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mikeyvthedon 14 years, 5 months ago.
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- Posted on: Fri, 02/17/2012 - 7:12am #36580

McDunkinDespite reports that Joel Freeland has signed a contract extension to remain in Spain, the Portland Trail Blazers still plan to negotiate with the center this summer.
It’s gone from the walking wounded to an apparent contract extension for Joel Freeland over the last month, but the Portland Trail Blazers aren’t giving up hope just yet on luring "the best big man in Europe" to Rip City.
In fact, they’re not even sure there is a lot of validity to recent reports stating Freeland is set to sign a contract extension with Spanish club Unicaja Malaga.
"Joel is aware of how we feel about him and his future with us and we are aware of Joel and his interest in becoming a Trail Blazer," Blazers acting General Manager Chad Buchanan told Ridiculous Upside.
"When the season is over and we can begin to engage in more serious contract talks with Joel we will do so."
Word spread rapidly Tuesday that would leave Freeland’s long-awaited debut in the NBA with the Blazers in jeopardy six years after Portland drafted him 30th overall in 2006. According to multiple reports, Freeland – whomissed three weeks of action after suffering a sprained right ankle – and his agreement with Malaga would start this season and include a 2.4 million (Euros) buyout clause for any NBA or overseas team.
At 25 years old, Freeland remains on Portland’s radar even if a new contract extension comes into play. And while health issues should raise a red flag in any negotiations between the two sides, the Blazers front office is still a little cautious about what is fact and fiction coming out of Spain with Freeland while shoving any health woes to the side.
"We have been in contact with Joel’s Spanish and U.S. agents all season long and are very aware of where things are at with his contract extension talks with Unicaja. These talks have no impact on our desire to try and bring Joel over to our team next season. When the season is over and we can begin to engage in more serious contract talks with Joel we will do so."
Freeland returned for Malaga on Feb. 5 and went for 12 points and seven rebounds in 30 minutes in a 69-54 loss to Blusens Monbus, and then followed up the performance with 14 points and six rebounds, beating Blancos 83-76 last Saturday.
"He is back playing and showing no effects from his injury. It is not a major concern for us at this point," added Buchanan.
May Makes The Move From Croatia To Italy
Sean May guaranteed that he will be back in the NBA before long, but he didn’t mention anything about Italy.
On Tuesday, May officially signed to play in the Lega Basket Serie A with Sutor Montegranaro after putting up some solid numbers this season for KK Zagreb in Croatia as the teams’ third leading scorer including 11.7 points and 6.4 rebounds per game in Turkish Airlines Euroleague competition.
The jump from Croatia to Italy gives May more recognition league-wise in comparison, particularly as he plans ahead to a summer of free agency and aspirations to return to the Association where he last appeared with theNew Jersey Nets in 2010 before suffering a stress fracture in his left foot.
If he shows well the rest of this season in Italy and the NBA comeback falls short, then May at least sets himself up for a possible return to Lega Basket Serie A. It will all come down to his production and of course, the ability to stay healthy which May has done.
The other good news: May joins Colby Karl and Jerel McNeal on the roster.
The bad news: Montegranaro sits 7-12 on the season and is ranked 14th in the 17-team league.
Howard Gets Chance For Fresh Start In Germany
The signing of former Buter Bulldog Matt Howard to EnBW Ludwigsburg comes at an interesting time as teams around Germany’s Beko BBL begin to fine-tune their rosters for the postseason push.
Howard started the season in Greece with Olympiacos before being released (and replaced by Joey Dorsey) and didn’t get the playing time in a tight rotation and only managed to play 10 minutes per game, averaging 4 points and 1.5 rebounds per game in the six games he appeared in. And while Ludwigsburg’s head coach Steven Kay commends Howard for his gritty style and "experience for his young age," don’t believe the hype the addition of Howard is about Ludwigsburg gearing up for a monster playoff run.
If anything, bringing in Howard may help Ludwigsburg grab a few more wins at 6-15 on the season as they fend off possibly being relegated to Germany’s Pro-A 2nd division (the two bottom teams in the Beko BBL fall into the lower division based on their record at the end of the season, while the two top teams from the Pro-A 2nd division advance to the Beko BBL).
Maybe a new start in Germany will do the 6-foot-8 forward some good. Many American import players take time not only to adjust to a new basketball system overseas, but also coping with a new culture off the court often takes time to settle into those foreign surroundings. That comfort level can carry over to the court and either have positive or negative effects. It was the later in Howard’s case.
We will find out on Wednesday in his debut for EnBW. Howard arrived in Ludwigsburg on Sunday and will be available for Wednesday’s home game against BG Goettingen, who oddly enough occupy the cellar at 2-19 in the Beko BBL.
0 - Posted on: Fri, 02/17/2012 - 7:22am #637993

