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2 in custody after crashing into fire hydrant following armed carjacking on North Side

Two people were in custody after crashing into a fire hydrant following an armed carjacking early Friday on the North Side.

A ride-share driver was sitting in his Hyundai sedan in the 1400 block of West Foster Avenue about 12:30 a.m. when two 18-year-old men forced him out of the car at gunpoint, Chicago police said.

The driver, a 65-year-old man, complied and the men drove west before crashing into the hydrant less than two miles away in the 1600 block of West Thorndale Avenue, police said.

The men were placed into custody and a weapon was recovered.

Charges were pending.

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Jabari, Chet or Paolo: Which rookie will have immediate NBA success?on June 24, 2022 at 7:43 am

With the No. 1 pick in the 2022 NBA draft, the Orlando Magic selected Duke forward Paolo Banchero. The move came as something of a surprise, given that Banchero never met with the Magic and the consensus around the league was that Auburn’s Jabari Smith Jr. would be headed to Orlando.

Instead, it was Banchero who heard his name called first. Gonzaga center Chet Holmgren went No. 2 to the Oklahoma City Thunder, while the Houston Rockets took Smith with the No. 3 overall pick. The Sacramento Kings drafted Iowa forward Keegan Murray at No. 4 and the Detroit Pistons rounded out the top five by selecting Purdue guard Jaden Ivey.

Our NBA Insiders break down the biggest draft-night takeaways, including which of the top three picks will have the best rookie season. And what about the major deals that went down on Thursday?

The Rockets and Pistons began making moves days before drafting Smith and Ivey, respectively. The Rockets traded center Christian Wood to the Dallas Mavericks for the No. 26 pick and four players on expiring contracts. The Pistons traded forward Jerami Grant to the Portland Trail Blazers for the No. 36 pick, as well as future draft picks.

The trades continued to pour in through draft night, with both the Pistons and Rockets making additional deals. In one of the biggest moves of the night, Detroit acquired the Charlotte Hornets’ No. 13 overall pick, Jalen Duren, in a three-way deal that also included the New York Knicks — who sent point guard Kemba Walker to the Motor City.

The Philadelphia 76ers got in on the trade action, sending swingman Danny Green and the No. 23 overall pick to the Memphis Grizzlies for guard De’Anthony Melton.

Which pre-draft or draft-night trade will have the biggest impact? Which of the top three picks is best suited for immediate success next season? Which teams underperformed on draft night? Our experts answer the biggest questions and make their bold predictions following a night in which 58 players heard their names called.

MORE: NBA draft trade grades | NBA trade tracker

1. Which of the top three picks is best suited for immediate success as a rookie?

Kevin Pelton: I like Smith’s combination of readiness and fit. Banchero will likely be asked to create a lot of offense for a limited Orlando team, something Houston doesn’t need as much with Jalen Green as a go-to guy. Plus, I expect the Rockets to push Smith’s long 2s off the dribble beyond the 3-point line, improving his efficiency.

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Andrew Lopez: Banchero slots in nicely in Orlando, surrounded by Franz Wagner and Wendell Carter Jr. in the frontcourt. The 6-foot-10 Banchero can play at the power forward spot and use his offensive skills that made him the surprise No. 1 pick. As ESPN Stats & Information points out, Banchero is one of two freshmen with 600 points, 300 rebounds and 100 assists in a season over the past 30 Division I seasons, along with Ben Simmons (LSU). Banchero should fit right in with Orlando’s young core.

Tim Bontemps: While all three picks have a chance to be really good, Banchero is set up to be the clear favorite for NBA Rookie of the Year. He already was arguably the most NBA-ready player in the class and is going to an Orlando team desperately in need of offense. He should have the ball in his hands all the time, and is a near-lock to put up big numbers if he stays healthy.

Jeff Borzello: Banchero would have been my answer had he gone No. 3 as originally anticipated — and he’s still my answer now that he’s going to Orlando as the first pick. The Magic have a number of backcourt playmakers who are more effective with the ball in their hands, but Banchero is good enough to be a focal point in the half-court from the start. He can score at all three levels, he’s an excellent passer for someone his size and he is a capable outside shooter — he shot 52.6% from 3 in the NCAA tournament. He was the most college-ready freshman last fall, and he’s the most NBA-ready draft pick now.

