Popular Post Erick Blasco Posted April 15, 2010 Popular Post Report Share Posted April 15, 2010 With the regular season over and done with, it’s time to see which teams are passing this season’s tests with flying colors, and which teams still need to do more homework. The grades aren’t only based on performance, but on expectations as well. For example, the Kings and Timberwolves are taking remedial classes to help them for the future, while the Spurs and Cavs are taking the most rigorous championship-level courses in a quest to become valedictorian. On to the grade book. Atlanta Hawks: A- Atlanta’s improvement can be traced to the newfound maturity of Josh Smith. His discretion on offense and his focus on defense have transformed him from an athletic specimen into a true difference maker. Jamal Crawford has been a boon off the bench, Marvin Williams has developed into a useful player, and Joe Johnson is one of the game’s most esteemed playmakers. However, can a team which has suffered no real adversity throughout the year—look at their man-games lost to injury—and which relies primarily on isoball upset one of the East’s behemoths? The first guess is no. Boston Celtics: F The Big Three has transformed into the Big Two—Rajon Rondo and Paul Pierce. Ray Allen has been mired in a season long slump and the wheels look ready to fall off. With Garnett’s knees shot, he can no longer be the rangy intimidator he was his first season and a half in Boston. Rasheed Wallace and Sheldon Williams have been disasters, Nate Robinson continues to prove he’s too immature for good teams, and the Celtics have gotten nothing from their bench. The Celtics look like Cavs or Magic fodder. Charlotte Bobcats: A The Bobcats commitment to defense gave them a backbone, and their acquisition of Stephen Jackson gave them a punch. To Captain Jack’s credit, after playing the Golden State Warriors for suckers, he’s been on his best behavior in the Queen City. Tyson Chandler’s had an ineffective season but by acquiring him, the Bobcats could rid themselves of the notion that Emeka Okafor was any kind of special player. In his stead, Gerald Wallace put his freakish hops and fearlessness to good use in becoming a dominant rebounder, while Boris Diaw’s versatility opens up innumerable offensive options. Few teams are as well coached as Larry Brown’s bunch. Chicago Bulls: D- Too many players have had too many bad years. Derrick Rose was timid early in the season recovering from an ankle injury, and Kirk Hinrich has been spotty offensively. The team hoped that John Salmons would step into the two-guard role and produce, but he’s a small forward who was outquicked by the faster guards matched up with him. The rookies play like rookies, and there’s still a void in the post. Vinny Del Negro’s had a rocky time as he’s learned the ins and outs of coaching, he may be the fall guy. Cleveland Cavaliers: A LeBron James may be the best defensive player in the game, and he’s clearly the best offensive player. Anderson Varejao is the lifeblood of a terrific defense, and the rest of the role players all fit in. Like Anthony Parker and Delonte West and their solid positional defense. Like Mo Williams and his ability to knock down open jump shots. Like Leon Powe’s power offense near the hoop. There are still concerns of course. Antawn Jamison has too many bad habits on defense. Zydrunas Ilgauskas is dead weight. Mo Williams has disappeared in previous playoffs. But the Cavs are the safest bet to capture a ring. Dallas Mavericks: B- The acquisition of Caron Butler and Brendan Haywood increased the Mavs’ talent base, while banishing Josh Howard increased the team’s focus. However, Dallas is only in the middle of the pack defensively, and their offense around Dirk tends to sputter, especially when Jason Terry’s jumpers are off. The Mavs are a second round team, tops. Denver Nuggets: C+ On the one hand, the Nuggets have looked into the belly of the beast and emerged unscathed—three wins in four games against the Lakers. On the other hand, the Nuggets’ play has really fallen off since George Karl’s leave of absence for chemotherapy treatment. Carmelo’s playing at an all-time high, Chauncey Billups is as steady as ever, but the Nuggets aren’t better than last year’s team. Why? J.R. Smith’s immaturity has prevented him from maxing out his enormous talent. Detroit Pistons: F Yes there have been injuries, but has any team looked so lifeless? The offense goes through the motions and nobody plays with an edge defensively. Ben Gordon and Charlie Villanueva simply want to shoot, Rodney Stuckey and Will Bynum aren’t point guards, and nobody can set the screens and deliver the passes Rip Hamilton needs to be successful. What a steep fall for Joe Dumars, who’s devolved a title contending nucleus into a roster with limited talent and toxic contracts. Golden State Warriors: F It’s been a circus on and off the court, but what would you expect with Don Nelson in tow? Maybe