Wednesday, May 24, 2023

Top 25 NBA Players: Who NEVER Won a Championship Ring

Photo Credit: Getty Images/Arizona Sports

In honor of scoring machine Carmelo Anthony's retirement, here come my Top 25 NBA players who have NEVER won a championship ring. 

(As always, the initial post and list can be found @LegendSports7 on Twitter, where all the magic happens.)

Top 25 Players to Never Win a Ring (as of 5/24/2023)

1. Nikola Jokic
2. Karl Malone
3. John Stockton
4. Elgin Baylor
5. Charles Barkley
6. George Gervin
7. Allen Iverson
8. Chris Paul
9. Vince Carter
10. Tracy McGrady
11. Reggie Miller
12. Patrick Ewing
13. Dominique Wilkins
14. Russell Westbrook 
15. Bob Lanier 
16. Carmelo Anthony
17. James Harden
18. Joel Embiid
19. Steve Nash 
20. Damian Lillard
21. Chris Webber 
22. Dikembe Mutombo
23. DeMar DeRozan
24. Luka Doncic
25. Yao Ming 

Honorable Mention

Grant Hill 
Paul George 
Adrian Dantley
Chris Mullin 
Walt Bellamy
David Thompson 
Sidney Moncrief
Jimmy Butler
Jayson Tatum
Trae Young 
George Yardley
Jack Twyman

John Frascella is a professional sports writer who works for Razzball, FanSided and Recruit Certified. He covers NBA, NFL and MLB and can be found @LegendSports7 on Twitter. 

Thursday, May 18, 2023

Revisiting MLB Free Agent Pitchers: What Could Eppler Have Done Differently?

 

Photo Credit: Amazin' Avenue 

Some people get pretty pissed at me when I attack Mets' GM Billy Eppler on Twitter @LegendSports7. 

Even though he had a horrific 332-376 record with the Angels - despite one of the highest payrolls in MLB - and he's built a crappy Mets' roster in relativity to the highest payroll in baseball history, people still seem to want to defend him. 

When I bash the Mets' pitching, the Twitter trolls say, okay, what would you have done then? 

To appease them, I'm posting my initial free agent pitcher rankings, before anyone was signed this past offseason (ages are per Spotrac): 

1.    Clayton Kershaw, 34 years old

2.    Carlos Rodon, 30 years old

3.    Jacob deGrom, 34 years old

4.    Justin Verlander, 39 years old

5.    Nathan Eovaldi, 32 years old

6.    Jameson Taillon, 31 years old

7.    Chris Bassitt, 33 years old

8.    Andrew Heaney, 31 years old

9.    Tyler Anderson, 32 years old

10. Kodai Senga, 29 years old

11. Martin Perez, 31 years old

12. Zach Eflin, 28 years old

13. Taijuan Walker, 30 years old

14. Michael Wacha, 31 years old

15. Ross Stripling, 33 years old

16. Mike Clevinger, 31 years old

17. Johnny Cueto, 36 years old

18. Seth Lugo, 33 years old

19. Sean Manaea, 30 years old

20. Zack Greinke, 39 years old

21. Vincent Velasquez, 30 years old

22. Drew Smyly, 33 years old

23. Jose Quintana, 33 years old

24. Jordan Lyles, 32 years old

25. Kyle Gibson, 35 years old

26. Corey Kluber, 36 years old

27. Michael Lorenzen, 30 years old

28. Noah Syndergaard, 30 years old

29. Wade Miley, 36 years old

30. Rich Hill, 42 years old

31. Zach Davies, 29 years old

32. Matt Boyd, 31 years old 

Monday, May 8, 2023

Frascella's Top 100 NBA Players: Jokic & Booker Are Officially Out of This World

 

Photo Credit: AP News

The NBA Playoffs are where we separate the men from the boys. 

Dozens of NBA players have insanely impressive stats during the regular season; but at the end of the day, isn't it really all about winning a chip? 

When it comes to professional basketball, I'm of the opinion that star players really do determine everything. In football, head coaches, offensive and defensive coordinators are extremely important. In baseball, an on-his-game pitcher can simply shutdown your lineup full of all-stars. 

