Killer Crossover
by: spanish_jam
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Preseason Eastern Conference: Top Of The Heap
Sep 04, 2008 | 10:14AM | report this
Continuing on with my look at the Eastern Conference, here are the leading contenders for a spot in next year’s Finals.  In reality, barring unforeseen injuries, anyone other than the top three teams coming out of the East would be a major surprise, and Cleveland is only in that group because LeBron James has proven to be exceptionally difficult to eliminate, regardless of the personnel around him.  So, here’s my top five:

5.  Philadelphia 76ers

Ever since the trade of Allen Iverson a couple years ago, the Sixers have been stockpiling young talent.  About midway through last season, that talent began to gel, leading to a fantastic second half, a spot in the playoffs and a surprising 2-1 lead on Detroit in the first round.  They came back to earth after that, getting soundly thumped in the final three games of that series, but the foundation was in place for a return to contention.  Then, this offseason, the Sixers made a major splash, adding one of the few consistent 20 and 10 guys in the league in Elton Brand.  If Brand is indeed healthy, Philadelphia is poised to make a run at home court advantage in the first round.  With a solid point guard in Andre Miller, a first rate post player in Brand, a shot-blocking force in the middle with Sam Dalembert, an explosive slasher in Andre Igoudala and young talents like Louis Williams, Willie Green and Thaddeus Young, the Sixers are in the best shape since the won the East behind A.I. and Dikembe Mutombo in 2001.  This year, I expect a win total between 50 and 55, and an excellent chance at reaching their first conference final in eight years.

4.  Orlando Magic

Wow, did Dwight Howard suck in Olympic play.  Some would say that his performance was an indication that he’s still too young to be a genuine, carry-a-team superstar.  I’m not one of those.  Remember how bad Tim Duncan looked during his Olympic experience?  All he’s done since then is win a couple of NBA Titles.  FIBA rules just don’t allow for solid interior post players to dominate as they would during NBA games.  That’s probably why big guys from Europe are more likely to play like much smaller guards rather than using their size and strength to dominate.  Howard will be even better this season than he was last year.  The addition of Mickael Pietrus will turn out to be one of the better free agent signings, and Anthony Johnson gives them an actual backup point guard instead of a masquerading two-guard like Keyon Dooling.  I still believe that Jameer Nelson’s best role would be playing about 25-30 minutes a game as a scorer off the bench with point skills, and that the Magic won’t ascend to genuine championship level until they acquire a pass-first point guard who excels in post entry passes, but with Howard dominating the paint, and versatile scorers like Hedu Turkoglu and Rashard Lewis, Orlando will spend the entire season in the upper half of the East. 

3.  Cleveland Cavaliers

What is there left to say about LeBron James at this point?  About the only thing he hasn’t yet done is dominate an NBA Finals or win an MVP Award, and it seems like those accomplishments are only a matter of time.  My first reaction to the trade for Mo Williams was almost negative.  I like the addition of another guard who can actually score, and I’ve never believed that a team with a guy like LeBron really needs a pass-first point guard anyway, but I really liked the contributions Joe Smith brought to the team.  Unless 19-year-old J.J. Hickson is ready to step in right away, losing Smith leaves them a little thin up front, with Ben Wallace and Zydrunas Ilgauskas aging rapidly.  Not that Smith is a spring chicken by any means, but there’s something to be said for strength in numbers, not to mention a guy who comes off the bench, plays solid post defense, offensive rebounds and has a nice little 15-foot jumper.  I think the more pressing need was for a shooting guard better than Wally Szczerbiak, something Danny Ferry probably could have picked up at the local Wal Mart.  Still, I suspect there’s another major move coming at some point this season.  If this roster stays as is, the Cavs will be no better than fifth or sixth in the East and still a very dangerous postseason opponent likely to pull an upset or two.  I believe a move will come, another big time player comes to town and the Cavs will be even money to beat both Boston and Detroit and return to the Finals.

2.  Boston Celtics

The Celtics were a perfect storm of talent and motivation last season en route to their first title in 22 years.  They jumped out of the gate to the tune of 30-3, and held on down the stretch, taking the best record in the league by a relatively wide margin.  After some early playoff struggles, they came together to finish off Detroit and Los Angeles to finally hoist the trophy.  This season, the motivation from years of playoff failure for their big three of Kevin Garnett, Paul Pierce and Ray Allen will be somewhat lacking.  And I think the loss of James Posey will affect them more than some people believe.  All that being said, they are still, without question, one of the best teams in the league and a repeat title is very possible.  If Rajon Rondo ever gets even an adequate jump shot, he could be one of the top point guards in the league for the next decade or so.  Kendrick Perkins, Leon Powe and even Glen Davis all have the potential for significant improvement, as well.  The recent signing of Darius Miles is pretty intriguing.  Portland wrote him off with what they called a career-ending injury, but I suspect some of that had to do with his attitude and the Blazers desire to be rid of his large contract and malcontent nature.  If he can still play even close to the talent he showed a few years ago, Boston may very well repeat.  I expect a little bit of a letdown, especially early in the regular season, but an eventual record approaching 60 wins again and a solid playoff run that comes up just short this time around.

1.  Detroit Pistons

The Pistons resisted making major changes this offseason after losing their third consecutive Eastern Conference Finals, meaning that they will enter this year with basically the same club as last year.  This may be the last go-round for the veteran starting five of Chauncey Billups, Rip Hamilton, Tayshaun Prince, Rasheed Wallace and Antonio McDyess, and anything short of another title will definitely mean the end of their time together.  Rodney Stuckey emerged late last year and in the playoffs as the obvious heir-apparent to Billups, and he will only get better this year, along with high-energy reserve Jason Maxiell.  Detroit is even taking a shot at salvaging the career of another guy with talent who hasn’t worked out anywhere else with Kwame Brown, a task they’ve excelled at in the past.  But Brown may be their toughest challenge of all.  I believe that some of the same motivators that helped the Celtics last year will work for the Pistons this year.  I expect Detroit to jump out early and end up with the best record in the East, possibly the entire league.  The Pistons major problem ever since winning the title in 2004 has been a lack of focus in the playoffs, losing games they shouldn’t have and consistently digging themselves into holes they couldn’t always climb out of.  This year, I think they keep their focus and return to the NBA Finals after a three-year absence.

So that’s how I see the Eastern Conference going into this year.  As always, there will be trades, injuries and unexpected performances, both good and bad, that will change the makeup of the conference.  But right now, this is how I see it ending up.  Next, the bottom five in the West.

4 Comments | Add a comment   categories: NBA, Philadelphia 76ers, Orlando Magic, Cleveland Cavaliers, Boston Celtics, Detroit Pistons
 
Playing For The Lottery
Jul 11, 2008 | 9:31AM | report this
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? 
7 Comments | Add a comment   categories: NBA, Baron Davis, Elton Brand, Corey Maggette
 
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ABOUT ME


spanish_jam
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.
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