Thursday, October 6th, 2011 at 12:36 pm  |  108 responses

Top 50: Monta Ellis, no. 23

The definitive ranking of the NBA’s best players.

by Irv Soonachan / @SidelineOB

It was a warm, rainy spring day, and Monta Ellis was standing in a West Oakland warehouse that had been converted into a food pantry, addressing a crowd of people waiting to receive cardboard boxes of basic supplies. As usual, he looked completely uncomfortable speaking in front of a group.

He stammered through a few platitudes, shifted around restlessly, then nearly sucked the air out of the room when he said something about “taking time from my busy schedule.” He just about brought it back a minute or two later when he mentioned, with raw sincerity, that he knows what it’s like to be hungry.

Ellis grew up poor in Jackson, MS, best known as the hometown of Richard Wright. Unlike many top basketball prospects he didn’t end up at a fancy prep school, attending Jackson’s Lanier High—one of many 100-percent black public high schools in a state that still fights federal desegregation laws dating back to Wright’s era. And like many of Wright’s protagonists, Ellis also knows what it’s like to feel uprooted and out of place.

He joined the San Francisco Bay Area’s NBA franchise straight out of Lanier in 2005, just 19 years old. His thick Southern accent was sometimes difficult to understand, and his quiet, often hesitant public demeanor was inimical to the PR rigors of the NBA.

“He’s a very, very shy guy by nature, and it takes him a while to warm up to people,” said former Warriors assistant Calbert Cheaney in an interview last season. Cheaney also played for the team during Ellis’ rookie year. “He’s a country boy from Mississippi. I’m sure he was a little bit star struck at first, coming all the way to California to play in the NBA.”

But one man’s shy is another man’s aloof. Depending who you ask, Ellis is either stubborn, overconfident, and by NBA standards has a questionable work ethic or is confident and very coachable (the latter according to former Warriors’ head coach Keith Smart). He is either too self-consumed to talk to people or simply, as Cheaney insists, quiet by nature. He could even be all of the above.

As a 24+ ppg scorer and the team’s workhorse—he has led the NBA in minutes per game each of the past two seasons—there is bound to be praise, but within the Warriors organization, Ellis is both respected and polarizing.

Once, in the locker room after a game late last season, Ellis stood surrounded by cameras and microphones delivering one of his typically funereal post-game pressers. If you stood far enough behind the throng to take in the whole scene, there was another voice, speaking in almost the exact same cadence and tone as Ellis—except the voice was speaking gibberish. It was one of Ellis’ teammates, just out of earshot of the media, mocking his accent.

As painful as he can sometimes be to observe off the court, that is how astonishing he is to watch on it—especially when he’s driving to the basket. Good lord, can he finish at the basket. Monta Ellis can put a basketball through a hoop with all the beauty and cunning and flair of Modigliani finishing a brush stroke.

Unlike many slashing scorers, Ellis is laser quick but not a great leaper. His most memorable drives end below the rim. With unadorned passion he feints, fakes, and changes speeds, finding his way into the paint, and when the trees converge on him the 6-3, 185-pound guard somehow twists his slim body around, or freezes the defense just long enough, or simply tosses the ball over them in a way that nobody could ever anticipate and suddenly it’s spinning softly, far above the basket, 18,000 people communally holding their breath for that brief, suspenseful pause before it drops through the net, and in the improbability of the moment they all go insane.

And the fans always know how incredible a shot it was because so many of them have done the exact same thing once or twice in their lives. On the playground or at the Y, driving to the hoop out of control and hip checked by a defender, thrown completely off balance, flinging up a wild shot and watching it go in just after hitting the ground. People remember that thrill the rest of their lives. Except Ellis scores on shots like that every single time he steps on a court. “That’s just a gift he has,” says Cheaney. “Not a lot of guys have it.”

