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Interesting Article on The Crawken.


Diesel

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Crawford Puts Hawks Ahead Of Uncertain Future

By: Jarrod Rudolph

RealGM.com Writer

Crawford_Jamal_atl_091118.jpg

December 10, 2010 3:05 PM

Jamal Crawford is an All-Star talent. His mix of size, skill and scoring ability make him one of the league’s toughest covers. This season, the 30-year-old guard is showing another side of his game that has been overlooked for many years -- a team-first attitude.

His unselfish approach extends beyond his on-court performance.

Crawford is in a contract year. Not just any contract year, but a contract year heading into a summer with a possible lockout and major changes to the NBA’s pay structure. Most of the time these circumstances have led to players doing everything they can to showcase their individual talent and secure big money, many times at the expense of their teammates.

Crawford, however, isn’t planning on using that strategy.

He understands that an unselfish, team-first attitude gives him the best chance to compete for a championship and get paid without being viewed as just another guy that only plays hard at contract time.

“You have to be a good teammate first if you’re playing to win,” Crawford said. “If you’re a good person at heart everything will take care of itself.”

“I’m honestly not playing to score a lot of points. I can go out there and try to score 20 points and can do that on a few different teams. The guys on this team are looking at the bigger picture. We’re all taking a step back in terms of our individual scoring for the benefit of our team.”

The distraction of playing with an uncertain future has been an issue for Crawford. He tries not to let his situation overshadow his obligations to the Hawks, but he can’t seem to get away from the constant questions about his future.

“It’s difficult, honestly,” Crawford said. “I think no matter what you do or say, it’s always in the back of your mind. Not so much on the court, but when you’re done playing people always want to talk about it. It’s always there and you have to do the best you can to weather the storm.”

Perhaps the true difficulty comes from not understanding why a deal hasn’t been reached.

Last season the Hawks enjoyed their most successful season since the 1997-98 campaign. Crawford, the reigning NBA Sixth Man of the Year, was a major part of the team’s 53 wins. The 10-year veteran averaged 18 points a game, leading the Hawks in scoring 27 times. He gives the Hawks a weapon off the bench that most teams don’t have. Most importantly, he wants to stay in Atlanta.

While teams around the league were doing everything in their power to secure top-tier talent this summer, the Hawks retained Joe Johnson and did nothing else.

Such things worried Crawford with the uncertainty of his future. Understanding the business of basketball, however, has given him the focus needed to play the game, both on the court and at the negotiating table.

“I really didn’t know what was going to happen and I was worried about not getting a deal done this summer,” Crawford said. “Now I’m okay if nothing gets done here. I’ll get a chance to pick where I want to go. I want to stay in Atlanta, but if that doesn’t happen it’s not the end of the world. I’ll have a chance to pick a place I think is best for me.”

Players like Crawford are hard to find.

There have been players with far less talent that refused to accept the role of sixth man. Crawford has embraced the role and used his talents to have a historic season. He posted the most 20-point games for a reserve. He had the highest scoring average for a player off a bench in almost 40 years (without starting a single game). He made the most three-point baskets (163) for a player off the bench in 19 years. He also recorded nine four-point plays and helped the Hawks improve by six games.

The Hawks would be wise to get Crawford’s deal done sooner than later.

He won’t be waiting long for another team to make him an offer.

There are a few different teams that need a go-to guy. There are a few more that are looking for someone of Crawford’s caliber to lead their team. Judging by his numbers as a reserve, he won’t disappoint if given the opportunity to be a team’s premier player.

--Jarrod.Rudolph@RealGM.com

Read more: http://realgm.com/src_feature_pieces/999/20101210/crawford_puts_hawks_ahead_of_uncertain_future/#ixzz180t2xFmA

Edited by Diesel
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Crawford is a class act.

“I really didn’t know what was going to happen and I was worried about not getting a deal done this summer,” Crawford said. “Now I’m okay if nothing gets done here. I’ll get a chance to pick where I want to go. I want to stay in Atlanta, but if that doesn’t happen it’s not the end of the world. I’ll have a chance to pick a place I think is best for me.”

Well Said, Jamal !

He knows his bosses have never paid luxury tax before and that is coupled with the fact that he is at an age and position where teams are shy about giving longer contacts. He realizes the situation and shows everything you want out of a veteran player.

I hope the Hawks find a way to keep him under a fair contract. It would be nice if someone valued Marvin enough to give us a usable, or even unusable expiring contract in order to get the cap relief to resign Crawford without paying tax..........if it comes down to that.

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Nice comments from Crawford but I question the original author who claims that a team won't be disappointed if Crawford is their premier player. I am trying to envision a team where Crawford is the premier player that is worth much of anything. He strikes me as a very good complimentary player but not one that should be leading a playoff team.

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I love what Crawford brings to the table...we all do. But he IS 30 years old. He's not spry kid anymore. If we can legitimately get better by packaging his contract with someone else to acquire an uptick in talent, then we need to do so. That is why I have been so frustrated by the DNPs and Inactivations by Jordan Crawford (the one guy most likely to provide us the scoring punch off the bench his elder does).

However, we already have a flawed team that is not championship material yet, and losing Crawford for nothing does little to mitigate that. If he will re-sign for a relatively short and fair contract (2-3 years), then it is probably best to keep him. However, if he is looking to get close to the $10 million he is getting now, I wish him the best on some other team.

Sund needs to earn his paycheck this offseason (assuming no lockout) and jettison some of our underperformers like Marvin/Zaza/Bibby for some decent guys or cap relief if possible. It takes two to tango, but he's the one being paid the big money--not me.

Of course, if our owners were willing to delve into the lux tax like most contenders, things would be easier. But eh, find a way to get it done.

Edited by TheTruth
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Perhaps the true difficulty comes from not understanding why a deal hasn't been reached.

What a lazy one pointed article. We could have extended Jamal this year and he'd be writing this article about Al Horford.

Crawford is in a contract year. Not just any contract year, but a contract year heading into a summer with a possible lockout and major changes to the NBA's pay structure. Most of the time these circumstances have led to players doing everything they can to showcase their individual talent and secure big money, many times at the expense of their teammates.

Crawford, however, isn't planning on using that strategy.

He understands that an unselfish, team-first attitude gives him the best chance to compete for a championship and get paid without being viewed as just another guy that only plays hard at contract time.

Is the author really telling us this as fact when the only evidence he submits is a quote from Jamal? Does he have any visual or statistical evidence? Did he maybe talk to other Hawks players and they told him Jamal was being a good team player?

Nice quotes from Jamal but lets role play and pretend for a second we're Jamal and we want a new contract. What would we say?

I really find these types of articles annoying. It is void of relevent information merely to make it interesting for ignorant basketball fans. He could have written an article with all the facts and guess what? It would have completly sucked because people would ask "Whats the point of this article?" Looks to me like he's just trying to make the Hawks management look incompetent, and do they really need help with that?

That being said. I like Jamal on this team and I do hope we find away to resign him, but at the same time I'll understand if we can't.

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It looks like Jamal was really bothered with his contract situation at the beginning of the season hence bad play.

Now, when he's convinced that he just needs to play and wait what happens, he plays like he did last year. He's keeper, but for the right price.

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