
| Preseason Preview: Toronto Raptors | |
Toronto Raptors 2006-07 record: 47-35 1st in the Atlantic Added: Maceo Baston, Jason Kapono, Jamario Moon Lost: Luke Jackson, Morris Peterson, Pape Sow, P.J. Tucker PG: T.J. Ford, Jose Calderon, Darrick Martin SG: Anthony Parker, Juan Dixon, Carlos Delfino SF: Jason Kapono, Joey Graham, Jamario Moon PF: Chris Bosh, Jorge Garbajosa, Kris Humphries, Maceo Baston C: Andrea Bargnani, Rasho Nesterovic
Versus Bulls 2006-07 Home Fri. December 8, W 93-90 Away Fri. December 28, W 107-97 Home Tue. February 13, L 111-112 Away Sun. April 8, L 89-103 2007-08 Home Sat. November 10, 7:30PM Away Sun. November 25, 11AM Home Wed. April 16, 7:30PM Overview: The Raptors became the darlings of the league last season emerging from the much of the Atlantic division to win 47 games, a 20 game improvement from the previous season. They were high scoring, energetic, and getting key contributions from a roster full of no-names. All the experts ripped them for trading Charlie Villanueva, how’d that work out? They laughed at bringing back Anthony Parker after failing in the NBA a decade ago. Jorge Garbajosa wasn’t a household name. Andrea Bargnani was the #1 pick, but few Americans had ever seen him play. It worked. It was great to see. They were not Chris and the Boshettes, they were just a talented, hungry team that got it done. It is going to kill me to write it, but I don’t think that they will have an encore performance. Lost amid the good story was the fact that they won the Atlantic because Philadelphia, Boston, and New York were a mess, and New Jersey was battling injuries all year. The Nets exposed the Raptors for being just a good team last April in the 1st round of the playoffs. They couldn’t contain Jason Kidd or stop Vince Carter. Now with the additions of Kevin Garnett, Ray Allen, Zach Randolph, and the return of Ricard Jefferson and Nenad Krstic, I’m not so sure that the Raptors can play .500 ball within the division. Last season’s 11-5 mark within the division was second to only the Bulls, 12-4, in the East and 3rd in the NBA, the Mavericks were the best at 14-2. A better division might send Toronto back to being a .500 team. What they mean for the Bulls? Much like the Celtics and Magic, I think the presence of Chris Bosh on the floor is an unwelcome sight at the United Center. Other than the games where he was slowed or missing with an early season knee injury, he massacred Ben Wallace on the offensive end. It isn’t fair for Ben Wallace to have to guard a guy like Bosh. He’s 23 years old, incredible athlete, has the ability go out on the perimeter because he has a face up game and a 15-footer, and is a great finisher around the hoop. With the shooters around him in Bargnani, Kapono, Parker, Dixon, and Garbajosa, how do you give help? I just don’t like the way the Bulls match up with the Raptors, and Bulls fans might hope that the Atlantic offers better resistance this year. Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
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| Preseason Preview: Houston Rockets | |
Houston Rockets 2006-07 record: 52-30 3rd in the Southwest Added: Aaron Brooks, Jackie Butler, Steve Francis, Mike James, Carl Landry, Luis Scola Lost: Juwan Howard, Scott Padgett, Kirk Snyder, Vassilis Spanoulis, Jake Tsakalidis
PG: Rafer Alston, Mike James, Steve Francis, Aaron Brooks, John Lucas SG: Tracy McGrady, Bonzi Wells, Luther Head SF: Shane Battier, Justin Reed PF: Luis Scola, Chuck Hayes, Steve Novak, Carl Landry C: Yao Ming, Dikembe Mutombo, Jackie Butler
Versus Bulls 2006-07 Away Thurs. November 18, L 100-101 Home Mon. January 8, L 77-84 2007-08 Home Sat. December 22, 7:30PM Away Sun. February 24, 7PM Overview: A lot of people are making the Houston Rockets their “sleeper” team. I’m trying to figure out how Luis Scola and the 2007 incarnation of Steve Francis is going to elevate them above the Spurs, Mavericks, and Suns. I am not denying that it is possible, but I don’t see how they are going to be significantly better this year. Scola is the latest in the line of talented players from Argentina. He has started for their national team for some time and has developed a following among scouts and media people. During the FIBA Tournament of the Americas, he led the Argentinians to the finals averaging 19.5 points, 7.5 rebounds, and 2 assists for the tournament. He is a talented, but athletically limited power forward on a team full of talented but athletically limited players. Beyond Tracy McGrady, the Rockets don’t have an elite athlete in their rotation. Aaron Brooks, Luther Head, and Jackie Butler are athletic but appear to be buried behind veterans. I think that even if all their new parts come into their roles, they still are only a 55 win team. I’m not going to take shots on a 55-win team. I’d love if the Bulls were a 55-win team, but the Rockets are victims of geography. To win the title, somehow they need to surpass the Mavericks and Spurs in their division. If somehow they can accomplish that, then they still have to find out how they will match up with the Phoenix Suns or Golden State Warriors in a seven game series. They are 1-6 against the Suns the past couple years and were overwhelmed at home by the new look Warriors last April in their only meeting with the true Nellyball lineup. They limited by their athleticism, and while Jeff Van Gundy was run out of town for trying to hide it by taking the air out of the ball, I don’t think Rick Adelman will have the magic touch with which to turn the clock back on Steve Francis or give Yao hops. What they mean for the Bulls? While the Rockets don’t match up well with a lot of teams in the West, they do with the Bulls. The Bulls just do not have the personnel to handle either Yao or McGrady, and this has caused the Bulls to lose 5 of 6 meetings since those two have been teamed up. I might be crazy, but I think that the Rockets are a team where Joakim Noah and Tyrus Thomas can have some success and might be the keys to having some success against them. The Rockets cannot match level of activity that those two can bring to the game, and against a team that on a whole is just better than them, the Bulls need to get extra opportunities and cheap put backs. This could come back to backfire if they just pick up three or four fouls and couple turnovers in five or six minutes, but I think might be worth the risk.
