Central Division Previews

Posted on: October 4th, 2010 by Sebastian Pruiti No Comments

 

Here we have yet another set of these great blogger previews.  This time we take a look at the Central Division, where the Bulls may have lost their status as favorites (in my opinion) to win the division with the news that Boozer will be out eight weeks with a fractured hand.

Bucks: Brew HoopNBAMateSBNation Recap

Bulls: Blog-A-BullSBNation Recap

Cavs: Fear The SwordWaitingForNextYear

Pacers: Indy Cornrows

Pistons: DetroitBadBoysDetroit BasketballNeed4Sheed.comSB Nation Detroit

Recaps: All Previews

Send in Your Mailbag Quesitons

Posted on: October 3rd, 2010 by Mark Ginocchio 8 Comments

 

Anyone have any questions for our mailbag for tomorrow? Send them in: mailbag@netsarescorching.com

 

The Nets officially kick off their season tonight at 7 PM at the Prudential Center, as they take on the Israeli professional basketball team Maccabi Haifa in Newark. This will be the first opportunity to see the completely revamped New Jersey take on a professional basketball team, albeit not an NBA team. Maccabi Haifa is led by American Sylven Landesberg, a former Mr. Basketball (NY) who played two years at Virginia and spent Summer League this offseason with Sacramento.

Three things to watch out for:

  • Anthony Morrow & Terrence Williams. Morrow struggled with his shot at the Prudential Center and chalked it up to adjusting to the rims. While Avery has made a few comments indicating that Morrow is likely the starter come opening day (and according to Nets beat writer Stefan Bondy, he will start tonight), he'll have to show that he can make some shots in Newark at some point if he wants Avery to keep saying that.
  • Jordan Farmar. Unlike Morrow, Farmar seemed to have no issue knocking down three-pointers at the open practice, and showed a considerable swagger on the court. Against a second-tier professional team, he should continue to shine. Devin Harris shouldn't have any issues keeping his starting job, but if Farmer continues to impress, he could be facing a competition he didn't expect.
  • Lastly, of course, the rookies. Joe Smith, Troy Murphy, and Brian Zoubek are all out tonight, which means that there will be a lot of time backing up Kris Humphries at the 4 (and perhaps some at the 5) for Derrick Favors. Damion James is a 3-4 hybrid w ho should see some time at both positions as well. James is more polished but Favors of course has that unbelievable upside, and against a small front line (Other than 7'1" Robert Rothbart, Maccabi Haifa has no player taller than 6'8") Favors should be able to utilize his strength & quickness down low and overpower the opposing defense.

Daily Link: Favors Impresses

Posted on: October 2nd, 2010 by Mark Ginocchio 24 Comments

 

Well, despite seemingly looking to move him in almost every Carmelo Anthony-trade scenario, Avery Johnson and the Nets seem to continually express wonderment to the kid's raw tools. Today Fred Kerber captures a highlight from the week:

Rookie Derrick Favors sought to establish position on the right block. Kris Humphries, from behind, tried to force Favors away from the basket.

Favors put his right arm into Humphries' chest, shoved and sent the six-year veteran stumbling. Offensive foul? Probably. Impressive move? Definitely.

Meanwhile, Johnson, while gushing, throws cold water and references Benoit Benjamin again:

" 'Potential.' He can potentially get there," Johnson said, reminding that for every great player who once flashed potential, there was an equal bust who fell short (he referenced Benoit Benjamin).

I really want to see what Favors can do in a Nets uniform. One would think, with the way talks collapsed with Denver, that they would no longer hold the leverage in talks with the Nets as they seemingly did last week, especially if Favors comes out of the gate and can find ways to contribute.

 

Obviously, this is a New Jersey Nets blog, however, the NAS crew absolutely love the NBA in general. So, every week, Sebastian, Mark, Devin, Evan, and myself will answer questions regarding the L.

1) Washington Wizards owner, Ted Leonsis mentioned that the NBA would have a hard salary cap like the NHL and was fined $100,000 by David Stern for saying so.  How do you think the hard salary cap will affect the league and should the NBA have one?

