EASTERN CONFERENCE
ATLANTA HAWKS
Off-season
Recap:
The Hawks haven't made a significant off-season addition since
trading for Jamal Crawford. The firm belief in Atlanta has been that
the core of Al Horford, Joe Johnson, and Josh Smith will eventually
develop into a championship contender, with no major additions
needed. Marvin Williams is paid like he's part of that core, and his
bloated salary forced the Hawks to wave goodbye to Crawford after two
very successful seasons in Atlanta. Jeff Teague is being counted on
to build on his promising series vs. the Bulls last spring and become
the man at point, which he'll have to do considering Tracy McGrady is
his lone backup with Kirk Hinrich sidelined following shoulder
surgery. Vladimir Radmonivic was also brought in to provide
three-point shooting.
Grade:
C-
Projected
Record:
41-25 (5th
in the East)
Haiku:
Crawford cost too much
Hinrich hurt his shoulder
Teague must be the man
BOSTON CELTICS
Off-season
Recap:
The moves the Celtics didn't make (trading for Chris Paul and/or
David West) are more interesting than the moves they did make, but
Danny Ainge still found a way to improve his team. Brandon Bass is a
huge upgrade of Big Baby Davis, especially considering the money
Davis will be making. The loss of Jeff Green hurts the depth behind
Paul Pierce, and I don't think bringing back C Sasha Pavlovic is
going to help there. I do like the drafting of the Purdue duo JaJuan
Johnson and E'Twaun Moore, but Jermaine O'Neal is still the starting
center (ahead of Chris Wilcox), which isn't ideal. Delonte West was
allowed to part, which may be for the best for both parties.
Grade:
C
Projected
Record:
44-22 (3rd
in the East)
Haiku:
Dooling and Bradley
Are the Celtics' backcourt depth
Rondo plays all game?
CHARLOTTE BOBCATS
Off-season
Recap:
A 305-pound Boris Diaw is the Bobcats' starting center, so things are
pretty dire regardless of whatever else is going on in Charlotte.
Kemba Walker, Bismack Biyombo, and Corey Maggette were draft-day
acquisitions, with Walker (hopefully) bringing leadership and
scoring, Biyombo (hopefully) bringing the shot-blocking and
rebounding the Bobcats gave away when they dumped Tyson Chandler last
year, and Maggette (definitely) filling the offensive black hole void
left by the departed Stephen Jackson. OKC bust Byron Mullens was
brought in to compete with incumbent stiff Desgana Diop to see who
truly is the worst center in the NBA, which both have proven worthy
of already by failing to beat out Diaw for the starting role. Reggie
Williams is an okay signing (although he's already hurt).
Grade:
D
Projected
Record:
12-54 (15th
in the East)
Haiku:
Kemba and Bismack
Are the same as the Cats' two
Best players last year
CHICAGO BULLS
Off-season
Review:
The only move the Bulls made this off-season was replacing Keith
Bogans with Rip Hamilton, which is at worst a wash, and at best gives
the Bulls a major upgrade at their lone problem spot last season.
Jimmy Butler was also drafted, and although draftniks are high on him
(or at least as high as someone can be on the 30th
pick), he most likely won't contribute much this season. If he does,
it most likely means something has gone very wrong in the upper
reaches of what may be the most complete depth chart in the NBA.
While many teams sat on their hands this off-season, the Bulls are
one of the few that were correct in doing so.
Grade:
B
Projected
Record:
52-14 (2nd
in the East)
Haiku:
Rip, Brewer, or Kyle
It does not matter who's 2
Rose makes all better
CLEVELAND CAVALIERS
Off-season
Review:
The arrival of Kyrie Irving and (to a lesser extent) Tristan Thompson
signals the true beginning of the post-LeBron era, as last season's
squad made the mistake of believing it could contend for the playoffs
before a record-setting losing streak forced management to accept
that the only way up is down. No such delusional mistakes were made
this winter, with the fat cut (Baron Davis), and the steady
placeholder (Anthony Parker) brought back to share the backcourt with
Irving. One more season at the bottom of the league should provide
the draft pick necessary to begin the climb back out of the gutter,
and start the countdown until Irving's (or next year's rookie
sensation's) free agency, and Cleveland can do this all over again.
