Friday, July 17, 2015
Friday, July 10, 2015
Why Some People Love Donald Trump
http://www.dailykos.com/story/2015/07/10/1401019/-New-National-Poll-Confirms-The-Republican-Presidential-Field-Is-Now-Led-By-An-Unabashed-Racist
Look, I grew up on a 100 acre farm in western NY. The county voted about 67% Republican. My dad was a Democrat, and my mom was a George Wallace Democrat. She voted Democrat; she just hated all minorities.....probably still does.
I know the type of people who love Donald Trump. So let me defend/explain them a little here.
1) General hatred of minorities: Most older people in the sticks hate minorities. Let's not pretend that the North is appreciably better than the South. If you are a typical person who was born in the 1920s-40s, you hate minorities. You believe that white people work very hard and never get ahead and that minorities just decide to stay on welfare, have kids, and get the government to pay for them.
2) Feelings on illegal immigrants: Illegal immigrants around the 1960s and 1970s used to be thought of as slightly better than American minorities because they came to the U.S. to work (not go on welfare). You will see that in the North and the Southeast the hatred of illegal immigrants is probably less than the general hatred of minorities. The issue with illegal immigrants is that HUGE populations of crotchety old white people live in California, Texas and Arizona. The minorities that the old folks see every day are generally illegal immigrants. They often do not speak English, which is a huge pain in the ass, and they also have kids who go to school -- old crotchety white people hate paying for public school and they certainly hate paying MORE so that kids can learn English. So, illegal immigration pisses off people in some huge states, so that needs to be a big deal politically for the party of old crotchety white people.
3) The World Is Against/Taking-From Me: There is a general feeling of old white people, and many young middle to lower class white people, perhaps best epitomized for me by my mom, that the world is against them and that, but for some awful plot hatched specifically against them by someone, they would be successful. A corollary to that rule is that the person desperately wants to be a super-wealthy Mitt Romney type, and would be but for some SOB keeping him or her down. Therefore, the person keeping him or her down cannot be a Mitt Romney type. Well, it also cannot be the people "like me" who are white and working poor/middle class. So who is left? The minorities. They are taking all of the money and leaving me with none. Ask a person of this sort, "What % of the U.S. budget goes to social programs for the poor like welfare?" You will get answers like 40% or 75%. (It is like 5-12%). Why 40-75%? Because I work and work and work and my fucking taxes go to people who do jack shit. If I didn't have to pay taxes to these leeches, I would be wealthy like Mitt Romney....or Donald Trump.
4) Why Won't People Tell the Truth? This is probably the most valid reason that Trump voters have for supporting him. If I know L.A. gang members, none of whom are white, are killing people and crime is awful in inner city areas, can I say, "Black and Hispanic people are killing each other every day!" Answer - no. If I know a woman who is Asian and she doesn't have a job and has 12 kids, can I complain about that, saying, "I know this Asian woman....? Answer - no. Why? Because to do so is "racist." This is particularly hard to swallow. Recall that these Trump voters have a hard enough life -- they are generally poor to middle class. They think everyone hates them and is trying to screw them out of success. They hate almost everyone. So life sucks. Now they are told that they not only cannot tell racist jokes anymore (which used to be extremely popular) but they also cannot actually complain about things that are, in fact, happening.
One of the toughest pills to swallow is the claim that illegal immigrants are not, in fact, illegal immigrants, but merely "undocumented". These immigrants didn't legally come into the country with acceptable papers and then just somehow misplace their passport. They aren't waiting for their citizenship papers that are lost in the mail. They are here, knowingly, in violation of federal law. They are illegal immigrants, why make up a different term? I have a brother who functions at roughly a 4 year old level. He suffered damage to his brain at age 2. OK. For 52 years he has been "mentally retarded." Since 2012? He has an "intellectual disability." WTF is an intellectual disability? He cannot understand old William Buckley lectures very well? He only gets 45% of Dennis Miller's most obscure quips? Come on. He has mental retardation. He lost substantial use of his brain. I think no less of him for being mentally retarded, and I think no more of him for being intellectually disabled (wouldn't it be "differently abled" by the way?). Why try to make a nicer term. Just say mentally retarded, because in 10 years we will find intellectually disabled offensive and go somewhere else with the term.
