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View Full Version : Luis Scola is the South American Tim Duncan



Allanon
03-06-2008, 03:29 PM
Chris Mannix
CNN/SI
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2008/writers/chris_mannix/03/05/rockets.mailbag/index.html

HOUSTON -- The people have spoken and they ain't happy about my recent column discounting the Rockets' chances of making the playoffs without Yao Ming. Those e-mails kick off this mini-mailbag.

What makes you so much of a freakin' expert? Who did you play for, coach or manage in basketball? The Rockets will make the playoffs and you will look foolish!
-- Jim, Virginia

Stay in New York and never come to Houston. This is Clutch City, where we've been down and won two championships. Stay away, hater.
-- Mark, Houston

With all due respect to your reactionary, myopic assessment of the Rockets just hours after the Yao news, a true professional would not be so quick to do so. There is no doubt Yao's presence on the court will be missed, but their winning streak was not by his doing alone; it was a TEAM effort.
-- Phillip, Houston

You don't know much about the NBA, do you?
-- Chris, Houston

Touch a nerve, did I? Look, I'm far from a Rockets hater. Before Yao's injury, I believed Houston to be a dark-horse candidate to come out of the Western Conference. Not just because of Yao or Tracy McGrady, but because the supporting cast surrounding the two superstars was the strongest it had ever been.

Luis Scola is the South American version of Tim Duncan. As one Rockets official told me, Scola is the best pure power forward in Houston since Otis Thorpe, who, incidentally, was traded in 1995.


The maligned Rafer Alston is playing like a top-flight point guard. He was averaging 14.2 points and 7.5 assists during the 15-game winning streak that the Rockets took into Wednesday's game against Indiana.

Shane Battier and rookie forward Carl Landry have stepped up to play important roles. And the ageless Dikembe Mutombo, who will be wagging that finger in his grave, has proved he is still a solid, 20-minute-per-night player.

The biggest benefactor of all these contributions has been McGrady, who acknowledged that he hasn't always trusted his teammates. "I've gotten better since I've been [in Houston]," McGrady told me for a story that appears in this week's Sports Illustrated. "But when I was in Orlando, I had to shoot all the time. It's the way it was."

Does all this change my opinion of the Rockets' playoff chances? Ehhhhh. Houston benefited from a fairly easy February schedule (though, as one Rockets official pointed out, so did the Lakers). The Rockets' March slate is anything but easy: They will face all of the other top West contenders, with a home game against Boston mixed in as well. A mid-March stretch of four games in five nights against the Celtics, Hornets, Warriors and Suns -- the last three on the road -- will be especially grueling. It's still an uphill battle.

"It's a bitch of a conference," McGrady said.

Now that I agree with.

I realize that Devin Harris is talented. But the fact that he is in his fourth year in the league and hasn't really "exploded" as a top-tier point guard worries me. Maybe it was because he was on a playoff contender and had a short leash in terms of mistakes allowed. It will be interesting to see how he plays in New Jersey.
-- Allen, Washington, D.C.

I'll take it one step further, Allen. New Jersey got a steal in Harris. The Nets are convinced that Jason Kidd was mailing it in this season. They are more than happy to have Harris, a 25-year-old blur who will team with Richard Jefferson and Nenad Krstic to form the Nets' core. At least until LeBron James hits free agency (that can happen as early as 2010, close to the time the Nets are expected to move into a new arena in Brooklyn).

The question that remains is what to do with Vince Carter. I'm told by league sources that the Nets have made it known throughout the league that Carter is available. It wouldn't surprise me if the Nets pushed to deal him in the offseason. Actually, it would surprise me more if they didn't.

Can we expect to see Caron Butler and/or Gilbert Arenas back in Wizards uniforms this season?
-- Bill, Arlington, Va.

Butler has missed the last 12 games with a hip injury. Arenas has been sidelined since having knee surgery in November (his second knee surgery in seven months). I'm told that both players will be back this season. I think it's a mistake.

The Wizards have little chance of making any noise in the postseason. They would would be wise to be careful with Butler, who is in the third year of a five-year, $50 million contract, and Arenas, who will opt out of his contract and become a free agent after this season.

Wizards general manager Ernie Grunfeld has some big decisions to make this summer regarding Arenas and All-Star forward Antawn Jamison, who will be an unrestricted free agent. Knowing his core is healthy would help him decide whether to keep this group together.

Matchman
03-06-2008, 03:38 PM
Luis Scola is the South American version of Tim Duncan. As one Rockets official told me, Scola is the best pure power forward in Houston since Otis Thorpe, who, incidentally, was traded in 1995.
WTF? so he is better than charles barkley?! :wtf

spurs_fan_in_exile
03-06-2008, 03:46 PM
Is the exchange rate still that lop sided?

Trainwreck2100
03-06-2008, 03:54 PM
:lol

hater
03-06-2008, 03:59 PM
Is the exchange rate still that lop sided?

dude wake up. The dollar isn't worth jack shit anywhere in the world anymore.

Scola is the real deal :p:

J Zone
03-06-2008, 04:37 PM
wow :drunk

Extra Stout
03-06-2008, 04:43 PM
If Luis Scola is the South American Tim Duncan, what exactly does that make Manu? God?

