cgf wrote:rand wrote:cgf wrote:And yet, 4 of the top 6 teams this year were in the east. Balance of power has shifted.
4 of the top 6 teams by what measure?
By record, the East had only 3 of the top-5 teams and then there were 4 teams tied for 6th with 50 wins each. But records are biased because the West is tougher top-to-bottom than the East so the top West teams had a more difficult in-conference schedule. By SRS, the East had only 2 of the top-8 teams.
Moreover, the trajectory for the East going forward is not promising. Boston is entering massive decline, Cleveland has to prove it's not a paper tiger after losing in the semis to a team which won 14 fewer games, Milwaukee has been in decline for awhile and now might lose Giannis, New York is mid, Philly can't get their sh*t together and while Orlando and Detroit are promising young teams, both have yet to win a playoff series.
Folks can disagree…there’s only so many hours one can devote to watching the nba…but all season I said the top 6 teams were Boston / Cleveland / OKC & New York / Indiana / Minnesota. And the playoffs have only reinforced that conviction.
I am sympathetic to the desire to make this as objective a discussion as possible, but the nba’s format makes that an ultimately fruitless exercise because the purpose of the regular season isn’t to win as many games as possible to determine the champion…it is to best position yourself for the postseason tournament that decides the champion, and the postseason is too small a sample size.
So SRS will only ever tell us who had the best regular season performance on the whole, not who is the best team in a vacuum / best suited for the playoffs…especially as the gap between regular season and postseason officiating grows & the value of home court diminishes.
For example, SRS will miss teams who made big trades that they had to develop chemistry after, like New York & Minnesota this season, and Indiana last season. It will overvalue teams that go balls to the walls in the regular season like OKC and Houston, while undervaluing a banged up team that’s just trying to get into the tourney and get healthy for the tourney, like New York.
That’s why I said before the 2nd round that I thought both series in the east were toss ups, before any injuries, despite the metrics. Indiana was better than their 10-15 start made them look and we became a different team after getting healthy & having the Pistons toughen us up.
But the Knicks, pacers, and wolves showed all season that they had the pieces to contend against the top tier, if they were healthy and brought their a-game.
I’ll get back to respond about the future, as I think you continue to underestimate the Knicks & Cavs, while forgetting about Detroit / Orlando & even Atlanta if JJ can stay healthy…but my comment was just about this season.
Looping back to discuss the future now that I've got stuff started at work.
Boston will be a play-in team at best until Tatum’s back and then who knows what they'll be when he gets back...or how close to this Tatum, they'll even get back...while Milwaukee will stay mid at best whether Gianni’s leaves or not, Miami has no #1, and Philly are washed up...although the #3 pick, Maxey, Grimes, and McCain, isn't a bad start to the rebuild...but:
- Indiana isn’t going away. They could lose Obi and TJ to the apron but I like Jarace Walker more than Obi anyway; while Nembhard can fill the backup pg minutes, although the kid they have behind TJ (Quenton Jackson) looks like a player in his own right...and getting Isaiah Jackson back to replace Bryant should make a palpable difference if he hasn't lost his springiness.
- Cleveland getting injured and losing to an excellent Indiana team doesn’t make them paper tigers…even if they were the other top 4 team I feared the least before the playoffs started; they’re still really good when their top 4 are fit. And despite losing some depth to the cap, could be much stronger if Garland & Mobley continue to improve.
- If the Knicks are mid after what they did to Boston, then OKC is the only non-mid team in the west lol. But New York should be better next season either way; after a training camp with both towns & Robinson, the tax payer MLE to snag an 8th man, and an offseason for one of Kolek / McCullar / Hukporti to stake a claim to a rotation spot.
- You’re under-rating Orlando and Detroit, they are just as tough as Houston, who just got the 2 seed out west…only they have young #1s to go with their terrifying defenses. And if you’re pencilling Giannis onto the rockets, why not pencil Lauri onto the Pistons? Or Coby White + Cam Johnson on Orlando? Those are more likely to happen & more realistically upgrade those teams into contenders.
- Then there’s Atlanta who are a .500 team that punches up well, whenever JJ is healthy. Trae undermines the defense too much without someone like Mitch replacing Capela's ghost...but Jalen Johnson, Dyson Daniels, Onyeka Okongwu, & Terrance Mann, are an excellent supporting cast for him; plus Risacher could be in a for a nice sophomore bounce and both Gueye / Krejci looked like players.
- And who knows what’ll happen with Toronto if they stay healthy. I don't like their offense...and like Houston don't think they have a young #1 of the future to groom, already in house...but their defense was so good it screwed up their tank even without an offense.
If BI can be just a passable #1 for them, that could let everyone slide into roles they are better suited for; RJ as the #2; Quickley as the #3; Dick as the flamethrowing 6th man who can step in whenever RJ or IQ has an off night. While Barnes focuses on being the supped up Draymond that he was always supposed to become...whether next to Poeltl or as a smallball 5.
Given how mid the non-OKC west is, we could see more of the top teams coming from the east next season, as well...especially if Minnesota has to lose Randle or Reid for cap reasons.