Latest Charlotte Stories
Posted: Jun 30th 2008 11:46PM ET by Will Brinson (RSS feed)
Filed under: Bobcats, NBA Media Watch, Charlotte, Carolina

Prior to the recent announcement that
Michael Jordan would be the 2008 Citizen of the Carolinas, his greatest accomplishment in life was his minor league batting title. Well, whew. Now we don't have to worry about MJ's self confidence, as the Charlotte Chamber of Commerce
awarded him the title this past weekend.
The basketball legend is this year's Citizen of the Carolinas, joining the ranks of his former Tar Heels coach, the Federal Reserve chairman and other VIPs with Carolinas ties, the Chamber announced Friday.
The award is given annually to a person from North Carolina or South Carolina who has brought positive recognition to the states.
Jordan made the cut because of his success on and off the court and his charitable contributions, Chamber officials said in a press release.
And because the Bobcats have been so freaking good since he got there! Zing! (What? It was way more appropriate than making some "Free Lexus to College Students Program" joke.)
Now, it is interesting and great and all that Jordan won this award. My issue is that the award really only seems to focus on glad-handing a famous celebrity, since it, by very definition, requires previous public recognition to actually be achieved. Plus, all charitable donations aside, it totally fails to acknowledge the recent less than stellar news about Jordan regarding his personal life that have come forward. Oh. And the Bobcats.
Posted: Jun 28th 2008 7:40PM ET by Will Brinson (RSS feed)
Filed under: Bobcats, Eastern, NBA Draft, NBA Gossip, NBA Rumors, Charlotte

The Bobcats, needless to say, had a curious draft. Everyone expected
Brook Lopez' name to get called at nine; after all, what need does Charlotte have with
D.J. Augustin if
Raymond Felton is the future at point guard? (Answer: exactly.) But Charlotte
reaffirmed today that Felton is going to keep starting and that Augustin was merely drafted as a backup.
"We don't think D.J. is going to come in right now and be the starting point guard," [GM Rod] Higgins said.
While Higgins dismissed talk of a Felton-to-Knicks trade, it's clear the Bobcats were in various trade discussions leading up to the draft.
Managing partner Michael Jordan confirmed Thursday that the team talked to the Toronto Raptors about a deal that could have swapped forward Gerald Wallace for point guard T.J. Ford.
Apparently, talks stalled because the Raptors wanted a draft pick included as well, which seems like a nice thing to let Wallace know (You
alone, sir, are worth one T.J. Ford, but you and a draft pick? We think not.) heading into the offseason.
Posted: Jun 27th 2008 11:15AM ET by Will Brinson (RSS feed)
Filed under: Bobcats, NBA Draft, NBA Rumors, NBA Last Night, Charlotte

The buzz out of Charlotte is all about
D.J. Augustin. And how could it not be? The Bobcats passed over
Brook Lopez, a.k.a. the scoring big man they need to move
Emeka Okafor to the four, in favor of Texas' point guard. And they did this when, in theory, they already have the point guard of the future,
Raymond Felton.
But obviously,
Larry Brown does not care for Felton. I am making that conclusion based on a) the drafting of Augustin, b) Brown getting on national television and saying (paraphrase) that a strong connection to your point guard is absolutely necessary for success and c) my amazing ability to connect dots.
Now, Rick Bonnell of the
Charlotte Observer is
saying that, with very few exceptions, anyone on the roster is fair game to be moved around.
The Bobcats were in serious discussions with the Toronto Raptors about a deal that could have swapped [Gerald] Wallace for T.J. Ford. It didn't happen, but that's the clearest indication yet how active the Bobcats are in seeing what their players might bring in trade.
I assure you Wallace isn't alone. Raymond Felton could be moved, and so could just about anyone else with perhaps the exception of Jason Richardson.
That shouldn't be surprising, and Richardson is only off limits because of his contract. What is shocking is how quickly
Michael Jordan, Brown and Co have given up on Felton (all three Carolina grads) given they spent a high lottery pick on him just a few years ago.
Posted: Jun 26th 2008 12:15PM ET by Tom Ziller (RSS feed)
Filed under: Bobcats, Mavericks, Grizzlies, NBA Draft, NBA Rumors, Charlotte