Against this backdrop comes Trump. He is a rich white guy -- therefore, he is everything these voters worship. HE is not the one holding them down. In fact, he is what the voters would be, but for the constant plot of people against them. He is against minorities. He is particularly against illegal immigrants, and he understands that these "rapists" and "murderers" and general "criminals" and whatever else Trump has called them are destroying our once great country (where good hard-working people could get ahead, but for the constant forces conspiring against them). And, most importantly, Trump will say what he really means. No mealy-mouthed discussion or dog whistle terminology. "Minorities are bad, there are trillions of them, they are destroying us, and I am here to be the one person in the world who cares about you and who is not trying to screw you!"
Well, thank goodness. Someone finally understands my plight and will tell the truth. And maybe if he gets elected, we can all go back to telling the truth and telling racist jokes.
It makes sense. It really does.
Now, Trump has several problems with pulling off a win using this approach:
1) these people also believe a lot of things that they will want affirmed as well -- no gay marriage or other rights for gays, one God, prayer in school, right to discriminate against minorities, tougher drug laws for minorities, no abortion rights, "men's rights" (which is basically the right to do whatever you want even if women object). You cannot be soft or waiver on any of these issues. Remember, Trump lives in the Northeast. He may not defend Jim Crow laws (Rand Paul will). He may feel that certain private decisions (swearing, divorcing a million times) are perfectly fine. He may not toe the crazy person line. There is no room for that. You are 100% with us or 100% against us.
2) There are some people out there like my mom who value education. Most of her kids got an education and they advanced themselves. My mom likes to learn and she likes to know stuff. The current positioning of the GOP as the party of Sarah Palin really bugs the shit out of her. She would vote for a Republican who admitted that global warming is a problem and that we need to teach evolution and that there is a place for public education and smart people. But she called me in 2008 after she voted and said, "I hate to say it, but I voted for that [fill in word] Obama. I thought of your kids and I could just not stick your kids with that Goddamned woman. That just isn't right." She, of course, was talking about Palin. Trump's position, while popular, almost certainly appeals to the "know nothing" side of the party. There are still people out there who hate minorities but would prefer to be governed by someone who is at least their intellectual equal.
Maybe not many, but when you are in a 52-48% world. you cannot drop 2%.
3) The people with money love illegal immigrants. They do. They are cheap labor. They trim my grass and they feed my kids. I go to Home Depot and hire 12 from the parking lot. If I am worth $2,000,000 to $5 billion, I want illegal immigrants around. Same thing if I own a hotel or a fast food restaurant. Why do fast food restaurant owners fear ICE audits? BECAUSE THEY ARE HIRING PEOPLE WHO ARE HERE ILLEGALLY! I mean, come on. No matter how much money Trump has, it is awfully hard to win the election when you are fighting the powers that be in the party. As I have said repeatedly, Mike Huckabee was a rising star until he had the audacity to say that MAYBE it didn't need to be 85% of the GOP platform to insist on tax cuts for multi-millionaires. That was it. Done. SUGGESTING that tax cuts should not be the primary goal of the party? Nope. (Which is really remarkable, when you think about it -- a huge majority of GOP voters are broke ass folks who pay no taxes. Why these people are SO STUPID as to believe GOP "tax cuts" are for them still astounds me.).
But I digress. For those of you wondering why anyone would vote for Donald Trump -- there ya go.
Look, I grew up on a 100 acre farm in western NY. The county voted about 67% Republican. My dad was a Democrat, and my mom was a George Wallace Democrat. She voted Democrat; she just hated all minorities.....probably still does.
