Here are five guys who’s games are about to emerge into
stardom. Each one is in a good situation
on just the right team to excel. By the
end of the season, these guys will be talked about among the better players in
the league.
1. Rodney Stuckey,
Detroit
Billups-lite, Stuckey emerged in the playoffs during
Chauncey’s brief absence and showed the makings o####ame ready for prime
time. His rookie season was marred by
injuries early, and that may have prevented what could have been a
rookie-of-the-year type season and been the reason he was such a surprise in
the playoffs. He will continue to grow
into what will soon be a cornerstone role for the Pistons, taking minutes away
from Billups all the while.
2. Al Thornton, L.A.
Clippers
Tall, skilled and athletic, Thornton has got to be relishing
the opportunity to play in an up-tempo offense directed by Baron Davis. Young Al, one of several University of
Florida players scattered around the league who look like they might have the
goods to be solid pros if not more, will be a regular on nightly highlight
reels finishing what Davis starts. Plus,
playing in the same frontcourt with Chris Kaman and Marcus Camby can only give
Thornton more space to operate. He’s in
a great place to succeed, and I never thought I’d say that about a guy on the
Clippers.
3. Travis Outlaw,
Portland
One of Portland’s many and varied young talents, Outlaw
showed stretches of his potential during last season’s surprising run at
respectability. Outlaw is tall, 6’9” at
least, quick enough to drive past most defenders, and has the makings of a nice
shooter with three-point range. To me,
he’s a natural scorer, and his game only lacks the maturity to not press, and
improve his shot selection. He’s got the
physical tools to defend at least adequately, and coach Nate McMillan will
accept nothing less. Portland has as
much talent as any team in the league, and this season, that will start to
translate into success. Outlaw will be a
huge part of that.
4. Linus Kleiza,
Denver
I used to love Drazen Petrovic. His death was one of the great tragedies, in
my mind, o####uy cut down just as he was reaching stardom. Kleiza looks to be the second coming of
Petrovic. They even look somewhat alike with
similar body types, and Kleiza showed flashes of a well-rounded offensive game
at times last season. His shot was good,
if a little streaky, and he showed the quickness and the handle to get to the
basket when possible. He is also
aggressive and fearless, not afraid to take shots. Defensively, Denver is going to struggle even
more than usual this season, making scoring that much more important. The wide open game means that Kleiza is going
to get an opportunity to show his stuff.
5. Luis Scola, Houston
Scola came on strong as the season wore on for the
Rockets. By the end of the year, he was
even garnering some support for beating out Kevin Durant for Rookie of the
Year. Scola is a high energy player,
with a nice offensive game. He’s also
physical, and not afraid to defend. On a
Houston team that was lacking scoring at times, Scola will be a solid option
for points, along with newly acquired Ron Artest. He probably won’t start, as Shane Battier
gives Houston a more versatile defensive lineup, but he will get lots of
minutes and be a difference maker for the Rockets. Letting Scola go will be seen as one of the
few personnel mistakes made by the San Antonio Spurs in recent memory. Scola has a solid shot at the Sixth Man
award.
Others To Watch:
Rajon Rondo, Boston; Julian Wright, New Orleans; Al Horford, Atlanta;
Danny Granger, Indiana; Joakim Noah, Chicago
On the Decline
Here are some guys who are staring on the downslope of what
have been some pretty good careers. Each
of these guys, either through circumstance or loss of skills, will be
transitioning into lesser roles, some of them on other teams.
1. Ray Allen, Boston
Allen went through most of this season’s playoffs as less
than useless. He was, at times, the only
defensive liability on the floor for Boston, and his shot wasn’t just off, he
wasn’t even close. For a guy who’s
supposed to be such a great pure shooter, that’s a very disturbing trend. He’s either losing a step to age or he’s just
not a good fit on the team. I think it’s
a bit of both. In any case, he will
continue to backslide and will be the first of the big three to go.
2. Peja Stojakovic,
New Orleans
Peja had a nice rejuvenation last season, and he is in a nice place to keep it going as part of Chris Paul’s show featuring lots of
open threes in transition. But, as Bruce
Bowen showed in the playoffs, put an actual defender in his face, and he
struggles mightily. Plus, with the
addition of James Posey, more of the late-game attempts will be heading his way
because of a penchant for actually making important shots, unlike Peja. This season will mark the beginning a
fade-out for Stojakovic to a lesser role, especially if he remains with the
improving Hornets.
3. Chauncey Billups,
Detroit
This one is more situational than performance. With the emergence of Rodney Stuckey, a
player with eerily similar characteristics, Billups will see his role start to
diminish. As Stuckey improves and his
minutes go up, Billups’ minutes will go down.
The past couple of seasons, Chauncey ran out of gas by playoff time, and
his post season performances were up and down.
