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Any love for the Celtics? Lol
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Any love for the Celtics? Lol
Man, you guys are high on Indy, can't really see them finishing above Washington for one.
Sac trading Gay for Gibson would leave them a bit short at small forward - classic case of robbing Peter to pay Paul.
Indy has the biggest question mark over them with a new game style and the return of PG13.. and given such a drastic overhaul of their starting lineup, I'm betting they're slow off the blocks but build into the season. Ellis is a handy player to add in, and in an Eastern conference bereft of genuine playoff teams I think they'll do quite well.
The Wizards are hard to place for mine.. I like the way they go about it, but I'm struggling to see where they've improved.
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Being a Spurs fan I'll come back and contribute here once the playoffs start.
On that topic, if the Spurs make the playoffs this year (and let's face it we will with West and LMA coming in) they will equal the immortal Celtics team of the 50's and 60's with 19 straight appearances in the post season.
Not a bad run.
I just see too much skill duplication in Indy - Hill, Monta, Stuckey, PG - there's four guys who need the ball in their hands. Was really surprised that they re-signed Stuckey after investing in Monta, seems like overkill.
More ominously, Indy's probably got the worst frontcourt in the league on paper now - Mahinmi, Allen, Hill & Turner. They're obviously high on Turner, but it's a bit much to expect a rookie to carry the load up front. Just can't see where the spacing is going to come from, or Mahinmi aside, the defence.
They're banking on incremental improvement from Wall, Beal & Otto Porter. The latter was really impressive in the playoffs, showed great signs.
In reality they're waiting for KD, but the East is so weak they could end up as high as #2. Injuries aside, they're certainly not missing the playoffs.
Man, you guys are high on Indy, can't really see them finishing above Washington for one.
Sac trading Gay for Gibson would leave them a bit short at small forward - classic case of robbing Peter to pay Paul.
They're exceptionally high on Turner, and I'll admit that I was surprised by their wrecking ball approach to their frontcourt. But I think there's enough talent there and a guy like Solomon Hill should be able to contribute a little more this year. I also quite like Rakeem Christmas who they just drafted.. I guess we'll see how it plays out. Perhaps the mystique of PG is having an influence.
If they truly are waiting on KD I get the feeling they'll be more than a little disappointed. And I like Porter, but I'd like to see a little consistency shown over a longer stretch before making any calls on their championship prospects. Definitely wont miss playoffs though

Washington are interesting. Without Paul Pierce they'll lack that veteran in the locker room. Nene is injury prone as anything. And the mix doesn't quite feel right. Who starts at the 4? Who starts at the 3?
Indiana last year were really competitive and they didn't even have Paul George. Getting George back and adding Monta Ellis. Myles Turner I like as a rookie and Jordan Hill is a productive big man. Well coached. So I feel they'll be in much the same conversation as Washington. The main question for me is how they go in changing the pace of play.
I expect the Kings without Gay would be better as Toronto were and Memphis was after trading him. Gay is such an extremely anti-analytics guy as such a high volume shooter who goes for too many long 2s and isn't great from 3pt range.
Between the SF/SG positions the Kings have: McLemore, Belinelli, C.Butler and Casspi who are all worth having as part of a rotation. James Anderson is another who can stretch the floor and may be worth finding some minutes for. I don't have a problem with the numbers and given how anti-analytics Gay is, I'd back Sacramento to win more games without Gay than with Gay, with no Gay meaning better shots and more efficient offence.
For bigs all the Kings in terms of worthwhile bigs is: Cousins, Koufos and Cauley-Stein. They're all centers. Maybe Caron Butler could play as a stretch 4. But they simply don't have an option at power forward. Taj Gibson alongside Cousins having watched Gibson for years is a perfect fit as a guy who defenders, rebounds, gets offensive boards, finishes. Will get shots in the flow of the offense without demanding the ball. He covers on defence and defenders the rim and can defend the perimeter.
Also from a pace perspective. While the Kings owner advocates a fast pace and a four man defence with a cherry picker on offence. Cousins, Rondo and those other pieces I feel in a half court, slow game would be much better suited.
So that's a lot of why the Kings are a mess, even though Divac has quietly added some good pieces.
There's talent there for the Pacers, but most of the players blessed with it play in the same positions
Over on the bball board I was previewing Indy and just couldn't get my head around their likely rotations for the season. Maybe they actually will play PG at the four full-time, or even Solomon Hill. They've got Budinger and CJ Miles to somehow fit in too. Tbh I don't think they expected David West to walk - he'd have been a natural playing partner for Monta in the same manner that Dirk was in Dallas.
Roster seems un-balanced and ripe for a trade, trendy small-ball notwithstanding. I don't think Washington are ready for championship contention either (hence waiting for KD), but I do think they're still comfortably in the 2-6 range in the East. Indy's more likely to be 7-10.
