Claud
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NBA training camps start up in a couple weeks. In the meantime, we’re going team-by-team, from 1 to 30, exploring what each team’s ceiling is for the upcoming season and where their basement is. In other words, what are the realistic best-case and worst-case scenarios for each squad?
Additions: PF Yi Jianlian, C Brook Lopez, PG Keyon Dooling, SF Bobby Simmons, SG Chris Douglas-Roberts, PF Ryan Anderson, PF Eduardo Najera, SF Jarvis Hayes.
Losses: SF Richard Jefferson, PG Marcus Williams, C DeSagana Diop, SF Bostjan Nachbar, C Nenad Krstic.
Ceiling: 8th seed in the East
The youth movement is in full effect, even though New Jersey’s “rebuilding” plans are strictly geared toward the 2010 Summer of LeBron (and D-Wade and Bosh) more than developing the young nucleus they current have. Over the last eight months, the Nets jettisoned Jason Kidd, Jefferson and Krstic, basically replacing those three starters with Devin Harris (25), Yi Jianlian (20) and Brook Lopez (20). Is it an improvement? Talent-wise, no. So why is it possible that NJ could finish with a better record this year than last year — when they were 14 games under .500 and landed two slots out of the playoff bracket — in an Eastern Conference that’s gotten tougher? Because whenever you have one of the 15 best players in the League, you always have a chance at sniffing the postseason. And say what you want about Vince Carter, but he is that caliber talent. If Vince plays at the top of his game, NJ is still a threat.
Basement: Last place in the Atlantic Division
Jersey finished nine games ahead of Atlantic cellar-dweller New York, but if new Knicks coach Mike D’Antoni is worth what they’re paying him, that gap could close. Vince has the talent to carry the Nets to a playoff spot, but as always, the questions surround his motivation and toughness. It’s not like he’s in a contract year, and if Vince can read the writing on the wall, he knows this team wasn’t built to win now and that he would be traded in a second if the Nets thought it gave them a better chance at landing a big-fish free agent in 2010. So while Vince can go through the motions and still drop 23-24 points a night, the Nets’ season rests on the performance of Harris and a young frontcourt. Yi has offensive talent, but his disappearing act during the Olympics and the way he hit the rookie wall hard in Milwaukee doesn’t have anyone too excited about him. First-round picks Lopez and Anderson ideally help fortify the front line a little more, but you’re still in a situation where your “go-to” big man is Josh Boone.
Thoughts?
