What’s New

White Sox activate Anderson, send Moncada to ILon June 21, 2022 at 12:22 am

CHICAGO — Shortstop Tim Anderson was reinstated him from the 10-day injured list Monday prior to the Chicago White Sox opening a home series against the Toronto Blue Jays.

To make room on the roster for Anderson, Chicago placed third baseman Yoan Moncada on the 10-day injured list, retroactive to June 18, with a strained right hamstring.

Anderson, who had been on a rehabilitation assignment with Class AAA Charlotte while working his way back from a groin injury, was inserted into his customary leadoff spot for the opener against the Blue Jays.

The 2019 AL batting champ left a win over the Chicago Cubs late last month, going down in the outfield after fielding P.J. Higgins‘ fifth-inning grounder and throwing to first for the out.

A first-time All-Star in 2021 who manager Tony La Russa has called “our ignitor,” Anderson, at the time of the injury, ranked among the league leaders with a .356 batting average. He has five home runs and 19 RBIs in 40 games.

2 Related

Moncada left Friday night’s loss to the Houston Astros in the third inning with tightness in his left hamstring.

Moncada pulled up after running to first base on a groundout in the second inning and was limping slightly as he returned to the dugout. He remained in the game at third base in the bottom of the inning before being replaced by Josh Harrison in the third.

Moncada missed the start of the season with a strained oblique and didn’t play until May 9.

At 31-33 through Sunday, the White Sox are trying to climb back into contention in the National League Central. Chicago opened the Toronto series five games behind the first-place Minnesota Twins.

The Associated Press contributed to this story.

Read More

White Sox activate Anderson, send Moncada to ILon June 21, 2022 at 12:22 am Read More »

The Best July 4th Hotel Deals in ChicagoXiao Faria daCunhaon June 20, 2022 at 3:54 pm

Fourth of July is right around the corner. If you haven’t planned your trip, now is the last call! Check out the best July 4th hotel deals in Chicago so you can turn a weekend firework viewing into a beautiful staycation. Watch the display, enjoy some delicious food, and explore the Windy City’s life, arts, and culture right around the block!

230 Michigan Ave, Chicago, IL 60601

Only a 3-min walk from the Chicago Architecture Foundation, Pendry is the definition of luxury and style. As part of their anniversary celebration, Pendry is offering a “Sip & Stay” package including a $75 daily hotel credit ($150 for studio, $300 for one-bedroom suite) to experience all Pendry Chicago has to offer, including signature dining at Château Carbide, Venteux, Bar Pendry and more. You’ll also receive a bottle of champagne in your room upon arrival to celebrate the history of the building.

Advertisement

Image Credit: Sheraton Grand Chicago Riverwalk

301 E North Water St, Chicago, IL 60611

What better way to spend the 4th of July than watching the fireworks from a riverfront hotel? Offering one-of-a-kind views of the show over the holiday weekend, the Sheraton Grand is the perfect place to stay when planning a holiday staycation or visiting the city. A blend of refined comfort and stylishly appointed accommodations, the hotel offers striking views of the lake, river and Chicago skyline. Check out their Sip & Shop, Summer Seasonal Promo, or the Extended Stay packages. You’ll love the deal you get!

Advertisement

636 South Michigan Avenue Lobby Entrance On, E Balbo Dr, Chicago, IL 60605

Advertisement

Long dubbed “The Hotel of Presidents,” experience a place where past meets present this 4th of July. Dating back to 1910, The Blackstone hotel’s iconic past contains stories of things that happened in smoke-filled rooms and windowless barbershops. Guests can live the legacy firsthand by staying in the Suite of Presidents, where Harry Truman delighted staff with a private piano performance of the “Missouri Waltz;” President Eisenhower watched his 1952 nomination, and President Kennedy enjoyed Boston clam chowder when he received word he had to return to the White House during the Cuban Missile Crisis.

To elevate your July 4th getaway, try their Relaxation Package, Eleven City Diner Package, or the Park and Stay if you’re driving!

Advertisement

243 E Ontario St, Chicago, IL 60611

Aloft Chicago Mag Mile offers guests an ideal location for firework viewing right on the Magnificent Mile and only a 15-minute walk to Navy Pier. The modern hotel, built on the former site of the city’s MCA, features unique digital art throughout the lobby and guest rooms, delicious cocktails at W XYZ and encourages guests to color outside the lines while marching to their own beat. If that’s not enough to convince you to stay, Aloft is also participating in Marriott’s Summer Seasonal deals through September 1st!

505 Michigan Ave, Chicago, IL 60611

Centrally located on Chicago’s most iconic shopping and entertainment corridor, The InterContinental Chicago Magnificent Mile is the perfect jumping-off point for the 4th of July festivities in Chicago. Stroll down the famed avenue while heading to the lakefront for a picnic with family and grab a front-row seat for the evening’s fireworks at Navy Pier.

After a festive night, relax in the stunning historic 1929 hotel and take a plunge in the historic junior-size Olympic swimming pool featuring a hand-carved terracotta fountain of Neptune. A rotating weekly event series offers fun for guests of all kinds this summer. Their advanced booking offer can save you up to 20%, or, try the Road Trip to the City package, which includes parking throughout your stay, a $50 gas card, room accommodations, and free breakfast for two!

221 N Columbus Dr, Chicago, IL 60601

Dive into the rich culture of downtown Chicago from the striking Radisson Blu Aqua Hotel, Chicago, minutes from the Magnificent Mile, Millennium Park and Navy Pier. Designed by famed architect Jeanne Gang of Studio Gang Architects, the hotel places guests in the heart of the city for easy access to all Chicago has to offer over the 4th of July weekend.

If you’re a veteran, an active military member, or an educator, you can enjoy a special rate at Radisson Blu for the work you’ve done for the people! There are also a ton of other packages to choose from. Whether you’re here for a retreat, or just a quick stay for the firework, you’ll find an offer you can’t say no to!

226 W Jackson Blvd, Chicago, IL 60606

The new dual-branded Canopy by Hilton Chicago Central Loop and Hilton Garden Inn Chicago Central Loop complex is making downtown travel seamless with the introduction of their new “Park for Twenty Two” Packages, now available at both properties. Enjoy self-parking Thursday through Sunday with your stay at a discounted rate of just $22 per night. The package boasts a savings of $23 per night on parking and to add to the convenience, includes in and out privileges.

With the hotel being only 2-min away from the Skydeck, we honestly can’t think of a better place to stay for the firework display!

Featured Image: Sheraton Grand Chicago

Read More

The Best July 4th Hotel Deals in ChicagoXiao Faria daCunhaon June 20, 2022 at 3:54 pm Read More »

The next Kevin Durant? Meet Chet Holmgren, the NBA draft’s most gifted playeron June 20, 2022 at 11:46 pm

There are moments on the court when Chet Holmgren seems less like a basketball player than a figment of a fevered imagination. These moments generally occur after Holmgren either a) blocks a shot and snatches the ball out of the air with a dismissive nonchalance, or b) grabs a defensive rebound. Following these relatively mundane events, and only when the spirit strikes, Holmgren accelerates up the court, each dribble covering about 20 feet, and doesn’t stop until he has slammed the ball through the hoop on the other end.

Holmgren, the most unique and overly dissected player in this year’s NBA draft, is 20 years old and 7 feet tall and weighs less than 200 pounds. He looks like he could raise his hands over his head and shower in a garden hose. His arms extend to a condor-like wingspan of 7-foot-6. When he sits on the court before the game and stretches, soles of his shoes together in front of him, elbows pushing down on the inside of his thighs, his knees drift far enough away to appear disembodied. But this body, in those moments, travels the distance from one hoop to the other with both grace and power, two of the last things you’d guess by looking at him. And that is why, after those moments unfold, it can feel as if the ground is opening to reveal the rarest thing: something entirely new.

For instance: a game against the University of San Francisco, late in Holmgren’s only year at Gonzaga. He grabbed a rebound and took an observational dribble, surveying the court without betraying his intent. Seeing that nobody was taking him seriously, he began to accelerate, suddenly becoming the world’s skinniest big rig. The USF players, who did not at this time believe in the power of limitless possibility, didn’t seem interested in stopping him, each apparently assuming Holmgren would eventually see the ridiculousness of the act and simply stop himself. And so they watched him cross half court, and they watched him cross the free throw line, and they watched him gather himself, hold the ball with both hands, leap into the air and throw it through the hoop with primal force.

Gonzaga’s Chet Holmgren, at 7 feet tall and less than 200 pounds, is the most overly dissected player in this year’s NBA draft. He’s also a consensus top-three pick. The1point8 / Carlos Gonzalez For ESPN

These moments are wild, and weirdly difficult to define, and always followed by a period of collective introspection. Holmgren’s kinetic energy is multiplied exponentially by the element of surprise. Nothing in physics accounts for the audacity of an act. As always, the expression on Holmgren’s angular face never changes. Even as everyone around him practices their personal expressions of incredulity — and basketball games provide a master class in performative incredulity — he retains the heavy-lidded, loose-jawed look of the eternally unimpressed.

It always feels like an experiment: What happens if the tallest and most obvious player on the court decides to play the game as if he’s the only one in the gym?

