compucomp wrote:For all this talk about how amazing Brandon Roy is for his team, has nobody noticed that they are out of the playoffs at #9 and most likely will stay that way?
You understand that they are only a game back of the Warriors, right? And that, even at the 9th seed, they are on pace for about 47 wins, right? 47.38 compared to Golden State's 48.85 projected wins.
So for a projected difference of a win and a half, you think this is significant? And minding that this is a whole-season deal, not factoring in the Blazers' slow start.
I will come on the record and say that they will finish around .500 and will not make the playoffs, while the Warriors will make the playoffs. Brandon Roy is a pretty good player on an average team, he does not deserve to go to the ASG over a very good player on a good team.
The Warriors are not significantly better than the Blazers, or at least have not thus far been significantly better than the Blazers.
So you think the Blazers will finish "around .500," do you?
You understand that they are 45 games into the season now, yes?
That means that 37 games remain.
For them to finish "around" .500, they'd have to go within +/- 2 of 41 games.
Let's go with 43 for the moment.
That means they'd win another 17 games. 17 out of 37 is 45.9%.
They've have to play noticeably below .500 ball for the rest of the season to fit into the range you've described. This from a team that's at .578 on the season.
They are 8-15 since the 13-game winning streak, which is still a winning percentage over 53%.
So what about their game and their team suggests to you that they'll play so badly over the remaining 37 games as to collapse to a near-.500 record?
Nothing of substance, I'd wager, since there is little merit in such a position.
Miss the playoffs? Maybe; you may need 48+ wins to make the playoffs.
But the Blazers have an excellent chance to make the postseason and a chance not that far different from the one presented to the Warriors at this time.