Mark: It's clear that the NBA needs to change its salary structure because a number of teams are losing money hand over fist.  For a sport as financially challenged as the NBA, I think a hard cap like the NHL is worth exploring. If there was a way to eliminate guaranteed contracts, like what you have in the NFL, that would lead to even more parity and financial success in my honest opinion. I guess this is why I'll never be a lawyer for the player's union.

Devin: It would be extremely difficult to implement now, especially since you've got all these giant contracts recently signed. Pat Riley is not going to sign off on a hard cap with three near-max players on their roster. If it was grandfathered in somehow - I.E. contracts signed prior to hard cap agreement only count as a certain percentage of the cap - it could work, but I'm not a fan of a completely hard cap. I think the salary system as it stands is more effective.

Evan: There is no question that if the league implements a hard cap, player salaries will go down, especially for the non-superstars. The top guys will still get maximum money, but players who have gotten mid-level and veteran exceptions in the past will not be as well paid. There are two clear sides of the argument as to whether the NBA should impose a hard salary cap. Naturally the owners will want to implement one to curb players’ salaries and the Player's Association would be strongly against one. My opinion? Impose a hard cap like the NFL and NHL. One of the great things about the NFL is that each season a new team seems to come out of the woodwork and make a strong run in the playoffs. A major reason for this is because of the competitive balance created by a hard salary cap. A hard cap in the NBA will equal more competitiveness around the league and will not result in the same teams making the NBA Finals each season (Lakers, Celtics, Spurs…).

DV: I'm all for a hard salary cap.  It just makes sense competitively and proof of it working is in the NFL where every season teams come out of nowhere or fall hard from expectation.  Sure there are a lot of factors that go into those things happening, but the managing of salaries is a big part of that.  Not only will this even the field a bit more, but it will make scouting and analysis that more important and in any game, those are important elements to winning, as opposed to just throwing money around and not being afraid to make mistakes because a team doesn't mind eating up a bad contract.... MORE →

 

Acknowledging that he could still be traded for Carmelo Anthony at any time, NBA.com's John Schumann has focused on Devin Harris and his capabilities for a bounceback season this year. It's something NAS has discussed a lot, and Schumann seems to share the same mindset as some of our writers over here. Bottom line, with a new cast of characters on this team who are nearly all good shooters, it's possible for a Devo bounceback:

Enter Jordan Farmar, Anthony Morrow, Troy Murphy and Travis Outlaw. They may not be big names, but they can all shoot. The four summer additions, all of whom will be major parts of the Nets' rotation, have combined to shoot 41 percent from 3-point range over the last two seasons.

Harris again has the shooters around him to make defenses pay for sagging into the lane.

"Every point guard needs space," (Avery) Johnson said. "We feel that's going to be important for him to not have any excuses of why not to be aggressive."

If this team remains intact going into the season opener, the status of Devin Harris may be the most interesting thing to watch for. He was such a dramatic game changer in 2008-09. If he resembled that player last season, there is no question in mind that the Nets wouldn't have been battling to avoid the worst record of all time.

 

By:  Evan Kaplan

Welcome to part IV in our “Breaking Down the Schedule” series. For those of you who may not have followed the first three parts of our breakdown, here’s where we have the Nets after 60 games. Sebastian predicted a 9-11 start, Mark followed with an 8-12 prediction over the next 20 and Devin had the team going .500 with a 10-10 record in Games 41-60. So we at NAS have the Nets at 27-33 after the first 60 games.

Here’s a look at the final 22 games of the 2010-11 season and how the Nets will finish based upon their current roster.

March 04 vs. Toronto (The O2 Arena in London)

The Nets travel across the Atlantic to London, England to face off against the Raptors in the first of two games to begin the month of March. Toronto will have a down year with the tremendous turnover of their roster and the loss of Bosh, and with all of the travel and unusual playing circumstances for both teams, I think it’s safe to say they will split these two games. Nets win the first one. 28-33

March 05 vs. Toronto (The O2 Arena in London)

The second of two London games against the Raptors is a 3:00 Eastern Time Saturday matinee. The Nets have more talent than Toronto but you would think jet lag and the time difference could be a factor in the second game of a back-to-back. The more I think about these two games, the more I envision a split. Toronto takes the finale overseas. 28-34

... MORE →

Daily Link: Morrow vs TWill

Posted on: September 30th, 2010 by Mark Ginocchio 24 Comments

 

The Nets appeared to have a practice yesterday where it took a whole six questions before Carmelo Anthony's name was mentioned. That's an improvement folks.

