Chad Ford on Jasikevicius



Kestas 4kv at Dartmouth.EDU
Tue May 10 10:33:03 CDT 2005


[I especially liked the part about the difference between Maccabi and Laker 
fans and the bowing/kissing  episode. Kestas]

Jasikevicius has difficult choice ahead
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By Chad Ford
ESPN Insider
<http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/archive?columnist=ford_chad&root=nba>Archive
MOSCOW – Pay dirt.

It took nine days, 14,587 miles, a strikeout in Turkey, a terrible case of 
food poisoning and tanks rolling down the streets in Moscow – but we 
finally found someone who belongs in the NBA.

He is not Russian. He's not particularly athletic. Doesn't play great 
defense. Isn't 7 feet tall. Passed his 19th birthday 10 years ago. His 
upside was used up years ago.

But if there's one player in Europe who could make a difference in the NBA 
next year, it's Maccabi Tel Aviv's Sarunas Jasikevicius.

Jasikevicius led Maccabi to a second straight Euroleague title Sunday, and 
in the process, won the MVP of the Final Four. He scored 22 points on 
7-for-12 shooting, shot 3-for-4 from beyond the arc, and had six rebounds 
and five assists. However, the stats aren't what makes him appealing.

Jasikevicius is a warrior. He has the soul of a champion. He's led his team 
to three straight Euroleague titles (his first was with Barcelona in 2003) 
and shows no signs of slowing down.

He's lapped the competition in Europe.

"I was finding it tough to practice this year for the first time," 
Jasikevicius told Insider. "I had trouble motivating myself. I love the 
competition and it really took the Final Four to begin to bring it out in 
me again."

Obviously, NBA scouts and European basketball fans have known about 
Jasikevicius for years. He's no secret. NBA teams have flirted with 
bringing him over in free agency for the past two summers. His asking price 
last year, $1.6 million, wasn't too high. But general managers, as they are 
wont to do, always focused on what he couldn't do.

He's too slow. He's not a great athlete. He doesn't play defense. His 
passion can make him out of control. How will NBA players respond when he 
chews them out on the court after they make dumb plays?

So instead, scouts focused on the babies – teenagers who sat on the bench 
and waved towels. While Jasikevicius was willing his team to victory on the 
court, the multitude of GMs and scouts who have sat in gyms and watched him 
dominate the competition over the years were more interested in the team's 
young 12th man. Everyone's looking for a home run, the guy who saves the 
franchise. Everyone misses the double, the guy who contributes – probably 
as a prominent sixth man – to a championship.

He's not the only guy in the same boat. There were a 
<http://insider.espn.go.com/insider/magazine/magBlogArchive?id=2039748&month=may#May8,200510:57:07AMPDT>number 
of top veteran players in Sunday night's championship who have the talent 
to play in the NBA. Maccabi's Anthony Parker and Maceo Baston could be 
great rotation players. So could Tau Ceramica's Luis Scola, Arvydas 
Macijauskas and Travis Hansen.

Three of them – Parker, Baston and Hansen – are Americans playing overseas 
who struggled in their first pro stints but have improved greatly the past 
several years. Scola was drafted by the Spurs a few years ago but hasn't 
convinced them to pay the cash it would take (a starting salary of about 
$3-4 million) to get him over here. Macijauskas almost came to the NBA last 
season, but negotiations with two different teams fell apart.

Parker and Baston, like Jasikevicius, are veterans. Scola, Macijauskas and 
Hansen still have upside. All five could help a team next season if they 
are willing to give up starting roles in Europe for rotation gigs in the 
states. But none would have the immediate impact of Jasikevicius.

Is this the summer it all changes for him? Will he finally get some love 
from the NBA?

There's plenty to like about Jasikevicius' game. He's the best floor 
general in Europe. He has Steve Nash-type court vision. He's got a great 
outside jumper and uses his craftiness to weave his way to the basket and 
draw fouls. He's a vocal leader who isn't afraid to take the last shot. He 
makes his teammates better. And most important, he wins.

Can you name an NBA team, other than the Suns and Nets, that doesn't need 
some of that?