Holmgren, who averaged 14 points, 9.9 rebounds and nearly four blocks per game at Gonzaga, is a consensus top-three pick in the draft, along with Auburn’s Jabari Smith and Duke’s Paolo Banchero. Most prognosticators have Smith going first to Orlando, and Holmgren second to Oklahoma City, but pre-draft posturing is the lingua franca of the NBA. Besides, there are players like Smith and Banchero in every draft: smooth-shooting, sturdy-looking plug-and-play guys who promise to be Harrison Barnes for the next 10 years. There is not, and maybe never has been, anything like Holmgren: a 3-point-shooting 7-footer who handles the ball like a point guard — OK, let’s say a 2-guard — who could play on the wing on offense and lead the league in blocked shots for the foreseeable future.

Talent evaluators and suite-level decision-makers face the same issue as the USF Dons and many others before them; they’ll be forced to wrap their minds around what they’re seeing. In the parlance of the industry, Holmgren is the ultimate high-ceiling/low-floor player. If he plays to the talent, which he did in spurts at Gonzaga, where he followed his high school and AAU teammate Jalen Suggs, he’ll be generational. If his narrow frame gets tossed around the court by the types of large men who get paid fantastical sums to do such things, he could be relegated to roam the game’s exurbs, where his skills would be minimized.

You will no doubt hear the word unicorn a lot on draft night; it has become the easiest and laziest way to describe the uniqueness of Holmgren’s physique and skill set. Unicorn is meant as a compliment, but it is dismissive and unfair, a rhetorical surrender; unicorns — apologies to Kristaps Porzingis — don’t exist. Holmgren is here, flesh and blood and bone and very little fat, and the teams at the top of the draft must deal with the reality of his existence, and what it all might mean.

2 Related

The story of Chet Holmgren’s evolution as a basketball player might as well begin at the beginning, when legendary Minneapolis-St. Paul AAU coach Larry Suggs — father of Magic guard and last year’s No. 5 pick and single-season Gonzaga star Jalen Suggs — got a call from a friend who said, “I’ve got just what you need: a 6-foot third-grader who can really play.”

“Tell me more,” the elder Suggs said.

“The kid’s fearless. He can climb trees. He’s always on top of the roof of his house. Linebacker on his football team. He has no fear.”

“Sounds like my type of kid,” Suggs said. “Six-foot, climbing trees, hanging out on the roof, not scared of anything? I’ve got to see him.”

Suggs is sitting in his backyard in a leafy St. Paul neighborhood. He laughs and rolls his eyes. “So then he shows up,” he says, clapping his hands and settling in for a good story. “First of all, this kid wasn’t 6 feet tall. Tall, yes, but not 6 feet tall. And second, think of your worst grammar-school buddy who couldn’t play basketball. Right away in two-line layups you know. Couldn’t make a layup. Couldn’t dribble. He was air-balling.”

Not only that, but Chet Holmgren may or may not have arrived at the gym for that first practice wearing cargo shorts — teammate and friend Cole Ewald says he did — but there’s no question he was gangly and awkward and 8 years old.

“I thought I was good because I played rec league before,” Holmgren says, “but then I walked in there, and everybody was actually good. I realized pretty quickly: I wasn’t good.”

Team Grassroots Sizzle — God love AAU team names — was full of 8-year-olds who played and won tournaments against 11- and 12-year-olds. (Remarkably, eight of them would go on to play Division I football or basketball, and next year two — both top-5 picks, almost assuredly — will be in the NBA.) Holmgren, to his credit, tried as hard as he could during this first practice. He didn’t appear to be discouraged, which was another plus, and Suggs says he detected a flicker of understanding in the way Chet watched the other players, like Jalen, and understood the talent differential.

Holmgren, who averaged 14 points, 9.9 rebounds and nearly four blocks per game at Gonzaga, is as comfortable on the wing as he is in blocking shots. The1point8 / Carlos Gonzalez For ESPN

At some point Suggs became aware of a presence in the doorway. David Holmgren, all 7 feet of him, stood there watching his son. Larry Suggs looked at David, and then back at Chet. Possibilities that didn’t exist seconds before suddenly became possible.

When practice was over, Suggs asked Chet, “So, do you think you can play at the level these guys play at?”

Chet looked him in the eye and said, simply, “No.”

Suggs was impressed by the kid’s self-awareness — “I wouldn’t say I was self-aware at that point in my life,” Holmgren counters, “but I was wired to understand what was happening.” Still cognizant of how the air in the room changed the moment the 7-foot dad entered the gym, Suggs asked the kid one more question:

“Do you want to be as good as these guys?”

“Yes.”

“Then come every day and I’ll teach you the game of basketball,” Suggs said. “But you’ve got to listen.”

David Holmgren played two years at the University of Minnesota, his career cut short by chronic knee issues. He is as lean as his son, and just as tall, and looking at him it’s easy to imagine Chet in roughly 35 years, including the ponytail. David carries himself with a distinct countercultural vibe, and he remembers chafing every time he would get a rebound and a coach would instinctively tell him, “Get it to a guard.” If his son was going to become anything in basketball — and the jury was clearly out at this point — he at least wanted him to learn to do more than stand with his back to the hoop, his hand in the air and a defender behind him. In other words, David didn’t want Chet to become David.

Time and place aligned perfectly. Thanks mostly to the European way of coaching and playing, the basketball world was just beginning to welcome 7-footers who could handle the ball, shoot 3s and defend on the perimeter. Dirk Nowitzki was an MVP. Kevin Durant was the future, and Larry Suggs was a man who believed every player needed to be trained and coached like a point guard.

“He’s not going to be Shaq,” David Holmgren told Suggs. “Look at me. This is what he’s going to be.”

People familiar with Holmgren and his game say he has even more moves off the dribble, more face-up jumpers, and more range that will benefit from the spacing of an NBA offense. The1point8 / Carlos Gonzalez For ESPN

Chet Holmgren was in eighth grade, in the process of growing from 6-2 to 6-10 over the course of a single year — an inch every six weeks! — when Suggs began telling anyone who would listen that this kid would someday be the No. 1 pick in the NBA draft.

Suggs didn’t dash off this prediction without thought. He says Chet was “terrible, just terrible,” for several years before the growth spurt met the drive and everything came together like a lucky laboratory accident. Suggs studied the list of players who would graduate in Chet’s year, and he couldn’t see anyone he would project to be better.

He had watched Chet play endless games of one-on-one with Jalen after practices, and he saw the talent gap close every season as the competitive fire — at times verging on vengeance — grew. He and Brian Sandifer coached Chet to play by their unique philosophy — “European basketball with the iso game of the ’80s,” Suggs says — which meant the tallest kid on the court was often the Sizzle’s point guard. Sandifer was the tough one, bringing a mentality typified by team T-shirts that read, “We Want All The Smoke.” Sandifer watched the crowds and opposing teams and coaches, who were nearly all Black, look at Holmgren skeptically before being won over by his game and toughness. “Chet worked his ass off,” Sandifer says. “If you can play, people respect you. And at the end of the day, if you’re white and you’re that good, you stick out like a sore thumb.”

Sarah Harris, Chet’s mom, says, “David’s been telling me for years that Chet was going to be very good and very special. I kept rolling my eyes. Of course you’re going to say that, you’re his father.”

“I saw it in fourth or fifth grade,” David Holmgren says. “He started doing things with the ball that guards do — fluidly. He was still raw, but at that moment I knew he was going to be pretty good.”

David Holmgren drove Team Sizzle to tournaments across the Midwest and beyond: Milwaukee, Memphis, Chicago. He took the smelly sneakers out of his van and placed them on the roof every time they stopped for food or a bathroom break. “We weren’t spoiled,” Chet Holmgren says. “We were nine-deep in seven-seat cars, five people packed into hotel rooms, air mattresses on the floor. That was the culture — it wasn’t going to be handed to us.”

Ewald recalls a player being offered a spot on the team and choosing to join a different AAU team because it offered better gear. “He went to a team that got shoes,” Ewald says. “We beat them by 20.”

Suggs enlisted a local trainer, Aaron Delaney, to work with Holmgren, and his first words to Delaney were, “I want you to work with an eighth-grader who’s going to be the first pick in the NBA draft.” Delaney, who has trained professional and college athletes in multiple sports, said, “Cool. If he quits on the workout, I won’t work with him again.”

He watched Holmgren walk into the gym for the first time — pale, thin, a little bit hunched — and had one thought:

This is one tall-ass dude.

“I saw it in fourth or fifth grade,” Holmgren’s father, David, says. “He started doing things with the ball that guards do — fluidly. He was still raw, but at that moment I knew he was going to be pretty good.” The1point8 / Carlos Gonzalez For ESPN

But a future first overall pick? This kid? The only thing that kept Delaney from laughing was his respect for Suggs, whose basketball acumen was such that many believed he could see the future.

“I had it planned out: I was going to make him quit,” Delaney says. “I’m just going to break him today and not waste any more of my time. This could all be hype. I needed to see.”

The workout — stability and balance work, muscle-isolation work, Bosu ball work, ending with resistance training — was planned for an hour and 15 minutes. But Holmgren was still going strong, so Delaney added 15 minutes. He looked a little sluggish, like he might be on the verge of breaking, so Delaney added another 15 to push it to an hour and 45 minutes. Holmgren stayed with it, never complaining, and Delaney thought, I like this kid. I can work with him.