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| Preseason Preview: Miami Heat | |
Miami Heat 2006-07 record: 44-38 First in the Southeast Added: Joel Anthony, Mark Blount, Brian Chase, Daequan Cook, Ricky Davis, Devin Green, Penny Hardaway, Alexander Johnson, Smush Parker, Jeremy Richardson, Marcus Slaughter Lost: Michael Doleac, Eddie Jones, Jason Kapono, Gary Payton, James Posey, Wayne Simien, Antoine Walker PG: Jason Williams, Smush Parker, Chris Quinn, Brian Chase SG: Dwyane Wade, Daequan Cook, Anfernee Hardaway, Jeremy Richardson SF: Ricky Davis, Dorell Wright, Devin Green PF: Udonis Haslem, Alexander Johnson, Marcus Slaughter, Joel Anthony C: Shaquille O’Neal, Alonzo Mourning, Mark Blount, Earl Barron
versus Bulls 2006-07 Away Tue. October 31 W 108-66 Home Wed. December 27 W 109-103 Home Sat. January 27 W 100-97 Away Wed. March 7 L 70-103 Home Sat. April 21 W 96-91 Playoffs Home Tue. April 24 W 107-89 Playoffs Away Fri. April 27 W 104-96 Playoffs Away Sun. April 29 W 92-79 Playoffs 2007-08 Away Wed. January 16, 6PM Home Thu. February 14, 7PM Away Tue. April 8, 6:30PM Overview: The Heat got exposed last year for being old, injured, and disinterested. While ridding itself of the Gary Payton, who hung on for three years too many, and Antoine Walker can only help them, Miami is going through a quiet rebuilding year. Rebuilding? Yes, I believe when a team changes seven players from one year to the next that they are undergoing a rebuilding project. Despite being named as possible destinations for almost every available free agent, the only name players they landed were Ricky Davis, Mark Blount, Smush Parker and Penny Hardaway. While they will get all the headlines of the newcomers, I think that it will be who makes the team from the group of Alexander Johnson, Devin Green, Brian Chase, Jeremy Richardson, Joel Anthony, and Marcus Slaughter that Bulls fans should think about, because they were Bulls specific signings. The Heat felt like they ran into a bad matchup at a bad time in getting swept by the Bulls. Eddie Jones and Gary Payton could not keep up. James Posey and Udonis Haslem are not anything special as players, but were playing 30 minutes per against the Bulls because they were the two guys who could run the Bulls. Riley brought in as many high energy, athletic bodies as he could in the hopes that they can rub off on the veterans. In fairness, these guys do have some pedigree. Slaughter left San Diego State a year early and made a bigger name for himself playing for Pinar Karisyaka in Turkey averaging a double-double in a very good Turkish league than he did in college. Jeremy Richardson had a similar 06-07 campaign where he averaged 17.5 PPG in Fort Worth of the NBDL while showing that he had NBA range and athleticism after flying under the radar while playing at Delta State. Devin Green bounced around the world playing with the Los Angeles D-Fenders where he averaged 19.3 points, 4.6 rebounds, 3.9 assists and 1.50 steals in 38.4 minutes per game and the RheinEnergie Koln. He averaged 10.5 PPG, 5.5 RPG, and 1.4 SPG for the German league champs. Brian Chase emerged as a star of the NBDL last season as a teammate of Devin Green with the Los Angeles D-Fenders, averaging 16.7 points, 4.2 rebounds, 3.9 assists, 1.41 steals and 33.2 minutes while shooting 46.0 percent from the field, 43.9 percent from three-point range and 92.3 percent from the foul line. Chase also earned All D-League Honorable Mention honors and was selected to play in the 2007 D-League All-Star Game. Joel Anthony has a mostly non-descript career at UNLV, but he did establish himself as a great shot blocker. In 20 minutes per game as a senior, Anthony averaged 3 blocks per game! Alexander Johnson had a quiet, but effective season as a power forward for the Grizzlies. His emphatic dunks, blocked shots, and all around hustle endeared himself to many. He was only released because the team needed to clear up money to sign Darko Milicic. Of young group, probably only two to four make the team, depending on what they do with Penny Hardaway, Earl Barron, and Chris Quinn, but in bringing them in Pat Riley sent the message that the Heat are going to be younger, quicker, and more active this season. The rewards for overhauling the supporting cast probably will not be reaped until Dwyane Wade is fully recovered from his knee injury and in mid-season form around the All-Star break, Until then, all the Heat have to do is tread water and stay within reach of .500. If they can do this, then they have an opportunity to make a run at the Magic for the division and even if they fall short at least a spot in the playoffs. Come playoff time, a healthy Dwyane Wade and Shaquille O’Neal is still strikes fear into the hearts of the NBA, and the rebuilding effort will simply look like a reloading. What they mean for the Bulls
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| Preseason Preview: Denver Nuggets | |
Denver Nuggets 2006-07 record: 45-37 2nd in the Nortwest Added: Chucky Atkins, Steven Hunter, Bobby Jones, Von Wafer, Mike Wilks Lost: Steve Blake, Reggie Evans, DerMarr Johnson PG: Allen Iverson, Chucky Atkins, Mike Wilks, Anthony Carter SG: Yakhouba Diawara, J.R. Smith, Von Wafer SF: Carmelo Anthony, Linas Kleiza, Bobby Jones PF: Nene, Kenyon Martin, Eduardo Najera C: Marcus Camby, Steven Hunter
Versus Bulls 2006-07 Away Tue. November 21, L 109-113 Home Thur. March 22, W 109-108 2007-08 Away Tue. November 20, 8PM Home Fri. February 22, 7PM Overview: If any team was to emerge as a surprise champion, it will be the Denver Nuggets. It will require a little luck when it comes to the health of Kenyon Martin and Marcus Camby, but if they hold together the Nuggets will have what it takes to battle the Spurs, Mavericks, and Suns in the West. Allen Iverson continues to defy doubters who think he won’t be an effective player into his thirties, and playing alongside Carmelo Anthony and having the likes of Camby, Nene, and K-Mart behind him will only elongate his career. Carmelo Anthony, already a star, is only starting to hit his prime at the age of 23. He averaged 29 PPG, 6 rebounds, and 4 assists last season, and learned what it means to be a star in the league. I give George Karl a lot of credit for challenging Carmelo to be a better all around player and give better effort on the defensive end. He’s coming into this season in phenomenal shape, and poised for an even better 2008 campaign. It took Iverson, Anthony, and the rest of the team a month or so to acclimate themselves to one another. When Iverson first arrived, Anthony was suspended, so they first went from being Melo’s team, then Iverson’s team, then figuring out the chain of command. It was a bumpy ride, but winning 10 of 11 to close the season with wins over Dallas, Utah, Lakers twice, and San Antonio, although in a game where neither team played their stars, give hope for great things to come. Clearly, Iverson and Melo will combine for 50+ points and both have the potential to go for 40 or 50 on any given night, but they also have Nene and Camby picking up the garbage. If he stays healthy, Martin offers another dimension to the team on both sides of the court. They also have a number of little known scrappers, Eduardo Najera, Yakhouba Diawara, and Steven Hunter, who will do the little things that don’t show up in the stat book. My only concern with the Nuggets is whether George Karl can harness the immense talent of J.R. Smith. The team does not have many perimeter shooters. Beyond their Big 2 scorers, they really only have J.R. Smith, Chucky Atkins, and Von Wafer with the ability to spread a defense. Of that group, Smith should get the most minutes and have the biggest impact. Adding to the intrigue is that Karl has already announced that Yakhouba Diawara will start at shooting guard until Chucky Atkins gets healthy. The up-and-down relationship between coach and player can really sour if Smith is not willing to accept a specialized role off the bench. If not, the Nuggets will be need to look for a trade to bring in another shooter or risk another year of being one-and-done in the West. What they mean for the Bulls? On this year’s version of the circus trip, the Bulls make their annual trip to elevation. The Bulls historically are terrible on the trip and the game in Denver is usually no exception. When Iverson and Anthony are clicking, they can outscore anyone. With the Bulls playing in Denver as the fourth game in six days, it should not be surprising if Denver plays it’s part as a Circus trip assassin once again. The game in February should be more interesting because by that time we should know what kind of team the Nuggets and Bulls really are.