But the theme that seemed to emerge in practice yesterday is who's going t be the starting SG. NAS worked on that theme a little while ago, but here are how the beat writers are reporting it:

"Yeah, [Morrow] does [make a better fit], especially when the ball goes in the basket," (Avery) Johnson said (per the New York Post). "He gives Devin and Brook more room to operate because his 3's. We count them as layups and when he passes up those shots we're disappointed."

Here's the Star-Ledger's Conor Orr's take:

But much of it will depend on Williams’ continued maturation.

Reining in the player that can hang on to a 16 ppg. average, who can drop 14 assists in a night — like he did against Chicago last March — who can make a coach like Charlotte’s Larry Brown say that when he plays the way he’s capable of, the 12-70 Nets “could beat anybody.”

Brushing back the player that slept through team bus rides. Who struggled through role expansions and reversals. Who pondered aloud one night after a game about how different his future would be if he didn’t get drafted by the Nets at all.

As a little bonus here, our boy Dennis Velasco, moonlighting at his Fanway blog talks Carmelo on his podcast. Give it a listen, will ya?

 

Well, it's been fun to follow, at least.

From what appeared to be a sure thing Friday night, to seeing him a mile high in powder blue on Monday morning - fielding questions from the hoards of reporters at Media Day - the window of acquiring Carmelo Anthony has closed rapidly over the past few days. It appears to be, to paraphrase the words of head coach Avery Johnson, the opposite of alive.

Dead.

That's right, folks. The dust has settled, and Carmelo Anthony is still a Nugget. Rumors of Anthony's displeasure with Denver have been swirling for a year now, and almost came to a breaking point in these past two weeks. Denver hoped to get Anthony at least in for training camp. They wanted him around Chauncey Billups and the rest of the roster - who by all accounts still like him - to perhaps convince him to stick around. Although Billups has publicly stated "I'm not selling anything," Denver surely wants Carmelo to be buying: that maybe they've still got a fighting chance, maybe they can still compete with the best of the NBA, maybe they'd finally make it over the hump. The wait-and-see approach worked. He stays in Denver another day.

For now.

Before Monday, I would have sworn to you that this deal was going down. Mikhail Prokhorov wanted a bright star to build a solar system around, and Carmelo happened to be the one on the market. Need to deal a proven commodity? Here, Charlotte, take Devin Harris. You want exciting young talent? Here, take the #3 pick in the draft, Derrick Favors. Do salaries need to match somewhere? Who wants Quinton Ross? Are you satisfied yet? Nope, you need some picks. Hey, we've got picks! Here, take two of our most valuable ones. Wait, Carmelo doesn't want to sign an extension? No problem, let's convince him his friend Chris Paul will show up in two years!

But in the end, somewhere between the Mile High City and Cory Booker's playground, somebody - Denver, Melo, Charlotte, Billy, somebody - balked.

While I'm glad the wheels have stalled on this deal, it's hard to deny that the NBA has become a star-driven league in the post-Jordan era. Getting a star like Carmelo Anthony would certainly have helped in that department. He would have, at the very least, been Vince Carter 2.0: a dynamic, exciting, legitimate superstar that the Nets hadn't had since they dumped VC 14 months ago (for three players that have since left the team). He'd score 30 points a game, show off his gorgeous offensive versatility, sell enough jerseys to fill the Prudential Center twice-over, and give Mikhail Prokhorov a clubbing buddy. Having a marketable superstar like Anthony would have put butts in the seats, kept casual fans watching games, and in the end helped the rich get richer. For all their talents, Devin Harris hasn't been able to do that consistently, and Derrick Favors - as skyscraping as his upside may be - doesn't have that same charismatic pull. He's a great kid and a phenomenal talent, but he's just a ballplayer, not an actor.

