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2008-09 NBA Crystal Ball

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(Okay, this sucker is finally completed. Give me your ayes and nays.)

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Atlantic Division

1. Boston Celtics (2nd Playoff Seed)

Why: After short off-season, superb but aging big 3 pacing themselves for postseason. Posey missed. More quantity that quality in bigs off bench. But trio remains aces and Rondo emerging fast.

Worries: Kendrick Perkins' balky shoulder, inevitable letdown.

Overrated: The redemption of still-not-a-genius Doc Rivers. And based on his new salary, Tony Allen.

Underrated: Perkins' mucking.

Wild Card: Will Pierce reprise his magnficent postseason defense?

2. Toronto Raptors (5)

Why: Bosh-O'Neal tandem successful, Colangelo's United Nations are another year accustomed to NBA ball.

Worries: JO is toast, Moon is a flash in the pan, and the bench, especially in the backcourt, is too thin.

Overrated: With Canada off the radar, not much. Maybe 2007 Coach of Year Sam Mitchell?

Underrated: Impact of losing AJ Ford as pace changer and provider of rest for Calderon, three-point shooting depth.

Wild Cards: Bargnani bust or late-bloomer? Backup PGs Roko Ukic and Willie Solomon.

3. Philadelphia 76ers (6)

Why: Brand and Iguodala not ideal mesh and getting vintage Brand not guaranteed post Achilles injury. Shotblockers in paint (Dalembert, backup Ratliff), allow swingmen (Iguodala and Thaddeus Young to gamble on steals).

Worries: Brand's durability, return to earth after big step forward last season. Run and gun backfires.

Overrated: How much Brand will help.

Underrated: Frontcourt depth, with Reggie Evans and the good-looking rook Spreights in addition to Ratliff.

Wild Cards: Uh, Elton Brand. Breakout sophomore campaign for Thaddeus, Donyell Marshall and Kareem Rush raining treys off the bench.

4. New Jersey Nets (14)

Why: Krstic sorely missed, Vinsanity and Yi are matching dysfunctions of laziness, everyone waiting for LeBron.

Worries: LeBron arrival as delusional as Jay-Z retirement, Carter untradeable, Yi bad enough to turn off Chinese fan base.

Overrated: You mean besides Carter? The capability of Coach Frank, the center tandem of Brook Lopez and Josh Boone.

Underrated: Marvelous Mexican Eduardo Najera, whose added the three-pointer to his dirty work acumen. Point guard Devin Harris.

Wild Cards: Sean Williams, who deserves patience, the unquestionably athletic Yi.

5. New York Knicks (15)

Why: Because the fall of Rome wasn't rebuilt in a day. Because D'Antoni is coaching the wrong team (boot Riley and put him in Miami). Because Chris Duhon as the big personnel upgrade is weak sauce.

Worries: Disgruntled Knick fans finally stay away. A team mutiny. That, hey, you can't play Suns basketball with Eddy Curry and Zach Randolph. That the Italian rook is a bust.

Overrated: Throw the roster into a hat and draw a name. (Yeah, even David Lee, so constantly cited for being underrated that the reverse is closer to truth.)

Underrated: The limited but potentially crucial value of Stephon Marbury to some team over the next couple of years. Q Richardson's fantasy value. How much they'll miss Renaldo Balkman.

Wild Card: Marbury returns from the psychological wilderness, D'Antoni proves he's a genius after all as Knicks win 35 games.

Central Division

1. Cleveland Cavaliers (1)

Why: LeBron lives up to King James moniker, and the roles of players around him are tangible and complementary, especially new pickup Mo Williams, an uber-Paxton/Vujacic. Last year's distractions--contract disputes, big late-season trade--no longer a factor.

Worries: The tread on the tires of Big Ben and Z, the limits of LeBron's endurance.

Overrated: Boobie Gibson, Anderson Varejao.

Underrated: Coach Mike Brown, a poor man's Pops.

Wild Card: Enough quality swingman depth to give LeBron 10 minutes off every night?

2. Detroit Pistons (4)

Why: Lack of superstar matters in beefed-up East elite; need to blend new talent with old standbys under an unexperienced coach.

Worries: 'Sheed's fuse during decline in skills, and the psychological toll on the rest of the aging core (corps) of being not quite good enough year-after-year.

Overrated: Mr. Big Shot, who should split time with Stuckey this season.