Israel Gutierrez: Banchero, and it has nothing to do with where he was drafted. It’s because he’s best suited to defend his position at the moment, which should keep him on the floor long enough to record strong numbers. Smith has the ability to guard multiple positions and could potentially be reliable as a defender who you can trust on a switch. Much like Holmgren, however, Smith’s thin frame will be something NBA bigs will take full advantage of next season.

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The Seattle/Oklahoma City franchise has had a history of selecting historic players in the first round like Gary Payton and Kevin Durant. Can they replicate their success in 2022?

2. Which team impressed you most in this year’s draft?

Lopez: Oklahoma City identified the players they wanted and went after them. After Orlando shook up the draft at No. 1, the Thunder stayed true to what they wanted by taking Holmgren at No. 2. Instead of waiting for Ousmane Dieng to slide to them at No. 12, they sent three future first-round picks to New York for Dieng, and then drafted Santa Clara’s Jalen Williams with their No. 12 pick. With the No. 34 pick, the Thunder did their coaches, PR staff and fans no favors by drafting Arkansas’ Jaylin Williams — which surely won’t confuse anyone.

Gutierrez: Detroit. After moving Jerami Grant before the draft, the Pistons made it clear they would be building around a young core — and maybe DeAndre Ayton in free agency. If that’s the case, a guard combination of Cade Cunningham, Saddiq Bey and No. 5 pick Jaden Ivey is a good place to start. Ivey brings some of the flair that the more reserved Cunningham doesn’t. If they can find a way to complement each other, Ivey and Cunningham could be a lethal combination in a few seasons. Jalen Duren was also a necessary pickup for a team that needs toughness up front.

Bontemps: For Detroit to come away with Jaden Ivey and Jalen Duren is a pretty nice haul — especially since the Pistons only had to take on Kemba Walker and give up the future Milwaukee first-round pick from the Jerami Grant deal. Ivey has massive upside and could be a terrific fit alongside Cade Cunningham, while Duren adds athleticism and shot-blocking potential inside. Now, the Pistons have money to spend in free agency to continue to supplement their young core, too.

Borzello: It feels like this could be the answer nearly every year, but it’s hard not to like what the Spurs did with their three first-rounders. Jeremy Sochan’s stock has skyrocketed in the past year, and he ended up going at No. 9. The Poland native played his entire freshman year at 18 years old and showed flashes of how high his ceiling can be. He can guard multiple positions, is comfortable taking shots from the perimeter — despite his low shooting percentage — and showed an ability to buy into a team culture. The Spurs then landed two more young guards with potential in Malaki Branham and Blake Wesley. Branham earned lottery buzz early on in the draft process after a terrific second half at Ohio State, and his offensive ability should translate immediately. Wesley was inconsistent as a freshman at Notre Dame, but he’s explosive and will have time to finetune his game.

Pelton: The Rockets tend to see things a lot like I do (both likely influenced by statistical draft projections), and for a second consecutive year they drafted one of the players I considered most underrated, adding LSU’s Tari Eason at No. 17 after drafting Alperen Sengun at No. 16 last year. Before that, Houston was positioned to take advantage of Smith’s surprising fall to No. 3. Later, the Rockets added Kentucky guard TyTy Washington Jr. with the 29th pick and banked a pair of future second-rounders in a trade down. All in all, I liked what Houston did.

3. Which team had the most underwhelming draft night?

Bontemps: What the Knicks did was simply confusing — for now. It legitimately took me an hour to methodically figure out all of the moves they made — which essentially turned into trading the No. 11 pick, four second-round picks and Walker, and getting back three future conditional first-round picks — none of them likely to be as good as the No. 11 pick. The Knicks do, however, now have the ability to shed a lot of salary moving forward, which could allow the Knicks to pursue players such as Brunson or Kyrie Irving in free agency. Until we see the full picture, this was just a confusing night for the Knicks and their fans.

Thursday, July 7
Rockets vs Magic, 10 p.m.
Blazers vs Pistons, 12 a.m.

Friday, July 8
Mavericks vs Bulls, 4 p.m.
Spurs vs Cavaliers, 5 p.m.
Hornets vs Pacers, 6 p.m.
Nets vs Bucks, 7 p.m.
Warriors vs Knicks, 8 p.m.
Nuggets vs Timberwolves, 9 p.m.
Suns vs Lakers, 10 p.m.