I know the type of people who love Donald Trump. So let me defend/explain them a little here.
1) General hatred of minorities: Most older people in the sticks hate minorities. Let's not pretend that the North is appreciably better than the South. If you are a typical person who was born in the 1920s-40s, you hate minorities. You believe that white people work very hard and never get ahead and that minorities just decide to stay on welfare, have kids, and get the government to pay for them.
2) Feelings on illegal immigrants: Illegal immigrants around the 1960s and 1970s used to be thought of as slightly better than American minorities because they came to the U.S. to work (not go on welfare). You will see that in the North and the Southeast the hatred of illegal immigrants is probably less than the general hatred of minorities. The issue with illegal immigrants is that HUGE populations of crotchety old white people live in California, Texas and Arizona. The minorities that the old folks see every day are generally illegal immigrants. They often do not speak English, which is a huge pain in the ass, and they also have kids who go to school -- old crotchety white people hate paying for public school and they certainly hate paying MORE so that kids can learn English. So, illegal immigration pisses off people in some huge states, so that needs to be a big deal politically for the party of old crotchety white people.
3) The World Is Against/Taking-From Me: There is a general feeling of old white people, and many young middle to lower class white people, perhaps best epitomized for me by my mom, that the world is against them and that, but for some awful plot hatched specifically against them by someone, they would be successful. A corollary to that rule is that the person desperately wants to be a super-wealthy Mitt Romney type, and would be but for some SOB keeping him or her down. Therefore, the person keeping him or her down cannot be a Mitt Romney type. Well, it also cannot be the people "like me" who are white and working poor/middle class. So who is left? The minorities. They are taking all of the money and leaving me with none. Ask a person of this sort, "What % of the U.S. budget goes to social programs for the poor like welfare?" You will get answers like 40% or 75%. (It is like 5-12%). Why 40-75%? Because I work and work and work and my fucking taxes go to people who do jack shit. If I didn't have to pay taxes to these leeches, I would be wealthy like Mitt Romney....or Donald Trump.
4) Why Won't People Tell the Truth? This is probably the most valid reason that Trump voters have for supporting him. If I know L.A. gang members, none of whom are white, are killing people and crime is awful in inner city areas, can I say, "Black and Hispanic people are killing each other every day!" Answer - no. If I know a woman who is Asian and she doesn't have a job and has 12 kids, can I complain about that, saying, "I know this Asian woman....? Answer - no. Why? Because to do so is "racist." This is particularly hard to swallow. Recall that these Trump voters have a hard enough life -- they are generally poor to middle class. They think everyone hates them and is trying to screw them out of success. They hate almost everyone. So life sucks. Now they are told that they not only cannot tell racist jokes anymore (which used to be extremely popular) but they also cannot actually complain about things that are, in fact, happening.
One of the toughest pills to swallow is the claim that illegal immigrants are not, in fact, illegal immigrants, but merely "undocumented". These immigrants didn't legally come into the country with acceptable papers and then just somehow misplace their passport. They aren't waiting for their citizenship papers that are lost in the mail. They are here, knowingly, in violation of federal law. They are illegal immigrants, why make up a different term? I have a brother who functions at roughly a 4 year old level. He suffered damage to his brain at age 2. OK. For 52 years he has been "mentally retarded." Since 2012? He has an "intellectual disability." WTF is an intellectual disability? He cannot understand old William Buckley lectures very well? He only gets 45% of Dennis Miller's most obscure quips? Come on. He has mental retardation. He lost substantial use of his brain. I think no less of him for being mentally retarded, and I think no more of him for being intellectually disabled (wouldn't it be "differently abled" by the way?). Why try to make a nicer term. Just say mentally retarded, because in 10 years we will find intellectually disabled offensive and go somewhere else with the term.