Underrated: The potent power forward troika of McDyess, Maxiell and Amir Johnson, the offense of Tayshaun Prince.

Wild Cards: New coach Michael Curry, ex-top pick Kwame Brown, and is F Walter Sharpe another Dumars discovered diamond in the rough?

3. Indiana Pacers (9)

Why: A lot of intriguing pieces and a coach, Jim O'Brien, who knows how to put them together. But not enough defense to make postseason.

Worries: Roles don't get sorted. Who's the go-to guy, Granger or Dunleavy? The health of TJ Ford.

Overrated: Troy Murphy, always better on paper than on the court. Larry Bird as personnel guy. PG Jarrett Jack, fortunately now a backup.

Underrated: Dedicated mucker Jeff Foster, the potential upside of Roy Hibbert.

Wild Cards: The impact of rooks Hibbert in the paint and sharpshooter Brandon Rush beyond the arc. And does either Granger or Dunleavy have another level to rise?

4. Chicago Bulls (11)

Why: A pick-up-the-pieces year after the 07-08 disaster. Can new coach Del Negro blend the silk of Derrick Rose and Luol Deng with an formidable crew of bangers?

Worries: Neophyte Del Negro is clueless, Tyrus Thomas is a bust, Gordon, Hinrich and Nocioni have all hit their ceilings, and no low-post threats among Noah/Gooden/Gray.

Overrated: The gunner Ben Gordon, banger Gooden, whose game is as ugly as his hairstyles.

Underrated: Defensive stud Sefolosha; ditto the D of a healthy Larry Hughes; the immediate impact of Derrick Rose.

Wild Cards: Bounceback years from Hinrich and Deng, a monster ROY season from Rose, Del Negro figuring it out.

5. Milwaukee Bucks (13)

Why: Both their anchors (Redd and Bogut) are overrated and at odds with Scott Skiles' emphasis on D. GM John Hammond salary-dumps Mo Williams and yet trades Yi for Richard Jefferson, turning Ridnour and Villanueva into starters. WTF?

Worries: That Jefferson enjoys Milwaukee just as much as Yi did, that Redd and Bogut still can't defend and land in Skiles' doghouse. That top rook Joe Alexander is more a misbegotten 'tweener than a prototype Skiles sparkplug.

Overrated: Jefferson's stardom, Bogut's upside

Underrated: Backup big man Francisco Elson, whose time with the Spurs will get him minutes in Milwaukee.

Wild Cards: Alexander has the gritty goods, Ramon Sessions grows enough to push aside Ridenour at the point.

Southeast Division

1. Orlando Magic (3)

Why: Howard closest thing to vintage Shaq in NBA now. Pietrus and backup PG Anthony Johnson savvy complementary pickups.

Worries: Opponents figure out inside-outside offense, daring Magic to beat them with Jameer Nelson off dribble and Howard shooting midrange. The treys don't drop as easily this year. Hedo takes a step back from breakout year.

Overrated: Howard's Olympic doldrums translating to NBA.

Underrated: Stan Van Gundy, among league's top 10 coaches.

Wild Card: Howard takes another step up into MVP contention.

2. Atlanta Hawks (7)

Why: Nice blend of veteran backcourt and young, athletic front line. Mo Evans nice replacement for departed Childress. Playoff surprise vs. Celts provides emotional boost heading into season.

Worries: Expectations too great on team that, after all, won only 37 games last season. Bibby knows his tenure is brief and goes for his own before being salary-dumped. Josh Smith relaxes with fat new contract.

Overrated: Al Horford's ability to play center--this team needs Zaza Pachulia or better (Randolph Morris?) in the pivot to take next big step.

Underrated: The potential synergy with Joe Johnson and Horford as co-leaders of still-young squad on the come.

Wild Cards: Acie Law emerging enough at point to make Bibby's expiring contract a moot issue. Marvin Williams finally blossoming.

3. Miami Heat (8)

Why: Dwyane Wade, Shawn Marion and Michael Beasley. Screw the point guard and center--that's enough to squeak into the playoffs in the top-heavy East.

Worries: Beasley and the ego-fragile, contract-waiting Marion don't respond well to the ball-dominant Wade. Too many turnovers, not enough rebounds. Udonis Haslem takes his finger out of the dike in the paint. Erik Spoelstra?

Overrated: Marion's versatility--he's no KG. The need for a quality PG with Wade on the floor--see MJ, Kobe, LeBron, etc.