*All times Eastern

Lopez: For now, it’s the Knicks. New York started the night with the No. 11 pick and ended up sending out that pick, four second-round picks and Kemba Walker for three future first-round picks (protected 2023 picks from Detroit and Washington and a top-four protected Milwaukee first-rounder in 2025). Of the two 2023 picks, the Washington pick is lottery-protected and the Pistons pick is top-18 protected next year. It’s possible neither could move over. It does free up cap space for the Knicks this season, so if they pull off a deal for Jalen Brunson — or another guard — it all works out.

Pelton: I don’t particularly care for the fit of Wisconsin guard Johnny Davis with the Washington Wizards. Davis is most dangerous as a volume scorer off the dribble, so pairing him with a player capable of doing the same thing more efficiently — assuming the Wizards re-sign Bradley Beal, who can become an unrestricted free agent — doesn’t seem like a good use of the No. 10 pick.

Borzello: I don’t think there were any bad drafts, but the Thunder and Grizzlies raised some eyebrows with their first-round moves. Chet Holmgren was a no-brainer, but trading three first-round picks — all heavily protected — to the Knicks for Ousmane Dieng at No. 11 was unexpected. Taking Jalen Williams at No. 12 felt a bit early, even though Williams’ stock has continued to rise. As for the Grizzlies, both David Roddy and Jake LaRavia will be able to contribute thanks to their shooting and versatility, but both players felt a little early. Roddy didn’t have a great combine and it’s unclear how effective he’ll be defensively. LaRavia had a fantastic season at Wake Forest, but trading Nos. 22 and 29 to move up three spots for him was a surprise. Kennedy Chandler in the second round was a great value pick, though.

Gutierrez: The Hornets. It has not been the greatest of offseasons so far for Charlotte. After getting knocked out of the play-in for the second straight year, Miles Bridges found a dose of controversy with a social media post, and Golden State Warriors assistant Kenny Atkinson backed out of an agreement to be the next head coach. Then Thursday, the Hornets traded pick No. 13, a much-needed big man in Jalen Duren, to Detroit for a 2025 first-rounder. Huh?

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Check out highlights from Jabari Smith at Auburn as he gets ready for the NBA.

4. Which pre-draft or draft-night trade will have the biggest impact?

Borzello: I love everything the Rockets did over the past several days. Getting a first-round pick in the Christian Wood deal made a difference on Thursday. They nailed their three first-round picks and received two future second-round picks in the process. Smith should form a highly effective scoring duo with Jalen Green, and having Kevin Porter Jr. means Smith won’t have to shoulder a huge scoring load from Day 1. And then the Rockets added one of the best defensive players in Tari Eason at No. 17. After trading down from No. 26, landing TyTy Washington at No. 29 was a steal; he was considered a lottery pick all season and before a January ankle injury. Washington can make plays in pick-and-rolls and was a 40% 3-point shooter when healthy. The Rockets’ rebuild made huge strides this month.

Lopez: Philadelphia traded two players who were likely to have minimal impact next season — Colorado State forward David Roddy, whom they drafted with the No. 23 pick, and Danny Green, who suffered a torn ACL in the 2022 playoffs — for someone who can make an immediate contribution next season in De’Anthony Melton. The 24-year-old Melton averaged 10.8 points and 4.5 rebounds last season in Memphis, both career highs, as he found more minutes playing off the ball with the Grizzlies.

Bontemps: Depending on what the Knicks do, it could be that deal. But I’ll go with Philadelphia turning Danny Green and the No. 23 pick into De’Anthony Melton. Trading Green, who unfortunately is all but certain to miss the season with a knee injury, into a young, athletic wing player in Melton — who is a perfect fit as a defender next to James Harden and Tyrese Maxey — was a terrific piece of business by 76ers president of basketball operations Daryl Morey.

Pelton: The three-team deal between the Hornets, Knicks and Pistons has all sorts of fascinating implications for free agency. It moved New York a step closer to being able to make a big offer to Mavericks point guard Jalen Brunson, while giving Detroit Jalen Duren, a center who might take the Pistons out of the market for restricted free agent Deandre Ayton. Could the Pistons instead make a run at Charlotte’s restricted free agent, Miles Bridges? The Hornets may unwittingly have helped facilitate that.

