Now that I’ve gone through the Eastern Conference, It’s time
for the superior West. Last season, the
Western Conference was unbelievably strong, likely the most competitive array
of teams one through ten in the history of the league. This year, the top clubs are somewhat
improved, but it’s probably not going to end up with the same clustered playoff
picture where a team could go from out of the playoffs to 1st or vice versa in a matter of a
just a couple of weeks. Here are my
opinions on the bottom third:
15. Oklahoma City
Thundercats
Okay, so that’s not really the name, but outside of Oklahoma,
does anyone really care what they call this less-than-mediocre group? Personally, I like my suggestion. Imagine, Oklahoma City inbounding the ball
and, as they bring it up the court, the PA announcer gets the crowd fired up
with a chant of, “Thunder...Thunder...Thunder...Thundercats, ####!” And I think that old Thundercats logo would
look great on a jersey. If Toronto
can name a team after a cheesy dinosaur movie, then why not an old
cartoon? Their nickname notwithstanding,
it’s going to take sight beyond sight to envision a time when this team is
actually competitive. This is the worst
team in the league, hands down. Kevin
Durant may one day be a superstar, but not before he gets some actual talent
around him. If, by some freak chance,
guys like Robert Swift, Chris Wilcox and Desmond Mason start suddenly playing
up to their potential, they might be able to approach 30 wins. Jeff Green and Russell Westbrook are the only
other guys on the roster with any real upside, but it’s going to be at least a
couple of years before that happens, if ever.
Oklahoma City might be thrilled to have a permanent NBA team now, but
just wait until they have to suffer through the lean years that will result
from gutting the roster to expedite the move.
Be careful what you wish for.
14. Sacramento Kings
How the once almost-mighty have fallen. I wanted to like Sacramento, I really did,
mostly because Kevin Martin reminds me a little of Reggie Miller, but the trade
of Ron Artest gave up a solid, all-star type scorer and defender for nothing
more than a retread of a shooting guard in Bobby Jackson who was close to
washed up before he left the Kings last time.
There is some talent here, but not nearly enough to compete in the West,
and for every genuine player like underrated point guard Beno Udrih, there are
two or three other guys like Jackson, Shelden Williams and Mikki Moore who
would be overstating their value if I called them one-dimensional. Has there ever been a guy with as much talent
who has put up pretty decent numbers throughout his career and been as totally
irrelevant as Shareef Abdur Rahim? Brad
Miller has got to be close to collecting Social Security by now, and I can
barely recall why I was so high on Quincy Douby when he was drafted. There’s just too much depth in the West for
Sacramento to make any real noise.
Sadly, it seems like an eternity ago that the foursome of Webber, Divac,
Stojakovic and Bibby put the Kings on the NBA map. It may be a while before they find their way
back.
13. Memphis Grizzlies
I am actually somewhat optimistic about the Grizzlies,
mainly because I suspect that O.J. Mayo is for real. Forget Greg Oden, Derrick Rose and Michael
Beasley, here is your Rookie Of The Year.
And I was surprisingly impressed by Marc Gasol during the Oylmpics. If he comes to the NBA as a big, strong,
space-eater not afraid to push people around with a couple of pretty decent
back-to-the basket moves, the guard-heavy Grizzlies will cease being a
pushover. They might not win a lot of
games this season, but they will be that dangerous team that can beat you if
you’re not focused. Probably a lousy
road record but a respectable mark at home.
Rudy #### can score, and it wouldn’t surprise me at all if he and Mayo
combine for close to 50 points a night.
But mostly, Memphis is all about questions. Can Darko Milicic show some of the talent he
came into the league with playing next to a genuine big guy like Gasol? Will one or more of the guard trio of Kyle
Lowry, Javaris Crittendon and Mike Conley show something this season? Could Darrell Arthur possibly be the sleeper
of the draft? Young doesn’t begin to
describe this team; the seven guys I just mentioned have a combined 10 years in
the league, and three of those were Darko being stuck very deep on Detroit’s
bench. No chance whatsoever of them
getting near the playoffs this season, but they are moving in the right
direction.