Underrated: The value of Haslem. If he goes down, it's another train wreck in Miami.

Wild Cards: Mario Chalmers, or, better yet, Sean Livingston, emerging at the point. Balancing egos of Big Three.

4. Charlotte Bobcats (10)

Why: Because Larry Brown will help a lot and every year can't be ruined by injuries (unless you're the Wizards). Enough of the roster will buy into Brown's "right way." But frontcourt size and depth still a problem.

Worries: Adam Morrison a bust, Okafor and Felton have hit their ceilings, leaping crasher Gerald Wallace a bad concussion away from forced retirement.

Overrated: The potential of top rook DJ Augustin. Emeka Okafor as top overall pick getting a near-max deal (6 yrs, $72 M) to play the pivot.

Underrated: The ability of Jason Richardson to bail out the offense.

Wild Cards: Sean May stays healthy and blossoms, Brown loosens the reins on the perimeter bombers--Morrison, J-Rich, Matt Carroll--and turns Okafor into 'Sheed 2.0 on defense.

5. Washington Wizards (12)

Why: This year the raft of injuries finally catch up. Haywood's absence hurts more than Agent Zero's because the backups are undersized. Jamison is another year older. Can Caron Butler's all around game carry this team until Arenas's return?

Worries: Snakebit luck finally becomes too oppressive. Jamison takes step back, Etan Thomas and Darius Songalia can't get it done in the paint, DeShawn Stevenson affected from being punked by LeBron in playoffs.

Overrated: Jamison, good on paper but unable to guard larger 4's. Stevenson, a feisty defender who, like Arenas, is a legend in his own mind.

Underrated: Coach Eddie Jordan. Point guard Antonio Daniels, a consummate pro who is the reason why the Wiz haven't missed Arenas during all those knee surgeries.

Wild Card: Andray Blatche, whose emergence as a force in the paint would make a huge difference here.

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Pacific Division

1. Los Angeles Lakers (2)

Why: Hindering scar tissue from last year's Finals makes for tougher slog. Halos askew on Kobe and Zen Master, not to mention Odom and Gasol. Starting Vlad Rad over sensitive Odom may backfire.

Worries: Toll of long postseason then Olympics on Gasol and Kobe. Opponents effectively emulating Celts in getting physical and daring anyone but Kobe to beat them.

Overrated: Derek Fisher, a class act and heartwarming story who is at best slightly above average at the point. Vlad Rad, who hurts this teams at least as much as he helps it.

Underrated: Trevor Ariza. How much Andrew Bynum will develop this year.

Wild Card: Lakers adopt bloodthirsty attitude, turn arrogance into grit and positive aggression.

2. Los Angeles Clippers (7)

Why: Baron Davis and Marcus Camby are a huge improvement over ball-hog Corey Maggette and 8 games of Elton Brand. Chris Kamen is a top-10 center who can play twin towers with Camby because of the latter's midrange offense.

Worries: The health of both Davis and Camby, hurt in the past and already dinged up for the opener. Potential fallout from the power struggle between coach Mike Dunleavy and ex-GM Elgin Baylor. The rooted inferiority complex of Clipperdom.

Overrated: The trio of anti-glue guys--Tim Thomas, Ricky Davis, Cuttino Mobley--coming off the bench.

Underrated: The value of already mature second-year pro Al Thornton--never a star but a solid complement. Camby's ability to erase mistakes when perimeter D allows penetration.

Wild Card: Rookie Eric Gordon could be special. Entire team could boom or bust--range is 20 to 50 wins.

3. Phoenix Suns (8)

Why: Erratic transition from go-go to go-stop-and-slow. Shaq's best value now is enabling Amare. Inconvenient question: Who besides Raja Bell on this roster is a quality NBA defender? Fumes of Nash-Hill-Shaq plus Amare engine enough to eke out bottom run playoff spot.

Worries: Demolition derby leaves husks of Shaq-Hill-Nash by the wayside. (When Stoudemire is your horse there are worries aplenty.) Barbosa repeats last season's disappointments. Terry Porter's emphasis on D runs into brick wall of reality.

Overrated: The current reputations of Hill and Shaq, the promise of rook Robin Lopez. Alas, Boris Diaw, disappeared now two years running.

Underrated: The impact of losing D'Antoni, and the stupidity of nice-guy Steve Kerr in going for broke with the Shaq trade and then scapegoating his head coach.