But in the NBA? Well hell, if you've been watching these playoffs, just give the ball to Jimmy Butler, Devin Booker and Nikola Jokic down the stretch, then just get the hell out of their way. Let's get into the good stuff. 

Frascella's Ranking Criteria & Considerations 

1. Playoff game is on the line... can you clear it out for this guy, and he'll make the clutch, winning play for your team? 

2. Does he have a recent history of winning? 

3. How about a recent championship, or at least a run to The Finals? 

4. Is he a leader who has the utmost respect of his teammates? 

5. Is he a player who generally and ultimately contributes to a winning culture for his organization? 

6. Do they have mental toughness? 

7. Do they stay healthy enough? Do they always show up for their teammates when they are in need? 

If I can think of anything else, I'll explain along the way... 

Honorable Mention

Christian Wood, Mavs: He tends to look good in advanced metrics and gets a decent amount of hype, but I don't see impact on winning no matter where he goes. 

Buddy Hield, Pacers: His popularity would probably put him in the top 100 for most people, but I don't like his inefficient shooting. It doesn't really translate to winning in today's NBA. 

Devin Vassell, Spurs: Could easily squeeze into my top 100, it's just... the Spurs are so irrelevant these days. 

Trey Murphy III, Pelicans: An exciting young player who probably just needs more consistent minutes to crack my top 100. 

Nic Claxton, Nets: Metrics and analytics say he should probably be a top 100 player, but as a Nets' fan I can tell you... sometimes it feels like he is hurting us. Just because he can't shoot from the perimeter at all. And his free throw shooting stinks. 

John Frascella's Top 100 NBA Players

100. Austin Reaves, Lakers: Has been a key piece for the Lakers throughout the season. When LeBron and AD are out, he can step up and be a top gun. When all the big boys are out there, Reaves is a team player who slips into a key supporting role. 

99. Ivica Zubac, Clippers: One of the last of the Old Guard - a traditional, high-percentage center who stays pretty close to the rim. Very efficient player, though. 

98. Bennedict Mathurin, Pacers: A very exciting young talent who flashed moments of greatness in his rookie campaign. Needs to play better when the "full" team is on the floor. Only seemed to shine when he had opportunities to hog usage. 

97. Mitchell Robinson, Knicks: A dominant defensive center who has played particularly well in the postseason. 

96. Derrick White, Celtics: It's not always flashy, but White is a key Celtics' contributor behind the dynamic duo of Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown. 

95. Terry Rozier, Hornets: His stats say 'better than No. 95' but his Hornets never go anywhere. I don't know if there's an actual contribution to winning. 

94. Jakob Poeltl, Raptors: Had a fantastic season, but his Raptors and Spurs were both major disappointments. Not sure how much impact he truly has, despite great efficiency. 

93. Myles Turner, Pacers: A very talented two-way center who should probably have more impact than he does. Probably needs to increase aggressiveness and tenacity. 

92. Zion Williamson, Pelicans: Should be a top 50 player, but he simply doesn't show up for his teammates when they need him. Probably the most frustrating and disappointing player in the NBA... other than Ben Simmons. 

91. Immanuel Quickley, Knicks: Probably got screwed on that 6th Man of the Year Award. Given his durability and consistent health, he probably should have gotten it over Malcolm Brogdon, a vet who gets rested. 

90. Steven Adams, Grizzlies: We saw what happened to the Grizzlies in the playoffs when they didn't have their Big Man and enforcer. Steve's a very valuable, team-first center. 

89. Keldon Johnson, Spurs: Posted very strong stats for the young Spurs this season. 

88. Spencer Dinwiddie, Nets: A frustrating point guard on the whole - can rack up assists in bunches, but can never seem to find consistency when shooting from the outside. 

87. Franz Wagner, Magic: The type of high-IQ, all-purpose player who would fit nicely on basically any team in the NBA. 

86. Rudy Gobert, Timberwolves: He's a dinosaur in today's NBA. Still can't believe how much the Wolves gave up to acquire him initially via trade. 

