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Beyond the Arc Sports

Real Talk: About the Grizzlies and the Playoffs

As the Grizzlies continue to improve in the standings and other Western Conference teams fall short, there has begun to be some buzz about Memphis making a playoff push. This would be a terrible idea, as I will explain further.

For reference, currently the Grizzlies are 9th in the WC standings, one game back from the 8th seed.

The Grizzlies are going through a real, honest-to-God rebuild. With new front office decision makers and a new head coach, this team is finally in a position to execute a successful rebuild.
There is a young, dynamic core of exciting players to build around, and in many ways the future is looking brighter for this franchise than it ever has. Which is all the more reason why this process shouldn’t be rushed.

The 2019-2020 Memphis Grizzlies are a very young team, green behind the ears and still learning how to play together. They are still building chemistry and learning how to put together four complete quarters of basketball in the same game. It isn’t always pretty to watch, but this is a very good thing. It is exactly what they are supposed to be doing at this point in the rebuilding process.

But What About the Boston Pick?
Well … what about it? The first-round pick that we still owe to Boston is top-6 protected this year and while it would not be wise to lose deliberately, chances are the Grizzlies will organically end up a lottery team again this summer. Which allows the possibility of ending up with another very good draft pick this summer.

Yes, said pick is unprotected after this year, but the likelihood that the Grizzlies will end up as even the 8th seed is much greater next year. If that is the case, Memphis could potentially convey a pick that is outside the top-10 in 2021.

The Bottom Line
The playoffs should not be a goal for this Grizzlies team until they have developed enough to sustain a deep run. End of discussion.
As it stands right now, even if they did end up in the 8th seed, it is very unlikely they would make it out of the first round of the playoffs. Which makes the risk of injury too great, with the potential for a reward (or even a second-round series) much too small.

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Sports Sports Feature

No Love; Hold the Mayo: Are the Grizzlies Better Off After Draft Day?

Now that the rush and weariness of draft day has passed, time to pick through the aftermath and look ahead. Here’s my mammoth breakdown of where things stand as the Grizzlies embark on the off-season:

Does this trade make the Grizzlies better in the short term?
Maybe not. The Grizzlies lose the only solid veteran on the roster in Mike Miller and the trade leaves the roster out of balance and potentially lacking a lot of important qualities that adding Kevin Love would have provided — toughness, rebounding, a great pick-and-roll/pick-and-pop partner for Mike Conley, someone to start the break, etc. …

Read the rest of Chris Herrington’s latest take on Grizzlies’ Draft Day at Beyond the Arc.

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News

The REAL Grizzlies Draft News: Adriana Lima is Coming

Buried in all the blah-blah-blah about Kevin Love, O.J. Mayo, Mike Miller, etc. etc. was this little nugget: As a throw-in from Minneapolis in the Love for Mayo deal, the Griz also obtained Marco Jaric.

So what? you ask. Here’s what: Marco Jaric is engaged to Brazilian super-model Adriana Lima. Yep, the Victoria’s Secret model, magazine cover girl extraordinaire will be sitting in the crowd watching her man, Marco. That ought spark attendance at FedExForum, though it might make the front row seats NSFW.

Chris Wallace, sign that man to a no-trade contract ASAP. Plus we like the sound of “Marco to Darko.”

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Sports Sports Feature

Griz Draft Love, Then Trade Him for Mayo

I learned from a Grizzlies source tonight that a deal is in the works that would send the rights to Kevin Love to Minnesota along with Mike Miller, Jason Collins, and Brian Cardinal in return for the rights to O.J. Mayo, Marko Jaric, Antoine Walker, and Greg Buckner …

The Flyer‘s Chris Herrington was all over last night’s NBA draft action on his Beyond the Arc Grizblog. Read it here, and check back later today for more.

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Sports Sports Feature

Grizzlies Workout: Randolph, Lee, and Arthur

The Grizzlies held a six-player draft workout at FedExForum this morning featuring one contender for the #5 pick — LSU forward Anthony Randolph — one strong contender for the #28 pick — Western Kentucky guard Courtney Lee — and one figure of infamy for a lot of Memphis basketball fans — Kansas forward Darrell Arthur …

Read Chris Herrington’s full report on today’s workout at Beyond the Arc, the Flyer‘s Grizblog.