Gutierrez: The Blazers can recover from an awful season to become a top-six seed in one year, especially with Grant, a healthy Damian Lillard and one more frontcourt upgrade. If Anfernee Simons can still produce with a healthy squad around him, that should keep this team competitive with the Denver Nuggets and Minnesota Timberwolves, at the very least.

5. My bold prediction is:

Lopez: Jabari Smith will win the Rookie of the Year award. I know I said Banchero is best suited for immediate success, but Smith should put up better numbers. Also, a draft-night slight should provide all the extra motivation for Smith to have a big season. Alongside 2021 rookies Jalen Green, Josh Christopher, Alperen Sengun and Usman Garuba, Smith will have a chance to grow and learn — and more importantly — get up shots. Houston is going through a complete rebuild right now and Smith should be able to shine.

Pelton: E.J. Liddell follows the footsteps of New Orleans Pelicans teammate Herb Jones by making the All-Rookie team as a second-round pick.

Gutierrez: Dyson Daniels will be a rotation player for a Pelicans team that finishes in the top four in the Western Conference. The No. 8 pick has the build and defensive ability to be an instant impact player, and he also has an IQ that should help on a balanced New Orleans roster.

Borzello: Jaden Hardy is one of the draft’s biggest impact players despite being picked in the second round. Less than a year ago, Hardy was projected as a top-three draft pick, one of the game-changers in this class. Then he had an up-and-down season with the G League Ignite, putting up impressive counting stats — 17.7 points — but shot 35.1% from the field and 26.9% from 3. At his best, Hardy has a case as one of the draft’s best pure scorers. In Dallas, he won’t have to do anything but score. With experienced ball handlers Luka Doncic and Spencer Dinwiddie, Hardy can just go out and be a shot-maker. It’s a great fit for him.

Bontemps: Shaedon Sharpe will make the Trail Blazers look good for taking him No. 7 overall someday. I don’t pretend to be Jonathan Givony, who does a terrific job with our draft stuff, but Sharpe has massive upside and the chance to be a big-time wing player. Portland was wise to take a big swing on him, rather than making more of a win-now move with that pick.

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Jabari, Chet or Paolo: Which rookie will have immediate NBA success?on June 24, 2022 at 7:43 am Read More »

Lakers pick Christie; adding Pippen, sources sayon June 24, 2022 at 4:02 am

The Los Angeles Lakers have traded into Thursday night’s NBA draft, acquiring the Orlando Magic‘s No. 35 for a future second-round pick and cash.

Orlando will receive the better of either the Lakers’ or Washington’s second-round pick (which is owed to Los Angeles) in 2028, the Magic announced.

The deal allows the Lakers to buy their way back into the draft after trading away both of its own picks. Los Angeles’ eighth overall pick belongs to New Orleans as part of the Pelicans’ mammoth haul from the trade of Anthony Davis, while the Lakers’ second-round pick was moved in that same multiteam deal to Washington before eventually ending up with San Antonio.

Orlando still holds the first and 32nd overall selections in Thursday’s draft.

The Lakers’ perpetual win-now mentality around LeBron James has left them without control of their own first-round pick for the fourth consecutive season, but their acquisition of this high-second-round pick will allow their strong scouting department to make a contribution to that quest.

The franchise has a solid record of drafting good players and signing quality undrafted talent over the past decade despite meager draft resources. The Lakers have picked up Kyle Kuzma, Ivica Zubac, Talen Horton-Tucker, Alex Caruso, Svi Mykhailiuk and Austin Reaves from the lower reaches of the draft pools over the past six years.

Los Angeles is in need of low-cost roster depth after finishing 33-49 and missing the play-in tournament this year. If Russell Westbrook exercises his $47 million player option, the Lakers will be above the salary cap from their commitments to James, Davis and Westbrook alone.

In another move, the Cleveland Cavaliers acquired the No. 49 pick from the Sacramento Kings in exchange for the rights to Sasha Vezenkov, it was announced.

Vezenkov, 26, was a first-team All-EuroLeague forward this season. He was the 57th pick in the 2017 NBA draft.

The Cavaliers now have four picks in Thursday night’s draft: Nos. 14, 39, 49 and 56.

