Shaq's superstar dunk contest ...
Cavs, Lakers to get reacquaint...
Lakers-Cavaliers Preview 2010-...
MVP? It's debatable between Ko...
Cavs roll as Shaq reaches mile...
Presented By: 2010-01-20...
Timely baskets not in Raptors'...
ROSTER REPORT 2010-01-20...
NOTES, QUOTES 2010-01-20...
Shaq wants stars to dunk for H...
Kaspersky Lab, Kyrus Tech oraz...
Web viewing of NBA games may s...
LeBron is all-world unguardabl...
Rumors Talk: LeBron would go o...
Cavaliers sign Tarence Kinsey...
Clips forced to rebuild at sea
Brand has surgury
Clippers hosting Kings
Post subject: Is Al Thornton a
ïîñîáèå + ï
èùó ïàðíÿ
Interested In Roger Clemens Ro
January 2010
December 2009
November 2009
October 2009
September 2009
August 2009
July 2009
June 2009
May 2009
April 2009
March 2009
February 2009
January 2009
December 2008
November 2008
October 2008
September 2008
August 2008
July 2008
June 2008
May 2008
April 2008
March 2008
February 2008
 
 
Add to Google
Add to My Yahoo!
Subscribe in NewsGator Online
Add to Windows Live
News » Z survived 'Wolves, falling tripod


Z survived 'Wolves, falling tripod


Z survived 'Wolves, falling tripod
Cavaliers INSIDER

Minneapolis - Zydrunas Ilgauskas is lucky he survived his workout with the Minnesota Timberwolves in 1995.

It wasn't the broken foot that caused him to postpone his entry into the NBA draft for one year. It was an accident during his workout for the Wolves at their practice court in Target Center, where a cameraman was filming the workout from a perch above the floor.

"The cameraman dropped a tripod and missed Zydrunas by 6 inches," recalled Kevin McHale, then the Wolves vice president of Basketball operations and now their head coach. "That would have killed him. That would have been worse than the broken foot."

Ilgauskas laughed at the memory.

"It was half an inch," he said. "It landed on the floor between my feet and took out a piece of the court. It was almost the Z Center instead of the Target Center."

Back in 1995, the Wolves thought they had a sleeper in Ilgauskas. A European scout recommended him to McHale.

"The film on the guy was like something from behind the Iron Curtain," McHale recalled. "It was all grainy. We were watching and it was like, 'OK, which one of those dudes is he?' Needless to say, when you're watching teams from the area where he's from, they're all a bunch of tall white guys. So you're looking at the film, checking for [jersey] numbers."

"When we saw him, he was really skinny. But he had a nice soft touch."

The Wolves brought Ilgauskas in for a workout and he impressed McHale so much that he planned on taking him in the second round.

"He worked out for two days, then he said 'my foot hurts,' " McHale said. "We thought we'd have him see the doctor and he had a broken foot. I was like, 'That's a pretty tough dude.'

"We thought we had him stashed away. Then he broke his foot and came out of the draft. The next year he played better, and everybody found out about him."

The Cavs took him with the 20th pick in the 1996 draft. But McHale is still an admirer.

"I'm a big fan of Zydrunas," McHale said. "He's a great guy. I knew him so long ago he used to have hair."

Big Al: Cavs coach Mike Brown is a big fan of the Minnesota's Al Jefferson.

"Al is one of the best low-post players in the league," Brown said. "He's a guy you have to pay a lot of attention to. He's a guy who's going to go get a double-double every night.

" You just hope you can make him work for his shots, work for his points, not let him get too many offensive rebounds and try to contain everybody else. He's a guy who can win a game by himself."

Welcome back: Wally Szczerbiak always enjoys his visits to Minnesota, where he spent the first six years of his career after McHale made him a No. 1 draft choice in 1999.

"I wish him nothing but the best," Szczerbiak said of McHale.


Author: Fox Sports
Author's Website: http://www.foxsports.com
Added: December 19, 2008

 

 
Copyright © Cavaliershome.com, Inc. All rights reserved 2012.