NBA Focus

  • What is this site?
  • Main Concepts To Understand
  • NBA Draft Criticism & Reviews
 

Predicted records

10/28/2013

0 Comments

 

I already went over the contenders, and I think Miami will be the champ again.  If Miami does not three-peat I think Oklahoma City is the team most likely to replace them as champions. Here are my predicted regular season records for each team:

Eastern Conference

Miami Heat 57-25

Chicago Bulls 56-26

Brooklyn Nets 55-27

Indiana Pacers 51-31

 New York Knicks 47-35

Detroit Pistons 42-40

Atlanta Hawks 41-41

Cleveland Cavaliers 40-42

Washington Wizards 38-44

Milwaukee Bucks 37-45

Toronto Raptors 33-49

Orlando Magic 28-54

Charlotte Bobcats 27-55

Boston Celtics 24-58

Philadephia 76ers 19-63

Western Conference

Los Angeles Clippers 58-24

Oklahoma City Thunder 55-27

San Antonio Spurs 55-27

Houston Rockets 54-28

Memphis Grizzlies 50-32

Golden State Warriors 47-35

Denver Nuggets 44-38

Minnesota Timberwolves 43-39

Los Angeles Lakers 41-41

Dallas Mavericks 40-42

New Orleans Hornets 37-45

Portland Trailblazers 36-46

Sacramento Kings 33-49

Utah Jazz 25-57

Phoenix Suns 21-61

0 Comments

Title contenders

10/10/2013

0 Comments

 

I find myself agreeing with what a lot of the smart NBA prognosticators are saying about the upcoming season: There are going to be many very good teams, perhaps more than normal, and at the end of the day Miami still has to be considered the favorite to win the NBA Finals for the third straight year.

Yet, at the same time, I think many of us may be overemphasizing Miami as the favorite. As Zach Lowe pointed out recently, Miami always has been "on the precipice" of postseason failure the last three seasons. It took an absolutely amazing effort from LeBron James to carry them out of the depths last season, sprinkled in with some luck. Such individual dominance alone is difficult to sustain year after year in the postseason, even for somebody as profoundly great as James. If Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh are as relatively ineffective in postseason play again this year, the Heat are really going to be in trouble. Let's briefly view the other main contenders besides Miami:


Oklahoma City: The Thunder have lost Russell Westbrook for the beginning of the season, setting off the panic button in some circles, but such fears are unwarranted. Westbrook should return healthy, and Kevin Durant is so great that any missteps the Thunder have should be minor. They might not have the best record in the West this year, but then again they might. Durant is entering his prime, and the offensive inefficiencies this team has will probably be masked by Durant's transcendence, particularly in the regular season.


The Clippers: Los Angeles retooled around Chris Paul and Blake Griffin, and it has people like Danny Ainge thinking they will win 65+ games. If Paul and Griffin are completely healthy, that number is not unrealistic, and Paul will probably win MVP. Los Angeles is banking on its two stars to bring the team to a new level this year, and the off-season imports - Doc Rivers, Jared Dudley, J.J. Redick etc. - were expressly brought in with this in mind. Paul has always been underrated - this is maybe the best normal sized point guard ever - and 2014 could be the year that it all clicks for him and his team.


San Antonio: The Spurs, at the end of the day, blew it last year. They know this, and given the age of the team, it seems unlikely they can somehow bounce back and win it all this year. But San Antonio's system is superior to anybody else in the league, and this team is too well-coached to be discounted as a serious contender.

Chicago: By next Spring I expect Derrick Rose to be as great as ever, and the Bulls brutally effective style of play should serve them well in the postseason. The question is whether they will be able to generate enough offense around Rose to take down Miami, but this is a team no one will want to play in the postseason.


Houston: The Rockets are harder to predict than these other teams because of the enormous addition of Dwight Howard, and in the very least they should be well above average. If things fall into place - if the defense can be almost as good as the offense - the Rockets will be in a prime position to beat anyone.

Brooklyn: Like the Rockets, the Nets are difficult to project because of the major off-season additions of Kevin Garnett and Paul Pierce. The potential upside of this team is high - essentially a more offensively talented version of recent Celtics' teams - but injuries and age could easily take that away. I expect Brooklyn to be very solid, but it will be tough for them to make it through four playoff rounds with their health intact.

That is six real challengers to Miami in my opinion. I did not include Memphis or Indiana - two damn good teams - because ultimately I doubt they have the offensive starpower to go all the way. Regardless of the exact number, the league seems full of top-tier squads this season. So Miami will have their hands full if they want to three-peat.  It looks to be a competitive year in the NBA.

0 Comments

    Loading

    Tweets by @nbafocus

    RSS Feed



      Contact

    Submit



    Archives

    April 2015
    March 2015
    February 2015
    January 2015
    December 2014
    November 2014
    October 2014
    September 2014
    August 2014
    July 2014
    June 2014
    May 2014
    April 2014
    March 2014
    February 2014
    January 2014
    December 2013
    November 2013
    October 2013
    September 2013
    August 2013
    July 2013
    June 2013
    May 2013
    April 2013
    March 2013
    February 2013
    January 2013
    December 2012
    November 2012
    October 2012
    September 2012
    August 2012
    July 2012
    June 2012
    May 2012


Copyright Tim Grimes