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Sports center: Erick Dampier Contract Status, Stats, Schedule, News
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Rights: NoneLast Sal.: $.00M
Agent: SupeExp: 10+ years
FA Tier: 1 Age: 48
FBPPG:  Inj: No Injury
Desired Salary: Between $2.13M and $33.22M
Contract Status: UFA - Unclaimed Free Agent
‹7/27/37/4›
       
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Trans. Jan 14 2:22 ET
An injured Kobe Bryant is doing all he can to be able to play in Thursday night’s Lakers contest against the Golden State Warriors. The game is on the Warriors’ home court, and despite the two teams never really engaging in a serious rivalry during Bryant’s time in the league, the home team will honor Kobe during the nationally televised game. [ Follow Dunks Don't Lie on Tumblr: The best slams from all of basketball ] That honor will include a message from Warriors front office consultant Jerry West, also a former Laker champion who was the general manager of the team when it acquired Kobe Bryant all the way back in 1996. West locked in on Bryant early on in the draft process, despite having no lottery picks to work with. He cannily moved up in the draft by dealing Vlade Divac to Charlotte in exchange for the draft rights to Kobe – later adding legend to legendary by using some of the cap space acquired by dealing Divac to sign free agent Shaquille O’Neal. The Warriors general manager at the time, Dave Twardzik, will not be involved in the ceremony. Neither will former NBA center Todd Fuller, both for obvious reasons. Fuller was selected by Twardzik and Golden State 11th overall, two slots ahead of Bryant’s spot in the draft, in what at the time was the latest in a series of blunders that helped make the Warriors often the laughingstock of the league in the 1990s and into the 2000s. Carl Steward at Bay Area News Group recently caught up with both Twardzik and Fuller to discuss that infamous draft : "You felt much more comfortable taking an underclassman who declared as opposed to a high school guy because it was uncharted territory," Twardzik said. "The concern any time you take a high school guy is not only physical maturity but emotional maturity. It would have been something that probably didn't fit into our plans." […] "We did our due diligence, but ultimately we kind of felt like he was not going to get to us anyway," he said. "But you know, if he had, I don't know that we would have taken him. There was that unknown." […] "Todd was more of a high-post player and had a very good basketball IQ," Twardzik said. "But he probably wasn't quick enough or physical enough to play the position, and the system at the time was probably more suited to a low-post player." And Fuller? "Hindsight is always 20/20, but when I came out to the Warriors, it was a team in flux and I actually played a lot early and got off to a good start," he said. "But one of the things I didn't learn is I put too much pressure on myself. I wasn't that athletically talented, but I had enough tools to get the job done if I'd just worked a bit harder and had a little bit more stable mindset toward myself." Fuller did start the first 11 games of the Warriors’ season alongside Joe Smith (the top overall pick the year before), All-Star Latrell Sprewell, Chris Mullin (a future Warriors GM, in his last year with his first go-round with the team), and a post-ACL tear Mark Price. The team went 2-6 during that span, finishing the season with a 30-52 record, acting as the NBA’s second-worst defensive team. Fuller averaged 4.1 points and 3.3 rebounds per game in 12.7 minutes per contest under Rick Adelman, who along with Twardzik would be fired the following offseason. The center went on to play one more campaign in Golden State, offering about the same production, before being shipped to Utah for a second round pick. He jumped around to the Hornets and Heat in the years following, and after being cut by the Orlando Magic in 2001 training camp, he embarked on an international career that saw him play five more years and, by his estimation in talking to Steward , visiting 32 different countries along the way. According