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		<title>Five Best Nuggets Drafts</title>
		<link>http://nugglove.com/2012/06/26/top-5-best-nuggets-drafts/</link>
		<comments>http://nugglove.com/2012/06/26/top-5-best-nuggets-drafts/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 26 Jun 2012 22:40:34 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Jonathan Maness</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[<p>Despite numerous years of having a pick in the lottery the Denver Nuggets haven&#8217;t had a lot of success in the NBA Draft. There have been some major duds (Nikoloz Tskitishvili and Efthimis Rentzias), but some big hits (Carmelo Anthony, Kenneth Faried and Dikembe Mutombo). Here are some of the Nuggets best drafts: 2003 NBA [...]</p><p><a href="http://nugglove.com/2012/06/26/top-5-best-nuggets-drafts/">Five Best Nuggets Drafts</a> - <a href="http://nugglove.com">Nugg Love</a> - <a href="http://nugglove.com">Nugg Love - A Denver Nuggets Fan Site - News, Blogs, Opinion and More</a></p>]]></description>
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<p>Despite numerous years of having a pick in the lottery the Denver Nuggets haven&#8217;t had a lot of success in the NBA Draft. There have been some major duds (Nikoloz Tskitishvili and Efthimis Rentzias), but some big hits (Carmelo Anthony, Kenneth Faried and Dikembe Mutombo). Here are some of the Nuggets best drafts:</p>
<p><strong>2003 NBA DRAFT: Drafted Carmelo Anthony (3rd pick), Sani Becirovic (46th) </strong><br />
Say what you will about Anthony, but it&#8217;s tough to find a better Nuggets&#8217; draft. Not only did the Nuggets jump their win total from 17 to 43 in Anthony&#8217;s rookie season, but Denver made the playoffs each of the seven seasons he played on the team. He also averaged more than 20 points each year and was second in scoring in the 2006-07 season (28.9). In the end, Anthony was dealt to New York in a mega-deal which brought Danilo Gallinari and Timofey Mozgov to the Nuggets. Becirovic, who was a prominent player in Europe, has never taken his talents over to the U.S. and it is highly unlikely he&#8217;ll ever play a game in the NBA. He is 31 years old and his career has been devastated by knee injuries.</p>
<p><strong>1991 NBA DRAFT: Drafted Dikembe Mutombo (4th), Mark Macon (8th) and traded for Winston Garland<br />
</strong><a href="http://cdn.fansided.com/wp-content/blogs.dir/78/files/2012/06/imgres.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-2846" title="imgres" src="http://cdn.fansided.com/wp-content/blogs.dir/78/files/2012/06/imgres.jpg" alt="" width="126" height="94" /></a>Macon never panned out for the Nuggets and was quickly traded two seasons later for Alvin Robertson. However, Mutombo was a solid performer for Denver (<a href="http://nugglove.com/2012/06/25/happy-46th-birthday-dikembe-mutombo/">see here for his accomplishments</a>). Probably the biggest accomplishment for the 7-foot-2 finger-wagging defensive enforcer was guiding the eighth-seeded Nuggets past top-seeded Seattle Supersonics. Mutombo left Denver in 1996 and signed a max deal with the Atlanta Hawks. Garland was Denver&#8217;s starting point guard in 1991, but was waived later on.</p>
<p><strong>1992 NBA DRAFT: Drafted LaPhonso Ellis (5th pick), Bryant Stith (13th) </strong><br />
Stith and Ellis were never at the magnitude of Mutombo, but both were legitimate starters for the Nuggets. Ellis was chosen to the All-Rookie Team and also nearly averaged a double-double (15.4 points, 9.7 rebounds) his rookie year. He was an intense rebounder, defender and a solid offensive threat. Later in his career he developed a three-point shot as Denver tried to move him over to small forward. He was hampered by a knee injury during his third season in the NBA, which limited how he played the next two seasons. Despite playing only 55 games in 1996, he led the Nuggets in scoring (21.9 points).<br />
Stith was the Nuggets starting shooting guard from 1993 to 1997 and made his living on the defensive side of the ball (averaging nearly 1.5 steals from 1993 to 1996) and his team-first mentality. In 1996 when a number of free agents were cashing in on new paychecks Stith deferred and re-signed with the Nuggets at a discounted price ($22 million for five years). In 2000, Denver traded Stith to the Boston Celtics.</p>
<p><strong>1998 NBA DRAFT: Drafted Raef LaFrentz (3rd pick), Tremaine Fowlkes (54th), Ryan Bowen (55th) and traded for Nick Van Exel<br />
