Sunday, February 27, 2011

With two big trades, Oklahoma City becomes a serious championship contender



Right around the trade deadline the Boston Celtics and the Oklahoma City Thunder made an unbelievable trade. The Celtics sent Kendrick Perkins & Nate Robinson to OKC for Jeff Green & Ned Kristic.

Acquiring Perkins and the Bobcats Nazr Mohammed was a slam dunk for the Thunder. They immensely improved their defense with this trade. Perkins is one of the best defensive centers in the league and has a lot of playoff experience. Nazr will be a solid backup and can easily start if Perkins gets hurt.

The Thunder’s starting five will be Westbrook, Selfosa, KD, Ibaka and Perkins. With twenty-seven games to go, the Thunder have a good chance to pass the Lakers and obtain the 3rd seed in the West. They go from being a playoff team to having a real shot at winning the title. They now have the depth to match up with the Lakers, Spurs, and Mavs. And the scariest part is that Durant and Westbrook are only 22 years old! If they can resign Perkins to a long term deal, the Thunder could be a favorite to win the Western Conference for years to come. After all Tim Duncan, Dirk Nowitzki, and Kobe Bryant are not getting any younger, and Kevin Durant, Russell Westbrook and Kendrick Perkins have yet to reach the prime of their careers.

On the flip side of the coin it is very hard to see why the Celtics made this move. As TNT’s David Aldrige said, “The Celtics were a team who played tough, nasty defense down low. That was their identity. Now they lost that identity.” He is exactly right. They no longer have the same identity as they did before. Sure Shaq fits in well, but it is quite unrealistic to expect him to stay healthy throughout the playoffs. Jermaine O’Neal has not been good for awhile. As for Nenad Krstic, he can score but he can’t defend or rebound. Those are the two most important ingredients to winning a championship. Who is going to defend Dwight Howard? Shaq is simply too old to keep up with him for an entire series. Even if the Celtics were not able to resign Perkins it’s not an excuse to trade him now. Not when that starting 5 have never lost a playoff series when they are all healthy.

Shortly after the trade many members from both teams were shocked to hear the news. Kevin Garnett described Perkins as being like a brother to him, and the only way he could describe the situation was to say it was “like losing a family member.” Kevin Durant seemed excited for his team to land Perkins and offered him words of encouragement in a text message. It will definitely take some time for all players involved in this trade to adjust to their new teams and find clear roles for themselves, and both teams are hoping that happens before the playoffs.

So watch out Western Conference because that booming sound your hearing is the arrival of the Oklahoma City Thunder.

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Nuggets fans should write a thank you card to Carmelo Anthony



After all the months leading up to his trade to the New York Knicks, Carmelo Anthony was called every bad name in the book. No one could believe that he was demanding a trade while still under contract with the Nuggets. People said he should just play out his contract and then he could do whatever he wanted in free agency. But, as we look back on this deal I can’t help but think that Carmelo didn’t get enough praise for being honest about what he wanted. Now of course he couldn’t tell the media how he truly felt because he would get fined, but he let management know of his desire to leave and that allowed this deal to happen.

And the deal, by the way, turned out to be pretty darn good for the Nuggets who acquired Wilson Chandler, Raymond Felton, Danilo Gallinari, Kosta Koufos and Timofey Mozgov. Every one of those players has upside and they can put up solid numbers. By doing the deal early instead of waiting right until the deadline, the Nuggets could also use those new players in other trades to get various assets which they feel would best suit their team.

Carmelo could have sabotaged the entire deal for the Nuggets by saying he would only play for the Knicks. He could have refused to meet with Nets owner Mikhail Prokhorov and minority owner Jay-Z over All-Star weekend. But for the sake of the Denver Nuggets he played along, and remained non-committal after their much hyped meeting. That meeting and the proposed deal by the Nets caused the Knicks to get scared, and offer much more than they were originally willing to give up. Before the reemergence of the Nets in the talks the Knicks never intended to include Felton, Gallinari, or Mozgov in a deal for Melo.