Wild Card: The proud old vets dig deep for one more glorious year.

4. Golden State Warriors (9)

Why: Injury to Monta Ellis and loss of Baron Davis means obscure committee runs the point guard spot. Even before Ellis returns, not enough touches to go around between Maggette, Jackson and Harrington.

Worries: Boomlet of goodwill from upset of Mavs deflates into selfish, no-D carnival, bastardized Nellieball with the coach himself checking out, mentally and/or physically, before the All Star break.

Overrated: Ellis as a top flight point. The "fun" of losing 125-119.

Underrated: What could be done emphasizing a big mobile front line that sifts in Biedrins, Harrington, Brandan Wright and Ronny Turiaf. The slow but sure maturation of Stephen Jackson.

Wild Card: Wright emerging. A smart, early replacement for Nellie.

5. Sacramento Kings (14)

Why: Least talented roster in NBA. Artest and Bibby gone from overachieving 38-win team. Beno and Mikki won't get better, Brad Miller a year older. Kevin Martin or bust in Sacramento? No wonder the big news is $10 tickets.

Worries: Not enough grit after Miller, with Spencer Hawes, Mikki Moore, Francisco Garcia. That drafting Jason Thompson 12th overall was a big mistake.

Overrated: Management's estimation of their personnel, after too-fat contracts meted out to Garcia, Moore, and point guard Beno Udrih (who nevertheless would look good--and could have been--in a Wolves uniform). Bobby Jackson, erstwhile ball-hawker now a step too slow.

Underrated: Blue collar swingman John Salmons, pretty-boy coach Reggie Theus who worked wonders with this ballclub last year.

Wild Card: If their last two top picks--Thompson and the willowy Hawes--can play, that's wild cards filling an inside straight.

Southwest Division

1. Houston Rockets (1)

Why: Deep, relentless interior defense, with Scola, Artest, Landry, Battier, and Yao. Artest can be shut-down defender on league's elite swingmen. T-Mac takes pressure off so-so PGs Alston and Aaron Brooks. Brent Barry a key, Spurs-like acquisition. On paper, the best team in basketball.

Worries: Keeping Artest sane, obviously. Managing Yao's minutes in a way that protects his body and his ego at the same time. T-Mac's notorious postseason history and Alston's ability to be a floor general on a team in serious contention for a ring.

Overrated: McGrady as "choker"--it feels like the KG chatter before last season. The value of Yao--they can win without him.

Underrated: Luis Scola, the Spurs' biggest mistake. The grit of Landry and Battier, which is nearly the equal of vintage Artest. The track record of coach Rick Adelman.

Wild Card: Insert Artest joke here. Aaron Brooks emerging as pace-changer off the bench.

2. New Orleans Hornets (4th seed, 3rd best record)

Why: Emergence of Big 3 (Paul/Chandler/West) last year no fluke. Posey the perfect pick-up--defensive toughness and corner treys from CP3--and Julian Wright will emerge a little more this season.

Worries: Losing Pargo means horrible options--yeah, Mike James--behind Paul at the point. Ditto what happens when Chandler gets in foul trouble, leaving matters to Hilton Armstrong and Melvin Ely.

Overrated: Peja and Mo-Pete: Great knockdown shooters who need teammates drawing double-teams to get open.

Underrated: Chandler and West. Overshadowed by Paul, Chander happens to be the game's second-best center behind Dwight Howard, and West is a deadly midrange shooter who plays and defends with contagious passion.

Wild Card: Can Mike James find the mojo that made him a valuable backup early in his career? Posey pushing Peja and Peterson to play better defense.

3. San Antonio Spurs (5)

Why: Who is the next wave: Udoka? Mason? George Hill? Much as I love the Spurs, supreme coaching and bottomless pride must eventually cede to superior quickness, stamina, athleticism and talent.

Worries: Father Time. Duncan, Bowen, Oberto, Finley, and Kurt Thomas are on the downslope. Ginobili's ankle injury. Is this the year fearlessly penetrating Tony Parker gets hurt?

Overrated: The Spurs' string of odd-year championships and the value of their playoff experience. Instead, think of the Utah and Stockton and Malone at the end of their run.

Underrated: Gregg Popovich. Despite all logic, it will never surprise me to see Pops and Duncan triumph. A healthy Ginobili--the best clutch player in the game?