They got within a bee's dick of the ECF with pretty much the same team and with Wall missing games. Nene and Hump will split the majority of the time at the four one would imagine. They're actually pretty deep at the three - Porter, Dudley, Alan Anderson & Martell Webster. None of them perfect, but enough variety in skill-sets to cover all contingencies. Dudley and Anderson are underrated, although they might not be healthy to start the season.
Jordan Hill's greatest attribute is offensive rebounding, but that goes missing when he's asked to play as a mediocre stretch big. He's also horrible defensively - Ed Davis was the underrated big for the Lakers last season, Hill's more an empty numbers guy. Myles Turner could be good, but how often do rookie big men actually help their teams? Re. Monta, I just don't see how he fits alongside three other perimeter players who also need the ball, and without a legitimate floor-stretcher up front. Maybe PG will play PF, but that'll leave them horribly exposed defensively.
That's become a well-worn cliche, but it's something of a myth. Rudy has a TS% of 56 in Sacramento, which is actually above average for a high volume perimeter player, particularly one who doesn't shoot a heap of threes. He shot 36% on threes last year, which is respectable. He also gets to the FT line.
If you look up the Kings on/off stats last season, their problem was their bench, not Rudy. Their starting line-up was actually a net positive and Gay had a VORP rating of +2.5. Sacramento also finished top half of the league for offensive efficiency despite the handicap of being coached by Ty Corbin.
McLemore and Belinelli would split time at SG one would think. I like Casspi, but he's an energy bench guy. Butler's a break-glass option, not a viable starter anymore.
Taj is a very decent player, but I'd be highly surprised if the Kings traded Rudy for him, particularly after extending him so recently. I wouldn't be surprised if Rudy himself plays a little stretch four this season. Suspect WCS will get plenty of mins at PF as he's an unbelievably mobile defender.
The four man defence thing was always blown up way out of proportion. As for preferred pace, I dunno if I'd want Rondo pounding the ball in the half court - see Dallas, 2015. If the Kings want to run they needed improved interior D and better shooting on the wings, areas they have addressed.
Will it work? Who knows, but until the Kings get an elite stretch four I doubt they'll want to play a 90s style grind, especially with George Karl coaching.
I'm not convinced Porter is or will be good enough to be a long term rotation player let alone starter. Dudley, Anderson and Webster are all low level rotation players so I don't share your view on those guys specifically.
I see Washington going as far as Wall and Beal take them.
Jordan Hill should start at centre for Indiana so I'm not sure where you are coming from talking about him as a floor spacer. He will be the guy patrolling the boards for Indiana with George at the four with Turner coming off the bench and that first rotation big man at either big man position. When Hill and Turner play together I'd expect Turner to be used as the floor spacer as something of Indiana's LaMarcus Aldridge equivalent as that big who stretches the floor more so than crashes the boards as Hill more so does.
George Karl is a terrible choice of coach for Cousins. Cousins needs to play in the half court - see record with Mike Malone. He turns over the basketball too much otherwise.
Rudy Gay on the other hand is best in a fast-break, open court game that doesn't get bogged down in half court play.But if you're convinced a fast pace will work for Sacramento. Then sure. Keep Gay.
Porter's got it all to prove, but being able to do it in the playoffs bodes well for him. As for the others, Dudley had a huge influence on the Bucks last season, their fans were devastated to lose him. Anderson was probably Brooklyn's second best player in the playoffs against Atlanta, as cheap 3 & D options go he's as good as it gets. They also picked up Kelly Oubre in the draft - none of them are Pierce, but they do bring different skills.
If Indy start with a George/Hill frontline, they're going to get brutalised inside. Hill's strictly a third big, any team that starts him is asking for trouble.
Does Boogie need to play in the half-court though? He has enough handles, mobility and shooting range to hold his own in the open court one would think - it's not as if Shaq's Magic or Shaq's Lakers teams were coach by Mike Fratello, right?
On the other hand, one of Rudy's greatest assets is his ability to make a bucket on a broken possession. Doesn't mean he's not suited to an up-tempo style, but he's hardly a fish out of water in the half court either.
Perhaps look at it like this - did the Kings give Koufos $33 mil and use a high lottery pick on WCS just to have them both back-up Cousins? The inescapable conclusion is that they plan to play at least one, possibly both with Boogie. Otherwise they could've just drafted Mudiay, Johnson or Winslow.
I do see Cousins as being that pure half court player and someone not suitable for faster player. You're completely right about his set of attributes. But his turnover numbers of 4.5 turnovers per 36 are just embarrassing. Additionally in the uptempo system Cousins' defence I've found from the eye-test suffers as he spends too much energy on offense when the tempo is higher.
The intent by Sacramento has all along been reported that Cauley-Stein will start alongside Cousins. The issue I see is with Cousins an inside scorer and Cauley-Stein only able to score on lobs and put-backs. That combination as defensively versatile as Cauley-Stein is, just won't work. Particularly in a team that wants to play up tempo. You can't have a 7 footer and a 6'11, 270 pound guy playing in that system. Let along just looking at that pairing in isolation. In modern basketball at least one of the two bigs needs to be able to hit perimeter shots. Cousins can hit some mid range jumpers, but he is a low-post scorer so Sacramento really aren't from a chemistry standpoint going to get much from any of that I'm not anticipating.