From that day forward, for 180 straight days, a streak broken only when Holmgren left to play in the Iverson Classic, he worked out with Delaney. They worked on functional strength and balance without obsessing over weight gain. “You can’t put on more than 10 to 15 pounds safely without losing a step or risking injury,” Delaney says. “And Chet is way stronger than he looks.” Delaney has a video clip on his phone of Holmgren doing a 61-inch box jump, and when he’s asked if Holmgren would be able to bench-press 185 — the amount Durant famously was unable to lift in pre-draft workouts — Delaney says, “Oh, yeah — comfortably.”

In a pre-draft interview with the NBA’s social media team, Holmgren was asked to identify the biggest misconceptions about him: “I actually do lift weights and I actually do eat food.” His parents laugh at the idea that he doesn’t eat. “He never stops eating,” David says. “It’s all metabolism.”

Told that Delaney was trying to make him quit that first day, Holmgren says, “He never told me that part of the plan, but if that’s what he was trying to do, it was never going to work.”

Around the same time Larry Suggs began predicting that Holmgren would one day be the No. 1 pick in the draft (ESPN currently has him in the top three), he began telling anyone who would listen — including Holmgren — that he was destined to be the best American-born white player since Larry Bird.

“He’s said that a bunch of times,” Holmgren says, “and the first time he brought it up to me, I was in middle school. I don’t have a reaction to it, and I wouldn’t say that’s a role that needs to be filled. Nationality and race don’t change the game. What changes the game is skill.”

Holmgren and Magic guard Jalen Suggs have a long history, growing up and playing together in Minnesota and being coached by Suggs’ father, Larry. Orlando has the first pick Thursday. Stephen Maturen/Getty Images

David Holmgren is sitting in his living room, surrounded by dark wood walls and ceilings, a grand piano on one side and a bookshelf filled with hardcovers on the facing wall. There is a “Refugees Welcome Here” sticker on the sidelight of the front door of the six-bedroom, 6,600-square-foot, 107-year-old Georgian Colonial that seems to meet the layman’s definition of mansion. Sarah, who owns her own real-estate consulting firm and is an executive for a local nonprofit that works to provide affordable housing, is on the phone from Santa Barbara, visiting Chet with one of their two daughters — Chet is a middle child — and “trying to bring him some normalcy” while he works out in preparation for the draft.

The house is about four blocks from downtown Minneapolis, in a neighborhood interspersed with apartment complexes and business. A group of Somali women are walking their children to school as I walk up to the front door. David, a painting contractor, grew up near what is now George Floyd Square, a four-block area that radiates from the spot on the pavement near the corner of Chicago Avenue and East 38th Street where Floyd was killed by police. One of David’s high school jobs was at a drugstore in the very same building, the one that eventually became Cup Foods.

In late May 2020, in the aftermath of Floyd’s murder, protests and unrest rage a block away from the Holmgren house. They could smell tear gas from the backyard. Chet, who had just turned 18 and was a junior in high school, refused to stay home. Parents, coaches, friends — they told him not to go out. You’re 7 feet tall and known throughout the city, they told him. You’re going to be a target. But David says his son’s “frustration and anger” overrode the pleas.

“I hoop with everyone in the city,” Chet says. “All my friends and everybody I’ve played with — we’re all of different nationalities and races. Obviously, I can’t put myself in other people’s shoes in every circumstance, but I can sympathize with everybody. I definitely know how different people feel, and I know certain things are wrong and shouldn’t happen.”

Chet left the house alone, wearing all black, and eventually marched across the Interstate 35W Bridge with hundreds of others just minutes before a semi-truck barreled across the closed roadway and narrowly missed taking out a wall of protesters.

Sarah and David were home, watching it live on television. They knew Chet was with that group of protesters, and Sarah calls it “my most terrifying moment as a parent.” Seconds after the truck stopped, Chet called David to pick him up at a gas station. He had left the bridge minutes before.

“I just felt like I had to be out there,” Chet says. “This is part of my community, and it’s because I’m 7 feet and everybody knows me that I needed to associate myself with trying to help and to inspire others to jump in and help. Within my community, people obviously supported that I’m looking for change.”

Orlando, with the first pick, has the opportunity to reunite Holmgren and Jalen Suggs. (“All the way around it makes sense,” Sandifer says. “The basketball makes sense, the business makes sense. Biggest thing since Penny and Shaq.”) Holmgren and Suggs were teammates in AAU from third grade, and for four years and three high school state championships (the fourth was canceled because of COVID-19, but Holmgren won four because he played varsity as an eighth-grader) at Minnehaha Academy. They each played a year at Gonzaga before entering the NBA.

“Jalen’s had as much to do with Chet’s development as anybody,” David Holmgren says. “You know, kids are kids, and when Chet walked into the gym for the first time, it could have been, ‘What’s this geeky white kid doing in here?’ But from the beginning Chet would go straight to Jalen after practice and say, ‘Let’s play one-on-one.’ Jalen would always say, ‘Let’s go.'”

“Jalen is like a big brother to Chet,” Sarah says.

Talk to enough people who knew Chet Holmgren from the beginning, and they’ll each say the same thing: The college game restricted his movement and limited his repertoire, even at Gonzaga, which Holmgren chose in part to play in Mark Few’s high-octane offense. There’s allegedly a lethal George Gervin-style finger roll latent in the skill set, ready to awaken. There are more moves off the dribble, more face-up jumpers, more range that will benefit from the spacing of an NBA offense.

“Just wait,” David Holmgren says. “You’re going to see something a whole lot different than you saw in college. Trust me.”

Any discussion eventually devolves into an endless search for comparisons. Scouts and decision-makers, not to mention commentators, partake in it endlessly. Who does a player remind you of? Who could he possibly become? We have a compunction as a society to know What It All Means, the sooner, the better. Is Holmgren the latest iteration of Kevin Durant? If so, he’s KD with the shot-blocking ability to alter shots and change game plans. Is he Porzingis, tall and skinny and relegated by the game’s sheer mass to a life away from the basket?

So many questions. Has the game finally found, in Holmgren, its utopian ideal of positionless basketball? Or is this moment — the promise, the hope, the horizon-length vision of what Chet Holmgren could be — destined to be the main event?

“He’s always succeeded at every level,” David Holmgren says. “I’ve watched him dominate kids who are 2 years older and 50 pounds heavier. It’s never made a difference, ever. I’m not saying he might not struggle at the beginning, but there’s no way he’s not going to succeed.”

Each of the questions can be distilled down to one: What are we looking at? At this point, Chet Holmgren is an experiment without a working hypothesis, a subject without a valid comparison, a true party of one. And that, no matter how it turns out, is already something entirely different.

Holmgren was photographed at The Maybourne Beverly Hills in California.

Read More

The next Kevin Durant? Meet Chet Holmgren, the NBA draft’s most gifted playeron June 20, 2022 at 11:46 pm Read More »

Look out, NBA: Golden State has no plans of slowing down, thanks to young coreon June 20, 2022 at 10:10 pm

PRACTICE BEFORE GAME 2 of the NBA Finals had not begun yet, but rookies Jonathan Kuminga and Moses Moody took a moment on the Golden State Warriors bench to soak up the rare atmosphere inside Chase Center.

Everywhere their young eyes turned, there was a not-so-subtle reminder of exactly where they were. Flashing repeatedly on the gigantic big screen, on the LED board that wraps around the arena, on the scorer’s table and even on the seats they were sitting in, the NBA Finals cursive-script logo and Larry O’Brien Trophy were impossible to miss.

“What do you think?” Kuminga asked Moody as they looked at the Finals signage.

“What do you think when it’s us running this team one day?”

While Stephen Curry, Klay Thompson and Draymond Green were fortifying the Golden State dynasty by winning their fourth championship in eight years and defeating the Boston Celtics, the Warriors were also doing something that no champion in recent memory has done. As coach Steve Kerr put it, the Warriors were also “raising” two 2021 NBA lottery picks during this title run and hoping the championship masterclass Kerr and his Big Three delivered each day of their quest left a permanent imprint on the pair.

2 Related

“They’re going to have to [eventually] chart their own course, and fight their own fight,” said Bob Myers, the Warriors’ president of basketball operations. “They’re lucky that they get to see what it looks like.

“Steph, Klay and Draymond never got this advanced kind of scouting on what the Finals is and the playoffs. They had to go through it and find a path. This is why it’s huge for young guys to just taste it, see it and hopefully crave it.”

Kuminga and Moody will be parading down Market Street in San Francisco with the Larry O’Brien Trophy during Monday’s Warriors championship parade, nearly a year after they were drafted.

Kuminga and Moody are the first rookie lottery-pick teammates to play in the NBA Finals, and they are the youngest pair of teammates to win a championship, according to the Elias Sports Bureau.

Add on 2020 No. 2 overall pick James Wiseman — who missed this past season because of a knee injury, though Myers says he is expected to go through contact soon and participate in next month’s summer league — and Golden State returns a trio of lottery picks in their third season or less for the title defense.