12. Minnesota
Timberwolves
If you’re looking for a sleeper team that comes out of
nowhere and has a nice little, completely unexpected stretch, this one is
it. It’s a shame they’re in the
West. If the Timberwolves played in the
East, I would have seriously considered having them in the playoffs. Kevin Garnett is unquestionably a great,
all-time kind of player, but the suggestion that Minnesota got ripped off in
that trade is flat wrong. Al Jefferson
is going to be a 20-10 guy long after Garnett has retired. On draft day, I thought O.J. Mayo was going
to make a fantastic outside to Jefferson’s inside for Minnesota for the next 10
years, but he was quickly traded. If
Kevin Love is even close to the kind of player some think he will be, landing
him and Mike Miller from Memphis
will save the Timberwolves from a black mark like Seattle
earned when they drafted Scottie Pippen and then traded him for Olden Polynice. Polynice turned out to be a halfway decent center who played for bunches of teams, but Pippen’s going to the Hall Of Fame
with six rings. A front court pairing of
Jefferson and Love, along with Miller (the elder statesman of this team’s key
players at the ripe old age of 28) and any of a number of young talent like
Ryan Gomes, Craig Smith, Corey Brewer, Rodney Carney, Randy Foye, Rashad
McCants and, yes, even Sebastian Telfair gives this team depth and
flexibility. But they are in the West
where the learning curve is very steep, indeed.
There is no margin for error for the Timberwolves to get it all
together, and being so young, so much can, and probably will, go wrong. But don’t be surprised if they actually flirt
with a playoff spot during the first half of the season.
11. Denver Nuggets
This is what really separates the West from the East. A team that would probably make the playoffs
easily in the East isn’t even going to be in top 10 in the West. Trading Marcus Camby definitely hurts, but
it’s not like Denver hasn’t had to go long stretches without him on the floor
in the past. And I’ve always thought his
defense was very overrated, anyway.
Sure, he blocks a lot of shots, and alters even more, but his
straight-up defensive prowess isn’t all it’s cracked up to be. He is to blocking shots what Allen Iverson is
to steals. No one would call A.I. a
great defender, but he’s always near the league leaders in steals. It’s easy to put up great defensive stats
when that’s the only thing you’re trying for.
It’s Camby’s rebounding I think they’ll miss most. If they manage to beat the odds and keep Nene
and Kenyon Martin from going down, adding to their own long and storied injury
histories, they will still have at least a presence in the paint and, who
knows, maybe Renaldo Balkman actually has some defensive chops. The guy I’m intrigued with is Linus
Kleiza. Watching the Nuggets late in the
season and during their short-lived playoff stint, Kleiza’s play was giving me
flashbacks of Drazen Petrovic, the former New Jersey Nets star who was
tragically killed just as he beginning to emerge as a star. With Iverson, Carmelo Anthony, J.R. Smith and
Kleiza, Denver will score tons of points.
Defense is their Achilles heel, however.
So what else is new? The best
they can hope for is that a couple of the other playoff-caliber clubs slip a
bit, and they can slide into that eighth seed for another four or five game
post season stint.
I would say I am in agreement with you on everything here except for the props you give the T-Wolves. I like some of their young players, but they all strike me as doing their best on another team, later in their careers. Right now, this is a bad mix of youth to me. Love is way over-rated and will be lucky to carve out a journeymen career in this league. Jefferson is a scorer and can board too.....but he is not a game changer or a franchise player. The T-wolves just aren't worth talking about right now...they will be fortunate to win 20 games. All in all...very good synopsis!!
Granted they were an 8th seed last year, but Denver will was still a decent team. They really skrooood themselves by losing Camby. They should have lost Carl and looked for a coach to give that group one more shot. The talent is there...they just need some different principles to play by...like DEFENSE first maybe?????
I watched the Wolves a couple of times late last season and I like what I saw. I was hating that trade of O.J. Mayo when they first made it, and I still think in 10 years, we'll be looking back at that one as a big mistake, but Mike Miller makes them better right now. I think Love's overrated, too, but he still could be an effective role player. He's never going to be a star.
While we are seeing a change of players here in the NBA, some people seem to think that the vets are going to live forever and always will be the same great players, no matter what...
In the case of the Sacramento Kings, it is funny to see them being ripped for being inexperienced and young, but that will change in the years to follow...No one can predict how the newbies are going to play...and there is no magic wand to go poof! we are the best without going through hard times first.
It takes time and the players that were chosen for the next season are just a start...that is what rebuilding is all about...or should we go the route of Dallas and grab an aging vet(s) and go backwards??? I think not! When teams trade their vets they are usually on the downside of their NBA days so why waste time? It is time for the new NBA stars...
You rate Twolves to high.. The Kings and the Grizz will have better records.. I would rate the Nuggets higher only because of their scoring ability game in game out... Neither of these teams play much defense...
I am an actual professional writer (hard to believe, I know, but I do earn a living at it) who even owns my own publishing company in Maryland. I am a proud drop-out from the University of Maryland and still a life-long Terp fan. My blog is named in honor of my favorite former NBA player, Tim Hardaway, without all the homophobia. I just loved the guy and his game. I only hope he doesn't kick my #### for saying that.