Against this backdrop comes Trump. He is a rich white guy -- therefore, he is everything these voters worship. HE is not the one holding them down. In fact, he is what the voters would be, but for the constant plot of people against them. He is against minorities. He is particularly against illegal immigrants, and he understands that these "rapists" and "murderers" and general "criminals" and whatever else Trump has called them are destroying our once great country (where good hard-working people could get ahead, but for the constant forces conspiring against them). And, most importantly, Trump will say what he really means. No mealy-mouthed discussion or dog whistle terminology. "Minorities are bad, there are trillions of them, they are destroying us, and I am here to be the one person in the world who cares about you and who is not trying to screw you!"
Well, thank goodness. Someone finally understands my plight and will tell the truth. And maybe if he gets elected, we can all go back to telling the truth and telling racist jokes.
It makes sense. It really does.
Now, Trump has several problems with pulling off a win using this approach:
1) these people also believe a lot of things that they will want affirmed as well -- no gay marriage or other rights for gays, one God, prayer in school, right to discriminate against minorities, tougher drug laws for minorities, no abortion rights, "men's rights" (which is basically the right to do whatever you want even if women object). You cannot be soft or waiver on any of these issues. Remember, Trump lives in the Northeast. He may not defend Jim Crow laws (Rand Paul will). He may feel that certain private decisions (swearing, divorcing a million times) are perfectly fine. He may not toe the crazy person line. There is no room for that. You are 100% with us or 100% against us.
2) There are some people out there like my mom who value education. Most of her kids got an education and they advanced themselves. My mom likes to learn and she likes to know stuff. The current positioning of the GOP as the party of Sarah Palin really bugs the shit out of her. She would vote for a Republican who admitted that global warming is a problem and that we need to teach evolution and that there is a place for public education and smart people. But she called me in 2008 after she voted and said, "I hate to say it, but I voted for that [fill in word] Obama. I thought of your kids and I could just not stick your kids with that Goddamned woman. That just isn't right." She, of course, was talking about Palin. Trump's position, while popular, almost certainly appeals to the "know nothing" side of the party. There are still people out there who hate minorities but would prefer to be governed by someone who is at least their intellectual equal.
Maybe not many, but when you are in a 52-48% world. you cannot drop 2%.
3) The people with money love illegal immigrants. They do. They are cheap labor. They trim my grass and they feed my kids. I go to Home Depot and hire 12 from the parking lot. If I am worth $2,000,000 to $5 billion, I want illegal immigrants around. Same thing if I own a hotel or a fast food restaurant. Why do fast food restaurant owners fear ICE audits? BECAUSE THEY ARE HIRING PEOPLE WHO ARE HERE ILLEGALLY! I mean, come on. No matter how much money Trump has, it is awfully hard to win the election when you are fighting the powers that be in the party. As I have said repeatedly, Mike Huckabee was a rising star until he had the audacity to say that MAYBE it didn't need to be 85% of the GOP platform to insist on tax cuts for multi-millionaires. That was it. Done. SUGGESTING that tax cuts should not be the primary goal of the party? Nope. (Which is really remarkable, when you think about it -- a huge majority of GOP voters are broke ass folks who pay no taxes. Why these people are SO STUPID as to believe GOP "tax cuts" are for them still astounds me.).
But I digress. For those of you wondering why anyone would vote for Donald Trump -- there ya go.
Wednesday, July 08, 2015
NBA's Greatest All-Around Players - James, Bird, Jordan, Havlicek, Oscar
Recall that I have already gone through and ranked the top 36 greatest players, so everyone do NOT freak out here. The point of this entry is to identify guys who were great at every significant measurable aspect of the game of basketball -- scoring, rebounding, assists, and defense.
Now, judging a "great all-around player" is difficult, because you need to evaluate what makes a "great" all-around player. If someone gets 7 points, 7 rebounds and 7 assists a game, are they "great"? Does being a great all-around player mean you need to score 20 points a game? 25? Is 15 enough?