</strong>LaFrentz was suppose to be the safe pick on the draft and he was. However, the Nuggets passed on three would-be stars in Dirk Nowitzki, Vince Carter and Paul Pierce. LaFrentz toyed with the Nuggets with his potential. One game he&#8217;d have a 20-point, 10-rebound performance, but would follow that up by barely cracking 10 points. He was a great weak-side shotblocker, but wasn&#8217;t a great defender and constantly received the wrath of Dan Issel, who coached the Nuggets at the time.<br />
Van Exel was the big gamble that paid off for the Nuggets as they dealt Tony Battie, aka &#8216;El Busto&#8217; and the draft rights to Tyronn Lue to get the All-Star point guard with a bad attitude. Van Exel was everything the Nuggets needed and more. He raised his scoring in each of the three seasons he was in Denver and nearly averaged a double-double in 1999, averaging 16.1 points and 9 rebounds. He teamed up with Antonio McDyess to put Denver in the playoff race each season, but in the end the Nuggets fell short. After failing to make the playoffs for three straight seasons, the Nuggets packaged Van Exel and LaFrentz to Dallas in a salary-dumping trade.<br />
Bowen was drafted for his energy and hustle and he didn&#8217;t disappoint. After spending a season overseas playing basketball, Bowen played for the Nuggets from 1999 to 2004. Despite never averaging more than five points a game, Bowen was a key factor of the Nuggets rotation, playing hard every time he got on the floor. Fowles never played for the Nuggets.</p>
<p><strong>2009 NBA DRAFT: Traded for Ty Lawson</strong></p>
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<p>The 1995 Draft could be considered one of Nuggets better draft due to Antonio McDyess&#8217; success. But McDyess was traded two years later and played his best years when he returned to Denver as a free agent. The 2011 Draft when the Nuggets snagged Faried and Jordan Hamilton may end up as one of Denver&#8217;s best drafts, but it&#8217;s too early to tell. However, when the Nuggets acquired Lawson in the 2009 Draft may have saved the franchise. Imagine the impact the Anthony trade would have on the Nuggets if Lawson wasn&#8217;t there? Raymond Felton and Andre Miller were good, but not great and both can&#8217;t do half the things that Lawson can. Lawson is one of the quickest player up and down the court and shoots the ball at a proficient rate and rarely turns it over. His confidence continues to grow and we saw how dangerous he can be in the first-round playoff series against the L.A. Lakers.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
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		<title>Remembering the 1993-94 Nuggets</title>
		<link>http://nugglove.com/2012/05/20/remembering-the-1993-94-nuggets/</link>
		<comments>http://nugglove.com/2012/05/20/remembering-the-1993-94-nuggets/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 20 May 2012 18:47:03 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Jonathan Maness</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[<p>The young Denver Nuggets had their fans believing again this postseason with their nothing to lose attitude. That attitude brought back memories of the Nuggets run in 1994 when Denver entered the playoffs as the eighth-seed and rallied from a 2-game deficit to upset top-seeded Seattle Supersonics, who at the time were coached by current [...]</p><p><a href="http://nugglove.com/2012/05/20/remembering-the-1993-94-nuggets/">Remembering the 1993-94 Nuggets</a> - <a href="http://nugglove.com">Nugg Love</a> - <a href="http://nugglove.com">Nugg Love - A Denver Nuggets Fan Site - News, Blogs, Opinion and More</a></p>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div id="attachment_2730" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 136px"><a href="http://cdn.fansided.com/wp-content/blogs.dir/78/files/2012/05/imgres.jpg"><img class="size-full wp-image-2730" title="imgres" src="http://cdn.fansided.com/wp-content/blogs.dir/78/files/2012/05/imgres.jpg" alt="" width="126" height="94" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Dikembe Mutombo holds the ball after the Denver Nuggets upset the Seattle Supersonics during the 1994 NBA playoffs</p></div>
<p>The young Denver Nuggets had their fans believing again this postseason with their nothing to lose attitude.</p>
