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Adrian Wojnarowski: JO to the Heat for Marion could happen

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  • Adrian Wojnarowski: JO to the Heat for Marion could happen

    http://sports.yahoo.com/nba/news;_yl...yhoo&type=lgns

    Adrian Wojnarowski
    Yahoo! Sports

    So we could have gotten a Marion-quality player for JO? Let the teeth gnashing begin.







    As Jermaine O’Neal and his troublesome right knee returned to the Toronto lineup on Friday night, perhaps no one studied the Toronto Raptors center more closely than Pat Riley.
    The Miami Heat president has been seriously considering a trade package for O’Neal that would send Shawn Marion to Toronto, multiple league sources said. Yet Riley first needs to see O’Neal’s progress before he’ll make the leap of faith on a trade.
    Nevertheless, O’Neal, 30, was telling league associates as recently as Friday that he believes there’s a good chance he’ll end up in Miami.

    “If he’s healthy,” one source close to O’Neal said Friday, “it could very well happen.”
    League executives say that Riley has been determined to make a deal for a center, and has had substantive talks with Toronto GM Bryan Colangelo.
    No GM has seemed more determined to overhaul his team than Colangelo, and several league executives say he won’t hesitate to take Marion – whom he drafted in Phoenix – and his expiring $17.1 million contract for O’Neal.
    Miami would need to include another player, or two, to make the salaries match. O’Neal makes $21.3 million this season, and has a player’s option for $23 million for the next season.
    Colangelo has been willing to move everyone on his roster but Chris Bosh, Jose Calderon and Andrea Bargnani. In fact, the emergence of Bargnani, the 2006 No. 1 overall pick, has made an even stronger case for moving O’Neal. Before returning to the struggling Raptors on Friday, O’Neal had missed nine straight games with a sore right knee. He’s averaging 14 points and 7.2 rebounds a game.
    For Miami, the core choice is difficult: How much does the 7-footer have left in that battered body? The Heat had been believed to be a favored destination for Utah’s Carlos Boozer, but there are increasing questions about Boozer’s appeal because he has knee problems of his own.
    Riley “doesn’t seem as interested in cap space this summer,” said a rival executive who exchanged trade proposals with him recently. “He just seems concerned with having space in 2010.”
    The Feb. 19 trade deadline is looming.

  • #2
    Re: Adrian Wojnarowski: JO to the Heat for Marion could happen

    League executives say that Riley has been determined to make a deal for a center

    Hmmmm
    Nuntius was right for a while. I was wrong for a while. But ultimately I was right and Frank Vogel has been let go.

    ------

    "A player who makes a team great is more valuable than a great player. Losing yourself in the group, for the good of the group, that’s teamwork."

    -John Wooden

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Adrian Wojnarowski: JO to the Heat for Marion could happen

      Why do I get the feeling we wont see JO playing over 15-20 minutes a game until the trade deadline comes and goes.

      Toronto going to be handling him with kid gloves in the hopes Miami bites.
      The Most Common Cause of Stress is Dealing with Idiots

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Adrian Wojnarowski: JO to the Heat for Marion could happen

        Shawn Marion looks just as washed up as J.O. does.

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Adrian Wojnarowski: JO to the Heat for Marion could happen

          I'd much prefer Ford over Marion. Marion isn't as good as he was with Phoenix. I think D'Antoni's offense made him look better than he really was, and now that he isn't spoon fed he isn't playing as well.

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Adrian Wojnarowski: JO to the Heat for Marion could happen

            Originally posted by Quis View Post
            Shawn Marion looks just as washed up as J.O. does.
            “Success is not final, failure is not fatal: it is the courage to continue that counts.” - Winston Churchill

            “If you can't be a good example, then you'll just have to serve as a horrible warning.” - Catherine Aird

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Adrian Wojnarowski: JO to the Heat for Marion could happen

              I'd be amazed if Toronto can pull off a straight up JONeal for Marion deal ( and nothing else ).....BC would have fleeced Riley to the tune of $20+ mil.

              If I were Riley, I would want something more....JONeal just isn't the player that he was.
              Ash from Army of Darkness: Good...Bad...I'm the guy with the gun.

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Adrian Wojnarowski: JO to the Heat for Marion could happen

                I think this is a horrible trade for the Heat

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Adrian Wojnarowski: JO to the Heat for Marion could happen

                  I truly liked Marion in his younger years, but now I am starting to fade on whether he'd be more of a set-back for this Pacers team. I'd much rather get a younger player such as Haslam out of any deal with Miami.