Wild Cards: Can the "Spurs way" turn Udoka into the second coming of Bowen, and Mason into Finley?

4. Dallas Mavericks (10)

Why: Jason Kidd is absolutely vital to their fortunes and on his last legs. Nowitzki and Howard toting heavy (albeit very different) baggage. As the rule changes increasingly emphasize speed and athleticism, from 1 through 12 they among the slowest teams in the NBA. Scapegoating Avery Johnson was bad juju.

Worries: Falling down the rabbit hole even faster than Phoenix and San Antonio. Gigantic payroll makes some players (Howard, Dampier, Dirk) untradeable.

Overrated: Kidd is arguably the most overrated player in the NBA. Stackhouse no longer can get to the rim at will. Dampier is extremely limited, and should lose time to DeSagnana Diop.

Underrated: Brandon Bass is in linebacker club--joined by Maxiell, Millsap, and Landry--unheralded bangers off the bench who invariably help their team.

Wild Cards: Can Howard and Nowitzki bounce back into the form they showed during the Mavs' 67-win season?

5. Memphis Grizzlies (15)

Why: With Darko and Marc Gasol as the beef underneath at PF and C, the Grizz will be in the penalty shortly after the national anthem. There's more quantity than quality at the point. Their best players--Rudy Gay and OJ Mayo--are the easiest spots on the floor to fill.

Worries: That fans will notice that, despite their resemblance, Marc is not Pau. That Mayo is biding time and going for his before he scrams out of town. That they'd be better off with Kevin Love and Mike Miller.

Overrated: Mike Conley's upside. The value of big slow guys down near the basket.

Underrated: Rudy Gay is getting noticed but is still not fully appreciated. Believe it or not, Marko Jaric is overpaid but could help this team with his length and defense (and Adriana Lima sightings).

Wild Card: Marc Iavaroni abandons the double lugs and goes back to go go with Hakim Warrick beside Gasol and Gay, Mayo and speedy Kyle Lowry. But it still won't get them 25 wins.

Northwest Division

1. Utah Jazz (3rd Seed, 4th best record)

Why: Smart retooling with CJ Miles next to Brewer in the starting lineup creating a deep bench of Kirilenko, Millsap, Korver, Harpring and Brevin Knight. As usual, it is a patient, reliable building process.

Worries: Their funky frontcourt matchups don't translate well to playoff familiarity. Ditto Jerry Sloan's impeccable but predictable half-court sets.

Overrated: Sacreligious though it may be--and though I genuinely admire the guy--Jerry Sloan has never won the big one despite decades in the game and a plethora of stars and superstars on his rosters.

Underrated: Brewer would score more in another system. Millsap is a beast. Brevin Knight is a great backup PG in Sloan's system.

Wild Card: AK-47 thriving as 6th man tempo changer while Miles improves the offense in the starting lineup.

2. Portland Trailblazers (6)

Why: Because they're loaded and need only time before talk of rings and perhaps a dynasty is heard. The best organized ballclub in the NBA over the past three years. If Jerryd Bayless is a legit stud at the point someday soon, they will really be fun to watch.

Worries: Too much talent, not enough minutes, hurts the feelings of the wrong players. Otherwise, Bayless can't play the point, Brandon Roy gets hurt and Steve Blake is reprises his postseason foldo in Denver a couple years back. Oh yeah, and Greg Oden is reinjured.

Overrated: Maybe Rudy Fernandez.The shot selection of Outlaw and Webster at the small forward. I'm reaching...

Underrated: The immediate impact of Oden. The value of Portland's frontcourt depth. I mean, who else can swap out Oden, Aldridge and Outlaw for Przybilla, Frye and Webster, a second unit that's the equal of most team's top trio.

Wild Cards: Coach Nate McMillan overplaying his hand with a young ballclub. Conversely, everything gelling for an improbable, Rays-like run to the top.

3. Denver Nuggets (11)

Why: They couldn't play D with Marcus Camby in the middle, why would they improve without him and glue guy Najera? A team of me-first gunners in Melo, AI and J.R. Smith, plus questionable characters such as K-Mart and Nene in the frontcourt. It shapes up as lots of talent jumbled into bad chemistry--all flash and no pan.

Worries: They should worry about fan mutiny after dumping Camby for nothing and keeping coach George Karl around. Otherwise the health of Nene and K-Mart who have lost major parts of seasons recently.

