Re: TJ McConnell's 'MAGIC' Numbers
Posted: Fri Nov 27, 2015 6:42 pm
No surprise, something had to change.
A co-op community for Arizona Fans
http://beardownwildcats.com/
Would like to see TJ in the backcourt with Reggie Jackson on that Pistons team. Lots of scorers. And Stanimal!carolinacat wrote:Philly doesn't have guys who can make shots. If they did, McConnell's assists would be even higher.
If Philly goes another direction and thinks they need more of a scorer (which they probably do because everyone else sucks) I'm sure plenty of other NBA GMs' have taken notice. If you don't need point production from your point guard but need a great distributor and defender, TJ will find a home somewhere. He's proven himself on this level in a short time. He'll stick in the league.
TJ went for 7 points, 6 assists, and 5 rebounds in 21 minutes.KaibabKat wrote:Sixers win! Sixers win! Sixers win!
Chicat wrote:TJ went for 7 points, 6 assists, and 5 rebounds in 21 minutes.KaibabKat wrote:Sixers win! Sixers win! Sixers win!
I'm not so sure TJ had anything to do with breaking Williams's ankles. It appeared to me that TJ executed a slight inside out dribble and an invisible sniper took out Lou.TheGreatCatsby wrote:AND TJ on the ESPN front page sidebar with a video breaking Lou Williams' ankles. Good job Tj, you're gonna make it. If not on the crappy 76'ers once their shoot first point guards come back, then somewhere else.
He only has a few games left, so he's not going to leave any shots un-taken.rgdeuce wrote:The Lakers too. LMFAO, I love it. Kobe's shooting hand must have been fatigued from writing farewell poems and exhibiting other attention-seeking behavior on the interwebs. 7 for 26 against the 76ers defense?
Let him embarrass himself on his last farewell. His legacy should be appropriately tainted.Spaceman Spiff wrote:He only has a few games left, so he's not going to leave any shots un-taken.rgdeuce wrote:The Lakers too. LMFAO, I love it. Kobe's shooting hand must have been fatigued from writing farewell poems and exhibiting other attention-seeking behavior on the interwebs. 7 for 26 against the 76ers defense?
For a guy who spent so much time pushing himself as the ultimate competitor, he could play a few more years as an asset to a contender, but that would require him to leave the Lakers and stop shooting a ton.
PER (YTD) = 13.7. Higher than Jerryd Bayless, Chase Budinger, Stanley Johnson, Solomon Hill, Jason Terry & Richard Jefferson.HiCat wrote:Back to TJ McConnell's numbers guys?
TJ must lead PGs in boards per minute. He always has had a nose for the ball.Chicat wrote:TJ went for 7 points, 6 assists, and 5 rebounds in 21 minutes.KaibabKat wrote:Sixers win! Sixers win! Sixers win!
KaibabKat wrote:PER (YTD) = 13.7. Higher than Jerryd Bayless, Chase Budinger, Stanley Johnson, Solomon Hill, Jason Terry & Richard Jefferson.HiCat wrote:Back to TJ McConnell's numbers guys?
Who would have ever thunk?[/]
Kobe still jumps for a reason other than to squeeze off a contested 21 footer?Merkin wrote:
Chicat wrote:I think you meant 41 footer.
It means there are other guys back from injury taking his minutes.CalStateTempe wrote:Seems to have fallen off a bit.
Whats going on and what does it mean for TJ?
Chicat wrote:It means there are other guys back from injury taking his minutes.CalStateTempe wrote:Seems to have fallen off a bit.
Whats going on and what does it mean for TJ?
CalStateTempe wrote:Chicat wrote:It means there are other guys back from injury taking his minutes.CalStateTempe wrote:Seems to have fallen off a bit.
Whats going on and what does it mean for TJ?
Darn too bad.
Thanks for the update.
I'm sure his time is going to suffer in the short term but as others have indicated on here, he got his audition for the rest of the league. I like his odds of getting picked up by some other team regardless of his playing time with the Sixers.McConnell contributed five points (2-3 FG, 1-1 3Pt), four assists, two rebounds, and one steal in 17 minutes during the 76ers' 127-106 loss versus the Hawks on Wednesday.