                  Now on with the JO/Marion swap rumor. I doubt Miami has any interest in this with JO being paid in the 20's. They need to keep all of the cap space they can to try to get one of the top tier guys, and JO is no longer a top tier guy. Yes, he's a top notch professional who plays his butt off whenever he can, but the wheels are getting flatter and flatter. Marion is also in the beginnings of the twilight of his career and injuries that he would normally shrug off will start to show more and more. He'd be a good pick-up if you were close to championship level and just needed him off of the bench for 15-20 min a game.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: Adrian Wojnarowski: JO to the Heat for Marion could happen

                    I was always a Marion fan, but he now seems to be bringing questions to the team, he really is more SF than PF and we have a better prospect at that spot now, and most importantly JO's contract was split in half thanks to the Rasho/Ford combo. You can walk away from half the financial obligation at the end of the year.

                    Oh, and on top of all this you got Hibbert who is showing real promise of being a slow developing reliable post scorer who can at least hold his own on defense if not more. He looks to be a better all-around prospect than Rik was back in the day. I certainly didn't see that coming, but his on-court play put it in my face.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: Adrian Wojnarowski: JO to the Heat for Marion could happen

                      Originally posted by JGray View Post
                      I'd much prefer Ford over Marion. Marion isn't as good as he was with Phoenix. I think D'Antoni's offense made him look better than he really was, and now that he isn't spoon fed he isn't playing as well.
                      Actually, he wasn't spoon fed at all and that's why he wanted out of Phoenix. They didn't run any plays for him. At all. His job was to roam and do whatever he could on the floor, hence the matrix stats.

                      Seth, I've been thinking about Marion quite a bit over the past few weeks, playing "what if" in my head. I'm with you, I don't know where we would play him, although an arguement could be made for him playing PF and moving Troy to C. With Marion's passing skills, three point skills and ability to drive, I think he actually could be a prefect fit for this style offense.

                      My biggest reservation is that I've been gradually starting to suspect that Marion is a closet egomanaic. Have you guys noticed the little gripes he's made to the media over the years. Talent-wise, I think he'd be a GREAT fit for this team, but I suspect we'd be shipping in a new malcontent after we've alread cleaned house.

                      And for you people saying Marion looks washed up....

                      The guy's had ONE bad season. This one. On an incredibly unstable team. If the guy had been showing years worth of steady decline, I might agree with you. I think you put Shawn in a better structured system, that take advantage of all of his skills, I se him bumping right back up to being a top guy in the league.
                      Hey! What're you kicking me for? You want me to ask? All right, I'll ask! Ma'am, where do the high school girls hang out in this town?

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Re: Adrian Wojnarowski: JO to the Heat for Marion could happen

                        I really like this deal for both sides. The heat will have a much bigger lineup and Marion absolutely must get moved. I am sure Marion will be packaged with either Blount or Banks and Toronto will add like Joey Graham, Will Soloman, or Jamario Moon to the deal. The Heat have a logjam at PF and this would allow O'Neal to play next to Haslem. Chalmers, Wade, Beasley, Haslem and O'Neal. Toronto would be looking at Calderon, Kapono, Marion, Bargnani, Bosh. Not a bad lineup. I think it makes both lineups a lot more even. They both kind of have uneven lineups right now and this would even their talent across the starting lineup.
                        "Your course, your path, is not going to be like mine," West says. "Everybody is not called to be a multimillionaire. Everybody's not called to be the president. Whatever your best work is, you do it. Do it well. … You cease your own greatness when you aspire to be someone else."

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Re: Adrian Wojnarowski: JO to the Heat for Marion could happen

                          Originally posted by Skaut_Ech View Post

                          My biggest reservation is that I've been gradually starting to suspect that Marion is a closet egomanaic. Have you guys noticed the little gripes he's made to the media over the years.
                          Closet egomaniac? The dude would prefer being the best player on a bad team than the 2nd to 4th option on a winning one.

                          Phoenix ran plays for him. They just didn't run plays for him more than Amare. Check the cover story from ESPN the Mag from last year. It's gross.

                          I would never want Marion on our team regardless of his ability to spread the floor and cause match-up problems. If he wasn't happy w/ his role in Phoenix, then he would never be happy here.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Re: Adrian Wojnarowski: JO to the Heat for Marion could happen

                            "If he's healthy."

                            "If."

                            "If."