Memphis is alive this morning. Zach from
3 Shades of Blue sends along this rumor by Ronald Tillery of the
Memphis Commercial-Appeal, writing on
the paper's "Memphis Edge" blog.
Before trading for the 20th pick, the Charlotte Bobcats asked Memphis to take anyone on their roster for the No. 5 pick. It's something that hasn't been completely ruled out. Now that Charlotte owns the ninth and 20th picks, don't be shocked if the Griz agreed to take players plus the ninth and 20th picks for the fifth and 28th selections.
It isn't apparent whether the Grizzlies would be sending their own player back in such a deal; they don't have to, as both squads are under the cap a decent amount --
Jason Richardson would be the only guy who'd make too much to be traded to Memphis for nothing but picks.
And that's irrelevant, apparently: the
Charlotte Observer's Rick Bonnell says J-Rich is
the only untouchable Bobcat. In
a separate story, Bonnell also bolsters the Memphis rumors, noting that "several NBA sources identified the Memphis Grizzlies ... as the team most willing to deal down."
Emeka Okafor couldn't be the Grizzlies' choice, as he's a restricted free agent.
Gerald Wallace, though ... imagine him next to
Rudy Gay. Frederic Weis just peed himself. Tillery also says Memphis has called Dallas about
Josh Howard, who seems like a dark-horse trade candidate no one's talking about all of a sudden.
Posted: Jun 24th 2008 10:22PM ET by Shiloh Carder (RSS feed)
Filed under: UNC Basketball, Duke Basketball, ACC Basketball, NCAA Basketball Media Watch, Charlotte, Carolina

HBO is planning on doing a
documentary on the Duke-North Carolina rivalry. The documentary is scheduled to air next February, maybe just in time for the two schools to meet up in their annual post-Super Bowl bonanza.
"Jim Lampley (a UNC graduate) has been telling me about the rivalry for 20 years or so," says HBO Sports president Ross Greenburg. "I was also aware of the subculture of both universities, and even though UNC was the state school, they think of themselves as the dignified force in the rivalry. They think Duke is a bunch of animals even though Duke is supposed to be the Ivy League of the South. That never meshed right with me and it was interesting. Plus, you had all these legends coming out of these two schools, the [Michael] Jordan's, the [Christian] Laettner's and the [Mike] Krzyzewski's and [Dean] Smith's. Unbelievable iconic names have floated through both places and it makes for a great documentary."
HBO was praised for their look at the Ohio State-Michigan football rivalry last year.
Greenburg also says that he wants to hold a special screening in Raleigh, NC and fill the auditorium with Blue Devils fans on one side and Tar Heels fans on the other. Most of the interviews have been finished for the documentary, with just one guy left on the wish list: former Tar Heel Michael Jordan.
Needless to say, I'm psyched about seeing this.
Posted: Jun 24th 2008 7:43PM ET by Shiloh Carder (RSS feed)
Filed under: Mid-Majors Basketball, NCAA Basketball Coaches, Charlotte, Davidson Basketball
Davidson head coach Bob McKillop is close to signing a long-term contract with Davidson. Details of the contract aren't yet known, but McKillop did say an announcement would be made soon.
Davidson reached the Elite Eight last year and were a missed three-pointer at the buzzer from downing eventual champion Kansas. On the way to facing Kansas, the Wildcats beat Gonzaga, Georgetown and Wisconsin. The 2008 NCAA Tournament will mostly be remembered for what McKillop's Wildcats did.
This news makes me happy because it is nice to see a coach from a small school stick around once his program gets some notice. Many times, a coach uses an opportunity like that to land a much higher profile (and paying) job. It is hard to blame them since most people who jump at those chances.
Posted: Jun 23rd 2008 3:03PM ET by David J. Warner (RSS feed)
Filed under: Panthers, NFC South, Charlotte, NFL Police Blotter, Carolina

