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The Nets Can't Trade Morrow even if they wanted to...

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The Nets Can't Trade Morrow even if they wanted to... 

Post#1 » by NyCeEvO » Tue Mar 29, 2011 11:19 pm

Nets' Anthony Morrow has mastered the art of the 3-point shot after years of practice
Published: Tuesday, March 29, 2011, 5:15 AM
Colin Stephenson/The Star-Ledger By Colin Stephenson/The Star-Ledger The Star-Ledger

When her only son was 7 or 8 years old, Angela Morrow would put him to bed and turn off the light. Once the door to his bedroom was closed, it sounded as if a pickup game had broken out.

Swish, Yay!

Using a flashlight to help him see, Anthony would be throwing balls of rolled-up aluminum foil, or sometimes rolled-up socks covered with tape, through a hoop he had made by bending a wire hanger into a circle.

“That boy could make a goal out of anything,’’ Angela Morrow says.

Most basketball aficionados agree that great shooters are born, not trained. But if the ability to consistently hoist a basketball over 20 feet through a circular hoop 10 feet above the ground is mostly innate, that gift alone won’t get you to the NBA.

“Shooters, to me, are born," said Rontrice Morrow, Anthony’s older cousin and the man who taught him the finer points of shooting a basketball. “But practice does make perfect."

Anthony Morrow has been practicing shooting a basketball all his life. His dedication has refined a skill so sharp that he has the second-highest 3-point shooting percentage, .448, in NBA history.

At pre-school age, growing up in Charlotte, N.C., his mother would take Anthony to the park and let him shoot basketballs until he tired himself out. When Rontrice — who is eight years older than Anthony — would go to the park with friends, his grandmother would make him take Anthony. Rontrice and his friends would play half-court, and Anthony would shoot by himself at the other end.

All that shooting paid off when Morrow, 25, signed a free-agent deal with the Nets last summer worth $12 million over three years. For a guy who went undrafted coming out of Georgia Tech three years ago, and who nearly signed for $80,000 to play in Ukraine, it is more money than he could have imagined he’d ever see in his life.

“This is just tremendous, man, it’s a blessing,’’ Morrow said of the success and stability he has found in the NBA. “I thank God for it every day. It’s just one of those things where you see stuff like that in movies. You don’t see stuff like that every day. So I acknowledge that, give back to my neighborhood, give back to my community, tell people my story all the time.”

Morrow’s story picks up in the 10th grade with his jumper. It was then he first realized he was good enough to play basketball in college — maybe professionally. His high school coach at Charlotte Latin, Jerry Faulkner, told him that, with work, he had the potential to do big things.

“I said, ‘Anthony, what you do with this is your business, but I’m going to give you a chance,’" Faulkner recalled. “ ‘You can do what you want to do with it — you can listen to your coach, listen to your teachers and go to the next level. And maybe the next level.’"

Morrow, who grew up on the west side of Charlotte, had transferred to Charlotte Latin — 30 miles away, on the city’s south side — as a sophomore. The move taught him a lesson beyond basketball, his mother said.

“I felt the need to move him because public school wasn’t giving him a challenge,” Angela Morrow said. “He would be done with his homework in 20 minutes. I felt like he was smart enough to be challenged.”

She worked four jobs to cover the family’s bills and pay the tuition, and sometimes would bring Anthony to work with her “because I wanted him to see that nothing is free. Whatever you want, you’ve got to work for it.”

Morrow did. Sometimes, after a weeknight road game, he might not get home until after midnight — and then would have to do homework. He’d get to bed at 2 or 3 a.m. and be up by 6 a.m. to get to school on time.

As a sophomore, Morrow was recruited by North Carolina, his favorite college team, but then-coach Matt Doherty resigned after the 2002-03 season and his replacement, Roy Williams, didn’t show interest in Morrow, who ended up at Georgia Tech instead.

Morrow’s college career undulated. A successful sophomore season gave way to a junior campaign in which, after a back injury, his scoring average slumped and he mostly came off the bench. He rebounded as a senior, with his jumper (44.8 percent from 3-point range) helping to earn an invite to the NBA’s Portsmouth, N.H., draft combine. Still, he wasn’t drafted.

