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Sunday, February 23, 1997
Don Nelson shows off his whirlwind style
By HAL BOCK / Associated Press
It is a measure of Don Nelson's whirlwind style that two weeks
after he was hired as general manager of the Dallas Mavericks,
he has become one of the franchise's longest-tenured employees.
Let's see, there's coach Jim Cleamons, who left the security
of an assistant coach's seat next to Phil Jackson on the Chicago
Bulls bench last summer for this maelstrom.
And there's Samaki Walker, drafted last June and currently
the senior player on the team.
And there's Nelson, wheeling and dealing, trading his players
for yours and then maybe trading yours for somebody else's.
The latest wrinkle was a nine-player whopper with the New Jersey
Nets that just about swept the roster clean. This, however, could
be nothing more than an NBA version of Shakespeare's sound and
fury, signifying nothing. I give you my underachieving shooting
guard. You give me your underachieving center. What does it all
add up to?
That was the essence of the Dallas-New Jersey exchange of bodies.
Included in the package acquired by Nelson was enigmatic 7-foot-6
Shawn Bradley who, in his last game with the Nets, managed to
play 32 minutes without getting a single rebound.
Now, if you're 7-foot-6, you ought to get rebounds by accident.
You are, after all, starting just 2 feet, 6 inches away from the
basket. Put your hands up and sooner or later the ball almost
certainly will find them. It shouldn't be all that complicated.
As part of the package, the Mavs parted with their own 7-foot
mystery, Eric Montross. All you need to know about Montross is
that Boston, without a big man after grandpa Robert Parish moved
on, made him their No. 1 draft choice and then gave up on the
project after two years. Montross wears No. 00, a fitting description
of his NBA production so far.
The coming and going also included Robert Pack, Khalid Reeves
and Ed O'Bonnon to Dallas, and Jimmy Jackson, Sam Cassell, George
McCloud and Chris Gatling to the Nets.
The trade came days after Nelson began his reconstruction of
the Mavs by waiving jumbo Oliver Miller, generously listed as
280 pounds - probably before breakfast. The ponderous Miller,
upset at some slight real or imagined, had punctuated a Mavs'
loss a week earlier by saying, "I don't care anymore,"
an observation that earned him the new GM's first ticket out of
town.
Next, Nelson turned to some front office fine-tuning, hiring
ex-Mavs vice-president Keith Grant as a consultant, then firing
part-time equipment manager Ben Carter and replacing him with
full-timer Chad Lewis.
Then he went back to work on the roster, dispatching Jamaal
Mashburn, an ex-No. 1 pick, to Miami for three rather anonymous
types - Sasha Danilovic, Martin Muursepp and Kurt Thomas.
Immediately, some paranoid types in New York suspected that
it was a get-even move by Nelson, who left the Knicks on less-than-warm
terms a year ago. Could he be targeting his ex-employers by swapping
the useful Mashburn to the Heat, the team New York is chasing
in the Atlantic Division? Would Nelson be that devious?
That's unlikely. There is no time for devious in Dallas. The
Mavs have been wandering aimlessly through the NBA for a long
time now, never finishing higher than fifth since 1990. They were
sitting in their accustomed spot near the bottom of the Midwest
Division when Nelson swept into town and started sweeping players
out.
He found a willing partner in the Nets, another befuddled franchise
that was going nowhere and getting there in a hurry. And before
you decide New Jersey put one over on Nelson, consider that one
of Dallas' assistant coaches is Butch Beard, who spent the last
two seasons coaching the Nets.
What may be more important to the Nets than shedding Bradley
was shedding the remainder of his $44 million contract, an albatross
that now becomes Nelson's problem.
There's another up side to all of this for New Jersey. It frees
up playing time for Yinka Dare, their own No. 1 embarrassment.
Unless, of course, Nelson decides to take him off their hands,
too. Send
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Copyright ©1997,
Abilene Reporter-News / Texnews / E.W. Scripps Publications
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