now that he’s won more meaningless games then anyone else he’ll step aside and let someone with a clue run the team. Either way, he’s proven that midget ball is an abject failure. Houston Rockets: B+ Houston had a good run while it lasted but you need more than spunk and guts to make the playoffs, you need talent. Shane Battier isn’t the defender he once was, Trevor Ariza can’t be a go-to scorer, and without length up front, the Rockets defense offered no interior resistance. How the team got so far is a testament to Rick Adelman. Indiana Pacers: D Where are the athletes? Where are the defenders? Where’s the talent? There are too many role players and not enough firepower for Indiana to be competitive. Sure, the Pacers have successfully shed its thug image, but with the days of Ron Artest, Stephen Jackson, and Jamaal Tinsley ancient history, its time for the Pacers to worry less about reputation and more about winning basketball games. Los Angeles Clippers: C+ In Eric Gordon, the Clippers have a strong, athletic two-guard to complement Chris Kaman’s interior skills. Al Thornton was a mistake player who was shipped out, but the real mistake has been the signing of Baron Davis. Too comfortable, and too lazy, Davis has done little more than throw on his uniform and cash his humongous checks. Can Blake Griffin be a franchise savior? Los Angeles Lakers: C For whatever reasons, it hasn’t clicked this year. Kobe Bryant’s been spectacular in the clutch, but has never looked so mortal over the first 46 minutes of games. Jordan Farmar and Shannon Brown still take too many bad shots and make too many bad decisions for Phil Jackson to replace the rapidly fading Derek Fisher. And injuries to Luke Walton, Pau Gasol, and Andrew Bynum have exposed the Lakers bench as being Lamar Odom and a lot of smoke. Kobe’s going to have to recapture the magic and get a lot of help from Pau Gasol for the Lakers to repeat. Memphis Grizzlies: A+ Their defense wasn’t playoff caliber, but what a ride! Zach Randolph played the best basketball of his career by getting in shape, moving the ball, and feasting on offensive rebounds. Rudy Gay and O.J. Mayo are dynamite scorers, Marc Gasol plays with a wisdom beyond his years, and Mike Conley is no longer an outright liability. The next step will be improving the bench, and adding defenders to an impressive nucleus. Give Lionel Hollins all the credit for having the backbone to stand up to Allen Iverson, for getting Zach Randolph to shed his bad habits, and for putting his players in the best chances to succeed. Miami Heat: B+ Despite inconsistent seasons across the board, the Heat continue to persevere. Dwyane Wade hasn’t been as inconceivably good as he was last year, but he’s still played at a high level. Michael Beasley has no feel for the game, but Udonis Haslem keeps picking up the slack with his defense and rebounding. If Jermaine O’Neal can only play consistently effective basketball one day a week, Joel Anthony always plays defense, sets screens, and hustles consistently well. Dorell Wright and Carlos Arroyo have provide small boosts, and the team’s overall defense is up to par. That and Dwyane Wade gives the Heat a fighter’s chance in the playoffs. Milwaukee Bucks: A+ The Bucks are evidence as to how playing with purpose can overcome a lack of talent. No team gets after it harder than the Bucks, a tribute to Scott Skiles’ fascist dictatorship. Brandon Jennings is puny, but he can create his own shot and has uncanny court awareness. Carlos Delfino and Ersan Illyasova have been pleasant surprises, while Andrew Bogut gave the team some post scoring before his unfortunate injuries. Even if the Bucks are ousted in the first round, no team has overachieved as much as Milwaukee. Minnesota Timberwolves: F The same questions that have plagued the Timberwolves for several seasons still aren’t answered. Al Jefferson and Kevin Love don’t defend well enough for the T-Wolves to play both, but who do they move. Is Corey Brewer a keeper? Who is their point guard going forward? Johnny Flynn is a notch below the premier rookie point guards that have taken the NBA by storm, and Ricky Rubio may never play for the T-Wolves. Where is the wing scorer? Where is the shot blocker? Another lost season up north. New Jersey Nets: F All New Jersey’s competitive streak has done has made it that much more damning that Devin Harris decided to take the first four months of the season off. Brook Lopez is legit, but not as a first option. Plus, he’s so slow that he’s perpetually late on help assignments defensively. Terrence Williams has shown flashes of potential, but Yi Jianlian is without a doubt the softest player in the NBA. With bushels of cap space this offseason, the Nets will back up the truck and start over. They need to. New Orleans Hornets: C- Darren Collison and Marcus Thornton were bright spots in an otherwise gloomy season. Peja Stojakovic plays like the oldest player in the league, and Emeka Okafor is