                            Marion's clearly in decline, but he's got a lot more in the tank than Right Knee O'Neal.

                            I buy the rumor because JO is a defensive beast in the post when healthy. Pat loves that stuff 'cause it's so rare.

                            The Matrix is certainly not a building block player any more. He's a nice third option who can rebound and do a good job defending wingmen. But's he's a head case in the locker room. He's also a guy who relies on athleticism reaching 30 years of age, showing a noticeable decline. The Matrix is a good rental, but I don't want to be the GM signing his new contract.

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Re: Adrian Wojnarowski: JO to the Heat for Marion could happen

                              Guess he's not so closet, huh? Didn't realoize that. I know years ago, D'Antoni talked about how he didn't run any plays for Shawn because he didn't need any. He considered him the glue guy to do whatever need to be done by using his smarts to adapt to the situation. I thought that was the ultimate compliment.

                              BTW, I think this is your article;

                              http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/news/s...espnmag/marion

                              ESPN The Magazine: The Invisible Man

                              By Chris Palmer
                              ESPN The Magazine

                              Editor's note: This article appeared in the April 23 issue of ESPN The Magazine. Shawn Marion adjusts his Yankees cap and slips on a pair of white Gucci shades before stepping into the midday Arizona sun. Standing in front of a Tempe auto-body shop, he beams like a proud papa as he shows off the latest addition to his brood: a fully restored 1971 Cutlass Supreme convertible. He found the black classic with its 66,000 miles on the Internet and landed it after haggling some guy in Illinois down to $2,100. Now that he's put another $15,000 into it -- including matching black 22-inch deep-dish rims -- it's ready for the street.
                              Why's he called Matrix? 'Cause his game has special effects.

                              Today's cars are pieces of junk compared with this retro Dee-troit muscle, he thinks. Steve McQueen would be happy to drive this baby. Marion loves everything about it: the horizontal speedometer, the square headlights, the steel bumpers. But mostly he loves the 15-inch subwoofers that can rattle screen doors up at UNLV, his alma mater. At the moment, Jim Jones' "We Fly High" booms. Marion turns the volume to 23, igniting a car alarm symphony, before heading out for a spin. As he rolls through the Arizona State campus, Marion hears a large man in a suffocating blue polo call out. It's Michael Clarke Duncan of "The Green Mile" fame, one arm around his LA Clippers cheerleader girlfriend. "What up, Trix?" the actor says through a huge smile in that familiar grumble. "I see you, boy."
                              At least someone does.
                              * * * * *
                              Marion just wants to be noticed. His invisibility is never more evident than in the Suns' 129-127 double-OT epic with the Mavericks on March 14. With eight ticks in regulation, Steve Nash launches a potential game-tying three from the top of the key that caroms long and appears headed into the hands of Dallas' Greg Buckner. In an instant, the man they call The Matrix materializes to snag the ball and kick it back to the two-time MVP, who promptly drills a three from the elbow. The announcers roar that Nash has just gotten a leg up on Dirk Nowitzki in this season's MVP race. Not a mention is made of Marion's game-saving work. Moments like that have Marion wondering, Where is the love? The résumé certainly demands it: 18.6 ppg and four All-Star Games in eight seasons. And this season, Marion is the only guy in the top 20 in rebounds (10.0), field goal percentage (52.5), steals (2.0), blocks (1.6), double-doubles (35) and minutes (37.9). "Steve is the MVP of the league," says Marion, "but I've had people tell me I am the MVP of the team." Warriors coach Don Nelson might be one of them. Nellie says Marion is "as important as anyone they've got."
                              "I want the recognition. I feel I've done what it takes to get it, but for some reason it hasn't happened. " -- Shawn Marion