Overrated: Allen Iverson, one of my all-time favorite players, is staining his legacy out in the Rockies. Melo Anthony will be fool's gold until he dedicates himself to defense. And we're light years away from Karl heyday in drawing up pressure defenses in Seattle.

Underrated: Amid the carnage, the ever-hustling Anthony Carter had his best year last season. Linas Kleiza is an agile wide-body. And the Birdman, Chris Anderson, deserves all the catcalls but also some love (which is in shorter supply) for his effort around the hoop. Finally, Renaldo Balkman is a glue guy, so naturally he's heading down the depth chart in Denver.

Wild Card: Nene finally comes into his own as a premiere big man. AI and AC play wind-sprint ball in the high altitude. One of the high-scoring superstars is unloaded in a blockbuster and there is hope for the future among the now-betrayed Nuggets fans.

4. Minnesota Timberwolves (12)

Why: Memphis trade brings Big Al two vital assistants--outside sharpshooter Mike Miller, inside defender Jason Collins. Kevin Love? Jury's out as he stands in line behind previous three first-rounders who need to stop teasing and frustrating and start producing.

Worries: Foye can't play the point, Brewer can't shoot, McCants prefers controversy to trustworthy teamwork, Wittman, McHale and Taylor in over their heads.

Overrated: Love's immediate impact, Foye's leadership.

Underrated: Ryan Gomes, Mike Miller's non-shooting virtues, the instant offense of McCants.

Wild Cards: The correct deployment of Corey Brewer, Foye blossoming at the point, Al Jefferson walking the talk on defense.

5 Oklahoma City Thunder (13)

Why: An overreliance on Kevin Durant does nobody any favors. Ditto Wilcox and Collison, who shouldn't be part of the long-term plan. Top pick Westbrook is raw but exciting. With their core of kids (Green, Petro, Durant, Westbrook), their future could be bright.

Overrated: Durant was league's third or fourth best rook last year (Scola, Horton, maybe Thornton). PJ Carlesimo spends five years under Pops in SA and yet Sonics finished 27th in points allowed last year.

Underrated: Earl Watson is a great mentor/caddy for Westbrook at the point; Johan Petro deserves Collison's burn, Joe Smith was a savvy pickup for locker room leadership.

Wild Card: Durant makes me look stupid and blows up to the hype. Westbrook an immediate starter and demi-star.

 

