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2024 NBA Draft grades: Lakers, Celtics, Timberwolves among Round 1 winners

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John Fanta

College Basketball Broadcaster and Reporter

NEW YORK — Round 1 of the 2024 NBA Draft is in the books, and with that comes immediate reaction to the picks with the best value and those that might have been more perplexing.

Here are my instant grades from Wednesday night at the Barclays Center.

Dalton Knecht, Los Angeles Lakers: A+

JJ Redick was a sharpshooter himself, and in a weaker draft class, to find a player as valuable as Knecht on the board at No. 17 is a massive win for Rob Pelinka & Co. If Zach Edey was not the national player of the year, it would have been Knecht, who had eight performances of at least 30 points this past season, averaging 22 points per game. He is a walking bucket who can come off screens and get hot in a hurry. And LeBron James has to be pleased as well.

Baylor Scheierman, Boston Celtics: A+

Yes, the world champions get a top grade because when you’re in the 30th slot in the draft, finding the best available talent is the way to go. The 6-foot-6 wing out of Creighton has an elite feel for the game and averaged 18.5 points, 9.0 rebounds and 3.9 assists per game this past year in an All-American season. He’s a steal for Brad Stevens.

Ron Holland, Detroit Pistons: D+

Look, Holland is only 18 years old and has a high motor and explosive athleticism, but for Trajan Langdon to take him at No. 5? It’s a reach for a guy who has a rather stiff shot and is inconsistent in creating his own shots. Holland could turn into something special with how he defends and with his ability to finish near the rim, but the G League Ignite product is still pretty raw at this point.

Donovan Clingan, Portland Trail Blazers: A

Clingan is the opposite of Holland in that I felt the former UConn big man was a top-five prospect in this class, but he fell to No. 7 overall. While Portland has things to figure out with DeAndre Ayton and Robert Williams III each having two years left on their respective deals, getting Clingan sets the Blazers up with a 7-foot-2 superstar rim protector who has terrific feel around the basket and plays with relentless competitive passion.

Zach Edey, Memphis Grizzlies: B+

Let me be clear: Zach Edey being selected No. 9 overall in the draft is an A+ for college basketball.

The social media discourse from Ja Morant was also gold. I do think Edey is a fine fit for Memphis and gives that frontcourt such a unique talent to pair with Jaren Jackson Jr. READ FULL STORY HERE>>>CLICK HERE TO CONTINUE READING>>>

A team ready to win now had to take Edey, and Memphis is that, but taking him at No. 9 is why I gave this a B+, as I don’t love the value.

Matas Buzelis, Chicago Bulls: A

I thought he would certainly be a top 7-8 prospect in this class. But the 6-9, 19-year-old fell to his hometown Bulls on Wednesday, giving Marc Eversley & Co. the window to swipe a guy who had high value. Averaging 14.3 points, 6.9 rebounds and 2.1 blocks per game this past season, Buzelis needs to become more disciplined and a better 3-point shooter in his next chapter, but his size and skill give him the potential to be a connective weapon on a team looking for a multi-faceted player with length. I think he serves as a supplemental piece to Chicago’s backcourt.

Rob Dillingham and Terrence Shannon Jr., Minnesota Timberwolves: A+

Tim Connelly is at it again, reeling in a pair of splash guards to help Anthony Edwards on the perimeter. To trade with San Antonio for the eighth pick and only give up a 2031 unprotected first-round pick and a top-1 protected 2030 pick swap is a nice move. Who knows what those picks will be worth in six years? The move puzzled me with the Spurs. Dillingham shot 44% from 3-point range and was a blur in transition with a variety of offensive skills in his lone year at Kentucky under John Calipari, averaging over 15 points per game. Shannon, who was found not guilty of rape last week and was brought into a really brutal situation that unfairly hurt his reputation, landed with Minnesota at the end of the first round, which was a steal because he was as good as any guard in college basketball this past year, averaging 23 points per game.