an ordinary player making extraordinary money. No wonder with those two taking up much of New Orleans’ salary, the team didn’t go anywhere, even when Chris Paul was healthy. New York Knicks: C Off the court, the season was a rousing success as Donny Walsh pulled a Houdini act and got the Knicks far enough under the cap where they may be able to acquire two max contract free agents. David Lee went from being a hard-working glue guy to a star once he perfected his 18-foot jump shot, but his defense is amongst the league’s worst. Tracy McGrady showed nothing in his brief cameo, the Knicks’ shooters fired too many blanks, and the team, in true Mike D’Antoni fashion, was inept defensively, with Danilo Gallinari as the lone caveat. At least the Knicks played with passion, a scare commodity during the Isaiah Thomas era. With the financial maneuverings of Donny Walsh, the Isaiah era is now mercifully put to rest. Oklahoma City Thunder: A+ Kevin Durant is the real deal and the young Thunder play both free and loose, but also smart and disciplined. In other words, they don’t play like the new kids on the block that they really are. Give credit to Scott Brooks for keeping the kids on the right path, and to the precocious players for not straying into selfishness or bad habits. Dangerous now, imagine how good the Thunder will be when they grow up? Orlando Magic: B Orlando Howard has improved by leaps and bounds as a defender while his post game continues to marginally evolve. That’s why the Magic have been near the top of the standings despite the uneven moments they’ve had this season. Vince Carter finally appears comfortable with what Stan Van Gundy wants him to do, and as Jameer Nelson’s health has improved so has the team’s consistency. Are they better than last year’s team? Perhaps. But are they better than Cleveland is the more important question. Philadelphia 76ers: D Eddie Jordan coaches too much on whims and fancies, which means puzzling substitution patterns and an unset rotation. His Princeton offense was doomed from the start with the lack of shooters and high post passers on the Sixers. The team played without a head, strikes against Jordan and Lou Williams, who is best served as a backup. The team couldn’t run without getting defensive stops, or without Andre Miller’s ability to generate transition opportunities. Andre Iguodala does many things well, but his jumper is still broken which limits his effectiveness as a prime scoring threat. It was a lost year, so why not a failing grade? What did anybody realistically expect from this club? Phoenix Suns: A- A trip back to their “run-and-gun” roots meant fun times in Phoenix. Steve Nash continues to defy nature by not breaking down, and after a bad first half, Amare Stoudemire has reminded the league why he’s one of the most purely talented frontcourt players in the game today. Goran Dragic and Robin Lopez have turned ballers after rookie season busts, and Channing Frye tortures opponents who have to sell out to stop Nash/Stoudemire screen/rolls. Another exciting reason for Phoenix’ success, an interior defense far more alert and active than at any time during the Mike D’Antoni era. Portland Trail Blazers: B+ Too many games were lost early because of petty squabbling about being more or less comfortable in certain roles. Only after Steve Blake was traded, and Andre Miller confirmed as the starting the point guard, did the Blazers hit their collective stride. Trading for Marcus Camby shored up Portland’s void in the middle after losing both Greg Oden and Joel Pryzbilla, and Nate McMillan continues to max out the Blazers talent. Give the Blazers credit for making the most of their tough luck, and being a threat to win a playoff series. Sacramento Kings: B For several years, the Kings have needed an infusion of young talent and they finally got it. Tyreke Evans’ strength and quickness can win games by themselves when he learns to challenge them. Jason Thompson and Omri Casspi are players, while Carl Landry is relentless in the post and on the glass. The next step for the Kings is translating their young talent into wins, not an impossible task with that roster. San Antonio Spurs: C- Tim Duncan has declined so gracefully you almost don’t notice it, but he isn’t a shell of the automatic double team he was in his prime. Richard Jefferson has been a disappointment. Not only has he been passive, but he’s been mistake prone, especially on the defensive end of the court. Antonio McDyess looks over the hill, of course the big three would suffer a serious injury (Tony Parker), and the Spurs suffer from a team wide lack of athleticism. George Hill and DeJuan Blair have been A-OK, but if not for Manu Ginobili’s recent renaissance, the Spurs appeared they’d go down listlessly in the playoffs. Toronto Raptors: F With the playoffs in sight, a serious choke job down the stretch has the Raptors once again uninvited to the playoff party. For all the talk about Chris Bosh’s