Tuesday, August 2, 2022

NBA OFFSEASON REVIEW: Timberwolves

2022-23 overview: The Minnesota Timberwolves finished 46-36 and secured the 7th seed in the West last season. It was the franchise's first playoff appearance since 2017, and its most playoff wins since 2003-04. Minnesota will look to build on that momentum this year as it has built a roster suitable for a deeper playoff run. Some keys to the Timberwolves' success will be Anthony Edwards taking the next step toward superstardom and Karl-Anthony Towns settling into his new position at power forward. Jaden McDaniels will be the x-factor for this team, as he has the potential to become a high level starter. 

Draft: Minnesota used their draft capital to trade back and ended up taking Walker Kessler and Wendell Moore in the first round. They also added Josh Minot in the second round. Kessler was sent away as a part of their blockbuster trade with the Jazz, but Moore and Minot both signed rookie deals.

Moore played three seasons at Duke and improved each season. By his junior year, he was playing nearly 34 minutes per game while knocking down 41.3% of his three point shot attempts. If he can make another jump in the league, he can end up being a solid 3&D role player for the Timberwolves and possibly give an immediate impact. 

Minot will be more of a project piece. He played one year at Memphis and averaged 6.6 points and 4.8 rebounds in 14.6 minutes per game. What stands out about Minot is his athletic ability. Ironically, his new teammate, De'Angelo Russell, just tweeted "The @nba is full of athletes not Basketball players #respectfully" Minot fits the description. 



Trades: The Timberwolves traded for Rudy Gobert in a blockbuster trade that I alluded to earlier. The Wolves sent Patrick Beverly, Jarred Vanderbilt, Malik Beasley, Leandro Bolmaro, 2022 first round pick Walker Kessler, and four additional first round picks alternating years until 2029 in exchange for a defensive anchor and all star level talent, Gobert. This trade sent an unprecedented amount of assets away for one player, and it has made it very difficult for other franchises to trade their star players. i.e. Kevin Durant and Donovan Mitchell. While yes it was an overpay, the Timberwolves are pushing to win now, and this move will put them in a contending position. 

Free Agents: The Timberwolves lost two starters and its 6th man in the Gobert trade along with a rookie who would have most likely seen rotational minutes, so Minnesota's goal in free agency was to reload the bench. The key signings include Kyle Anderson, Eric Paschall, Austin Rivers, and Brynn Forbes, along with the resigning of Taurean Prince. 

Rotation:

PG: Russell, McLaughlin, Rivers

SG: Edwards, Nowell, Forbes

SF: McDaniels, Prince, Moore

PF: Towns, Anderson, Paschall

C: Gobert, Reid

Tuesday, July 26, 2022

Iowa State Basketball 2023 Recruiting Class

Today is July 26th 2022. A little over a year ago, the Iowa State Cyclones fired its men's basketball head coach after two consecutive 20 loss seasons. Today, it added the final piece to its best recruiting class of all time. In between now and then was the fastest turnaround a program has ever seen. 

The offseason momentum started when 4-star Jelani Hamilton (Austell, GA) made his commitment on July 1st. Both of Jelani's parents attended Iowa State, which ultimately influenced his final decision to follow in their footsteps. To paraphrase Brent Blum from the CF podcast network, you never know what kind of connections are out there. 

Fifteen days later, 4-star Milan Momcilovic (Pewaukee, WI) committed to Iowa State giving the Cyclones an early top 5 rated recruiting class (247). "An instant connection with Milwaukee native and Iowa State head coach T.J. Otzelberger was one of the deciding factors in Momcilovic committing to the Cyclones." Zac Bellman said in the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. 

Today, 5-star Omaha Biliew (Waukee, IA) chose Iowa State over the likes of Kansas, Oregon, and the G-league ignite. What are the odds that a physical, defensive minded 5-star prospect is sitting in the backyard of a rebranded program that prides itself on its grit and grind playstyle? Omaha and the Otzelberger lead Cyclones are a match made in heaven, and his commitment locked Iowa State into a top 5 recruiting class. 



Sometimes in sports, the stars align. 

Monday, July 4, 2022

NBA 2K22 GRIPES

I've been a loyal 2k sports customer since I got into the NBA video game in 2013. Unfortunately, I will continue to buy 2k every year no matter how many gripes I have. It's far and away the best basketball game on the market, but its lack of competition has allowed it to get lazy. There are four main game modes: Play Now, MyCareer/Park, MyTeam, and MyLeague/MyGM. Most of my complaints come from the MyLeague game play as that is what I play most often. 

