Taiwan Killa wrote:It's missing a stat: missed dunks/layups per game.
that is like 1-2 per game just like every other big man in the game.
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J Rob wrote:Scandalouzzzz wrote:was this guy that good in high school to make him be the 1st draft pick?
Michael Jordan on high school Kwame:
"We don't know what he is capable of doing, and we don't know when to expect dividends, but it became apparent after we saw him work out that he has the skills and desire."
And don't quote me, but I've also heard he killed Tyson Chandler in their one-on-one workouts.
To the Wizards, he was a no brainer...Kwame actually told Doug Collins "If you pick me, you'll never regret it."
Its odd cause if you look at Kwame's early development, you could see his career going the way Bynum's and O'neal's went.
First couple years are rough cause they aren't quite ready, but you can see the growth and potential.
Even his moves and athletecism remind you of O'neal early on.
Then...all of sudden on the verge of breaking out, Kwame gets hurt and never becomes more than an 8 and 7 player.
Odd. Just odd.
Early on in his career, Kwame had all this athletecism and potential, but was known as a locker room cancer...to the point where he said he was going to punch Gilbert Arenas.
Then he comes to L.A., becames a favorite of his teammates, but seemingly loses his desire to become a great player, regresses, and puts on weight.
Kwame should see a therapist and a nutritionist (aka lose 20 pounds).
Sedale Threatt wrote:I don't think it's much of a mystery at all. He simply isn't wired to be great.
I fully believe that it wasn't as much natural ability, even though they're certainly blessed in that category, that put players like Jordan, Magic, Bird and Kobe over the top but intangibles -- qualities like work ethic, desire, confidence, competitiveness.
Few of us humans have them, to be sure. But those that do tend to be successful in whatever they do, regardless of the field or their actual abilities. Everybody's had a friend like that -- pulls girls that are out of his league, achieves beyond his means.
Some people ask, Why me? Those guys ask, Why not me?
Not only is Kwame deficient in those areas, he might be completely devoid. Maybe that's Jordan's fault. Or maybe Kwame simply wasn't ready to be a pro. Regardless, a true champion can be measure by how he handles adversity and criticism. He doesn't, as Kwame has, go into a shell or flatline, regardless of the circumstances.