Morrow bounced around the NBA summer league circuit, hoping his shooting prowess would attract a suitor. He caught on with the Golden State Warriors, earned the MVP of the Utah summer league then a contract for the 2008-09 season. As a rookie, he scored 10 a game and hit 46.7 percent of his 3-point shots. The next year, he shot 45.6 percent from 3, a mark of consistency the Nets noticed last offseason.

“One of the things that we lacked tremendously was shooting,” Nets assistant GM Bobby Marks said. “Him kind of being under the radar the last couple years in Golden State — he was two minimum contracts, non-guaranteed — we felt at the value he possessed on the court and at the salary number we were looking at, he was a guy that kind of fit (our needs).”

Morrow has quietly become the Nets’ top offseason acquisition. He is averaging 13.2 points and shooting 42.4 percent from 3-point range in 43 starts, the most of his career. His career 3-point shooting percentage trails only Steve Kerr (.454) in NBA history.

“I’ve only played with one other shooter similar to him and that’s Kyle Korver, a guy that’s just a dead-eye 3-point shooter,” Nets point guard Deron Williams said. “Guys like that are a point guard’s dream, because you’re pretty much mad when they miss.”

Good article overall but that last statement just tells the FO one person they can't trade this offseason. Want Deron to stay? Don't trade his friends like the Jazz kept doing. Keep Morrow!

Also, this dude makes $12 million over the life of his contract and he's overjoyed! Some of these NBA players are pissed that they don't make more than $12 million in a season. Smh...
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Re: The Nets Can't Trade Morrow even if they wanted to... 

Post#2 » by Jersey Generals » Tue Mar 29, 2011 11:22 pm

Morrow being a throw in during the Melo disaster was laughable. A cheap shooter that, you know, actually wanted to play for the Nets? Keeper. Unless, he's one of the main assets being traded for a flat-out better player.
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Re: The Nets Can't Trade Morrow even if they wanted to... 

Post#3 » by NyCeEvO » Tue Mar 29, 2011 11:25 pm

Jersey Generals wrote:Morrow being a throw in during the Melo disaster was laughable. A cheap shooter that, you know, actually wanted to play for the Nets? Keeper. Unless, he's one of the main assets being traded for a flat-out better player.

Exactly. Morrow shouldn't be included in any trade unless it's a deal breaker to get a star that Deron wants to play with. Other than that, he ain't going nowhere!
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Re: The Nets Can't Trade Morrow even if they wanted to... 

Post#4 » by Stone » Wed Mar 30, 2011 12:03 am

NyCeEvO wrote:
Jersey Generals wrote:Morrow being a throw in during the Melo disaster was laughable. A cheap shooter that, you know, actually wanted to play for the Nets? Keeper. Unless, he's one of the main assets being traded for a flat-out better player.

Exactly. Morrow shouldn't be included in any trade unless it's a deal breaker to get a star that Deron wants to play with. Other than that, he ain't going nowhere!



Agreed.......We need a good shooter to space the floor. Love Morrows story but if we have to move him for the greater good so be it.
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Re: The Nets Can't Trade Morrow even if they wanted to... 

Post#5 » by JoseRizal » Wed Mar 30, 2011 4:16 am

Great article. I agree with all of you, Morrow is a keeper unless something spectacular comes up...
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Re: The Nets Can't Trade Morrow even if they wanted to... 

Post#6 » by Revolutionistt » Wed Mar 30, 2011 12:48 pm

Perfectly put. Unless the Nets are getting the likes of Dwight Howard in return theres no reason to trade Morrow. This guy is going to break Ray Allens record for three pointers made, with a higher percentage too! By the way, other than the Melo rumors has Morrows name been thrown around for trades at all? Or are you just bringing up the point that management shouldnt even explore trading him?
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Re: The Nets Can't Trade Morrow even if they wanted to... 

Post#7 » by NyCeEvO » Wed Mar 30, 2011 5:15 pm

Revolutionistt wrote:Perfectly put. Unless the Nets are getting the likes of Dwight Howard in return theres no reason to trade Morrow. This guy is going to break Ray Allens record for three pointers made, with a higher percentage too! By the way, other than the Melo rumors has Morrows name been thrown around for trades at all? Or are you just bringing up the point that management shouldnt even explore trading him?