<p>That attitude brought back memories of the Nuggets run in 1994 when Denver entered the playoffs as the eighth-seed and rallied from a 2-game deficit to upset top-seeded Seattle Supersonics, who at the time were coached by current Nuggets coach George Karl. Ironically, Mike Brown, who is the Los Angeles Lakers head coach right now, was a scout with the Nuggets in 1994.</p>
<p>That team didn&#8217;t feature a star, instead the top player was perennial Defensive Player of The Year Dikembe Mutombo. And the image of Mutombo lying on the ground holding the ball is vastly remembered by Nuggets fans. More than anything that 1994 squad had a good mix of players, who brought something different to the game.</p>
<p>It also featured a very talented bench, which was led by Rodney Rogers, Brian Williams (who would later change his name to Bison Dele) and Robert Pack.</p>
<p>In the second round, the Nuggets fell behind 3-0 to the Utah Jazz, which was led by the dynamic duo of Karl Malone and John Stockton but would eventually battle back and force a Game 7, before losing 91-81. Their playoff run featured four overtime games.</p>
<ul>
<li><strong>Mahmoud Abdul-Rauf </strong>is one of the most controversial NBA players of all-time, due his fiasco with the national anthem in 1996. But that controversy overshadowed a solid NBA career. The 6-foot-1 point guard was one of the best free throw shooters in the game, finishing with a career average of .905 percent from the charity stripe. Abdul-Rauf, who was drafted by the Nuggets as Chris Jackson (he changed his name three years later) with the third pick in the 1990 Draft, suffered from a mild case of Tourette syndrome and would spend hours after practice perfecting his shot. The Nuggets traded him to the Sacramento Kings in 1996 and he would play in the NBA off and on until 2000-01. Abdul-Raul continued his playing career overseas and was still playing all the way up until the 2010-11 season when he was a 41-year-old point guard with the Kyoto Hannaryz in Japan.</li>
<li><strong>Kevin Brooks </strong>wasn&#8217;t a big part of the Nuggets run, he only played a total of five minutes for the Nuggets in the 1994 playoffs. And that would be the last of his 3-year NBA stint. Brooks decided to take his basketball talents overseas to play for Australia&#8217;s Adelaide 36ers where he played with former Nuggets shooting guard Darnell Mee. Moving to Australia proved to be great for Brooks who would go on to be a team manager, assistant and head coach in the Australian Basketball Association. He is currently an assistant coach for a high school team in Australia.</li>
<li>The Nuggets drafted <strong>LaPhonso Ellis </strong>with the fifth pick in the 1992 Draft and he provided the team with exciting plays on both side of the floor. He led the Nuggets in scoring in the 1994 playoffs with 14.8 points a game, but being 6-foot-8 he lacked ideal size at power forward. And injuries would eventually get the best of Ellis throughout his career. He missed significant time during his next three years with the Nuggets and then would miss time when he played with the Atlanta Hawks and Miami Heat. Ellis, who is a Notre Dame alum, is now a college analyst for ESPN.</li>
<li><strong>Tom Hammonds </strong>was not a flashy player, but he provided toughness for the Nuggets. He didn&#8217;t play a lot in the 1994 playoff run, but when he did opponents knew he was on the floor. Hammonds would play four more seasons with the Nuggets before ending his NBA career with the Minnesota Timberwolves. After the NBA, he went into drag racing and has his own NHRA team.</li>
<li><strong>Darnell Mee </strong>really didn&#8217;t have a long and effective NBA career, spending two seasons as Denver&#8217;s 12th man. The Nuggets drafted him in the second round in the 1993 Draft and he played a total of 42 games (including two playoff games) with the Nuggets before playing in the CBA and then finishing his basketball career in Australia. He continued to play up until 2009 when he was 38. Mee is trying to continue his basketball career as a coach.</li>
<li><strong>Dikembe Mutombo </strong>was the face of the Nuggets squad. How can any Nuggets fan forget Mutombo celebrating on the floor after beating the Supersonics. That season, and the two following years, Mutombo led the league in blocked shots. However, in 1996 the Nuggets decided against matching the Hawks&#8217; $56 million/5 year deal for Mutombo and let the face of their franchise walk without any compensation. While the Nuggets fell to bottom of the NBA, Mutombo played in Atlanta until 2000 when he was dealt to the Philadelphia 76ers for Theo Ratliff. Mutombo helped an Allen Iverson-led Sixers squad advance to the NBA Finals, where Philadelphia lost 4-1 to the Los Angeles Lakers. Mutombo would then go on to play for the New Jersey Nets, New York Knicks and retired as Yao Ming&#8217;s backup in Houston. Mutombo is still working to improve his native country of Congo. Mutombo also received an honorary doctorate from Georgetown in 2010 and another from Harvard in 2011.</li>
