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Jazz Sign Ekpe Udoh

Good, safe pickup. He has a ton of playing experience overseas which is a plus over a Withey or GLeague guy.

Once again, I think this spells the end of Favors in Utah. We are making his loss less painful by getting a bunch of specialists who can play where he plays (PF and C).

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This is an interesting number. It looks like a contract specifically fitted for the bi-annual exception($3,290,000.00). Which means they've decided to stay over the cap and keep the full MLE.

I thought Thabo's contract looked like it may have been signed with the Bi-Annual Exception.
 
Here's a write-up by DX(Mike Schmitz) on the Euroleague Final 4 and there is a part on Udoh:

http://www.draftexpress.com/article/what-did-we-learn-at-the-2017-euroleague-final-four-5954/
What Did We Learn at the 2017 Euroleague Final Four

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Taking stock of what we learned at the 2017 Euroleague Final Four in Istanbul, especially as it pertains to modern basketball, the NBA, and by extension, the 2017 NBA Draft.
EKPE UDOH'S NBA FIT

Ekpe Udoh, the #6 pick in the 2010 NBA Draft, switched, slid, stripped, contested, recovered, rotated and swatted Fenerbahce to a 2017 Euroleague Final Four title, the Turkish power's first in club history. Written off as a 'bust' relative to his lofty draft status and just-decent NBA production (10.8 PER in 274 games played over five seasons), the recently turned 30-year-old Udoh thoroughly dominated the Euroleague Final Four with his stout, versatile defense, putting the clamps on Greek legend and three time Euroleague Final Four MVP Vassilis Spanoulis, one game after neutralizing incumbent Euroleague MVP Sergio Llull (the 34th overall pick in 2009).

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dj8XmqV5vNo

(the Jazz were at the Final 4)

Thanks to his excellent feet, massive 7' 4.5 wingspan, sharp timing and overall defensive range, Udoh killed nearly every ball screen with his 'switchability', stalling Olympiacos' offense. His dominant defensive performance (seven blocks in 75 Euroleague Final Four minutes) begs the question - why didn't Udoh stick in the NBA? The former Michigan big turned Baylor transfer certainly could have done more to maximize his opportunities at the NBA level, but the league had yet to evolve into what it is today. At 6-10, Udoh was 'undersized' for a center, and didn't quite have the skill set to fit as a four man, evident by his porous 8.9 points per 40 minutes on 44% shooting as a rookie in Golden State. With post touches more prevalent, Udoh didn't exactly fit on either end - undersized as a defender on the block, and raw as an interior scorer. His toughness was also questioned, and his lack of defensive rebounding was worrisome in a league that played bigger, and wasn't nearly as switch-heavy as it is today. But since his underwhelming seasons with the Warriors (2010-12), Bucks (2012-14) and Clippers (2014-15), the NBA has trended back in Udoh's direction. He's without question a five in today's NBA, and his perimeter defense and shot blocking instincts are as valuable as ever. Spanoulis, who shot 2-for-12 from the field largely due to Udoh's stifling perimeter defense, definitely isn't Steph Curry, Chris Paul or Kyrie Irving, but Udoh fits a prototype that all teams are looking for, and would most definitely be a defensive asset on virtually any NBA team today. More than anything, Udoh's Euroleague Final Four dominance emphasized the importance of having a big who can switch ball screens when involved in pick and roll, and put a lid on the rim when he's in help position. His much-improved passing is certainly an added bonus (3.0 assists per 40 minutes this past season), but it's his ability to switch, guard either big spot, and protect the rim that make him an attractive option for a team looking to bring him back over, although after his now-legendary weekend in Istanbul, he likely wouldn't come on the cheap. - Source: http://www.draftexpress.com/article/what-did-we-learn-at-the-2017-euroleague-final-four-5954/ ©DraftExpress

THE STYLES OF NBA CENTER

In a point guard, wing-heavy era, the NBA is seemingly employing three styles of centers: The Switch-Heavy Rim Protectors: Bigs like Udoh and Birch who can switch everything and protect the rim when not involved in the primary action. These bigs are generally vertical spacers as well. To varying degrees (some are more switch than anchor and vice versa) this is the Cauley-Steins, Nerlens Noels, Goberts, DeAndre Jordans, and Biyombos of the league.
 
Very sad day for Fenerbahce basketball. As a Fenerbahce season ticket owner, I am very sad but happy to see that he is coming to Utah

First of all, wonderful character. On / off the court everyone loved and respected him.

Basketball wise, we saw that he has improved a lot in the last two years. Defensively he has been the most dominant center in Europe, had Euroleague block records. However, more importantly, Fenerbahce defense also very much depends on switches and he was not beaten by even the fastest guys in Euroleague. He also recovers very well for help defense or weak side block. Obviously, players are faster in NBA but he would fit easily to Utah defense. His major problem was post up defense against longer / stronger centers - which has always been his weakness anyway.

Offensively he might surprise you. especially in his second year he became a major PnR threat and key playmaker. He can roll to the basket, hit a mid range and more importantly can easily see corner three or the other big cutting to the basket. Post up offense was ok.

Our other star Bogdan Bogdanovic also signed with Sacramento. For us this is like losing both Hayward and Gobert during the same off season.
 
Quote me on this, we are 10000% not making some blockbuster move. Ya'll setting yourself up for disappointment, and then outrage, when it was clear all along, lol
 
Then who is starting at PF? These moves were done to shore up to roster... not to presage some big trade. I think we're done.
I honestly feel like we could play JoeJ, Jerekbo, Sefolosha, Udoh, Bradley, and Bolomboy and be okay. Hell, we played so much last season with Diaw at PF because of Favors injuries. Diaw is serviceable there, but not much better than the 6 I just listed.

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Quote me on this, we are 10000% not making some blockbuster move. Ya'll setting yourself up for disappointment, and then outrage, when it was clear all along, lol
I won't be outraged, I'd just be shocked all these vets who can still play are agreeing to sign to get 0 minutes (that or Favors is going to barely play)

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Why is Udoh, a guy who was having a fantastic career, agreeing to sign with Utah if Favors is going to get the majority of backup center minutes?

He's getting close to a minimum contract. Those types of deals don't come with any sort of guarantees for minutes. I don't know why he chose the Jazz, I doubt they told him Favors will be out, so you should come.

I guess we have about 2 days to see what happens. Just color me skeptical of any potential major moves.
 
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