GoodbyeChandlerParticipantJust out of curiosity, how many guys do the Blazers have stowed away in Europe? I remember Freeland and Petteri Koponen, but aren’t there others?
0 - Posted on: Fri, 02/17/2012 - 7:25am #637994

McDunkinVictor Claver is the only other one i remember off the top of my head.
0 - Posted on: Fri, 02/17/2012 - 7:43am #638011

mikeyvthedonParticipantHere is John Canzano’s (a writer I usually am not huge on due to his being a d!ck, but a decent writer nonetheless) take on one of the NBA’s most epic fights of all time. Take yourself to the Blazers practice facility in 2005. A 7’4 Bosnian named Nedzad Sinanovic practicing against a 7’3 South Korean named Ha Seung-Jin. Enjoy the imagery and wish you could have bought tickets (I know I do):
Here’s my favorite story, though. Blazers back-up centers Ha Seung Jin and Nedzad Sinanovic were locked in the Blazers practice facility together for the summer, playing against each other because they needed the work. Ha, who is 7-foot-3, had come back from South Korea out of shape, then was hampered by tendinitis in his knee, and so he’s getting schooled by the 7-foot-4 Sinanovic, from Bosnia.
The two were tussling and tangling on the court. It’s getting pretty heated, and they’re yapping and cussing at each other, most of which neither can understand because of the language differences. And as the players usually do at the end of a workout, the two players were shooting free throws together in silence. Sinanovic went first, then it was Ha’s turn.
Peaceful enough.
That is, until Sinanovic made his final free throw, then retrieved the basketball and held it. I mean, it was like watching kids bicker and fight. Ha walked over and snatched the ball back. Then, Sinanovic said something unkind and two men ended up on the ground in a pile of swinging elbows and fists.
The fight was broken up by Blazers trainers and team managers, who are all about two feet shorter than the two players. Ha, who took a good punch in the face from Ned, was screaming, “I’ll sue! I’ll sue!”
The two were escorted to different areas of the practice facility to cool off. Normally the story would end here. Except Ha’s neutral corner happened to be the team weight room. He picks up one of those long wooden poles that players use to stretch. Ha just comes running out of the weight room swinging the pole and screaming expletives in Korean. He really went after Sinanovic, who blocked one swing with his forearm but took another shot in the ribs before someone ripped the pole (think: closet dowel) from Ha’s hands and threw it across the courts.
If you didn’t have the fight in you before you came to Portland, you soon found it.
http://thebiglead.com/index.php/2008/04/07/an-interview-with-the-oregonians-john-canzano/
0 - Posted on: Fri, 02/17/2012 - 11:01am #638080

HitsterParticipantPortland could offer Freeland a deal well above the rookie rate as it is well over 3 years since he was drafted and the Spurs used this rule to get Splitter over on improved terms. So the buyout could be paid for that way if needed.
I’m still waiting for Fran Vasquez to come over and Frederic Weis probably never wanted to come to the NBA after Vince Carter dunked over him in the 2000 Olympics.
0 - Posted on: Fri, 02/17/2012 - 2:23pm #638135

McDunkinWow Mikey…when you get your ass beat by this dude

how do you come back from that?
0 - Posted on: Fri, 02/17/2012 - 2:42pm #638147

mikeyvthedonParticipantLast I heard, he was trying challenge 7’4 as the tallest rapper in the game. His freestyles are ridiculous. Like, literally, he tends to just speak gibberish mixed with the Korean swear words that haunt him from the Ha encounter.
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