Archive for the ‘Supersonics’ Category

Vladimir Radmanovic: An Appreciation

Wednesday, May 7th, 2008

Vladimir Radmanovic

His website calls him “The Perfect 10 Model” (and even provides a recipe). He’s built like a power forward, shoots and passes like a guard, and can get off the floor when the mood strikes him. He also dresses like an Eastern Bloc Walt Frazier and flashes facial hair skills that would make George Michael blush. (It takes a lot to make George Michael blush). He was kicked off the Serbian national team for responding to a coach’s halftime tirade by flippantly peeling and eating a banana; he spent the second half in the crowd, posing for pictures and signing autographs. The current national team coach offered a TV or a laptop for his phone number. He wears mullets, fauxhawks, and braids equally without a hint of self-consciousness, lies about his height to bachelorette parties and about his snowboarding habits to his employer, evinces the mean ambition of a hot-boxed Breakfast Club, and, for all this, boasts over $15 million in career earnings, with another $18 or so guaranteed. He is Vladimir Radmanovic, a singular figure in the NBA.

Vladi Radmanovic

Granted, underachievers are not a rarity in a league with guaranteed contracts. And there have been more than a few whose failure to fulfill their promise arose from deeper, decidedly unfunny troubles. (Eddie Griffin was perpetrator of perhaps the funniest drunken car accident in history until he died in another drunken car accident and it became hard to laugh at the first; Similarly, Vin Baker’s bug-eyed, jowly ineptitude was born of his constant suckling at the hooch-tit.) Despite his childhood in the war-torn Balkans, all signs point to Vladi being not a demon-stricken underachiever but rather a flamboyantly dressed, comically disengaged playboy, a combination of The Strokes and Steve Martin and Dan Ackroyd’s ‘Wild and Crazy Guys.’

Though I lament his departure from Seattle (for non-basketball reasons; as a GM, I would never sign him), his decision to sign with the Lakers has been a boon to Vladiphiles everywhere. Now he’s just a channel flip away, wearing grandpa-on-vacation knee-high black socks and improbably poised to add a championship ring to his garish get-up. (Perhaps that will finally discredit the ring as the litmust test of winner-ness). But more importantly, in his crusty coach, Vladi’s found his first worthy NBA foil.

Nate McMillan, a more mild-mannered member of the Scott Skiles/Avery Johnson young tough guy school, was way too no-nonsense for Vladi’s bullshit. Mike Dunleavy was just a quick stop on the contract-year gravy train (look—Vladi even rebounds!). But Phil Jackson is as hopelessly adolescent as Vladi (if possessed of a better attention span). His Zenmaster schtick consists mainly of third-hand mystical pablum and a willingness to insult his players in the press. What better situation, then, for Vladi and the Vladiphiles? We used to have to scour awkward translations of Serbian message boards to find the latest nugget of Vladi apathy, but now it’s front page on ESPN. Phil calls Vladi a space cadet; Vladi separates his shoulder snowboarding. Phil says Vladi should see the team psychologist; Vladi says Phil is like Jack Nicholson in Anger Management. Phil says Vladi is not playing up to his potential; Vladi says they’ll talk about it in the exit interview. And on and on it goes, Mean Girls in men’s clothes playing a child’s game.

Cue up the banana, Vladi. Let’s hope that exit interview doesn’t come for a long time.

KD and Hawes In Da Club!

Monday, May 5th, 2008

A little Monday morning paparazzi action for you, courtesy of “The Dirty” and a hot tip from my man, Matt N.

Spencer Hawes and Kevin Durant

It’s Spencer Hawes and the Durantula hanging out with what appears to be next year’s pledge class. More photos here.

David Stern is King Kong

Friday, May 2nd, 2008

Local sportswriter Seth Kolloen just announced the second issue of his new magazine, Sports NW. The cover story is a piece by Free Darko scribe Bethlehem Shoals, arguing that the relocation of the Sonics to Oklahoma City is part of a David Stern plan to woo red-state America. The cover art is provided by Supersonicsoul contributor Rafael Colonzo, Jr. Check it out:

cover.jpg

Reid is to Sonics Drama what Scorcese is to Gangster Drama

Friday, April 25th, 2008

Check out Reid’s latest opuses, conveying the full range of swirling, gripping emotions produced by the Sonics relocation saga:

Grading the Sonics

Thursday, April 17th, 2008

Report Card

Last night, Kevin Durant had career highs of 42 points and 13 rebounds in the Sonics season-capping victory over the Golden State Warriors. Earlier this year, after the Seattle Fire Department put out an embarrassing scoreboard fire (with an assist from Squatch) the Warriors blew out the Sonics so badly that I left at halftime. But by the last couple weeks, the Supers had matured into a tough ticket, a team you didn’t want to face if you were jockeying for a playoff spot.

