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The Woelfel World of Sports
Bucks chose wrong option on Alexander
Posted by:
gwoelfel on
November 6, 2009 at
5:08PM CST
GERY WOELFEL They were all on the same page. Going into the 2008 NBA draft, everyone involved in determining who Milwaukee Bucks should select with the eighth overall pick was in agreement. Bucks general manager John Hammond, his assistant Jeff Weltman, player personnel director Dave Babcock and head coach Scott Skiles all felt Joe Alexander of West Virginia was the player who could significantly impact the franchise. Each of those individuals was duly impressed with Alexander’s steady improvement through college and intrigued with his seemingly unlimited upside. They were blown away by his athleticism . He possessed exceptional leaping ability and baseline-to-baseline speed. While believing the 6-foot-8 Alexander was a gem, the Bucks brass was also acutely aware that he needed some polishing. They knew it would take more than one season before they reaped the dividends on their investment. The Bucks’ assessment of Alexander was shared by most NBA teams. Most pro scouts had projected Alexander in the eight to 14 range. The New Jersey Nets, picking 10th, coveted Alexander. So did the Sacrmaneto Kings, who picked 12th. There was even one team picking before the Bucks who strongly considered taking Alexander. That was the New York Knicks, who had the sixth pick, wound up drafting another forward, Danilo Gallinari. So, it wasn’t like the Bucks were taking a wild flyer on Alexander. For a team that craved a forward and desperately needed to become more athletic, Alexander seemed like a perfect fit for the Bucks. Wrong. Almost from the start of training camp, the writing was on the wall that Alexander wasn’t in Skiles’ good graces. That became even more evident at the outset of the regular season when Skiles opted to give major minutes to Luc Richard Mbah a Moute, another forward who was chosen in the second round, instead of the highly-touted Alexander. By the middle of the season, whispers were circulating the NBA that Skiles didn’t like Alexander’s game. According to some NBA officials, Skiles, a stickler for details, was annoyed by Alexander’s lack of understanding of the pro game and his supposed inability to follow assignments. In the weeks leading up to the trading deadline in February, rumors spread the Bucks had already soured on Alexander and were attempting to trade him, with Memphis being a prominently-mentioned destination. But a trade for Alexander never materialized, and Alexander’s playing time virtually became non-existent. In a nine-game stretch from Feb. 27 to March 21, he played only four games. The most minutes he received in that span was 8:20. While Alexander was practically a fixture on the bench, his Lottery colleagues were fixtures on the court, especially all seven players drafted before him -- Chicago’s Derrick Rose, Miami’s Michael Beasley, Memphis’ O.J. Mayo, Oklahoma City’s Russell Westbrook, Minnesota’s Kevin Love, Gallinari and the Los Angeles Clippers’ Eric Gordon. Each of those aforementioned players wound up playing in at least 78 of the 82 regular-season games --with the exception of Gallinari, who was hurt. Each those rookies also averaged at least 25 minutes a game. Gordon, picked one spot in front of Alexander, averaged 34.3 minutes for the season. And Alexander? He wound up playing in just 59 games. He averaged a paltry 12.1 minutes a game. It wasn’t exactly the scenario Alexander envisioned while almost pleading with a reporter at an NBA pre-draft camp in Orlando to tell Skiles to pick him. Yet, while Alexander seldom played extensive minutes, he performed reasonably well when he was allowed to stay on the court. In the six games in which he played at least 24 minutes but not more than 29 last season -- essentially half a game -- Alexander averaged 11.6 points. He shot a highly-respectable 49 percent from the field. Perhaps the most telling sign of what Skiles and Co. thought of Alexander occurred in the last several weeks of the season when it was amply apparent the Bucks weren’t going to make the playoffs. Alexander played 25 or more minutes just three times in the last 12 games. In the season finale, Alexander barely got off the bench, totaling just 13 minutes. Conversely, Golden State coach Don Nelson used the final weeks of the season to guage the potential of the Warriors’ top pick, Anthony Randolph, the 14th overall draft pick. Randolph, whom the Bucks gave serious consideration to drafting before opting for Alexander, played 25 minutes or more in 11 of the final 12 games. In his last eight games, Randolph was outstanding. He not only averaged 15.1 points but grabbed 10.6 rebounds a game and had 12 steals. The Warriors have picked up Randolph’s option, and this season, he has already started a game. He appears headed for a long and productive NBA career. Meanwhile, Alexander’s future looks murky. After turning in a highly-encouraging summer league showing --16.6 points a game -- and following that with what some observers said was an excellent showing at Tim Grgrich’s camp, Alexander partially tore a hamstring before training camp and hasn’t played since. Furthermore, the Bucks brass decided last week not to pick up the third-year option on his contract. Both Hammond and Skiles said the principal reason for not picking up Alexander’s option was that they haven’t had enough time to evaluate him. Asked if he regretted not playing Alexander more last season, especially down the stretch, to get a better evaluation of Alexander, who is just 23, Skiles said, "No. No. Young players have to learn how to play winning basketball. That’s the most important lesson they have to learn. "Just to put him out there, just to get minutes and say we’re going to live with anything that they do ... "In my experience, and I’ve had a lot of experience with young players that have had success, I just don’t look at that as a valid way. "They have to earn their way onto the floor like everybody else and be productive when they are on the floor.’’ Skiles also defends the Bucks’ selection of Alexander, insisting it wasn’t a mistake. "I would never say that,’’ Skiles said. Suffice to say, there are many observers who disagree, including some within the Bucks organization. By not picking up Alexander’s option, he becomes an unrestricted free agent in July. If he signs with another team, the Bucks wouldn’t receive any compensation. If that occurs, the Alexander selection may go down as one of the biggest draft blunders in Bucks’ history. So, why didn’t the Bucks exhibit the patience they requested of their fans on draft night when they chose Alexander and pick up Alexander’s option year which, in the big picture of the NBA, is only $2.7 million? "We can’t get caught up in necessarily where Joe was picked,’’ Skiles said. "He’s not a pick anymore. He’s Joe Alexander. That’s who he is. He’s a player on our team. "We’re making the best decisions that we can for the long-range future of the Milwaukee Bucks.’’ And Hammond and Skiles made that decision even though Skiles contends Alexander can become a good player. "Sure. Absolutely,’’ Skiles said. "Yeah, he’s got a chance.’’ And the talent-challenged Bucks should have been the ones to give him that chance.
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