Add a great Olympic performance against the United States (he dropped 28 
points on Team USA in a Lithuania victory and 17 points in a loss last 
summer) to the three Euroleague titles he's already won, and someone will 
pull the trigger on a contract this summer.

Who? The Pacers have shown interest in the past. So have the Spurs and 
Pistons. The Cavs, who desperately need some help at the point, could use a 
winner like Jasikevicius to help change the culture there. The Blazers 
could use a mentor for Sebastian Telfair. The Jazz have no one running the 
point worth keeping right now. He'd be a major upgrade over Chucky Atkins 
for the Lakers. If Dallas decides to dump Jason Terry, he'd make a heck of 
a role model for Devin Harris. I could keep going.

I don't think the question anymore is about whether the NBA will have his 
agent's number on speed dial this summer. The question is whether 
Jasikevicius really wants to make the jump.

He wouldn't be the first great Euroleague player to snub the NBA. Serbian 
forward Dejan Bodiroga has been dubbed the Larry Bird of Europe for years, 
but turned down several offers to come to the NBA because he didn't want to 
trade being a basketball god in Europe for a gig as a role player in the 
United States.

Euroleague MVP Anthony Parker also turned his back on the NBA when he 
signed a two-year extension with Maccabi just weeks ago, likely ending any 
talk about his playing in the States again.

"I'm enjoying myself here," Parker told Insider. "I just think I'm happy 
helping my teammates here. I know I can play in the NBA, but I don't think 
I have to."

Jasikevicius has the same difficult choice ahead. There's no question that 
he can play in the NBA, but the chances of his being a star there are slim. 
On most contending teams, he's probably a sixth man or a setup man for an 
NBA superstar. And he would probably have to take less money in the NBA to 
be in that role.

On Maccabi, he's a national hero. I met someone from Tel Aviv in Moscow who 
was already in the process of filming a commercial, begging him to forget 
about the NBA and stay in Israel. Maccabi fans are the most enthusiastic 
basketball fans in the world. Jasikevicius is worshipped by them in a very 
real and intense way.

NBA fans can get a little crazy now and then, but they don't hold a candle 
to Maccabi fans.

Let's just put it this way: If Maccabi traded a player like Shaquille 
O'Neal away for what the Lakers got in return, Maccabi fans would have been 
jumping off buildings. In LA, there were a few furrowed brows over morning 
cappuccino.

Can he adjust to a supporting role in the calm and cool NBA? Jasikevicius' 
game is all about heart. An NBA team that signs him and doesn't play him 
will rip that heart out. He doesn't want that. He knows it would destroy 
his game.

"I feed off the passion here," Jasikevicius said. "I see a sea of yellow 
[Maccabi's team color] cheering us on and it lifts me. We have the greatest 
fans in the world. It's an honor to play for them."

He means it. As the last seconds ticked down on Maccabi's victory Sunday, 
Jasikevicius got down on his knees and began bowing to Maccabi fans. 
Israeli journalists (many of whom clearly don't follow the objectivity rule 
of most American sportswriters) kissed and hugged him as he walked off the 
court.

After the game, in front of a pack of Israeli reporters, I asked him 
whether he was leaving for the NBA next season. After Jasikevicius gave me 
one of those I can't believe you're asking me in front of this crew looks, 
he gave the right response.

"I don't know what I'm doing next year," he said. "I'm going to rest a 
little bit this summer. See if I can get motivated. I just don't know."

Whether that's true or not is anyone's guess. The "I don't know" speech 
didn't sound particularly convincing. His agent stopped me two days ago and 
told me that Jasikevicius definitely would end up in the NBA this season.

Jasikevicius is a competitor. He's accomplished everything a European 
player can. Now it's time to see just how well those skills translate to 
the NBA.

If you're a lucky fan of the team that signs him, do yourself a favor: 
Don't shrug your shoulders because you can't pronounce his name. Meet him 
at the airport. Throw a parade. Chant his name at games. Get his heart 
thumping.

And maybe he can make it four in a row.

<http://insider.espn.go.com/insider/writeback?name=Chad+Ford>Chad Ford 
covers the NBA for ESPN Insider.





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