85. Jalen Williams, Thunder: Easily one of the most impressive rookies in the game this season. It's gonna be scary when the Thunder have Williams, SGA, Giddey, Chet Holmgren and next draft's pick. 

84. Bobby Portis, Bucks: Consistently one of the best and most valuable bench players in the NBA. 

83. Jonas Valanciunas, Pelicans: One of the best of the 'old school' centers, to me. Very sure hands, super effective finisher around the cup. Surprisingly skilled and coordinated for his immense size. 

82. Scottie Barnes, Raptors: I think he became overrated after a solid rookie campaign. He's a 'nice' player, but he doesn't really knock my socks off. 

81. Jarrett Allen, Cavs: Considering both ends of the floor, he's probably the best of the 'old school' centers. He's also a better free throw shooter than basically all of those other guys. 

80. Cam Johnson, Nets: An excellent young shooter who plays with veteran poise and calm. Very good player for a team-first environment. 

79. Aaron Gordon, Nuggets: The perfect No. 4 in Denver behind Jokic, Jamal Murray and MPJ. The skillsets of this foursome work particularly well together. 

78. Jordan Clarkson, Jazz: One of my favorite players in the NBA. A one-on-one assassin who never lacks confidence from a scoring perspective. 

77. Fred VanVleet, Raptors: Really looked like a key contributor when the Raptors won the NBA title; but maybe Kawhi was just making everybody look better around him. 

76. Kevin Huerter, Kings: Was arguably the X-factor for the exciting, young Kings during the regular season, but he slunk into the background during their first-round playoff exit. 

75. Draymond Green, Warriors: Was up there amongst the league leaders in assists, and we already know about his all-around impact on the game for Golden State. 

74. Alperen Sengun, Rockets: One of the most dominant fantasy centers throughout the season. Good things are brewin' in Houston with Sengun, Jalen Green, Kevin Porter, Jabari Smith Jr. and Tari Eason. 

73. Dejounte Murray, Hawks: Didn't really move the needle in his transition from the Spurs to Hawks. 

72. Norman Powell, Clippers: Exploded for some really terrific games this season. Did a great job as an offensive leader whenever Kawhi and Paul George were out of the Clippers' lineup. 

71. Harrison Barnes, Kings: Was a key veteran presence at the heart of the Kings' franchise resurgence this season. 

70. Tobias Harris, 76ers: Just keeps on doin' what he does. Steady fourth man behind Embiid, Harden and Maxey in Philly. 

69. Kevin Porter, Rockets: An exciting young guard who can absolutely fill up the stat sheet. 

68. Anfernee Simons, Blazers: Should be a young guard to get excited about, but I just don't see the wins coming in Portland. 

67. Malik Monk, Kings: Played some pretty incredible ball for Sacramento in the postseason. Known as a 'shooter' but he's actually quite adept at attacking the rim. Just a very talented two-guard who improves on a yearly basis. 

66. Michael Porter Jr., Nuggets: A very good No. 3 behind Jokic and Murray in Denver. But is he good enough to help them win an NBA title? 

65. Malcolm Brogdon, Celtics: A crafty veteran who simply knows his way around a basketball court. Knows how to manipulate opposing defenses with moxie. 

64. Jalen Green, Rockets: A natural scorer. Had some absolutely explosive offensive outputs. 

63. Bojan Bogdanovic, Pistons: Had a monster season in Detroit. I was genuinely surprised a contender didn't nab him before the trade deadline. His veteran skillet is very useful in a variety of different ways. 

62. Russell Westbrook, Clippers: Probably the most polarizing player in the NBA. Had a helluva playoff series for the Clips, though! 

61. RJ Barrett, Knicks: We see flashes of greatness, but where's the consistency? He seems like he'll stay one notch below All-Star. Just a good young player. 

60. Kyle Kuzma, Wizards: Had a fantastic season in Washington - I like his high-energy, disruptive style of play. Would love to see him on a contender. 

59. Tyler Herro, Heat: Needed to stay healthy these playoffs. Could have potentially been a back-end top 50 player. 

58. D'Angelo Russell, Lakers: Not as good as he once was on my Nets, but he's ballsy and he's not afraid to make big plays. Fits nicely with LeBron, AD, Reaves and Rui in my opinion. 