Nuggets fans probably still have some contempt for Melo, but that should have already begun to disappear after a great win Tuesday night by the new look Nuggets. Even though they lack a superstar for the time being things could be worse, they could be the Cavs. You know Cavs and Raptors fans have to be envious of the great package Denver got for Anthony. As everyone knows the Cavs and Raptors were left with largely worthless assets when their superstars bolted for the white sand of South Beach. ESPN’s J.A. Adande puts it best:

“The Cavs and Raptors made last-minute sign-and-trade deals for picks and trade exceptions, but those are just possibilities and cap space. The Nuggets have more tangible assets.”

During these last six months Anthony was also portrayed as being greedy for wanting to sign his three year extension, instead of waiting for free agency where he was bound to lose millions of dollars. Some people said he should give up the money just like Lebron did when he went to the Miami HEAT. With his new extension, Melo will make$ 21.6 million a year. Since he will live in New York he must pay a 7.7% state income tax on that money which would be something around $1.6 million. After taxes his salary will be about $19.9 million. Since Lebron signed with Miami he doesn’t have to pay state income tax in Florida. He makes $19.2 million a year. So is Anthony really being that greedy if he’s making just $700,000 more than Lebron?

Over the summer, after Melo saw the backlash from Cavs fans towards James, he probably thought that he should tell the Nuggets front office asap that he wanted out of Denver. I think he just never imagined that the trade process would take so long and that so many fans would turn on him for having the guts to tell his team he did not see them in his future. He did the right thing, and now his former team’s rebuilding process will be much easier thanks to the good players they were able to acquire for him.

So Nuggets fans get out your pens and start writing because I know thousands of people in Cleveland and Toronto who would die to be in your shoes.

Sunday, February 20, 2011

The biggest threat to the Celtics this is year? That’s right it’s DA Bulls



For the past three years almost, it seems that almost no team has been able to stop the Boston Celtics. With three conference titles in two years, they have at times seemed invincible against their conference foes. But each year brings new challenges and threats to their Eastern conference supremacy. This year’s biggest threat to the Boston Celtics isn’t Dwight Howard and the Magic. It’s not Lebron and the Heat. It’s the Chicago Bulls along with their defensive wizard Tom Thibodeau (long time Celtics assistant).

Since posting a 38-16 record and a third place conference standing at the All-Star break, the Bulls are having their best start since a certain number 23 used to play at the United Center. The Bulls opponents continue to be at the mercy of their stingy defense which has held the opposition to a 42% FG% and a measly 33% from behind the arc. The Bulls have been able to put up these impressive numbers without their leading rebounder and shot blocker, Joakim Noah who has been sidelined for the last two months due to a torn ligament in his right thumb. They remain only two games out of first place in the Eastern Conference.

Bulls fans are salivating at the prospect that their team will finally be at full strength after the All Star break when Noah returns to action against the Raptors on February 23rd. His timing could not be better as the Bulls will be on the road for seven of their next nine games. Five of those teams are playoff teams, and to truly become an elite team the Bulls must improve their road record. In order to win in the playoffs teams must win on the road, unless you’re the 2008 Boston Celtics who only won three road games on their quest to a seventeenth NBA championship. The Bulls have a mediocre road record at 13-12, and must become road warriors in the second half of the season if they are to capture home court advantage throughout the playoffs.

The Bulls biggest weakness is at shooting guard, and it is possible that they will make a move to acquire a talented shooter and defender before Thursday’s trade deadline. They should preferably seek someone long who can defend players such as Dwayne Wade, Jason Richardson, Ray Allen and Kobe Bryant. In the 2008 playoffs James Posey wasn’t the Celtics most well known guard, but he could make a three when needed and he thoroughly harassed Kobe Bryant in the NBA finals. A James Posey type shooting guard would fit well into the Bulls offense, and would be able to score easily when Rose or Boozer bring the double team.