Grade:
B
Projected
Record:
14-52 (12th
in the East)
Haiku:
Gilbert writes letters
The
font and words scream DOUCHEBAG
At least Dan spends cash
DETROIT PISTONS
Off-season
Review:
Joe Dumars continued his assault on logic, contradicting himself by
the move. First, he drafted Brandon Knight, presumably to replace
restricted free agent Rodney Stuckey, who of course was instead
re-signed to a three-year deal. Rip Hamilton was bought out,
signaling a long-overdue move towards a total rebuild, until Tayshaun
Prince was brought back for four more years. With Prince, Austin
Daye, and Charlie Villanueva locked up to man the three, Jonas
Jerebko could be let go. Or he could be re-signed for four more
years. Effectively, Dumars kept the same log-jammed, overpaid roster
that finished 30-52 last year together for the foreseeable future,
squandering his first chance to rectify the disastrous 2009
off-season and dooming the Pistons to an immediate future of boring
mediocrity.
Grade:
D-
Projected
Record:
13-53 (tied for 13th
in the East)
Haiku:
Three sort-of point guards
Three tweener forwards who suck
Help poor Greg Monroe
INDIANA PACERS
Off-season
Review:
Deciding (correctly) that they had enough young talent on the wings,
the Pacers started off by trading the draft rights to Kawhi Leonard
to the Spurs for Indianapolis native George Hill. While the Hill
acquisition is nice, the real coup of Indiana's off-season was the
signing of David West. West's addition moves Tyler Hansborough to
the bench, a role more suited for Psycho T's style. Jeff Foster was
brought back to back up Roy Hibbert, and (presumably) to mentor his
replacement, Lou Amudson, who was acquired for disappointing wing
Brandon Rush. West may not be the superstar needed to elevate
Indiana to the heights of Chicago or Miami, but he should at least
help the Pacers compete with the Hawks and Magic of the world.
Grade:
B+
Projected
Record:
37-29 (7th
in the East)
Haiku:
George grew two inches
Granger received scoring help
Indy will be tough
MIAMI HEAT
Off-season
Review:
Unfortunately, a 4th
quarter backbone for LeBron James wasn't available this off-season,
or the Heat would have addressed their only weakness. Even without
that, the Heat should be better. Shane Battier will take Mike
Miller's mostly ineffective minutes, while rookie Norris Cole will
provide the spark and energy Mike Bibby's corpse failed to provide.
A flier was taken on Eddy Curry, but unfortunately it looks like the
end of the line for the former Bull. Udonis Haslem should be healthy
for the whole season, which will help, but, honestly, as long as
LeBron, Dwyane Wade, and (to a much lesser extent) Chris Bosh are
healthy, the Heat will always be the favorites to win the title,
which they should do this summer.
Grade:
B
Projected
Record:
53-13 (1st
in the East)
Haiku:
Oh for two in June
LeBron will finally win
Breaking Cleveland's heart
MILWAUKEE BUCKS
Off-season
Review:
The Bucks traded the pick that became The Jimmer for Stephen Jackson,
which is already looking shaky, considering Fredette is looking at
least entertaining (something the Bucks weren't at all last year) and
Jackson is threatening a holdout despite having two seasons left on
his current deal. Second round pick Jon Leur will provide a
different look behind Andrew Bogut, spotting up for threes and
becoming a fan favorite, while Bogut by all accounts is finally
recovered from that gruesome arm injury, which would be by far the
most impactful development of the off-season. With a healthy Bogut,
the Bucks should be right in the mix with the Pacers and Sixers at
the bottom of the East. Without him, Jon Leur is their starting
center.
