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NBA

Thoughts From Wednesday Night in the NBA

With most teams having played their first game of the season, here are a couple things that stuck out in my opinion from each game and which player stood out to me from each team (negatively or positively)

Atlanta Hawks 120, Indiana Pacers 109 – Josh Smith 18 points, 8 assists, 5 stls – Danny Granger 31 pts, 4 rebounds.

I think this is the beginning to a huge season for Josh Smith and he can finish as a top 10 fantasy player. I was surprised how long Indiana was in the game but I guess that’s what happens when you make 10 three’s and shoot over 53%.

Orlando Magic 120, Philadelphia 76ers 106 – Dwight Howard 21 points, 15 rebounds – Elton Brand 8 points, 6 rebounds.

So far, same old Brand as he cannot get accustomed to Philly’s run and gun style. An awful second quarter in which the Sixers were outscored by 21 put them in a hole they could never get out of.

Toronto Raptors 101, Cleveland Cavaliers 91 – Andrea Bargnani 28 points, 5 rebounds – Lebron James 23 points, 11 rebounds, 12 assists.

Two games in and the King already has one triple double however, the Cavs also have two losses. Right now the Cavs are looking sluggish on both sides and Lebron is not getting any help from the supporting cast. Barganani was a huge matchup problem that Cleveland had no answer for.

Boston Celtics 92, Charlotte Bobcats 59 – Shelden Williams 12 points and 9 rebounds – Gerald Wallace 10 points and 12 rebounds.

Congrats Charlotte! You managed to get in the record books on Day One for the lowest amount of points on opening night in the shot clock era. The Bobcats managed to shoot just 31% went 0-10 from downtown and shot 52% from the charity stripe. Wow. Kudos to Boston for shutting them down but in the words of Ed Lover, “C’mon Son!”

Miami Heat 115, New York Knicks 93 – Jermaine O’Neal 22 points and 12 rebounds – Danilo Gallinari 22 points (7-13 3PT).

For the Heat, it is real nice to see O’Neal get off to a start as he was such a disappointment last year and has been for the past few years. O’Neal is going to be a key for the Heat to win a playoff series. For the Knicks, Gallo did drop 20+ but I have a problem with how he got them. He took one two point shot! If Gallo is going to be this type of player, give me Jason Kapono for less money and I would have drafted Eric Gordon with the 6th overall pick.

Minnesota Timberwolves 95, New Jersey Nets 93 – Johnny Flynn 18 points and 4 rebounds – Terrence Williams 15 points 10 rebounds.

Flynn absolutely tore ish up in the 4th quarter scoring 13 of his 18 points and leading a Timberwolves comeback. I really enjoyed watch Flynn play in his first game and is my runner-up for ROY if Harden doesn’t play as much as I think. Williams was one of three Nets to record double doubles (Lopez and Yi) but his was most surprising. He got his minutes once Jarvis Hayes went out with a hamstring injury and obviously made the most of it.

San Antonio Spurs 113, New Orleans Hornets 96 – Dejuan Blair 14 points and 11 rebounds – Chris Paul 26 points and 9 assists.

Looks like I was right about Blair (hah Nick Malone!) He would have played more if he didn’t commit 4 fouls but in 23 minutes, Blair had a double double and in 6 minutes, he had 6 boards. He put up better numbers than Tim Duncan and will be an absolute force. For the Hornets, my oh my, they look awful. Chris Paul is looking for the closest escape route and its no where in sight right now. As Max Caster put it brilliantly last night on Off the Glass, “Anytime your team needs Stephen Jackson to stay in the playoff race, you know your team sucks.”

Oklahoma City Thunder 102, Sacramento Kings 89 – Kevin Durant 25 points and 11 rebounds – Kevin Martin 27 points (5-19 shooting, 14-14 FT).

Durant is off to a solid start and put all the negative talk about how he has a career -7 when he is on the floor by posting a +17. Take that haters! Russell Westbrook continues to impress by posting 14 points, 7 rebounds, and 13 assists. The key stat: 2 turnovers. However, they were playing the Kings, and let’s not forget that. Tyreke Evans really struggled in his debut shooting 5-16, kudos to Russ’ for that shutdown D. Long long season for Sacramento follows…

Detroit Pistons 96, Memphis Grizzlies 74 – Ben Gordon 22 points off the bench – O.J. Mayo 9 points (2-12 shooting) 6 rebounds.

