- Summer '07 Winners: Congratulations to the Boston Celtics on their unexpected offseason turnaround. Months ago, players (including Garnett) were refusing trades to the team. When the Celtics ended up with the #5 pick in this year's draft, all hope seemed lost for another few years. This is not so anymore. This Celtics team just may take the Atlantic Division this year.
- Three-fifths of the Fab 5: Chris Webber and Jalen Rose are free agents. Juwan Howard has asked for a trade because his main reason for heading to Minnesota left for Boston. It sounds odd, but for some strange reason I could see at least two of the three ending up on the same roster this year. The biggest road blocks, aside from age and declining skill, would be that two of the three (Webber and Howard) have no NBA Finals experience and the third (Rose) has found a way to become an outcast on every team he has played on since making the Finals in 2000 with the Pacers.
- The Sonics of ?: Stay tuned to see if the team stays put in Seattle or decides to leave. With already 30 teams and arguments of a diluted game due to uneven talent distribution, there are no indications that the NBA would be able to accommodate the city by adding a new team there. By the way, what ever happened to the team officially dropping the "Super" in Supersonics and just going by "Sonics" on a full-time basis? That decision was supposedly made 11 or 12 years ago.
- Dream Team 3.5: While Dream Teams I and II were clearly superior teams to any assembling of other U.S. national men's basketball teams, the most recent team looks pretty promising. One thing that the original Dream Team did well that the current national team somewhat understands is sharing the ball. The last two U.S. teams defined 'sharing the ball' as taking turns running isolation plays for each other. This current team really does look like an All-Star team rather than just a collection of all-stars.
- In need of wizardry: One team that not long ago was in one of the most exciting opening round series in NBA history may now be on its way to disappointment. Granted, injuries ruined any chance the Wizards had of giving the Cavaliers another remarkable first round series, but the Wizards show few signs of improving since losing the series in 2005. The Brendan Haywood-Etan Thomas situation was bad and nobody wants to take away Thomas's salary via trade. Jarvis Hayes left for Detroit and Andray Blatche was arrested this summer. And, quite honestly, Washington would probably be much better off had Larry Hughes decided to stay. The best thing the team has going right now is Gilbert Arenas's NBA Live '08 cover. Here's hoping that they can rebound this year.
- Calling the shots?: Vince Carter wants to see Jermaine O'Neal come to town and join the Nets. In the last discussion between the Pacers and the Nets, the Pacers set O'Neal's value at Richard Jefferson, Nenad Krstic, and a third player. No offense, but Richard Jefferson was a key player in two NBA Finals runs for the Nets before the team traded for Carter. If anything, the lucrative contract given to Carter may have set the ceiling for a Nets roster that yet again does not escape the second round. However, in Carter's defense, the previous Nets' teams to win the Conference had Kenyon Martin at power forward along with sharpshooters Kerry Kittles, Lucious Harris, and Keith Van Horn (2001-'02 only). Those championship contending teams also had a collaboration of Byron Scott, Lawrence Frank, and Eddie Jordan (all head coaches now) leading those teams.
In accordance with the release of the new NBA 2K11 basketball video game, legendary Chicago Bulls shooting guard Michael Jordan has returned to the media's spotlight. That is, Michael Jordan has caught the sports world's attention by saying that today's NBA rules would have allowed him to score 100 points in a game. No one is questioning Michael Jordan's uncanny ability to make plays, create shots, and score points. Michael Jordan is right in saying that, overall, today's rules favor offensive players, particularly guards. Much less contact is allowed in defensive play; some of what was legal when Jordan played (such as forearms and handchecking) is now deemed personal foul-worthy. Furthermore, with a 30-team league, talent is spread out more than it used to be, and players--while on average are more athletic today--come into the league much less fundamentally sound. However, Michael Jordan has forgotten about the re-emergence of zone defense in the NBA. True, ...