Grade:
C
Projected
Record:
29-37 (10th
in the East)
Haiku:
Michael Redd is gone
Delfino is no answer
Dunleavy, Jr.
NEW JERSEY NETS
Off-season
Review:
No, Dwight Howard wasn't stolen for Brook Lopez and some late-round
draft picks, but the off-season wasn't a bust for the Nets. Travis
Outlaw's non-production will be replaced by anything else (most
likely either Damion James or ex-Knick Shawne Williams), and Kirk
Humphries was brought back without the Nets having to comprise future
cap space (which could be used to continue the pursuit of Howard).
Rookie Marshon Brooks should provide scoring, even if it is
inefficient. This year will be another holding year for New Jersey,
but the presence of Deron Williams for a full year should make them
the most competitive they've been since the Jason Kidd days. With
Brooklyn and (perhaps) a Dwight-D-Will combo ahead, better days
should be coming.
Grade:
C
Projected
Record:
32-34 (9th
in the East)
Haiku:
Last time in Jersey
The Nets will wait once again
For a star to come
NEW YORK KNICKS
Off-season Review: The
Knicks went all-in with the Melo-Amare combo, jettisoning Chauncey
Billups and the coming salary relief he represented to bring in Tyson
Chandler. An Anthony-Stoudamire-Chandler frontcourt is boffo, but
how long will they get to play together, 60 games, or 30? Elsewhere,
with Billups gone and rookie Iman Shumpert looking promising but not
like a point guard, discarded vets Mike Bibby and, more
interestingly, Baron Davis were brought in to help Toney Douglas try
to run Mike D'Antoni's attack. If Davis is healthy and motivated,
the Knicks will push the Celtics in the Atlantic division. If he
isn't, at least that frontcourt will be a blast to watch go .500.
Grade: B
Projected Record: 42-24
(4th
in the East)
ORLANDO MAGIC
Off-season
Review:
Instead of actively pursuing the best deal out there for Dwight
Howard, Otis Smith instead has spent (even more) big money to make
another run at a title in what could be Dwight's Orlando swan song.
Jason Richardson was inexplicably brought back for a 4-year deal,
despite the fact that JJ Reddick was outplaying him by the end of
last year. Big Baby Davis was given a huge contract, and cost the
Magic a better player in Brandon Bass. Cleveland similarly loaded up
for one last run in LeBron's last year in town, only to become one of
the worst teams ever following his exit. A similar fate likely
awaits the Magic, except they won't be nearly as good as that
Cleveland team this year.
Grade:
D
Projected
Record:
40-26 (6th
in the East)
Haiku:
Lopez will not do
Hurt Bynum and who? Won't do
So Otis gave up
PHILADELPHIA 76ERS
Off-season Review: With a
young roster tied up to fairly substantial contracts, and with
seemingly no desire to trade Andre Igulodala, the Sixers had little
choice but to stand pat and wait for youngsters like Evan Turner and
a re-signed Thaddeus Young to blossom. First-round choice Nikola
Vucevic appears to be a guy drafted because he's tall who never does
anything. Spencer Hawes is tall and has talent, so he's back for one
more year to see if he can finally harness it. PER favorite Mareese
Speights was rumored to be shopped, but it looks like he'll be back
to finally prove John Hollinger right. Barring a stunning
development by Turner or Young, the Sixers should again find
themselves at the bottom of the East playoff field.
Grade: B-
Projected Record: 34-32
(8th
in the East)
Haiku:
Middle of the road
With some talent that can grow
A spring sweep ahead
TORONTO RAPTORS
Off-season
review:
The Raptors finally seem ready to hit bottom, which hasn't happened
since they set themselves up to draft Chris Bosh. No significant
additions were made this off-season (talent-wise or salary-wise), and
even their first round pick Jonas Valanciunas won't be in Toronto
this year. Gary Forbes, Aaron Gray, and Jamal Magloire aren't going
to win any games, which is good, since the Raptors should do nothing
to jeopardize their lofty draft position in one of the strongest
drafts in years. DeMarr DeRozan and Ed Davis—Toronto's past two
first rounders—are nice pieces, but neither is going to be a
superstar, nor is Valanciunas (despite his dominating European Under
19 performance). A superstar is needed to make the Raptors matter
again, and this draft should provide one.
