Hodge Traded for Blake; No Punches Thrown

Talk about sick irony!

It doesn’t getting any crazier than NC State’s Julius Hodge being traded for Maryland’s Steve Blake.

The Denver Nuggets need some breathing space from luxury-tax territory. The Milwaukee Bucks need backcourt scoring to counter their injury crisis.

That’s why the teams, according to NBA front-office sources, are combining on a trade featuring Earl Boykins that will be announced later Thursday.

Now 10 games into the Allen Iverson Era, Denver has agreed to send Boykins and little-used forward Julius Hodge to the Bucks for guard Steve Blake.

As you probably remember, Blake and Hodge engaged in some ‘legendary’ battles in the early part of the decade that included an incident where Hodge blatantly elbowed/punched Blake in the back of the head at the end of a fast break during a game in College Park during Hodge’s freshman season. Hodge was subsequently suspended for the next game by the ACC. Wolfpackers will also remember that Hodge’s actions were positioned as retribution for a “Chris Paul-esque” move that Blake pulled on earlier in the season in Raleigh.

There are A LOT of names that NC State CHOSE not to recruit/offer during Herb Sendek’s tenure that ultimately haunted Herb and the program – Josh Howard, PJ Tucker, Craig Dawson, Chris Wilcox, David West, the nudge of Ivan Wagner out the door, and others. But no name had such a large, direct – and ironic – impact as Steve Blake.

Blake ultimately participated in more victories at Maryland than any player who has ever worn the Terps’ uniform. This included his participation as the floor leader for two Final Four teams and a National Championship team when Terps defeated Indiana in 2002.

It didn’t have to end up that that way for NC State, Maryland or the ACC.

Early in Blake’s high school career he actually wanted to play at NC State. You see, Blake grew up near/in Miami, FL modeling his game after the former all-time assist leader in college basketball – NC State’s Chris Corchiani. (Didn’t Blake play for Gabe Corchiani down there in like Hilieah Falls or something?) NC State Head Coach, Herb Sendek, decided that Blake wasn’t NC State material (much like former ACC POY, Josh Howard at Wake Forest) and elected not to pursue the young point guard.

The rest…as they say…is history! Obviously, very big history for the Maryland Basketball Program and sickly ironic history for NC State’s in ight of the fact that Coach Sendek’s biggest struggle to elevate the Wolfpack’s program stemmed from Sendek’s annual inability to land a top notch point guard that he coveted. Who needed Steve Blake when you could get Cliff Crawford? It is a question that only a few still ponder today.

* Related entry from Dave Sez (Link)

* Randomly related entry (Link)

* What happens when Chris Paul is suspended (Link)

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78 Responses to Hodge Traded for Blake; No Punches Thrown

  1. xphoenix87 01/11/2007 at 1:47 PM #

    SFN: No offense. But…we don’t care what you think of our choices and the way in which we choose to spend our time or run our blog. You are always welcome to start a blog to share your thoughts. There are literally thousands of sites that will host for you. Thanks!

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    I was glad to see this trade. It strikes me as one of those rare NBA deals that actually makes sense (NBA GMs are so bad) and helps both teams. It should allow Jules to get some more PT on a depleted Bucks team and maybe show what he can do in the league. I’ve been waiting to see him get a chance to see how he does, so I’m excited that he’s going to a team that looks like it could use him.

  2. Dan 01/11/2007 at 2:01 PM #

    With Mo Williams and Michael Redd being out now, Hodge is going to have a chance to be an NBA point guard. The kid was the best NYC point guard of his day, he should have been the PG at NC State during his entire stay.

    I love Jules, but coming to NC State didnt give him the chance to develop his natural skills. And that’s a shame, he could’ve been the best PG NC State ever had.

    I hope he continues to develop his game and gets a chance to run an NBA offense. But something tells me that after the most recent shooting, Hodge is glad just to be out of Denver.

  3. packbackr04 01/11/2007 at 2:07 PM #

    THAT was one of the worst moves Herb ever made as coach of NC State. Blake was sick, and as you stated he WANTED to come to play at NC State. I thought it was shooter sherrill who he recruited instead but i could be wrong. i was in college at that time and spent the better part of my days in various administrative buildings and smoking thai sticks.

    PJ Tucker and CHris wilcox are other good examples of local players who herb let get out of Raleigh, and the other big one was Shavlick Randolph, doesnt his dads jersey hang in the rafters at nc state? again i could be mistaken… i know it was one of those recent dukies… short term memory fading… fading… o who am i kidding its completely gone.

  4. BoKnowsNCS71 01/11/2007 at 2:13 PM #

    Better to get shots in Milwaukee rather than getting shot in Denver.

    Hodge defenses Kobe sucessfully and gets traded — go figure. Not sure George Karl was ever happy with JH.

  5. choppack1 01/11/2007 at 2:17 PM #

    Regarding Blake – we went w/ Crawford over him. Crawford was big and fast and ended up having a solid junior year and a nice senior year, but Blake went onto becomong one of the more accomplished PGs in recent history.