and Andrea Bargnani’s improvements, the Raptors are still pathetic defensively. Of course poor perimeter defenders like DeMar DeRozan Hedo Turkoglu, and Jose Calderon don’t exactly help. Speaking of Turkoglu, he learned that the grass Dwight Howard is on is always greener. Without Howard’s ability to suck in defenses after screen/rolls, Turkoglu looked like just another guy—but everyone who watched last year’s Magic already knew this. The Raptors have been a team of cream puffs for too long, and they’ve proven their philosophy isn’t working. It’s time to blow it up and rebuild. Utah Jazz: B Wesley Matthews’ emergence made Ronnie Brewer obsolete, and gives the Jazz a more versatile offensive player than the chicken-wing jump shooting of Brewer. Deron Williams continues to amaze, Carlos Boozer can still score, and the players cover for each other defensively. Still, it’s the same old tune for the Jazz. Not enough athletes in the frontcourt to contend. They need Andrei Kirilenko desperately. Washington Wizards: F A collection of inefficient, albeit talented inefficient players does not make a winning basketball team. Gilbert Arenas was a fool on the court long before his foolishness off the court and is the next to go after Caron Butler and Antawn Jamison were shipped out. Is Andray Blatche the player Washington builds around? While he has big-time talent, his total lack of maturity will keep the Wizards well short of their expectations. There are worse teams in the league, but is there any more embarrassing team? 5 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
NomarFachix Posted April 15, 2010 Report Share Posted April 15, 2010 Thanks! Great read. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jenneral Posted April 15, 2010 Report Share Posted April 15, 2010 Great insight and analysis all the way around. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
AboveLegit Posted April 15, 2010 Report Share Posted April 15, 2010 Good article Erick, but I think you focused too much on records... The Wizards deserve a D, but if we're speaking objectively here, they managed to do something that will ultimately benefit them in the future. I've said it before, after all of us realized the Wizards were not a playoff team (that hit most, if not all of us in November), we did what we had to do, ship out all bad contracts, get under the luxury tax, and start fresh. We managed to address the Gilbert situation, in the words of Ernie Grunfeld "as long as he's under contract and has the desire to play basketball, Gilbert will be a Washington Wizard next season." He's still our centerpiece, always has been, always will be. And let's not forget the emergence of Andray Blatche.. Though I would've loved to see Nick Young break out (have been expecting it for quite some time now), I can settle for a big man who can take the scoring load off of Gil and whoever we draft, and also allows us to seek other positions with our 3 picks this year. To give the Knicks, Hornets, Sixers, Kings, and Pacers above a failing grade while giving the Wizards an F is either stupid or just a blatant double standard (no offense lol). Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
GamerGuy Posted April 15, 2010 Report Share Posted April 15, 2010 Nice grading, I agree with most of it. I'd probably give the Lakers a B-/C+ instead of a C, though. Even with the problems they've had, they managed to lock up the first seed out West once again. Not an easy task. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Owner Real Deal Posted April 15, 2010 Owner Report Share Posted April 15, 2010 Kobe has looked like a mortal through the first 46 minutes of games because he's been playing with an avulsion fracture in his index finger, a dislocation on the same shooting hand, a swollen knee, twisted ankle and back spasms. 2008-09: 26.8 PPG on .467 FG, 5.2 RPG, 4.9 APG, 1.5 SPG2009-10: 27.0 PPG on .456 FG, 5.4 RPG, 5.0 APG, 1.5 SPG All things considered, not much of a difference in the general statistics. If those are numbers by a "mortal" in the basketball world, I guess the bar is set pretty high. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Legacy Posted April 15, 2010 Report Share Posted April 15, 2010 With all the injuries on the Warriors, you couldn't cut them some slack? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Lone Wolf Posted April 15, 2010 Report Share Posted April 15, 2010 (edited) I think Milicic may become the shot blocker the Wolves need. Hopefully his stamina improves this offseason. Some want Jefferson for Prince + Pistons first round pick, hoping to get Turner and Favors. Brewer is definitely worthy enough to keep. His shooting abilities have improved, by a lot. Can't deny that he's a top 5 MIP candidate. This year was supposed to be somewhat of an evaluation for all players. Clearly, we know that Jefferson and Love cannot play together at the same time. Clearly, we do need a wing player. That all should be answered this offseason, hopefully. This was Kahn's first year, so evaluating this year was needed. Edited April 15, 2010 by Lone Wolf Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Erick Blasco Posted April 16, 2010 Author Report Share Posted April 16, 2010 Good article Erick, but I think you focused too much on records... The Wizards deserve a D, but if we're speaking objectively here, they managed to do something that will ultimately benefit them in the future. I've said it before, after all of us realized the Wizards were not a playoff team (that hit most, if not all of us in November), we did what we had to do, ship out all bad contracts, get under the luxury tax, and start fresh. We managed to address the Gilbert situation, in the words of Ernie Grunfeld "as long as he's under contract and has the desire to play basketball, Gilbert will be a Washington Wizard next season." He's still our centerpiece, always has been, always will be. And let's not forget the emergence of Andray Blatche.. Though I would've loved to see Nick Young break out (have been expecting it for quite some time now), I can settle for a big man who can take the scoring load off of Gil and whoever we draft, and also allows us to seek other positions with our 3 picks this year. To give the Knicks, Hornets, Sixers, Kings, and Pacers above a failing grade while giving the Wizards an F is either stupid or just a blatant double standard (no offense lol). Clearing cap room is a nice organizational goal, but has no bearing on how a team should perform. They were a disaster with their stars and were as much as an inept team without them. The Wizards are worse off with Arenas' play and will never achieve anything with him. Andray Blatche is as selfish and immature as they come, and that was before his run-ins with Flip Saunders and his outrage over not getting a triple double in a recent win. Young breakout players have not developed (except Blatche). Nick Young is still lost, though Javale McGee always has been a project. Many people thought this team would be a playoff team. I thought they'd be about what the Raptors were this year. Even with modest expectations they've disappointed everyone. You're a Wizards fan so you'll look for silver linings, but the Wizards were a disaster for the second straight year. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Erick Blasco Posted April 16, 2010 Author Report Share Posted April 16, 2010 Nice grading, I agree with most of it. I'd probably give the Lakers a B-/C+ instead of a C, though. Even with the problems they've had, they managed to lock up the first seed out West once again. Not an easy task. The Lakers goal isn't to win the West, its to win a title. If the assignment is to prepare themselves for a title, they appear to be about average in achieving the task, which comes out to a C grade in strict teaching circles. It obviously wasn't a failure of a year, and obviously wasn't a season in which the Lakers consistently look unstoppable. Right in the middle (AB C DF) is a C, hence my grade. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Erick Blasco Posted April 16, 2010 Author Report Share Posted April 16, 2010 Kobe has looked like a mortal through the first 46 minutes of games because he's been playing with an avulsion fracture in his index finger, a dislocation on the same shooting hand, a swollen knee, twisted ankle and back spasms. 2008-09: 26.8 PPG on .467 FG, 5.2 RPG, 4.9 APG, 1.5 SPG2009-10: 27.0 PPG on .456 FG, 5.4 RPG, 5.0 APG, 1.5 SPG All things considered, not much of a difference in the general statistics. If those are numbers by a "mortal" in the basketball world, I guess the bar is set pretty high. I guess LeBron makes Kobe look mortal in comparison. My main criticism is that Kobe's had too many horrendous shooting games against relatively inferior defenders and defenses. He used to be more automatic. Injuries make anyone look mortal, but Kobe used to have this air of invincibility that's beginning to crack. His percentages are the lowest they've been since Shaq left and Kobe flew solo. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Erick Blasco Posted April 16, 2010 Author Report Share Posted April 16, 2010 With all the injuries on the Warriors, you couldn't cut them some slack? The Portland Trail Blazers were starting Juwan fricking Howard. That team laughs at anyone who tries to use injuries as an excuse. Regardless of the injuries, the Warriors aren't a team---just a collection of individuals forced to play a ridiculous kind of basketball. With Curry, Ellis, and Maggette, there's enough offense there to legitimately contend for 500, something the Warriors didn't do. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Erick Blasco Posted April 16, 2010 Author Report Share Posted April 16, 2010 I think Milicic may become the shot blocker the Wolves need. Hopefully his stamina improves this offseason. Some want Jefferson for Prince + Pistons first round pick, hoping to get Turner and Favors. Brewer is definitely worthy enough to keep. His shooting abilities have improved, by a lot. Can't deny that he's a top 5 MIP candidate. This year was supposed to be somewhat of an evaluation for all players. Clearly, we know that Jefferson and Love cannot play together at the same time. Clearly, we do need a wing player. That all should be answered this offseason, hopefully. This was Kahn's first year, so evaluating this year was needed. With how arrogant Milicic is, with his absent work ethic, he'll never amount to anything in the NBA. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