The tradeoff of going through the misery of losing Thompson to two devastating injuries and Curry to a wrist injury, enduring 50 losses in 2019-20 and not making the playoffs for two straight seasons is a championship core and a new generation of lottery talent to groom in Wiseman, Kuminga and Moody. Along with 23-year-old Jordan Poole, the young players will push for more significant roles next season.

Green had his doubts earlier this past season about whether this was the recipe for another championship: a combination of experienced vets and young first-round picks to develop.

“When you look around at how championship teams have historically been built, unless it is a super young team like the Warriors early on that had veterans around us, then you just really haven’t seen it before,” Green said. “Historically, we just hadn’t seen it work.”

Golden State resisted the urge to trade away its future to add more experience after it started the season 27-6, and the Warriors made it back to the NBA mountaintop again. While most defending champs have to find creative ways to keep key players and improve, the Warriors next season will boast a pair of homegrown lottery picks who enter their second year with invaluable playoff and Finals experience, no matter how little they played.

Now, the Warriors’ championship DNA also flows through Kuminga and Moody.

“Most people spend their career chasing that,” Green said. “And worried like, I need to get to this team, I need to be around these guys, we need that coach. If you are not a loser, which we have a bunch of come through this league, then you worry about that your entire career.

“For them to not have that worry moving forward, like you already have that stamp of ‘I’m a champion.’ Now everything you do from there, you can do it from a different space. You are not chasing anything or really wanting for that, which some people never get.”

play1:00

Relive the top moments from every game of the 2022 NBA Finals as the Warriors defeat the Celtics to reclaim their spot atop the NBA.

THE INTOXICATING AROMA of champagne can be detected down the hallway from the visitor’s locker room in TD Garden after Golden State’s triumph over Boston in six games. Kuminga and Moody are soaking in something no rookie lottery-pick teammates have ever experienced.

As Warriors players go to take professional photos with the championship trophy, Kuminga, 19, holds it like a baby, nestling it into his left arm. Moody, who turned 20 last month, holds the greatest prize in the sport like an expensive guitar.

The Warriors’ grizzled veterans hope that this moment isn’t lost on the duo they’ve been trying to raise all season long into NBA champs.

“They’re 19-year-old kids,” said Andre Iguodala, who started his pro career in 2004, two years after Kuminga was born. “They’re supposed to be on college campuses learning about themselves, who they are as people, what they like instead of these guys making five-plus million dollars a year, got all the pressures, the madness of having money and being in the spotlight. You can become jaded. You can start taking these things for granted.”

These were Iguodala’s seventh NBA Finals. And he made sure to tell Kuminga and Moody to record this moment, even “take pictures.”

Articulating these tips to teens without sounding like a parent can be tricky at times with the generational gap.

Green noticed earlier this past season that every time he saw Kuminga walk by him, the teen would “start laughing.”

“I’m 32 and he’s 19,” Green said. “And what I like to do may just not be cool to him. … Imagine when you see one of the old heads doing something. … You’re really laughing at the fact that that’s so old-school that it’s funny.

“That’s how I feel like he was looking at me, like, ‘Dude, you’re just old. You move old. You look old.'”

Kuminga — a raw forward from Congo drafted No. 7 overall after playing one season with the G League Ignite — has had to be more patient than some of his lottery peers. Kuminga played a total of eight minutes in the NBA Finals. He averaged 9.3 points in 70 regular-season games and 5.2 PPG in 16 playoff appearances.

The Golden State Warriors beat the Boston Celtics 4-2 in the Finals.

GAME 6: GS 103, BOS 90
o Curry captures first Finals MVP
o Stars hit social media to congratulate Warriors

GAME 5: GS 104, BOS 94
o Whatever it takes: How Warriors won G5
o Warriors are suffocating C’s game plan

GAME 4: GS 107, BOS 97
o Curry’s epic game changes series
o Celtics, Warriors need their big men

GAME 3: BOS 116, GS 100
o C’s use size, quickness to regain control
o Curry in unfamiliar underdog territory

GAME 2: GS 107, BOS 88
o Steph was a problem for the Celtics
o C’s lament more third-quarter woes

GAME 1: BOS 120, GS 108
o Boston’s win one year in the making
o Celtics beat Dubs at their game

“I learned that he was a freakish athlete,” said Warriors center Kevon Looney, who will be a free agent along with Gary Payton II and Otto Porter Jr. “He’s one of those different type of athletes … like the best athletes in the NBA, Andre at his peak, guys like LeBron.”

The 6-foot-7 forward started 12 games as a rookie and played some key playoff minutes in the second round against Memphis when Green was ejected in Game 1 for a flagrant foul 2, and in Game 2 when Green needed stitches after being hit in the eye. Kuminga also scored 18 points in Golden State’s blowout win over Memphis in Game 3 and 17 points twice in blowout losses against Memphis and Dallas, respectively.

While other rookies such as Orlando’s Franz Wagner (No. 8 overall) and Sacramento’s Davion Mitchell (No. 9 overall) logged more minutes in the regular season on non-contenders, Kuminga had to bide his time and learn.

But unlike the other lottery picks, Kuminga and Moody now have championship experience.

“I never really worry about whether we’re playing, not playing,” Kuminga said. “As long as I’m still here, learning, getting better every day. When my moments get called, I know I’ll be ready. … Everybody here [is] just helping me, way more than dudes [other rookies around the league] are, wherever they are right now.”

Moody, who was drafted after one season at Arkansas, is the more polished rookie. But the shooting guard is still learning from two of the greatest shooters in the game in Curry and Thompson. He also has the emerging Poole ahead of him.

Still, Kerr played the 6-6 Moody in the Western Conference finals against Dallas, and the guard’s 65 minutes were the most in a conference finals by a teenager since Kobe Bryant’s 87 minutes in 1998. Like Kuminga, Moody played sparingly in the Finals, seeing a total of 10 minutes. During the regular season, Moody averaged 4.4 points in 52 games.

Curry, though, repeatedly lauded Moody’s approach and habits, noticing how the rookie works like an experienced veteran every day with the same intensity no matter how little playing time he was getting.

“It’s amazing to see the result in just one short year,” Curry said. “Him coming into a playoff series in the middle of the Western Conference finals and making an impact.

“That’s the stuff you’ll probably look back on and be really proud of because there’s a lot of instability around this league. Not everybody has the infrastructure and the presence to bring guys along like that.”

IN THE MIDDLE section of the Warriors’ team plane on their flight to Boston for Game 6, Myers saw Curry, Thompson and Green sitting together at the same table, laughing and joking.

Myers couldn’t help but appreciate the rarity of the moment. A trio of All-Stars, still enjoying each other’s company after a decade on the same team.

“I think they see it,” Myers said of Kuminga, Moody and Wiseman. “I hope it registers. I’m sure it does, but it might register differently with each of them. They’re all different too. Just like Steph, Klay and Draymond are different. … It’s almost like a band, that the personalities complement each other and that’s how you stay willing to sit next to each other when you don’t have to.”

Perhaps Kuminga and Moody will produce the same championship hits as their predecessors once it is their turn. All they know is, they are world champions already.

“If you give a pig a pancake, then he wants some syrup,” Moody said. “Once I get the championship, you’re going to want something else.”

As for when their turn will come to run the Warriors, Kuminga and Moody will have to wait before the Curry, Thompson and Green era is ready to hand the reins over.

“Eventually, years from now, they’ll pass the baton and see what the other guys can do,” Myers said.

“But it’s a tough act to follow, I’ll tell them that. It’s about as tough of an act to follow as you can find, whoever’s next in line to try to carry that baton.”

Read More

Look out, NBA: Golden State has no plans of slowing down, thanks to young coreon June 20, 2022 at 10:10 pm Read More »

1 NBA insider says that Rudy Gobert to Chicago Bulls is an expecationVincent Pariseon June 20, 2022 at 8:08 pm

The Chicago Bulls had a really nice season in 2021-22. They were one of the top teams in the Eastern Conference for most of the season. That was until they fell off at the end mostly due to multiple injuries to some of their best players.

With a couple of more additions during the offseason along with some better health, they could be a championship-level team in short order. One player that would be a fit with the team right now is Rudy Gobert of the Utah Jazz.

Matt Moore of The Action Network said on a podcast that this is becoming more of a league-wide expectation. That is much more convincing than calling it a rumor right now. This would be huge news for the Bulls as they look to take that next step.

Hearing that it is a legit possibility is certainly exciting to hear for this Bulls team that needs to keep building. The roster was in shambles just a few seasons ago but it has been built back up to what it is today. Gobert would make it that much better.

The Chicago Bulls would look so nice with Rudy Gobert on their roster.

We don’t know what a trade would look like but Gobert is probably joining a core of players that had tremendous success in their first year together.

Guys like Zach LaVine (if he stays), DeMar DeRozan, Lonzo Ball, Nikola Vucevic, Patrick Williams, and Alex Caruso (if none of them are traded) would look really nice with a guy like Rudy Gobert around them. It would be interesting to see how long it takes them all to win as a cohesive unit.

The Bulls would look a lot different just by adding this one player. He is the type of guy that helps them on both sides of the basketball. Others around him, as mentioned before, would be made better just by adding this particular player. They wouldn’t automatically become a championship team but they would be that much closer.

