This topic contains 5 replies, has 5 voices, and was last updated by
butidonthavemoney 14 years, 8 months ago.
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- Posted on: Wed, 11/02/2011 - 4:03am #33616

McDunkinAs a sportswriter in 2011, it’s getting ever less bizarre to type the words “Andrei Kirilenko of CSKA Moscow” all the time; certainly this team’s fans want the NBA lockout never to end as AK-47 is leading an impressively outfitted Red Army through early Euroleague and PBL dominance.
Kirilenko was rewarded for his individual brilliance through two EL games by taking the first Player of the Month award of 2011-12. The locked-out Utah Jazzman has been good for per-game averages of 14.5 points on 62.5% shooting, 9.5 rebounds, 5.5 assists and 2.5 blocks. Notes the league’s official site: “The 30-year-old Kirilenko leads the 2011-12 Euroleague in performance index rating average (30), rebounding and blocks, and is also tied for fifth place in assists.”
CSKA Moscow’s prime addition in an off-season full of big name deals also bagged the Euroleague’s first Player of the Week trophy with an insane 17-point, 15-rebound performance in the Russian side’s 87-74 victory over Žalgiris Kaunas.
That week, he was also credit with the dunk of opening night…
…the block of opening night…
…and the assist of opening night.
Granted, the sole game played that evening was CSKA vs. Žalgiris Kaunas, but impressive nonetheless. In week two of Euroleague play, Kirilenko contributed 12 points and six rebounds in just 22½ minutes of play as CSKA took something of a laugher over Brose Baskets Bamberg with a 94-74 win.
Incidentally, in his only PBL game played thus far, #47 contributed 12 points and seven rebounds in under 29 minutes in CSKA’s 73-68 victory over Eurochallenge side Triumph Lyubertsy. But perhaps ultimately Kirilenko is most valuable to CSKA as a distraction. With this guy crushing in all statistical categories, only cessation of the lockout overseas will remind observers of those other players – you know, dudes like Milos Teodosic, Nenad Krstic, Darjus Lavrinovic, Viktor Khryapa, Ramunas Siskauskas…
0 - Posted on: Wed, 11/02/2011 - 5:59am #606246

Anton123ParticipantDo you think that might mke him reconsider playing in the NBA? I mean why play as an average small forward, when you can be the european MVP for more money and your home country
0 - Posted on: Wed, 11/02/2011 - 10:57am #606288

mikeyvthedonParticipantExcept the more money part.
0 - Posted on: Wed, 11/02/2011 - 11:42am #606289

butidonthavemoney"I mean why play as an average small forward"
Kirilenko was never an "average small forward". Even when his statistical output was underwhelming, he was always far more valuable to the Utah Jazz than people understood.
If the dumbasses in Utah think a player like Al Jefferson is better for their team, then they don’t deserve AK-47.
kanyeshrug.jpg
0 - Posted on: Wed, 11/02/2011 - 12:13pm #606291

JunkYardDogParticipanttotally agree
ak47 is a great player with an amazing bbiq : a team player in offense as in defense.
he would be a great steal for a contender like boston, SA, LAL, chicago, dallas…. every team should chase him
and I think he could hesitate coming back in nba… cause he’s a star hear in europe and he got the respect he deserves and he misses sometimes in the nba. So with a comfortable salary he will hesitate.
0 - Posted on: Wed, 11/02/2011 - 1:02pm #606294

butidonthavemoney
You’re my favorite.
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