The hardest thing in evaluating guys from the ancient days of the NBA is the NBA didn't keep steals and blocks before, I believe, 1976, so you cannot really look at steals or blocks. To fix this problem, I went with Defensive Win Shares where I considered defense.
What I did was considered a variety of season results to determine what guys consistently show up on the charts. I did 5 searches on the www.basketball-reference.com database, using what I believe to be various examples of what a reasonable person would consider to be a great all-around season. The guys who appear on all 5 lists:
LeBron James
Larry Bird
Michael Jordan
John Havlicek.
That is it. Oscar Robertson appeared on 4 of the lists (ranking highly on many) but failed to have 4 seasons or more with 4+ defensive win shares. Nevertheless, I will place him 5th, to create a full starting 5.
What is most remarkable about the search results is the absolute and utter dominance of LeBron James. Table 1: first by 2 seasons; Table 2 - tied for first with 3 point guards; Table 3: first by 4 seasons over Oscar, 7 over Bird, 8 over Jordan; Table 4: tied for first; Table 5: first by 6 seasons over Bird and Jordan.
Table 5 is perhaps the most shocking result I stumbled upon. There have been only 19 total seasons in which a player has gone 25-6-6 with 4 DWS. LeBron has NINE of them!! Almost half.
This would explain why James can take absolutely horseshit teams to the NBA Finals - he has the ability to do everything on the court and fill in enormous gaps left by his teammates.
I used a variety of searches:
Table 1 -- Most seasons with 20 points/5 assists and 5 rebounds per game (see very bottom, I couldn't move it for some reason)
Table 2: Most seasons with 7 points, 7 assist and 7 rebounds per game
Table 2
Table 3 -- 25 points, 6 rebounds and 6 assists a game, plus at least 2 Defensive Win Shares:
Table 3.
Table 4 -- Seasons With 15 points/4 rebounds/4 assist and 4 Defensive Win Shares
Table 4
Table 5 -- Seasons with 25 points per game/6 rebounds/6 assist and 4 Defensive Win Shares:
Table 5
Table 1 (Seasons with 20-5-5 average)
Now, judging a "great all-around player" is difficult, because you need to evaluate what makes a "great" all-around player. If someone gets 7 points, 7 rebounds and 7 assists a game, are they "great"? Does being a great all-around player mean you need to score 20 points a game? 25? Is 15 enough?
The hardest thing in evaluating guys from the ancient days of the NBA is the NBA didn't keep steals and blocks before, I believe, 1976, so you cannot really look at steals or blocks. To fix this problem, I went with Defensive Win Shares where I considered defense.
What I did was considered a variety of season results to determine what guys consistently show up on the charts. I did 5 searches on the www.basketball-reference.com database, using what I believe to be various examples of what a reasonable person would consider to be a great all-around season. The guys who appear on all 5 lists:
LeBron James
Larry Bird
Michael Jordan
John Havlicek.
That is it. Oscar Robertson appeared on 4 of the lists (ranking highly on many) but failed to have 4 seasons or more with 4+ defensive win shares. Nevertheless, I will place him 5th, to create a full starting 5.
What is most remarkable about the search results is the absolute and utter dominance of LeBron James. Table 1: first by 2 seasons; Table 2 - tied for first with 3 point guards; Table 3: first by 4 seasons over Oscar, 7 over Bird, 8 over Jordan; Table 4: tied for first; Table 5: first by 6 seasons over Bird and Jordan.
Table 5 is perhaps the most shocking result I stumbled upon. There have been only 19 total seasons in which a player has gone 25-6-6 with 4 DWS. LeBron has NINE of them!! Almost half.
This would explain why James can take absolutely horseshit teams to the NBA Finals - he has the ability to do everything on the court and fill in enormous gaps left by his teammates.