We can only hope that this “expectation’ becomes a reality. There is a lot of work to do for this team but they are on the right path. The NBA would be better with the Chicago Bulls making deep playoff runs and this is just the beginning.

Read More

1 NBA insider says that Rudy Gobert to Chicago Bulls is an expecationVincent Pariseon June 20, 2022 at 8:08 pm Read More »

Lakers’ changes, Utah turmoil and Kyrie’s contract: NBA’s offseason in full effecton June 20, 2022 at 9:49 pm

The NBA Finals wrapped up only a few days ago, but The Association’s calendar stops for no one.

This week, the next generation of players will be welcomed into the league when the Orlando Magic begin the 2022 NBA draft Thursday night at Brooklyn’s Barclays Center. From there, free agency and summer league will follow, as teams begin blueprinting how they can catch up to the defending champion Golden State Warriors.

Will some of the biggest names worth watching this summer — including Zach LaVine, Bradley Beal and Jalen Brunson — remain with their current teams? Where is the Deandre Ayton saga headed with the Phoenix Suns? How will the Los Angeles Lakers retool around LeBron James and Anthony Davis after last season’s failed run to the playoffs?

Here’s a look at the top 10 questions facing the NBA heading into what should be, as always, an eventful offseason.

Mock draft: First-round changes and lottery movement

1. How will the Warriors reload for their title defense?

Golden State emerged from two seasons in the wilderness by claiming a fourth title in eight years and reestablishing its dynasty. A fifth title, though, will require some expensive decisions.

Kevon Looney, whose interior defense and offensive rebounding played a critical role in the Warriors’ run, is likely to get a significant raise from $5.2 million in 2021-22. The same could be true for Gary Payton II, the Warriors’ defensive ace who, after years of fighting to gain a solid foothold in the NBA, seems set to get more than the minimum for the first time in his career.

Extension decisions also await the Warriors, specifically with Andrew Wiggins, who has one year left on his deal, and Jordan Poole, who is a year away from restricted free agency. After spending a record $350 million in combined payroll and luxury tax payments in 2021-22, the Warriors are on pace to hit $400 million in each of the next two seasons.

play1:21

Amar’e Stoudemire and JJ Redick assess LeBron James’ chances of winning a fifth NBA championship.

2. How will the Lakers retool around LeBron James and Anthony Davis?

When LeBron came to Los Angeles, he had reached the playoffs in 13 straight seasons. In four seasons with the Lakers, he has now missed the playoffs twice — and L.A.’s 33-49 mark this season was the worst of his career. Changing those fortunes will require a lot of work this summer. It began with hiring former Milwaukee Bucks assistant Darvin Ham to replace Frank Vogel as head coach.

Next up? Figuring out how to fill out a roster that, once Russell Westbrook and Kendrick Nunn opt into their deals, as expected, will be sitting right around the luxury tax line with only six players under contract. (That’s presuming Westbrook will remain in Los Angeles next season, which at the moment seems the most likely path forward.)

Like last summer, the Lakers will be forced to fill the remaining nine roster spots with minimum players and the taxpayer’s midlevel exception. That may not be enough to keep one of their few bright spots from last season, unrestricted free-agent guard Malik Monk.

And by the way, James himself has a decision to make in August: whether or not to extend his contract. If he chooses not to, he can be an unrestricted free agent in the summer of 2023.

3. Which direction are the Jazz headed?

Utah was expected to face a tumultuous offseason after losing to the Dallas Mavericks in the first round, and that began with coach Quin Snyder resigning from the Jazz after eight successful seasons.

2 Related

Now, following two straight disappointing postseason exits, the focus will shift to how Jazz CEO Danny Ainge will reshape this team in his first full offseason in charge — namely whether that will include breaking up the All-Star partnership of Donovan Mitchell and Rudy Gobert after five seasons together.

Without a pick in Thursday’s draft, the Jazz don’t have many options to dramatically change the roster. And of course, there’s the decision Ainge will make on who will succeed Snyder on Utah’s bench, one of two remaining coaching openings in the league. (Charlotte has the other, after Kenny Atkinson accepted the job last week only to reverse on that decision a few days ago, per ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski.)

After 76ers president of basketball operations Daryl Morey was reunited with James Harden at the 2022 trade deadline, it was expected to begin an extended partnership in the City of Brotherly Love.

And while that is still likely to be the case, a disappointing playoff run leaves both sides with decisions. Will Harden choose to opt into his $47 million player option or will he survey the free-agency landscape? Will the two sides agree to a longer-term contract for a lesser number to create some more financial flexibility moving forward?

Elsewhere on Philly’s roster, Danny Green, likely out for all of next season with a knee injury suffered during the playoffs, has a $10 million expiring contract that can be used as a trade chip — along with the No. 23 pick in Thursday’s draft, after Brooklyn opted to take next year’s first-rounder instead as part of the Harden-Ben Simmons trade.

play2:05

Stephen A. Smith sounds off on Kyrie Irving’s postgame comments on the Nets’ struggles.

Irving and the Nets have the same set of options as Harden does in Philadelphia.

The Nets, meanwhile, have plenty of decisions to make beyond that, as they try to improve on last season’s disappointing first-round sweep at the hands of the Eastern Conference champion Boston Celtics.

Patty Mills has a player option for next season, while one of the team’s best defensive players, Bruce Brown, will be an unrestricted free agent. Nic Claxton, a rim presence at both ends who fills a need in which Brooklyn is in short supply, is a restricted free agent.

The Nets, who must also fill several spots at the end of the bench, are expected once again to be one of the most expensive rosters in NBA history.

6. Will Deandre Ayton remain with the Phoenix Suns?

What a difference a year makes.

In June 2021, the Phoenix Suns were enjoying their first trip to the NBA Finals in nearly 30 years, and Ayton was being praised for his integral role in helping the franchise get there.

But after a second-round exit against the Mavericks thanks to a blowout loss in Game 7 — Ayton was benched for most of that second half — the future of the 2018 No. 1 pick is unclear.

Will Phoenix agree to a sign-and-trade deal with Ayton to reshape the roster and move on from him? Or will he sign an offer sheet elsewhere that would likely lead to the Suns matching?

play2:00

Jalen Brunson steps up with 41 points to lead the Mavericks to a 110-104 win and even the series in Luka Doncic’s absence.

7. What will Zach LaVine, Bradley Beal and Jalen Brunson do?

The three guards in their mid to late 20s will be unrestricted free agents next month.

LaVine is coming off knee surgery this offseason but is likely to have his choice of max contract offers — though a return to the Chicago Bulls, who traded for him five years ago, seems the most likely outcome. The odds are that Beal will make a similar decision and re-sign with the Washington Wizards once he opts out of the final year of his contract between now and June 30.

The more interesting situation lies in Dallas, where Brunson — a critical part of the Mavericks’ run to the Western Conference finals — will be an unrestricted free agent at 25 years old. After agreeing to a trade for Christian Wood last week, a deal with Brunson could push the Mavericks deep into the luxury tax.

The New York Knicksa team to which Brunson has many ties, including his father, Rick, who was hired to Tom Thibodeau’s coaching staff this offseason — could make a healthy offer to lure him away. So could the Detroit Pistons, who would provide an intriguing fit for him next to last year’s No. 1 pick, Cade Cunningham.

8. How will the top of the NBA draft shake out?

The top three picks in this year’s draft, per ESPN’s Jonathan Givony, are projected to be Auburn’s Jabari Smith, Gonzaga’s Chet Holmgren and Duke’s Paolo Banchero. The order, however, remains a bit unclear.

Get access to exclusive original series, premium articles from our NBA insiders, the full 30 for 30 library and more. Sign up now to unlock everything ESPN+ has to offer.

Givony projects Smith to be the Magic’s selection at the top, followed by Holmgren going second to the Oklahoma City Thunder and Banchero going third to the Houston Rockets.

After the top three, things get unpredictable in a hurry. The Sacramento Kings, Detroit Pistons, Indiana Pacers, Portland Trail Blazers and New Orleans Pelicans have the next five selections.

9. What will the combo guard market look like in free agency?

One of the more intriguing aspects of free agency is how four fairly similar players, restricted free agents Anfernee Simons (Portland) and Collin Sexton (Cleveland Cavaliers) and extension candidates Poole (Golden State) and Tyler Herro (Miami Heat), wind up being paid. All four are explosive offensive players with, shall we say, questionable defensive abilities.

Simons is likely to stay in Portland, particularly after CJ McCollum was dealt midseason to clear a spot next to Damian Lillard for him. Sexton’s free agency will be interesting, as he missed virtually the entire season after undergoing meniscus surgery — and Cleveland already has lots of money on its books moving forward.

Both Poole and Herro will be fascinating extension candidates, as they both have played big parts in Finals runs — Poole in Golden State’s title run this year, and Herro helping Miami make the Finals two years ago.

play1:09

Marcus Spears breaks down why Zion Williamson can be a cornerstone for the Pelicans if his commitment level is high.

10. How many of the top players in the 2019 draft class will be extended right away?

The Memphis Grizzlies and Ja Morant will all but certainly agree to a max contract extension at the start of free agency. But three of the other top five picks in the 2019 NBA draft — Zion Williamson (New Orleans Pelicans), RJ Barrett (New York) and Darius Garland (Cleveland) could have slightly more complex negotiations.