After his short speech at the food pantry, Ellis settled in behind a table next to his wife, Juanika, a former police officer in Ellis’ adopted hometown of Memphis, TN, and started handing out boxes. Juanika, by all accounts, has been a good influence on Ellis (“She didn’t take no mess from me,” Ellis has said), and encouraged him to be more open.

As the crowd pressed through the open front of the warehouse the combined smell of body odor, unwashed hair and clothes, and dog piss, courtesy of two bulldogs who guarded the place—and who relieved themselves on pieces of cardboard left on the floor for that purpose—congealed on the wet, humid day into a rank fog that engulfed everyone.

The young wife of the team’s owner rolled up the sleeves of her white designer blouse to help move boxes; some of the team’s staff slid off to the side; and one germaphobe Warriors official frantically darted around looking for hand sanitizer. Ellis, however, was completely relaxed. This appearance was his idea—after having done a similar event with teammate Stephen Curry a few months earlier, he’d wanted to do one alone.

It’s only natural that Ellis would want to establish an identity away from Curry, to whom he is constantly compared. They’re both rising stars, listed at the exact same height and weight, nearly the same age and play the same position: shooting guard trapped in a point guard’s body. But after that, they’re a study in contrasts.

Curry, who grew up in a nuclear NBA family, is approachable and unselfconscious before a game. He is also meticulous in preparation, with an on-court warm-up that includes rehearsing his moves and cuts with game-level focus.

Ellis, on the other hand, predictably tenses when any reporter approaches, before gravely intoning that he doesn’t do pre-game interviews, and his warm-up has been known to feature catapulting circus shots over his head. It makes old-school players and coaches cringe, even though an astounding proportion of them go in.

But Ellis’ genius for the game can’t be learned, even if you’re as diligent and talented as Curry. And while Curry’s outgoing personality leads people to root for him, Ellis, who plays with his heart so raggedly exposed, his talent and limitations always on display, has something more magical: the ability to make people identify with him.

At the food pantry it didn’t take long for Ellis to get tired of sitting behind the table, with boxes and sterile greetings pushed across a 24-inch gulf. But what happened next was still a surprise.

Without warning he got up from his chair, walked around the table and waded into the haggard crowd. Security personnel and team officials could only watch in awe and apprehension while he hugged people, shook hands, posed for pictures and whispered encouragement too low and close for anyone else to hear—far closer than any other outsider was willing to go.

After most of the boxes had been given out Ellis did a brief, obligatory TV interview and then slipped out the door, blowing off the rest of the media. It would have been more surprising if he hadn’t. Like so many nights throughout the season he’d shown us some important part of himself, but didn’t feel like talking about it afterward. And like most nights during the season, it was incredibly compelling to witness.

SLAMonline Top 50 Players 2011
Rank Player Team Position Pos. Rank
50 Luol Deng Bulls SF 8
49 Andrew Bogut Bucks C 7
48 Ray Allen Celtics SG 9
47 Marc Gasol Grizzlies C 6
46 David West Hornets PF 15
45 Kevin Martin Rockets SG 8
44 Andrew Bynum Lakers C 5
43 Brandon Jennings Bucks PG 11
42 Lamar Odom Lakers PF 14
41 Gerald Wallace Blazers SF 7
40 Brook Lopez Nets C 4
39 Joakim Noah Bulls C 3
38 Carlos Boozer Bulls PF 13
37 Kevin Garnett Celtics PF 12
36 Eric Gordon Clippers SG 7
35 Tony Parker Spurs PG 10
34 Andre Iguodala 76ers SG 6
33 Al Jefferson Jazz PF 11
32 Al Horford Hawks C 2
31 Stephen Curry Warriors PG 9
30 Tim Duncan Spurs PF 10
29 Josh Smith Hawks PF 9
28 Manu Ginobili Spurs SG 5
27 Tyreke Evans Kings PG 8
26 Rudy Gay Grizzlies SF 6
25 John Wall Wizards PG 7
24 Danny Granger Pacers SF 5
23 Monta Ellis Warriors SG 4

Notes
• Rankings are based solely on projected ’11-12 performance.
• Contributors to this list include: Maurice Bobb, Shannon Booher, David Cassilo, Bryan Crawford, Sandy Dover, Adam Figman, Jon Jaques, Eldon Khorshidi, Ryne Nelson, Doobie Okon, Ben Osborne, Quinn Peterson, Dave Schnur, Abe Schwadron, Dan Shapiro, Irv Soonachan, Todd Spehr, Tzvi Twersky, Yaron Weitzman, DeMarco Williams and Ben York.
• Want more of the SLAMonline Top 50? Check out the archive.