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| Preseason Preview: New Jersey Nets | |
New Jersey Nets 2006-07 record: 41-41 2nd in the Atlantic Added: Darrell Armstrong, Malik Allen, Jamaal Magloire, Sean Williams Lost: Hassan Adams, Eddie House, Mikki Moore, Clifford Robinson PG: Jason Kidd, Marcus Williams, Darrell Armstrong SG: Vince Carter, Antoine Wright, Bernard Robinson SF: Richard Jefferson, Bostjan Nachbar PF: Jason Collins, Sean Williams, Josh Boone C: Nenad Krstic, Jamaal Magloire, Malik Allen, Mile Ilic
Versus Bulls 2006-07 Away Fri. January 5, L 86-91 Home Thur. January 11, L 83-86 Home Fri. April 6, W 105-74 Away Wed. April 18,, L 97-106 2007-08 Away Wed. October 31, 6:30PM Away Wed. February 20, 6:30PM Home Tue. March 18, 7:30PM Overview: I feel dumb for feeling that the Nets will bounce back this year. How often does a veteran team take a major dip in the standings, and then bounce back? I am aware that injuries to Nenad Krstic and Richard Jefferson played a major role in the team’s mediocre 41-41 record, but Vince Carter got his extension, and history has shown that he can get complacent. Jason Kidd, while as efficient as he ever was in 2007, is going to turn 35 this season, and sat out the preseason to rest his back. At some point, nature is going to take its course. Even the timeless John Stockton started to slow and couldn’t handle a 35-40-minute per night workload once he turned 35. That said, I think the Nets had an incredible offseason. Bringing in Jamaal Magloire, drafting Sean Williams, and getting Nenad Krstic back from a knee injury gives them frontcourt depth for the first time since they had Derrick Coleman, Armon Gilliam, and Jayson Williams. Even if Jason Kidd only plays 30-35 minutes instead of 35-40, he’s still one of the best in the business, and back ups Darrell Armstrong and currently injured Marcus Williams are capable handling 15 minutes per night. Vince Carter still has 30 PPG potential, whether he has the desire to do so over 82 games is debatable, but everyone knows that he will come to play come playoff time. Richard Jefferson should bounce back to his old ways now that his ankle problems are behind him. This team could very well give the Celtics a run for their money in the Atlantic and go back to being a 50-win team and an Eastern conference favorite come playoff time. They have everything a team could want on paper, but coming off a 41-win season, I have my doubts. What they mean for the Bulls? In the East, the Pistons and Nets are two teams that are simply better than the Bulls at every position. The Heat, Knicks, Wizards, Raptors, Magic, and Celtics have guys that can cause problems and those mismatches overcome their deficiencies, but the Pistons and Nets are just better at every spot. Jason Kidd, Vince Carter, and Richard Jefferson are just better than Hinrich, Gordon, and Deng. The Nets combo platter of Krstic, Collins, Williams, Magloire, Allen, and Boone is better than the Bulls of Wallace, Thomas, Noah, Smith, Khryapa, and Gray. Add in that Jason Kidd hates Skiles and loves sticking it to him for running him out of Phoenix, I don’t like the Bulls when matched up against New Jersey. Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
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| Preseason Preview: Los Angeles Lakers | |
Los Angeles Lakers 2006-07 record: 42-40 2nd in the Pacific Added: Javaris Crittenton, Derek Fisher, Coby Karl Lost: Aaron McKie, Smush Parker, Shammond Williams PG: Derek Fisher, Javaris Crittenton, Jordan Farmar SG: Kobe Bryant, Maurice Evans, Sasha Vujacic SF: Luke Walton, Vladimir Radmanovic, Coby Karl PF: Lamar Odom, Ronny Turiaf, Brian Cook C: Andrew Bynum, Kwame Brown, Chris Mihm
Versus Bulls 2006-07 Away Sun. November 19, L 72-82 Home Tue. December 19, W 94-89 2007-08 Away Sun. November 18, 7:30PM Home Tue. December 18, 7:30PM Overview: Kobe Bryant is the best player in the NBA, and along with LeBron James, Tim Duncan, and Dwyane Wade, the only players who right now can lead any team to 40 wins. Jordan, Magic, Shaq, Bird, and Wilt were that way. It is elite company. The only thing that might keep Kobe from leading the Lakers back to the playoffs this year is a crumbling relationship with the Lakers front office. His complaints are understandable. Since they traded Shaquille O’Neal, their drafts have netted Javaris Crittenton, Sun Yue, Marc Gasol, Jordan Farmar, Andrew Bynum, Ronny Turiaf, Von Wafer, Sasha Vujacic, Marcus Douhit. To put this in perspective, they have passed on Anderson Varejao, Chris Duhon, Trevor Ariza, Sean May, Danny Granger, Ryan Gomes, Amir Johnson, and Daniel Gibson. They have had the opportunity to acquire Carlos Boozer, Baron Davis, Jermaine O’Neal, Kevin Garnett, and most notably Jason Kidd and not gotten the deal done. GM Mitch Kupchak has done a poor job of talent evaluation and development, and in doing so is wasting the prime years of one of the greatest talents the league has ever had. Despite not making any major moves to better themselves, they are going to be better this year than last. Smush Parker was not meant to be a starting point guard in the NBA. Derek Fisher, although nothing special, knows Phil Jackson’s system and has played with Kobe Bryant before. Javaris Crittenton can offer a scoring threat off the bench as well as potential for the future. Chris Mihm, Lamar Odom, Vladimir Radmanovic, Maurice Evans and Luke Walton can’t possibly all be injured again. Those small improvements can be huge if Kobe Bryant can stay motivated and in a Laker uniform. The media runs amuck of Kobe-to-the-Bulls rumors despite there really not being much substance to them. If the team can get past the off court distractions, and fend off a difficult first month of the season, the Lakers will be in playoff contention again. The X-factor for them being a legitimate threat in the West and a simple one-and-done is Andrew Bynum. The 20 year old who the Lakers would not part with to get Jason Kidd needs to have a breakthrough season. If he can come around and emerge in year three as Al Jefferson did last year, and go from a maddeningly inconsistent player with potential to a real threat on the block, the Lakers have the potential to win 45-50 games and get a #5 or #6 in the West. If not, either he or Kobe probably won’t finish the season in purple and gold. What they mean for the Bulls? It’s all about Kobe, and it will continue to be for the foreseeable future. Kobe has stated that he’d like to be traded to Chicago. He has also said he’d like to play in New York, Phoenix, or Dallas. It is possible as the season goes on, he’ll think about the possibilities of playing with Detroit, Golden State, Houston, or Denver. The point is, he is frustrated with the front office’s inability to give him a better supporting cast, and he is just using the Bulls as a chip to either have the Lakers bring in someone who can or get him to a better run organization. I won’t believe that Kobe will be traded until it happens, but I’m not opposed to dreaming.