AboveLegit Posted April 16, 2010 Report Share Posted April 16, 2010 Clearing cap room is a nice organizational goal, but has no bearing on how a team should perform. They were a disaster with their stars and were as much as an inept team without them. The Wizards are worse off with Arenas' play and will never achieve anything with him. Andray Blatche is as selfish and immature as they come, and that was before his run-ins with Flip Saunders and his outrage over not getting a triple double in a recent win. Young breakout players have not developed (except Blatche). Nick Young is still lost, though Javale McGee always has been a project. Many people thought this team would be a playoff team. I thought they'd be about what the Raptors were this year. Even with modest expectations they've disappointed everyone. You're a Wizards fan so you'll look for silver linings, but the Wizards were a disaster for the second straight year.I'm not denying the fact that it was a failure of a season from a statistical standpoint, you'd have to be a real biased fan to think otherwise, but I do believe getting under the luxury tax was a main concern for this team's future. The Wizards won one more game than the Kings, yet you give them a B. There's a HUGE difference between the two according to you, and I'm curious, what is it? The fact that they got a young exciting team, or the fact that you portray the Wizards as a joke (which is understandable, but regardless it's not something that should be put into consideration? Yes, the Wizards underachieved, but after a month into the season, you knew this team was on the verge of rebuilding. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ManOnTheMoon Posted April 16, 2010 Report Share Posted April 16, 2010 Good read, i agree with it...sad thing is i agree with you said about my own team Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Erick Blasco Posted April 16, 2010 Author Report Share Posted April 16, 2010 I'm not denying the fact that it was a failure of a season from a statistical standpoint, you'd have to be a real biased fan to think otherwise, but I do believe getting under the luxury tax was a main concern for this team's future. The Wizards won one more game than the Kings, yet you give them a B. There's a HUGE difference between the two according to you, and I'm curious, what is it? The fact that they got a young exciting team, or the fact that you portray the Wizards as a joke (which is understandable, but regardless it's not something that should be put into consideration? Yes, the Wizards underachieved, but after a month into the season, you knew this team was on the verge of rebuilding. Some people thought the Wizards would be the East's 5 seed this year. Look for preseason articles from major websites, ask people on this site (who I know picked the Wizards fifth because they thought I was an idiot for thinking they were an 8 seed with more confidence in them missing the playoffs than gaining a higher seed). What were Sacramento's expectations this year? I looked at them and Milwaukee as having the two worst rosters in the league. Their young players started to develop, and they have a stud to build around---something they needed. The fact that it took only a month for Washington's season to fall apart only makes me want to give them a worse year. Getting under the luxury task only became a priority once the team realized it's season was a failure. Now they have cap space but who will want to play there? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Erick Blasco Posted April 16, 2010 Author Report Share Posted April 16, 2010 Good read, i agree with it...sad thing is i agree with you said about my own team Take solace in the fact that they're easily the safest bet in the West. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Warren2ThaG Posted April 16, 2010 Report Share Posted April 16, 2010 Wizards deserve a B considering Blatche might be in the Hall of Fame one day.... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Make It Naaaashty Posted April 16, 2010 Report Share Posted April 16, 2010 Wizards deserve a B considering Blatche might be in the Hall of Fame one day.... What does that have anything to do with their grade? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