The reduced minutes will probably help him keep fresh legs in May and,
hopefully for Detroit, June, but because they are such similar players at the
same position, the once irreplaceable Billups will now become a redundant piece
heading for a new team next year, if not sooner.
4. Manu Ginobili, San
Antonio
Ginobili is a lot like Dwayne Wade in my eyes. For him to be effective, he has to be able to
play with a near-reckless abandon, throwing his body around without regard for
consequences. He’s also 31, and he has
put a lot of mileage on the engine, with the long championship NBA seasons and
International play for Argentina. Still,
last year was Ginobili’s best so far before injuries finally shut him down in
the playoffs. He’ll miss at least a
month to start this season after ankle surgery, maybe more, and who knows how
long it will be before he’s 100%. A
repeat of last season’s success is less likely than a repeat of the injuries
that doomed it for the Spurs.
5. Lamar Odom, L.A.
Lakers
Odom may still put up good numbers somewhere for a few more
years to come, but if his consistency and clutch play doesn’t improve quickly
for the Lakers, he’ll be the first guy out the door. Most players would prefer to be the guy who’s
skills add to a team and who’s addition would put them over the top. But Odom’s presence may be holding the Lakers
back, and his subtraction could be more valuable to them. After both the Clippers and the Heat gave up
on Odom and his great potential, a Laker team on the cusp of greatness moving
him out will be the deathknell to his championship hopes. What contender is going to want a highly-paid
guy who has ultimately been a disappointment everywhere he’s gone?
Others To Watch:
Antawn Jamison, Washington; Vince Carter, New Jersey; Steve Nash,
Phoenix; Marcus Camby, L.A. Clippers; Zydunas Ilgauskas, Cleveland
On The Way Out
Here are some guys who are on their last legs as regular
players. Some will retire, some will
become deep situational reserves on good teams, if they’re lucky. It’s also not a coincidence that four of these
guys have been traded recently. But this
year will be their swan song from being big contributors.
1. Bruce Bowen, San
Antonio
Bowen is 37 and his days as a premier defender are
past. Unfortunately for him, his three
point stroke seems to be leaving him as well.
He could still be a useful spot defender, but without the one thing that
made his less-then-limited offensive game bearable, after this season, his time
being more than an occasional reserve playing small and sometimes non-existent
minutes is done.
2. Jermaine O’Neal,
Toronto
This is O’Neal’s last shot at a comeback. If he spends more than half of this season
injured, or can’t get the strength and quickness back into his game, he’ll be
finished. The Raptors will be let down
in their hope that O’Neal could revive a once-promising career, and Jermaine
will never again be anything more than a longshot, if he doesn’t walk away
altogether. One thing he was always
lacking is the will to comeback and play o####rant Hill.
3. Ben Wallace,
Cleveland
Wallace was never the most gifted athlete, needing to work
harder than everyone else to survive. He
may still have the will, and that’s debatable, but his motor is just not there
any longer. He’s become increasingly
ineffective for long stretches, and that will only get worse as he continues to
age. Without more help than Cleveland
currently has, he’ll have to play a lot of minutes, and that will further
expose the not one, but two steps he’s lost.
Big Ben may hang around after this season, but because he’s such a
massive liability with his free throw shooting, he’ll never be more than a spot
bench reserve.
4. Shaquille O’Neal,
Phoenix
This will be Shaq’s last hurrah. He may not retire, he himself has suggested
he will stay through 2010, but if there is any game left in him, he’d better show it now. Shaq has never been one for excellent fitness,
and because of his size, it’s only a matter of time before leg injuries end his
playing days. It may not be one big one,
but it will always be something. That
and the fact that he is a severe liability defensively and with his free throw
shooting, and his offensive game has slowed to a crawl. It will be harder and harder for any head
coach to justify keeping him on the floor.
If he has any dignity, he’ll retire after this season before he
embarrasses himself.
5. Jason Kidd, Dallas
Kidd is another player who’s defensive liabilities and lack
of shooting will ultimately mean severely curtailed minutes as a reserve. He’s slowing down, can’t even disrupt the
quicker guards who are populating nearly every team in the league, and is not
even a threat to take a jump shot, making it tougher on the other four guys in
half court sets. He needs to run to be
effective, but he’s 35 and not that fast, and up-tempo against quicker guards
further exposes him as a defender. What
Sam Cassell did for the Celtics this season is about the best Kidd can hope for
in the future. Much sooner than he
thinks.
Others To Watch:
Michael Finley, San Antonio; Luke
Ridnour, Milwaukee; Alonzo Mourning, Miami; Brad Miller, Sacramento; T.J. Ford, Indiana
Next Up: The last
installment in my preseason ramblings, Fifteen Guys Who Would Be King.