Here's how I rank the game modes in order of what I play most often: 

1. MyLeague / MyGM - 

These game modes allow the user to test their GM, coach, and commissioner skills. You can simulate (or play) through years and years of NBA seasons and control ALL of the background noise including trades, game plans, drafts, league rules, and many other NBA season factors. MyGM adds more of a story to this and makes the decision making a little more personal. 

2. MyTeam - 

This is 2k's version of ultimate team. The user builds a fantasy lineup by collecting various levels of past and present players' cards. 

3. MyCareer / Park - 

User creates their own player to start an NBA career with and also play with other created players at the 'park.' 

4. Play Now - 

This is the simplest form of the game. User vs. AI or user vs. user single game play with a plethora of current and classic NBA teams.

Now that you see how I play 2k, here are my eight biggest gripes that I have come across in the game:

1. Start Today Glitch: 

One of the best features about MyLeague is that you can start your league off on the actual date. The 2k servers store all of the live statistics, so there's no reason to re-sim all of the games and events leading up to the point you want to play. This year, I went to 'Start Today' the day after the play-in games were finished. Once I got it all set up, it brought me to a blank playoff bracket with no options to move forward. That was two months ago!! There have been two game updates, and this glitch is still occurring. You're probably thinking, "okay well the season is over now." Exactly! In previous games, it would just start me in the current off season. 

Worth noting: because I'm poor, I play on the PS4. It's possible that they gave up on the old generation. But Ronnie, I beg! Let me start today. I paid full price still.

2. 2021 Draft Class: 

This gripe coincides with the previous. Because I haven't been able to 'start today,' I've accepted starting a MyLeague at the beginning of this season. 2k gives the option to start in the previous off season, so I wanted to see how a 2021 redraft would turn out! Shame on me for having expectations because after pick 4, I noticed a silly little trend. The ENTIRE CLASS had been duplicated and renamed. Cade Cunningham and his identical clone, Lee Carter, were drafted 1 & 2, followed by Evan Mobely and his clone, John Hampton. I simulated up to my pick and looked at the remaining board and every player had somehow been duplicated. 

God bless PlayStation user ______ for creating a downloadable 2021 class. 

3. Talent Inflation: 

Somewhere around four years into the typical MyLeague simulation, the amount of 'good' players triples. Teams will have 10 players in their rotation above 84 overall, and the league will have 5-6 players with the same overall as Michael Jordan. While this does create league parity, it also completely ruins the realism of the future. The game mode offers player progression and regression sliders to combat this issue, but there is no perfect setting. The progression and regression needs more volatility. Not every lottery pick develops into a star, and not every 2nd round pick is out of the league after two years. This game mode needs to do a better job reflecting this. 

4. The Pelicans: 

Sticking with the MyLeague theme, the Pelicans are almost always the simulated 2023 or 2024 NBA champions. Do they have a good core? Yes. Could they win a championship soon? Maybe so. But because of Zion's career availability, I can't stand seeing New Orleans win without making any notable moves. 

If I made better roster moves for the user team, I could easily avoid this. Note to self: Win so that the Pelicans can't. 

5. Awards: 

The simulated league awards have zero voting fatigue. Luka Doncic wins MVP for 10 consecutive years, Giannis Antetokounmpo wins 10 consecutive DPOYs, and only superteam coaches win COTY. The award winners always deserve their awards, but some parity would be nice. 

6. MyCareer Stat Lines: 

I get that this is a videogame and that it is supposed to be fun, but I hate how easy MyCareer games are. There is no reason that your MyPlayer should be scoring 80% of the teams' points in every game. 80+ ppg is not fun. Turn up the difficulty? Okay sure. Now he's averaging 25ppg and the team scores 32 points because none of the AI teammates can score. There is no realistic single player control game play options because the AI is too robotic to make the correct basketball play. I'm not just begging for a realistic difficulty setting here; I also need a more realistic story line. This whole MyCareer movie thing with cut-away scenes has been so ass. I don't need a made up, cookie cutter story about NBA scouts saw my player playing a pick up game at a park and gave me a G-league opportunity. I don't need to start my career in China and have a fictional college rival. Just give me a few college games and draft me based on my performance in those games. Base the career off of that draft position. Let me earn the superstar title!