Grade:
C
Projected
Record:
13-53 (tied for 13th
in the East)
Haiku:
DeRozan might shine
And Bargnani will score lots
But the Raps will suck
WASHINGTON WIZARDS
Off-season Review: With a
roster brimming with talented knuckleheads, Rashard Lewis's contract,
and John Wall, the Wizards faced several possibilities. They could
have amnestied Lewis, clearing his contract from their books, and
traded a knucklehead. Or, they could have brought everyone back, and
hoped that a year-older Wall could become a leader, whipping the
knuckleheads into shape and coaxing production out of Lewis. The Wiz
chose the latter, bringing back Nick Young, keeping Lewis, and adding
Ronny Turiaf to mentor JaVale McGee, which should set up yet another
exciting year filled with bone-headed moments. Wall should start to
move into the elite point guard discussion, while the whole team will
rock the best uniforms in the league, but actual playoff contention
is at least one year away.
Grade: C+
Projected Record: 21-45
(11th
in the East)
Haiku:
Blatche, McGee, and Young
The Capitol's Three Stooges
Will undermine Wall
WESTERN CONFERENCE
DALLAS
MAVERICKS
Offseason Recap:
Championship owners always have difficult decisions to make the
following offseason, and Mark Cuban was no exception. He knew
bringing Tyson Chandler back was going to be a steep price, so he let
the 29-year old center sign with the Knicks and used the money to pay
Lamar Odom, Vince Carter, and Delonte West. Wise move, Mr. Cuban.
Chandler’s missed over 150 games in his career, and there was
absolutely no way he was going to replicate last season’s numbers.
Although the Mavs will be a little thinner down low, their perimeter
defense should be among the NBA’s best between Kidd, West, Marion,
Carter, and Odom (who I expect to play a lot of 3 this year). Expect
little drop-off in the Mavs’ defensive efficiency.
Offseason Grade: B+
Projected 2011-12 Record:
45-21 (2nd in West) (45-21, 5th)
Haiku:
Tyson’s in New York
It was smart to let him go
One more title run
DENVER
NUGGETS
Offseason Recap: After
hitting a home run with the Carmelo Anthony trade last year, Denver’s
offseason probably felt a bit underwhelming. Their biggest
acquisition was Andre Miller, making his second go-round in the Mile
High City. I personally think Miller’s a nice fit for Denver’s
up-and-down style, though unfortunately he won’t have anyone to
throw alley oops to (sorry, Nene). Regardless, three of Denver’s
key rotation players – Wilson Chandler, Kenyon Martin, and J.R.
Smith – will be playing overseas until March, and those losses will
be felt early on during the team’s compressed schedule. But it’s
hard to be too critical when the Nuggets were able to re-sign their
two most important free agents – Nene and Aaron Afflalo – to
long-term deals. They could be West contenders in 2013.
Offseason Grade: B
Projected 2011-12 Record:
37-29 (6th in West) (37-29, 8th)
Haiku:
Key guys in China
Will limit team’s depth early
Playoffs still in reach
GOLDEN STATE
WARRIORS
Offseason Recap: Let’s
start with the most noteworthy signing… Head Coach Mark Jackson!
When hiring an ABC analyst who’s never coached at any level is your
team’s high-point of the summer, that’s never a good thing. When
it comes to clever catch phrases (“Momma there goes that man!”
“3-ball corner pocket!”), Mark’s in a league of his own.
Unfortunately, I think that’s the league he was best suited for.