Now the season’s over and the team’s future location sadly uncertain. Nevertheless, it’s time to grade the on-the-floor product (or what remains of it–I left off the traded players). This was tougher than I thought: when I scanned my original list of grades, there was hardly even a ‘C’ among them, and how can a 20-win team get all A’s and B’s? I went through again with a more critical eye, but still, I like this team, and it’s not really their fault they sucked. Without further ado:

Chris Wilcox: B-
It’s hard to know which is receding faster–his hairline or the dream that he’ll somehow harness his considerable hops and brawn and become a top-notch power forward. His failures seem to arise more from a lack of guile and skill than effort, but how hard would it be to develop a lefty jump hook? He still finishes an alley-oop as well as anybody.

Earl Watson: B
The Earl posted his finest pro season, which, while featuring an impressive combination of defense, penetration, and professionalism, didn’t entertain like his time at UCLA. Thus I propose he be called “The Earl of Westood,” in remembrance of those halcyon days when he and Baron Davis (“The Baron of Westwood”) finished each other’s alley-oops like Peter North finishes scenes: with gusto. For those keeping score, Westwood now boasts an Earl, a Baron, a Miller, and a Wizard. It’s like its own little medieval video game.

Johan Petro: C-
It’s hard for me to offer an objective assessment of the man who karate kicked the Hip To Be Fit Cadillac Remix into YouTube glory and whose infrequent highlights inspired Kevin Calabro to bellow his uniquely sublime “Sacre Bleu!” I shall try, though. The Frenchman displayed a fairly reliable mid-range jumper (which he forced too often, leading to a terrible shooting percentage), occasional rebounding prowess, and no ability to defend or use his left hand. At least the Sonics didn’t use a lottery pick on him, like they did on…

Robert Swift: Incomplete
In his few minutes this year, Wild Bobby Ginger looked raw…Monday Night Raw! Sure, the NBA pays better and the ponytailed pivot likely has another few years of hardwood promise to unfulfill, but when you’re done chasing those chimerical hoop dreams, Bobby, I know a guy named Vince who has a few vials of the good stuff and a job for you.

Mo Sene: C+
Rounding out the twenty-one feet of first-round 5-spot bench ballast is my favorite of the three, the Senegalese sensation with the Van Damme video collection, Mouhamed Saer Sene. While Mo looked a little lost on offense on his too-few call-ups, he did inflict some serious D-League damage, to the tune of a Defensive Player of the Year Award for that circuit. Keep up the good work, Mo!

Mikael Gelabale: B-
Showed some promise for a hot minute, then blew out his knee. He and Mo formed a classic comic pairing at the end of the bench, and if there’s any justice in the hoop universe, they’ll someday, somewhere get a chance to ball together. Picture ‘em rollin’!

Luke Ridnour: C-
In assessing our team’s chances for success, an old basketball coach of mine used to say “you can’t make chicken soup out of chicken shit.” Well, with the help of some heavy seasoning, Frodo’s managed to make an edible broth. But 170-pound point guards who can’t shoot and aren’t terribly athletic shouldn’t be logging heavy minutes in the NBA.

Damien Wilkins: D
He scored 41 points in a double overtime game against the Hawks in November. That was fun and the exception to this rule: with Wilkins, the fewer the shots and minutes, the better.

Maximus Szczerbiak: Incomplete

Conceived as a Celtic and born a Cavalier, the future ruler nevertheless gestated as a SuperSonic. Little Z will have plenty of money, likely accompanied by good looks and an imposing physique. As the Bard once quipped, some “have greatness thrust upon them.” Live up to your name, kid.

Nick Collison: B+
Larry Brown would say that Collison played the right way. Of course, David Lee played the right way and Brown benched him. If you’re reading this, Larry Brown, please accept my heartfelt ‘fuck you’ for your sabotage of the 2005-2006 Knicks season. And Nick–nice work.