AboveLegit Posted April 16, 2010 Report Share Posted April 16, 2010 Some people thought the Wizards would be the East's 5 seed this year. Look for preseason articles from major websites, ask people on this site (who I know picked the Wizards fifth because they thought I was an idiot for thinking they were an 8 seed with more confidence in them missing the playoffs than gaining a higher seed). What were Sacramento's expectations this year? I looked at them and Milwaukee as having the two worst rosters in the league. Their young players started to develop, and they have a stud to build around---something they needed. The fact that it took only a month for Washington's season to fall apart only makes me want to give them a worse year. Getting under the luxury task only became a priority once the team realized it's season was a failure. Now they have cap space but who will want to play there?I'll openly admit it, I had the Wizards as the fourth seed of the East this year, but what difference does it make? You're telling me because a certain team fails to meet the standards of fans and "experts", their season is deemed a failure? I'm sorry, but our season competitively was MAYBE 1-2 months tops. The rest was playing out the young guns, nothing more. Just like the Kings, Pacers, Nets, etc, the Wizards were in games to get their youth some experience on the court. Who wouldn't want to sign here? Well first off, no one is expecting a big name free agent to sign here, but it's always a positive when you're in a good financial position. The fact that you completely base these grades off of off season expectations is completely asinine, and serves no point. I could tell say the Bucks will win 60 games 7 months ago, so according to me, they're season is a failure? No. We had a goal, to get the bad contracts out, and to stay financially flexible for the next 3-4 seasons. Did we achieve this? Yes. What's wrong with giving Washington a D? You still have no supported the decision of giving the Pacers, Sixers, and Knicks a better grade? What is the logic behind giving an equally useless team like the Pacers a D? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
AtTheDriveIn Posted April 16, 2010 Report Share Posted April 16, 2010 Great job. It looks pretty accurate. I think the one team you may have been overly critical on was the Chicago Bulls. I'm on the opposite end of the scale toward them than you are, it seems. I thought, considering expectations, the team on paper, chemistry after their deadline (or thereabouts, I'm not sure when that even happened anymore) trade, they've impressed me a great deal. Derrick Rose finally got himself together to end the season, playing like a true star after the All-Star break, Luol Deng has sort of a breakout year after the disappointment that was last season and even became a decievingly impressive rebounder. I can recount at least two or three games where he had 15 or more rebounds, and one for sure that he had 20 in. The rookie of the team, Taj Gibson, didn't play like a rookie at all. He just played. Averages of 9 and 7 for a guy who was used rather sparingly all season long to me was good. Not to mention, he's also extremely smart out there, but that may have something to do with him being 24 years old already. Flip Murray, from what I can recall their only real addition through free agency played well, and especially well after Salmons left (although I'm not sure what happened to him this month). All in all, personally I'd have to give the Bulls a B, or even a B+. They made the playoffs in quite a comeback over the Raptors and given their financial situation for the upcoming free agency period, they can improve even moreso. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Erick Blasco Posted April 16, 2010 Author Report Share Posted April 16, 2010 I'll openly admit it, I had the Wizards as the fourth seed of the East this year, but what difference does it make? You're telling me because a certain team fails to meet the standards of fans and "experts", their season is deemed a failure? I'm sorry, but our season competitively was MAYBE 1-2 months tops. The rest was playing out the young guns, nothing more. Just like the Kings, Pacers, Nets, etc, the Wizards were in games to get their youth some experience on the court. Who wouldn't want to sign here? Well first off, no one is expecting a big name free agent to sign here, but it's always a positive when you're in a good financial position. The fact that you completely base these grades off of off season expectations is completely asinine, and serves no point. I could tell say the Bucks will win 60 games 7 months ago, so according to me, they're season is a failure? No. We had a goal, to get the bad contracts out, and to stay financially flexible for the next 3-4 seasons. Did we achieve this? Yes. What's wrong with giving Washington a D? You still have no supported the decision of giving the Pacers, Sixers, and Knicks a better grade? What is the logic behind giving an