Even if I’m wrong, there’s still little to get excited about from
the Warriors’ offseason. They signed Kwame Brown to an absurd
$7-million contract, did nothing to address the awkward Steph
Curry-Monta Ellis pairing, and look poised to continue their streak
of awful lottery selections (minus Curry) with overrated guard Klay
Thompson next in line.
Offseason Grade: C-
Projected 2011-12 Record: 29-37
(10th in West) (23-43, 12th)
Haiku:
When will this team learn?
Curry and Ellis don’t mesh
Return to lotto
HOUSTON
ROCKETS
Offseason Recap: GM
Daryl Morey has never been one to rush into deals; he likes to
collect assets and wait for the big score. Unfortunately, David Stern
mucked up that plan. The Rockets had everything in place to not only
acquire Pau Gasol from the Lakers but also sign Nuggets center Nene
to a long-term deal. That would have given the Rockets the NBA’s #1
front line; instead they got neither player and watched another
offseason go by with no prize. New Head Coach Kevin McHale will do
what he can to keep an optimistic attitude in Houston, but the
players know they’re not going anywhere significant without a
superstar. Expect Morey’s approach to pay off big eventually… but
until then Rockets fans must be patient.
Offseason Grade: C+
Projected 2011-12 Record:
32-34 (9th in West) (32-34, 9th)
Haiku:
David Stern’s blocked trade
Means the Rockets once again
Are stuck in limbo
LOS ANGELES
CLIPPERS
Offseason Recap: No,
hell has not frozen over (at least not to my knowledge), but the
Clippers did just make the league’s biggest offseason trade in
acquiring Chris Paul. Although they had to give up an awful lot to
get him, there’s no doubt Paul makes them a significantly better
team this upcoming season. As for their other moves, I’d say those
were a bit more questionable. Caron Butler for $24 million? Deandre
Jordan for $43 million? I hope L.A. realizes they paid nearly $10
million more for those two players than the Grizzlies did for Marc
Gasol. Since the Clips are in “win-now” mode after acquiring
Paul, those moves make a little more sense. But it comes with a huge
risk to the team’s future.
Offseason Grade: A-
Projected 2011-12 Record:
39-27 (5th in West) (42-24, 6th)
Haiku
CP3-Griffin
‘Bout to take over L.A.
And win Pacific
LOS ANGELES
LAKERS
Offseason Recap: Rule
#1 about being an NBA GM: “Never do anything quickly unless the
deal’s too good to pass up.” After the Lakers got rejected in the
Odom/Gasol for Chris Paul trade, they immediately shipped Lamar off
to Dallas in exchange for the Mavs’ $8.9 million trade exception
and their 2012 first round pick. Hey, I’m all about cleaning house
if a guy’s presence is toxic to the team (Odom wanted out), but
you’re telling me the league’s top sixth man couldn’t have
brought back more to you than that? Sounds like Kupchak cared
more about resolving the issue quickly than finding the best deal for
his team. Now the Lakers have only three good players and are all but
out of the Dwight Howard sweepstakes.
Offseason Grade:
D
Projected 2011-12 Record:
33-33 (8th in West) (48-18, 3rd)
Haiku:
Struck out on Chris Paul
Foolishly traded Lamar
8th seed
here we come
MEMPHIS
GRIZZLIES
Offseason Recap: The
Grizzlies had only one responsibility this offseason: re-sign Marc
Gasol. Not only did they successfully do that, they got him for a
more-than-reasonable price at four years, $58 million, indicating to
me that Gasol really wants to be there (he could have gotten $10-12
million more somewhere else). The Grizz are now in position to
compete for an NBA Championship, and this season in particular seems
like their best chance. The entire core is in its prime, and their
depth and continuity should give them a leg up on the competition in
this compressed, shortened season. I expect them to fight for the
Southwest Division crown with Dallas, and Zach Randolph (yes, Zach
Randolph) finishing in the top five of MVP votes.
