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Green and Roy: Are they on the same page?

If you're a UNC fan you've likely already seen this interview and winced.

Something seemed a little strange when UNC issued a press release about Danny Green entering the NBA Draft, a day after it had already issued a release saying that Ty Lawson and Wayne Ellington were entering the draft.

And, looking back on it now, you definitely could have read into Roy's statement in the Green release.

"Danny and his father contacted me in the last 24 hours and indicated they
wished to test the waters and enter Danny in the draft. We have done the
necessary paperwork to do that."

Now compare that to the lengthy quote Roy issued the day before for Tyler, Ty and Wayne.

"I am pleased and most supportive of the decisions made by all three young
people. I want what is best for each individual and each individual player is different and has different factors to consider. It was a very exhausting time of research spent talking to the
NBA people. I contacted more than half the teams in the NBA, speaking to various player personnel representatives including a number of general managers. In fact, I contacted more teams this year than I¹ve ever done before to provide them with the best information possible on their draft status. We gave that information over to Tyler, Ty, Wayne and their families
and allowed them to make the decision.

"We will continue to help Ty and Wayne with the draft process and give them
all the support they need in making any future decisions related to staying
in the draft or returning to Carolina."

Just a tad different, wouldn't you say?

Now though, we don't even have to read between the lines. Danny Green didn't sugarcoat it for Inside Carolina: Roy Williams didn't think it was a good idea for Green to enter the draft, but Green did it anyway.

"I called him and told him about doing it, but he didn’t think it was for my best interests… He gave me his advice, but I wanted to do it anyway."

And Green also claimed he was overlooked during the whole pre-draft process at UNC. Consider his response to the question - Had you talked with (Williams) about it?

“You’d have to talk to him. I mean, I called him and talked to him about it, but when it came down to it, it was the ‘Big Three.’ So they had their own meeting, and he thought I wasn’t thinking about doing it."

(You can see why Danny Green has always been a media favorite. He's pretty much incapable of guile. Ask him what he thinks and he tells you)

This is where things start to get interesting for UNC - as if they aren't already. Green said his goal is to get that guaranteed contract that goes along with being a first-round pick. If not, then returning to school would be an "option." Not a definite, mind you. It certainly seems as if Green would really, really like to turn pro but will return to Chapel Hill if things really go south for him in the next few days.

Returning may no longer be such a simple matter, either. It looks as if there will have to be at least some bridge-building between Green and Roy. Ignoring the coach's advice is one thing. Implying that coach overlooked you in favor of your teammates is another.

That's not to say that Danny Green can never go home again. Let's face it, if he doesn't stay in the draft, he'll need UNC. And UNC will need Green, particularly if Lawson and/or Ellington stay in the draft. Someone has to shoot some 3-pointers to keep Hansbrough from being triple-teamed. So Green and Roy will likely get back on the same page.

Still, it sheds some interesting light on the behind-the-scenes stuff that goes on every year at college campuses in the spring. As much as fans - and writers - like to think that the players' primary goal is to get a national title ring and to give glory to the dear old school - it usually isn't. The goal is the NBA. And even though coaches usually publicly support their players when they declare for the draft, they know they don't get contract extensions based on how many former players are in the league. They get paid to win.

Those conflicting goals are always there, behind the scenes. Sometimes, when a blunt guy like Danny Green comes along, the rest of us are let in on the dispute.


Comments (2)

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B. Brown said:

Roy has dissension on the team because he does appear to play favorites with his players. Unlike Dean who treated stars and role players alike, Roy spends to much time gushing about Tyler while his other "superstars" are reduced to role players. That's why he has this exodus of players to the NBA or back home. It's amazing they stayed around as long as they did. Danny Green was under appreciated. He was the most versatile player on the team, inside outside and he played defense.
Yes Jim, Danny was unfairly overlooked by his coach and the coach bears more responsibility than you seem willing to acknowledge.

Jim Young said:

You raise some interesting points, B. Brown. Roy certainly never hesitated to praise Tyler. Did he do that to the detriment of the rest of the team? I don't know.

That brings me to your last point - that I'm unwilling to acknowledge Roy's responsibility in "overlooking" Danny. I'm not going soft on Roy. Rather, I don't have first-hand knowledge, or info from several very good sources, to substantiate Danny's claims. All I can do is analyze what the impact of Danny's claims of being overlooked might be. Whether those claims are justified is not something I'm qualified to answer right now.

But as I said, your other points raise some interesting questions. Some Duke folks I know believe that the Blue Devils have been hurt in recruiting in recent years by the way K handled J.J. Redick. According to their thinking, K's gushing praise of J.J. and running through the offense through J.J. so often may have led potential recruits to worry they might be marginalized as role players if they went to Duke. At least, that's what the folks I know think other schools were using as negative recruiting fodder.

Roy's recruiting certainly doesn't seem to be hurt by the way he treats Tyler publicly. Has it hurt the chemistry on his current roster? It's an question to ponder.

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