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  • http://slamonline.com LakeShow

    It is saying much. That is every teams goal. To win a chip. Why would you want a guy who can’t do that? I think you could win with Durant/Melo/LeBron/D-Wade/Dirk/CP3/DerronWilliams/Blake Griffin/John Wall(most likely, unless he unlearns all of his skill and losing his speed)D-Rose/Kobe Bryant… Theres a few more that could be the best player on a championship team. Even Z-Bo could be. It’s a stretch, but I wouldn’t be shocked to see Z-Bo as the man on a title contender. Monta is a good player. Real good. He’s elite at certain things. He isn’t who you want driving the car though. He could win a chip as the second man on a title contending team I do believe though.

  • AirForceONE

    Monta Ellis is ranked as the 41st best player in the NBA in the new ESPN NBA Rank. That is more like it. They asked more than 90 experts from ESPN.com, the TrueHoop Network, TrueHoop TV, Daily Dime Live, ESPN TV, ESPN Radio, ESPN Deportes, espnW, ESPN The Magazine, ESPN Insider, ESPN Fantasy, ESPN Games, ESPN Dallas, ESPN Los Angeles, ESPN Chicago, ESPN New York, ESPN Stats & Information, ESPN Topics and ESPN Analytics. That is legit!

  • https://plus.google.com/photos/106403650426394352312/albums/posts davidR

    yea, cuz experts work at ESPN.

  • https://plus.google.com/photos/106403650426394352312/albums/posts davidR

    nbk, that’s a fair statement, and it’s fair to rank monta in the top 25, because chances are if you pair monta with a top 20 talent (with the appropriate role players), that team has a legit chance at a title.
    back when baron and stack jack were still warriors, monta was the 3rd option on offense. he responded by scoring 20 a game on an absolutely ridiculous 53%

  • https://plus.google.com/photos/106403650426394352312/albums/posts davidR

    er, what i’m trying to say is, anyone ranked in the 20s is a very good player, but probably isn’t good enough to be the 1st option AND carry the team to the finals

  • https://plus.google.com/photos/106403650426394352312/albums/posts davidR

    and nbk, i disagree that monta has to be your best player if you want the team to win. the 06-07 warriors did very well with him as the 3rd option

  • http://Slamonline.coM nbk

    No im saying no team is going to win a title with Monta Ellis. Teams can win games, maybe even a playoff series or two. But no titles. Until Ellis learns to be less of an alpha. And that Warriors team made the playoffs once, as an 8 seed, and ellis was a role player, off the bench. Baron Davis, Stephen Jackson, Al HarringtoN All shot more shots and scored more points then Monta Ellis. Also ellis only played 20MPG in the playoffs, down from 35 during the regular season.

  • T-Money

    nbk: no offense but i hate that logic. ellis doesn’t have to “learn” to be less of an alpha, the warriors need to bring somebody that’s better than him so he can be a number 2! who should he deferring to right now – steph, david lee, briedrins, wright? put him on a team with dwight or lebron or melo and he will kill as a 2nd option.

  • http://Slamonline.coM nbk

    He’s a shooting guard. You want him as your second option? Your gonna win a championship with Monta Ellis next to a pg, and he will be a second option? When will he have the ball? He doesnt do anything but score off the dribble and pass when its a necessity. He’d be great as a scorer off the bench but he is far too good to accept a role like that. I just don’t see how it would work. Optimistically sure there is a way for him to win a title, but i don’t know what it realistically is. There are too many better player in NBA history who have played every kind of role that werent good enough to be the second option on a title team for an undersized shot heavy 2 guard to be the best or second best player on a title team. imo

  • http://Slamonline.coM nbk

    T-Money i dont take offense to anything here man don’t stress.