While Gordon looked great the Pistons other prized free agent, Charlie Villaneuava did not, scoring just 7 points. Rumors are swirling that the Pistons are looking hard in trading Rip Hamilton so we will keep our eyes on that. The Grizz were just as unimpressive as the Bobcats because they do have scorers who just flat-out were terrible last night. Those die-hard Grizzlies fans are praying for an Iverson sighting, and that can never be a good thing. Stick to BBQ and not basketball, Memphis.

Denver Nuggets 114, Utah Jazz 105 – Carmelo Anthony 30 points 8 rebounds – Deron Williams 28 points and 13 assists.

One of the more entertaining games of the night as both teams went back and forth and some of the game’s elite talent battled it out for 48 minutes. In the end, Williams could not get enough help from his sidekick in Carlos Boozer, just 12 points, than Melo got with his in Chauncey Billups who dropped 25. Also, big ups to Ty Lawson dropping 17 and six dimes in his debut. Here’s to UNC!

Houston Rockets 108, Golden State Warriors 107 – Trevor Ariza 25 points, 5 rebounds – Stephen Curry 14 points, 7 assists, 4 stls.

I hate Don Nelson, officially. Why the hell does Ronny Turiaf start ahead of Anthony Randolph? Can someone please tell me?!? Other than that, Curry scored the team’s final six points to keep the game close but the Rockets made some big stops at the end and pulled out with the win.

Phoenix Suns 109, Los Angeles Clippers 107 – Steve Nash 24 points, 8 assists – Baron Davis 12 points (4-11), 12 assists.

Through two games Davis is shooting 5-21, a stretch that must get turned around especially without Blake Griffin. Nash’s game winning lay-up with 5 seconds was the difference maker as Eric Gordon couldn’t connect on the buzzer beater three.

NBA

NBA Offseason: Top 10 Teams That Improved

It sure feels good to be back. I have returned from my six week hiatus in which I was up in the great town of Gilmanton Iron Works, New Hampshire looking after soda-crazed and junk food ridden kids. But now, reality has set back in and I am ready to jump back into the swing of things to WCWP Sports and 3rd String Safety.

What a busy offseason it has been in the NBA. Big name after big name switching area codes, trading places, and dawning new jerseys. Here’s a look at the top ten teams who have made the most noise in the off-season thus far.

1. San Antonio Spurs

Additions: Richard Jefferson, Antonio McDyess, DeJuan Blair, Theo Ratliff

Subtractions: Bruce Bowen, Fabricio Oberto, Kurt Thomas, Drew Gooden

It kills me to say this because if any of you have ever listened to Off the Glass or read any of my blogs, you would know how much I dislike the Spurs, but what they did this off-season ranks by far at the top of the list. Let’s start with the draft. Selecting a lottery talent like DeJuan Blair out of Pittsburgh with the 37th overall pick is just criminal. How teams selecting in the 20s did not fathom that even a guy with two below average knees is not better than the people who were actually picked (Darren Collison, B.J. Mullens, Taj Gibson) is asinine. Not to mention, they got Jack McClinton who can flat out shoot the ball.

Now onto the Jefferson move. Trading away Bowen, Oberto, and Thomas is exactly what the Spurs needed. Not only did they get younger but they got an athletic swingman who can score the ball, all while being okay with not being the number one option. McDyess, along with Blair fills the void that was left in the front-line depth when the Spurs traded away Oberto and Thomas. Although 34, McDyess managed to average close to a double double last season with Detroit. McDyess will be making $15 million over the next three years.