Jeff Green: B+

The former Hoya was something of a hoops dilletante, dabbling in a potpourri of roles–the Rodman-esque rebounder, the Radman-esque marksman, the raw rookie who loves to dunk. I have it on no less an authority than Steve “Snapper” Jones that Green regularly arrived early and stayed late to work on his game, something that paid off in an improved handle, left hand, and three-point shot. In the last month, he started to take a lot of shots, which would have been more alarming had he not been playing in a seven-man, D-League-caliber rotation.

Kevin Durant: A
He finished the season as one of only three teenagers to average 20 points a game–the other two being Lebron James and Carmelo Anthony. While his predecessors were physically mature as rookies, the long-limbed Durantula (Michiko Kakutani might call him the long-limned Durantula) still looks like he might get caught in a pool drain. Nevertheless, he soared over the rookie wall, finishing the season with a string of dominant performances and showing a promising flair for the dramatic. Seattle’s turned its lonely eyes to you, Mr. Durant. Please don’t go.

P.J. Carlesimo: B-
Chicken soup, chicken shit. The halfcourt offense was stagnant, but those mock turtlenecks and beige blazers were pretty hot.

Sam Presti: A
A fairly flawless first campaign. If I have to eat a broth made of chicken shit, I want Sam Presti to be the one preparing it. Another scoop of poop, Soup Nazi!

Kevin Calabro and Steve “Snapper” Jones: A+
Calabro’s the finest play-by-play announcer in the NBA, in this homer’s opinion, and Snapper proved that he doesn’t need lil’ bro Walton to excel. Top notch work, fellas.

Mark Cuban Praises Reid’s “Important” Video

Tuesday, April 15th, 2008

Congrats to my good friend and Haymaker & Sally collaborator Jason “Reidster” Reid: Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban praised Reid’s “Don’t Stop Believing” remix of the Christine Gregoire rally that “Save Our Sonics” crashed (I was generously given a “musical supervisor” credit for suggesting the Journey hit), calling it an “important” effort in a TV interview last night. Sure, Cuban spoke about it only briefly, but he did go out of his way to bring it up. Note to Reidster: since he obviously reads your e-mails and admires your work, maybe you could talk to Mr. Cuban about funding your next feature?

168-116

Monday, March 17th, 2008

Kiki Vandeweghe Nuggets
168? How you like them Nuggets, Kiki?

Not sure what to say about this one. The Nuggets set the NBA season record for points in a half in the first half, then matched it in the second. If Kevin Durant had scored 73 rather than 23 points, the Supes still would’ve lost. It’s enough to make one yearn for those European soccer leagues where teams can get bumped down. Maybe instead of bringing Mo Sene (7 points in 9 minutes!) up, we should’ve just sent the Sonics down.

FYI, The Nugs’ all-time scoring record is 186 points, set in a triple-overtime game in 1983 by the faster-paced Alex English/Kiki Vandeweghe-led squad in a faster-paced NBA. Those Denver teams, whose offensive binge lasted much of the 80s, averaged 126.5 points per game in the 81-82 season, but never hit 168 points in a regulation game.

Where Amazing Happens Goes to Hollywood

Monday, March 17th, 2008

You may have seen this already on the Weekly. Reid and I made a second “Where Amazing Happens” commercial poking fun at fat cats Stern, Bennett, Schultz, etc.

Where Amazing Happens

Monday, March 10th, 2008

In Bill Simmons’ recent “Save the Sonics” mailbag, Pat from Berkley, Massachusetts wrote:

I must not be watching enough TV because I haven’t seen the “NBA Cares” commercial with Clay Bennett and David Stern fondling money and in the background there is a group of ex-Sonics fans burning their Kevin Durant and Ray Allen jerseys. What a joke. The NBA: Where ripping out an entire city’s heart happens.

Well, here it is: the NBA ad celebrating the Sonics’ potential relocation to Oklahoma City:

Mo Sene Dominates D-League: Bring Him Up!

Monday, March 10th, 2008

An update on Mo Sene from last week’s Buzzer Beater

Senegalese Sensation Mo Sene went off to the tune of 30 points and 18 rebounds in an Idaho Stampede loss to the Austin Toros last night (hat tip to commenter SSFan4Life at the SonicsCentral message boards). The game before that, he put up 16 and 15.

What are you waiting for, Sam Presti? The seasons’s lost anyway. Bring up Mo!