Offseason Grade: A
Projected 2011-12 Record:
43-23 (3rd in West) (46-20, 4th)
Haiku
Re-signed Marc Gasol
That’s all the Grizzlies needed
To be contenders
MINNESOTA
TIMBERWOLVES
Offseason Recap: The
T’Wolves made a lot of offseason moves, almost all for the better.
They wisely selected arguably the best player in the 2011 draft in
Derrick Williams, who I expect to play significantly more minutes
than Michael Beasley this season. They then hired future
Hall-of-Famer Rick Adelman to replace creatively-dead Kurt Rambis as
the team’s Head Coach. Lastly, Spanish sensation Ricky Rubio
finally made his way over to the Gopher State to join the team’s
fraternity of point guards, which now includes J.J. Barea from
Dallas. Sure the team still has some serious needs at center – and
there will likely be a lot of continued growing pains from this young
group – but their days in the Western Conference basement are
officially over.
Offseason Grade: B+
Projected 2011-12 Record:
25-41 (12th in West) (15-51, 14th [tied])
Haiku:
With Rick Adelman
Replacing Rambis as Coach
Night- and-day results
NEW ORLEANS
HORNETS
Offseason Recap:
Despite what you may have heard from the Chris Paul trade (which
I agree was a pretty good deal for New Orleans), don’t fool
yourself for a second: the Hornets are going to be bad. Quite bad,
actually. People don’t realize the tremendous effect Paul had on
the Hornets’ offensive efficiency, and that simply cannot be
replaced by Eric Gordon, Al Farouq-Aminu, and Chris Kaman. The team
also lost David West to Indiana, taking away their second-best shot
creator. I expect the Hornets to look very similar to last year’s
Milwaukee Bucks – only in a tougher conference with slightly less
effective defense. But I do applaud them for acquiring both Gordon
and Minnesota’s first-round pick in the Paul trade, which
should help the rebuilding process.
Offseason Grade: B
Projected 2011-12 Record:
19-47 (15th in West) (15-51, 14th [tied])
Haiku:
Chris Paul waved goodbye
New Orleans wishes him well
Dark days lie ahead
OKLAHOMA
CITY THUNDER
Offseason Recap:
Sometimes less is more. Such is the case for the Oklahoma City
Thunder. Looking back at their 2010-11 season, Owner Clay Bennett and
GM Sam Presti had to feel pretty good about the results. OKC was a
lot closer to beating Dallas than a 5-game series normally indicates,
so there was little need to make serious personnel changes. They
re-signed shooter Daequan Cook for virtually nothing and drafted
Boston College guard Reggie Jackson with their first-round pick, but
really these moves are inconsequential to the team’s big picture.
The Thunder are my favorites to finish with the West’s best record
due to their unique combination of depth, youth, and continuity that
few teams can match during this lockout-shortened season.
Offseason Grade: A
Projected 2011-12 Record:
48-18 (1st in West) (51-15, 1st)
Haiku:
League’s compressed schedule
Perfect for Thunder’s roster
Durant MVP
PHOENIX SUNS
Offseason Recap: I
am convinced that owner Robert Sarver is perfectly at peace with his
franchise having a long, painful rebuilding process once Steve Nash
leaves after this season. If that’s not the case, then he really is
the most idiotic owner in sports. The Suns clearly aren’t going
anywhere, nor were they two years ago. Yet Sarver has held his stance
that the team refuses to trade Steve Nash. On top of that, they are
making lateral moves such as bringing back Grant Hill for another
season. What exactly does that accomplish? Loyalty and fan
appreciation are obviously more important to the Suns organization
than making smart basketball choices. If that’s where their values
lie, power to them. But it certainly doesn’t sit well with me.