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| Preseason Preview: Washington Wizards | |
Washington Wizards 2006-07 record: 41-41 Added: Dominic McGuire, Oleksiy Pecherov, Nick Young Lost: Calvin Booth, Jarvis Hayes, Michael Ruffin PG: Gilbert Arenas, Antonio Daniels, Roger Mason SG: DeShawn Stevenson, Nick Young, SF: Caron Butler, Dominic McGuire PF: Antawn Jamison, Andray Blatche, Darius Songaila C: Brendan Haywood, Oleksiy Pecherov, Etan Thomas (inj.)
Versus the Bulls 2006-07 Home Sat. December 2, W 112-94 Away Wed. January 10, L 103-113 Home Fri. February 23, W 105-90 Away Sun April 15, W 101-68 2007-08 Away Wed. December 19, 6PM Home Fri. February 29, 7PM Home Sat. April 5, 7:30PM Overview: I have a sneaky feeling that the Wizards are going to take a step or two backwards this year. While the Magic, Bobcats, and Hawks have improved themselves, the Wizards have only gotten younger. Not to say that they were deep last year, they clearly weren’t, but the Wizards are likely to have a second line that is closer to rivaling Georgetown in age and development than an NBA team. The level of youth and inexperience is only going to place a greater burden on the Wizards starters to produce and stay healthy if Washington is going to have any chance of returning to the playoffs. Additionally, the loss of Etan Thomas leaves an already thin front line even thinner. Brendan Haywood is a horrible fit for a team that wants to run, but with only rookie Oleksiy Pecherov and 21 year old Andray Blatche they have no choice but to keep him as their starter. Both Pecherov and Blatche have flashed potential in the preseason, and the team would be best served if one of them can take the starting spot from Haywood, but I’m not confident that either will be able to take that step this season. The reason for optimism is comes from the fact that Gilbert Arenas, DeShawn Stevenson, Caron Butler, and Antawn Jamison score 80 points per game. When those four are healthy, the Wizards have a chance of outscoring just about anyone. This scoring punch allowed the Wizards to run out to a 34-25 record, but when injuries struck Arenas and Butler, the lack of depth left the Wizards reeling to a 7-16 finish, as well as a 1st round sweep from the Cavaliers. I’m not certain that even if healthy, the Wizards are capable of winning matching last season’s win total in an East where so many teams have upgraded their rosters. What they mean for the Bulls I still have a hard time placing Gilbert Arenas among the best in the NBA. I remember how he just massacred the Bulls in the 2005 playoffs, and then went blow for blow with LeBron in 2006. If he had not gotten hurt last year, he might have gotten serious consideration for MVP of the league. Despite all that he has done, I’m not sure whether he can be put in the same breathe as Kobe, Wade, LeBron, and Iverson. I’m not sure that when he is placed with a middling to bad supporting cast, and his team will be as poor as it has been in the past few years, he can will them to the playoffs. This is why I am dismissing the Wizards this year as finishing somewhere from 8-12 in the East and a non-issue for the Bulls.
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| Preseason Preview: Golden State Warriors | |
Golden State Warriors 2006-07 record: 42-40 3rd in the Pacific Added: Marco Belinelli, Austin Croshere, Troy Hudson, Stephane Lasme, Kosta Perovic, Brandan Wright Lost: Adonal Foyle, Sarunas Jasikevicius, Josh Powell, Jason Richardson, Anthony Roberson PG: Baron Davis, Troy Hudson SG: Mickael Pietrus, Monta Ellis, Marco Belinelli SF: Stephen Jackson, Matt Barnes, Kelenna Azubuike, PF: Al Harrington, Austin Croshere, Brandan Wright, Stephane Lasme C: Andris Biedrins, Patrick O’Bryant, Kosta Perovic
Versus Bulls 2006-07 Away Fri. February 9, L 121-123 OT Home Wed. February 28, W 113-83 2007-08 Home Fri. January 18, 8:30PM Away Thur. February 7, 9:30PM Overview: What can I say about a team that named Stephen Jackson a captain? On one hand, Stephen Jackson and Baron Davis might be two of the most underappreciated players in the NBA. Remember last February, even basketball sage Charles Barkley thought the Pacers bested the Warriors when they traded Jackson, Al Harrington, Keith McLeod, and Sarunas Jasikevicius for Troy Murphy, Mike Dunleavy, Josh Powell, and Ike Diogu. This was clearly an indictment of Jackson, who on paper was far and away the best player in that trade. Jackson is one of the few players around that can play in any style, multiple roles, multiple positions, and never break stride. Yet, his off the court issues cloud most people’s perception of his on-court contributions. On the other hand, it is his off the court problems that has him suspended for the first seven games of the season. I wonder about the Warriors ability to follow through on their breakout half season. Jason Richardson was jettisoned to Charlotte for rookie project Brendan Wright. Mickael Pietrus is upset that he wasn’t extended or traded. Monta Ellis suffered a scary neck injury during the preseason that will slow him early on. Not much positive news has come out of Oakland since the Jazz eliminated them in the 2nd round. That said, they still have Baron Davis in a contract year. Al Harrington has lost 15 pounds to better handle the team’s run-and-gun style. 1st round pick Marco Belinelli appears to found a perfect home for a locked in gunner. Andris Biedrins will likely join the rather exclusive double-double club in his contract season. Austin Croshere, now that he is no longer on the league’s most overpaid players, might actually get appreciated for being a solid big man off the bench. Having question marks in the East is one thing, but question marks in the West can put a team in the lottery. With a much improved Memphis team, and New Orleans still coming on strong, the Warriors can not expect to be able to flip a switch and turn it on in March again. This season will be a gauge for Nellyball, Baron Davis, and the Captain. I’m looking forward to seeing how it will play out. What they mean for the Bulls? The two games with the Warriors should be among the most entertaining of the season. Last Spring, the Warriors became the best late night show on television. Watching BD, J-Rich, the future Captain, and the rest of them was nothing short of incredible. They were 48 minutes of an And 1 video. I only hope that this season brings more of the same, and seeing as how the two games are going to be on ESPN and TNT, the networks feel the same way. Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
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| Preseason Preview: Orlando Magic | |
Orlando Magic 2006-07 record: 40-42 3rd in the Southeast Added: Adonal Foyle, Marcin Gortat, Kevin Kruger, Rashard Lewis, Torrell Martin Lost: Travis Diener, Darko Milicic