Both Williamson and Pelicans vice president of basketball operations David Griffin have talked about re-signing with New Orleans, but after playing a combined 85 games across his first three NBA seasons — including zero in 2021-22 — there could be some negotiating surrounding potential guarantees in the deal as protections for New Orleans moving forward.

Barrett could become the first Knick to be extended off his rookie contract since Charlie Ward in 1999. Despite Barrett making improvements across his first three seasons, it could be a complicated negotiation ahead for both sides, particularly if Barrett is looking for something close to a max extension.

Garland, on the other hand, will be looking for something in that range after a breakout third season that saw him make his first All-Star Game and finish third in Most Improved Player voting.

Read More

Lakers’ changes, Utah turmoil and Kyrie’s contract: NBA’s offseason in full effecton June 20, 2022 at 9:49 pm Read More »

Sources: Suns to hire Cato as assistant GM, VPon June 20, 2022 at 7:40 pm

The Phoenix Suns are hiring the NBA’s Morgan Cato as assistant general manager and vice president of basketball operations, making her one of the NBA’s highest-ranking women in a league front office, sources told ESPN.

Cato — who’ll also become the first woman of color to hold the title of assistant GM — will report to GM James Jones and work with coach Monty Williams on several fronts, including the leadership and strategy related to coaching development, player engagement and front office personnel operations, sources said.

Cato spent the past decade working for the NBA in New York under president of league operations Byron Spruell. Her roles there included several strategic initiatives that targeted the growth of the game throughout the NBA and world, including officiating development, the launch of the Basketball Africa League and the global basketball talent pipeline.

The Suns were a league-best 64-18 this past season before losing to the Dallas Mavericks in the Western Conference semifinals.

Read More

Sources: Suns to hire Cato as assistant GM, VPon June 20, 2022 at 7:40 pm Read More »

Magic still evaluating all options with No. 1 pickon June 20, 2022 at 6:27 pm

ORLANDO, Fla. — College basketball season ended almost three months ago, the NBA draft lottery was more than a month ago and the draft itself is later this week.

Seems like the process should be winding down.

Orlando Magic president Jeff Weltman sees it differently.

“I tell you, it’s still early in the process,” Weltman said Monday.

Translated: The Magic haven’t decided yet what they’ll do on Thursday night when the draft rolls around and they have the No. 1 pick. Other teams have called to gauge what the asking price would be if they want to trade for that selection, and the Magic have evaluated all the top candidates.

But Weltman sees no reason to decide anything before it’s absolutely necessary, especially given the opportunity that Orlando has by holding this No. 1 pick.

2 Related

“Dialogue is always ongoing,” Weltman said. “But most importantly, we get to do what we want. That’s the real benefit of having the No. 1 pick.”

The top candidates for the pick are well-known: Auburn’s Jabari Smith Jr. worked out for Orlando earlier this month, Gonzaga’s Chet Holmgren met with the Magic for multiple days last week and Duke’s Paolo Banchero has been working out with former Magic guard Mike Miller.

Weltman wouldn’t say that those are the only three candidates Orlando would consider at No. 1.

“It’s confirmed that there are a lot of talented players at the top of this draft, that’s for sure,” Weltman said.

This is the fourth time that Orlando will be making the No. 1 pick. The Magic took Shaquille O’Neal with the top selection in 1992. Chris Webber was the No. 1 pick by Orlando in 1993, and he got traded that same night for Penny Hardaway and a package of future picks that were eventually turned into Vince Carter and, later, Miller. And in 2004, the Magic selected Dwight Howard with the first pick.

The No. 1 pick on Thursday will join a young core in Orlando that already includes 2017 top pick Markelle Fultz, a pair of top-eight picks from the 2021 draft in Franz Wagner and Jalen Suggs, and Cole Anthony — the No. 15 pick in the 2020 draft.

Orlando also has the No. 6 picks from the 2017 and 2018 draft, Jonathan Isaac and Mo Bamba. It’s possible that when next season starts Orlando could have as many as six lottery picks, nine top-16 selections and 12 first-rounders on its roster.

This is all part of the challenge for the Magic — who also have the No. 32 and No. 35 picks this year — going into Thursday: Finding more youth that fits with the current core, finding ways to be better next season and sustainably better for years to come.

“We do want to get better, but not at the expense of rushing back to mediocrity,” Weltman said. “And we do want to have something sustainable. But you have to elevate the standard to do that. You can’t just stay at the basement level, you know, interminably. So those are conversations that we’re having, which players do that for us.”

Read More

Magic still evaluating all options with No. 1 pickon June 20, 2022 at 6:27 pm Read More »

Look out, NBA: Golden State has no plans of slowing down, thanks to young coreon June 20, 2022 at 5:44 pm

PRACTICE BEFORE GAME 2 of the NBA Finals had not begun yet but rookies Jonathan Kuminga and Moses Moody took a moment on the Golden State Warriors bench to soak up the rare atmosphere inside Chase Center.

Everywhere their young eyes turned, there was a not-so-subtle reminder of exactly where they were. Flashing repeatedly on the gigantic big screen, on the LED board that wraps around the arena, on the scorer’s table and even on the seats they were sitting in, the NBA Finals cursive-script logo and Larry O’Brien Trophy were impossible to miss.

“What do you think?” Kuminga asked Moody as they looked at the Finals signage.

“What do you think when it’s us running this team one day?”

While Stephen Curry, Klay Thompson and Draymond Green were fortifying the Golden State dynasty by winning their fourth championship in eight years and defeating the Boston Celtics, the Warriors were also doing something that no champion in recent memory has done. As coach Steve Kerr put it, the Warriors were also “raising” two 2021 NBA lottery picks during this title run and hoping the championship masterclass Kerr and his Big Three delivered each day of their quest left a permanent imprint on the pair.

2 Related

“They’re going to have to [eventually] chart their own course, and fight their own fight,” said Bob Myers, the Warriors’ president of basketball operations. “They’re lucky that they get to see what it looks like.

“Steph, Klay and Draymond never got this advanced kind of scouting on what the Finals is and the playoffs. They had to go through it and find a path. This is why it’s huge for young guys to just taste it, see it and hopefully crave it.”

Kuminga and Moody will be parading down Market Street in San Francisco with the Larry O’Brien Trophy during Monday’s Warriors championship parade, nearly a year after they were drafted.

Kuminga and Moody are the first rookie lottery-pick teammates to play in the NBA Finals, and they are the youngest pair of teammates to win a championship, according to the Elias Sports Bureau.

Add on 2020 No. 2 overall pick James Wiseman — who missed this past season because of a knee injury, though Myers says he is expected to go through contact soon and participate in next month’s summer league — and Golden State returns a trio of lottery picks in their third season or less for the title defense.

The tradeoff of going through the misery of losing Thompson to two devastating injuries and Curry to a wrist injury, enduring 50 losses in 2019-20 and not making the playoffs for two straight seasons is a championship core and a new generation of lottery talent to groom in Wiseman, Kuminga and Moody. Along with 23-year-old Jordan Poole, the young players will push for more significant roles next season.

Green had his doubts earlier this past season about whether this was the recipe for another championship: a combination of experienced vets and young first-round picks to develop.

“When you look around at how championship teams have historically been built, unless it is a super young team like the Warriors early on that had veterans around us, then you just really haven’t seen it before,” Green said. “Historically, we just hadn’t seen it work.”

Golden State resisted the urge to trade away its future to add more experience after it started the season 27-6, and the Warriors made it back to the NBA mountaintop again. While most defending champs have to find creative ways to keep key players and improve, the Warriors next season will boast a pair of homegrown lottery picks who enter their second year with invaluable playoff and Finals experience, no matter how little they played.

Now, the Warriors’ championship DNA also flows through Kuminga and Moody.

“Most people spend their career chasing that,” Green said. “And worried like, I need to get to this team, I need to be around these guys, we need that coach. If you are not a loser, which we have a bunch of come through this league, then you worry about that your entire career.

“For them to not have that worry moving forward, like you already have that stamp of ‘I’m a champion.’ Now everything you do from there, you can do it from a different space. You are not chasing anything or really wanting for that, which some people never get.”

play1:00

Relive the top moments from every game of the 2022 NBA Finals as the Warriors defeat the Celtics to reclaim their spot atop the NBA.

THE INTOXICATING AROMA of champagne can be detected down the hallway from the visitor’s locker room in TD Garden after Golden State’s triumph over Boston in six games. Kuminga and Moody are soaking in something no rookie lottery-pick teammates have ever experienced.

As Warriors players go to take professional photos with the championship trophy, Kuminga, 19, holds it like a baby, nestling it into his left arm. Moody, who turned 20 last month, holds the greatest prize in the sport like an expensive guitar.

The Warriors’ grizzled veterans hope that this moment isn’t lost on the duo they’ve been trying to raise all season long into NBA champs.

“They’re 19-year-old kids,” said Andre Iguodala, who started his pro career in 2004, two years after Kuminga was born. “They’re supposed to be on college campuses learning about themselves, who they are as people, what they like instead of these guys making five-plus million dollars a year, got all the pressures, the madness of having money and being in the spotlight. You can become jaded. You can start taking these things for granted.”

