According to Eric Hasseltine Show in Memphis - he showed up to a draft training camp at 304 lbs, 22% body fat.
And those differences are why Davis was able to declare early, get drafted,and contribute immediately even as a rookie. Its why hewas able to continue to get more minutes each season in Boston.esplanade91 said:First and foremost I want to say I'm not defending Renardo because he's a POS, but I'm throwing this out there because I think some of you are wrong. Big Baby has been a role player everywhere he's been and he was a big ole fatty in college with great ball skills. He was drafted late and he got down to about 290lbs (6'9"). To say you're sure Renardo will NEVER play in the NBA is a little ridiculous. If he does a lot of growing up in the next 6 months he could very well be a bench player, but that falls entirely on his maturity level. He has the skills and athletic ABILITY to beat guys like Dampier who are still on rosters out for a spot.
mstateglfr said:And those differences are why Davis was able to declare early, get drafted,and contribute immediately even as a rookie. Its why hewas able to continue to get more minutes each season in Boston.esplanade91 said:First and foremost I want to say I'm not defending Renardo because he's a POS, but I'm throwing this out there because I think some of you are wrong. Big Baby has been a role player everywhere he's been and he was a big ole fatty in college with great ball skills. He was drafted late and he got down to about 290lbs (6'9"). To say you're sure Renardo will NEVER play in the NBA is a little ridiculous. If he does a lot of growing up in the next 6 months he could very well be a bench player, but that falls entirely on his maturity level. He has the skills and athletic ABILITY to beat guys like Dampier who are still on rosters out for a spot.
Davis has a TON of limitations, yet he continues to be valued and get playing time. Its because he has what Sidney doesnt- effort and attitude.
And comparing me to Kobe Bryant is a perfect example. I am him if I grew an inch, lost 20 pounds, developed incredible footwork, and was more athletic.esplanade91 said:I think Davis vs. Renardo is a perfect example. Big Baby IS Renardo if he lost weight and showed maturity and drive.
completely disagree with this. I know Rick was the worst college coach ever, but nobody wasor is going to changeRenardo. His problemsstartand end with himself. He just doesn't care about basketball. If he had been here under Ray, he would have been gone after a year.[b said:fishwater99[/b]]I bet if he would have played for Coach ray and stayed on the team he would be a 1st rounder this year.
The RSS would have left the before the first practice was over under Coach Ray. This has nothing to do with our "old coach" or new one.KurtRambis4 said:I think you are not understanding my point. It is that he would not have lasted under Ray.
The potentialto do or be something is worth nothing at all without the desire and structure to do or be it. Worth nothing at all.And when that desire and structure arent present, potential really just means waste.fishwater99 said:Unlike you, the RSS has all the potential in the world to be an NBA player.
I bet if he would have played for Coach ray and stayed on the team he would be a 1st rounder this year.
The RSS has a better jump shot, and passing skills than Davis ever had or will. He just needs to get in shape and have the desire to play basketball.
I would not be surprised if he is a late 2nd round pick.
The <a href="http://www.draftexpress.com/nba-pre-draft-measurements/?page=&year=2012&source=NJ+Workout&sort2=DESC&draft=0&pos=0&sort=4">heaviest player
The same thing but with ESPN college basketball blog commentary by Eamonn Brennan:weighed in New Jersey was Mississippi State's Renardo Sidney, at a whopping 304 pounds, nearly 40 pounds more than the next heaviest prospect. His 22.4% body fat percentage was also highest by a large margin in New Jersey, and ranks as the second highest figure ever in our extensive database ahead of Oliver Miller. Sidney quit pretty early on in the workout after being seen grasping an inhaler on the sidelines.
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</font></span>and Mississippi State's Renardo Sidney (wait for it) was the heaviest
player in the combine (there it is) by 40 pounds, with a body fat
percentage of 22.4 percent, the highest of the combine and the
second-highest in Givony's entire database. (Only the legend that is
Oliver Miller ranked higher.) The kicker: "Sidney quit pretty early on
in the workout after being seen grasping an inhaler on the sidelines."
Never change, Renardo. Never change.