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09-16-2005, 01:00 PM
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Super Moderator
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10 Most Overpaid Players in the NBA
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1. Tim Thomas, SF, Knicks: $14.5 million. Thomas was awarded a monstrous $67 million contract from the Bucks in 2000 when it appeared the Bulls and Magic might make big offers. He averaged 12.0 points last season and often was outplayed by rookie Trevor Ariza, who will make less than 5 percent of Thomas' salary this season.
2. Adonal Foyle, C, Warriors: $7.7 million. Foyle has been a tireless activist for getting college students politically involved. A lot of good that does the Warriors when they need a basket in the post. Foyle will make $41 million over five years despite averaging 4.5 points in 21.8 minutes last season.
3. Jason Collins, C, Nets: $5 million. Collins is a decent defender, but he shoots 41.8 percent from the field, which is bad -- if you're a guard. For a center, it's impossibly bad. Collins' twin brother, Jarron, is a center for the Jazz who has put up similar numbers (better shooting, fewer blocks). But Jarron makes $1.8 million.
4. Austin Croshere, SF, Pacers: $8.9 million. Croshere chose a good time to peak -- in the 2000 Finals, averaging 15.2 points and 6.0 rebounds. The Pacers coughed up $51 million for Croshere that summer. Alas, he's a defensive liability and a streaky shooter. Croshere is lauded in Indy for being prepared and professional. For $8.9 million, a little professionalism doesn't seem much to ask.
5. Keith Van Horn, Mavericks. $15.7 million. The Nets thought they had a star when they gave Van Horn $73 million in 1999. Turns out they had a nice role player. He is Dallas' seventh man, but he makes more than anyone who took the floor in last season's Finals except Tim Duncan (who gets $100,000 more).
6. Maurice Taylor, PF, Knicks: $9.2 million. Taylor can be a useful post scorer, but he plays defense as though he has somewhere else to be, and he seems more likely to work on a bacon burger than a Bowflex. Taylor's averages (7.3 points, 4.0 rebounds) are lower than teammate Mike Sweetney's (8.4 points, 5.4 rebounds), but Taylor will make $7 million more this season.
7. Michael Olowokandi, C, Timberwolves: $5.9 million. Seems safe to file Olowokandi in the bust bin. When it comes to desire, he's Mr. Roper and basketball is Helen. Last season, his seventh, featured career lows in scoring and rebounding.
8. Scot Pollard, C, Pacers: $6.2 million. The Pacers survived the loss of Brad Miller two years ago, but Pollard had as much to do with that as, say, Zan Tabak. Pollard battled injuries last season, but even when healthy the previous year, he averaged 1.7 points and 2.7 rebounds.
9. Antonio Davis, F/C, Bulls: $14 million. Bulls coach Scott Skiles calls Davis' leadership "invaluable" to the young team. But the bet here is if Skiles were forced to put a value on that leadership, it'd be far south of $14 million. Davis averaged career lows of 7.0 points and 5.9 rebounds last season.
10. Kelvin Cato, C, Magic: $8.6 million. Laugh all you want about teams that overpay based on good postseasons, but the Rockets gave Cato six years and $42 million based on a good preseason. Cato is a solid defensive big man, but for $8.6 million, is developing a hook shot too much to ask?
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The entire Knicks team should also be #11.
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09-16-2005, 01:14 PM
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The Adonal Foyle contract was shocking when it was given by the Warriors; I'm not sure how you justify giving him that much money. The only redeemable quality the guy has is that he's tall.
Olowokandi and Van Horn are nice reminders of how much of a crap shoot the draft really is.
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09-16-2005, 01:21 PM
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I'm suprised Alan Houston isn't in the top 10
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09-16-2005, 01:33 PM
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Quote:
Originally posted by moe.ron
I'm suprised Alan Houston isn't in the top 10
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He may not play next season, and as far as I heard his career might be over due to injuries. Plus he is more talented than the rest of the guys on the board.
He's definitely overpriced though, no doubt about that.
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09-16-2005, 01:40 PM
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Join Date: Feb 2003
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Brian Grant should be on that list too.
He was prrrretty good before all his injuries. But definately not worth 14 or 15 million a year.
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09-16-2005, 02:22 PM
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Where is the list from, ESPN.com?
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09-17-2005, 03:21 PM
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Chris Webber should be on the top. He makes about 20 mil and he sucks.
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09-17-2005, 06:59 PM
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Quote:
Originally posted by madmax
Chris Webber should be on the top. He makes about 20 mil and he sucks.
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The problem is Webber is better than the guys on the board (although he had an awful year last year and is nowhere near a frontline player anymore). He's a waste at what they're paying him, but not as much as some of the other guys.
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09-18-2005, 11:42 AM
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Banned
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Join Date: Sep 2005
Posts: 175
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Wow, Van Horn making 16 mil a year. That's insane.
Brian Grant was set to make some absurd amount of money this year too.
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