Continuing
on with my preseason look at the Eastern Conference, here are teams 6 through
10. Last season, three teams at .500 or
worse made the playoffs. That is not
going to happen again. I believe
it’s going to take 42-45 wins to get into the post season this year. All five of these teams have the capability
of getting that done.
10. Toronto
Raptors
Toronto is
a trendy pick to move up in the East after trading for Jermaine O’Neal, but I
just can’t bring myself to believe that he’ll stay on the floor all season, or
be the kind of player he was five or six years ago. That being said, the Raptors were just 41-41
last season. They might actually have a
better record this year and still miss the playoffs. I like the move to clear out T.J. Ford and
hand the full time point guard reins to Jose Calderon. I expect him to end up in the top five in the
league in assists, averaging double figures.
This team’s main drawback is a total lack of interior strength. Their best big guys, Chris Bosh, Andrea
Bargnani and O’Neal, all play small, and that will kill them in the end. Still, they should be in playoff contention,
coming up just short.
9. Milwaukee
Bucks
I liked the
Bucks chances better before they traded Mo Williams. They did land Luke Ridnour in the deal, but
he has been nothing short of miserable the past couple of years playing on
really bad Seattle teams. If he can regain
some of the form he showed a few years ago when Seattle reached the second
round of the playoffs, the Bucks will have an excellent shot of landing a
playoff spot, and possibly making some noise when they get there. With Richard Jefferson, Michael Redd, Charlie
Villanueva, Andrew Bogut and explosive rookie Joe Alexander, he’ll have plenty
of chances for assists, but a rejuvenation is far from secure. If he can’t get it back together, Milwaukee
will be in major trouble at the point, and that will cost them a chance at
postseason play. I’m guessing Ridnour
will be solid yet unspectacular and the Bucks will miss the postseason by a
hair, possibly going down to the final day of the season.
8. Atlanta
Hawks
After years
of futility, the Hawks finally broke through and nearly pulled the greatest
upset in NBA playoff history, taking a Celtics team that was almost 30 games
ahead of them in to standings to a game seven.
Just having Mike Bibby on the floor for a full season should be enough
to get them over .500. And it’s a
distinct possibility that Marvin Williams will blossom now that Josh Childress
is playing in Greece, Al Horford will take a step up into All Star territory
and Josh Smith will move into superstar range.
And that’s not even mentioning Joe Johnson, who is still Atlanta’s best player. Depth is the main concern, I think. An injury or two that causes key players to
miss significant time will derail the entire season. My guess is they will be better right out of
the gate this year, and two of the three key young guys will step up their
games, crashing the post season for the second year in a row. The short bench will be their downfall,
however. The Hawks are a year and a few
shrewd personnel moves away from legitimate contention.
7. Washington
Wizards
This is
kind of a difficult team to figure. They
may have been better off letting Gilbert Arenas walk and spending that money
elsewhere, but they gave him an enormous contract despite missing nearly the
entire season with an injury, and the team performing very well without
him. Caron Butler, if he can stay away
from the injuries that have hurt him throughout his career, looks to be a guy
blossoming into a genuine star, and with Brendan Haywood looking like an actual
player for the first time in his career and young big guy Andray Blatche
looking as though he has a nice upside, the Wizards won’t be just the same old
run and gun team. Look for some of the
toughness they displayed in the Cleveland series to carry over into this year,
and winning home court advantage in the first round is a possibility. But I expect they will again have some injury
issues that will cost them a few games, and Agent Zero’s new contract will look
even worse by the end of the season. They’ll probably just be happy if they don’t have to face LeBron James and the
Cavs in the first round again.
6. Chicago
Bulls
This is the
team I think will move up the most in the East.
Remember, just two seasons ago, Chicago swept the defending champions in
the first round, before last season’s catastrophe, led by a disgruntled and
massively overrated Ben Gordon. From all
reports, Gordon is done as a Bull, and to me, that is definite addition by
subtraction. It would have been an
enormous mistake to pay him $10 million per year. Chicago is much better off giving the bigger
and more defense-minded Thabo Sefolosha more minutes than dealing with the
streaky, much-too-small, defenseless Gordon any longer. The main reason I think the Bulls will move
into the playoffs is that I don’t think their roster is done. I suspect there may be a major move coming up
sometime this season. The Bulls still
have an abundance of pieces to package together, and their inability to put
together deals for Pau Gasol, Kevin Garnett or any other quality player over
the past few seasons has held this team back.
This year, I believe they get it done.
With the right deal, they could move up even higher. I expect a slow start as Derrick Rose learns
the pro game, but a strong finish, and a reconstituted team that could possibly
pull a major upset come playoff time.
Can someone explain to me why the NBA doesn't change the rules about the free agency and trade moratoriums or at least wait and hold the draft once the moratorium is up and the next year's salary cap is set? Never did understand that. And it could lead to more big trades on draft day, making an otherwise somewhat dull affair more exciting. Anyway, I thought I'd look at a couple trades that I guess are official, if not formally so. I'm sticking to trades that involved actual proven players, not just draft pick swaps, although a couple of these included draft picks.