    Tucker, Wilcox, and Dawson all had issues in some form or fashion after arriving at school – and were recruits we missed during the “golden years” of Sendek’s tenure. Truthfully, I wonder more about the impacts of the ones we had who left during his tenure: Marshall Williams, Mike Bell, Justin Flatt, Trey Guidry, the big seven footer and Mike O’Donnell…In some cases becaue of the depth they would have provided, but in other cases because of the scolies they cost us that could have been better spent.

  6. tvp 01/11/2007 at 2:25 PM #

    The Crawford v. Blake thing emphasized Phase I of Herb’s recruiting strategy. Initially, he went after the best “athletes” he could find at any position over guys with better basketball skills.

    After he switched to TOFKAP*, he pulled a 180 and went after the best shooters/high basketball IQ/”versatile” (in the positionless sense) players he could get.

    * – The Offense Formerly Known As Princeton (a joke I had since Herb hated when it was called the Princeton offense).

    SFN: Very, very astute points here

  7. gopack968 01/11/2007 at 2:25 PM #

    Hopefully Julius can use this opportunity to turn his NBA career in a positive direction. He was in real danger of not getting his option picked up at the end of the season. Karl never seemed to like him and the shooting incident just made his tenure in Denver that much worse.

    In NC State land we still love “Da Jules from Harlem,” and wish him well on his ‘Way to Stardom”

  8. JimValvano 01/11/2007 at 2:42 PM #

    First of all…I liked Cliff Crawford. I liked Blake too, but you wonder if Blake just had better talent around him than Cliff and that led to his success. Plus he had a better coach which I doubt anyone can argue against.
    Second…it wasn’t the Princeton Offense. It was the Princeton…because there was no offense involved.
    Third…I would like to be the first to expose the Tarholes and their plan to destroy the professional careers of great Wolfpack players. George Karl benched Hodge only because he was a former Wolfpacker.
    In Conclusion…I am excited for Julius and the opportunity he is going to receive in Milwaukee. He is going to prove once and for all that he belongs in the NBA and that he can be a quality starter for anyone.

  9. redfred2 01/11/2007 at 2:49 PM #

    Good luck JH!!! May all of your important shots, concern a basketball from here on out.

  10. BoKnowsNCS71 01/11/2007 at 3:13 PM #

    “Third…I would like to be the first to expose the Tarholes and their plan to destroy the professional careers of great Wolfpack players. George Karl benched Hodge only because he was a former Wolfpacker.”

    This is in jest right?

  11. smfrank 01/11/2007 at 3:14 PM #

    There is no doubt that Blake is a solid point guard. But he had a LOT of help on that Maryland squad. The guys that carried the load don’t even get credit in the NBA – Lonny Baxter, Juan Dixon, & Nichlas. Steve Blake had a whopping game of 33% shooting, 6 points, 3 assists, 4 TO’s (kinda reminds you of a Courtney Fells line). But hell – let’s all give blessings to Steve Blake because Herb didn’t recruit him.

    Secondly I saw Wilcox play twice in high school against Broughton while in college. Both games he was held to

  12. Gene 01/11/2007 at 3:18 PM #

    Josh Howard, PJ Tucker, Craig Dawson, Chris Wilcox, David West

    I went to Enloe and for the life of me, I cannot remember any news that Herb did not try and heavily recruit Wilcox. I think he went after both Wilcox and Bell and only landed Bell, who transferred after injuries slowed him down and looked to be limiting his minutes.

    SFN: For clarification, Herb/NC State initially went after Wilcox. In the end, however, Wilcox was an academic risk not to qualify. As was Scooter Sherrill, from whom the Pack had secured a commitment. So, after recruiting Wilcox the decision was made to ease up because of the academic risk. Of course, in the end, they both qualified. Had Sendek been more established and had a better program rolling at the time…then we would have been in a better position to take that risk. He wasn’t. We couldn’t. Wilcox won a National Championship at Maryland.

    the shooting incident

    I initially thought this reflected poorly on Hodge, when he got shot, because he might’ve somehow done something we don’t know about to start the mess but after the Bronco’s CB was killed in another drive-by shooting, after leaving a bar / club a few weeks back, I think it’s more a problem with Denver, than any one person. Guess those folks out West are pretty trigger happy, if someone starts talking smack.

    PJ Tucker

    Had serious academic issues and wasn’t offered by ACC schools or at least any of the Big Four schools, in NC. Why single Herb out on this?

    SFN: So what? Tucker was obviously was able to get past those academic issues. Herb gets singled out because most of the other Big Four schools won a helluva lot more than Herb and there is therefore no reason to question their decisions. Additionally, none of them were located a couple of miles from Tucker’s high school.

    Shavlick Randolph, doesnt his dads jersey hang in the rafters at nc state?