                              Don't misunderstand. Marion is not trying to steal Nash's thunder or pick a fight. There is plenty of respect and a healthy appreciation for their symbiotic relationship. But he'd still like you to pass the sugar, please. "I want the recognition," says Marion, who got fewer votes for February's All-Star Game than Shane Battier. "I feel I've done what it takes to get it, but for some reason it hasn't happened." Respect is the final piece of the puzzle. A career of being overshadowed by higher-profile teammates despite his box score stuffing has left him thirsting for attention. But it's hard for Marion to get anyone to feel sorry for him.
                              He is, after all, a single, 28-year-old star for a team on the short list to win the title. And let's not forget he's the highest-paid Sun of all, sitting on a max deal that's paying him $49.3 million over three years. Those who don't know him -- and even those who do -- have to wonder what the problem is.
                              Back in Tempe, Marion and his Cutlass reach their destination: Hooters, and its half-price, happy-hour Buffalo wings special. The waitresses, in shiny orange short shorts, who have been milling around the bar, snap to attention, giggling as he walks by. Marion takes a table in the middle of the restaurant, near a wall-mounted TV that is tuned to an ESPNEWS feature on Kobe's recent scoring tear. Marion would pay to see Kobe, but not many others. "I don't watch a lot of basketball," he says. "I find it boring. You gotta understand, I play for the Suns. Everything else doesn't match up."
                              After a brief chat with his mom, Elaine, Marion cracks a menu but is quickly distracted by a perky waitress who suggests the ribs. "Did y'all win last night?" she asks.
                              "Yeah," says Marion, slightly disinterested.
                              This article appears in the latest edition of ESPN The Magazine. Subscribe.

                              "Woo! You go, boy! We love you!" It's a scene that plays out over and over in his world -- getting recognized just for being Shawn Marion -- but it's not the support he's looking for. If gushing girls in tight T-shirts gave out postseason awards, then he'd have it made. Alas, the props he covets are those doled out by basketball people who matter, in the form of bronze statues. They aren't served up at the Hooters on South Mill Avenue with a side of crinkly fries. So no offense, miss, but Harry Potter's invisibility cloak would really come in handy right about now.
                              Two dozen wings and a tumbler of lemonade later, Marion is back at his three-bedroom town house in a gated complex in northern Phoenix. Kicking off his untied white Air Force 1's, he flops on an oversize brown leather couch. He slides off his cap, rubs his head and lets out a sigh, like something is on his mind. And these days, something is always on his mind. A sense of incompleteness preoccupies him. His subordinate role in the offense, on the team, is never far from his thoughts.
                              Marion clicks on the 39-inch flat screen, and there's Stallone racing away from the psychos in "Cobra." Sly, in a modified 1950 Mercury, hits the nitro and disappears over the horizon. Invisible.
                              And that could be Marion. He has the juice to force the issue and demand a trade to another NBA town, one in which he'd be the center of attention. So what about it, Shawn? Would you rather be a 30-point scorer and an MVP candidate on a lesser team, say, one only flirting with the postseason, than the sidekick to the sidekick in Phoenix? "Wow, that's interesting," he says thoughtfully, as if he's never entertained the prospect before.
                              Marion pauses nearly 10 seconds to concentrate on the question. Only the muted sound of late-afternoon traffic outside the two-story living room breaks the silence. He fiddles with the remote as if it holds the answer. "I've never been asked that," he continues. "That would be an interesting situation to be in, to really show people what I can do.
                              "But we'd be in the playoffs, right?"
                              * * * * *
                              Like the fuel that breathes life into one of Marion's cars, the Suns offense is famously high-octane. But unlike in his metal-and-rubber rides, Marion sees himself as but a passenger in that other, blood-and-guts machine. He'll say he is a victim of his own unique style of play, because it allows coaches and teammates to figure he'll fend for himself, to fit in wherever. The upshot is, Marion is a freelancer in his own shop. If he doesn't feed himself, he starves.

                              "He may feel unappreciated, but everyone here appreciates what he does. We know that without him there is no championship How can he be considered underrated with that résumé? " -- Jalen Rose, on Suns teammate Shawn Marion

                              "A lot of people don't understand how the NBA works," he says. "They look at the Suns as a running team but don't realize that many nights, we play a two-man game. Everything we do starts with Steve and Amaré's pick-and-roll. I have no plays called for me. I have to go get everything." Which he does -- better than anyone. He leaps quicker than just about any other player in the league, because he pogos while the rest of the humans take time to gather. He launches his unorthodox eye-level shots with an unblockable Dan Marino-like flick of the wrist, but in fact, he is the rare player who doesn't need the ball to put up 17 a game. Most of his opportunities come on backdoor cuts, offensive putbacks and quick strikes on the break. In a March 25 game against the Kings, he got his usual 17 while possessing the ball for less than 60 seconds of real time. "The beauty of Shawn's game is he thrives in whatever style we play," Nash says. It's a blessing and a curse. Marion knows all anyone has to do to neutralize a player who doesn't get plays called or picks set for him is box out. "You see me averaging 18, but some nights I struggle to get a bucket," he says. "People don't realize how hard the NBA is. I have to move constantly if I want to survive."
                              The star's hand-wringing amuses the most recent addition to the team, Jalen Rose. "He may feel unappreciated, but everyone here appreciates what he does," Rose says. "We know that without him there is no championship." Rose, who speaks with the confidence and insight of an elder statesman, continues. "How can he be considered underrated with that résumé? Of course, the reason he's as good as he is is because of that chip on his shoulder." But if a lack of credit for the Suns' success bothers Marion, you wouldn't know it by watching him interact with his teammates. He organizes poker tournaments on team flights. When he's on the bench, he is often the first one dapping the players coming off the court when a timeout is called. Before every opening tip-off, he hugs head coach Mike D'Antoni, a ritual he started four seasons ago to show support for the rookie coach. "Shawn is a smart guy, and he knows how good he's got it," says D'Antoni, who's been one of Marion's biggest fans.
                              Shawn Marion's left to wonder when all of the accolades will start coming his way.