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Sports Sports Feature

The Latest Grizzlies Draft Candidates’ Workout

The Grizzlies held another draft workout at FedExForum this morning, bringing in a trio of power-forward prospects: Indiana’s D.J. White, Wisconsin’s Brian Butch, and Clemson’s James Mays …

Read all about it from Chris Herrington, who was on the scene, at Beyond the Arc, the Flyer‘s Grizblog.

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Sports Sports Feature

On the Draft

A potentially momentous offseason for the Memphis Grizzlies commences this week with the NBA draft. Picking an unlucky fourth after posting the league’s worst record a year ago, the Grizzlies may have missed out on a sure thing (in the form of elite prospects Greg Oden and Kevin Durant) but now find before them a dizzying array of options. Here’s an attempt to see through the rumors, smoke screens, and general uncertainty for a glimpse of what might happen Thursday night and what it might mean — in the form of three key questions.

If the Grizzlies pick fourth, what are the options?

The Grizzlies are held hostage somewhat by the Atlanta Hawks, who pick third. The Hawks are likely to tab Florida power forward Al Horford, who has emerged as the consensus number-three prospect in the draft. Then again, the Hawks have shocked us before.

The Grizzlies love Horford and would pick him if he somehow slips past number three — and I wouldn’t be surprised if a trade led to Ohio State point guard Mike Conley Jr. or Chinese forward Yi Jianlian going third instead. But, assuming Horford is off the board, the Grizzlies are likely to choose among four prospects: Conley, fellow Florida players Joakim Noah and Corey Brewer, and North Carolina’s Brandon Wright.

The thought here is that Conley — a pure point guard with the quickness, handle, poise, and court vision to be a star — is the prospect with the highest ceiling.

Noah seems to be a perfect fit for the Grizzlies. He’s an active rebounder and defender who doesn’t need a lot of touches to be effective. The hitch: He may not be quite good enough to pick at number four. If you’re picking that high in a good draft, a team should be looking for a star. Noah reeks of role player.

Brewer and Wright are long shots that shouldn’t be counted out. Brewer is perhaps better equipped to impact the game on both ends of the floor than any of these players and fits new coach Marc Iavaroni’s preferred style. Wright is raw and would seem to duplicate Gasol’s strengths and weaknesses but has as much raw talent as anyone in the draft after Oden and Durant.

The hunch here? Conley gets the nod over Noah.

Will there be any trades?

Draft day trades could turn everything upside down, but right now a truly major trade — i.e., dealing Gasol — seems unlikely. New lead executive Chris Wallace scouted Gasol heavily while in Boston and Iavaroni is a noted big man’s coach. It seems unlikely the new regime will deal Gasol before having a chance to work with him.

More likely would be a trade involving another established player — with Mike Miller, Hakim Warrick, and Stromile Swift the likely subjects — to acquire either a young power player to pair with Gasol (Denver’s Nene and Utah’s Paul Millsap might make some sense) or another draft pick.

What will the pick mean?

The week after the rookie draft, the NBA’s free-agent period will begin with the Grizzlies poised to be one of the few teams with significant money to spend. And make no mistake, the draft and free agency are connected. What the Grizzlies think they can do in free agency is likely to influence what they do on draft day. For that reason, the Grizzlies’ draft pick should be a tipoff as to what player — or at least what type of player — the team will target in free agency.

If Noah, Brewer, or Wright are the pick and no other trades are made to net a point guard, then expect the Griz to target Milwaukee Bucks point guard Mo Williams, long thought to be the team’s preferred free-agent prize.

But if Conley is the pick (as I suspect), then the Grizzlies will look elsewhere in free agency. Addressing the long-acknowledged need for a more physical presence in the paint would seem to be most likely. But the options among power players in this free-agent class are meager. Instead, don’t be surprised if the Grizzlies go after one of the talented young swingmen available, such as Charlotte’s Gerald Wallace or Seattle’s Rashard Lewis.

Chris Wallace seems to prefer accumulating the best talent available for the Grizzlies rather than focusing on positional needs. Iavaroni prizes versatility. In Phoenix, Iavaroni was used to working with unconventional lineups. So, don’t assume the Grizzlies do the obvious this summer.

For up-to-date news and analysis before, during, and after the draft, go to Beyond the Arc, the Flyer‘s Grizzlies blog at MemphisFlyer.com/grizblog.