57. Brook Lopez, Bucks: Had a jaw-dropping season in Milwaukee. Probably should have won Defensive Player of the Year over Jaren Jackson Jr... plus Brook never seems to miss a three these days! 

56. Cade Cunningham, Pistons: An explosive combo guard who simply needs better, more seasoned players around him. 

55. Kristaps Porzingis, Wizards: Had a monster season on the stat sheet... but that's sort of who he is, right? Shouldn't the Wizards have at least made the East's play-in ladder with Porzingis, Kuzma and Beal? 

54. Nikola Vucevic, Bulls: Just not really feeling his impact anymore. 

53. Deandre Ayton, Suns: Not much of a headline anymore with Devin Booker and Kevin Durant controlling everything in Phoenix. 

52. Evan Mobley, Cavs: Has had a great start to his career, but I don't know if you can win in the playoffs with Jarrett Allen and Mobley up front. Need the true perimeter shooting, right? Mobley's mid-range game sort of caps his impact. 

51. Khris Middleton, Bucks: If he could just stay healthy, we know he'd be a top 40 player. 

50. Paolo Banchero, Magic: The NBA's deserving Rookie of the Year! 

49. Jordan Poole, Warriors: I don't think you realize how important this kid is to the Warriors' overall success. 

48. CJ McCollum, Pelicans: Just starting to annoy me at this stage of his veteran career. So many wild, contested shots. 

47. Chris Paul, Suns: Another polarizing player, a la Westbrook. Guess what? CP3 got hurt in the playoffs... again. Some things never change. 

46. Josh Giddey, Thunder: An excellent all-around young player who is wise beyond his years on the basketball court. 

45. Julius Randle, Knicks: Polarizing like Westbrook and CP3. Randle seems to play a lot worse in the playoffs than he does during the regular season. 

44. Jrue Holiday, Bucks: A calming veteran at the point guard position. 

43. Desmond Bane, Grizzlies: A productive wingman for Ja Morant's offense in Memphis. 

42. Andrew Wiggins, Warriors: The quiet 'glue' player for one of the most successful franchises in the NBA. 

41. Darius Garland, Cavs: A lightning-quick, electric offensive player who is fun to watch. 

40. LaMelo Ball, Hornets: One of the best fantasy options, for sure... but can we keep him healthy? And can his Hornets ever win anything? 

39. Bradley Beal, Wizards: Where's the winning?

38. Karl-Anthony Towns, Timberwolves: Not even really sure what to think or write about him anymore. 

37. Paul George, Clippers: Enough is enough - just stay healthy and get out on the court when your team needs you. 

36. Kawhi Leonard, Clippers: Same exact sentence I just wrote about Paul George. 

35. Tyrese Haliburton, Pacers: One of the most promising young guards in the game. Had his Pacers on a surprise playoff track pre-injury. Great things are coming. 

34. Jaren Jackson Jr., Grizzlies: Defensive Player of the Year, yes... but he really disappointed me with piss-poor all-around play in a first-round exit at the hands of the veteran Lakers. 

33. Mikal Bridges, Nets: Once he got increased usage in Brooklyn, he became one of the best and most productive players in the entire NBA. 

32. Pascal Siakam, Raptors: We pretty much know who he is, at this point. 

31. Brandon Ingram, Pelicans: Everything feels so messy with the Pelicans. It's an icky situation, overall. Ingram got hurt a bunch this year, while Zion just doesn't wanna play when the games matter. Ingram needs to get out of dodge and start fresh elsewhere. 

30. Kyrie Irving, Mavs: Played well after his trade to the Mavs... but their team collapsed overall. This is becoming a disturbing trend. 

29. Tyrese Maxey, 76ers: Love his confidence and guts. Could be a good No. 2 player elsewhere, but he has Embiid and Harden in his way in Philly. 

28. Domantas Sabonis, Kings: A great regular season player - didn't like the way he disappeared (often) against the Warriors in the Kings' first-round exit from the postseason. 