2. Orlando Magic

Additions: Vince Carter, Brandon Bass, Ryan Anderson, Matt Barnes

Subtractions: Hedo Turkoglu, Courtney Lee, Rafer Alston, Tony Battie

After trading for Vince Carter the Orlando Magic took themselves out of the running in order to re-sign Hedo Turkoglu and for good reason. They simply felt that they did not need to spend $50 million on a player who is not as complete as VC. Carter enjoyed a nice season with the Nets last year averaging 21 points, 5 rebounds, and 5 assists. Playing with a dominant big man should open up his game and alleviate any sort of pressure. The surrounding talent including Jameer Nelson and Rashard Lewis should hault any sort of continuing streak that VC has in his inability to improve teams. Ryan Anderson is another versatile forward the Magic acquired who had a nice rookie year averaging 7 points and 5 boards. Look for Brandon Bass to start at the 4, while Lewis sits for the first ten games due to his suspension.

The kicker to the Orlando off-season is the re-signing of Marcin Gortat. The Mavericks believed they had Gorat in their back pocket after signing him to a 5 year $34 million offer sheet. However, the Magic sured up their depth at center with the move.

3. Cleveland Cavaliers

Additions: Shaquille O’Neal, Anderson Varejao (resigned), Anthony Parker, Jamario Moon

Subtractions: Ben Wallace, Sasha Pavlovic

This off-season is a huge gamble for the Cavaliers as they are really rolling the dice. If the Shaq of last season makes the trip to Ohio, than the Cavs could be making the move over the top. If not, than this could easily be Lebron’s last year in his home state. Last year O’Neal averaged 18 points and 8.5 rebounds a game, all while missing just seven games. Those were the most points he had averaged in a season since 2005 and the most games he has played in a season since…2000 (yikes). If O’Neal is healthy, he won’t be helping out Lebron James the most, but rather Mo Williams. Let’s face it, Lebron does not need pressure to be relieved off of him. Rather he needs his teammates to be in roles that suit them best. Mo Williams was not made to be a second option and that was embarrassingly shown off in the Conference Finals. O’Neal can be that second option that forces double teams and opens up shots for the rest of the Cavs.

Anderson Varajeo resigned for 6 years $50 million to give the Cavs some depth that they missed out by not selecting DeJuan Blair but rather Christian Eyenga (I do not understand NBA GM’s…) Anthony Parker could be one of the most underrated moves of the off-season. A career 42% 3 point shooter, Parker takes a lot of flack from me for being the second best baller in his family. However, with Shaq and Lebron commanding double teams, Parker will have his chance to shine.

4. Los Angeles Lakers

Additions: Ron Artest, Lamar Odom (resigned)

Subtractions: Trevor Ariza

First order of business, the Ariza for Artest swap. From what I have read and watched this move has gotten a lot of mixed feelings and deservingly so. Ariza is a 24 year old athletic swingman, who does not mind being the fourth option, who came into his own all last season, made big three after big three in the playoffs, and can defend the perimeter exceptionally. Artest is 30 years old who is as tough as nails and is one of the best perimeter defenders in the game but when he gets the ball, his hands become velcro and he dominates the shot clock and is also an ex-nut case who prefers to walk around in his underwear. Why in the triangle offense, would you bring a guy like Artest in? Artest brings something the Lakers have been missing for a while. That is grit and toughness. When Ariza and his agent spurned the Lakers thinking that they would get more than the mid-level exception the Los Angeles had to make a move. Orlando, Cleveland, and San Antonio all had made their moves.

If there is one player and one coach that are perfect for Ron Ron to play with it is Kobe Bryant and Phil Jackson. Kobe understands now what it takes to be a champion and will brainwash Artest with that mentality. Jackson has handled egos before and this is just another one added onto the plate. If Artest can keep his shenanigans to a minimum, the Lakers will be the favorites to win it all once again. The one problem I have with the signing is that it was for 5 years $33 million. Not so much the money, but the years. When you have a 30 year old ticking time bomb, I would much rather make it a short term investment than have him when he’s 35.

Resigning Lamar Odom was a huge step in the right direction for the Lakers. Odom took less money (4 year, $33 million) from his hometown team than what the Miami Heat were offering. Odom will continue to come off the bench but now alongside with Kobe wants to make this Lakers team into a dynasty. Had the Lakers not resigned Odom it would be hard to even put them into the top ten.