McConnell has officially moved to a reserve role with the older and more accomplished Kendall Marshall being named the starter by 76ers' coach Brett Brown. Marshall and Tony Wroten combined to play 31 minutes, with McConnell receiving the remaining 17 minutes at point guard.
It's unclear whether Wroten could see some time at shooting guard as the season goes on since he's not really a true point guard, but if not McConnell figures to wither away into fantasy irrelevance as those two return to full health.
He's only an assistant coach but some of this is probably Mike (No D)'Antoni's input. I'm a UA FB & BB guy so that's pretty much all I watch, but I was a fan of the Suns while Colangelo was the owner. (Who incidentally has also become president of basketball operations on the 76ers). After Mike no D left I came to realize that his apparent success had much more to do with having Steve Nash at the point (Along with Amare and The Matrix etc), and my opinion of him really soured after he said, and I quote, "I don't play bad rookies". He was referring to Jordan Hill when he was asked why JH wasn't playing. (When he was coach of the Lakers). Once Sarver became the owner I stopped following.. still check up on them once in a while but ... Anyway so Mike is kinda like RR... one dimensional... loves the offense but doesn't develop incoming talent and pays no attention to D. And seems to want to be handed a team full of Kobe's so he can sit back and not put in the work for the entire unit under his command. As for TJ I found it incredible he made it into the League and am rooting for him hard because his work ethic and trajectory with working hard on his game deserves it big time.rgdeuce wrote:TJ is still playing fine. In the month of December he is shooting 41% FG 42% 3PFG, almost 4 boards and 3.2 APG to 1.6 TOPG. His PIE for the season is 11.5 which is good. Wroten and Marshall came back. Marshall leapfrogged TJ as the starting point and Wroten was let go. The issue is, Colangelo came in and brought in Ish Smith, so Smith is now the starter, Marshall is his backup, and TJ is the third point. He got 2 minutes against the Suns and just under 12 last night since Ish Smith came in.
Smith is a journeyman in his fifth year I believe, marginally better than TJ in my opinion, though not the defender TJ is. Heard Colangelo wanted a veteran running point. Last night Smith had 22 points but needed 21 shots to get them, not good, and he had 11 dimes but 6 turnovers. Bringing in Smith is what ultimately effed TJ. Marshall has been a decent point in the past, and maybe you can chalk up his struggles this year to rust, but he has been garbage since coming back. It looks like Brown will still be using TJ, but just plugging him in at the most opportune times, or for a quick spark when the team is dragging ass. TJ is still outplaying every rookie point guard in the league, but these are the 76ers and 3/4 of their team or more are dispensable and are treated as such.
The 3-33 Philadelphia Sixers are such an abhorrent basketball team, that even the players’ parents are making headlines.
According to backup guard Kendall Marshall’s father Dennis—who has since deleted his Twitter account—the 24-year-old is stuck on the bench because he’s black.
Marshall is playing behind both Ish Smith and T.J. McConnell (who is white), and putting up averages of 4.3 points and 3.9 assists on 34 percent shooting.
Per the Philly Inquirer:
“I always said there was racism in sports,” read the tweet, posted during Saturday’s setback to the Los Angeles Clippers. “White guys in basketball are getting every chance to succeed even when they aren’t doing (expletive).”
Another tweet took a shot at another one of Marshall’s teammates. The player is believed to be reserve shooting guard Nik Stauskas, who is shooting 30 percent on three-pointers after making 6 of 8 against the Clippers.
Story @ NBA.COM: http://www.nba.com/sixers/news/game-rec ... 03-nets-98" target="_blankBrown continued, “I showed my son, ‘This is a marine.’ This is one tough, tough, competitive person. He just, we all know, you see how he plays. We can all guess how he’s wired. It reflects his wound, playing through that. I think it’s just a level of toughness that you either have it or you don’t, and he has it.”