27. Bam Adebayo, Heat: A pivotal two-way force for Spo and Jimmy's always fiery Heat. 

26. Zach LaVine, Bulls: One of the most gifted offensive players in the league. 

25. Lauri Markkanen, Jazz: Seemingly every year you can make a case for him as the Most Improved Player in the league. True stardom appears to be on the horizon. 

24. Damian Lillard, Blazers: Where's the winning? Can you be a successful franchise with Lillard as your main guy? 

23. DeMar DeRozan, Bulls: Always a bridesmaid, never the bride. 

22. Donovan Mitchell, Cavs: Pretty much done with him after the Cavs' putrid playoff performance against the less-talented and lower-seeded Knicks. 

21. James Harden, 76ers: Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde in this head-spinning second-round series against the Celts. Harden is doing some incredible things, for sure. 

20. Trae Young, Hawks: He's a ballsy kid. Not really sure why his reputation has taken such a hit. Rest of the Hawks' team needed to play better against Boston. 

19. Jamal Murray, Nuggets: I love the control of his game. He's a quiet maestro at the point guard position. Ultimately, he's one of the key players in the entire NBA because the Nuggets need him fully healthy to win it all. 

18. Klay Thompson, Warriors: One of the league's top overall contributors to winning. Can still turn it up and come through in the clutch when he needs to. 

17. Anthony Edwards, Wolves: Sky's the limit for this kid. Just a truly electric talent. 

16. Ja Morant, Grizzlies: Selfish behavior throughout the season. Didn't do enough to beat the Lakers in the playoffs, either. 

15. Jalen Brunson, Knicks: Turned the Knicks' entire franchise around in just one season. Mavs fell apart without him, too. Now that's value. 

14. De'Aaron Fox, Kings: The NBA's first-ever "Clutch Player of the Year" was exactly that - every time the Kings needed a big bucket, Fox delivered in a major way. Was an absolute joy to watch throughout the entire season. 

13. Anthony Davis, Lakers: Sometimes he looks top five. Other times we wonder if he's even top 50. 

12. Jaylen Brown, Celtics: An assassin. Arguably the most underappreciated player in the world right now. 

11. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Thunder: May have actually been the best player in the NBA this season. Solid, consistent, reliable and insanely productive. A great leader at a young age. 

10. Luka Doncic, Mavs: Didn't even make the playoffs, and his leadership skills have been called into question. 

9. Jayson Tatum, Celtics: Great run to The Finals last season. Locked in a 2-2 battle with the Sixers right now. Let's see where he ends up! 

8. LeBron James, Lakers: Still doin' it big at 38 years of age. Utterly incredible. 

7. Joel Embiid, 76ers: I need to see him close the deal in the playoffs, for once. 

6. Giannis Antetokounmpo, Bucks: Got too full of himself this season, then totally choked in the first round of the playoffs. Couldn't make a free throw to save his life. 

5. Kevin Durant, Suns: Playing better with Devin Booker than he did with Kyrie Irving. Better flow, a bit more spacing. 

4. Devin Booker, Suns: He's been the absolute best player in the postseason this year. Averaging 37 points per game while shooting SIXTY-TWO PERCENT from the floor. Have we ever seen anything like this from a two-guard? 

3. Jimmy Butler, Heat: He's an old-school superstar at heart - all grit, all toughness, doesn't really care about political correctness. He's a swiss army knife - can beat you driving, mid-range shooting, shooting threes, free throws, playing defense and/or rebounding. If you don't respect Jimmy Butler's all-around attack, then you don't really understand basketball. 

2. Stephen Curry, Warriors: The reigning NBA champ just scored FIFTY points in a Game 7 closeout of the feisty, young Kings. Still got it, Steph. 

1. Nikola Jokic, Nuggets: He's breaking so many records I can't even keep up with them:

- Most points in a playoff game for a Nugget (53)

- 1st player in NBA history to record 30+ points, 15+ rebounds and 15+ assists in a playoff game. 