                              If there's one thing that sticks in Marion's craw more than anything else, it's the lack of recognition for his work at the defensive end. Regarded by coaches and players as one of the league's preeminent stoppers, Marion can keep a point guard from getting into the lane on one possession and force a power forward into a bad shot the next. "When he's out, it's like we're missing four players," says D'Antoni. "There's no way to replace him. We just try to cover as many holes as we can." What is most striking is that because of the Suns' small-ball system, Marion has played out of position at power forward for much of the past three seasons. At 6-7, 228, he can't dominate the paint with brute force. Instead, he uses cunning and hustle, deftly anticipating the bounce of a rebound or blocking a shot of a taller player from behind. "Boxing him out is impossible," says Amaré Stoudemire. "You have to face-guard him the whole time." That's not going to happen either. "Players are trained to follow the shot," says Celtics coach Doc Rivers. "And when you turn your head, he's gone."
                              Even at his size, Marion snags more defensive rebounds per game (7.8) than 54 of the 59 other starting power forwards and centers. And his 1.6 bpg is nearly double that of the next best shotblocker of equivalent height, Charlotte's Gerald Wallace (0.97). He also leads the Suns in deflections.
                              Despite all that, guess who has never made an All-Defensive team? "I just don't understand how something like that can happen," Marion says. "It's one thing to ask a guy to guard another position every now and then, but for a whole season? That is rough. Are they watching the same league?"
                              Two diehard Suns fans in particular have seen all they need to. Acting on their own, David Nelson, a UC-Irvine grad student, and Damien Walker, a season ticket-holder and professional online poker player, recently compiled a 12-page report titled "Surprise! An Objective Analysis of the Defensive Player of the Year Award." After crunching numbers from a variety of categories, the study concludes that Marion is their guy. "That's not us saying he should win it," says Walker. "That's the data."
                              * * * * *
                              Marion spends much of his time away from the court alone, but not in a self-imposed Kobe sort of way. A month from turning 29, he's too old for the club-hopping of younger teammates. And the older ones have responsibilities. "You can't just pick up the phone and call one of your teammates in the afternoon and say, 'Let's hang out tonight,'" he explains. "They've got kids and they gotta eat dinner and check with their wives. You've got to plan."
                              At the end of the day, it's safe to say no one can question Marion's drive.

                              His hobby of restoring classic cars gives him a creative outlet. A 1970 Chevelle and a 1966 Lincoln, "like the one from the opening credits of 'Entourage'," round out his collection of older models. His late-model stable includes a BMW 760, Mustang GT, Hummer H2 and Porsche Cayenne. All white. "It's just my thing," he says. One car you won't find in his garage is a Maybach. Waste of cash, he says. "People may find it strange, but I'm just really smart with my money," says Marion, who opts to fly commercial rather than go by private jet. And you're more likely to find him staying at a Holiday Inn than a five-star hotel when he travels. But to everyone around him, he is first-class goods. On a crowded thoroughfare near Marion's house, a black Lexus pulls up beside the Cutlass. The passenger-side window sinks to reveal an attractive woman in her mid-20s. "Excuse me," she says, "I just want to say you have a beautiful car."
                              "You want to wash it for me?" Marion replies.
                              "Sure."
                              The moment hangs for a beat like an offensive rebound waiting to be dunked home. But Marion just smiles politely. Just another instance of his getting attention everywhere but where he wants it most. The light turns green and he makes a right turn for home, vanishing once again.
                              Chris Palmer is a senior writer for ESPN The Magazine.
                              Hey! What're you kicking me for? You want me to ask? All right, I'll ask! Ma'am, where do the high school girls hang out in this town?

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