After winning just 22 games in 2020-21, the Cavs went 44-38 last season under coach J.B. Bickerstaff and barely missed the playoffs. They made the play-in tournament but lost to Brooklyn and Atlanta. This year is the first time the Cavs haven’t drafted in the top five since 2018.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Lakers pick Christie; adding Pippen, sources sayon June 24, 2022 at 4:02 am Read More »

Chicago White Sox trade targets – 3 outfield options

The Chicago White Sox are having a subpar season. With a 33-35 record, this team isn’t playing well and has yet to pick up momentum to give the Minnesota Twins or the Cleveland Guardians any pressure. The lineup particularly has struggled this season, scoring only 4.28 runs per game and the front office needs to inject life into the batting order.

White Sox lose to the Orioles, 4-0
Just the second time the Sox offense has been shutout all season, despite reaching base 13 times, and flying out to the track roughly 57 times. Lenyn Sosa debuted, due to (minor) injury of course, and drew a walk.
Sox are 33-35

The trade deadline is a month away. While the team has multiple issues to address, the lineup has to be a priority. So, why should they try to acquire an outfielder? For a handful of reasons but one primary one will be to allow for a rotation in the outfield that constantly provides a strong bat in the lineup.

Eloy Jimenez has yet to return to the team and when he returns, it’s unclear what player the White Sox will be receiving. AJ Pollock is a viable option in the field but hasn’t provided the same power to the lineup. The White Sox pitching staff has been a pleasant surprise but the lineup will need to find another hitter who can play the outfield to build on the rotation, one that can provide the much-needed spark to the team.

Andrew Benintendi

In terms of adding a spark, Andrew Benintendi seems like a non-starter. With the Kansas City Royals, he’s slashing .295/.360/.390 with three home runs and 99 total bases. Essentially, Benintendi has developed into a contact hitter who is an excellent fielder.

Despite all the criticism, Benintendi is a viable option for two big reasons. For starters, he’s a cheap option for the front office, being that he’s on the final year of his deal and the Royals might look to trade him for any value whatsoever. The second thing Benintendi adds to the White Sox is valuable at-bats to the end of the lineup. The 27-year-old outfielder will get on base and keep the line moving at the end of the lineup, something that will ultimately help the White Sox batting order.

Mitch Haniger

Mitch Haniger is having a rough season with the Seattle Mariners, largely because of injuries, which have kept him out of the lineup. A promising April was derailed by an ankle injury and the projected timetable for a return is the All-Star break. Haniger is a pending free agent and considering where the Mariners are in the standings, they could trade him at the deadline, shortly after he returns to the lineup.

Mitch Haniger left tonight’s game with a right high ankle sprain.

What would Haniger bring to the lineup? Mostly power. Through nine games this season, he had a .486 Slugging Percentage and he has had a Slugging Percentage over .400 in every season of his six-year career. Aside from the power that joins the White Sox lineup, Haniger can notably add a left-handed bat to contrast Jose Abreu, Luis Robert, and Eloy Jimenez. The White Sox batting order is good but when teams go to the bullpen, they can counter the right-handed heavy lineup at the top, without much resistance. As a result, the move would round out the order while still adding a spark.

Jason Heyward

It might sound weird for the White Sox to make a deal with the rival Chicago Cubs. However, the two teams have been surprisingly open to trading players with one another. Jose Quintana was dealt in 2017 for Eloy Jimenez. In 2021, Craig Kimbrel was traded for Nick Madrigal. Ultimately, these two teams will make a trade if the best offer is made.

Jason Heyward has been a letdown since signing with the Cubs back in 2016, never tapping into that potential baseball fans saw in his early years with the Atlanta Braves and in the contract year with the St. Louis Cardinals. That being said, the White Sox could make an offer and still add power and strong fielding to the team. Moreover, Heyward wouldn’t be a rental acquisition, allowing the front office more flexibility if the trade fails to turn the season around.

Last year, the Braves improved their lineup not with splash trades but with minor moves. One of the moves they made was acquiring Jorge Soler, who was having a down year with the Royals but possessed that rare tool of power. Heyward could add that to the White Sox and kickstart a strong second half to the season.

Make sure to check out our WHITE SOX forum for the latest on the team.

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Cueto OK but no ‘O’ vs. O’s dooms White Sox

Seby Zavala caught Johnny Cueto’s minor league starts at Triple-A Charlotte when the 36-year-old veteran was building up his arm strength after signing a minor league contract. Zavala caught him Thursday night, getting the best seat in the house to watch one of the best pitching classics in the game.