to Steward , Fuller is now “pursuing his Master's degree in advanced analytics at N.C. State and only fleetingly follows the NBA.” Kobe? Well, Kobe’s still playing. And he’s on a whole lot of NBA fans’ Mt. Rushmore. This certainly was a whiff, on Golden State’s part, but both then and now some of the reasons behind passing on Bryant are somewhat understandable. For one, the team was looking to win now. It had by then lost Chris Webber after he fell out with former coach Don Nelson (the Fuller pick, cruelly, was the last link to the trade that brought C-Webb to Golden State), but on paper it recovered nicely behind Smith, Sprewell, and the hope that Mark Price could approximate his former All-Star ways. Sprewell went on to make the All-Star team that year, averaging 24 points per while playing Bryant’s position. Rookie contracts lasted only three years back then, so the team needed to improve rather quickly in order to keep Smith (entering his second year) from fleeing as an unrestricted free agent. Secondly, as Twardzik mentioned, teams just didn’t draft many high schoolers back then, and no NBA team had ever drafted a high school guard . Kobe had hype coming out of Lower Marion, including a Sports Illustrated feature, but that feature also included this quote : "I think it's a total mistake," says the Boston Celtics' director of basketball development, Jon Jennings, who opposes any schoolboy's going pro. "Kevin Garnett was the best high school player I ever saw, and I wouldn't have advised him to jump to the NBA. And Kobe is no Kevin Garnett." Those Celtics, famously, would still work Bryant out but pass on drafting him in favor of Antoine Walker. In reality, 13 teams passed on Kobe Bryant – nearly half the NBA at that point, and it’s possible he could have fallen further had Jerry West (who also had an All-Star shooting guard on his roster in Eddie Jones) not dangled Vlade Divac in front of Hornet GM Allan Bristow (the unluckiest No. 13) and his staff’s eyes. Sadly, for the Warriors, the damage didn’t end with the Fuller selection. Twardzik – a scrappy former ABA and NBA guard who worked up the ranks after serving as an NBA assistant coach – also passed on future Hall of Famer Steve Nash, All-Stars Jermaine O’Neal (also a high schooler, who would become the youngest player in NBA history later that year), Zydrunas Ilgauskas, Peja Stojakovic, and several solid rotation players. Ben Wallace went undrafted. Lots of teams screwed up their picks that year, but it’s still a tough “what if?” -list to read off. Especially when considering how the Warriors fell even further in the coming months. The team hired Garry St. Jean as its GM the following summer, and legend Chris Mullin was dealt to a contender in Indiana for Erick Dampier. Not only did Latrell Sprewell attack new coach P.J. Carlesimo in the second month of Fuller’s second season, he joined a long list of talented players who (in Spre’s case, literally) forced their way out of Golden State: Mitch Richmond, Chris Webber, Tom Gugliotta, Tim Hardaway, and later in 1997-98, former top draft pick Joe Smith. The Warriors would disappoint for years, until a returning Mullin and Don Nelson helped the team make the playoffs in 2007. It should also be noted that the Fuller selection wasn’t exactly praised at the time; and not just because of the presence of Kobe. An Academic All-American with a nearly perfect GPA at NC State, the center was touted by Golden State more for his academic success rather than his business acumen that summer. St. Jean went the same route when he introduced next summer’s lottery pick: Colgate product Adonal Foyle. For Bay Area fans, though, all of this is warmed by the fact that the Lakers and Warriors have essentially switched places, nearly 20 years later. The same mismanagement, iffy coaching and injuries that befell those Golden State teams have dogged the Lakers since 2012, even with Bryant (sort of) still around, while the defending champion Warriors have lost just three games since last June. The idea that Kobe Bryant could have been the one to keep Latrell Sprewell from P.J. Carlesimo’s neck (instead of, seriously, Muggsy

The Scoop: None.