WalterBenitez
03-06-2008, 04:53 PM
Where is whottt ... he would need some aspirin! :dramaquee

WalterBenitez
03-06-2008, 04:55 PM
If Luis Scola is the South American Tim Duncan, what exactly does that make Manu? God?

YEP, didn't you know that? :rolleyes

Hemotivo
03-06-2008, 05:03 PM
:lol

Harry Callahan
03-06-2008, 05:06 PM
"South American Tim Duncan" is an insult to Tim Duncan. That is way overboard.

samikeyp
03-06-2008, 05:12 PM
No.

Hold on, that was a bit of a quick answer. Let me think about it.
















No.

Mr.Bottomtooth
03-06-2008, 05:36 PM
:lmao that's gold.

remingtonbo2001
03-06-2008, 05:45 PM
Where is whottt ... he would need some aspirin! :dramaquee

Aspirin?

Make that a joint and a case of Lone Star Light.

spurms
03-06-2008, 06:13 PM
wow this guys is basically saying if tim duncan was argentinian he would be luis scola! Must be a crazy argentine scola fan.

kuato
03-06-2008, 06:24 PM
"South American Tim Duncan" is an insult to Tim Duncan. That is way overboard.
------> What ? are you saying that calling someone "south american" is an insult ? :nope

rasho8
03-06-2008, 06:26 PM
------> What ? are you saying that calling someone "south american" is an insult ? :nope

No I think hes saying comparing Scola to Duncan is an insult.. unless you were saying how much better Tim is than Scola.

hater
03-06-2008, 06:34 PM
I don't understand all the commotion.

South America has shitty basketball players. So Scola is as great PF as there has ever been. Isn't Duncan as great PF as has been for US??

in other words, he is a poor man's Tim Duncan, or a 3rd world's Tim Duncan :D

gmanrulz
03-06-2008, 07:26 PM
damn basketball must be terrible in south america

J Zone
03-06-2008, 07:32 PM
he is a poor man's Tim Duncan

NOT even that

Manu'sMagicalLeftHand
03-06-2008, 07:34 PM
This isn't such an impressive feat to be proud of. I mean, there are 12 countries in South America and excluding Argentina and Brazil, and eventually a good generation from Venezuela and Uruguay, the rest of them suck in basketball.

This is like calling an African ice-hockey player "The African Wayne Gretzky".

whottt
03-06-2008, 07:43 PM
Oberto > Scola

Manu'sMagicalLeftHand
03-06-2008, 07:47 PM
Manu >>>>>>>>>>>>>> Nocioni > Pepe Sanchez > Oberto > Scola >> Herrmann >>>>>>> waterboy > towelboy > my dad > my grandpa > Delfino

Hemotivo
03-06-2008, 08:13 PM
:lmao

Matchman
03-06-2008, 08:59 PM
Manu >>>>>>>>>>>>>> Nocioni > Pepe Sanchez > Oberto > Scola >> Herrmann >>>>>>> waterboy > towelboy > my dad > my grandpa > Delfino

:lol
why the hate on Delfino?

samikeyp
03-06-2008, 09:14 PM
I think Scola can be a good NBA player, but he will never, ever be in the class of Duncan.

Manu'sMagicalLeftHand
03-06-2008, 09:20 PM
:lol
why the hate on Delfino?

They guy has talent, the skills, the body. But he also has the will of Marvin the Paranoid Android and the IQ of a bucket full of vomit.

I'm Argentinian, I can stand lack of athleticism, talent, skill, but in no way I can stand his indifference towards basketball. He should have his passport removed and declared persona non-grata here.

Ok, maybe that was a bit too much, but you get the point. Going into the playoffs, I'll take Nocioni a thousand times before Delfino, even 'tho Noc has very lower level of skill and talent. But he's a warrior and always keeps fighting doing the little things to help, even when his team is sucking in the lottery.

Delfino with a different attitude could be a top 15 SG in the league.

Indazone
03-06-2008, 09:36 PM
Scola THREAD!! :D

batboy
03-06-2008, 09:41 PM
Oberto > Scola

/signed

Sec24Row7
03-06-2008, 11:40 PM
Speedy Gonzales is the Mexican Mickey Mouse....

WTF?

rasho8
03-07-2008, 12:06 AM
Manu >>>>>>>>>>>>>> Nocioni > Pepe Sanchez > Oberto > Scola >> Herrmann >>>>>>> waterboy > towelboy > my dad > my grandpa > Delfino

:lmao :lmao :lmao :lmao :lmao :lmao

MajorMike
03-07-2008, 12:57 PM
Actually, I like that explaination. He is a 3rd World Contries' Tim Duncan. Sort of flattering to Tim.

RonMexico
03-07-2008, 01:02 PM
Actually, I like that explaination. He is a 3rd World Contries' Tim Duncan. Sort of flattering to Tim.

South America isn't a country.

CaptMike is the SpursTalk Bill Walton.

SAGambler
03-07-2008, 01:31 PM
I wasn't too upset when they sent Scola on to Houston, but now that I have had a chance to watch him, I suspect we should have kept him here. He reminds me a lot of Oberto, seemingly to be in the right spot at the right time. I suspect there may come a time when we would find him useful.