No, I don't think Morrow was mentioned in any other deal. And yeah, I was bringing up the point that management shouldn't even think about trading him. D-Will is the only full-fledge untouchable Net. Morrow and Lopez have asterisks next to their names indicating that they're not going to be traded unless it's for a star.
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Re: The Nets Can't Trade Morrow even if they wanted to... 

Post#8 » by Revolutionistt » Wed Mar 30, 2011 6:14 pm

NyCeEvO wrote:No, I don't think Morrow was mentioned in any other deal. And yeah, I was bringing up the point that management shouldn't even think about trading him. D-Will is the only full-fledge untouchable Net. Morrow and Lopez have asterisks next to their names indicating that they're not going to be traded unless it's for a star.


Is he though? I mean if he starts showing signs that hes not going to resign then doesnt management have to look at trade options? Id say for this summer at least hes untouchable but after that hes gotta show that hes staying long term, otherwise hes out in my book.
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Re: The Nets Can't Trade Morrow even if they wanted to... 

Post#9 » by SIC » Wed Mar 30, 2011 8:20 pm

I agree trading Morrow is only an option if Dwight Howard is coming back to the Nets.

The funny thing is the NETS drafted Korver and that year we drafted him and traded him to 76ers when we need 3pt shooting badly. I am pretty sure Dwill is aware of this fact.

This FO would make a very big mistake trading a sharp shooter like Morrow.

Dwill, Morrow, Defensive SF, Offensive PF, Dwight Howard would be scary. I know Morrow isnt a starter but if we can get a starting SF instead of a starting SG, I would be ok with a line up like that.
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Re: The Nets Can't Trade Morrow even if they wanted to... 

Post#10 » by deepblueday » Wed Mar 30, 2011 9:01 pm

Revolutionistt wrote:This guy is going to break Ray Allens record for three pointers made, with a higher percentage too!


No chance, baaaabbaaayyyy.

Funniest (and scariest) part about that rumored Andre Miller deal was Morrow being swapped for Fernandez like they were in any remotely equivalent players. :lol: I like Morrow a lot, he's a guy that will fit in perfectly anywhere he goes. Not many guys in the NBA can score 13-15 PPG on elite percentages never having the ball in their hands and having almost no plays run for them.

That said, I would still probably swap him for Mayo if that's what it took. I would do it reluctantly though. We just desperately need playmaking on the wing, and he's clearly the best option available.
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Re: The Nets Can't Trade Morrow even if they wanted to... 

Post#11 » by SteveNets15 » Wed Mar 30, 2011 9:15 pm

I wouldn't trade Morrow for Mayo.
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Re: The Nets Can't Trade Morrow even if they wanted to... 

Post#12 » by NyCeEvO » Wed Mar 30, 2011 9:51 pm

Revolutionistt wrote:
NyCeEvO wrote:No, I don't think Morrow was mentioned in any other deal. And yeah, I was bringing up the point that management shouldn't even think about trading him. D-Will is the only full-fledge untouchable Net. Morrow and Lopez have asterisks next to their names indicating that they're not going to be traded unless it's for a star.


Is he though? I mean if he starts showing signs that hes not going to resign then doesnt management have to look at trade options? Id say for this summer at least hes untouchable but after that hes gotta show that hes staying long term, otherwise hes out in my book.

Well, yes of course. You know what I meant. If people call for him this year and during the offseason, we're hanging up the phone. If nothing happens between now and leading up to the deadline, then at that point we would trade him.
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Re: The Nets Can't Trade Morrow even if they wanted to... 

Post#13 » by deepblueday » Thu Mar 31, 2011 3:09 am

I really, really don't want to move Morrow. His deal is very reasonable, and you just can't find shooters like him. He was great tonight.

What do we think about JR Smith? Maybe playing with a leader and playmaker like D-Will could get him to tone down the crazy one-on-one stuff.
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Re: The Nets Can't Trade Morrow even if they wanted to... 

Post#14 » by dukeknicksirish » Thu Mar 31, 2011 2:51 pm

you guys aint getting Howard lol
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Re: The Nets Can't Trade Morrow even if they wanted to... 