AJ Johnson, Milwaukee Bucks: F

This pick made little to no sense to me then, and it still makes no sense to me now. He’s a 6-4 guard who is 167 pounds and needs a couple of years to figure out what he wants to be offensively and to work on his body. Look, if you want to get a project, I get it. But there was more value on the board at 23 for Milwaukee and I didn’t like the pick at all.

Pacome Dadiet, New York Knicks: B

At only 18, Dadiet is a 6-8 wing who shot 37% from 3-point range playing in Germany this past season. He has burst off the dribble and a good midrange game with great vision to deliver solid passes, but he’s very raw in terms of efficiency and discipline. I thought he would be a second round value, but Leon Rose can afford this type of project with where the Knicks stand, so it’s a B for me.

Devin Carter, Sacramento Kings: A

The Big East Player of the Year will be a winning player who has a 10-15 year career in the league. I had him in my top 10. The Kings got him at 13, making a 6-3 junkyard dog guard a great addition because he will embrace and know his role alongside De’Aaron Fox and Malik Monk. Carter is a pest defensively, has evolved his perimeter game and can score at the rim quite well. His motor? Limitless.

My best available entering Round 2:

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2024-06-27 06:01:19
#NBA #Draft #grades #Lakers #Celtics #Timberwolves #among #winners

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Toni Kroos’ controversial statement on immigration in Germany: “It became uncontrollable” | He will continue to live in the Spanish capital with his family after his retirement

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The Real Madrid midfielder, who hung up his boots at the age of 34 after having played in all of the Euro Cup matches with his national team and retiring in style with Real Madrid, made some controversial statements about immigration in Germany.

“Germany is no longer the country it was ten years ago because of mass migration. The problem with that is that it has become uncontrollable,” said Toni Kroos, now a former footballer, hours after being eliminated from the European Championship.

She also reinforced this statement with another example that generated more rejection: “I have a seven-year-old daughter. If I were asked if I would let her go out at 11 at night in Spain or in a big German city, right now I would answer Spain,” she said.

Finally, referring to his home country, Kroos added: “There are problems everywhere, there are too many people.” READ FULL STORY HERE>>>CLICK HERE TO CONTINUE READING>>>

The former midfielder retired from football after Germany lost 2-1 to Spain at the European Championships and with one last Champions League title with Real Madrid. According to reports, he will take up residence in the Spanish capital to continue living with his family “for security reasons.”

2024-07-07 19:26:14
#Toni #Kroos #controversial #statement #immigration #Germany #uncontrollable #continue #live #Spanish #capital #family #retirement

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Gravel stage of the Tour de France: futile attacks in the dust

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Tourreporter

Status: 07.07.2024 22:11

Tadej Pogacar tries to attack several times on the gravel roads of Champagne. But at the end of the 9th stage of the Tour de France, everything remains as it was in the battle for the yellow jersey. Especially because his rival Jonas Vingegaard has other plans.

Primoz Roglic rolled up to the team bus in Troyes with a thick crust of dust and a broad grin on his face. Happy to be able to tick off the day that he and his team had been dreading so much. But now the 9th stage was over, and without any damage, neither temporally nor physically.

Roglic is happy that his team boss is not

“The most important thing is that I stayed in one piece,” said Roglic after the 199 kilometers through Champagne, 32.2 kilometers of which were on gravel roads in the famous vineyards of this region. What could have happened – a defect, a fall or some other mishap that could have cost the Slovenian time. But now he was standing here: dirty, tired, but happy “that I stuck with it.”

Roglic crossed the finish line at the same time as the other contenders for the Tour victory, 1’46 minutes behind the overjoyed day winner Anthony Turgis. That was the main goal of the day for Red Bull-Bora-hansgrohe. Even if things got a bit tricky for Roglic a few times along the way. Which is why his team boss Ralph Denk later came to the conclusion, unlike his captain, that it was “not a good day for us.”