5. Boston Celtics

Additions: Rasheed Wallace, Marquis Daniels, Shelden Williams, Glen Davis (resigned)

Subtractions: None

None of these guys are cracking the starting lineup on opening night but the Boston Celtics offseason was good enough to earn them a spot in the top 5. Despite his age at 34, Wallace has enough skill and veteran leadership to help the Celtics in a big way. Wallace averaged 12 points and 7 rebounds last season. Consider him to be my early favorite to win the 6th Man of the Year Award. Marquis Daniels will also play a significant role in the Boston rotation. Averaging 14 points for the Pacers last year, Daniels is at the peak of his game and should fit nicely seeing that he could play three positions if need be.

Resigning Glen Davis was a significant move for the Celts. At just 2 years for $6 million, Davis’ game matured exponentially over the final two months of the season that the terms of the deal could be one of the bigger bargains of the offseason. Big Baby averaged 16 points and 6 rebounds filling in for Kevin Garnett last year in the playoffs. This is the deepest the Celtics have been throughout the Big Three Era which is a scary thought for the rest of the league.

6. Detroit Pistons

Additions: Ben Gordon, Charlie Villanueva, Austin Daye, DaJuan Summers, Chris Wilcox, Ben Wallace

Subtractions: Allen Iverson, Rasheed Wallace, Amir Johnson, Antonio McDyess, Aaron Afflalo

Joe Dumars was one of the more busier GMs during this year’s NBA offseason, especially in the beginning. Dumars managed to nab the best free agent scorer out on the market in Ben Gordon and the best free agent power forward in Charlie Villanueva in a matter of hours. Both were signed to five year deals with Gordon making $50+ million and CV making #35 million. The combo of Gordon and CV is much better and will be much more productive than AI and Rasheed Wallace.

Ben Wallace should be somewhat rejuvenated to return to the place he called home and provide rebounding, leadership, and depth to the center position. The Pistons took a few steps back with losing out on the McDyess sweepstakes only to get Chris Wilcox in return. Austin Daye as NBA talent but will take a few years because he is so thin and frail. DaJuan Summers could provide some production right away for the Pistons.

7. Los Angeles Clippers

Additions: Blake Griffin, Sebastian Telfair, Mark Madsen, Craig Smith

Subtractions: Zach Randolph

The Clippers got the ball rolling when they won the lottery and selected Blake Griffin with the number one overall pick in June’s NBA Draft. Griffin appears to be the real deal as he was a beast in the Las Vegas Summer League. However, the main reason they appear on this least is through the principle of addition by subtraction. The Clippers shipped away the headache and glut that is Zach Randolph for an expiring contract in Quentin Richardson. Then they managed to continue the Q-Rich carousel and trade him for Telfair, Madsen, and Smith. Telfair played decently in Minnesota last season averaging 10 points and dishing out 5 assists. Craig Smith can also provide some scoring off the bench.

Now with a nucleus of Griffin, Eric Gordon, Baron Davis, Al Thornton, Marcus Camby, and Chris Kaman, the fortune for the Clippers could slowly be turning. They will take a few years but a few more lottery picks that turn out successfully could send the Clips to the playoffs sooner than you think.

8. Toronto Raptors

Additions: Hedo Turkoglu, Demar DeRozan, Marco Belinelli, Reggie Evans, Antoine Wright, Jarret Jack, Rasho Nesterovic

Subtractions: Shawn Marion, Anthony Parker, Jason Kapono

The Raptors jumped into the free agency pool by signing Hedo Turkoglu to a five year $53 million deal. Although they definitely overpaid for the swingman, the Raptors desperately needed to make a significant move in hopes of resigning Chris Bosh at the end of this year. Turkoglu should be the perfect fit in Toronto when you combine his size, skill, and shooting ability.

Demar DeRozan has as much athletic ability as any person in the draft but does have that bust feature about him. Jarret Jack should be able to come in and be a very competent backup behind Jose Calderon. Jack averaged 13 points and 4 assists last year for Indiana while sharing the point guard role with T.J. Ford.

Belinelli and Antoine Wright will be solid additions and could receive meaningful minutes if DeRozan is not ready right away.