7. AI Perimeter Defense: 

I touched on how bad the AI teammates are on offense, but they are HOF perimeter defenders. It is not easy to get by AI defenders, which isn't necessarily a bad thing. My gripe here is that people take advantage of this when playing against another user. Basically, if you don't play on-ball defense, it makes it much more difficult for your opponent to get to the basket. People will camp with the center and use their big as a free safety while the AI does the hard work for them. It's cheap, but it's effective. 

Easy fix: get better at offense.

8. MyTeam complexity: 

MyTeam is a fun and creative game mode. Collecting rare players and building custom line ups is such a great idea. Add custom uniforms and arenas, it creates a whole fantasy style game mode. My gripe? It has gotten too cute. They have added too many different 'cards' to use. Attributes, badges, and shoes are all used to upgrade the player cards, but why do we need any of that? You need to add 3 attribute cards to a specific shoe card and apply it to a player for them to be better for a limited amount of games. It's weird. It's complex. It's tedious. The game only needs player cards. 

I will continue to buy 2k every year regardless, but my gripes were starting to pile up. 2k is one of the most beloved video games, and many other players have their own list of gripes. Lucky for us, Ronnie will take all of our thoughts into consideration and give us an in game picture of Ja Morant's sweaty, animated face. 

Thursday, June 30, 2022

NBA OFF SZN: ATL/SAS


Yesterday, the Atlanta Hawks made a win-now move and traded Danilo Gallinari to the Spurs in exchange for star guard Dejounte Murray. I don't have much to say on Atlanta's end. After underachieving in 2022, the Hawks needed to add some on-ball defense that can compliment Trae Young's play style. Young is an elite scorer and facilitator, and having Murray will take some of the scoring pressure off of him. Murray averaged 21.1 points and 9.2 assists last season, but his 2 steals per game stand out. Murray will have no issue guarding bigger guards, so I think he can transition into the 2 role even though he's a natural 1. He has the length and size. Atlanta's back court will be set for the near future. We'll see what other moves the Hawks make going forward as John Collins and Clint Capela have been in trade rumors since the dead line. 

From San Antonio's POV, are we going to see a true tank from the Spurs? San Antonio received 3 future firsts, including Charlotte's 2023 which has high potential to be in the lottery. The Spurs organization has a winning culture, so I don't think this rebuild will last long.

Tuesday, February 8, 2022

NBA Trade Deadline: POR/NO

Per Adrian Wojnarowski, the Pelicans are sending Josh Hart, Tomas Satoransky, Nickeil Walker-Alexander, Didi Louzada, a 2022 protected first round pick, and two second round picks to the Trailblazers in exchange for CJ McCollum, Larry Nance, and Tony Snell. Woj also reports that Portland's plan is to focus on building a roster around Damian Lillard. 

My first question is; is this a new focus for Portland? If so, what have they been doing for the last seven years? Surely, this just means that they are trying to restructure the roster around their superstar point guard after failing to do so in years previous. Dame has been all in and has shown loyalty every step of they way, but the question is beginning to loom, can he get a ring in Portland? Short answer: no. They never really had a window, as they peaked at about the same time as Kevin Durant joined the Warriors. Portland had a good team for years, and even made a run to the western conference finals, but it just seemed like they were always one piece away. I just don't know that Portland is an attractive free agent destination, especially to play third fiddle with their previously established backcourt. Could that change as Portland searches for Dame's new sidekick? Will Anfernee Simons be able to step into that sidekick role? Or, will Damian Lillard decide it's time to move on? 

On the other hand, the Pelicans are currently sitting in 10th place in the west, 4.5 spots behind the Lakers in 9th. Trading for a veteran guard will help make up ground as they hold on to their play-in spot for dear life. If the Pelicans can stay competitive with out Zion Williamson, they will be set up nicely for when (if) he eventually returns. Worst case scenario: the veteran pieces don't fit well in New Orleans, the Pelican's record tanks them out of play-in contention, and they find themselves in the 14-12 spot with out their 2022 first round pick. The pick's protections allow for New Orleans to keep it if it lands in the top 5. This pick is currently projected 9th, in which case it falls to the Trailblazers. 

NBA Trade Deadline: SAC/IND


Adrian Wojnarowski dropped one of his Twitter famous “Woj bombs” hours ago, reporting that the Sacramento Kings are sending Tyrese Haliburton, Buddy Hield, and Tristian Thompson to Indiana in exchange for Domantas Sabonis, Justin Holiday, and Jeremy Lamb. This move shows us that the Kings plan to compete for a play-in spot and are “win now” mode, while the Pacers make a move to get younger and escape the purgatory that is the 4/5 seed. 