Roglics Team in der Defensive

The German World Tour team’s sports director Rolf Aldag also said that they had their “backs against the wall”. On the second of the 14 gravel sections, his colleagues Roglic had already finished far too far behind. On the rising terrain with deep gravel, they then ran into chaos.

Nico Denz, one of Roglic’s bodyguards, even had to get off and push his bike for a while, which is why he later called the whole thing a “circus”. Getting Roglic back into the group of favorites cost a lot of energy early on, which would have been better saved. As a result, Red Bull-Bora-hansgrohe was repeatedly on the defensive later on.

9th stage arrow right The overall ranking arrow right READ FULL STORY HERE>>>CLICK HERE TO CONTINUE READING>>>

Vingegaard is not going

The fact that no major damage was caused was mainly thanks to Jonas Vingegaard. The Tour winner of the past two years had pursued a very similar goal on the white gravel roads of Champagne. “Our goal was not to lose any time,” explained the Dane with a dusty grey face.

Vingegaard and his team were obviously not interested in leaving Roglic behind. Much to the chagrin of Tadej Pogacar and Remco Evenepoel. “The race could have been decided 80 kilometers from the finish. But unfortunately Jonas decided not to ride with us. Which is understandable on the one hand, but not on the other,” complained Evenepoel.

There, the Belgian had himself initiated an attack on one of the gravel hills, which only Pogacar and Vingegaard had been able to follow. In no time at all, the trio had caught up with the ten-strong breakaway group and caused a lot of excitement there. But then, after a brief exchange, the three dropped back again.

Vingegaard takes over from Tratnik

“In all situations, we thought it would be better to have several teammates around me in case something happens,” Vingegaard later explained his refusal to cooperate. Probably also because he had an inkling early in the race of how quickly the day could have ended in disaster for him too. In one of the first gravel sectors, Vineggaard had a flat tire and so quickly took over the bike of his teammate Jan Tratnik. The Slovenian is roughly the same stature as his captain.

And because the Visma-Lease A Bike team traditionally leaves nothing to chance, they had already let Vingegaard try out Tratnik’s bike in the training camp. Vingegaard then rode through Champagne for the rest of the day with the starting number one on his back and the number seven on his bike, while Tratnik had to wait three minutes for a replacement bike, as he later reported.

Pogacar attacks tirelessly

For Vingegaard, this could have meant the end of his ambitions for yellow. And so on the fourth-to-last gravel section, he also refused to work with Pogacar, who was attacking tirelessly in the final phase, when both Roglic and Evenepoel had missed the connection and his teammate Matteo Jorgenson brought him close to the rear wheel of his rival.

“I expected that. They are probably underestimating Remco, Primoz and the others,” said Pogacar later, shrugging his shoulders. “We could have driven away, that’s how I see it. But everyone has their own race, that’s just how it is.” So in the end all the attacks in the battle for yellow crumbled to dust, but that didn’t really make anyone unhappy. “We all put on a pretty good race,” said a relieved Primoz Roglic. “The show wasn’t boring.” It continues after the rest day on Monday.

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Tragedy Strikes Moroccan Football: Five Players from Ittihad Tangier Disappear at Sea

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It is a tragedy for Moroccan football. Five players from Ittihad Tangier have disappeared at sea during a yacht trip.

Communication with the boat was lost while five Ittihad Tangier players, including a first-team member and several hopefuls, were on board.

UPDATE

According to local media Le360, the passengers jumped into the water to swim, and strong winds then pushed the yacht away from the water. The Royal Gendarmerie and the Royal Navy managed to save three players, found more than 800 meters from the shore after an hour and a half of searching. Two other people are still missing. An investigation has been opened by the gendarmerie services following this incident. READ FULL STORY HERE>>>CLICK HERE TO CONTINUE READING>>>

2024-07-07 19:12:00
#players #disappear #sea #boat #trip

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