9. Dallas Mavericks

Additions: Shawn Marion, Jason Kidd (resigned), Drew Gooden, Quinton Ross, Tim Thomas

Subtractions: Brandon Bass, Jerry Stackhouse, Antoine Wright, Devean George, Ryan Hollins

I really like the Marion sign and trade to Dallas. Marion averaged 13 points and 8.5 rebounds with Toronto a bit of an underachieving year by Marion’s standards. Those numbers don’t typically result in a 5 year $39 million contract but when you examine what Marion brings to the Dallas lineup, it makes sense. They will be unconventional now, starting Josh Howard, Marion, and Dirk all at once. Marion’s rebounding ability makes up for any loss in height. Also, with J-Kidd continuing to run the point position, the Mavs are an up and down team, a system that Marion absolutely flourished in when he was with Phoenix.

The only negative to the Dallas off-season is that they missed out on front court depth that was a necessity. Brandon Bass and Marcin Gortat (ironically both ending up in Orlando) were stolen from the Mavs and all Dallas got back was an unimpressive patch of hair on the back of Drew Gooden’s head.

10. New Orleans Hornets

Additons: Emeka Okafor, Darren Collison, Ike Diogu

Subtractios: Tyson Chandler

I absolutely loved and absolutely hated the Hornets off-season. First the good, the Emeka Okafor for Tyson Chandler deal was won by Nawlins. Okafor, not as good as a weak side defender as Chandler is a better shot blocker and significantly better offensively. For his career, Okafor has averaged 14 points and 11 rebounds a game. Mostly while having Raymond Felton as his point guard. Chandler’s career numbers are 8 points and 9 rebounds a game. Okafor has not missed a game in the past two seasons while Chandler played in just 45 games last year.

Now for the bad…I do not understand why the Hornets decided to take Darren Collison with the 21st pick of the draft. I like Collison as a point guard and he could be a serviceably body in the NBA. But to use your first round pick on a guy who will be a career backup behind your franchise player and arguably a top 5 player in the league in Chris Paul is ridiculous. Collison will never see a good chunk of minutes that will justify the pick. With DeJuan Blair still on the board and the Hornets in need for bodies down low, the pick just made no sense whatsoever.

So there you have it, the top ten teams who made the biggest splash thus far in the NBA offseason. Make sure you listen to Off the Glass tomorrow night on wcwpsports.com at 8 pm EST where I make my return to the airwaves. Nick Malone and I will be going into the NBA offseason more in-depth.

Like I said, it is good to be back…

NBA

NBA Salary Cap To Be As Low As 50 Million?!?

ESPN produced a report on Wednesday that the NBA’s salary cap is expected to be lowered to approximately $50 million next season.

According to the Worldwide Leader…

In a memo announcing next season’s salary cap and luxury-tax threshold, sent out shortly before the league’s annual July moratorium on signings and trades was lifted at 12:01 a.m. ET Wednesday, NBA teams also received tentative projections from the league warning that the cap is estimated to drop to somewhere between $50.4 million and $53.6 million for the 2010-11 season.

This is bad for the Knicks “Get LeBron James Plan” very bad.

When Knicks president Donnie Walsh took the job in April 2008 — before the global economic downturn that, as with most businesses, has hit the NBA so hard — some teams around the league were projecting a 2010-11 cap ceiling in the $63 million range per team.  The Knicks, for example, increasingly look as though they will be restricted to signing one maximum-salaried player that summer if the latest projections hold, which theoretically would only enhance the Cleveland Cavaliers‘ chances of retaining LeBron James, given the other holes in the Knicks’ roster. New York’s original plan to lure James was founded upon trying to sign James and a second marquee free agent in 2010.

This is certainly sobering news for NBA GM’s and players. All these players who were hoping to catch on in big markets in 2010 (LeBron/Wade/Bosh/Amare) need to wake up and smell the roses of economic downturn.  Those aforementioned players are going to giving up, potentially, a lot of money by not signing extensions with their current teams.

As it stands right now the Knicks have roughly $27 million in salary committed to 2010.  That’s without resigning Lee or Robinson, or singing a Free Agent this off-season as rumored.  After all this moving and shaking the Knicks have done they only have $23 million in cap space for the Summer Of LeBron and no draft pick next year.

Everyone scoffed at me when I said the Knicks wouldn’t have the cap space to add two max players after the Randolph and Crawford trades.  Now they barely have enough cap space to offer LeBron.

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