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fishercob wrote:



LyricalRico wrote:^ A lot can happen between now and the draft. If the Wiz dump Blatche, get some value for Young and possibly McGee, and pick up a decent vet at the deadline - then I think they can show signs of life in the second half of the season. Add in a good draft and I think the case can absolutely be made that EG is right on track for Ted's rebuilding plan.
Really, as long as Ted's plan is to lose and accumulate picks, it's going to be difficult to sell tickets. Putting a different name on the GM office door isn't going to move the needle on tickets IMO. If Ted's primary goal is to sell tickets for the 2012-13 season, then they are going to go all in on vets.
LyricalRico wrote:^ A lot can happen between now and the draft. If the Wiz dump Blatche, get some value for Young and possibly McGee, and pick up a decent vet at the deadline - then I think they can show signs of life in the second half of the season. Add in a good draft and I think the case can absolutely be made that EG is right on track for Ted's rebuilding plan.
Really, as long as Ted's plan is to lose and accumulate picks, it's going to be difficult to sell tickets. Putting a different name on the GM office door isn't going to move the needle on tickets IMO. If Ted's primary goal is to sell tickets for the 2012-13 season, then they are going to go all in on vets.
When you think of trainers, you think of dominant personalities that always find a way to make themselves the loudest man in the room. That is not Joe Connelly. Joe Connelly is a short, stocky man with a goatee that stands out only because he looks so different than the men he is training. Many trainers and coaches stop workouts in the middle to provide instruction. Connelly would rather keep things moving. The only time you hear his voice is when he's encouraging players to keep going.
It's been a long road for Connelly to get to this point. Twenty years ago, Connelly was working at local recreation centers and teaching in Baltimore. He mostly worked with high school kids and some college players. It was only a few years ago when he got in contact with some of the Wizards players. His brother, Tim Connelly, had risen to the position of head scout with the Wizards after beginning in 1996. Eventually, Joe Connelly found his way into the Wizards' network working with Mason, then with the team, and Blatche.
"I've been working out with him since I've been with the Wizards," Blatche says. "His brother actually used to be with us when I was a rookie, so Joe's been around the Wizards [for a while]."
Connelly has no official position with the Wizards, but he regularly communicates with general manager Ernie Grunfeld and others within the organization. This year, he's worked closest with Blatche, Trevor Booker and Ndiaye, and he was the man who ran the private workouts Blatche organized with a couple members of the Wizards in September. Ndiaye in particular couldn't stop singing Connelly's praises.
The overall vision for the organization, though, is an open question. With team president Ernie Grunfeld on the last year of his contract, speculation has resurfaced that he could be on his way out in a full-scale housecleaning. But league sources caution to consider that Grunfeld remains in the good graces of owner Ted Leonsis, who recognizes that Grunfeld's plan was seriously interrupted with the Gilbert Arenas gun incident two years ago. And while an extension for Grunfeld certainly is out of the question at the moment, the Wizards actually will be fairly well positioned next summer to make a significant move in a deep free-agent class. Assuming they buy out Rashard Lewis, who only has $10 million guaranteed out of his $22 million salary, Washington would have less than $35 million in committed payroll. And since the youth movement is in full swing, Grunfeld might be able to extract another asset if he decides to move veteran guard Maurice Evans and/or Roger Mason to a contender that needs guard help. Both are on one-year deals and can't be traded until March 1, and their veteran experience is needed in the locker room. But if either one decides he wants a trade, sources say the Wizards will try to accommodate them.