“It’s fun to catch,” Zavala said.

Zavala needed one game catching Cueto at Charlotte to figure him out. But hitters have had a hard time doing that in Cueto’s seven starts since he joined the White Sox on May 16.

“After that we were on the same page,” Zavala said. “He throws everything everywhere in any count. Spins it, sinks it cuts it. Messes up the hitters. It’s fun.”

For the first time in the Orioles’ 4-0 win over the Sox at Guaranteed Rate Field, Cueto did not last six innings, but he once again provided more than a serviceable start, leaving while trailing 2-0. Adley Rutschman, whose homer in the fourth scored the first two runs, doubled against reliever Reynaldo Lopez after Cueto was pulled by manager Tony La Russa with one out in the sixth, scoring the third run charged to Cueto.

Cueto threw 104 pitches, so that was enough. He gave up seven hits and a walk and struck out seven, matching his season high notched in his first start in Kansas City on May 16.

Cueto turns, alters deliveries, shakes and shimmies to mess with batters’ timing but he sticks to a pitching basic for success, throwing the first pitch for strikes. Before Thursday, Cueto threw strikes on 70.5 percent of his pitches, his career high and the highest mark among Sox pitchers as well as the fourth fourth-highest among pitchers with at least 40 innings.

The Sox haven’t supported Cueto with much offense this season — he was in jeopardy of falling to 1-4 despite a 3.19 ERA, and it was more of the same for a lineup without Luis Robert, Yoan Moncada, Yasmani Grandal and Eloy Jimenez against Orioles right-hander Dean Kremer, who lowered his ERA to 1.71 with 5 2/3 scoreless innings.

In addition to losing Danny Mendick (out for the season) and Adam Engel (hamstring strain) to the injured list, La Russa rested Robert because of a leg soreness. Jose Abreu is playing with a sore hip and Andrew Vaughn has leg soreness. Robert, who was running at far less than full speed before being pulled in Wednesday’s 9-5 loss to the Blue Jays that dropped the Sox to 33-34, was given a day off.

“He’s got an issue he’s had before so we are going to let it quiet down,” La Russa said. “I expect he’ll play [Friday].

“When you run with the speed that he does, and as often as he does defensively and on the bases, you are going to get sore. Look at the range of games we are playing in a row, today’s the [day off] to pick after a day game and not until tomorrow night. It gives him max amount of time to treat it and rest it.

“We always tell them run to what your legs feel like. The most obvious thing is there’s guys that can steal and if their legs are barking we tell them don’t push it.”

Gavin Sheets, back from Triple-A Charlotte, doubled in the fourth and pushed it when third base coach waved him home on Leury Garcia’s single, but right fielder Austin Hays threw him out to end the inning, the major league leading 13th time the Sox have been thrown out at home.

The Sox threw out Cedric Mullins at home in the second when left fielder AJ Pollock tracked down Trey Mancini’s double and teamed with shortstop Tim Anderson and Zavala on a well-executed relay. Anderson and Zavala both picked throws from the dirt.

The Sox made plenty of hard contact with nothing to show for hit, hitting two drives to the wall (Pollock in the third, Abreu in the sixth), and they watched O’s outfielders make great (Austin Hays) and good (Mullins) catches on well-struck balls by Jake Burger and Sheets in the eighth.

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Chicago Bulls draft Arizona guard Dalen Terry with 18th overall pickMichael Labellarteon June 24, 2022 at 3:31 am

The Chicago Bulls have selected guard Dalen Terry with the 18th overall pick in the 2022 NBA Draft. While it is not the pick most had the Bulls making, it is a solid pickup to shore up the defense on the wing while adding more athleticism.

Terry was the heart and soul of the Arizona Wildcats last season, and he averaged 8.0 points, 4.8 rebounds, and 3.9 assists on 50 percent shooting and 36 percent from three-point range. He averaged about 28 minutes per game for the one-seeded Wildcats.

Terry is best on the defensive side, where he used his seven-foot-one wingspan and elite athleticism to shut-down opponents. He can guard positions 1-4 and immediately improves one of the most glaring holes on the roster. He is also able to stretch the floor quite well, especially on catch-and-shoot threes. He projects as a solid 3-D player in the NBA and should be a rotational player for the Bulls in the coming years.