This was Iguodala’s seventh NBA Finals. And he made sure to tell Kuminga and Moody to record this moment, even “take pictures.”

Articulating these tips to teens without sounding like a parent can be tricky at times with the generational gap.

Green noticed earlier this past season that every time he saw Kuminga walk by him, the teen would “start laughing.”

“I’m 32 and he’s 19,” Green said. “And what I like to do may just not be cool to him. … Imagine when you see one of the old heads doing something. … You’re really laughing at the fact that that’s so old-school that it’s funny.

“That’s how I feel like he was looking at me, like, ‘Dude, you’re just old. You move old. You look old.'”

Kuminga — a raw forward from Congo drafted No. 7 overall after playing one season with the G League Ignite — has had to be more patient than some of his lottery peers. Kuminga played a total of eight minutes in the NBA Finals. He averaged 9.3 points in 70 regular-season games and 5.2 PPG in 16 playoff appearances.

The Golden State Warriors beat the Boston Celtics 4-2 in the Finals.

GAME 6: GS 103, BOS 90
o Curry captures first Finals MVP
o Stars hit social media to congratulate Warriors

GAME 5: GS 104, BOS 94
o Whatever it takes: How Warriors won G5
o Warriors are suffocating C’s game plan

GAME 4: GS 107, BOS 97
o Curry’s epic game changes series
o Celtics, Warriors need their big men

GAME 3: BOS 116, GS 100
o C’s use size, quickness to regain control
o Curry in unfamiliar underdog territory

GAME 2: GS 107, BOS 88
o Steph was a problem for the Celtics
o C’s lament more third-quarter woes

GAME 1: BOS 120, GS 108
o Boston’s win one year in the making
o Celtics beat Dubs at their game

“I learned that he was a freakish athlete,” said Warriors center Kevon Looney, who will be a free agent along with Gary Payton II and Otto Porter Jr. “He’s one of those different type of athletes … like the best athletes in the NBA, Andre at his peak, guys like LeBron.”

The 6-foot-7 forward started 12 games as a rookie and played some key playoff minutes in the second round against Memphis when Green was ejected in Game 1 for a flagrant foul 2, and in Game 2 when Green needed stitches after being hit in the eye. Kuminga also scored 18 points in Golden State’s blowout win over Memphis in Game 3 and 17 points twice in blowout losses against Memphis and Dallas, respectively.

While other rookies such as Orlando’s Franz Wagner (No. 8 overall) and Sacramento’s Davion Mitchell (No. 9 overall) logged more minutes in the regular season on non-contenders, Kuminga had to bide his time and learn.

But unlike the other lottery picks, Kuminga and Moody now have championship experience.

“I never really worry about whether we’re playing, not playing,” Kuminga said. “As long as I’m still here, learning, getting better every day. When my moments get called, I know I’ll be ready. … Everybody here [is] just helping me, way more than dudes [other rookies around the league] are, wherever they are right now.”

Moody, who was drafted after one season at Arkansas, is the more polished rookie. But the shooting guard is still learning from two of the greatest shooters in the game in Curry and Thompson. He also has the emerging Poole ahead of him.

Still, Kerr played the 6-6 Moody in the Western Conference finals against Dallas, and the guard’s 65 minutes were the most in a conference finals by a teenager since Kobe Bryant’s 87 minutes in 1998. Like Kuminga, Moody played sparingly in the Finals, seeing a total of 10 minutes. During the regular season, Moody averaged 4.4 points in 52 games.

Curry, though, repeatedly lauded Moody’s approach and habits, noticing how the rookie works like an experienced veteran every day with the same intensity no matter how little playing time he was getting.

“It’s amazing to see the result in just one short year,” Curry said. “Him coming into a playoff series in the middle of the Western Conference finals and making an impact.

“That’s the stuff you’ll probably look back on and be really proud of because there’s a lot of instability around this league. Not everybody has the infrastructure and the presence to bring guys along like that.”

IN THE MIDDLE section of the Warriors’ team plane on their flight to Boston for Game 6, Myers saw Curry, Thompson and Green sitting together at the same table, laughing and joking.

Myers couldn’t help but appreciate the rarity of the moment. A trio of All-Stars, still enjoying each other’s company after a decade on the same team.

“I think they see it,” Myers said of Kuminga, Moody and Wiseman. “I hope it registers. I’m sure it does, but it might register differently with each of them. They’re all different too. Just like Steph, Klay and Draymond are different. … It’s almost like a band, that the personalities complement each other and that’s how you stay willing to sit next to each other when you don’t have to.”

Perhaps Kuminga and Moody will produce the same championship hits as their predecessors once it is their turn. All they know is, they are world champions already.

“If you give a pig a pancake, then he wants some syrup,” Moody said. “Once I get the championship, you’re going to want something else.”

As for when their turn will come to run the Warriors, Kuminga and Moody will have to wait before the Curry, Thompson and Green era is ready to hand the reins over.

“Eventually, years from now, they’ll pass the baton and see what the other guys can do,” Myers said.

“But it’s a tough act to follow, I’ll tell them that. It’s about as tough of an act to follow as you can find, whoever’s next in line to try to carry that baton.”

Read More

Look out, NBA: Golden State has no plans of slowing down, thanks to young coreon June 20, 2022 at 5:44 pm Read More »

Thoughts on living in tents: under an Archer Avenue viaduct…in Chicago parks… that one time in Idaho…and that time in California’s Steinbeck Country

Thoughts on living in tents: under an Archer Avenue viaduct…in Chicago parks… that one time in Idaho…and that time in California’s Steinbeck Country

Sometimes, my former journalism students from Columbia College call me when they’re working on stories about the South Loop, where I’ve lived for almost 30 years.

One call will always stand out. A young man rung me up to ask about homelessness in the neighborhood. He wanted to pick my brain on everything from the prevalence of living in the street to the efficacy of such a lifestyle in my neighborhood.

At some point, I told him I didn’t advise under any circumstances that anyone live under the stars, without bathroom facilities, if for no other reason than they may be prey to people who might try to abuse or even kill them. Not that a roof over one’s head are certain to prevent that–but he knew what I meant.

Why make it easy for drunks, sadists or madmen to have a little fun with a sorry soul, who may be mentally ill, sorrowfully addicted or hopelessly without resources and support of any kind.

I told him there were plenty of places out there that take people in–from churches to do-gooder shelters to government-sponsored programs–to get people off the streets.

And I said I thought it was terrible that so much housing gets torn down and ends up as a rubbly lots in downtrodden neighborhoods, when these same groups and government programs could rehabilitate them and provide decent housing for those who need it, thereby helping the neighborhoods and the homeless at the same time.

“I’d hate to see the city turn into a bunch of tent cities,” I said. And he got very quiet and I could tell he probably thought I was a little too much a law-and-order right winger who just didn’t get it.

I got it, alright.

And it’s happened. We have a bunch of tent cities around town that are disgraceful. They aren’t Woodstocks, Haight-Ashburys or Amsterdam in it’s drugs-wow! heyday. They are horrid symbols of how all the institutions–governmental and nongovernmental–have failed. Completely and miserably. Whatever the cause, I can’t buy that it’s here to stay. No one is doing much about it, but maybe if we elect the right people, that will change.

Or maybe not.

When there are potholes to fix, CTA routes that don’t run right and gang shootings downtown, everyone concentrates on that.

And human beings living and doing all their business in the streets? Living in a tent in Chicago. Is it freedom they seek?

No one lives anywhere in total freedom. And a tent under a viaduct on Archer Avenue, for instance, isn’t really living free. I’s not free from pollution, knifings, filth and communicable disease.

A while back, I was walking down archer when I got to a long stretch of a viaduct with high sidewalks on both sides. Problem was, it was impossible to get down either sidewalk, packed as they were with tents that touched each other and left no room to walk. I considered walking in the street but it was very dark down under and cars might not see me. And it would be impossible to vacillate between street and sidewalk when cars came, due to the aforementioned sidewalk height. So I retraced my steps and and took the long way.

Granted, not a big problem in comparison to being homeless, sick, drug addicted or mentally ill with no treatment in sight and laying about under a bridge, albeit in a tent.

But why do we allow this anywhere in this City–or in this Country? Those empty lots as a result of the torn down houses that the city owns? Why can’t they be designated as campgrounds, with toilets, water and group visits that bring food and offers of help of various kinds?

I’ve heard of such attempts but unless there’s room for all–and everyone is forced to go there rather than on a sidewalk, they aren’t working. Some will say that making people go there robs them of their freedom.

But if I didn’t pay my real estate taxes, I’d have my house taken away. There are rules that govern any lifestyle. Rent not paid: you are out on the street. Income taxes not paid, cable bill not paid, condo assessments not paid, I could go on and on. There are unlikeable consequnces.

Ultimately we are all doing things that if we stop doing them, there are grave consequences. and no group of people, no matter how downtrodden and poor, should escape at least some responsibility. And camping in a lot provided for that is not a heavy consequence. So the powers that be should provide them. No living on the sidewalk allowed, should be a hard and fast rule.

Recently, my mother, brother, daughter and I took a ride to the neighborhood I grew up in. We made a stop at Margate Park, where I spent much of my childhood–inside the field house in the gym and in the arts and crafts room with Mr. Myers, the art teacher who provided us with all sorts of plaster figurines that we could paint to our hearts’ content.