Toronto-Indiana The Raptors sent T.J. Ford, Rasho Nesterovic and the 17th pick of the draft (Roy Hibbert) to Indiana for Jermaine O'Neal. I guess this trade's official, although the last I heard, it couldn't be formally completed until July 1 because of some contract issue with Ford, and there was the small matter of physicals. Indiana got rid of one highly paid major injury risk for another less-highly paid major injury risk. They also receive a BIG center, albeit a slow, lumbering one in Roy Hibbert and another 7-footer in Nesterovic who played all of 15 minutes per game for Toronto in the playoffs. The Pacers are remaking their roster, looking for better, more consistent guard play and more strength inside. To me, Ford doesn't exactly scream "consistent" and, for a quick, slashing point guard, he is probably one bad fall away from it being his last. But at least he's not Jamaal Tinsley.
Toronto gets Jermaine O'Neal, a guy who was the league's most improved player back in 2002 and a three time All-NBA player (twice on the third team and once on the second team). Since then, he's become first team all injured reserve. During his years in Indiana, The Pacers lost in the first round in three of their five playoff seasons, the second round once, reaching only one conference finals and O'Neal didn't exactly develop a reputation as a prime time player in big games. Still, if he's healthy and motivated (both enormous if's) he could form a frightening combo with Chris Bosh.
Basically, it's a risk-reward move for Toronto. If it pays off, they've made a big step up in a weak conference. If it doesn't, all they gave up was an unwanted draft pick, a backup center and a point guard they pretty clearly no longer wanted or needed. Indiana really should have traded O'Neal two or three years ago when they might have gotten something a little more useful in return. Toronto wins this one, whatever happens.
Indiana-Portland In this one, Portland sent the 13th pick in the draft Brandon Rush and Jarrett Jack to Indiana for Ike Diogu and the 11th pick in the draft Jerryd Bayless.
Indiana did a little better this time, but now they've got two point guards. I'd bet they'll play much like Toronto did with Ford and Calderon, rotating quarters. Brandon Rush has a shot to be pretty good though.
Portland gets a little help inside with Diogu, if he gets off the bench, something that didn't happen very often in Indiana and something that's not guaranteed with Portland's depth of talent, and the guy they wanted in Bayless. Not really sold on Bayless as point guard, but with Brandon Roy, he won't need to be and he can score.
A trade of middling reserves and draft picks with potential who may or may not pan out. I'll call it even until I see what kind of players Rush and Bayless turn out to be. Both guys could be hit or miss in my mind.
Milwaukee-New Jersey Milwaukee sent Yi Jianlian and Bobby Simmons to New Jersey for Richard Jefferson. Wow, a trade with no draft picks. Straight up NBA players for NBA players.
New Jersey continued dumping salary in an effort to be in position to nab LeBron in a couple years. It seems like a foregone conclusion that LeBron is out of Cleveland, and most of the speculation about his NBA future is the Knicks and Nets, with both clubs taking steps to make that a reality. To me, it's a pretty dangerous move. I seem to recall the Chicago Bulls and some other teams a few years ago doing the same sort of preparation to sign a big-time upcoming free agent playing for a small market club who was thought to be available, Tim Duncan. Needless to say, it didn't happen. Duncan re-upped and those clubs counting on him were left out in the cold. In this day and age, NBA superstars never leave their teams as free agents. Trades maybe on occasion, but never as free agents. Don't count on this happening, either. But that doesn't mean that Vince Carter shouldn't be packing his bags, as well.
Yi has potential and wasn't really happy in Milwaukee anyway. A move to the Nets (soon to be Brooklyn) gives him the bright lights he wanted. Can he perform? Bobby Simmons was the most improved player a few years back with the Clippers before signing a big free agent deal that has never panned out.
As for the Bucks, with Jefferson, they've got some talent on their roster. Barring further moves (like a trade of Michael Redd) I wouldn't be surprised to see them in then playoffs in the east next season. Not really a contender, though.
Unless Yi lives up to the initial hype, or they actually do land LeBron later on, the Bucks win this one.
I was going to say something poignant about the trade between Minnesota and Memphis that sent Mike Miller to the Timberwolves with draftee Kevin Love and salary throw ins for draftee O.J. Mayo and salary throw ins. All I can say is Memphis had better hope Mayo is a superstar in the making because they gave up a solid NBA player in Miller and top 5 draft pick for him. Of course, there may be a reason why the Grizzlies have never won a playoff game, let alone a series. I'm sure Pau Gasol would agree. But hey, Marc Gasol's coming next year and he's gonna make that Laker trade look like it wasn't just flat-out theft. Right?
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.