Jan 14 2:22 ET
Trans. Aug 17 4:07 ET
You’re in your second semester of AP Basketball History, you love really good teams, and you love lists. With precious little drama left in the NBA’s 2015 offseason, why don’t we hit the barroom and/or barbershop, pour ourselves a frosty mug of Barbicide, and get to arguin’ over each franchise’s most formidable starting five-man lineup. [ Follow Dunks Don't Lie on Tumblr: The best slams from all of basketball ] Because we don’t like making tough decisions, the lineups will reflect the All-NBA line of thinking. There will be no differentiation between separate forward and guard positions, and the squads will be chosen after careful consideration of individual merits only – we don’t really care if your team’s top shooting guard and point guard don’t get along. These rankings will roll out based on when each franchise began its NBA life. We continue with the Dallas Mavericks, who have had their ups and downs. C: Shawn Bradley . We’re not goofing around here. Bradley was never an All-Star with the Mavericks, but that hardly matters as he gave the team nine seasons of professional pivot work. He averaged seven points, 5.7 rebounds and 2.1 blocks in 21 minutes a night with the Mavs. Without much else to talk about, here is the list of other centers the Mavs started in a failed attempt to unseat Bradley during his career: Eric Riley. Chris Antsey. Samaki Walker. John “Hot Rod” Williams. Sean Rooks. Wang Zhi-Zhi. Christian Laettner. Evan Eschmeyer. Raef LaFrentz. Scott Williams. Danny Fortson. Calvin Booth. He was eventually replaced, upon retirement, by Erick Dampier. We’ll get into this further in a bit. F: Dirk Nowitzki . The greatest Maverick in team history is also the greatest player in league history to make the NBA jump directly from international play. Nowitzki’s talents were so rare that in the relatively troglodytic and sometimes out and out xenophobic NBA world of 1998, a jump-shooting 7-footer that didn’t (unlike Hakeem Olajuwon or fellow German Detlef Schrempf) go to an American school was still seen as a future star. Dirk led the team to its first playoff berth in 11 years and playoff win in 13 years in just his third season, alongside a Finals appearance in 2006 and a title in 2011. Dirk paces the Mavericks in 12 different major regular and postseason statistical categories, and he is second place in three others. He is only fourth in regular season assists in the Mavericks’ all-time ranks, so he’s clearly a selfish player. F: Mark Aguirre . A bruising, no-nonsense scorer that may have no-nonsensed his way out of a bruised Dallas locker room. Taken with the top overall pick in the 1981 draft after the Mavericks’ debut campaign, Aguirre averaged 24.6 points and 5.7 rebounds on Mavericks squads that (thanks to intelligent drafting) ended up making the playoffs five seasons in a row – culminating with a Western Conference finals showing in 1988. With the Mavericks struggling the season after and with Aguirre clashing with both teammates and coaches, he was dealt to Detroit for Adrian Delano Dantley. G: Rolando Blackman . Born in Panama, Blackman was a standout at Kansas State but still somehow slipped to ninth in the 1981 draft. A three-time All-Star, Blackman had the confidence needed to survive on a Mavs team that had gone from laughingstock (its top pick in the 1980 draft, Kiki Vandeweghe, refused to play in Dallas and was dealt for draft picks that eventually included Rolando) to Western Conference playoff mainstay. Blackman averaged 19.2 points per game in 11 seasons with Dallas. G: Jason Kidd . Kidd’s career in Dallas was very Jason Kidd-like. Heralded as a franchise savior upon his drafting in 1994, Kidd forced his way out of Dallas after two great seasons and one rather sulky half-year. Dealt back to Dallas in 2008 in what was a much-criticized deal at the time, a sturdier Kidd helped lead the Mavs to repeated playoff berths and the 2011 championship, turning his reputation around completely. He then drew the ire of owner Mark Cuban by reportedly going back on his word to re-sign with Dallas before signing with the New York Knicks in 2012, dragging it right back down in Big D ( maybe ). Averaged 10.5 points, 5.5 rebounds and 8.4 assists alongside 1.9 steals in his time with the team. The Bradley inclusion was not meant to be a shot at Bradley or the Mavs, it’s just that Dallas’ history in the pivot has been severely lacking. Tyson Chandler played well last season and was the starting big man on the 2011 championship club, but that’s just two full seasons. James Donaldson was an All-Star in 1988, but he averaged seven points, 9.3 boards and 1.3 blocks that year and 8.8/9.5/1.3 in his Mavs career. That line almost won him a starting spot. Roy Tarpley, sigh. Outside of perhaps Josh Howard, the team’s other forward slots are somewhat thinned out. Sam Perkins was a steady contributor and did switch over to center some (I could have cheated!). The team’s guard history is stacked. Michael Finley was an absolute workhorse on both ends for the team from 1996 until 2005, a two-time All-Star. Derek Harper was a Mavericks mainstay for years, and in spite of one notable postseason gaffe he was a beloved member of the Mavs for 11 years before being dealt to a championship contender in New York. Just as beloved was point guard Brad Davis, who was plucked from Continental Basketball Association obscurity to play nearly 900 games with the Mavericks as a steady starter and reserve. Jim Jackson was less beloved, to put it mildly, but he did average nearly 20 a night in 289 career games with Dallas. Jason Terry and Steve Nash were mixtures of the two. It took the draft pick that became Shawn Marion (himself a Mavericks champion) to acquire Nash prior to the 1998 lockout, and he struggled with back and Achilles injuries in his first two years (including Marion’s standout rookie year), even hearing boos. The Mavs even signed Howard Eisley prior to 2000-01 to fight for the starting nod in training camp. Nash healed, and went on to a fabulous Mavericks career that ended when the team made what everyone thought was the right move at the time , in not overpaying for the guard early in his 30s. Terry was Nash’s semi-replacement, a scoring point guard that drew the ire of Nowitzki during his first playoff with the team. JET went on, however, to be a cracking presence on several great Mavericks squads, winning the title with the team in 2011. That’s our five. Who are you going with?