I also learned to swim “at Margate.” Actually, we put on our suits and walked over to the Boys’ Club a few blocks away to use their pool. We got our walking and swimming in–in one fell swoop.

And nothing beat Day Camp in Margate Park. Doing all sorts of stuff in the park behind my beloved field house. I can still taste (and smell) my daily bologna sandwich on Wonder bread that my mom packed for me every day to eat outside at lunchtime. How I loved those sandwiches, although these days I wouldn’t touch one with a 10-foot pole.

What we found that day when we visited the park was a tent city that covered every square foot of the park surrounding the field house, which was closed.

So where did everyone use the bathroom? If they used the grass, no one would be far from other people’s excrement–since the tents were wall to wall. I saw no portable toilets or potable water sources. Did good-hearted souls come during the day or at night with provisions and other accoutrements of comfort?

All I could think of was the current crop of day campers like I used to be. There was no room to sit with fellow campers and eat a bologna sandwich. Maybe picnics these days are held inside or off-site or not held at all. Where do the kids from the neighborhood play? There wasn’t an inch of space for kids to do anything from what we saw, staring at the volume of tents.

And yet…. I find myself remembering one of the best times in my life, more often than not. The summertime driving trips I took with my first husband Tim in the mid-1970s out west–always with the same destination: to visit his father, who headed the town of Torrance, California. We took a different route in our red 1967 Camaro that my mom gave me when I came home from college–and she decided to share a car with my dad a few years before.

It had a standard transmission with a gear shift adjacent to the steering wheel. And Tim and I were always armed with Mobil Travel Guides, so we didn’t miss any sites along the way.

One year, a couple we’d just met through our work–we were both telephone installers for Illinois Bell butI can’t remember which one of us installed their phones–invited us over for dinner.

He had been French actress Jeanne Moreau‘s boyfriend before she married William Friedkin–and before our host married his wife. And we had a wonderful time listening to their stories.

When we were leaving, we told them about our pending summer sojourn, and they insisted we take their little orange pup tent with us; for those times it was hard to get a place to stay, we could always get a spot in a campground or in a National Park.

We loved that idea, just in case. And we ended up spending many a night in it, just as they suggested, in wonderful campgrounds of all kinds

Once, we were in Idaho, and we ran into some sort of a festival and couldn’t get a campground–or a motel–but there were people who let those of us who were stranded camp in their front yard and backyard–and use their bathroom. Lovely hospitality and lovely people, I must say.

And then there was another time in California, in John Steinbeck country, you might say, where we were exhausted and couldn’t find anywhere to stay. No motels, no openminded homeowners anywhere. Nothing.

In our groggy state, we did spot a very darling city park in the heart of a very nice town, the name of which I don’t remeber. I think the park was called “Steinbeck Park,” however. We looked at each other, raised our eyebrows and thought, why not?

We pitched our pup tent in the park. No one was around. It was the middle of the night and we slept soundly, safely and very comfortably, our car parked nearby. Where (or even if) we used a bathroom, I can’t remember. There may have been a public restroom nearby, open all hours in the park, but I don’t know. I have no memory of that.

When we woke up it was sunny and we drove on and stopped for breakfast somewhere.

What I do remember, though,very vividly is the complete feeling of independence, self-reliance, freedom and strength I had that day, a feeling that I call up every once in a while to see me through whatever.

That we could drive to a strange town, pitch a tent in the park, find comfort…. And everything turned out fine. No bad guys, no cops, no varmints, no interruptions at all.

When we got back to Chicago, we had that couple over to our house for dinner, to thank them for the use of their wonderful little orange tent and how it made us feel ever the more self-reliant and relaxed that we had it.

When we gave it back, it had a tiny hole in it. I thought maybe I shouldn’t even mention it. But I did. But they didn’t care and didn’t even check it out.

And I wasn’t sure if they did look for it, that they’d be able to spot it. It was so minuscule.

And in my memory it gets smaller all the time, in comparison to what that little orange tent ultimately gave me, which gets bigger all the time: a feeling of freedom and a lack of concern that has stuck with me ever since.

Filed under:
Uncategorized

Advertisement:
Advertisement:

Welcome to ChicagoNow.

Meet
our bloggers,

post comments, or

pitch your blog idea.

Meet The Blogger

Bonnie McGrath

Bonnie McGrath is an award-winning long time Chicago journalist, columnist, blogger and lawyer who lives in the South Loop. You can contact her at [email protected]

Subscribe by Email

Completely spam free, opt out any time.

Recent posts

Thoughts on living in tents: under an Archer Avenue viaduct…in Chicago parks… that one time in Idaho…and that time in California’s Steinbeck Country »

Posted today at 10:30 am

Memorial Day: This one’s for you, Argentina “Tina” Jones, 1919-2022: »

Posted May 30, 2022 at 10:16 am

It’s been 35 years since Harold Washington ruled the City–and I’ll never forget the day he died. »

Posted April 18, 2022 at 11:09 am

How come the US Government can only bring half the country’s poor children out of poverty? »

Posted March 30, 2022 at 10:54 am

The day Gloria Steinem came to my house and I couldn’t think of a thing to say »

Posted February 28, 2022 at 1:52 pm

Monthly Archives

June 2022
May 2022
April 2022
March 2022
February 2022
January 2022
November 2021
October 2021
September 2021
August 2021
July 2021
June 2021
May 2021
April 2021
March 2021
February 2021
December 2020
November 2020
October 2020
September 2020
August 2020
July 2020
June 2020
May 2020
April 2020
March 2020
February 2020
January 2020
December 2019
November 2019
October 2019
September 2019
August 2019
July 2019
June 2019
May 2019
April 2019
March 2019
February 2019
January 2019
December 2018
November 2018
October 2018
September 2018
August 2018
July 2018
June 2018
May 2018
April 2018
March 2018
February 2018
January 2018
December 2017
November 2017
October 2017
September 2017
August 2017
July 2017
June 2017
May 2017
April 2017
March 2017
February 2017
December 2016
November 2016
October 2016
September 2016
August 2016
June 2016
May 2016
March 2016
February 2016
January 2016
December 2015
November 2015
September 2015
August 2015
July 2015
June 2015
May 2015
April 2015
March 2015
February 2015
January 2015
December 2014
November 2014
October 2014
September 2014
August 2014
July 2014
June 2014
May 2014
April 2014
March 2014
February 2014
January 2014
December 2013
November 2013
October 2013
September 2013
August 2013
July 2013
June 2013
May 2013
April 2013
March 2013
February 2013
January 2013

Blogroll

Mom, I Think I’m Poignant!’s favorite blogs

4 Broads Dish/Dee Dee Lynch Silverstein
Chat With Pat/Pat Deeb
Chicago Architecture/Bill Motchan
For What it’s Worth/Jack Leyhane
JaneswalkCHICAGO/Martha Frish
Joan Chandler Communications/Joan Chandler
LoriLevinLaw/Lori G. Levin
Me & My Shadow A Life in Chicago/Frances Archer
nancy bishop’s journal/Nancy Bishop
Opinionated Woman/Judy Marcus
South Loop Connection/Stephen Reginald
Sugar Buzz Chicago/Judy Marcus
The Daily Blagica/Blagica Bottigliero
The Rookie Widow/Elaine Soloway
The Story of a House/William Tyre

Categories

Uncategorized (243)
Life in the South Loop (179)
I Can’t Stand Rahm (14)

Latest on ChicagoNow

Thoughts on living in tents: under an Archer Avenue viaduct…in Chicago parks… that one time in Idaho…and that time in California’s Steinbeck Country

from Mom, I Think I’m Poignant! by Bonnie McGrath
posted today at 10:30 am

Daily Cubs Minors Recap: David Bote and the I-Cubs bullpen lead team to win; Jensen looks sharp; Big days for Roederer and Stambaugh; Made doubles and homers

from Cubs Den by Michael Ernst
posted today at 9:33 am

Grumble and then move on

from Retired in Chicago by Marianne Goss
posted today at 8:11 am

Juneteenth National Independence Day

from The Chicago Board of Tirade by Bob Abrams
posted Sunday at 4:12 pm

Daily Cubs Minors Recap: Add another to list of big days for Alcántara, Slaughter, and Young; Schlaffer continues June resurgence; Mora hits inside the park HR; Clarke strikes out eight

from Cubs Den by Michael Ernst
posted Sunday at 10:57 am

Read these ChicagoNow blogs

Cubs Den

Chicago Cubs news and comprehensive blog, featuring old school baseball writing combined with the latest statistical trends

Pets in need of homes

Pets available for adoption in the Chicago area

Hammervision

It’s like the couch potato version of Mr. and Mrs. Smith.
Advertisement:

About ChicagoNow

FAQs

Advertise

Recent posts RSS

Privacy policy (Updated)

Comment policy

Terms of service

Chicago Tribune Archives

Do not sell my personal info

©2022 CTMG – A Chicago Tribune website –
Crafted by the News Apps team

Read More

Thoughts on living in tents: under an Archer Avenue viaduct…in Chicago parks… that one time in Idaho…and that time in California’s Steinbeck Country Read More »