Sacramento rarely hits on their draft picks.  Tyrese Haliburton was one of their few home runs, so it was a shock to see him be dealt away like that. Playing in his 2nd year, at 21 years old, he has proven that he could be the foundational piece to a rebuild in Sacramento. The question is, how long would that rebuild take before the Kings are truly competitive? With this move, it’s hard to argue that the Kings won’t at least compete for a playoff spot, but at the same time, the ceiling just got a lot lower. It's hard to say what the King's long term expectations are, but short term, they want to be a playoff team. This franchise currently holds the longest active playoff drought and are in desperate need of a winning culture. Could this move backfire down the road? No doubt. 


Indiana had found themselves in an difficult spot after PG’s departure. The team was good every year, but never an actual threat to contend. There will be some initial regression after losing an all star caliber player in Domantas Sabonis, but the future is bright. Shortly after breaking the news of the trade, Woj also commented on Pacer's center Myles Turner and his thoughts on Tyrese coming to Indiana. Woj said, "Turner gets to play center now and appears thrilled with the idea of playing with Haliburton." What center wouldn't want to play with a playmaking guard like Tyrese, who just dished 17 assists in his last game in Sacramento?   


Thursday, December 3, 2020

Hilly Builds: Texans

 

    Welcome to Hilly Builds, where we're rebuilding every bad team in the NFL. Then maybe we'll work on the good teams, but we'll see how I'm feeling. Thanks to the great TrillWithers for letting me use the homage to him as the name, so lets get started:


The Houston Texans are an absolute dumpster fire. They're 4-7, they're already 13 million over the cap going into next season, and they don't own their own first or second round picks thanks to the Laramie Tunsil trade and the Brandin Cooks trade. We're taking over a really, really tough situation, but there's one thing we do have that no one else in the division has, and something that all but maybe 2 or 3 other teams would kill for: Deshaun Watson. 

As long as we have Deshaun, we have hope. Unfortunately, we do have to consider that his contract is going to kick in soon, so we can't just load up on high priced veterans and hope for the best. Make no doubt about it, we're keeping Deshaun Watson. I'll resign before I ship him out of town, but the contract is an unavoidable (and incredibly well deserved) hurdle that we'll have to face as we rebuild this team.


1. Figure out the JJ Watt Dilemma.

    JJ Watt was once on track to be one of the greatest defensive players in NFL History. He won 3 defensive player of the year awards by the time he was 26 years old. He led the league in sacks twice, tackles for loss three times, and provided quite a bit of versatility by batting down passes at the line of scrimmage, having 49 pass deflections over a 4 year stretch. He was positionally versatile, which allowed the Texans to out scheme opponents frequently. By all accounts, he was one of the best ever already. Unfortunately that's when the injury bug hit.

    After not missing a game in his first 5 seasons, Watt has missed 32 games over the last 4 seasons. The wear and tear of playing at such a physical position at an incredibly elite level has started to take its toll on our iconic superstar. When healthy, he's a fantastic veteran presence and still a high level football player from time to time. But Watt is also worth $32,000,000 over the next 2 years and that's way too much to be paying a 31 year old player with an extensive injury history and declining production when healthy. 

    We're going to lay out the options so JJ can choose his own decision. We're either going to have to restructure to significantly lower the cap hit over the next two years, and if he decides he doesn't want to spend his remaining years on a bad team, we'll have no problem trading him and his easily cutable contract for whatever value we can get. There's a really good chance we have to outright cut him, but there's no more guarantees on his deal so we can move on scotfree, and I also think a team that has the ability and depth to deploy him less to keep him healthier like the Ravens or Steelers might trade a 5th or 6th round pick. In fact, I'm sure JJ would welcome an opportunity to go to the Steelers and play with his brother TJ. So we take care of one of our all time greats, clear the cap space, get a little bit of draft capital and keep that connection with JJ for when his career is over and I hire him to just hangout around the facility. 


2. Get As Many Cheap Assets As Possible.

    This one is pretty simple. We're going to have a quarterback on a massive deal soon, and one that we want to build a winner around. So for increased flexibility going forward, we're going to have to get rid of some of the luxury items on this roster for mid and late round picks. Outside of Watson, there's really not anyone on this roster they could even think about getting a first round pick for. Brandin Cooks, Bernadrick McKinney, Duke Johnson, and David Johnson are all pretty solid to good football players that could be worth a lot more to a team that's one or two pieces away from getting over the hump.

