The Moonball Blog

Saturday, December 12, 2009

Of Craptors, Clowns and Crowns




I know I have no good reason to be surprised, but the depth of Toronto's suckiness somehow has caught me off guard. Aside from home wins over Cleveland and Miami, TDot has yet to beat a good team. Worse still, they have lost 5 games to East leaders Boston, Orlando, and Atlanta by an average of 16+ points. In fairness Toronto has played 14 of its first 25 on the road. Still, .400 basketball is a disappointment.

Remember when there was some buzz about the Wizards contending? Somehow the return of Arenas and the acquisitions of Mike Miller, Randy Foye, and Fabricio Oberto would allow the Wiz to make a Celtic-like turn around from there miserable 19 win 08-09 campaign. Unless Washington starts developing some defensive chemistry, they will remain a laughing stock.

Speaking of them Celtics, Rajon Rondo and Kendrick Perkins are both playing on an incredibly high level. The young duo have led the charge during the Celts current 9 game run. Rondo has become a floor maestro of the highest order. Scarier still, he seems to have mastered a 16 foot pull up foul line left. Perk is a friggin beast. A constant defender, he has developed a forceful post game. With Boston's superior ball movement, the C's regularly find Perk for crushing jams and easy lay ins. Wait til Baby returns. A lethal mix of young and old.

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Friday, October 09, 2009

(a sorta) League Preview: Toronto Raptors


The sorriest and the lottery likelies are just that. The Wizards, Clippers and Thunder may actually be players in the 2009-10 post season. At the same time, these teams are all question marks because recent poor play. The beat goes on with 2nd best team in the East's Atlantic Division.


Toronto Raptors

PG Jose Calderon Jarret Jack

SG Marco Belinelli DeMar DeRozan Quincy Douby

SF Hedo Turkoglu Antoine Wright

PF Chris Bosh Reggie Evans

C Andrea Bargnani Rasho Nesterovic Amir Johnson


Toronto really puzzles me. In large part because of the presence of Chris Bosh, I have assumed that Toronto would have been a constant playoff participant, if not a burgeoning contender. But their weak 41-41 campaign in 2008 and miserable 33 wins in 2009 show the Raptors as sorta suckers. Granted, GM Bryan Colangelo has a concept that he is working towards, and building anything takes time. With the acquisitions of Turkoglu, Jarret Jack, Marco Belineli, DeMar DeRozan and Amir Johnson, he may finally have the personnel to play a Euro-Suns style. But unless Colangelo’s plan also includes losing Bosh as a free agent next summer, Toronto needs to get back into the playoff mix this season.


Bosh is a bit of enigma himself. Perhaps it is his laid back persona, or perhaps it his preference of the perimeter over the block on offense, but for one of the game’s best young bigs, he does not seem to be that BIG. He is certainly more forward than center, and arguably more Tom Chambers than Chris Webber. He is a very active defender, a strong rebounder, and big time scorer. Is he a franchise guy? Or just a really damn good player? The verdict will become a lot clearer if he can’t lift this team above mediocrity.


With Turkoglu and the other new guys, T-Dot gained significantly in the athleticism and scoring departments. For a team with dreams of a playing at a fast pace and putting up big scores, they now have pretty good pieces. Jose Calderon is coming off a down year, and is apparently very focused. An effective Jose will get things moving right. Turkoglu’s creativity and willingness to initiate for others is going to fit in very nicely. Jack is very solid third guard, with Belinelli and DeRozan serving as the primary two guards. All three can score. Amir Johnson will help the Raps on D. Rasho is fine back up center when you are forced to play big. Johnson could be the big that will get the most minutes after Bosh and Bargnani.


Bargnani, while not an Olowokandi-level disappointment, has not really had a full season of consistent good play in his three years in the League. He will be 24 years old as he enters the season. He is being asked to play out of position as center because he is 7’0 and Mr. Bosh has a lock on the power forward spot. For Toronto to make any serious foray into the East’s upper crust, Bargnani has to come into his own now. Having his country mate Belinelli may help him. Bottom line, though, is Bargnani must deliver.


You may have noticed that aside from referencing Bosh and sub Amir Johnson, I have not mentioned anything about defense.


Like the Thunder, Clippers and the Wiz, I am not sure what to expect of this team. They will probably be fun to watch, unless for some reason they stink. Best case scenario: A playoff run and tough second round loss to one of the East’s top three. Of course, for that scenario, they would need to get the 4 or 5 seed. How likely is that? Probably Toronto is the 7 or 8 seed.

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