I used a variety of searches:
Table 1 -- Most seasons with 20 points/5 assists and 5 rebounds per game (see very bottom, I couldn't move it for some reason)
Table 2: Most seasons with 7 points, 7 assist and 7 rebounds per game
Table 2
1 | LeBron James | 2005 | 2013 | TOT | NBA | 6 |
2 | Magic Johnson* | 1980 | 1989 | LAL | NBA | 6 |
3 | Jason Kidd | 2000 | 2008 | TOT | NBA | 6 |
4 | Oscar Robertson* | 1961 | 1966 | CIN | NBA | 6 |
5 | Larry Bird* | 1987 | 1991 | BOS | NBA | 3 |
6 | Fat Lever | 1987 | 1989 | DEN | NBA | 3 |
7 | Wilt Chamberlain* | 1967 | 1968 | PHI | NBA | 2 |
8 | John Havlicek* | 1971 | 1972 | BOS | NBA | 2 |
9 | Grant Hill | 1997 | 1997 | DET | NBA | 1 |
10 | Michael Jordan* | 1989 | 1989 | CHI | NBA | 1 |
11 | Norm Van Lier | 1971 | 1971 | CIN | NBA | 1 |
12 | Darrell Walker | 1990 | 1990 | WSB | NBA | 1 |
13 | Russell Westbrook | 2015 | 2015 | OKC | NBA | 1 |
Table 3 -- 25 points, 6 rebounds and 6 assists a game, plus at least 2 Defensive Win Shares:
Table 3.
1 | LeBron James | 2005 | 2015 | TOT | NBA | 11 |
2 | Oscar Robertson* | 1962 | 1970 | CIN | NBA | 7 |
3 | Larry Bird* | 1985 | 1988 | BOS | NBA | 4 |
4 | Michael Jordan* | 1989 | 1992 | CHI | NBA | 3 |
5 | John Havlicek* | 1971 | 1972 | BOS | NBA | 2 |
6 | Rick Barry* | 1974 | 1974 | GSW | NBA | 1 |
7 | Clyde Drexler* | 1992 | 1992 | POR | NBA | 1 |
8 | Richie Guerin* | 1962 | 1962 | NYK | NBA | 1 |
9 | Jerry West* | 1966 | 1966 | LAL | NBA | 1 |
10 | Russell Westbrook | 2015 | 2015 | OKC | NBA | 1 |
Table 4 -- Seasons With 15 points/4 rebounds/4 assist and 4 Defensive Win Shares
Table 4
1 | Kareem Abdul-Jabbar* | 1970 | 1980 | TOT | NBA | 9 |
2 | Larry Bird* | 1980 | 1990 | BOS | NBA | 9 |
3 | Kevin Garnett | 1998 | 2007 | MIN | NBA | 9 |
4 | LeBron James | 2005 | 2013 | TOT | NBA | 9 |
5 | Michael Jordan* | 1987 | 1997 | CHI | NBA | 9 |
6 | Scottie Pippen* | 1990 | 1997 | CHI | NBA | 8 |
7 | Wilt Chamberlain* | 1964 | 1971 | TOT | NBA | 6 |
8 | Walt Frazier* | 1969 | 1974 | NYK | NBA | 6 |
9 | John Havlicek* | 1968 | 1973 | BOS | NBA | 6 |
10 | Bob Cousy* | 1957 | 1961 | BOS | NBA | 5 |
11 | Dave Cowens* | 1973 | 1978 | BOS | NBA | 5 |
12 | Karl Malone* | 1994 | 2003 | UTA | NBA | 5 |
13 | Dwyane Wade | 2005 | 2011 | MIA | NBA | 5 |
14 | Kobe Bryant | 2000 | 2010 | LAL | NBA | 4 |
15 | Julius Erving* | 1979 | 1984 | PHI | NBA | 4 |
16 | Chris Webber | 1997 | 2003 | TOT | NBA | 4 |
Table 5 -- Seasons with 25 points per game/6 rebounds/6 assist and 4 Defensive Win Shares:
Table 5
1 | LeBron James | 2005 | 2013 | TOT | NBA | 9 |
2 | Larry Bird* | 1985 | 1987 | BOS | NBA | 3 |
3 | Michael Jordan* | 1989 | 1992 | CHI | NBA | 3 |
4 | John Havlicek* | 1971 | 1972 | BOS | NBA | 2 |
5 | Clyde Drexler* | 1992 | 1992 | POR | NBA | 1 |
6 | Oscar Robertson* | 1964 | 1964 | CIN | NBA | 1 |
Table 1 (Seasons with 20-5-5 average)
1 | LeBron James | 2004 | 2015 | TOT | NBA | 12 |
2 | Larry Bird* | 1981 | 1992 | BOS | NBA | 10 |
3 | Oscar Robertson* | 1961 | 1970 | CIN | NBA | 10 |
4 | Kobe Bryant | 2002 | 2015 | LAL | NBA | 9 |
5 | Michael Jordan* | 1985 | 2002 | TOT | NBA | 9 |
6 | Clyde Drexler* | 1987 | 1992 | POR | NBA | 6 |
7 | Walt Frazier* | 1970 | 1975 | NYK | NBA | 6 |
8 | John Havlicek* | 1969 | 1974 | BOS | NBA | 6 |
9 | Tracy McGrady | 2002 | 2008 | TOT | NBA | 6 |
10 | Jerry West* | 1962 | 1968 | LAL | NBA | 6 |
11 | Rick Barry* | 1974 | 1978 | GSW | NBA | 5 |
12 | Grant Hill | 1996 | 2000 | DET | NBA | 5 |
13 | Wilt Chamberlain* | 1964 | 1968 | TOT | NBA | 4 |
14 | Magic Johnson* | 1981 | 1990 | LAL | NBA | 4 |
15 | Scottie Pippen* | 1992 | 1997 | CHI | NBA | 4 |
16 | Elgin Baylor* | 1961 | 1970 | LAL | NBA | 3 |
17 | Steve Francis | 2002 | 2005 | TOT | NBA | 3 |
18 | Kevin Garnett | 2002 | 2005 | MIN | NBA | 3 |
19 | Richie Guerin* | 1960 | 1962 | NYK | NBA | 3 |
20 | Dwyane Wade | 2005 | 2009 | MIA | NBA | 3 |
Rk | Player | From | To | Tm | Lg | Count |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
21 | Russell Westbrook | 2013 | 2015 | OKC | NBA | 3 |
Monday, July 06, 2015
Thursday, July 02, 2015
Top 99 NBA Free Agents as of Midnight Last Night, With Status
Source -- www.hoopshype.com
2 Marc Gasol Unrestricted
1 LeBron James Unrestricted
2 Marc Gasol Unrestricted
3 LaMarcus Aldridge Unrestricted
4 Kawhi Leonard Agreed to terms with San Antonio $90
million, five years
5 Kevin Love Agreed to terms with Cleveland $109 million,
five years
6 Jimmy Butler Agreed to terms with Chicago $95 million,
five years
7 Dwyane Wade Unrestricted
8 DeAndre Jordan Unrestricted
9 Tim Duncan Unrestricted
10 Goran Dragic Agreed to terms with Miami $90 million, five
years
11 Draymond Green Agreed to terms with Golden State $85
million, five years
12 Brook Lopez Agreed to terms with Brooklyn $60 million,
three years
13 Paul Millsap Agreed to terms with Atlanta $59 million,
three years
14 Greg Monroe Unrestricted
Just signed max deal with Bucks.
