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Shav

Discussion in 'Charlotte Hornets' started by slydevl, Nov 16, 2005.

  1. slydevl

    slydevl Asshole for the People!

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    Which I did. RCSI is highly respected.
     
  2. UNCfever

    UNCfever Full Access Member

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    Sly, puleaseeeeeeeeeee, don't go off the deep end here.

    OK, one that is highly repected by somebody other than yourself.

    Scout, Telep, Rivals, you know the real ones! :imagestor
     
  3. slydevl

    slydevl Asshole for the People!

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    RCSI is a real one and is often referenced by journalists. I'm not surprised you haven't heard of it. It is the consensus of all the major lists. So it is actually the most realistic.
     
    Last edited: Nov 21, 2005
  4. UNCfever

    UNCfever Full Access Member

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    It's ok Sly, just say it was the best you could do and that you couldn't find a real site. :imagestor
     
  5. UNCfever

    UNCfever Full Access Member

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    Do have one question, is post season after their Senior year of high school or freshman year of college? That would explain a lot as to why Jawads stock went up and Shavs took a nose dive.
     
  6. slydevl

    slydevl Asshole for the People!

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    Here's the point where I get to make you look stupid because you blindly put your foot in your mouth.

    http://home.nc.rr.com/rsci/The_Experts/the_experts.html

    You cannot discount RSCI without discounting every major ranking service.

    Now kindly fuck off.
     
  7. slydevl

    slydevl Asshole for the People!

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    High school. You show your ignorance. Shav was hurt most of his senior year. That is why his stock took a nose dive in most rankings. Others still ranked him based upon the talent he had shown his junior year knowing he was hurt.
     
  8. UNCfever

    UNCfever Full Access Member

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    Sly I did notice the experts info he had on his site. I just notice that none of those sites or at least that I can find, have the 2001 info on their site. If this home site provided some actual links to the specific info, it just may give him a little more rock to stand on.

    I did ask you to do that, but you didn't, you went to find some home site of a college kid.
     
  9. QC REPRESENT

    QC REPRESENT Full Access Member

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    I still think Shav got handed a job by King :twocents: but....

    http://www.newsobserver.com/738/story/342836.html
    Spot on 76ers roster is Randolph's to lose
    Ex-Blue Devil returns 'home' to Cameron Indoor Stadium for NBA team's training camp

    Shavlik Randolph hoists a shot during the 76ers' practice Tuesday in Durham.


    Luciana Chavez, Staff Writer
    To those who never believed Shavlik Randolph would grace an NBA roster, Philadelphia 76ers general manager Billy King had this to say at the first day of training camp at Duke's Cameron Indoor Stadium.
    "It's his roster spot to lose," King said Tuesday of Randolph's standing with the NBA team as an undrafted rookie free agent.

    "We plan on him being here unless he doesn't continue to play the way he has been playing."

    Sounds like Randolph may be smelling a touch of vindication in the air.


    "When Philly signed me, that was encouraging," Randolph said Tuesday on the same court where he played three seasons for Duke.
    "People ask me all the time, 'Do you think you can make the roster?' I mean, I'm thinking I can help the team. People can doubt that or not believe it but that's the feedback I'm getting."

    Don't trip over the irony that Randolph is back at Duke working to make an NBA team. He isn't uneasy about it. The first thing he did Monday night after arriving in Durham was go to Cameron to shoot.

    "It was comfortable," Randolph said. "The rims are soft like, when I left. This is home."

    Randolph, a 6-foot-10, 227-pound power forward, will enjoy another bit of home tonight. He'll appear at the dedication of the newly remodeled Broughton High School gymnasium in Raleigh to take the first shot on the basketball court. The 7:30 p.m. ceremony is open to the public.

    The Broughton appearance will be a brief getaway from the mission Randolph has been on since he surprised fans and foes alike by leaving Duke in May.

    Asked how he reacted when the college basketball world criticized him for bolting from Duke for the NBA, Randolph said, "I went out and signed with an NBA team, that's how I reacted."

    Randolph admits that his Duke career, a three-year journey marred by injury, illness and inconsistent play, was "mediocre."

    "I didn't get drafted because of what happened at Duke and I wiped that off my chest and moved on," said Randolph, who averaged 4.4 points and 4.3 rebounds as a junior. "It happens. God's blessing me. ... I'm getting paid to play a game I love and if anyone wants to criticize, they can say it to my face."

    King said Randolph, who has skills to play facing the basket but played with his back to it for most of his Duke career, reminds him a little bit of Danny Ferry, King's former teammate at Duke.

    "As Danny got bigger he eventually found his niche," King said. "You don't find guys with that height and athletic ability. ... You can't teach that, so we gave him an opportunity. He was there all summer and impressed the coaches. But he can't relax."

    Randolph would be one of between 13 and 15 players on the Sixers' roster. NBA teams can carry 12 players on their active roster and at least one and up to three on their inactive roster. King said the Sixers would likely carry 15 total to have as many veteran and young, developing forwards as possible.

    "Hey, the minimum salary is $398,000 or something like that; that's not a bad living," King said. "If he had gotten a degree and taken a job, I doubt he'd be making that much."

    Even if Randolph is on the inactive list, he would still be eligible to play for the Sixers' developmental league team, the Roanoke (Va.) Dazzle.

    Each NBA team can assign up to two players to the NBDL, a minor league of sorts for first- and second-year players.

    First-year Sixers coach Maurice Cheeks said he liked what he saw from Randolph on Tuesday and praised his "old school" power forward attitude.

    Randolph, known throughout his career as a big man with small-guy skills, takes a pragmatic approach to his NBA career.
     
  10. UNCfever

    UNCfever Full Access Member

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    Oh, that's even better then, so Shav was rank higher all along until he got hurt. Shit, got hurt, damn, didn't mean to bring that up, glad you did.


    Pssttt! :trophy:
     

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