[外電] Trail Blazers draft room strategies
Trail Blazers draft room strategies
Sunday, June 22, 2008
By BRIAN HENDRICKSON Columbian Staff Writer
TUALATIN, Ore. — Kevin Pritchard will rise at 3 a.m. Thursday morning and —
on three or four hours of sleep at most — begin a routine with which he is
now intimately familiar.
The Portland Trail Blazers’ general manager will spend the early hours
leading up to the NBA Draft by reading media reports and discussing possible
scenarios with members of his management and scouting teams. All that before
the sun has barely breached the horizon.
The group will have examined most of the details — 95 to 99 percent of the
work will already be done, Pritchard says — yet they will spend the next
several hours combing for overlooked nuggets.
Pritchard calls this “The Process” — a day-by-day, step-by-step strategy
to achieve optimum draft success. And its success cannot be argued.
Each of the last two years, “The Process” has revitalized the Blazers’
franchise. It led them to pick Greg Oden over Kevin Durant last season, and
to acquire the rights to Brandon Roy and LaMarcus Aldridge the year before.
It pushed the Blazers to purchase late first-round picks each of the last two
seasons that brought them Spanish guards Sergio Rodriguez and Rudy Fernandez,
and helped set Portland up for what it hopes will be the franchise’s next
great run of success.
Pritchard’s year builds up to this moment. It is his personal All-Star
stage, and he treats it like a coach preparing for Game 7 of the NBA Finals.
“When I was a player, all I did was think about that game. Who was I
guarding?” Pritchard said. “And it’s the same thing. What are the teams
above us looking to do? What are the teams below us looking to do? If one
thing happens that changes the whole draft, is that a possibility that day?
So we try to explore every possibility.”
So what, exactly, is “The Process?”
It’s the scouting reports for 150 college and international players,
organized and packed into a three-ring binder with statistical analysis,
background information, and breakdowns of their production.
It’s the hundreds of hours of digital video loaded onto a computer server,
waiting for coaches and scouts to review.
It’s the trade and draft scenarios, written onto dry-erase boards
surrounding the draft room where team officials can visualize the
possibilities while 11 telephones ring endlessly.
And it’s the constant string of outgoing phone calls as Blazers officials
explore every option of their draft strategy, like the floor of a stock
exchange in the midst of a bull bonanza.
Can they convince a team to trade its top-10 pick?
Can they grab an extra first-round selection?
Who can they pick at No. 33?
Is there a swap to work out for any of their second-round picks?
The Blazers will already know many of those answers as Pritchard rises before
dawn on Thursday. “The Process” will have provided them.
Thursday will be about executing a fine-tuned strategy and squeezing every
possibility out of the annual event.
Pritchard can not predict how it will end.
But he trusts “The Process” to guide him.
From:http://tinyurl.com/5oxrpr
--
※ 發信站: 批踢踢實業坊(ptt.cc)
◆ From: 61.64.47.64
BLAZERS 近期熱門文章
PTT體育區 即時熱門文章
22
31
30
35