Anthony's a great player - no denying that. His levels of greatness are debatable (top 5? top 20? top 10?), but it's a foregone conclusion that his net impact (but not his Net impact) is a positive one. But here's where my skepticism sets in: at what cost? The Nets would have lost two players who actually wanted to be here; a former all-star reunited with his old coach and what would have been one of the highest draft picks ever to be dealt against his will post-draft and pre-season. They would also have lost (depending on the source) some combination of Kris Humphries, Quinton Ross, cash, and two first-round draft picks. That may be fair value for a player of Anthony's caliber, but when a player is demanding a trade, fair value should not be an option. Just look at Vince Carter - twice.  Anthony's preferred suitors - New York and Chicago - didn't have nearly enough to offer and refused to offer real talent, respectively. That left New Jersey as a last-ditch destination. It would have been akin to selling the farm to get a cow that looks perfect - until you realize that it actually wanted to graze at The Garden.

Truth be told, this deal may end up going down - maybe on December 15th, maybe right before the trade deadline, hell, maybe tomorrow. It's one of those situations where 'Melo isn't going to get traded... until he gets traded. Billy King himself said these things sometimes take as long as two years until you get the player you want. Oddly enough, that line of logic could also apply to the centerpiece of the deal - the 19-year-old Favors, of course - but I doubt that's the development he was referring to. Regardless, I do hope we get to see Favors's next two years in New Jersey. That looks more and more likely with each passing day.

Between the complete overhaul of the roster, the gutting of the front office and staff, and the impending move to Brooklyn, It's All New! has never rung more loudly. While adding a star like Carmelo Anthony would have boosted the campaign, I'm ecstatic about what the Nets have now - a talented, balanced lineup from 1 to 5, depth at every position, a youthful base, and veteran leadership. We may not be a playoff lock, but the narrative will certainly be fun to watch unfold. Meanwhile, I'm just counting down the days until the first alley-oop from Devin Harris to Derrick Favors. I sure hope you're counting with me.

Daily Link: Watch out Knicks

Posted on: September 29th, 2010 by Mark Ginocchio 6 Comments

 

Despite the Carmelo Anthony deal being "dead," the Daily News' Mike Lupica thinks the Nets are shaping up to be winners here - because they've proven over the past week that they're serious about coming after the New York Knicks and leveling them into irrelevancy.

The Nets were set to come after the Knicks, who have the worst ownership in sports and the worst in the history of the Garden. Come after them even before they got to Brooklyn the way the Jets have come after the Giants.
Keep in mind, I thought the Nets were coming across as a bit desperate during the 'Melo dealings, handing over all of the leverage to the Denver front office, who seemed willing to string Billy King along as long as it took to see if the pot could be sweetened. Good for Billy King for stepping away from the table yesterday, but this whole ordeal demonstrated that Nets still have a lot of work to do to improve their image as laughingstocks around the NBA.

Pacific Previews Recap

Posted on: September 28th, 2010 by Sebastian Pruiti 8 Comments

 

Alright guys, in continuing the great team preview series, we are now going to look at those who covered the Pacific Division:

ClippersClips NationSBNation Recap

KingsSactown RoyaltyCowbell KingdomSBNation Recap

LakersSilver Screen and RollForum Blue & GoldNBAtipoffSBNation Recap

SunsBright Side Of The SunSB Nation ArizonaValleyoftheSuns SBNation Recap

WarriorsGolden State of MindSBNation Recap

Recaps: All Previews

(Tardy) Knicks Preview: Straight Bangin'

Melo Talks “Dead” … For Now

Posted on: September 28th, 2010 by Mark Ginocchio 12 Comments

 

There was a lot of speculation  the past 24 hours regarding the status of the proposed four-way deal that would land Carmelo Anthony in a Nets uniform. Dead or alive? AP is reporting that it's dead:

The person spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because he wasn't authorized to speak publicly about the trade.

Anthony took the court with his Nuggets teammates on the first day of training camp Tuesday. But his days in Denver could very well be numbered even after the four-team deal that also would have included Charlotte and Utah collapsed.

The Nuggets could still listen to offers.

While I liked the idea of landing a superstar in NJ, especially one that was so heavily coveted by the Knicks, I think its best to call this deal dead for now. I guess it will be revisited, but I can't see how Denver gets a better haul that what Billy King was reportedly being offered.