The Bulls host the Celtics for a final regular season meeting on April 7th, in what could be a sneak preview of this year’s Eastern Conference finals. If the Bulls end up with the second or third seed and the Celtics remain in first, the Bulls could beat the Heat to advance to the ECF. This week’s game vs. the Heat will be a good measuring stick for the Bulls, and they can cement their elite status in the conference by getting back to back wins against the Heat with a victory on Thursday. Many people seem to overlook the Bulls as second round fodder to the Heat, but that is simply not true. Not when the Heat’s major weaknesses play to the Bulls biggest strengths. The Heat do not have a legitimate point guard or center and need significant production from those two positions to have a chance vs. the Bulls. Derrick Rose and Joakim Noah will give the Heat all they can handle. The Heat also lack a decent bench, and vs. the Bulls, the Heat’s subs simply can’t matchup with Watson, Brewer, Korver and Gibson. As good as the big three are they will have to average somewhere around 25pts each in a series against the Bulls to have a chance. This is highly unlikely because in the playoffs the game will slow down, resulting in the Heat having fewer possessions and thus fewer shots for their star players.
Thibodeau’s elaborate defensive schemes will wear down the Heat’s big three and eventually they will simply be too fatigued to win a seven game series against the Bulls. In a series against the Celtics the Bulls would match up well as they are one of the only teams who can rival the Celtics big bodies. Once Doc Rivers greatest ally, Thibodeau will become his greatest enemy.

What kind of success the Bulls have in the playoffs, and for the second half of the season will ultimately be determined by this week’s trade deadline. For now Bulls fans will just have to sit tight and wait and see what moves Paxton can pull off, in what seems like the longest week of the NBA season. Tick tock, tick tock, as everyone waits for Thursday at 3 o clock.

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

As Kings punish Cousins, Rockets need to give them a way out



Demarcus Cousins is at it again. This time he got in a fight with teammate Donte Green after the Kings loss to the Thunder on Saturday night. After the altercation the team suspended him for one game, and he was unable to travel with the team to Phoenix.

This certainly isn’t the first time Cousins has rustled some feathers in his own locker room, and it won’t be the last either. At just twenty years old, Cousins has obvious behavioral and maturity issues. That’s why the Kings even went out of their way to put his high school coach on their staff, to help ease him into the NBA. That has worked with mixed results.

With the trade deadline a week away, will the Kings really keep Cousins? Ask now and any Kings official will tell you that he will not be moved. However, he would seem to have the highest trade value on the team. After all, Kevin Martin was traded to the Rockets during last year’s deadline even though the Kings said that they would not trade him so that he could compliment Tyreke Evans in the backcourt.

Instead of worrying about Cousins next tantrum, the Kings could trade him for a player they have been coveting for the last three years: Aaron Brooks. That would make the Kings have an extremely quick back court in Evans and Brooks. Paul Westphal could move Aaron back to his natural two guard position, and could mold him into a similar version of Allen Iverson (an undersized two who can score at will). Brooks lead the league in threes last year, and is finally starting to find his shot again after coming back from an ankle injury that sidelined him for 24 games earlier this season.

No matter how immature Cousins is, the Rockets are starving for a big man with his talent and size. As he gets older he is bound to mature, both as person and as a player. Putting Cousins in a locker room with a group of savvy veterans could completely change his mindset. When the Rockets acquired Ron Artest from the Kings three years ago, people worried how his unpredictable personality would fit into to such a no nonsense team. In the end he flourished and helped lead the Rockets to their first playoffs series victory in more than a decade. Rick Adelman can coach anyone, and he certainly could mesh better with Cousins than Paul Westphal ever will.

The Rockets could combine this deal with another for Artest which I mentioned in a previous post. Artest looks frustrated in LA, and a return to the Rockets could be just what he needs. Due to Ron’s turbulent past and issues with immaturity during his younger years in the league, he would be a perfect mentor for Cousins. Artest has been there and done that, and hopefully Cousins will understand that he must change his attitude to not only help the team but also himself.

By trading the expiring contract of Jared Jeffries for Ron Artest and Brooks for Cousins, the Rockets would get back a lot of talent without giving up that much. If the Rockets could become successful with an Artest /Cousins combo, Adelman should consider becoming a professional mediator after he retires.

