Eddy-Bull: Weight an issue again
August 1, 2004
http://www.suntimes.com/output/bull...pt-bull011.html
BY LACY J. BANKS Staff Reporter Advertisement
Eddy Curry is not making things easy for Bulls operations chief John Paxson.
Paxson was hoping to sign Curry to a long-term extension, with the window for such negotiations opening today and closing on Oct. 31. Tyson Chandler also is eligible for an extension, but the Bulls had targeted Curry as the franchise cornerstone.
All Curry had to do to earn a possible six-year, $90 million extension was stay in peak condition during the offseason. But he's not even close.
''I'm sure that we will talk with Curry's and Chandler's agents, but I'm not sure where the talks will go,'' Paxson said. ''Tyson has been a model of consistency all summer. He has actually exceeded what we had hoped for.
''With Curry, he has chosen for the good part of the summer to go work with [personal trainer] Tim Grover. So we haven't been able to monitor him as closely as to the quality of his work. Tim has a good program, facility and reputation. But, ultimately, it's the effort the individual chooses to put into his conditioning whether at the Berto Center or Hoops [the Gym].''
One league source says the 6-11 Curry, hampered briefly by a mildly strained right hamstring, is 35 pounds over the 285-pound target weight the team has set for him. Curry appeared to be progressing earlier this summer when he was working with Grover. But he left Grover for a month and started working out at the Berto because he was rumored to be upset with Grover.
Two weeks ago, when Bulls coach Scott Skiles was asked how Curry looked, Skiles bowed his head and paused before answering with a grim face.
''I don't even want to comment on that right now,'' Skiles said.
Curry reported to camp out of shape last season, and the Bulls got off to a miserable start. When the season ended, Bulls chairman Jerry Reinsdorf met privately with Curry and reiterated that the Bulls' future success rested largely on his shoulders. Curry came out of the meeting vowing to work harder.
''[Poor conditioning] definitely won't be the case this summer,'' Curry said recently. ''After a couple of weeks of rest, I'm going to go into the gym, work harder than I ever have and make sure I come to training camp in shape and ready to have my best season.
"I can't let the team down. The team is depending heavily upon me, and I have personal pride as a professional.''
But when Curry tipped the scales this week, he weighed 320 pounds. Now he's back with Grover and also working out at the Berto.
''We don't have much time, but we're going to try to make a whole lot of progress in a short period, and hopefully Eddy is dedicated to it,'' Grover said. ''If he does not get it in the next four weeks, it's not going to happen. It's a matter of focus, commitment and investing in yourself.''
Darren White, Curry's new agent, agrees.
''He took some time off to visit relatives and then he went on a cruise with his family,'' White said. ''But thank goodness there's plenty of time left.
''We have hired Patrick Huggins, a private chef who works with other NBA players like Michael Finley and Juwan Howard, to help Eddy with his diet. And Eddy is determined to work extremely hard in the next 60 days to get his body and his conditioning where they ought to be. He realizes that this is a contract year for him.''
If Curry is not signed to an extension, he'll become a restricted free agent next summer, and the Bulls would be able to match any offer he receives.