So you're looking for big-man help for the Nuggets?
I'm not.
If you're of the opinion that two faulty inbounds plays were the difference between the Nuggets losing to the Los Angeles Lakers last spring or possibly moving on to the NBA Finals, your vote is for "as is" too.
The Nuggets were even with the Lakers on the boards in that playoff series. There is not much to suggest the Nuggets' roster, as presently constituted, can't get them to the Finals.
If a big man isn't necessarily the answer, how can their roster be improved?
First, stabilize the bench. That means getting consistent, positive production from J.R. Smith, who seems to be headed in that direction. Smith's scoring average (15.2) is fine, but his .332 shooting percentage on 3-pointers has to get to around .400. And his 1-to-1, assist-to-turnover ratio must be at, or very near, 2-to-1.
The bench also has to establish an identity. There is still a helter-skelter, mix-and-match nature to what the Nuggets do when Smith, Ty Lawson, Chris Andersen, Anthony Carter and Joey Graham check into the game. When the reserves get a comfort level and rhythm to what they're doing, the Nuggets will be that much stronger.
Second, and this is no secret, the Nuggets need to even out their performances. The Nuggets have wins over Cleveland, Orlando, the Lakers and San Antonio, and three victories over Utah, so they have a track record of beating the NBA's best. That helps come playoff time.
But the Nuggets have lost seven times to teams with losing records. Win four of those, and we would be talking about a 30-10 team and an entirely different set of perceptions.
As for all the talk of adding a big man, the Nuggets are being out-rebounded by an average of only two per game.
Read more: http://www.denverpost.com/sports/ci_142 ... z0d5d8GHRV
Kind of a bizarre column. I like Dempsey. I've met the dude when he worked on the CU beat, but this seems a bit asinine. I know generally people always overhype the need to trade/sign FA's, especially on boards like this one, but this seems pretty clear. The Nuggets have zero depth with their bigs. One goes down (which we've seen happen to both K-Mart and Bird), the Nuggets are screwed. The notion that the only way the Nuggets should need to improve is internal improvements is foolish to me. We've already seen how fragile the Nuggets rotation can be if they lose a guy or two. Adding a fourth big who can actually play should be a priority, and I'm not sure why one of the Nuggets beat writers believes otherwise.