PG: Jameer Nelson, Carlos Arroyo, Kevin Kruger SG: J.J. Redick, Keith Bogans, Torrell Martin SF: Hedo Turkoglu, Trevor Ariza, PF: Rashard Lewis, Pat Garrity, Tony Battie, Bo Outlaw C: Dwight Howard, Adonal Foyle, Marcin Gortat, James Augustine Versus Bulls 2006-07 Away Wed. November 1, L 94-109 Home Wed. February 26, L 87-94 Away Thur. March 8, W 100-76 2007-08 Home Mon. December 31, 1PM Away Tue. January 15, 6PM Away Wed. April 9, 6PM Home Sun. April 13, 6PM Overview: Is it possible that a horrible contract can actually pay off? The Orlando Magic overpaid royally to acquire Rashard Lewis. Even in the world of Tyson Chandler getting $10M annually, $110M for Rashard Lewis? It is so absurd that I almost wish it backfires for them, but once I get beyond the money I love the acquisition. The Magic already had the stud on the block that makes them contenders for the next ten years in Dwight Howard. Now they have committed to surrounding him with guys who will force teams to extend out. Last year, the Magic were a miserable three point shooting team. They only took 11 per game, and were 27th in the league in both attempts and makes. Getting Lewis, deciding to use J.J. Redick, to go along with Hedo Turkoglu on the perimeter should help Dwight Howard take the next step in his development. Not to mention the extra firepower should help Jameer Nelson bounce back from an underwhelming 2006-07 season. If nothing else, it should keep him from thinking that him shooting from behind the arc will ever be in the team’s best interest. Additionally, with the Miami Heat figuring to start slow with Wade injured and the roster in disarray as well as the Wizards going through a bit of transition in their own right, the Magic have the opportunity to grab a big lead in the Southeast in the first few months. If they go into the All-Star break with the division lead, maybe the decision to give Rashard Lewis $30M more than they should have doesn’t quite look so terrible. What they mean for the Bulls? Dwight Frigging Howard. You can pretty much guarantee that Howard will go for 25 and 15 whenever he plays the Bulls. The best defense they had for him last year was fouling him and hoping that he’d miss like he did in their March game, where he went 5-14. With what appears to be a nice supporting cast, I wouldn’t be surprised if Orlando makes it past the 1st round of the playoffs this year. I feel about Howard the same as I do about Kevin Garnett and Chris Bosh, and he is the reason the Bulls don’t want to play the Mgaic in the playoffs. Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
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| Kobe? | |
I want to be the first person to say that Kobe Bryant to the Bulls talk is insane. Would I love to see him in a Bulls uniform? Absolutely, but it isn’t going to happen. Reason #1 Jerry Buss doesn’t want to trade him The Lakers tried to make Kobe happy over the summer. They brought back Derek Fisher to give him another friend in the locker room, and made a push to acquire Jermaine O’Neal and Kevin Garnett over the summer in order to appease Kobe. They weren’t willing to ante up both Andrew Bynum and Lamar Odom to get Jermaine O’Neal, and they maintain that they put together a better offer than the Celtics did to get KG. Walking away from the summer with only Fisher might not be enough to change Kobe’s mind, but that doesn’t mean that Buss is going to stop trying to fix their relationship. I think he is going to give Bird until February to see if he lowers his price on O’Neal as well as trying to see what other players may come available before seriously considering moving Bryant. Reason #2 Buss never said he is going to trade Kobe http://www.latimes.com/sports/la-sp-lakers11oct11,0,741511.story?coll=la-home-center “I would certainly listen,” Buss said. “At any time, I think you have to do that with anybody. It’s just part of the game, to listen to somebody who has a dissatisfied player that you think is going to fit. You can’t keep too many loyalties. You’ve got to look at it as a business. He looks at it the same way I look at it.” When Buss said he would listen, people got this idea that Kobe was out the door. The NBA is flooded with players who are playing for teams that they don’t want to. Shawn Marion, Jermaine O’Neal, Andrei Kirilenko, Mickael Pietrus, Juwan Howard, and Yi Jianlian have all demanded trades in the past six months. None of them have been dealt. P.J. Brown said he wanted to be traded last year and never was. Scottie Pippen told the Bulls he wanted out during the second three peat and was never dealt. This is a part of what happens in professional sports. Every year Manny Ramirez says he wants out of Boston, and if I turn on the TV tonight, I’ll see him wearing a Red Sox jersey. “I tend not to think in basketball terms that many years down the road because things change so dramatically, but he could test the waters at that point,” Buss said. “If he still is in that frame of mind, then hopefully we can do a sign-and-trade and get some comparable talent. I would like to think that we win between now and then so that it doesn’t come up.” Let me repeat what is important here “I would like to think that we win between now and then so that it doesn’t come up.” Buss either thinks that the addition of Fisher and Crittenton and the return of Chris Mihm from injury will improve the team or that some lottery bound team will look to move a high end player for picks, youth, and expiring contracts. Reason #3 Paxson doesn’t want to trade Deng “You have to get comparable value when you make a trade,” he said. “It’s very hard to trade somebody like him because people who have enough material to make it worthwhile are usually contenders and they don’t want to make the trade. Reason #4 The Bulls know Skiles’ limitations as a coach Scott Skiles isn’t a dumb coach, but he isn’t a championship coach. He can’t coach players with star personalities, and he can’t develop big men. When he took over in Phoenix, he was handled a loaded Suns team with Jason Kidd, Shawn Marion, Penny Hardaway, a pre-buffet Rodney Rogers, and a not yet decrepit Clifford Robinson. They hated his guts and stopped listening and caring less than two years in. Kidd demanded a trade, and when they got Stephon Marbury in return, everyone knew it was time for the guillotine. Paxson has given him a second chance, and done the best to get the most out of him. Getting rid of Curry and Chandler were bad basketball decisions, but necessary if he wanted to keep Skiles as his coach. People like to think that the Bulls won the Curry trade, but Tyrus Thomas, Viktor Khryapa, Joakim Noah, and Aaron Gray for Eddy Curry doesn’t get a check mark in my book. The PJ Brown for Tyson Chandler deal didn’t work out any better. What it did do, however, was give Skiles a team that he can handle. I’m not sure bringing in Kobe Bryant who needs to be coddled and hugged at times is going to put Skiles in a position to succeed, and while their commitments to Eddy Curry and Chandler were great a Kobe Bryant investment would be in the $100M range. If a conflict was to arise, Paxson couldn’t possibly stand by Skiles. Given what they have already committed to him in giving away a 20 PPG center and a double-double seven footer, I’m not sure Paxson is going to want to have to make that decision. Reason #5 They need to get a star back or the ability to get a star soon Jerry Buss needs the Lakers to be relevent. He can’t get away with DUIs and hanging out with hot 21-year old co-eds when his breadwinner is winning 30 games. As long as he has Kobe, he’s a rich man. The Staples Center will sell out, Lakers merchandise will be sold all over the globe, and his team will be on ESPN and TNT every week. Given that the Lakers are his big financial investment, this is huge for him. Ben Gordon and Kirk Hinrich aren’t stars that will 1) lead a team to 40 wins in the West 2) sell merchandise 3) fill the Staples Center. My guess is that if Kobe Bryant is to be traded, it will only happen in February if the Lakers are well below .500, if they couldn’t pry away Marion, Kirilenko, J. O’Neal, or any other soon to be disgruntled stars, and if in return for Bryant they can free up enough cap room to go spend crazy this summer and have the possibility of drafting O.J. Mayo who by February should be the 2nd biggest sports star in LA. This is why the Clipper make sense. It is why to Dallas for Dirk, Phoenix for Amare and Atlanta’s 1st, or to Houston for T-Mac could have legs. Reason #6 The media creation that Bryant won’t be traded to a team in the West Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
