Phoenix Suns select Gani Lawal of Georgia Tech with 46th pick in NBA draft

By Bob Baum, AP
Friday, June 25, 2010

Suns select Georgia Tech’s Lawal with 46th pick

PHOENIX — The Phoenix Suns, working with a general manager who will walk away from his job next week, have selected Gani Lawal of Georgia Tech with the 46th pick overall in the NBA draft.

Lawal left college after his junior season, when he averaged 13.1 points, 8.5 rebounds and 1.4 blocked shots. The Suns have plenty of scorers, but the 6-foot-9, 234-pound forward could help address the team’s need for rebounding and inside strength.

Phoenix also had the last pick of the draft, No. 60 overall, and the chose another athletic forward, 6-8 Dwayne Collins of Miami.

The Suns had no first-round pick. It was sent to the then-Seattle SuperSonics, now Oklahoma City Thunder, as part of the Suns’ salary-dumping trade of Kurt Thomas in 2007.

Steve Kerr announced last week that he was leaving after three seasons as general manager and will explore opportunities in broadcasting. Kerr, who was part of five NBA championship teams, was a color analyst for TNT for four years before owner Robert Sarver hired him as general manager.

David Griffin, Phoenix’s senior vice president for basketball operations, also decided to leave after 13 years in the Suns organization.

Kerr didn’t talk to the media. That was left to coach Alvin Gentry, who will increase his involvement in management until a new general manager is found.

Gentry said Kerr and Griffin “still have the best interest in the team.”

“Those guys have a lot of pride and they’re going to try to do the best job they possibly can,” Gentry said. “The two picks that we had, to get those kids at 46 and 60, I think is phenomenal.”

Gentry said he had no interest in adding general manager to his title.

Sarver had no comment on whether he would like to talk to Kevin Pritchard, who was fired Thursday after seven seasons as general manager of the Portland Trail Blazers.

“Over the next 30 days, the process will play out,” Sarver said.

Gentry called Lawal and Collins “young kids that have the potential to do some good things.”

“You can never have too much size,” Gentry said. “You saw that in the Lakers series. We think both of those kids have an opportunity to turn into special players. The thing with Gani is he was the leading rebounder playing alongside (Derrick) Favors. Obviously that was a big factor for us.”

Lawal, whose father was born in Nigeria, explored the possibility of leaving college after his sophomore season but decided instead to stay at Georgia Tech, where he was a third-team all-ACC selection for the second straight year.

Lawal was a McDonald’s all-American at Norcross, Ga., High School. He had 12 double-doubles last season and was ACC player of the week after 21-point games against Georgia and Duke. He scored 29 against Charlotte and had 17 points and a career-high 18 rebounds against Miami.

Collins, who has a 7-foot, 4-inch wingspan, led Miami in scoring (12.0 points per game), rebounding (7.8), blocks (1.1) and field goal percentage (.604).

The Suns got the 46th choice in the trade that sent Boris Diaw and Raja Bell to Charlotte for Jason Richardson and Jared Dudley. The No. 60 pick came as part of the trade of Shaquille O’Neal to Cleveland.

Kerr has denied widespread reports that he was dissatisfied with Sarver’s offer for a new contract after building an overachieving team that made it to the Western Conference finals.

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