryant, and has been durable in his later years, playing less than 80 games just once while in Phoenix.
Hill made just over $10 million during his first four years with the Suns, a bargain for a productive starter, and the team made signing him a priority once the lockout was settled - enhanced by Nash's pleas to not let him go somewhere else.
"Sure you were worried - he had a lot of options, a lot of good options," Gentry said. "The fact that he chose to stay here is great for us and I think it speaks volumes for what he thinks about our franchise and how he felt like it would be beneficial to him."
Phoenix also solidified its rotation behind Nash by adding Telfair and Brown.
Telfair has played for five teams over seven NBA seasons, most recently a second stint with Minnesota in 2010-11. The 26-year-old has never averaged more than 9.8 points in a season, but is expected to give the Suns a solid backup to Nash.
"I had a couple of situations and this was the best one," said Telfair, cousin of former Suns point guard Stephon Marbury. "I had a team that wanted me, which was the situation I wanted to be in, so I'm here. I've got all my focus here and going to make the best of it."
Brown bounced around his first three seasons before settling in as Kobe Bryant's backup with the Los Angeles Lakers. The 26-year-old gave the deep Lakers quality minutes over the past two seasons, setting career highs for points in each before declining a $2.4 million option to stay with the Lakers.
"I just go out and play basketball and the style (in Phoenix) fits how I do it," Brown said. "I like to get up and down, I like to run, shoot, a lot of scoring, screen-and-rolls, early shots on the break. And I think I bring a little bit different look with some defense with all those championship situations."
Carter had a short-lived run in the desert, playing 51 games - 41 starts - after joining the Suns with Mickeal Pietrus and Marcin Gortat in a six-player deal last December that sent Jason Richardson and Hedo Turkoglu to Orlando.
Once one of the NBA's most dynamic players, the 34-year-old Carter averaged 13.5 points while shooting 42 percent with Phoenix.