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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Tuesday, October 06, 2009

(a sorta) League Preview: Washington Wizards


The
sorriest and the lottery likelies enter the season with bleak prospects. The Clippers and the Thunder have a little something to be excited about. Though they were horrible last year, getting to the playoffs and possibly making noise is a realistic possibility. Enter the 4th best team in the Southeast Division.


Washington Wizards


PG Gilbert Arenas Randy Foye

SG DeShawn Stevenson Mike Miller Nick Young

SF Caron Butler Dominic McGuire

PF Antwan Jamison Andray Blatche

C Brendon Haywood Fabrico Oberto JaVale McGee


The word in the Wizards organization is that they are in the mix for the championship. The return of star Gilbert Arenas and center Brendon Haywood, and the additions of Mike Miller, Randy Foye and Fabrico Oberto certainly strengthen the ‘Zards. But Washington is essentially banking on the same core from 04-05, when they won 45 games and lost in the Eastern semis. This group has never been known for defense. Stalwart Antwan Jamison is now 33 years old with 829 NBA games to his credit. Arenas true health remains a question mark. Championship? No way. Post season menace? Quite possible.


The Wizards can fill it up. Arenas, Caron Butler, Jamison, Miller, Foye, and Nick Young all get you buckets. Coach Flip Saunders will do well with this crew on the offensive end. Saunders’ teams generally move the ball well, share the scoring, and shoot a high percentage. He has a team that already trusts one another. Expect Washington to race past 100 points most games.


They will probably need to score 106-107 pts to win games, because stopping opponents is going to be an issue. Arenas’ quickness will be tested nightly at the point. Stevenson is a joke as a stopper. Butler is tough but inconsistent. Jamison is undersized. The new guys have barely a clue on defense. Having Haywood back will help some. The Carolina alum had found himself as a pro before losing the past season to injury. A strong shot blocker, he gives the ‘Zards a toughness the sorely need. He is also a polished post defender that can dance with the East’s big boys. Bottom line is Washington gave up a lot on D much of last year. It was ugly, and many of the prime participants are still part of the team’s core.


Assuming that Arenas is healthy enough to play 70+ games and really run the team, the Wizards could roll a lot of the sucker teams with their fire power and depth. Butler is in his prime, averaging 20 points, 6 rebounds, 4 assists, and over 1.5 steals over the past two seasons. Jamison is older, but the wiley scorer can still get it done. Foye and Miller provide strong bench scoring. Even Haywood and the young bigs McGee and Blatche have offensive skills.


As for the Wizards ability to challenge the elite of the East? Do not see it. Washington could possibly get in the discussion with Atlanta and Miami, but they could also get locked in a dog fight for the 8 seed with Philly, Detroit, and the like. Defense wins and Washington does not D.

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