Post#15 » by N Ireland Nets » Thu Mar 31, 2011 4:27 pm

dukeknicksirish wrote:you guys aint getting Howard lol


Yeh because you have the inside track on what Howards future holds. Don't hate because the Knicks have no chance of obtaining Howard where as we are 1 of 3 teams (Net, Bulls and Lakers) with a serious chance.
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Re: The Nets Can't Trade Morrow even if they wanted to... 

Post#16 » by NyCeEvO » Thu Mar 31, 2011 4:32 pm

deepblueday wrote:What do we think about JR Smith? Maybe playing with a leader and playmaker like D-Will could get him to tone down the crazy one-on-one stuff.

While I think he would be ok here, many others don't want any part of JR. Personally, I'd think our offense would really start to pick up if he's on the Nets. He's one of the best athletes in the league, can shoot, and runs the break well. Defensively, he's average but the one thing that I do like about him is that he gets the crowd going. He's a hometown product and has talked about playing in NJ every time his contract is up. He's only 25/26 years old and we wouldn't have to go overboard to get him.

In my mind, there are only two moves that the Nets can make that where they will get the most bang for the buck and those are signing JR to a contract similar to the one he has now or by trading for Mayo. Either way, Morrow would still be on the team and no matter who is the backup (Morrow or JR/Mayo) our SG spot would always be lethal at shooting.
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Re: The Nets Can't Trade Morrow even if they wanted to... 

Post#17 » by SteveNets15 » Thu Mar 31, 2011 4:37 pm

Yea we should sign JR and D.west.Then trade Brook for Bynum and Outlaw for Al Harrington.Go Jersey for our last season in Jersey.

Bynum
D.West
AlHarr
JR
D-WILLY
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Re: The Nets Can't Trade Morrow even if they wanted to... 

Post#18 » by NyCeEvO » Thu Mar 31, 2011 4:44 pm

dukeknicksirish wrote:you guys aint getting Howard lol

And so he'll go to the Knicks right? Your team should be ashamed that they two perennial allstars and still manage to be below .500. Our team almost beat you last night and we know that we're not good. Before you go lol-ing on someone else's board, you might wanna lol at your own team first.
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Re: The Nets Can't Trade Morrow even if they wanted to... 

Post#19 » by NyCeEvO » Thu Mar 31, 2011 4:51 pm

stevieboy wrote:Yea we should sign JR and D.west.Then trade Brook for Bynum and Outlaw for Al Harrington.Go Jersey for our last season in Jersey.

Bynum
D.West
AlHarr
JR
D-WILLY

Well, D-Will isn't from Jersey so that wouldn't be an all jersey team.

Even though Harrington isn't great, Denver would never trade him for Outlaw. Outlaw is that bad. I wouldn't trade Brook for Bynum because he had chronic knee issues. Phil Jackson said before the season starts that if Bynum has another knee injury, he'll never be able to be a franchise center and will have to play less minutes as a starting center or be a reserve. He's too injury prone.
D.West just tore his ACL and will barely be in a game shape by the time the season starts. You should always hesitate to get guys after they tear their ACL. West is already 31 and an ACL tear on top of that makes his FA value much worse than what it was going to be.
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Re: The Nets Can't Trade Morrow even if they wanted to... 

Post#20 » by SteveNets15 » Thu Mar 31, 2011 5:02 pm

NyCeEvO wrote:
stevieboy wrote:Yea we should sign JR and D.west.Then trade Brook for Bynum and Outlaw for Al Harrington.Go Jersey for our last season in Jersey.

Bynum
D.West
AlHarr
JR
D-WILLY

Well, D-Will isn't from Jersey so that wouldn't be an all jersey team.

Even though Harrington isn't great, Denver would never trade him for Outlaw. Outlaw is that bad. I wouldn't trade Brook for Bynum because he had chronic knee issues. Phil Jackson said before the season starts that if Bynum has another knee injury, he'll never be able to be a franchise center and will have to play less minutes as a starting center or be a reserve. He's too injury prone.
D.West just tore his ACL and will barely be in a game shape by the time the season starts. You should always hesitate to get guys after they tear their ACL. West is already 31 and an ACL tear on top of that makes his FA value much worse than what it was going to be.


:lol: Yea i joking.The Nets are probably going to sign Humphries and T.Prince.I wouldn't mind having JR on the team either for the right price.

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