<li><strong>Robert Pack </strong>may have been the most athletic point guard in the NBA during his playing career. He made a living of putting opposing players in posters. Just ask Michael Jordan. Pacman also played his best when it counted. During the 1993-94 regular season he made only six 3-pointers and nearly matched that during the 1994 NBA playoffs when he hit five. Pack also scored 23 points in Game 5 to help the Nuggets knock out the Sonics. Pack signed a multi-year deal with the Nets, but injuries derailed his career. His lone healthy season was in 2000-01 when he was Nick Van Exel&#8217;s backup in Denver. Pack retired in 2004 and was an assistant coach with the New Orleans Hornets in 2009 and is currently an assistant with the Clippers.</li>
<li><strong>Mark Randall</strong> finished his career with the Nuggets, where he played only two seasons. However, considering he grew up in Denver, he stayed in Denver. He is a Community Ambassador for the Nuggets and can been seen assisting Rocky during Nuggets games.</li>
<li><strong>Rodney Rogers </strong>was a rookie during the Nuggets&#8217; playoff run in 1994 and he caused matchup problems thanks to his size (6-foot-7, 235 pounds) and ability to shoot. He is most known for hitting three 3-pointers in the span of nine seconds in his rookie season. Rogers would stick around Denver until 1995 when he was traded to the Los Angeles Clippers with Brian Williams on draft day for Antonio McDyess. Rogers had four good years with the Clippers and then signed with the Phoenix Suns in 1999 and was chosen Sixth man of the year. Rogers played for three more teams before retiring in 2005. In 2008 he was paralyzed from the shoulders down after getting in a wreck on a dirt bike. He is not likely to walk again.</li>
<li><strong>Bryant Stith </strong>was a lot like current Nuggets&#8217; current guard Arron Afflalo. Stith was a classy person off the court and played to the best of his ability on the court. He was a mediocre scorer and shooter, but was a hard worker on defense. And that was exactly what he was in the 1994 playoffs. Not flashy, but solid. And in 1995, Stith showed his quality when he re-signed with Denver for far less than what he was offered in the open market. Stith played for Denver up until 2000 when he was traded to the Boston Celtics for his former teammate Pack. Stith played two more seasons before retiring with the Cleveland Cavaliers in 2002. Stith is now a high school basketball coach in Virginia and has led his team to back-to-back state championships.</li>
<li><strong>Brian Williams </strong>was an extreme eccentric player. Example of that was when he changed his name from Brian Williams to Bison Dele in 1998, but in his time with the Nuggets he was one of the best  backup center in the NBA at the time. Coming off of Denver&#8217;s bench, Williams averaged 8 points during the regular season, but stepped up his game in the playoffs to average 9.3 points and 7.4 rebounds. He played with the Nuggets for one more year before being traded for McDyess. He would later win an NBA Championship with Michael Jordan and the Chicago Bulls and than retired in 2000 at the age of 30. Dele and his girlfriend went missing when they were sailing in the Pacific Ocean. It is believed that Dele&#8217;s brother, Miles Dabord is responsible for their deaths. However, Dabord overdosed on insulin and went into a coma before he provided the police any information.</li>
<li>At the ripe old age of 29, <strong>Reggie Williams </strong>was the savvy veteran for the Nuggets 1994, but was also probably one of the most overrated players on the Nuggets squad. He was Denver&#8217;s second leading scorer but it was his defense that got him on the floor. He had a knack for picking the opponents pocket, but at the same time he could get up and block their shots. Williams played two more seasons for the Nuggets, but was dealt to the Indiana Pacers in 1996 with Jalen Rose for Mark Jackson. Williams retired in 1997 and is currently a high school coach in Washington D.C.</li>
</ul>
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