Terry’s weaknesses include shaky shot creating as well as below average rebounding for his size. He was projected to go between picks 20 and 30, but the Bulls are banking on his potential as a defender and shooter.

The good thing is that the Bulls do not need him to be a go-to scorer, although improved offensive skills would be nice to see, especially through Summer League. The Bulls just need his defense and hopefully the shooting translates to the NBA as well. While Terry lacks in scoring, he does not lack confidence, as shown by one of his quotes after a pre-draft visit earlier in the summer.

Dalen Terry on being projected as a late first-rounder: “There’s gonna be a redraft in 10 years and it’s gonna be different.” pic.twitter.com/g8xlcprm46

— Sean Highkin (@highkin) June 15, 2022

There is a lot to be excited about with Dalen Terry. He is only 19 and fills a huge role on this team already. The Bulls severely lacked defense on the wing, and they were exposed in that area down the stretch and in the playoffs. It is clear that the front office is prioritizing defense with this pick, and this most likely means Coby White is traded in the coming weeks.

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Chicago Bulls draft Arizona guard Dalen Terry with 18th overall pickMichael Labellarteon June 24, 2022 at 3:31 am Read More »

Sources: 76ers trading No. 23 for Griz’s Meltonon June 24, 2022 at 4:02 am

The Philadelphia 76ers are trading the No. 23 pick from Thursday night’s NBA draft and small forward Danny Green to the Memphis Grizzlies for shooting guard De’Anthony Melton, sources told ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski.

Memphis will get the rights to guard David Roddy, sources said. Philadelphia selected him at No. 23 out of Colorado State.

Melton averaged a career-high 10.8 points in 73 games for the Grizzlies this past season as they advanced to the Western Conference semifinals. He is scheduled to make $8.25 million next season and $8 million in 2023-24.

For his career, he has averaged 8.4 points per game on 40.9% shooting and 36.1% from 3-point range, as well as 3.6 rebounds and 2.8 assists.

Melton was a second-round draft pick of the Phoenix Suns in 2018, but after just one season in Arizona, the Suns shipped him to the Grizzlies as part of a multiplayer deal.

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Roddy was named an Associated Press All-America honorable mention and the Mountain West Player of the Year after averaging 19.4 points, 7.5 rebounds, 2.8 assists, 1.2 steals and 1.0 blocks in 33 minutes per game this past season.

He helped lead Colorado State to its first NCAA tournament appearance in nine years as a No. 6 seed, the highest in school history.

Green tore both the ACL and LCL in his left knee during the playoffs.

The Sixers were scheduled to have only the 23rd pick in the draft.

ESPN’s Jonathan Givony and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Sources: 76ers trading No. 23 for Griz’s Meltonon June 24, 2022 at 4:02 am Read More »

2022 NBA Draft: Chicago Bulls select guard Dalen Terry at No. 18 overall

The Chicago Bulls have selected Arizona guard Dalen Terry in the 2022 NBA Draft

Building off a successful season that resulted in a playoff berth, the Chicago Bulls added a new face to a budding core.

With the 18th overall pick ,the Bulls selected 19-year old Dalen Terry out of Arizona.  He’s a 6’7 guard who brings size, excellent defense, and great passing. Moreover, Terry brings a fearless personality, one which Bulls fan will learn to love.

Dalen Terry Analysis

Bleacher Report draft expert Jonathan Wasserman shared his scouting report on Terry.

Scouting Report: A 6’6″ ball-handler, Terry has become intriguing for his guard size, versatility and impact on winning, even though there are real questions about his scoring and shooting.

Will Gottlieb of CHGO shared his profile on Terry as well.

Terry is one of “my guys.” He’s been a late riser in the draft process, but solidified himself around the mid-20s area. But why wait? Terry is limited as a scorer, but he fits the bill as an awesome big-wing defender who can really playmake, keep the ball moving and make his teammates better.

He’s not going to be a high-upside pick in the sense that he could run the offense at some point in his career (although, if that shot comes together…). He’s building on some invaluable skill sets that give him room to be a contributor now with room to develop into more of an offensive hub as his career progresses.

Dalen Terry Highlights

Make sure to check out our Bulls forum for the latest on the team.

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