The Scoop: None.
Aug 17 4:07 ET
Trans. Jan 21 12:40 ET
The Los Angeles Lakers’ owners can’t comment on potential free agent additions specifically, which is why they’re left to take in the slings and arrows as they publicly defend their team’s course in the midst of a 12-30 season. The team’s general manager, Mitch Kupchak, can’t talk on record about the sort of player he’d like to go after with his team’s potential $20-something million in cap space this summer. The squad’s coach, Byron Scott, can’t be seen whispering in a free agent’s ear, and he can’t muse openly about how great it would be to add a specific contributor currently working for another team. If any faction is caught talking, they’ll be heavily fined by the NBA for tampering. They can’t say anything until July, when contracts either turn over for another year, or expire. It’s Quiet Time, in the middle of a season that was designed to be a lost one. Players, on the other hand, can chatter away. They can admit to the press that they’d love to see a specific player on their team next season, and they can call, text, Facebook or Twitter message loving missives to free agents all they want. Those guys can recruit. The two most prominent Laker holdovers for 2015-16 are Kobe Bryant and Nick Young. Both have admitted to trying to stay in the ear of two of this summer’s most coveted free agents, looking to build a case that the Lakers are a team on the rise. It started with Nick Young whispering sweet nothings into Phoenix Suns guard Goran Dragic’s ear. From the Los Angeles Daily News : “I told Goran Dragic on the court, ‘You might be my teammate next year.’” Young told the L.A. News Group shortly after the Lakers’ loss on Monday to the Phoenix Suns. “I’ll talk to Marc (Gasol.) Me and him are cool. Kevin Love, I’ll talk to him.” Several, if not every, NBA team will at least put in a pitch to Marc Gasol and Kevin Love, but as we’ve discussed before with both players , neither is likely to leave their championship-contending teams to take less money to rebuild in Los Angeles. Despite Nick’s charms. Dragic, on the other hand, might be a possibility. Even if it is a slim one. I mean, the guy’s brother is under contract to play with the Suns next season. The Suns have rebounded from an iffy start to hang on to the eighth seed in the killer Western Conference playoff bracket. The team is on pace to threaten for 50 wins, and though the team’s three-game lead over the improving Oklahoma City Thunder isn’t exactly “comfortable,” Phoenix should be credited for keeping the Thunder at bay for far longer than we presumed they would. Dragic is technically under contract next season, but he will most certainly use his player option and opt out of the final year of his deal, a year that stands to pay him a below-market mark of $7.5 million. If the Suns miss the playoffs and Goran deduces that the team’s approach with Dragic, Eric Bledsoe and Isaiah Thomas isn’t working, there is a chance (however slight) that he could decide to start all over. Decide to ink a one-year deal somewhere and await the increased NBA salary cap slated to hit in 2016. That’s a reach, but in Nick Young’s mind, it’s reachable. Kobe Bryant? He’s shooting higher, as you’d expect, and refusing to sign off on any chance that Rajon Rondo remains a Dallas Maverick. Not until Rondo literally signs off on things. From the Boston Herald : While Mavericks owner Mark Cuban expressed confidence his club can and will sign Rondo to a new deal, Bryant told the Herald he’s not about to cease working on getting him to LA. “No way,” Bryant said. “I’m not done. I’m not stopping until he signs an extension.” Though many rightfully worried about Rondo’s fit with Dallas offensively, he has helped turn the team’s defense around to a significant degree, the offensive drop hasn’t been severe in the slightest, and Dallas is 10-4 with him on board (0-1 with him out of the lineup). That’s a sterling record considering that the Mavs’ move for Rajon was created midseason, without the aid of a training camp. The fit was made even more impressive due to the fact that Rondo isn’t your typical, orthodox NBA point guard. The dude can’t even hit free throws. Mark Cuban, however, isn’t worried : “It’ll get better,” owner Mark Cuban said. “If we can improve (former center) Erick Dampier’s free-throw shooting, among others, we’ll improve Rajon’s. How he starts is going to be different from how he finishes.” (Mark’s memory might be a little off, here. Damp’s free throw percentage dipped to 60 and then 59 percent in his first two seasons in Dallas, down from nearly 66 percent in the year prior to the Mavs