These also, via Wikipedia: 

  • Highest single-season player efficiency rating in NBA history (32.85).
  • Highest single-season player box plus-minus in NBA history (13.72).
  • Fastest triple-double in NBA history (14 minutes and 33 seconds).
  • Only NBA player to be selected in the second round of the common era draft to win the MVP award.
  • Only NBA player to reach at least 2,000 points, 1,000 rebounds, and 500 assists in a single season.
  • Only NBA player to average at least 20 points, 10 rebounds, and 9 assists per game on 60% field goal percentage in a single season.
  • Only NBA player to average at least 25 points, 10 rebounds, and 8 assists per game on 52% field goal percentage in a single season.
  • Only NBA player to average at least 25 points, 13 rebounds, and 7 assists per game in a single season.
  • Only NBA player to lead his team in all five major statistics (points, rebounds, assists, steals, blocks) and field goal percentage in the same season.
  • Only NBA player to record a 15+ assist triple-double while shooting 100% from the field.
  • Only NBA player to record multiple 35+ point triple-doubles while shooting 90% from the field.
  • Only NBA player to record multiple 30+ point triple-doubles without a turnover.
  • Only NBA player since the NBA-ABA merger to post 35 points, 20 rebounds and 10 assists in multiple games in a single season.
  • Only NBA player since the NBA-ABA merger to post 30 points, 20 rebounds and 10 assists in multiple games: Denver Nuggets, 2019–20 and 2022–23
  • First player in NBA history to average at least 25 points, 10 rebounds, and five assists through their first 50 career playoff games.
  • Third NBA player since the NBA-ABA merger to post 30 points, 20 rebounds and 10 assists in a game: Denver Nuggets, 2019–20 and 2022–23
  • Sixth NBA player to lead his team in all five major statistics (points, rebounds, assists, steals, blocks) in the same season: Denver Nuggets, 2021–22

Nikola Jokic is quickly becoming one of the greatest to ever play the game of basketball. 

John Frascella is a published sports author and professional sports writer for Razzball, FanSided and Recruit Certified. Follow him on Twitter @LegendSports7 for all things NBA, NFL and MLB throughout the year. 

Friday, May 5, 2023

UPDATED! Full List of Mets' Trade Targets with Season Falling Apart

 

Photo Credit: Corvallis Gazette-Times

The wheels are falling off the Mets' highly-anticipated 2023 season. GM Billy Eppler and washed-up manager Buck Showalter continue to fail the team. 

Earlier this season, I highlighted some potential trade candidates here. But things have already changed rapidly, as the Pittsburgh Pirates have surged to relevance, while the St. Louis Cardinals have tumbled into oblivion. Let's get a closer look at my possible trade candidates, now: 

Teams I DON'T Think Will Trade Right Now

Atlanta Braves
Pittsburgh Pirates
Milwaukee Brewers
Los Angeles Dodgers
Arizona Diamondbacks
San Diego Padres

Tampa Bay Rays
Baltimore Orioles
Toronto Blue Jays
Boston Red Sox 
Minnesota Twins
Texas Rangers
Houston Astros
Los Angeles Angels 