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| Preseason Preview: Los Angeles Clippers | |
Los Angeles Clippers 2006-07 record: 40-42 4th in the Pacific Added: Dan Dickau, Guillermo Diaz, Kimani Ffriend, Brevin Knight, Ruben Patterson, Josh Powell, Al Thornton Lost: Jason Hart, Von Wafer
PG: Sam Cassell, Brevin Knight, Dan Dickau, Guillermo Diaz, Shaun Livingston (inj.) SG: Corey Maggette, Cuttino Mobley SF: Quinton Ross, Al Thornton, Ruben Patterson PF: Tim Thomas, Josh Powell, Yaroslav Korolev, Elton Brand (inj.) C: Chris Kaman, Aaron Williams, Paul Davis, Kimani Ffriend Versus the Bulls 2006-07 Away Wed January 31, L 98-110 Home Tue. March 20, L 89-103 2007-08 Home Tue. November 6, 7:30PM Away Sat. November 17, 9:30PM Overview: For a moment in time, the Clippers looked to be on the rise. They made it to the 2nd round of the playoffs in the West. Cassell, Livingston, Maggette, Brand, and Kaman looked to be a legitimate core that had the potential to go deep into May or maybe even June. Sadly, it didn’t last, and has come crashing down. Livingston will miss the year with a knee injury, Brand will miss much if not all of this season with a ruptured Achilles tendon, Kaman got his contract and then got lazy, and Livingston, Maggette, Brand, and Cassell are all in the either the last year or option years of their contracts. The Clippers are rebuilding… again. The only thing the Clippers have going for them is that they will have a motivated Sam Cassell and Corey Maggette. When they are playing hard, both Cassell and Maggette have 20 point per game potential. Maggette knows that this coming contract will be his last monster deal, and that a big year might score him $50M. Even at Sam’s advanced age, he averaged 17 PPG in months November and February last year, the only two months he was healthy enough to play every game. Additionally, the Elton Brand injury has opened up the possibility of Al Thornton putting up the best numbers of any rookie for this coming season. The biggest knock on Thornton coming out was that he was only 6’7, although he has a freakish wing span, and is going to turn 24 before the season is a month old. These are the kind of criticisms that should get scouts fired. The way the NBA ruins player’s bodies, age isn’t as important as miles. If Thornton takes care of his body and is smart about his conditioning, I see no reason to believe that Thaddeus Young will be in any better position to help a team than Al Thornton simply because Al will be 34 and Young will be 29. I think baseball has come to this realization and is now willing to realize that a prospect isn’t old and washed up at 24, and my guess is that Al Thornton will do the same in the NBA. What they mean for the Bulls? Well with Elton Brand on the sidelines, Bulls fans won’t be subjected to his obligatory 25-15 when he comes to Chicago. I’m assuming that we’ll see an angry Tim Thomas who I’m sure is less than thrilled that Skiles exiled him for most of the ’06 season, and with the additional workload might put up Brandesque numbers. On the personnel front, I think the Clippers are the super sleepers in any potential Kobe Bryant trade. They have expiring contracts, two 1st rounders in the ’08 draft (they have Minnesota’s pick but it is Top 10 protected), and a guy in Thornton that will probably go for 13-17 per as a rookie. By February, cap relief to bring in another star or two next summer, two or three first rounders, the rights to Sofoklis Schortsantitis, and Al Thornton is probably 90 cents on the Kobe dollar, which is far better than anything else the Lakers could get, and because it is LA my guess is Kobe would let it go through. My idea would have the Clippers sending Cassell, Maggette, Livingston, Dickau, Thornton, the rights to Sofoklis Schortsanitis, their ’08 1st round pick, and the pick owed to them by Minnesota for Vladimir Radmanovic and Kobe Bryant. This would get the Lakers only a $28M payroll for the ’09 season leaving plenty of cap room to throw at Arenas, Duncan, Iverson, Baron Davis, Marion, Artest, Jamison, Okafor, Josh Smith, or possibly even Gordon and Deng. My guess is that would land them one or two studs, and then with Odom in the final year of his contract they could work a sign-and-trade with another. The Clippers reload in ’09 with Kobe and Elton Brand. They’d still have pass first point Brevin Knight, Kaman, Thomas, Mobley, Quinton Ross, and the mid-level exception. While not overly impressive, Kobe and Brand would be the next best thing to recreating a Shaq and Kobe 1-2.
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| Preseason Preview: New Orleans Hornets | |
New Orleans Hornets 2006-07 record: 39-43 4th in the Southwest Added: Ryan Bowen, Melvin Ely, Adam Haluska, Trey Johnson, Morris Peterson, Julian Wright Lost: Devin Brown, Linton Johnson, Desmond Mason
PG: Chris Paul, Bobby Jackson, Jannero Pargo SG: Morris Peterson, Rasual Butler, Adam Haluska, Trey Johnson SF: Peja Stojakovic, Julian Wright, Rasual Butler, Ryan Bowen PF: David West, Cedric Simmons, Marcus Vinicius C: Tyson Chandler, Melvin Ely, Hilton Armstrong
Versus Bulls 2006-07 Away Fri. December 1, W 111-108 Home Fri. March 2, W 104-93
2007-08 Home Tue. February 12, 7:30PM Away Mon. March 17, 7PM
Overview:
The Hornets are the reason why the NBA needs to reform how it structures itself. In the East, the Hornets are probably a Top 5 team winning between 45-50 games. Last year having Chris Paul miss 20 games, David West 30 and Peja Stojakovic 70, they still won 39 games in the West. Now they add another marksman in Morris Peterson and a rookie with as much upside as anyone not named Durant or Oden in Julian Wright. Wow. Did I mention that Chris Paul is still only 22, and coming off a season where he averaged 17 points and 9 assists, or how about Tyson Chandler playing so well that he was added to Team USA? What about the fact that Davis West can probably average 20-10 this year and still not have casual NBA fans know his name? GM Jeff Bower and Byron Scott have done a wonderful job of identifying and developing young talent. They brought in Tyson Chandler for PJ Brown, drafted West at #18 after other teams were taking Reece Gaines, Troy Bell, and Zarko Cabarkapa, and have guys like Jannero Pargo, Rasual Butler, and Bobby Jackson who have all outproduced their contracts.
The only negative thing a person can say about this team is that they play in the best division in the NBA. They have to compete with Dallas, San Antonio, Houston, and a much improved Memphis squad sixteen times over the course of the season, which is really cruel and unusual punishment. They have three of the Top 5 teams in the NBA playing in their division, and they will be hard-pressed to match the 6-10 they had in their division. It is possible that they can sneak into the bottom of the West, and I think that they will so long as Chandler, West, Peja, and Paul can stay healthy.
What they mean for the Bulls?