  • MUBWAR

    ellis is 1 of the most overrated player in the league. Besides steals, 1.his 1 on 1 D is atrocious. 2.his brain doesn’t have an explanation for the word : assist. And last, his scoring lacks the efficiency of a top 25 player. His standing at 41 with ESPN is closer than Slam’s.

  • http://thetroyblog.com Teddy-the-Bear

    Co-sign T-Money.

  • http://thetroyblog.com Teddy-the-Bear

    @ nbk: Not true. Monta does have the ability to be an efficient off-the-ball scorer. He averaged 20 a game on 53% shooting alongside two other 20 point scorers, both of whom handled the ball more than him.

  • https://plus.google.com/photos/106403650426394352312/albums/posts davidR

    nbk, that warriors team made the playoffs AFTER they traded for stephen jackson and al harrington. basically, they made the playoffs by going on huge winning streak to sneak into the playoffs. the next year, they won 49 games, and missed the playoffs. they were definitely better than just an 8 seed

  • https://plus.google.com/photos/106403650426394352312/albums/posts davidR

    mubwar, you have no idea what you’re talking about. ellis doesn’t know what an assist is? how about this: he led the entire league for assists among shooting guards.

  • http://thetroyblog.com Teddy-the-Bear

    (a few years back). The only reason he takes more shots now is because the Warriors have no one else to score consistently.
    @ Mubwar: Well he’s a shooting guard who averages 5 assists a game. 45% shooting for a shooting guard is not that bad. At all. The only difference between 45% and 50% shooting when you take his number of FG attempts is ONE make. People always take FG% way out of context.

  • https://plus.google.com/photos/106403650426394352312/albums/posts davidR

    but yea, what do you mean he needs to learn how not to be an alpha? like t-money said, there is no one on the team he should be deferring to. many times, he is the only offensive option, and is asked to bail the team out on possessions cuz keith smart had no idea how to run offensive plays.
    and yea, he scores in more ways than just off the dribble: his slashes and give and go’s are basically unguardable because of his speed and ability to finish at the rim. i’m actually surprised david lee wasn’t utilized on the high post to let monta slash, especially with lee’s passing ability.
    and like people are saying, he deferred to baron davis and stephen jackson in 07-08, and ended up scoring 20 on 53%. he already knows how to defer to better talent

  • MUBWAR

    im just being hard on ellis because just like Josh Smith, if his basketball IQ was a little higher and he made better decisions he can easily average 20 and 8. Sorta like a marbury type of player. I am sorry but averaging 24.1 points on 20.1 shots is not efficient. I’ll take steph curry, at least he tries on D

  • ChipS

    Brandon Roy is far from done! Watch!….. and as far as the Dallas series he did flash some old B-Roy so that alone tells me he’s far from done. Find a contending team and add a healthy B-Roy as a second option. Lethal! If only it worked out that way!

  • http://cnbc.com JTaylor21

    Teddy, sorry but the difference between shooting 45% and shooting 50% is huge in the grand scheme of things (82gm season).
    Carry on. *back to 2K12*

  • https://plus.google.com/photos/106403650426394352312/albums/posts davidR

    since when was shooting 45% as a shooting guard considered inefficient?

  • https://plus.google.com/photos/106403650426394352312/albums/posts davidR

    you also want your shooting guard to average 8 assists a game?

  • http://Slamonline.coM nbk

    I never said he can’t score. He doesnt benefit a team as a heavy minute third option, he’s not good enough as a defender. He isnt even scoring at that elite of a clip, for example, he only outscores Stephen Curry by 1.6 points per 36 minutes. Despite shooting 2.8 more shots in the same amount of time, with 1 less assist and rebound. And he was on a rookie contract with those other 2, so that was likely the only time he’ll ever play in anything but a 1st or 2nd option role.