Sunday, February 13, 2011

Carmelo Anthony to the Lakers? (Please don’t tell me Denver’s management is THIS dumb…)



If you read the report out on February 8th by Chris Broussard of ESPN then you know that the Nuggets and Lakers are having preliminary discussions about a possible deal of Anthony for Andrew Bynum. If this deal happened it would surely be another gift to the Lakers, just like the Pau Gasol trade that went down three years ago.
Bynum is good, but he is certainly not someone to build your franchise around. Over the past five years he has only averaged playing in 56 games a year. He’s just simply too risky to rely on in the long run, much less give up your franchise player for.

If Ujiri does pull of this trade in the next week then he will definitely achieve what few GMs have. He will enter an elite club where GMs trade away their franchise players for other team’s leftover assets. Yes, he will be a proud member of the Chris Wallace club.

Basically he would be giving his franchise player to his team’s biggest rival over the last two years. Did I just hear Avery Johnson say “Merry Christmas LA” again? The GM would be basically telling his team and fans that the Nuggets will no longer be able to compete with the Lakers and that they should simply expect mediocrity from the team for the next few seasons.

You can bet your bottom dollar Greg Popovich will have something to say about that! The fact that this trade is even being discussed at all is unreal, but again here come the Lakers. The moment they hit a bit of adversity they look to make a big trade. They can acquire nearly any elite player they choose and take on the salary because their owner can afford it. Who wouldn’t want to play for Phil and have Kobe, Pau, and Odom as teammates?

But what would happen to the competition in the West? I mean if you put Anthony in a line up with Bryant, Gasol, Fisher and Odom that team is almost guaranteed to go to the NBA finals. And for all those people who say there are not enough shots for Bryant and Anthony together, just look how successful Lebron and Wade are meshing in Miami.

It would be the creation of yet another super team which the media would adore and salivate over, but the fans outside of LA would hate. If this deal really goes down what does that say about the future of the NBA? Are small market teams like the Timberwolves and the Raptors doomed because they don’t have the perfect location for an NBA free agent? Is that what the league has come to?

There must be other deals out there. Some team must have something better than what New York is offering. If he hasn’t already Ujiri needs to get the Nets back on the phone and let them create the terms of the deal for Anthony. If that deal is truly off the table, then they need to start seriously talking to the LA Clippers and try to deal Anthony to the other team that plays its home games at the Staples Center. Imagine the talent they could get from the Clips in exchange for Anthony. The Nuggets could get back an attractive package of Kaman, Foye, and Aminu. The Clippers starting five could easily be Davis, Gordon, Anthony, Griffin, and Jordan. To me that starting lineup can compete with any team in the league. One would think this opportunity would satisfy Melo in terms of location and talent. It would allow Melo to compete against his best friend (Kobe) to see who the real king of LA is.

But it’s really up to Ujiri to bring Denver a deal that will benefit them. So far he hasn’t shown he’s ready for the big time as an NBA GM. After the trade deadline passes we’ll see if this still holds true.

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

The one man who can save the Cavs from extinction




If your Dan Gilbert millions of questions must be racing through your head as you try to contemplate the future of your dwindling franchise. After making NBA history by losing twenty-five games in a row something must be done.
Obviously the Cavs need to make a trade for two reasons. They lack sufficient talent to compete and they must use the trade exception from the Lebron James deal by July or else it expires.

But what else can they do to right their sinking ship? Should they fire Byron Scott? Would that change anything? Probably not.  They seem to be playing hard under Scott especially considering all the injuries they have had, but just don’t have the talent to close out games.
 
Gilbert and the Cavs need to make a big splash and the best way to do that is for them to fire their current GM Chris Grant, and go after Kevin Pritchard as hard as they can. Grant has had lots of experience in NBA front offices and has also previously been an assistant GM. But with their current situation the Cavs need a GM who is proven and tested.

Kevin of course won’t be attracted to their current situation, but he might be attracted to Gilbert’s fat wallet. Gilbert shouldn’t let this opportunity slip away. He needs to set up a meeting with Pritchard and bring a blank check along with a contract saying he won’t take no for an answer.

