Archive

Posts Tagged ‘Grant Hill’

How many players born in the 1970’s are left in the NBA?

October 25th, 2009 tedi31 4 comments

2008-2009 NBA Playoffs – First Round – Houston Rockets @ Portland Trailblazers (Game 2)

Portland fans sent Dikembe Mutombo off the court with a standing ovation.

Portland fans sent Dikembe Mutombo off the court with a standing ovation.

As the aged Houston Rockets veteran Dikembe Mutombo clutched his injured knee underneath the Portland basket during Game 2 of last year playoffs, it not only marked the end of a remarkable long career but it also closed the curtain on the last active National Basketball Association (NBA) player that was born in the 1960’s.

I then posit the question…

With the 2009-2010 NBA regular season right around the corner, how many NBA players born in the 1970’s are still active?

And the results are not surprising.

How many are left and the luxury of having a guaranteed contract.

As of this writing, there are a total of 120 NBA players born between the period of 1970 to 1979. This target group represents about 27% of the entire player population in the NBA (assuming that all 30 teams carry a maximum of 15 players). This number is further wilted down to 26% if you remove unsigned free agents (e.g., Raef LaFrentz (POR) and Malik Rose (OKC)), players who are still under contract but are unable to play or have retired due to injuries (e.g., Matt Harpring (UTA) and Cuttino Mobley (NYK)), and sadly, players who still have a contract but are no longer valued by their team (e.g., Brent Barry (Free Agent)).

Chicago's Lindsey Hunter is the league's most senior player at 38 years and 10 months.

Chicago's Lindsey Hunter is the league's most senior player at 38 years and 10 months.

This leaves the league with a total of 115 players between the ages of 30 to 39.

Age is but a number

There are still a number of prominent players who play on a high level and I’ve listed them down based on their birth year:

1972 – Shaquille O’Neal and Grant Hill
1973 – Jason Kidd
1974 – Steve Nash, Rasheed Wallace, Derek Fisher, Marcus Camby, and Antonio McDyess
1975 – Walter Ray Allen, Jr., Zydrunas Ilgauskas, and Allen Iverson
1976 – Kevin Garnett, Tim Duncan, Chauncey Billups, Antawn Jamison, and Andre Miller
1977 – Paul Pierce, Vincent Lamar Carter, Manu Ginobili, and Jason Terry
1978 – Kobe Bryant, Dirk Nowitzki, Richard Hamilton, Stephen Jackson, Mike Bibby, and Shawn Marion
1979 – Rashard Lewis, Hedo Turkoglu, Ron Artest, Lamar Odom, Baron Davis, Mehmet Okur, Elton Brand, and Michael Redd

Brent Barry is the last "active" NBA player who was born in 1971.

Brent Barry is the last "active" NBA player who was born in 1971.

Other facts

  • The Chicago Bulls Lindsey Hunter (1970) is the oldest player in the NBA and the youngest would have been Ricky Rubio (10-21-90) if he suited up for the Minnesota Timberwolves this season. Instead, that honor goes to Philadelphia 76ers guard Jrue Holiday (6-12-90).
  • Players born in 1978 and 1979 (26 members each) represent almost half the players born in the 1970’s (45%). While Brent Barry (1971) and the aforementioned Lindsey Hunter (1970) are the only remaining members of their respective birth years still active in the NBA.
  • Should Brent Barry not get an opportunity to latch on to any other team this season, 1971 would be the only birth year in the 1970’s not represented in the NBA.

—————-
Now playing: The Brand New Heavies – After Forever
via FoxyTunes

Jason Kidd and Grant Hill Retrospective: Two Sides of Health

October 9th, 2009 tedi31 No comments

Talking about Camby got the ball rolling…

Recently injuries to Los Angeles Clippers Forward/Center Marcus Camby (knee) brought up a number of subjects (e.g., longevity of the playing careers of basketball players, player assessments, player trade/free agent movement, injuries, trades, etc.) during a recent chat I had with my cousin online.

We remember the good times when all of these players that we grew up watching and emulating were at their peak.

Here is an update on two of them.

1994.

Dallas rookie point guard Jason Kidd

Dallas rookie point guard Jason Kidd (1994)

Jason Kidd.

With the second pick in the 1994 NBA Draft, the Dallas Mavericks selected California guard Jason Kidd to run their offense that featured Jimmy Jackson and Jamal Mashburn. Kidd, who signed a six-year $60 million dollar rookie contract (those were the days before the NBA collective bargaining agreement regulated rookie salaries), didn’t take long to impress as he helped the Mavs improve that year by 23 wins. By the end of his rookie year, J-Kidd averaged 11.7 points, 5.4 rebounds, 7.7 assists per contest, and led the NBA in triple doubles with 4.

Grant Hill.