  • https://plus.google.com/photos/106403650426394352312/albums/posts davidR

    and how’re you gonna say monta is inefficient, but say you want him to be sorta like a marbury type of player? marbury only shot 45% twice in his career

  • http://Slamonline.coM nbk

    He’s not efficient at all when you factor in how horrible he is guarding shooting guards.

  • https://plus.google.com/photos/106403650426394352312/albums/posts davidR

    nbk, those kind of stats never tell the whole story

  • nbaNw8

    Should be higher on the list in my opinion

  • http://Slamonline.coM nbk

    Oh yeah your right. Lets look at their record. Nope lets not do that. How bout we take a look at if the Warriors are better with Monta Ellis on the bench….gulp, better not do that either. Hmmm there seems to be no way anyone can show Monta Ellis has a positive impact on the Warriors except for raw statistical numbers…that tell you only that he scored points at a pretty good clip, and played a ton of minutes. None of that says he’s a good enough player to merit this kind of praise.

  • https://plus.google.com/photos/106403650426394352312/albums/posts davidR

    this season was a joke because keith smart was our coach. other than that, once the we believe squad left, i really doubt any superstar in the league outside of kobe or lebron could take a team full of D-leaguers anywhere meaningful.
    when monta goes to the bench, it’s at the end of the game when it’s garbage time. so yes, the team will perform better when he goes to the bench, because they’re playing against the other teams garbage players.

  • https://plus.google.com/photos/106403650426394352312/albums/posts davidR

    it also doesn’t help when the big man rotation consists of dan gadzuric, injured ekpe udoh, injured andris biedrins, david lee nearly needing his arm to get amputated, injured lou amundson, rodney carney, vladimir radmonivic…

  • http://Slamonline.coM nbk

    David Lee, & Stephen Curry are not D-Leaguers in fact they have both been on this list. Neither is Dorell Wright (anymore) Biedrins, or Reggie Williams. The Hornets were less talented, especially after David West’s knee exploded. Utah with all their various issues were also less talented. But their best players were better on both ends of the court. And they won more games. Thats gotta fall somewhat on Ellis, this is basketball, where your best player effects the outcome more then in any other sport.

  • http://Slamonline.coM nbk

    If the warriors garbage players are in, the other teams garbage players are in. Doesnt account for the gap. and the Gap is all defensive. Just to let you know.

  • https://plus.google.com/photos/106403650426394352312/albums/posts davidR

    the hornets have chris paul + monty williams, and utah had deron williams + jerry sloan for a good chunk of the season. the hornets made the playoffs, utah spiraled once they lost deron & sloan. yes, they will be ranked higher than monta, and rightfully so. they are better players. in fact, they’re in the A+/A tier of NBA players, so their teams by principle will do pretty well.
    when david west went down, the hornets were able to replace him with carl landry. when david lee and steph curry went down, the warriors replaced them with acie law & vladimir radmonivic.

  • https://plus.google.com/photos/106403650426394352312/albums/posts davidR

    and i’m here to let you know that it’s not true, because i catch a lot of warrior games and i saw keith smart keep dorrell and steph in during garbage time.

  • https://plus.google.com/photos/106403650426394352312/albums/posts davidR

    look, i’m not saying monta is a superstar, or that your team can win a championship with him as the 1st option. it probably can’t. but i do believe he is an extremely good 2nd option, one that gives your team a good shot at winning a title.
    being ranked #23 basically shows that he falls in the B+ tier, which is exactly where i feel he belongs.
    like in the gordon thread, it seems like we’re both set in our beliefs of monta. which is fine. but myself, and SLAM truly believe that monta is the 3rd or 4th best SG in the league.
    if you dont believe it, watch his games (not his stats). otherwise, we’ll agree to disagree