Criteria I am looking for/focused on 

1. You aren't gonna get good players from good teams. 

2. Mostly you wanna pick from good players on bad teams. 

3. You probably won't even get players under 27 years old from bad teams. 

4. So I'm looking mostly, 28+ years of age on non-contenders or potential non-contenders. 

KEY: BOLD = very desirable player in my opinion 

** Teams that may trade & their interesting players **

New York Yankees: 17-15, last place in division

Anthony Rizzo, 33 years old 

DJ LeMahieu, 34 years old 

Giancarlo Stanton, 33 years old 

Nestor Cortes, 28 years old 

Kansas City Royals: 8-24, last place in division

Salvador Perez, 33 years old

Edward Olivares, 27 years old 

Matt Duffy, 32 years old 

Jordan Lyles, 32 years old 

Zack Greinke, 39 years old 

Brad Keller, 27 years old 

Ryan Yarbrough, 31 years old 

Amir Garrett, 31 years old

Aroldis Chapman, 35 years old 

Scott Barlow, 30 years old 

Josh Staumont, 29 years old 

Chicago White Sox: 10-22, 4th in division

Andrew Benintendi, 28 years old 

Eloy Jimenez, 26 years old 

Tim Anderson, 30 years old 

Yoan Moncada, 28 years old 

Hanser Alberto, 30 years old 

Lucas Giolito, 28 years old 

Dylan Cease, 27 years old 

Lance Lynn, 36 years old 

Michael Kopech, 27 years old 

Mike Clevinger, 32 years old 

Kendall Graveman, 32 years old 

Detroit Tigers: 13-17, 3rd in division

Eric Haase, 30 years old 

Jonathan Schoop, 31 years old 

Eduardo Rodriguez, 30 years old 

Alex Lange, 27 years old 

Cleveland Guardians, 14-17, 2nd in division

Jose Ramirez, 30 years old 

Myles Straw, 28 years old 

Josh Bell, 30 years old 

Mike Zunino, 32 years old 

Shane Bieber, 28 years old 

Cal Quantrill, 28 years old 

James Karinchak, 27 years old 

Aaron Civale, 28 years old 

Oakland Athletics, 6-26, last in division

Brent Rooker, 28 years old 

Jesus Aguilar, 33 years old 

Ramon Laureano, 28 years old 

Jace Peterson, 33 years old 

Tony Kemp, 31 years old 

Zach Jackson, 28 years old 

Sam Moll, 31 years old 

Seattle Mariners, 15-16, 4th in division

Eugenio Suarez, 31 years old 

Ty France, 28 years old 

Teoscar Hernandez, 30 years old 

Luis Castillo, 30 years old 

Marco Gonzales, 31 years old 

Paul Sewald, 33 years old 

Trevor Gott, 30 years old 

Washington Nationals, 13-18, last in division

Joey Meneses, 31 years old 

Jeimer Candelario, 29 years old 

Patrick Corbin, 33 years old 

Trevor Williams, 31 years old 

Hunter Harvey, 28 years old 

Kyle Finnegan, 31 years old 

Carl Edwards Jr., 31 years old 

Philadelphia Phillies, 15-17, 4th in division

Nick Castellanos, 31 years old 

Taijuan Walker, 30 years old 

Gregory Soto, 28 years old 

Seranthony Dominguez, 28 years old 

Craig Kimbrel, 35 years old 

Miami Marlins, 16-16, 2nd in division

Garrett Cooper, 32 years old

Jon Berti, 33 years old 

Jorge Soler, 31 years old 

Jean Segura, 33 years old 

Yuli Gurriel, 39 years old 

Dylan Floro, 32 years old 

Matt Barnes, 33 years old

Tanner Scott, 28 years old 

AJ Puk, 28 years old 

St. Louis Cardinals, 10-22, last in division

Paul Goldschmidt, 35 years old 

Willson Contreras, 31 years old 

Nolan Arenado, 32 years old 

Tommy Edman, 28 years old 

Tyler O'Neill, 28 years old 

Paul DeJong, 29 years old 

Miles Mikolas, 34 years old 

Jordan Montgomery, 30 years old 

Chris Stratton, 32 years old 

Drew VerHagen, 32 years old 

Ryan Helsley, 28 years old 

Giovanny Gallegos, 31 years old 

Cincinnati Reds, 13-18, 4th in division

Jake Fraley, 28 years old 

Nick Senzel, 28 years old 

Wil Myers, 32 years old 

Luis Cessa, 31 years old 

Buck Farmer, 32 years old 

Alex Young, 29 years old 

Lucas Sims, 29 years old 

Chicago Cubs, 15-16, 3rd in division

Trey Mancini, 31 years old

Patrick Wisdom, 31 years old 

Eric Hosmer, 33 years old 

Drew Smyly, 34 years old 

Jameson Taillon, 31 years old 

Mark Leiter Jr., 32 years old 

Brad Boxberger, 35 years old 

Colorado Rockies, 12-20, last in division

Kris Bryant, 31 years old 

Elias Diaz, 32 years old 

Charlie Blackmon, 36 years old 

CJ Cron, 33 years old 

Jurickson Profar, 30 years old 

Mike Moustakas, 34 years old 

Randal Grichuk, 31 years old 

Kyle Freeland, 30 years old 