If Gilbert gives him a long-term deal then he could reshape the franchise. Pritchard knows talent like few in the NBA do. Just look at the Blazers. They have two of their starters injured and still are on track to make the playoffs. What other teams can say that? Prichard made smart moves throughout the years especially in the draft. For example, he traded Zach Randolph’s huge contract in the 2007 draft, and got the rights to Nichols Batum in 2008 who was just a 19-year-old prospect at the time, and had only played a year in Europe. He was able to get a great back up center in Marcus Camby and even convinced him to sign an extension with the Blazers, a team he didn’t want to play for when he was initially traded at the deadline last year.

The guy’s resume speaks for itself and he would eventually make the Cavs a contender just as he did with the Blazers. Can you imagine a legitimate Cavs and Heat rivalry in the next few years? What NBA fan wouldn't want to see that? It's possible with Pritchard at the helm.

The trade deadline is two weeks away and this might be the best time for the Cavs to use their trade exception and get some solid talent on their roster. If they can work out a deal to hire Pritchard before the trade deadline, he could help them make some interesting moves. Lets face it, his potential hiring would be the best news the Cavs have had all season.

Cavs fans deserve better than what they’ve been sold this season. It’s time for Gilbert to call in the surgeon and get Pritchard to stop the bleeding and resuscitate this lifeless team, otherwise they will go into a coma for many years to come and may never wake up.

So now Mr. Gilbert the ball is in your court. Do you have the balls to make the biggest front office move of the season?

Sunday, February 6, 2011

Ron Artest wants out, which team should roll the dice?




According to ESPN’s Marc Stein Ron Artest wants to abandon the ever swaying ship that is the Los Angeles Lakers.
So which teams would be interested in him? One team I can think of that would at least have some interest is the Houston Rockets.

Why the Rockets do it:

The Rockets need a shake up and no one shakes things up like Ron-Ron. Shouldn’t take a lot to get the deal done considering how bad Ron has been this season and how bad the Lakers want to get rid of him.

Ron Artest was a big part of how the Rockets won their first playoff series in over ten years. No one thought they could recover from the season ending injuring to Mcgrady in 09 but they did. Ron picked up his game immensely after Tmac went down.

This is a guy who was so fired up he shaved the Rockets logo in his hair cut during the 2009 playoffs, and he brought something to the Rockets that they have never gotten back: toughness and defense.

Before Yao went down in the 2009 playoffs, it really seemed that the Rockets could beat the Lakers Ron had an ok series, but he really brought the intensity. At one moment the fearless Artest got right in Kobe's face and started jawing with him. To this day he still feels Bryant intentionally elbowed him in the throat. This is the kind of energy the Rockets currently lack and desperately need.

Why the Rockets won't do it:

Daryl Morey has already tried the Ron Artest experiment and it was obvious that he didn’t want to sign him to multiyear deal by only offering him a one year contract in the 2009 offseason.

Ron’s stats are awful and his contract gets him paid nearly 22 million for the next three years.

Rumor has it that the last straw for Rockets in 2009 was when Ron showed up late for Game 7 against LA...in his underwear...and decided to get on the same bus for the owner and management.

Why the Lakers do it:

Ron Artest is a fourth option and looks like he doesn’t care anymore. His numbers are horrible. Even Mitch Kupchak came out and said the team needed to make a trade. One Matt Barnes comes back from injury he could easily move into the starting lineup at small forward and do a better job than Ron's been doing.

Why the Lakers won't do it:

They will as long as they can find a team to show interest in taking on Ron's deal and antics... (crickets chirping)

Really this deal really depends on Rick Adelman. Ron loves to play for RA but is Rick willing to go through the constant roller coaster ride that is Ron Artest?
Then once the Rockets got Artest would they try to make a bigger move to get a center?

If Ron was the only piece they get before the deadline then it would be really interesting to see how he produces again as a Rocket.

So Ron I have to ask you if you do end up getting traded and never winning another ring do you regret selling your only one?

(Here’s a link to Stein’s article)
http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/columns/story?columnist=stein_marc&page=Artest-110202