15 Monta Ellis Unrestricted
16 Brandon Knight Agreed to terms with Phoenix $70 million,
five years
17 Reggie Jackson Restricted
18 Rajon Rondo Unrestricted
19 Tyson Chandler Agreed to terms with Phoenix $52 million,
four years
20 Khris Middleton Agreed to terms with Milwaukee $70
million, five years
21 Josh Smith Unrestricted
22 Tobias Harris Restricted
23 DeMarre Carroll Agreed to terms with Toronto $60 million,
four years
24 Tristan Thompson Restricted
25 Enes Kanter Restricted
26 David West Unrestricted
27 Robin Lopez Unrestricted
28 Louis Williams Unrestricted
29 Patrick Beverley Restricted
30 Wesley Matthews Unrestricted
31 Thaddeus Young Agreed to terms with Brooklyn $50 million,
four years
32 Danny Green Agreed to terms with San Antonio $45 million,
four years
33 Omer Asik Agreed to terms with New Orleans $60 million,
five years
34 Paul Pierce Agreed to terms with LA Clippers $10 million,
three years
35 Manu Ginobili Unrestricted
36 Iman Shumpert Agreed to terms with Cleveland $40 million,
four years
37 JR Smith Unrestricted
38 Corey Brewer Unrestricted
39 Brandon Bass Unrestricted
40 Amare Stoudemire Unrestricted
41 Brandan Wright Agreed to terms with Memphis $18 million,
three years
42 Carlos Boozer Unrestricted
43 Arron Afflalo Agreed to terms with New York $16 million,
two years
44 Jordan Hill Unrestricted
45 Marco Belinelli Unrestricted
46 Ed Davis Unrestricted
47 Rodney Stuckey Unrestricted
48 Kosta Koufos Unrestricted
49 Gerald Green Unrestricted
50 Kevin Garnett Unrestricted
51 Jae Crowder Agreed to terms with Boston $35 million, five
years
52 Amir Johnson Agreed to terms with Boston $24 million, two
years
53 Jeremy Lin Unrestricted
54 Mike Dunleavy Agreed to terms with Chicago $14.4 million,
four years
55 Luis Scola Unrestricted
56 Maurice Williams Unrestricted
57 Aaron Brooks Unrestricted
58 Mirza Teletovic Restricted
59 Andrea Bargnani Unrestricted
60 Tyler Hansbrough Unrestricted
61 Andray Blatche Unrestricted
62 Nate Robinson Unrestricted
63 Al-Farouq Aminu Agreed to terms with Portland $30
million, four years
64 Thomas Robinson Unrestricted
65 Jason Terry Unrestricted
66 Alan Anderson Unrestricted
67 CJ Watson Unrestricted
68 Jonas Jerebko Agreed to terms with Boston $10 million,
two years
69 Kevin Seraphin Unrestricted
70 Michael Beasley Unrestricted
71 Alexey Shved Unrestricted
72 Luc Richard Mbah a Moute Unrestricted
73 Jameer Nelson Unrestricted
74 Gary Neal Unrestricted
75 Tayshaun Prince Unrestricted
76 Sonny Weems Unrestricted
77 Alexis Ajinca Agreed to terms with New Orleans $20.2
million, four years
78 Larry Sanders Unrestricted
79 Bismack Biyombo Unrestricted
80 JaVale McGee Unrestricted
81 Kyle Singler Agreed to terms with Oklahoma City $25
million, five years
82 KJ McDaniels Restricted
83 Ishmael Smith Unrestricted
84 Glen Davis Unrestricted
85 Marcus Thornton Unrestricted
86 Derrick Williams Restricted
87 Norris Cole Restricted
88 Richard Jefferson Unrestricted
89 Jason Smith Unrestricted
90 Cory Joseph Restricted
91 Leandro Barbosa Unrestricted
92 Wayne Ellington Unrestricted
93 Aron Baynes Restricted
94 Reggie Evans Unrestricted
95 Gigi Datome Restricted
96 Jose Juan Barea Unrestricted
97 Nick Calathes Restricted
98 Ben Gordon Unrestricted
99 Matthew Dellavedova Restricted
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