    They also carry a combined $31,000,000 cap hit, while only having $3,700,000 in dead cap. So if we can't trade them, we can absolutely cut them without much worry. Cooks has been traded for first rounders a couple times, and was just traded for a 2nd rounder. So I think going into the last year of his deal, a 3rd round pick is probably fair value for a 27 year old receiver on the verge of the 5th 1,000 yard season of his career. Between the other 3, I think we could squeeze a 6th rounder out of a team this year, and perhaps a conditional 6th or 7th round pick next year. It's not great value, but holding onto those contracts is going to put us in worse position to build around Watson long term, so it's crucial that we clear the deck.

    After trading/cutting Watt, McKinney, Cooks, and the Johnson boys, We clear up approximately $48,500,000 in cap space, and add an extra 3rd, 5th, and 6th round pick this year. That gives us 10 draft choices in the 3rd-7th rounds, but none in the first 2. This is an issue, big time. 

3. Gut the roster quickly.  

    This roster is in really bad shape. The Texans will only make 2 first-round picks between 2017-2021 after trading 2 of them to select Deshaun Watson, and trading 2 of them for Laramie Tunsil. The other selection, OT Tytus Howard, has shown some promise, but hasn't really taken the next step yet. There was a game earlier this year where not a single rookie played a snap, which shows how bad last years draft class was, and how little young talent we have under contract. So this is going to be a full on tear down. 

If we can get anything for Whitney Mercilus, we will. He's an aging edge rusher on a bad contract, so if we can eat enough dead money, we might be able to get a little bit of value for him. I'm not sure how likely that will be, but if we don't find a trade partner, we'll probably have to just bite the bullet on him and keep him. Bradley Roby might be able to net us a late round pick going into the last year of his deal, but considering he's an average corner at an above average cap hit, we're probably going to have to cut him to open another $8,500,000. Now we've got about $57-60,000,000 in cap space, a franchise quarterback, a good, but expensive left tackle, and not a whole lot of anything else. There aren't going to be any reliable weapons on this roster so we've got to give Watson something to work with. We're letting Will Fuller leave, because I've got another idea. 

4. Free Agency: Take a lot of cheap gambles... Except one. 

    Free Agency is where we're going to be making a lot of moves. With no blue chip draft capital available, we've got to figure out a way to field this roster in a way that will, at the very least, protect Deshaun Watson for our rebuild. There's one player I'm prepared to give a large, long term contract to, and that's Bears WR Allen Robinson. Robinson has put up gaudy pro bowl numbers during his career with passers like Blake Bortles, Mitch Trubisky, and Nick Foles getting him the ball. In college, he had Matt McGloin and Christian Hackenberg. There are some injury concerns there, but not nearly as many as Will Fuller or Kenny Golladay and I believe that Robinson is a top 5 wide receiver that's been in terrible situations for most of his career. 

At just 27 years old, Robinson is likely just reaching his performative peak, and we want to give Deshaun Watson a go to receiver that he can throw the ball up to. We're giving Robinson a 5 year deal worth $100 Million, but we'll structure the contract so that way it's really only a 4-year deal worth $85,000,000. Robinson gets a massive contract that shows his value among NFL Receivers even though we both know he's getting cut or restructured before that final year, and we get a big time, game breaking receiver at market value. If we have to get into a bidding war for Robinson, so be it. But he's going to be a Texan when it's all said and done. 

    After we get Robinson signed, now we're going to shift our focus to signing a bunch of team friendly deals with aging veterans, young players who fizzled out in their first stops, and athletic diamonds in the rough that we can potentially uncover from small schools and practice squads. 

    Players like Solomon Thomas, Corey Davis, John Ross, Hassan Reddick, Jarrad Davis, Charles Harris, and Takk McKinley are all former first round picks that are likely to hit the open market this year after disappointing with their first (and in several cases second and third) team. Hopefully we're able to give some of those younger players some stability and consistent playing time in a low pressure environment, and they blossom. Some of them will continue to stink, but a couple of them could really step it up in a new environment. Ross, Reddick, Davis, Harris and McKinley were taken by the Bengals, Cardinals, Lions, Dolphins, and Falcons. All five of which have since fired the regimes that drafted those players, so I think we can find some bargains.

