
Scalabrine to introduce Eurubuntu?
Last night, wires began reporting that Sonny Weems of the Toronto Raptors has already reached an agreement in Europe. Though reports “did not specify which team Weems would play for,” sources indicated that “Weems is in the process of signing a one-year contract and will remain in Europe for 2011-12, even if owners and players were to find a way to solve their differences and salvage the NBA season.”
Weems is currently in Spain with fellow Raptor Jose Calderón at a youth basketball camp, immediately leading BiE to speculate that Weems will be playing for some ACB side in ‘11 – perhaps Caja Laboral Baskonia, with whom Calderón played for five seasons…? The presence of DeMar DeRozan at said camp also makes one wonder about this possibility.
From the superstar sphere, Pau Gasol can hear the ticking of time, but is clearly not making any definitive decision yet. In contrast, Andrei Kirilenko seems to have a solid plan – two solid plans, really.

Kirilenko: Bring the multi-year deal
“Another important thing is that the city has to be comfortable for me and my family. I would like to play in Europe and finish my career overseas. But I will sign only a multi-year deal: I don’t want to go to Europe for just one season. Utah is my first option. I have played there 10 years. And, to be honest, there are some franchises in NBA where I would love to play…”
Clearly, the most obvious choice for Kirilenko would be to do a hitch with CSKA Moscow, but the way the Red Army has been laying out the Euros in their reloading effort this offseason, one can’t imagine having more funds. On the other hand, just imagine a roster than includes Kirilenko, Krstic, Milos Teodosic, Darjus Lavrinovic, and Ramunas Siskauskas: Think they’d be the Euroleague favorites going into the season…?
Brian Scalabrine, formerly a member of the championship Boston Celtics, is one of the few to have publicly set a personal deadline for his European decision.
Scalabrine told the Chicago Tribune on Friday that “if in the next 15 days [the situation is] still kind of like it is now, I’m just going to Europe and play. … I support the players and the union and want to see the [NBA] game stay great. But at the end of the day, with two years or so left of playing basketball, I’m not interested in watching billionaires fight. I just like the game too much. I like the camaraderie. I like to play. So why not do it in a great city in Europe and educate my family?”
Radmanovic to stay home in Serbia?
Vladimir Radmanovic, a member of the Los Angeles Lakers squad vanquished in the NBA championship by Scalabrine’s C’s in 2008, is currently hanging out in his Serbian home with an expiring contract from the Golden State Warriors – and hinting that he might be playing some Serbian Superleague ball come fall.
Said Radmanovic to the San Francisco Chronicle: “I was never playing for one last [NBA] contract. Let them argue. I might be over here, playing basketball.” For Partizan Belgrade, perhaps…?
Finally, an Associated Press report states that Radmanovic’s former teammate and current New Jersey Nets guard Sasha Vujacic is certainly open to ideas while thinking about both Europe and China: “Definitely, as players, we’ve got to look at other opportunities,” he said.
And European basketball fans should surely be looking at the NBA lockout as a serious opportunity to bring some big guns over here.
Tags: Andrei Kirilenko, Boston Celtics, Brian Scalabrine, Caja Laboral Baskonia, Darjus Lavrinovic, David Andersen, DeMar DeRozan, Euroleague, Golden State Warriors, Jose Calderon, Los Angeles Lakers, Milos Teodosic, NBA, NBA lockout, Nenad Krstic, New Jersey Nets, Partizan Belgrade, Pau Gasol, Ramunas Siskauskas, Sasha Vujacic, Sonny Weems, Toronto Raptors, Utah Jazz, Vladimir Radmanovic


[...] NBA players to Europe: Weems will, Kirilenko could, Radmanovic might – BallinEurope [...]
[...] feine Seie BallinEurope.com berichtet hier über die Wahrscheinlichkeiten dass bisherige NBA-Spieler nach Europa gehen. Und überhaupt, die [...]
1. NBA sends off-season teams to Europe to build interest in the game, uses Euroleague as international D league for years.
2. Best international player in NBA History wins championship, kinda solidifying the global end game of David Stern and the Dream Team (see MJ, now NBA Owner)
3. Owners lock out players, tells them, sorry we can’t help ourselves trying to acquire your services & you’re overpaid, in the same sentence. Rumors of players playing for Euroleague pop up days later.
that stuff happened, this could happen
4. Euroleague stockpiles money, being fully aware of lockout in advance. Acquires talent and announces to media, “Who cares how much we spent! We just got Kobe!” NBA Owners suddenly look very greedy, and to boot can’t their players back. Lock out turns into a strike.
5. NBA Owners having been screwed by this irony for about a year…start to get nervous when LeBron, after sitting a year and waiting, announces “The Decision: Part 2.”
(LeBron, do you still chew your passport? Smirks Jim Gray)
6. Yada yada, ends up by 2015, EuroLeague and NBA play a finals series after the playoffs to decide “World Champion” and EuroLeague wins most every year because they have no cap and their currency is worth twice as much as American currency, regardless.
[...] BallinEurope [...]
[...] BallinEurope [...]