Wow, did Baron Davis' dreams of a winning return to L.A. vanish quickly. I wasn't really sold on the the Davis-Elton Brand combo as a playoff ticket anyway. For one thing, Brand--Mr. 20 and 10 as he's being called nowadays--has made the playoffs all of once in nine seasons in a league where over half the teams make the postseason. Admittedly, he did play with some lousy teams with the Clippers and Bulls, but everyone should know by now that a good player on a bad team always puts up inflated stats. Would he have a career 20-10 averages on championship contenders? I don't think so. And his one playoff appearance was on a team led by Sam Cassell when he could still play, a bonafide winner everywhere he goes. I mean the guy helped lead Milwaukee and Minnesota to Conference Championship Series, not to mention his three rings with Houston and Boston. Does Baron Davis have that kind of pedigree? Nope.
The Clippers did win a first round series that year, but they beat the Nuggets,a perpetual first round whipping boy. And they did take a Phoenix team without Amare Stoudamire to a game seven, but came up short. All the promise in that team quickly vanished, however, and they were back to the same old Clips. Davis, on the other hand, has been on a handful of playoff teams in his career, but never got out of the second round either. Last year, he played in all 82 games, but he only played in more than 60 games twice in the previous six seasons, and never more than 67. Keeping him healthy and on the court has always been an issue.
But now, that doesn't matter. Brand is a new Philadelphia 76er and all the talk is about how they are championship contenders now. Well, not quite. For one thing, let's see what kind of shape he's in after missing all but 8 games last year before we anoint them as this year's Celtics. There's a lot of talk about the good nucleus, and how they were up and coming before signing Brand. Well, they do have some good young talent, but they were still 40-42 last year, in a season where they clearly over-performed in a really bad conference. They did go up 2-1 on the mighty Pistons, but we all know Detroit has a tendency to lose games in the playoffs to teams it should stomp. Once they fell behind, Detroit crushed Philadelphia handily in the last three games. Did the Sixers actually win those two games or did the Pistons just sleep-walk through them? I'm guessing the latter.
Does this mean Philly will miss the playoffs? Doubtful in the mediocre east, but not out of the realm of possibility. First of all, they need to match whatever deal is on the table for restricted free agent Andre Igoudala, then they have to keep everyone healthy and on the court. Even at that, I still don't see them being much better than a lower playoff seed, first round exit kind of club. And don't expect three teams at .500 or worse making the playoffs in the East again this year, so they'd better approach 50 wins, or they could be back in the lottery themselves.
As for the Clippers, I would throw the entire check book at Josh Smith and pray that the Atlanta Hawks won't be intelligent enough to match. Or maybe make an enormous offer sheet to Igoudala just to drive up his price for Philly. Nothing like a little gamesmanship, just ask the Warriors, who signed away the Clippers other best player, Corey Maggette. Outside of that, and probably even with that, it's lottery time again.
Maggette, on the other hand, showed himself to be a true loser. He was courted by virtually every legit title contender in the league; San Antonio, Boston, Detroit, Cleveland; for mid-level exception money ($5.8 million). Instead, he took $10 million to take Baron Davis's place in Golden State, moving from one of the league's perpetual losers to another. Golden State does have some talent, but even coach Don Nelson admits he's going with younger players this season at the expense of victories. Backtracking from their 48 wins of last year isn't going to get it done in a conference where the eighth seed had 50 wins, and who really knows how good Portland can be? He could have played one year with San Antonio or Detroit on a national stage, maybe taken home a ring, and still gotten a big payday next year. Or better yet, two years polishing a championship resume then been in position to cash in on the salary cap space left over from the LeBron James losers. But no, he took the money today over any realistic chance for a title. Golden State may grow into a contender in two or three years, but in the West as of now, they're still a lottery team. I guess he just wanted to stay in his comfort zone, watching the playoffs on t.v. rather than playing in them. But hey, at least he can afford a nice couch.