Drafting third overall were the Detroit Pistons who over the last few years had seen their team fall from the NBA’s elite after winning back-to-back NBA championships in 1989 and 1990. With Duke senior forward Grant Henry Hill, one of the most decorated collegiate players of his generation, the Pistons not only had a new cornerstone (who signed to a tune of eight-years, $45 million) to build under the guidance of veteran guard Joe Dumars, but also what was to become the face of the NBA for the next few years. Hill’s status was never more apparent than in that year’s NBA All-Star Game wherein he became the first rookie (in any of the four major sports—Basketball, Baseball, Football, and Hockey) to be the events top vote getter. Hill finished with averages of 19.9 points, 6.4 rebounds, 5.0 assists, 1.77 steals per game. As for triple-doubles, G.Hill didn’t match Kidd’s total but was able to post one against the Orlando Magic on April 7, 1995.

001093812

Detroit point forward Grant Hill (1994)

With their individual accomplishments (I can’t really say “AND team accomplishments” since the Pistons only had an 8-game improvement will Hill that year), both Jason Kidd and Grant Hill were named NBA co-rookie of the year—only the second duo (until Chicago’s Elton Brand and Houston’s Steve “Franchise” Francis turned the trick in 99’-00’) to capture the award after the Celtics’ Dave Cowens and Blazers’ Geoff Petrie did it 24 years earlier.

In their own right, both Jason Kidd and Grant Hill have had successful and highly lucrative careers. Kidd is third all-time in triple-doubles (netting 103 as of 4/15/2009), USA Basketball’s 2007 Male Athlete of the Year (going 56-0 lifetime when representing his country as of 2008), and has reached the NBA Finals twice in 2001 and 2002. On the other hand, Hill had been named to numerous NBA All-Star teams (even making the squad during the 2001 season in which he only participated in four regular season games), is one of only three players (the others being Elgin Baylor and the late Wilt “The Stilt” Chamberlain) to lead his team in scoring, rebounds, and assists on at least three occasions, and is generally a nice guy (having won the NBA’s Sportsmanship Award (2004, 2008) and the Magic Johnson Award (2006)).

But in my eyes, arguably the defining point in their respective careers is the element of injury from which no player is immune.

The Good.

After a French Fry throwing incident with his wife, Kidd has his mug shot taken.

After a French Fry throwing incident with his wife, Kidd has his mug shot taken.

In March of 2000, the Phoenix Suns’ Jason Kidd broke a bone in his left ankle with 2/10th’s of a second left in the first half of their game against the Sacramento Kings. Surgery ensued, and five weeks later, Kidd was back on the court for the Suns’ playoff run. Four years later, Kidd had microfracture surgery on his left knee in July 1st and returned five months later without any ill effects—which says a lot because a number of players have either retired (e.g., Terrell Brandon, Allan Houston, Kerry Kittles, Karl Malone, Jamal Mashburn, Bryon Russell, guard Alvin Williams, and Chris Webber), are unemployed (e.g., Anfernee “Penny” Hardaway), not really the same anymore (e.g., Matt Harping, Kenyon Martin (procedure on both knees in successive years), Eduardo Najera), or play like they never got hurt in the first place (e.g. the aforementioned Jason Kidd, Zach Randolph, Amare Stoudemire and the retired Hall of Famer John Stockton). (The jury is still out on Portland Trailblazer rookie Greg Oden and $111 million dollar man Gilbert “Hibachi” Arenas, so we will have to wait and see.)

The Bad.

Once Upon A Time...Collectors would have died for a chance to get Hill related swag.

Once Upon A Time...Collectors would have died for a chance to get Hill related swag.

Grant Hill. Once the poster boy for endurance (averaging 38.93 minutes a game during his first six years in the NBA), Hill’s health deteriorated after severely injuring his ankle during the 2000 playoffs while playing for the Detroit Pistons. The following year, the Orlando Magic’s new free agent acquisition had season-ending surgery to repair a broken medial malleolus (inside bone of left ankle) on Jan. 3 2001. A similar season-ending procedure was done 11 months later (Dec. 19, 2001) and the following season (2002-2003), Hill also missed a majority it before having surgery again on his bothersome left ankle which involved re-fracturing and re-aligning the ankle by re-shaping the heal on March 18, 2003.

Wikipedia.com shares that five days after the said procedure, “the unexpected happened: Hill developed a 104.5 °F (40.3 °C) fever and convulsions. He was immediately rushed to a hospital. Doctors removed the splint around his ankle and discovered that Hill had developed a staph infection, from which he nearly died. He was hospitalized for a week and had to take intravenous antibiotics for six months.”

Grant Hill then missed the entire 2003-2004 in order to rehabilitate his left ankle. Two years later, Hill’s ankle was fine but he still missed 61 games due to a sports hernia.

And the comparisons don’t stop there.

2009.

Entering the twilight of their careers, Kidd and Hill aren’t the same players that they once were.  But growing up watching these guys, they are still very much capable of giving us (the fans) yet another timeless moment.

Don’t blink.

Because it may just happen.

—————-
Now playing: Tom Petty – Running Down a Dream
via FoxyTunes