Brent Suter, 33 years old 

Justin Lawrence, 28 years old 

Brad Hand, 33 years old 

San Francisco Giants, 13-17, 4th in division

Mike Yastrzemski, 32 years old

JD Davis, 30 years old 

Wilmer Flores, 31 years old 

LaMonte Wade Jr., 29 years old 

Michael Conforto, 30 years old 

Joc Pederson, 31 years old 

Brandon Crawford, 36 years old 

Mitch Haniger, 32 years old 

Anthony DeSclafani, 33 years old 

Alex Cobb, 35 years old 

Ross Stripling, 33 years old 

Sean Manaea, 31 years old 

Jakob Junis, 30 years old 

Tyler Rogers, 32 years old 

John Brebbia, 33 years old 

My "Dream" Acquisitions out of everyone on here

Anthony Rizzo, 33 years old 

DJ LeMahieu, 34 years old 

Salvador Perez, 33 years old

Andrew Benintendi, 28 years old 

Eloy Jimenez, 26 years old 

Dylan Cease, 27 years old 

Eduardo Rodriguez, 30 years old 

Jose Ramirez, 30 years old 

Shane Bieber, 28 years old 

Brent Rooker, 28 years old 

Ty France, 28 years old 

Teoscar Hernandez, 30 years old 

Luis Castillo, 30 years old 

Joey Meneses, 31 years old 

Nick Castellanos, 31 years old 

Paul Goldschmidt, 35 years old 

Willson Contreras, 31 years old 

Nolan Arenado, 32 years old 

Jordan Montgomery, 30 years old 

Ryan Helsley, 28 years old 

Patrick Wisdom, 31 years old 

Kris Bryant, 31 years old 

Justin Lawrence, 28 years old 

John Frascella is a published baseball author who has been covering the MLB for 19 years. Follow him on Twitter @LegendSports7 for all things Mets, MLB, NFL and NBA throughout the year. 

Milwaukee Bucks: Budenholzer's Firing is a Bad Look for the Entire NBA

 

Photo Credit: Detroit Bad Bays 

In the midst of the Milwaukee Bucks' first-round playoff series against the Miami Heat, head coach Mike Budenholzer's brother died in a tragic car accident. When the Bucks lost, Budenholzer - who had the best record in the entire NBA - was quickly fired. What does this say about the NBA's culture? 

Mike Budenholzer is 11th in NBA history in winning percentage, ahead of coaching legends like Jerry Sloan, Chuck Daly, George Karl and Rudy Tomjanovich.

He did an outstanding job once again this season, leading the Bucks to an incredible 58-24 record - the best in the entire NBA.

Budenholzer was also the head coach of the Bucks in 2021-22, when they very recently won the NBA championship.

All aspects considered, "Coach Bud" is one of the best in the history of the NBA.

Why in the world did the Bucks fire Budenholzer?

Inexplicably, after a free throw shooting collapse by Giannis Antetokounmpo (10-of-23 at the charity stripe in a game the Bucks lost by two in overtime), Milwaukee's brass decided to place all the blame on Budenholzer's shoulders.

This is the same man who lost his brother in a tragic car accident, right in the middle of the hotly-contested series with the Miami Heat.

This is the same man who was the head coach of the Bucks in Giannis' only season as an NBA champion.

What does this firing say about the current culture of the NBA?

You are a recent NBA champion head coach, and you get fired?

You have the best record in the entire league, and you get fired?

Your brother dies suddenly in the middle of a playoff series, and you get fired?

How about just being decent human beings? No understanding that Coach Bud may have been a bit off his game given the shocking tragedy he just suffered through?

The Bucks' organization is so wrong in so many different ways, here. What message does this send to every single person in your organization? Win a recent championship and have the best record... and that's not good enough?

What if the team had a bad regular season? Fire every single person in the entire organization, then?

The Milwaukee Bucks have totally failed the NBA in this instance. Why would anyone even want to coach in this league? All reason and logic have flown completely out the window.

Great coach Mike Budenholzer deserved better. I can only hope he ends up with my Brooklyn Nets, now.


John Frascella is a published sports author and professional sports writer for Razzball, FanSided and Recruit Certified. Follow him on Twitter @LegendSports7 for all things NBA, NFL and MLB throughout the year.