equally useless team like the Pacers a D? Put it this away. Say the Hawks lose in the 2nd round this year and have the exact same roster next year. If they start next year by losing games, having Joe Johnson bring a gun to the locker room, and then after a month focus on a youth movement, it's a failed season. Developing a youngster or two does nothing to dispel the notion that the Hawks got nothing out of the talent they had and fell way short of expectations. It's a failed season. Maybe if the Hawks youth movement saw them fight towards 500 or something, I could give them a D- or D, but again, the team didn't get what it could have gotten with the talent around it. Achieving cap space is nice but cap space has never won or lost games. I've never heard a coach say, "Well, cap space just isn't getting it done, he needs to pick up the intensity," or a player say, "man, when cap space does what it does, they're unstoppable." These grades only reflect how teams play on the court relative to their talent level. If I including positioning for the future, the New Jersey Nets would be this year's organizational champions. The fact that I base these teams off of a season's expectations serves to illustrate which teams played roughly how they were supposed to play, which maxxed out their roster, and which failed outright. These are team grades, not power rankings. All a team can do is max out the roster it has and achieve certain goals. Look at the Bucks as an example. Washington had three All-Stars. I'll let that sink in. Three All-Stars, plus a center who has gotten lots of praise for what he brings to Dallas. The team went nowhere with Arenas. When he went out, the team went nowhere without him. And when you talk about this youth movement being a success, THEY LOST 16 GAMES IN A ROW! They weren't winning with Andray Blatche's compiling either. Their young players either haven't developed yet, or have developed bad habits. How has this season not been a failure? Because they acquired cap room? You need to do more than that, you need to play good basketball with what you have. Either way, the Wizards went nowhere half the season with at least two All-Stars and Andray Blatche on the team. How is this season not a failure? Because they acquired cap room? Let's start the New Jersey Nets' parade. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Erick Blasco Posted April 16, 2010 Author Report Share Posted April 16, 2010 Great job. It looks pretty accurate. I think the one team you may have been overly critical on was the Chicago Bulls. I'm on the opposite end of the scale toward them than you are, it seems. I thought, considering expectations, the team on paper, chemistry after their deadline (or thereabouts, I'm not sure when that even happened anymore) trade, they've impressed me a great deal. Derrick Rose finally got himself together to end the season, playing like a true star after the All-Star break, Luol Deng has sort of a breakout year after the disappointment that was last season and even became a decievingly impressive rebounder. I can recount at least two or three games where he had 15 or more rebounds, and one for sure that he had 20 in. The rookie of the team, Taj Gibson, didn't play like a rookie at all. He just played. Averages of 9 and 7 for a guy who was used rather sparingly all season long to me was good. Not to mention, he's also extremely smart out there, but that may have something to do with him being 24 years old already. Flip Murray, from what I can recall their only real addition through free agency played well, and especially well after Salmons left (although I'm not sure what happened to him this month). All in all, personally I'd have to give the Bulls a B, or even a B+. They made the playoffs in quite a comeback over the Raptors and given their financial situation for the upcoming free agency period, they can improve even moreso. Maybe. The Bulls have their moments for sure, but they were supposed to be a potential sleeper with Rose and Salmons and Hinrich. They were flaky until the final few games, and even then, needed a Raptors collapse to get in. They beat a handful of decent teams down the stretch, but in their fourth or fifth to last game, they lost to the Nets and were in danger of missing the playoffs and ruining the good work they did last year, and even earlier this year with their out-of-the-blue Western conference demolition tour. Vinny Del Negro hasn't improved as a coach, and while Deng's rediscovered his form, too many players either have regressed or stayed still. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Lone Wolf Posted April 19, 2010 Report Share Posted April 19, 2010 With how arrogant Milicic is, with his absent work ethic, he'll never amount to anything in the NBA.Well, he has said that he likes playing Minnesota because they're letting him play. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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