Showing posts with label NBA All-Star game. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NBA All-Star game. Show all posts

Monday, February 15, 2016

Will the 20-year old record survive the next 30 games?

The most amazing and crazy thing about the Bulls all-time record of 72-10 that MJ and the boys engineered back in 1995-1996 is that a team like this year's Warriors could be at a ridiculous 48-4 and we still can't be 100% sure that they will break the Bulls' record. That's how special that season was. It is probably one of the most underrated record in all of sports. Playing .878 ball over a 82 game season is near impossible. The Warriors are currently ahead of that pace and are winning at a blistering .923 pace. They have to go 25-5 rest of the way to break the record or 24-6 to tie it. It would have to be a robust .833 or .800 ball respectively in case you are scoring at home. Thats what it's going to take even after playing .923 ball for the first 50+ games. These are just ungodly numbers. Will the Warriors break the record this season? I think they will and it's a tribute to how good this team is that it doesn't even sound like I am going out on a limb to say this. Some folks may actually be surprised if they don't make it happen because, suddenly, the Bulls record doesn't even sound that difficult to these fans given the dubs impressive run so far.

But there are a couple of potential roadblocks for the dubs. Key injures are of course the obvious one. Also, their schedule has some tough stretches like the 6 game roadie they are starting this week post all-star break. Nothing fazes this team, but @Clippers, @Hawks, @Heat, and @Thunder can be a challenging stretch even for them. Their schedule is back-loaded and more than half of their remaining games are against the 7 teams right behind them in the brutal Western conference playoffs standings today. Of course more than half of those teams are no match for the dubs, but they also play the Thunder and Spurs 5 times rest of the way. You can't put anything past a team that's 48-4 and they are definitely not scared of anybody. With all that said, nobody will be shocked if they miss the 72-10 mark. It's easier to win a championship than going 72-10. That was definitely true at the beginning of the season and even today, I will still give the record a slight edge over winning the championship on the difficulty scale.

This Warriors chase will actually keep us entertained and carry the second half of the season. It is a big deal. We will hear about it a lot and rightfully so. Some people have blamed the Warriors' excellence for taking some of the drama out of this NBA season. That may be true in some NBA towns, but the chasing of the record will put the Warriors and the NBA increasingly under the spotlight come March 10th or so. Should be a fun second half after a great All-star weekend. I meant All-star Saturday because the actual game on Sunday was garbage. Something has to be done to make the All-star game watchable.  As stupid as the MLB's idea to award home field in the World Series to the winning side of the All-star game was, it is looking better and better with every inane Pro Bowl and All-star game in other leagues. The 3-point contest and the dunk contest on Saturday night were both great. Thanks to the star power of the splash brothers, the 3-point contest seemed like the headliner the last couple of years. But Aaron Gordon and Zach LaVine walked in right after and put on a dunk show for the ages. They brought back the dunk contest to relevancy. It was real fun and good luck to those 2 youngsters in their careers.

Suns' own Devin Booker made it to the final round of the 3-point contest with the splash brothers. This kid is special and hope he keeps getting better and saves the franchise. Protect the shield, Devin!

Sunday, February 17, 2013

King's League

LeBron James is good. I know I am not breaking any news with that. But what has always been interesting to me is, how well his career has stuck to the script and followed the plan when it comes to greatness. That's not easy considering how improbable the plan looked and how complicated the script read given the unprecedented hype and expectations he carried into the NBA. There has never been an athlete who has met such levels of hype. And that's despite the fact that no athlete has ever had to deal with as much hype as LeBron and they still always fall way short of expectation. You could make an argument that LeBron has even surpassed the ridiculous hype since being called "the chosen one" when he was just 17-years old. He made it harder on himself with the whole drama off the court around his free agency and made some enemies across the nation, but his game on the court never deviated from the golden script a whole lot. Most people's anger and hatred seemed to have dissipated with the championship last year as Americans love a winner more than anything.  There is still some lll-will around him for having "taken his talents to South Beach" - including your truly not totally pardoning him yet, but at this all-star break, LeBron's star is at the highest it has ever been.

LeBron's game has constantly and consistently improved over the years, though not at the pace some people expected at times. But some of that might be media and other's fault and not LeBron's. There were some legitimate concerns about his killer instincts and toughness that he finally answered during last year's playoffs. There were a couple of games against the Pacers and the Celtics where he dominated the game and just wouldn't let his team lose. The Heat were slowly and surely becoming his team throughout last season, but that playoff run put the finishing touches on the change of ownership from Wade to LeBron. It was not Wade's house anymore and he was merely renting a room from LeBron, a room that might have even been smaller than Bosh's sub-let. LeBron didn't look like he needed Wade a whole lot as he showed he could do everything Wade did including hitting clutch game winners, only better. The championship victory erased many concerns. The toughness gene might still be missing, but the perception has changed forever. Perception is often reality in life, especially when it comes to abstract intangibles in sports like "being clutch" or "having heart." With the MVP trophy and the ring last year, LeBron was the "king' for real finally.

This season, LeBron is taking the next step, the very existence of which was not a guarantee considering how great he was already. Where do you go from that impressive 2012? LeBron is going right to the GOAT discussion - Greatest Of All Time. He is bringing everything in his arsenal together and with the addition of more low-post polish and championship experience, he is putting up numbers that challenges all conventional wisdom around basketball efficiency. I don't know if 40's are the new 30's, but shooting 60% may become the new 50% as LeBron is making 60% look normal and simple. He is currently averaging above 56% shooting for the season, which is unheard of for a wing player. Even MJ has not shot that high for a season, though we are not sure if LeBron can hold on to that through the end of this season. But he just came off a ridiculous stretch where he averaged over 30 points and 60% shooting for 6 straight games.  Thats efficiency and domination at historic levels not even taking in to account all the other things he does on the court - namely the rebounds, assists, and the defense. This obviously has kicked off a "is LeBron is the greatest ever?" debate. And the question reached the GOAT himself.  Michael Jordan is celebrating his 50-Th birthday today to coincide with NBA's all-star game. So he has been on TV quite a bit and had to deal with a variant of this question.

While it's still not polite or smart to compare LeBron to Jordan himself, we are not too far away from that discussion. I don't think LeBron will be able to accumulate 6 championships like MJ, but if he gets to 3, we have to entertain the comparison because of every other number LeBron is going to put up. This guy is going to accumulate some numbers that will be hard to argue against. But the comparison between LeBron and Kobe was a topic Jordan had to weigh in on this week. He said it was a tough one, but he will go with 5 over 1, meaning Kobe's 5 rings makes him better than LeBron's one. I think thats people taking the easy way out though I do see the logic of using championships as a tie-breaker if the comparison is tight. We may do that for LeBron V Jordan 4 years from now. But that argument is a cop-out here with Kobe for a couple of reasons. LeBron to me is way better than Kobe and thats not to take anything away from Kobe, who is great in his own right and is probably a top-10 player in the history of the game. But Kobe has never even sniffed the levels of efficiency that LeBron is playing at right now. And, Kobe's 5 rings are way different from Jordan's 6 in that it includes Shaq's 3. So, LeBron in my mind is a ring away from putting Kobe firmly in his rear-view mirror and probably 2 rings away from challenging his airness himself for the best ever because he is going to have all the other numbers on his side. He is true basketball royalty and 2013 will be remembered as the year when he entered the GOAT discussion. That in and of itself is an impressive achievement and a good reason to watch the rest of this NBA season.