Doctor MJ wrote:Joey Wheeler wrote:What do you guys see as possibilities for rosters that can compete with the Lakers (assuming Lebron/AD health) in the next few years?
I see it as extremely unlikely any team can pull it off, but the way I'd go about it would be to pair Embiid with a high level perimeter creator and shooters. I think a roster to challenge Lebron/AD will have to contain Embiid, don't see any other big who can approximate AD's all-around impact, especially on defense. Teams without an elite defensive big will just get killed in the paint...
Lakers absolutely feel set up to potentially win multiple titles, though I'm hesitant to talk like that when they still have a series to go before their first title. I'll feel better after they actually pull that off, but even then you only get to see so many matchups in a given year, and you never know when age might catch up with them.
By age you mean Lebron's age. In normal circumstances that'd be a concern but honestly he shows zero signs of slowing down or stop being a superstar any time soon... AD is 26, his prime is still ahead of him if anything.
Eddy_JukeZ wrote:Joey Wheeler wrote:What do you guys see as possibilities for rosters that can compete with the Lakers (assuming Lebron/AD health) in the next few years?
I see it as extremely unlikely any team can pull it off, but the way I'd go about it would be to pair Embiid with a high level perimeter creator and shooters. I think a roster to challenge Lebron/AD will have to contain Embiid, don't see any other big who can approximate AD's all-around impact, especially on defense. Teams without an elite defensive big will just get killed in the paint...
If the Warriors with Steph and Klay could somehow land Giannis.
I mean you never know though. Maybe Lebron declines a lot next season with the age and mileage. Not like Lebron and AD are the same age.
Things can change quickly in the NBA.
I don't think this'd be sufficient to top the Lakers with Lebron and AD. We have ample evidence that Curry can't really impact the game on the same level or close to Lebron and AD in the playoffs and Giannis as a 2nd option on offense is a big question mark. Not to mention there's no guarantee Curry even returns at his best.
Heej wrote:Joey Wheeler wrote:What do you guys see as possibilities for rosters that can compete with the Lakers (assuming Lebron/AD health) in the next few years?
I see it as extremely unlikely any team can pull it off, but the way I'd go about it would be to pair Embiid with a high level perimeter creator and shooters. I think a roster to challenge Lebron/AD will have to contain Embiid, don't see any other big who can approximate AD's all-around impact, especially on defense. Teams without an elite defensive big will just get killed in the paint...
Honestly I think Nuggets and Mavs got it. If KP gets better at killing switches it's kind of a wrap cuz that teams gonna have the best coach in the West (Carlisle > Pop imo at this point) and a lot of young developing role players for the next few years.
Nuggets are gonna need to hit on MPJ Murray and Jokic taking a leap which is very doable. They still have Will Barton waiting in the wings to be a reliable scorer at the 3. Realistically they're gonna have to get MPJ to eventually approximate what Grant gave them this year.
Lakers are gonna have the pick of the litter on veteran ring chasers. The right Danny Green replacement or PG acquisition could be enough to push em into dynastic status.
I like the Mavericks, if Porzingis pans out as a great rim protector, who can actually stay on the court and not injured all the time, and the Mavericks keep building they might build a team around Luka that can compete with the Lakers.
I don't believe in the Nuggets. Nice, fun team, but I don't think you can win in the NBA with a center who can't protect the rim at a high level. I think you need to play Jokic at the 4 and pair him up with a strong rim protector for the Nuggets to have a real avenue for contention.