    Mike Iupati, Everson Griffin, Tahir Whitehead, Derek Wolfe, Xavier Rhodes, Lawrence Guy, Logan Ryan, Bruce Irvin, and Danny Amendola are all veterans over the age of 30 that are playing on contracts worth $6,000,000 or less a year. We're going to try and sign a few of these guys to some cheap, team friendly deals to help revitalize their career in the hopes of landing one more big contract. We can even structure the deals in a way that we eat most of the small cap hit this year, which would make them very tradable assets if we're still a year or two away from really getting down to business. I don't really know which of those guys will be getting mid level deals this season, but my point being, there are usually very productive veterans that are cap casualties waiting to be signed to team friendly contracts every offseason. We're going to make sure we get at least 2 veteran corners though, because we need them in the worst way.

    Lastly, in terms of the diamonds in the rough, I think we'll try and go after anyone that just put up absurd combine numbers or production from a small school. Or a player that was vastly underutilized on a bad college team with a bad coach. There are quality NFL players on practice squads right now, we're going to do our best to find and polish them. At worst, they get cut at the end of training camp with really no lost cost, but if we can find a productive NFL starter or two, we can really add to the talent pool. 


5. Draft: Focus On Undervalued Positions.

    Without a pick in the first two rounds this year, there's really no way for us to leapfrog into a spot where we can get an elite impact player at a highly valued position. So we're going to focus our earliest picks on positions where good players slip because it's not as widely valued: we're going after safeties, running backs, ILBs, and Interior DL. I think there's a really good chance that immediate impact players can be acquired in rounds 3 and 4 if you're ok with the fact they don't play a premium position, and are a little more situationally limited. Right now, we're fine with that, because we need an influx of talent all over the place, and if we can start to cobble together a good, young, cheap corps of players to surround Deshaun Watson with, it'll allow us even more versatility in our organization. We'll use our later round picks on wide receivers and corners, essentially hoping to hit a serious lottery ticket. If we don't hit, it's not really an issue. But we need to absolutely make sure that we get at least a couple guys in this draft who can develop nicely. Maybe we even trade down once or twice and get a couple extra late round picks without sacrificing salary cap space. 


6. Understand that this is step one, not the conclusion of the rebuild:

    Lastly, we need to come to terms with the fact that we're going to have to keep rebuilding this roster regardless of how our season goes. We play in one of the weaker divisions in football historically, and it wouldn't shock me in the least if we're able to go 11-5 and win the division/make the playoffs. As long as we have Deshaun Watson, that's always going to be possible. But it's also important that we understand that volatility with other teams isn't necessarily indicative of where we currently stand, and if the goal is winning a Super Bowl, we can't abandon our longterm plan by signing high priced free agents after the first good season. The goal is still surrounding Watson with cheap, cost controlled talent, so if anything, a good season will actually allow us to trade down in the upcoming drafts without the pressure of having to acquire an immediate playmaker at the top of the draft. 

    Laramie Tunsil is someone that I would consider moving after this season, but I do think there's a critical importance in keeping our franchise QB safe, so even though we're paying a premium on him, it's a bullet I'm willing to bite so long as he plays well and keeps Deshaun healthy. We just have to understand that next seasons overall results are meaningless, because soon Watsons contract will fully kick in and we'll need the versatility to continue to build the Houston Texans into a super bowl contender. 

Wednesday, December 2, 2020

NBA Legend Joakim Noah Retires

Okay, NBA Legend may be a stretch, but Joakim Noah did have an outstanding NBA career that included a couple of All-Star appearance's, a Defensive Player of the Year Award, and a most impressively a 4th place finish in the 2013-14 MVP voting.

As a Bulls fan though, Noah meant so much more than the accolades. He wasn't a flashy player by any means; but you always knew he was going to play his nuts off for you, and when you play in a city like Chicago that is the easiest way to get to the people's heart. Watching him play the 2013-14 season was special. That was a middling Bulls team that quickly had the excitement of Derrick Rose's return wear off after he had to have another knee surgery that would end his return after just 10 games. That combined with Luol Deng being dealt for essentially money (shout out Jerry Reinsdorf) midseason, the exciting era of Bulls basketball that appeared to be on the horizon was dead before we could blink. Jo had other plans though, he went and had his best season as an NBA Player and led the Bulls to 48 wins. Jo put up 12.6 ppg with 11.6 boards and as one of the better passing big men in the game he put up 5.4 assists and included 4 triple doubles. The numbers just don't do Jo justice in describing how good he truly was for that team. but his production was recognized. Not only did this season lead him to be the Defensive Player of the Year in the NBA but also ended up 4th(!!!) in the MVP voting.

He wasn't the flashiest or the most skilled but no one played harder and maximized their production like Jo.