trading for him. He rebounded a bit to shoot in the low 60s two other years, but fell to 57 percent in his penultimate year with the Mavericks. His best mark with Mark, at 63.8 percent, was eclipsed four other times with teams he played for in the years before the Mavericks dealt for him.) Rajon has missed 13 of 17 free throws as a Mav, but even an embarrassing “hack-a-Rajon”-incident in the playoffs won’t dissuade Dallas from offering him a max extension this summer. It’s unlikely that Kobe’s presence will dissuade Rajon from accepting it, either. The Lakers have cap space, but Dallas (as the incumbent team) can offer Rondo more money if they see fit to. Then there is the idea of Rondo’s fit, as is the case with any team he plays for. Kobe Bryant has backed off of late, relative to his previous play, but he still dominates the ball. Rajon Rondo dominates the ball as well – he needs it to be effective. Neither player is even an average three-point shooter. The Lakers, eventually, will be an intriguing destination. Unless they take in terrible lottery luck, dropping to out of the top five in the 2015 draft and relinquishing their selection to Dragic’s Suns, the team will enter this offseason with plenty of space and two consecutive highly regarded top draft picks on its rebuilding roster. They’ll have space in 2016, as well, when Bryant’s contract comes off the books. Until then, however, it’s just noise. Even Bryant, at his most dogged, probably knows that Rondo, Dragic and others aren’t coming to Los Angeles this summer. As he likely knew last summer, when considering another potential teammate: LeBron James when asked if Kobe Bryant recruited him during free agency this summer: "No" — Dave McMenamin (@mcten) January 15, 2015 Rebuilding takes time, Los Angeles. It’s your turn to do it. - - - - - - - Kelly Dwyer is an editor for Ball Don't Lie on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at KDonhoops@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter! Follow @KDonhoops

The Scoop: None.
Jan 21 12:40 ET
Trans. Dec 29 7:39 ET
We’re at a point where comparisons to the 2010-11 Miami Heat are laughable. Those Heat had their issues. They started Mike Bibby in postseason games. Zydrunas Ilgauskas, Erick Dampier, and Jamaal Magloire all had to man the middle. The superstar triptych of LeBron James, Dwyane Wade, and Chris Bosh seemed afraid to step on each others’ toes. By the time spring rolled around, however, they still had that superstar triptych. They mustered a top five finish on both ends of the floor, and after an embarrassing Eastern Conference final Game 1 blowout the team won four straight gritty games against the Chicago Bulls as it moved on to the NBA Finals. This year’s Cleveland Cavaliers figure to be on no such course as presently constructed, and as currently playing. LeBron James is not coming through with the sort of year we expected, Kevin Love was benched in the fourth quarter of his team’s most recent win, Kyrie Irving is currently on the shelf with a scary knee injury, and center Anderson Varejao is out for the season. On the team’s home floor on Sunday night, the miserable Detroit Pistons outscored the Cavs by an 86-48 mark over the final two and a half quarters of the game to finish the night with a boo-heavy 103-80 win . Following the embarrassment, LeBron James did our job for us : ''We're not a very good team, as far as on the court, where we're still trying to find our way,'' said LeBron James , who had 17 points, 10 rebounds and seven assists for Cleveland. ''Right now we're just not very good in every aspect of the game that we need to be to compete every night.'' The loss was sadly typical of Cleveland’s usual 2014-15 low points. James did well in the assists (seven) and rebounds (ten) department, but he also turned the ball over seven times and needed 19 shots to score 21 points, and he was far from dominant. Kevin Love was not in the game plan following the first quarter, and the Pistons absolutely went mad from behind the three-point arc. Watch: Now, fluke elements do come into play here. Even after that 54.8 performance from deep, Detroit still ranks in the bottom third of the NBA in three-point percentage. In the video, you'll also spy Brandon Jennings and Caron Butler attempting shots that defenses would usually want to allow. These guys made some bad shots. They also made a lot of open, easy, and good shots in the win. We knew even in the summer that if the Cavaliers were to race out to a Heat-styled dynastic turn, they’d have to produce what was easily the top offense in the league in order to overcome their defensive issues. Issues that no