Offseason Grade: F
Projected 2011-12 Record:
24-42 (13th in West) (31-35, 10th)
Haiku:
The Suns glory days
Are oh so far behind them
Nash fans, let him go
PORTLAND
TRAILBLAZERS
Offseason Recap: Who
do you feel sorrier for: Brandon Roy or Greg Oden? Tough choice,
right? I actually think the Blazers are relieved Roy called it quits;
it saves them face with their fans about Amnestying him, even though
it was clearly the right move. As for Oden, I think we’ve seen the
last of him in a Blazers uniform, and it too may be for the best.
Otherwise, I’m actually a pretty big fan of Portland’s offseason.
They signed Jamal Crawford to a 2-year, $10 million deal to provide a
backcourt scoring boost, acquired Raymond Felton from Denver to
instill more youth and range at the 1, and added underrated forward
Craig Smith to their frontcourt depth. Given the circumstances, it
could have been much worse.
Offseason Grade: B
Projected 2011-12 Record:
34-32 (7th in West) (38-28, 7th)
Haiku
Roy and Oden’s leave
Helps the Blazers down the road
So sad, yet so true
SACRAMENTO
KINGS
Offseason Recap: I’ve
completely lost faith in this team. Basically, the Kings’ strategy
is to acquire as many semi-talented players as possible, with no
regard whatsoever to work ethic, position, injury proneness, team
chemistry, or anything else the other 29 teams in the NBA account for
when signing players. Here were the Kings trade/free agent
acquisitions this offseason: John Salmons, Travis Outlaw, and J.J.
Hickson. None of those players are awful, but none are that great
either. They re-signed Marcus Thornton – a scoring guard I really
like – but gave him a 5-year, $40 million deal. Who else was going
to offer him that? Lottery pick Jimmer Freddette will certainly draw
interest from college fans, which is good because they won’t be
drawing much interest from me.
Offseason Grade: D+
Projected 2011-12 Record: 22-44
(14th in West) (16-50, 13th)
Haiku:
There’s no way this team
Will ever make the Playoffs
With this whiny bunch
SAN ANTONIO
SPURS
Offseason Recap: The
Spurs are in a tricky spot. They probably don’t have the talent to
win the NBA Championship anymore, but at the same time they possessed
the league’s best record for 95% of last season. The question then
becomes what was the fluke – their amazing regular season run or
first-round Playoff exit? GM R.C. Buford made the same decision I
would have made: give this core one more chance. However, management
chose to trade combo guard George Hill to the Indiana Pacers for
rookie Kawhi Leonard on draft night – not sure I understand that
one if your vision is to go all-in for this season. They also
withheld from Amnestying Richard Jefferson; you can be sure that
won’t be the case next summer.
Offseason Grade: C
Projected 2011-12 Record:
40-26 (4th in West) (49-17, 2nd)
Haiku:
Tony, Manu, Tim
Have one more run left in them
If no one gets hurt
UTAH
JAZZ
Offseason Recap: The
Jazz are one of the smartest organizations in sports. GM Kevin
O’Connor had the foresight last year to trade Deron Williams away
when the right deal presented itself, leading to acquiring both
Derrick Favors and rookie Enes Kanter, two extremely promising young
big men. When you factor in Al Jefferson, Paul Millsap, Gordon
Hayward, C.J. Miles, and Mehmet Okur, the Jazz probably have the
NBA’s deepest frontcourt. I do wish they would have more
aggressively pursued trading one of their bigs for some backcourt
help, but perhaps the team feels its Championship window is still too
far away. I was also not a big fan of the Josh Howard signing; again,
I wish the team would have spent money to address its thin backcourt.
Offseason Grade: B-
Projected 2011-12 Record:
27-39 (11th in West) (25-41, 11th)
Haiku:
The future is bright
With a bounty of young bigs
Please, go get a guard
It seems you think there's a larger gap between the top and the bottom than I do, Canaan. I think the West is much more compact in its range of talent than the East is. We will soon find out who's right!
ReplyDeleteAlso, you are a much tougher grader than I am - the highest grade you gave out was a B+!
ReplyDelete