Truth About It » dave hopla
Truth About It RSS Feed
Follow Truth About It.net on Twitter
Follow Truth About It.net on FaceBook
Check out the Truth About It.net YouTube Channel

Posts for category ‘dave hopla’

Ernie Grunfeld: The Closer
| July 14, 2008 | 11:57 pm

Washington Wizards fans may never realize the importance of the summer of 2008, or, I should say, how crucial it’s been to have a GM like Ernie Grunfeld at the helm with the direction of the franchise on the line.

Whether you agree with it or not, the Wizards GM made an assessment based on the team’s past, his cognizance of the game, and his awareness of personnel (with some assistance from his staff of course). Grunfeld then formed a plan, made his plan public, and enacted that plan with swift intuitiveness.

Charting the future path of an NBA team involves knowledge, luck and chance. Ernie limited risk by using his knowledge. Part one of the plan was to lock up Antawn Jamison immediately. Sure, if you are purely considering market value, four-years and $5o million may be slightly overpaying for the 32-year old forward. One only has to factor in Gentlemen Jamison’s leadership, much less his many other intangibles, to understand that AJ was more than deserving of the amount and time.

And part 1b was locking up Gilbert Arenas. Ernie has seen, heard, and experienced plenty of free agent summers. He knows that anything can happen. Sure Ernie may have been surprised about Brand-Gate, but that doesn’t mean he neglects to consider such events a possibility, especially with our friend, Captain Quirk.

Locking up Gilbert Arenas, even for $111 million over six (a price which some, including myself, have wished was even less) was the right thing to do. I’m no longer contentious on the price. To wait longer to get a deal with Arenas done is to open the door wider on the chance that something crazy might happen. Grunfeld slammed the door and moved on to dotting the i’s and crossing the t’s on the summer. He used tact to get Arenas to take less money, still allowing for Agent Zero to safe face, while providing for maneuverability down the road.

Part one and beyond has so far involved the signing of Dee Brown, he of rap and Sports Illustrated fame. I’d been curious as to who might fill the needed third string PG position, one with the quicks to push (as the Wizards 2nd unit, with it’s youth, needs to run), and hopefully one in possession of a knock-down jumper as well. With Brown, we obviously have more confidence in his ability to be an example of the former, rather than the latter. But there’s always Turkey and Dave Hopla, and when you consider that Grunfeld signed Brown on the cheap, I’d give the move an A minus.

Read more »

Brendan Todd Haywood: Washington Wizards Player Evaluation
| July 8, 2008 | 5:01 pm

After a brief hiatus, it’s time to get back to Washington Wizards 2007-2008 player evaluations…..only four players left: Gilbert Arenas, Caron Butler, Antawn Jamison, and today, Brendan Todd Haywood. My thoughts are below, head over to Bullets Forever and check out what the Pradamaster and Jake The Snake have to say about BTH.

Previous Entries:

Etan Thomas
| Oleksiy Pecherov | Dominic McGuire | Nick Young | Andray Blatche
| Roger Mason | Darius Songaila | Antonio Daniels | DeShawn Stevenson

Brendan Todd Haywood, Washington Wizards - flickr/kevin813Before the 2007-2008 season, I had feelings of intense frustration, and perhaps despite, towards Brendan Todd Haywood during his tenure as a Washington Wizard. I found BTH to be a bumbling, soft, waste-of-space….leading to frequent use of the effeminate moniker, Brenda. My opinion was so negative because I simply expected more use of his potential, and Haywood seemed to be a never-ending source of disappointment.

In my second game blog of 07-08, the massacre in Boston, I wrote this:

1st Quarter: Haywood dunk! Great positioning on the rebound…AND…the subsequent block! Please do this all year. If you do, I will write a personal letter to you apologizing for all the times I’ve referred to you as Brenda Haywood. You can hold me to that.

It wasn’t until game 21 versus the ‘Sota T’Wolves when I “officially” stopped calling Brendan, Brenda. Haywood was able to sustain whatever it was that got into him for the entire season and led me to turn an about face, believing the chances of him reverting back to his former self to be very slim.

Read more »