Prokorov wrote:Prokorov wrote:
I'm going with 27 wins.
I think we really did a great job transitioning the team with guys who fit better. We got a big who can defense/switch/run and moved our primary scoring from bigs to smalls. we added shooting. we got a 2 way vet farmiliar with the systems.
on the other hand we had alot of turnover, we lack talent and depth and like last year cant sustain injury to a top 6-7 rotation guy. The focus will be on development and we probably lose games we could win to allow young players to play through struggles.
i can see a high end output of 32-34 or a disaster scenario of 15 wins but i think 27 would be my prdiction
Here was my initial post/prediction (I later bumped this from 27 to 29 wins). Pretty close, as we sit at 27 wins with 2 to games to play. So im basically right on target-ish.
Reading back through this thread was fun. Crazy how many people thought this was a 40+ win team and thought it was like no big deal to double your win total. I thought we would be better without lopez but thats still a transition. and bottom line, in the NBA it still mostly comes down to TALENT. sure we play hard and modern and that makes us better then our talent but we sitll have like bottom 5 talent. add to that we arentreally gunning to win so much as develop and sub 30 wins seemed like a lock.
you can point to injuries but thats part of talent. when you lack talent, you cant sustain a good record when guys go down. teams with talent can do that.
i will say we got shafted alot in close/late games... so im fine with anyone saying because of that this could ahve been a 32 win team.
Either way, 27-29 wins for me is a MASSIVE success. Kenny has done an outstading job. worked miracles development wise when you look at what dinwiddie, levert, rhj, harris, and allen did this season. not to mention +7 or +9 wins. thats no small feat.
+9 wins is like a 30% increase.
no one should be disapointed.
I agree that 27-29 wins, given the injuries, is a massive success. It was +7 or +9 wins from last year, but perhaps even more since a Lin-less team last year was on a 13 win pace.
I also agree that the Nets had less latitude for injuries since they lack relative talent. The Spurs can lose Leonard and still win 46-48 games. The Celtics can lose Gordon Hayward and still win 54-56 games (though the Celtics are a bit of an outlier since Brad Stephens can win with little talent).
This being said, I still believe that the Nets with Lin and Russell playing 70+ games, and with Booker, would have won between 35-40 games. Out of the 450 players in the NBA, maybe 20 players end up missing most of the season with injuries (4-5%), so the Nets just came up unlucky with Lin's injury. I know you think Lin is worth maybe 2 wins tops, which I disagree with, but there's no way to settle this so no point in debating. I really wish Lin played half a season so we could see how the team played with him, and have some data to use.
In any case, I agree that this season was a big step forward.