Koufos will be the backup big man and get those primary minutes off the bench. And he'll be solid enough. But as another 7 footer and not a guy who stretches the floor by position. That front court is not a front court I'd be comfortable playing with if I was a Kings fan.
As for Indy. I'm ok with Hill and George as a starting frontline. Maybe George moves back to the 3 and Turner ends up starting when they figure out their perimeter is too small to play that way from the get go. In the current NBA other than P.Gasol, Randolph, Griffen and a small few others. There aren't that many bigs that can punish someone like Hill for a lack of ability on the defensive end. It's mostly perimeter guys who hurt teams on the inside in the NBA today, so if Paul George, George Hill etc can limit penetration, Jordan Hill I'm ok with seeing start as someone who hits the boards and can score some even though I concede on the defensive end he is poor.
For those looking for an interesting hypothetical trade as it's never not trade season in the NBA.
What about:
Chicago get: Paul George
Indiana get: Joakim Noah, Tony Snell and Doug McDermott
Who says no first?
Indy says no.
You only trade for Jo if you're on the verge of contention, and trading PG puts Indy right back to square one. I love Jo's game, but he'll age in dog years and will be out of contract soon IIRC. McDermott's still pretty much an unknown quantity, and Snell doesn't move the needle much.
The Pacers would also be fried by their own fans if they traded George - they'd only do it if they were convinced he'll never fully recover from his injuries. Health willing he's one of the few untouchables in the league. He's a two-way player, and they're the easiest to build around.
Great start by the cavs even though dropped game one, Mo Williams and Richard Jefferson have been welcomed additions. The bench is looking a heap better than last season, cunningham is up and down as expected from a guy with less than 50 NBA games. Lebron has started slow.. which is pleasing given the results. Kyrie and Shump out atm also. Looking forward to the Miami game.
Bulls out played the cavs but still almost got the win was a positive sign. Memphis simply did not rock up to play basketball, could not buy a bucket in the first 15 mins of the game. They seem to match up horrendously with the cavs, blown out twice last year also.
Pelicans are struggling, they have a few(possibly a lot?) outs but they haven't even been competitive yet. Portland jumped them big time. Already doubting my 6th man choice because Collison will be starting very soon haha.
Jefferson fits in much better than Marion, he can make a high % of open 3's, he is good enough on a fast break and is a decent defender. When Shump comes back I think JR will lose minutes and Jefferson keeps his 15-18 a game. Jefferson is shooting 69% from the field and 71% from 3 so far this season and was also shooting well in preseason. Obviously those numbers will drop but if he can stay at around 45-48% from 3 then he has a lot of value for the cavs. Cunningham is purely depth whilst Irving is out, right now he is getting mins ahead of Harris. When Irving and Shump come back Cunningham will be out of the rotation very quickly.LeBron is really struggling with his back. I saw the highlights and they showed LeBron every time he was on the bench having his back stretched. It is possible LeBron has exited his prime? It will make for interesting viewing. I like for the Cavs how Kevin Love offensively has been much more involved. I've been surprised that Jefferson and Cunningham made the Cavs roster. LeBron needs some help on the wings but I'm not sure either are the answers. Richard Jefferson the past seven years has looked finished. Impressive first two games but I can't see him maintaining his current play over the course of the season. Cunningham likewise is a curious addition. He has struggled having played on good teams and has been unable to get minutes.
I think the Cavs probably need to get trading. Trade Varajao for a wing player. Use those Haywood and Miller trade exceptions to add talent from teams looking to unload players.
Mo Williams though I agree with you on is a good backup point and a good addition as someone who can play off the ball and catch and shoot some 3s which works perfectly with LeBron.
Anthony Davis on opening night is said to have gotten caught up in the MVP talk. Game 2 he settled. He just doesn't have much of a supporting cast with those guys always hurt. The Pelicans also really need to shake up that roster and get some better fitting pieces. Build around Davis and Holiday and move those other name players for some better compliments and guys with better durability.
I'll start..... West and East predictions as well as Champions & MVP.
West
1. San Antonio Spurs
2. LA Clippers
3. Golden State Warriors
4. Oklahoma Thunder
5. New Orleans Pelicans
6. Houston Rockets
7. Phoenix Suns
8. Memphis Grizzlies
East
1. Cleveland Cavaliers
2. Toronto Raptors
3. Atlanta Hawks
4. Chicago Bulls
5. Washington Wizards
6. Miami Heat
7. Indiana Pacers
8. Milwaukee Bucks
Champions
LA Clippers
Runners Up
Cleveland Cavaliers
MVP
Anthony Davis
Curry is on another level, he makes long contested 3's too easily.
I really should have stuck with my gut and gone Blake Griffin as MVP. The bloke is a monster... Keeps this up and he becomes more influential to his team than LBJ.