By the way, I'm really hoping the Lakers trade for Ron Artest. Talent-wise, he'd be a perfect fit for what they need, but is the Staples Center really big enough for the egos of Kobe and RonRon? I can't wait to see how long they can go before being at each other's throats. And Artest's not like Shaq, who will just childishly rip someone behind their back. He'll smack Kobe upset his head if the mood strikes him. After all, what's more fitting than the team from Hollywood having a little drama?
It seems like I've been hit or miss lately. Not 24 hours after I made the strong proclamation that NBA superstars never leave their teams as free agents, Baron Davis opted out of his contract with the Warriors to, most likely, sign as a free agent with the Clippers. But hey, who could have expected a guy to take a $4 million pay cut to go play for the Clippers, of all teams, especially after their best two players, Corey Maggette and Elton Brand, both opted out to become free agents themselves? Now, you can argue (as I probably would) that Davis isn't really a superstar, but he is a great player that's clearly the the face of a franchise and team leader. Close enough.
And while Brand's opt out is most likely a play for what amounts to a contract extension, Maggette is as good as gone. And it looks like Gilbert Arenas may be gone from Washington, as well, although staying is still a possibility. If this were two years ago, or even last season, Agent Zero might have made a case for being a superstar. (By the way, is Agent Zero his nickname because of the number on his jersey or the number of late May and June playoffs games he's appeared in?) Now, he's coming off of a severe injury and nobody knows if he'll be his normal explosive scoring self, so the superstar tag doesn't apply. Same for Brand. Until we see if he's actually healthy and back playing like the MVP candidate he was three years ago, he's just another big name guy looking for a comeback season.
Davis himself is usually all about injured reserve, but he actually played all 82 games last year, right up to the point that Don Nelson benched him for the second half of the last game of the season. Apparently, that annoyed Baron so much that he left money on the table in Oakland to suit up for what is quite possibly the worst franchise in all of sports. Of course, if he can somehow win leading the Clips, he'll become legendary. After all, look what leading the New Jersey Nets to two straight NBA Finals did for Jason Kidd's reputation. Before that, he was just another wife-beater with a lousy a jump shot that Phoenix couldn't get rid of fast enough.
These three guys are most likely going to take home enormous amounts of cash this off-season, but my money's on the three of them not playing 82 games next season combined. Meanwhile, Maggette may be the guy most likely to rejuvenate his career. If, as the rumor suggests, he lands in San Antonio playing with great players and a great coach, gets his head on straight and remembers how he used to play defense, he may be hoisting a trophy this time next year while the other three are hoisting a cold one while watching the playoffs on TV.
While my free agency comment was a little suspect, I did, however, suggest that eventually, a big name player was going to head overseas for the money. When I wrote it, I expected it to be a year or two or three before someone tried it, but apparently, one of the top rated incoming freshmen in the country, Brandon Jennings, is strongly considering (i.e., taking the money and running) signing overseas instead of playing for the University of Arizona next year. The NBA had better be very, very careful with how they handle this.
In my mind, given the option of going right into the NBA, the very thought of playing in Europe would never, ever have been a factor. But now, faced with a year of essentially indentured servitude to the NCAA (especially for big time talents), real hard cash and actual professional-level instruction not only will become a factor, it's most likely the best decision. Now consider, if Jennings dominates over there, presuming he goes, builds a fan base, gets some international marketing dollars, will it be all that easy to get him back? After all, he will still have the NBA rookie pay scale to adhere to.
Tiago Splitter stayed in Europe this year instead of coming to the Spurs because of the rookie scale. Guard Juan Carlos Navarro of the Grizzlies, despite showing promise and most likely lining up for a nice payday, split back to Spain, primarily because being paid in Euros is now better than being paid in dollars. I'd be willing to bet somewhere David Stern is praying Brandon Jennings is a massive flop. Otherwise, there could be big, big problems on the horizon for the NBA. Isn't Internationalism great?
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.