If Tyson Chandler continues to hit free throws at the rate he is in the preseason, just a modest 66-70%, he’ll continue to rub a little salt on the wounds when he averages a double-double. Other than that, the Hornets aren’t really an issue for the Bulls. When healthy, they can cause problems for anyone, but nobody knows whether their horses will still be running when they play in February and March.
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| Preseason Preview: Indiana Pacers | |
Indiana Pacers 2006-07 record: 35-47 4th in the Central Added: Travis Diener, Lukasz Obrzut, Kareem Rush, Courtney Sims Lost: Darrell Armstrong, Maceo Baston, Orien Greene, Josh Powell
PG: Jamaal Tinsley, Travis Diener SG: Mike Dunleavy, Kareem Rush, Andre Owens SF: Danny Granger, Marquis Daniels, Stephen Graham PF: Jermaine O’Neal, Ike Diogu, Shawne Williams C: Troy Murphy, Jeff Foster, David Harrison, Lukasz Obrzut, Courtney Sims
Versus Bulls 2006-07 Home Sat. November 11, W 89-80 Home Mon. December 11, W 106-91 Away Mon. January 22, L 91-98 Away Sun. March 25, W 92-90
2007-08 Away Wed. December 12, 6PM Home Wed. January 23, 7:30PM Away Wed. February 27, 6PM Home Sat. March 22, 7:30PM
Overview:
Let me put it this way, if I was Larry Bird and my team closed the season going 6-23 down the stretch, I maybe would have done more than just bring in Travis Diener and Kareem Rush. Maybe. Possibly. I understand that it isn’t easy for him when he is saddled with horrible contracts that he either handed out or traded for, but the Pacers might have the ugliest roster in the NBA. It is no wonder that Jermaine O’Neal declared that he wanted to be traded to the Lakers over the summer. Right now, Indiana has no chance to be any good. I don’t see how they finish better than 4th in the division.
By mid-season the only drama left in Indy will be what they can get for Jermaine O’Neal, and who they will take with their Top 5 pick in the draft. Even with the possibility of getting younger in the future, any optimism has to be tempered by the fact that Tinsley, Dunleavy, and Murphy have contracts where those three will make $27M annually through 2011 and Jeff Foster is still owed close to $12M. In fairness, I do think that Troy Murphy will bounce back from a bad year and that Danny Granger can be a big time wing, but this kind of mess is usually not seen outside of Atlanta or Clipperdom. A good basketball town like Indianapolis shouldn’t be subjected to what they will see this season.
What they mean for the Bulls?
On one hand, Jermaine O’Neal appears to be on his way out of town, which is good. On the other hand, we don’t know where. Even though he is starting to slow down, O’Neal can still have a major impact on a contender. While I don’t think Larry Bird would trade him within the conference, I can’t help but think that O’Neal going to New Jersey or Washington would really change the overall picture in the East. Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
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| Preseason Preview: Philadelphia 76ers | |
Philadelphia 76ers 2006-07 record: 35-47 3rd in the Atlantic Added: Calvin Booth, Derrick Byars, Reggie Evans, Herbert Hill, Ricky Sanchez, Jason Smith, Thaddeus Young Lost: Steven Hunter, Alan Henderson, Bobby Jones, Joe Smith, Steven Smith
PG: Andre Miller, Louis Williams, Kevin Ollie SG: Andre Iguodala, Willie Green, Derrick Byars SF: Rodney Carney, Kyle Korver, Thaddeus Young PF: Reggie Evans, Shavlik Randolph, Jason Smith, Ricky Sanchez C: Samuel Dalembert, Calvin Booth, Herbert Hill
Versus Bulls 2006-07 Away Fri. November 24, L 108-123 Home Wed. December 6, W 121-96 Away Wed. March 14, W 88-87
2007-08 Home Fri. November 2, 7:30PM Away Fri. January 12, 6PM Away Wed. March 26, 6PM
Overview:
I’m not going to believe that Billy King knows what he is doing until they actually win something. His ineptitude as a GM ruined the Allen Iverson-era in Philly, and left the team saddled with horrible contracts that they still not out from under- they are paying Chris Webber $19M this year and Aaron McKie $7M. This, of course, after they finally get out from that Todd MacCullough contract ended this past summer.
That said, I think King has drafted well the past couple years. Rodney Carney is an athletic marvel and gets after it defensively. Thaddeus Young, while still a year or two away, is regarded as having one of the highest upsides from his draft class. Jason Smith figures to be a decent rotation big man because of his rebounding skills. Derrick Byars provides an outside shooter for a team that really only has Kyle Korver to stretch a defense. It isn’t out of the realm of possibilities that these past two draft classes, along with Andre Iguodala, Louis Williams, and Shavlik Randolph are only a couple of pieces away from being a threat in the East
What they mean to the Bulls?
This season… not much? Where they can come into play is with contract negotiations with Ben Gordon. If the Bulls do not extend Gordon before the season starts, the 76ers will have a lot of cap room next summer with which to throw at a scorer to team with Iggy and the gang. Being such a young team, I don’t think that Philadelphia will go after free agents closing in on 30 making me believe that Gordon would probably be their second option if they cannot get Gilbert Arenas.
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| Preseason Preview: Sacramento Kings | |
Sacramento Kings 2006-07 record: 33-49 Last in the Pacific Added: Rashid Byrd, Nic Caner-Medley, Orien Greene, Spencer Hawes, Mikki Moore, Adam Parada, Brandon Robinson, Mustafa Shakur, Darryl Watkins Lost: Jason Hart, Ronnie Price
PG: Mike Bibby, Orien Greene, Mustafa Shakur SG: Kevin Martin, John Salmons, Quincy Douby SF: Ron Artest, Francisco Garcia, Nic Caner-Medley, Brandon Robinson PF: Mikki Moore, Shareef Abdur-Rahim, Kenny Thomas C: Brad Miller, Justin Williams, Darryl Watkins, Adam Parada, Rashid Byrd
Versus Bulls 2006-07
Home Fri. November 3, L 88-89 Away Thur. February 8, L 77-86
2007-08 Home Sat. January 5, 7:30PM Away Sat. February 2, 9PM
Overview:
This figures to be a transitional year for the Kings. Reggie Theus is taking over the team and is going to implement a run-and-gun style. This figures to cause a lot of the roster to turn over because the team as constituted isn’t meant to run. Brad Miller, Kenny Thomas, and 1st round pick Spencer Hawes aren’t run-and-gun players. Mike Bibby is so far on the decline that he chose not to opt out of his contract this past summer knowing that he can no longer get $28M over two years as a free agent. Both he and Shareef Abdur-Rahim might have a slight boost from not having to try on defense, but they aren’t what they once were. Ron Artest is in a contract year and it is unclear as to how his game will translate to a faster pace, so if they get off to a slow start he figures to be on the trade block.
The only thing certain about the Kings is that Kevin Martin will be their shooting guard for the foreseeable future, and Mikki Moore will fit into their plans much better than Hawes. Playing in the West, they will have a hard time matching last season’s win total, but that might not be a bad thing. They need to get a point guard of the future, unless you think Orien Greene and Mustafa Shakur better than their track records indicate, and next summer’s lottery is likely to be chopped full of them.