Carolina Panthers wide receiver Dwayne Jarrett, who was
arrested and charged with DWI last March,
pleaded guilty to that charge on Monday in a Mecklenberg County courtroom. He was fined $420 and will perform 24 hours of community service. He also surrendered his driver's license to the court, so hopefully he'll find someone who can
drive him to film sessions.
To his credit, Jarrett said all the right things following this conviction:
"This is a thing that happened and you learn from your mistakes. ... You always have to take the right steps in everything you do. That's life in general. I took full responsibility for what happened."
Jarrett had a forgettable rookie season with the Panthers, which likely prompted the free agent signings of D.J. Hackett and Muhsin Muhammad. Is this guilty plea a sign that Jarrett is finally maturing and will own up to his mistakes on the field, too? It's a good sign, but it's just a starting point for him, really, if he wants to be the kind of receiver in the NFL that he was at USC.
Posted: Jun 23rd 2008 11:00AM ET by Will Brinson (RSS feed)
Filed under: Bobcats, NBA Draft, Charlotte
Crystal Ballin' takes a team-by-team look at what should, could, and probably will happen in the June 26th NBA Draft.If NBA greatness translated to the front office, ho-boy, would the Bobcats be unstoppable. Unfortunately, it doesn't. And as such,
Michael Jordan's Tarheel-homerism-fueled draft rampage will only be stopped this year by everyone
flocking back to Chapel Hill. Oh wait.
Larry Brown's still coming.
Picks: #9, #38
Needs: A big man who can score and/or complement
Emeka Okafor in the post (read: let him play power forward). Or perhaps an aggressive, defensive minded bigger guard-forward that can keep
Adam Morrison off the floor when
Gerald Wallace gets hurt.
Best Case Scenario:
Brook Lopez drops to number nine, although considering how guard/non-big man heavy the top part of the draft is, this seems pretty unlikely. There's chatter that people aren't enamored with Brook's lack of upside though, and nothing scares an NBA front office away from someone like "lack of upside" (see:
Battier, Shane). And speaking of homerism -- I'm going out on a limb and saying the Cats should trade down in the second round and pick up local UNCG product (respect the alma mater, please) and 3/4 tweener
Kyle Hines, or just roll with a
Joey Dorsey/
D.J. White frontcourt addition.
Posted: Jun 16th 2008 7:06PM ET by Shiloh Carder (RSS feed)
Filed under: UNC Basketball, ACC Basketball, NCAA Basketball Fans, NCAA Basketball Police Blotter, Charlotte, Carolina

With all the
giddiness over the Tar Heels getting back
Ty Lawson next season, there are some serious questions that need to be answered.
What kind of penalties will Lawson face for his
arrest last week?
Granted, in the realm of wrong-doin' ... this isn't that bad. A 20 year old had a beer and his radio too loud. Yes, he was caught in his car, but he wasn't drunk and if he had been of drinking age he wouldn't have caught a DUI. Still, these are those dumb things that need to get some punishment in some form.
Whether he went to the NBA or not, he would have to face a Chapel Hill courtroom at some point. However, now that he stays a Tar Heel, the team (namely, coach
Roy Williams) will have to issue some sort of punishment.
To understand this dynamic is key ... and one of the reason most people felt Lawson was NBA-bound. Lawson, who will be a junior next season, has been in Ol' Roy's doghouse before. Of course, then it was due to basketball-related issues. Now it is a bit more serious.
Don't think that one conversation that Lawson had with Williams over the past few days didn't include "what will you do to me if I come back, coach?" Rest assured that it has been discussed and, probably, somewhat satisfactory for Lawson.
Posted: Jun 16th 2008 5:01PM ET by Shiloh Carder (RSS feed)
Filed under: UNC Basketball, ACC Basketball, NBA Prospects, Charlotte, Carolina
All around Tar Heel Nation, there are smiles. Ever since April, it has been rare to see such an occassion (with the obvious exception of Player of the Year Tyler Hansbrough's decision to not go into the NBA Draft). There was the blowout to Kansas in the Final Four, Roy Williams wearing a KU sticker during the title game and the defection of four players from a team that would've been favored next season.
Today, Ty Lawson, Wayne Ellington and Danny Green all decided to come back to North Carolina next season. While Ellington and Green aren't total surprises, there was a point that it felt both would actually leave. Lawson returning is a huge surprise since (a) he didn't seem like he really wanted to come back, (b) the arrest in Chapel Hill would mean consequences from Williams and (c) his stock actually seemed to rise into easy first round status.
This is a huge get for Williams and Tar Heel fans. The only two non-returning players (that mattered) from a 36-3 Final Four team are Quentin Thomas (graduation) and Alex Stepheson (transfer) -- both reserves.
The starting lineup will probably stay the exact same: Lawson, Ellington, Hansbrough, Marcus Ginyard and Deon Thompson. The bench will consist of Green (one of the best sixth men in the nation), Bobby Frasor (injured last year, a smart, steady player with a defensive presence), freshman Ed Davis (who will fill the defensive/rebounder role that Stepheson left), William Graves (long range shooter), freshman Tyler Zeller (a 7-foot guy who loves to run) and freshman Larry Drew (solid PG that won't be relied on too much).