    Grandfather is Ronnie Shavlik, who played on Case’s Final Four team and is still our all time leader in rebounds (I think) and was voted one of the Top 50 players in the history of the ACC, when the League did it’s 50th Aniversary men’s basketball voting, on the best players in the first 50 years of the league, in 2003.

    Shav thought about NCSU, but Herb was coming off his losing season and his job was in jeopardy, if he didn’t prove he could make the NCAA’s the following season. He went for the coach, with the lifetime contract.

    You one other thing that is a bit sad, and maybe ironic, is Herb’s last 5 years was the best I saw of NCSU basketball, since I became a Wolfpack fan. I grew up in the Raleigh area and remember when NCSU-UNC was as big or bigger a game than UNC-Duke. I enrolled during the Les Robinson era and remember when he had open try outs for our basketball team, in the 1992-1993 season.

    I know we’re all hoping the next couple of seasons will be awesome under Lowe, and I do want more than what Herb could provide, but from my point of view, other than our own belief in our right – based on 10 ACC titles and 2 National Championpships – to be among the best in the ACC, the last 20 years of NCSU Men’s Basketball haven’t been overly impressive.

    Here’s to hoping the power of positive thinking, from our fanbase, can help propel us to greatness.

    After the way this year will likely play out, I need an upper.

  13. Gene 01/11/2007 at 3:20 PM #

    *You one

    EDIT: You know one

  14. Rick 01/11/2007 at 3:30 PM #

    “You one other thing that is a bit sad, and maybe ironic, is Herb’s last 5 years was the best I saw of NCSU basketball, since I became a Wolfpack fan.”

    You are obviosly young or just became a fan in the last 15 years. The last five years were some of the most frustrating in my entire life. It sucked knowing you were never going to be better than good.

  15. RAWFS 01/11/2007 at 3:31 PM #

    Herb’s last five years were a decent period but the banner years were the late 80s and the middle 70s in my 34 years of being a Pack fan.

    I pray nightly that we have a team as great as the 72-74 era. ONE loss in two years.

  16. Gene 01/11/2007 at 3:35 PM #

    You are obviosly young or just became a fan in the last 15 years.

    I’m in my 30’s and enrolled in NCSU in the fall of 1992.

    I wasn’t a fan growing up, since none of my family had ties to the local universities.

    It sucked knowing you were never going to be better than good.

    Which for me was better than knowing we sucked and could lose to anybody, like UNC-G, Davidson, Florida Atlantic, etc., on any given day.

  17. lush 01/11/2007 at 3:38 PM #

    packbacker

    great lebowski reference, and it was randolphs gradpa ronnie shavlik who’s jersey hangs in OUR rafters, which makes him a “fu***** fascist”

  18. SuperStuff 01/11/2007 at 3:41 PM #

    That elbow cost him Rookie of the Year in the ACC that year. I think this could be a good thing if Jules gets some playing time.

  19. lush 01/11/2007 at 3:51 PM #

    gene

    im class of 2000, graduated with wilcox, bell, and allen lovett. what a squad. when did u graduate?

  20. Dan 01/11/2007 at 3:55 PM #

    I have to say that I came to State in ’95, and it sure has been nice at least taking part in the NCAA tournament. The field is so ridiculously large that if you dont make, you basically are irrelevant.

    It was nice having NC State as an option in the yearly bracket pool. Yeah, they cost $10 every year b/c I’m such a homer, but still….

    Here’s to Sidney getting some depth and showing us that the lack of intensity on defense is due to the lack of players. Still, I just want to see some FIRE on defense. Not to mention it’d be nice to see one or two passes SNAPPED instead of lobbed. Its just been a total lack of intensity lately.

  21. Gene 01/11/2007 at 4:04 PM #

    when did u graduate?

    Graduated in 1992.

    I got excited, when I saw Enloe players ranked in the Top 100 and kept tabs on their recruiting, to the best of my ability.

  22. packbackr04 01/11/2007 at 4:10 PM #

    GOOD CATCH LUSH^ i sometimes feel as if my witty remarks go unappreciated.

    also,,, who is the fascist? shavs or his grand-dad?

  23. choppack1 01/11/2007 at 4:11 PM #

    “The last five years were some of the most frustrating in my entire life. It sucked knowing you were never going to be better than good.”

    Well, I think the previous 8 or ten before those 5 years should have really driven you bonkers. I guess it’s kind of like pulling for the Braves. It didn’t become really painful to pull for them until they started making the playoffs and losing.

    Although I have another perspective. After going through the 10 year drought, it was very special to watch selection Sunday and see where you were going. Nothing is worse than not having a reason to watch the selection Sunday show.

  24. DIXIE Wolf 01/11/2007 at 4:23 PM #

    English 101…

  25. smfrank 01/11/2007 at 4:38 PM #

    In that class from Enloe with Wilcox, Bell & Lovette – the best player in that bunch was Al. One of the things I will never understand about sports these days. Al was a straight up baller with a will to score & rebound. He would of found a way if given the oppurtunity at a Division I school – much like Grundy.

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