18 Reader Comments

Anonymous (not verified)07:18am
Oct 27
Thanks for the Rundown. From this koolaide drinking Einsteinian insane fans perspective I think the Wolves won't be eliminated from the playoffs until April. Here's my much more abbreviated and less educative prognostication (Based on Record) West East 1. New Orleans 1. Orlando 2. Lakers 2. Cleveland 3. Utah 3. Toronto 4. San Antonio 4. Chicago 5. Houston 5. Boston 6. Phoenix 6. Atlanta 7. Portland 7. Philadelphia 8. Clippers 8. Charlotte 9. TimberWolves 9. Miami 10. Denver 10. Detroit 11. Dallas 11. Washington 12. Sacremento 12. Indiana 13. OkCity 13. New York 14. Memphis 14. New Jersey 15. Golden State 15. Milwuakee
APB (not verified)08:33am
Oct 27
Oops, that was me.
RhinoLove (not verified)08:50am
Oct 27
Just one quick thought... There's no way in hell the Celtics don't top the East. Where's the love, where's the respect? The only thing the Celtics lacked in last years playoff run was the confidence that they were the best team in the league. They choked against lesser competition like the Hawks and the Cavs, but dominated the Lakers and Pistons when it counted. Winning that championship is going to make them a better team, and we all know that KG will not allow any let down. They may rest the vets more and win slightly less games, but picking anyone but the Celtics to win the title, let alone the East seems ludicrous to me.
APB (not verified)09:04am
Oct 27
RHino, Color me ludicrous. There are many reasons to consider the Celtics the top of the East. I might just be feelign a little contrarian. However, the Celtics played last year with a chip on their shoulder. They stormed out of the gate and then came back to Earth over the second half of the season. They were almost eliminated by Atlanta in the first round and were equally challenged by Cleveland in the second. They will be a veteran team with their core three one year older and aptly satisfied with a championship ring on their shoulder. Ray Allens production will fall and Pierce will take a small step back while suffering an injury at their age keeping them out of a significant portion of the year if not the playoffs would not be surprising. In fact, face it, making a pick for a team to have a dramatic dropoff from one year to the next is not that daring whne you consider the role of an injury could take on a staring player. If the Celtics don't come out on top of the East, my picking it will more likely be the result of blind luck due to an unfortunate injury to Garnett/Allen/Pierce or even Rondo. Mostly I picked the Celtics to fall back to improve upon the Wolves draft pick they will get from them, in other words wishful thinking. Likewise, I am picking Miami lower than I think they should probably finish. I''m hoping their improvement over last year is only as high as needed to surrender their pick to the Wolves. It has nothing to do with respect, although wishful thinking is still quite ludicrous.
pagingstanleyroberts (not verified)10:32am
Oct 27
I agree w Britt and APB for the reasons they cited above. Also, I'm not sure KG's teammates can keep up with the pace he sets without some more injuries. In addition, if they lose a few games in a row and people start pointing fingers at everyone but KG, that will rub some players the wrong way. Even though KG is my favorite player in NBA history, it's telling that very few players have been able to keep up with him for more than a few years. Almost every supporting "star" he's ever played with (Googs, Brandon, Wally, Cassell) has missed significant time with serious or chronic injuries. I just get the sense that Allen and Pierce will combine to miss 15-20 games this year, and that would be enough to move them down.
Anonymous (not verified)08:37pm
Nov 3
its TJ Ford...Not AJ
Britt Robson09:21am
Oct 27
Rhino-- Sure there are ways the Celts don't top the East. Ask anyone in the Celtic locker room who their toughest opponent was in the playoffs last year and they'll say the Cavs, a team that just added the best complement LeBron has ever had, doesn't have the distractions of the contract squabbles or blockbuster trade this year, and boasts a terrifying superstar who seems to be both incredibly motivated and a genuine team player. You've also got the continued development of the game's best big man in Orlando, coupled with a smart coach and a raft of tall three point shooters. Detroit has more depth than Boston, and is rolling the dice on a rookie coach who could tank, but could also be the right ingredient for a boost. In Boston, the Celtics lost the 4th most valuable player on their team in the postseason. Kendrick Perkins has been chronically beset by a bad shoulder. And as the San Antonio Spurs continually demonstrate, even proud, veteran teams with three quality superstars find it difficult to repeat.
RhinoLove (not verified)10:25am
Oct 27
I'd counter that by saying that the Celtics toughest opponents in last year's run was themselves. They played scared in the first two series, and nearly choked under the weight of expectations. That is behind them now that they have their rings. KG is still a top 5 player, Pierce is in his prime, and Ray Allen will remain crafty and effective in small spurts...AND they have a very nice group of young players that will be better, more confident, and more experienced. They'll miss Posey, but I fully expect the increased production from the rest of the 2nd unit to outweigh his absence. LeBron is phenomenal and I have no doubts that he'll be even more beastly this year. But he still doesn't have enough behind him, and probably won't for some time given all the stupid panic roster moves the Cavs have made in recent years. They are dangerous, as is Detroit...Orlando shouldn't even be in the conversation. None of them could take a healthy Celtics team in a seven game series.
APB (not verified)10:59am
Oct 27