Bulls fans should hope that the Kings finagle enough wins over bad teams to be close to the 8-spot in February. The Kings have the ability to get upgrade the Cavaliers roster if they want to sell. Mike Bibby might not be an A point guard anymore, but Cleveland doesn’t even have a C-level guy on their roster. Also, if Artest goes East, he could really alter the possibilities for a team like Miami. Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
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| Preseason Preview: New York Knicks | |
New York Knicks 2006-07 record: 33-49 4th in the Atlantic Added: Allan Houston, Fred Jones, Jared Jordan, Demetris Nichols, Zach Randolph, Walker Russell JrLost: Steve Francis, Channing Frye
PG: Stephon Marbury, Nate Robinson, Mardy Collins, Jared Jordan SG: Jamal Crawford, Fred Jones, Demetris Nichols, Allan Houston SF: Quentin Richardson, Renaldo Balkman, Jared Jeffries PF: Zach Randolph, David Lee, Wilson Chandler, Malik Rose C: Eddy Curry, Randolph Morris, Jerome James
Versus Bulls 2006-07 Away Sat. November 25, W 106-95 Home Tue. November 28, W 102-85 Away Fri. December 22, L 92-103 Home Tue. April 10, W 98-69
2007-08 Away Sat. November 24, 12PM Home Fri. December 14, 7:30PM Away Sun. December 30, 11AM
Overview:
Isiah Thomas somehow acquired a 26 year old beast on the block in Zach Randolph who came off his best season where he averaged 23 and 10 per for Channing Frye and Zach Randolph. I’m not going to lie and say this did not both me. Something tells me that Paxson just didn’t try hard enough. Randolph could have been the Rasheed Wallace to the 2004 Pistons, but he ends up in New York… a New York team with Eddy Curry that didn’t a 20 point scorer on the block? Oh well.
If Thomas can find a way to maximize both Eddy Curry, they could be a 45-50 win team. No team in the NBA has the front court depth to handle both Curry and Randolph. Where the problems may lie is that Curry has a tear in his right shoulder that will sideline him for the entire preseason. This will keep the two from learning how to play alongside one another. It is possible that the injury could be for the best if Thomas could convince Curry to come off the bench. The Knicks had problems generating offense off the bench last season. Separating Curry and Randolph would give the team a legitimate scoring threat off the bench that help them solidify the times where Marbury and Crawford are on the bench.
Beyond the big boys, the Knicks are the same team as they were last year. Marbury is still their point guard, Crawford is their best perimeter scorer, Lee can pull down a ton of rebounds, and the likes of Malik Rose, Ronaldo Balkman, Jared Jeffries, and Nate Robinson bring energy and not much else. Fred Jones is a Isiah favorite and can score in bunches when given the opportunity, but doesn’t figure to be a major player in the rotation. Jared Jordan, another Isiah fav, might bully his way into minutes when Thomas wants to strangle Nate Robinson. He is a pass-first point that scouts were divided over before the draft. Some thought he’d be the next Steve Nash others a career 12th man. Playing for a coach/GM who believes in him can only help his cause. If they make the team, Demetris Nichols and Allan Houston would give the Knicks a pure shooter, but that would require the team to trade or buyout either Jones Nate Robinson, Jerome James or Jared Jeffries.
What they mean for the Bulls?
They killed me on draft night when they got Z-Bo for 5 cents on the dollar. Even if Randolph doesn’t fit the Bulls current model, he fits the model for a team that wants to win a title. Much like Rasheed Wallace a few years back, Randolph has the potential to put a middling playoff team over the top. Of course, now we’ll never know. The Knicks could get into the mix for the playoffs if they figure out the Curry-Randolph relationship, but aren’t going to win a title this year, and it cannot be known what the Bulls would have had to give Portland or how he would fit. As is, Randolph and Curry will probably keep Thomas and Noah on the bench in foul trouble meaning the November 24 meeting might be the first time Aaron Gray takes off the warm-ups. Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
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| Preseason Preview: Charlotte Bobcats | |
Charlotte Bobcats 2006-07 record: 33-49 4th in the Southeast Added: Deji Akindele, Marcus Campbell, Jermareo Davidson, Jared Dudley, Gabe Muoneke, Jason Richardson, Jameel Watkins, C.J. Watson Lost: Melvin Ely, Brevin Knight, Jake Voskuhl
PG: Raymond Felton, Jeff McInnis, C.J. Watson SG: Jason Richardson, Matt Carroll, Derek Anderson SF: Gerald Wallace, Adam Morrison, Jared Dudley, Gabe Muoneke PF: Emeka Okafor, Jermareo Davidson, Walter Herrmann, Othella Harrington, Sean May (inj.) C: Primoz Brezec, Ryan Hollins, Deji Akindele, Marcus Campbell, Jameel Watkins
Versus Bulls 2006-07 Away Wed. February 14, L 85-100 Home Fri. April 13, 100-81
2007-08
Home Sat. December 1, 7:30PM Away Wed. December 5, 6PM Away Wed. January 2, 6PM Home Fri. January 25, 7:30PM
Overview:
The Bobcats open their inaugural season this year now that they have finally decided to pay for actual NBA players. Bob Johnson has operated this team with tight purse strings since he was awarded the franchise, but with a draft night trade for Jason Richardson and the re-signing of Gerald Wallace, the Bobcats are a trendy pick to battle for the 7th and 8th spot in the East. They have most of the pieces in place to be a good team even with Sean May’s missing the season, but they remind me a bit of the Bucks. Raymond Felton won over Michael Jordan’s trust enough to let Brevin Knight go, and figures to improve upon the quietest 14 PPG, 7 APG in the league last year. Let me put this in perspective, Raymond Felton put up the same rebounding and steal numbers, one more assist, and only two fewer points per game than Hinrich. Who knew? He is really the key to the Bobcats improving their win total. Behind him is Jeff McInnis, so they depth is a concern so they can’t see him get injured or struggle because he is the only guy that is going to get Jason Richardson, Adam Morrison, Matt Carroll, and Emeka Okafor the ball. I think most good teams have two good creators on offense. Richardson is a great scorer, but not a creator. Matt Carroll might get an assist every other game. Morrison might lose a few minutes this year, although I figure they will go small with a frontline of Morrison, Wallace, and Okafor quite often, and while he has pretty good vision is really only a scorer. I think all of their eggs are in Felton’s basket, and I’m not 100% confident that they’ll be able to withstand the 10-15 minutes per game he is on the bench or any games that he misses to separate themselves from the other 4-5 teams that figure to be in the 7-11 range.
What they mean for the Bulls?
Having the Bobcats on the schedule for four usually is a blessing from the schedule makers, but for the first year in their existence they have signs of hope for being more than a guarantee game. I don’t know the scores, but they should be interesting games. Jason Richardson and Gerald Wallace have had high scoring games in the past, and are some of the most entertaining players in the league. Okafor has established himself as one of the best rebounders and shot blockers in the league, and is now in the best shape of his career.
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