amount of proper coaching and tricky elements could be eliminated because of the personnel in place. The man they hired to coach, David Blatt, has largely abandoned some of the more complicated aspects of his international offenses in order to kowtow to NBA orthodoxy, and partially as a result the Cavs are only fourth in the NBA on that end. That might seem like an achievement worth crowing over, especially when considering all the new faces on board, but fourth isn’t good enough. The Eastern-leading Toronto Raptors, for example, are ranked tops in the NBA on offense, which is enough to move past the mitigating detail that is their 18th-ranked defense. These are the sort of rankings that most expected from Cleveland this season, a middling defense alongside an offense from the ages. The Cavs have the fifth-worst defense in the NBA this season, however, one that doesn’t figure to improve anytime soon even with Varejao (who at times was overrated by many, defensively) out for the year. And it isn’t as if teams are going to line up in order to give the Cavs any help. Names have been bandied about, with Memphis’ Kosta Koufos in the clubhouse lead, but why would any squad queue up to make Cleveland’s day? The Grizzlies actually need Koufos badly, even as a reserve center, because of the team’s stylings on either end and the possibility for injury or fatigue from starting big man Marc Gasol. Koufos is of paramount importance to their play, and though the Cavs have the tidy option of relinquishing a first-round draft pick back to Memphis (protected heavily this year, protected to the top five in the years following) from a 2013 deal, it may take even more to pry a big man that can defend and finish away. It may even take Dion Waiters in a trade. That’s how poor Cleveland’s leverage is right now. Clouding things even further is Waiters’ play of late – he’s actually been quite good on (mostly) both ends. Of course, he’ll still do this … … but he’s valuable. With that in place, why would an efficiency-driven front office in Memphis, one working with the sixth-overall offense in the NBA right now, deal a needed big man for a swingman that is always one brain synapse away from tossing up a left-leaning (like, George McGovern-style) 24-footer? All for a player that would most certainly act as a reserve for Tristan Thompson, the Cavs’ starting center – one that shares the same player representative as LeBron James? Cavs general manager David Griffin is still your 2014-15 NBA Executive of the Year. One shouldn’t care if other teams finish with better records (as was the case in 2010-11, when the Bulls’ Gar Forman won the award ahead of Pat Riley), because David Griffin still put LeBron James and Kevin Love on a team that already featured Kyrie Irving. If he whiffed on a coach that some think LeBron is uneasy about , so be it. This is your Executive of the Year. He signed LeBron. He traded for Love. Kvetching over James’ supporting cast is useless. Yes, Mike Miller, James Jones, Shawn Marion and Lou Amundson seem like the sort of signings that helped doom the aging Heat in years’ past, but who else was Griffin going to sign? There weren’t any mythical big man defenders or lights-out swingman stoppers floating around last July. This was the best the Cavaliers could do, and Griffin shouldn’t be judged for failing to acquire hypothetical players that don’t exist or (at best) aren’t available in reality. Do you really think Memphis would have traded Marc Gasol for Andrew Wiggins and Anthony Bennett? Cleveland is “just” 18-12 and still very much in the mix. There is always the mental image to be had of LeBron locking down on Kyle Lowry or Jimmy Butler this May, much in the same way he did to Derrick Rose in the Eastern Conference finals back when the 2010-11 Chicago Bulls blew past the Heat in the regular season. This is more than salvageable, and anything can happen in a seven-game series. Even against a team from the Western Conference. This has to be the bottom, though. The squad will not be able to approach the realm of the mediocre on defense, but it has to at least start trying to. And the offense, once David Blatt rightfully decides to throw his position around, has to achieve top rank. It’s the only way to save a season that should be starting to worry northern Ohio. Clowntime is over, and chill mode has to end. - - - - - - - Kelly Dwyer is an editor for Ball Don't Lie on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at KDonhoops@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter! Follow @KDonhoops

The Scoop: None.
Dec 29 7:39 ET


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