I think the reason Orlando is in the conversation is the same reason that New Orleans is (although before last season, most predictions didn't include New orleans in the picture either). I think the teams lead by the post-MJ era players are in a decline. Boston was put together by taking three of these players entering the the twilight of their career and latting make one last rung. The other teams (Dallas with Dirk and Kidd, Phoenix with Nash and Shaq, San Antonio with Duncan, and Detroit with Sheed) are not improving, but rather trying to hold things to gether as they retool. Lebron began the Post-post MJ era and the teams led by these players are now in the primes of their career. We are going to see some new team rise to the top and Howard's Orlando is definitely in the conversation with Lebrons Clevelan. Kobe's talents for taking over a game will also inevitably fall, as he remains a player who is key to a teams success. LA has done a great job of putting young talent around him and Bynum could keep LA among the top teams in the West for another year or two more. But, even the West belongs now to teams that are led by Chris Paul and Deron Williams. Likewise teams like Portland and the Wolves in the West, and Chicago and Miami in the East should be on an upward trajectory as a new cast of all stars begin to make their impressions in the NBA.
ScapeGoater (not verified)02:39pm
Oct 27
I don't know how we could all know KG won't allow any letdown. What the hell happened after the Wolve's WCF run? KG is a wonderful player, but I'm not sure about the team leader stuff. It appears to me that should be left to others.
Andy G (not verified)08:11am
Oct 27
Sloan (I think) has never won a Coach of the Year, despite being one of the best coaches in the league for the past 20. Can't agree that he's overrated. He's almost always put his teams in position to win--sometimes win titles--but Michael Jordan and Kobe Bryant have gotten in the way of that. I can't put the blame on Sloan. Agreed on the immediate impact of Oden. He and Roy might look a whole helluva lot like Penny-Shaq, and could make a championship run sooner than people think. Barring major injuries (which is a big assumption for LAL and Houston), I think you've picked the Top 4 in the West. Utah didn't add anything, but why would you, when you were a young team that legitimately contended for the title. NOLA has guys like Posey and Peja, that could potentially drop off, but still have their young trio. Between Houston and LAL, the healthier team should win the West. You can't give Rick Adelman that much talent--offensive and defensive--and not expect a deep playoff run and great regular season record. Ditto for Phil Jackson. LAL had a hole in the middle last season that wasn't exposed until the Finals. Without a rebounding center, teams can shadow Kobe easier, less-concerned about blockouts and interior defense/rotations. Bynum does exactly what they need in a 5, and people worried about the Gasol-Bynum chemistry are mistaken. Since when does having a big 4 that can shoot, not mesh well with a bigger 5 that can rebound? I think their biggest x-factor is the point guard position. Farmar surely wants to be a star in the league, but that can't happen until he wins the starting PG spot. Fisher is an incredible 3-pt shooter, though, who complements Kobe's game better than a penetrator. Phil has his biggest challenge in figuring that one out. They should trade Odom, if possible. I said last year after the Finals that they'd never win a title with that guy on the roster. Unless the whole 6th man thing works wonders, I think I stand by that statement. East should have a whole lot of the same, I think. Boston has the best roster and should have the best record. LeBron will have the same strengths, and weaknesses. Until he develops a mid-range game and/or post-game, he'll be the second-best player in the league. Mo Williams should help, but not enough to win more than 55 games. With Stuckey's timely emergence, Detroit stays in the hunt--unless they decide to, once and for all, blow it up by sending Sheed and/or Billups out the door. Orlando could be a little better, but D-Howard still sucks at free throws and JJ Redick needs to step up and deserve the minutes that he (supposedly) is finally going to get. Toronto could win the East, if JO has stuff left that we weren't seeing in Indy the past couple seasons. Chicago makes the playoffs, with Rose-Gordon-Deng and 2 big guys off the street. If Thomas-Noah build on some of the promise they've shown of late, that team could be somewhere in the 4-5-6 range.
Caerochren (not verified)12:02pm
Oct 28
I think in the Timberwolves "Worries" section you should also include Miller's health. He has back issues, worst case they could derail his career. I am also surprised by how high you rank the Rockets - between McGrady's health issues, Yao's health and ability issues, and Artest's mental issues I don't see a lot to like. I think they will be a play-off team, but I see them coming in around number 8.
Britt Robson04:16pm
Oct 29
If Houston is closer to the 8 seed than the 1 seed at the end of the season, post me back and mock me. Because I don't think that's going to happen.
APB (not verified)04:58pm
Oct 29
Not that I would ever want to mock you Britt, but didn't you have Denver as the number 1 seed in the West last year?
Britt Robson11:43pm
Oct 29
Yes, I did. They didn't defend. If they'd kept Camby and Najera, I'd have them at least back in the playoffs this season. Adjust your expectations around my biases accordingly.
Dave T (not verified)02:13pm
Oct 28
Interesting writeup! A couple of comments: 1. I think you have the Bulls too low. I predict Derrick Rose will be ROY, and the Bulls will finish ahead of Indiana. 2. Dang, the Southwest division looks tough as all get-out. I like the youth of the Hornets over the past glory of the Rockets.
Britt Robson04:20pm
Oct 29
You might be right about Rose and the Bulls. I think my numbers 7-11, which are the Hawks, Heat, Pacers, Bobcats, and Bulls, could be thrown in a hat and pulled almost any order right now. As for Hornets, Rockets, Houston's depth cancels NO's youth advantage in terms of stamina. They are very different teams who will both get between 50 and 60 wins. I just happen to think Houston has the kind of bruising interior defense that creates championships--check the list of recent winners.
secres (not verified)10:23am
Oct 21

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