  • T-Money

    nothing “has” to fall on anybody. if you think monta’s play is the reason why gstate is not winning more, then say that. if not, what are we talking about? monta has excellent vision for a 2-guard and is not a ball hog at all. his shooting numbers are decent for a scoring 2-guard too and he showed that he can have outstanding efficiency when surrounded by other scorers (53% is crazy at the 2-spot). and his defense is not horrendous at all. granted, it’s not good either but he’s not kevin martin or steph curry (ha!) out there. i really do think monta’s curse is his height – people want him to play like a 1 because he’s smallish so when they say he’s a chucker, it’s because they unconsciously compare him to 1s. take the exact same game, the same defense and the exact same stats and say mont a is 6’5 – we’re not having this discussion.

  • http://www.slamonline.com Slick Ric

    I say this is about right, If you think there are 41 better players than monta, I question your basketball knowledge.

  • http://Slamonline.coM nbk

    I dont think he’s any worse then top 30, I just dont think he’s good enough to merit the praise he gets from some people. I respect your opinion david, its just not how I see it. – and T-Money – i think Gstate isnt winning because of who the former management chose to pay superstar money and a bunch of other bad personnel decisions. If they decide to keep Monta and Curry that will be why they won’t progress as a team. Trading Monta to Philadelphia seems like the best thing for all parties. A team of defenders and athletes around ellis and young in Philli (team would make the playoffs and be a decent challenge as a 6 or 7 seed) and Iguodala to immediately solve their perimeter defensive problems in Gstate.

  • http://twitter.com/#!/MichaelJR_NZ Michael NZ

    23? Too high. More like 33.

  • sc

    Monta isn’t being paid superstar money. In fact, he has one of the best contracts in the league.

  • http://Slamonline.coM nbk

    11 million a year. So a littles less than a fifth of all your cap space.

  • http://Slamonline.coM nbk

    David Lee somewhere around that too

  • http://www.slamonline.com Max

    Monta to Orlando would make them a contender.

  • Hugo

    seems like slam needs to create an ‘essay section’ so lakeshow can continue to enlighten us with his unprecedented nba knowledge……

  • Ken

    Incredibly well written; a pleasure to read. Thank you for your effort on this, it shows.

  • T-Money

    david lee is a terrible contract – THAT’S crippling the team. 11 mil a year is the going rate for a guy like monta. how much would you pay him? 9? does that make a difference?

  • http://www.sbnation.com/nba/2011/10/4/2468098/nba-lockout-2011-owners-david-stern-robert-sarver-the-hook Allenp

    Monta’s contract is really fair.
    David Lee’s is an atrocity.
    $11 million for a bonafide second option with All-Star talent is more than good value. It’s great value. No, Monta shouldn’t be the best option on your team unless you have a team full of good players like Detroit in 2004, but if you had a legit top tier big and another decent wing, that team could be a serious contender.
    If Curry progresses, and they find some better big, especially defensively, they can have success in my opinion. Portland did it with Clyde Drexler and Terry Porter, and I would say that Steph and Monta had the combined talent to approach that level of a backcourt. Mainly because I think Steph, if he improves on defense a LOT, can be better than Porter.

  • http://Slamonline.coM nbk

    But Monta can never defend like Drexler. He’s the size of a PG, Drexler was a long 6’7″ – Monta is not as good as Drexler was and never will be.

  • http://www.sbnation.com/nba/2011/10/4/2468098/nba-lockout-2011-owners-david-stern-robert-sarver-the-hook Allenp

    I can’t really remember Drexler as a great defender. But, my point still stands. I think GSW could compete with an improvement of their bigs and better defense. I won’t compare them to the Bad Boy Pistons because neither Monta or Steph compare to Dumars, let alone Isiah, but I think it’s possible to have your two best players be your point guard and shooting guard and still be a great team.

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    Wait wait wait, are you saying Joe Dumars is better then Clyde Drexler? And I think its possible for a team to win titles with their two best players being guards, just not being two defensively deficient guards who happen to be the exact same size.

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