Wednesday, October 27, 2021

2021-22 NBA Bric-a-Brac (Week 1)

Waivings

Bulls waive Stanley Johnson

Bucks waive Tremont Waters

Pistons waive Cassius Stanley, Derrick Walton Jr, Jared Cunningham

Pacers waive Keifer Sykes, Nate Hinton, Terry Taylor

Cavs waive Justin James, Kyle Guy, Mitch Ballock

Celtics waive Juwan Morgan, Ryan Arcidiacano, Garrison Matthews, Luke Kornet, Theo Pinson

Knicks waive Aamir Simms, MJ Walker

Raptors waive Ish Wainwright

Sixers waive Shaq Harrison

Heat waive Micah Potter, Ja'Vonte Smart

Magic waive Hassani Gravett, Admiral Schofield, BJ Johnson, Jeff Dowtin

Hornets waive LiAngelo Ball, Wesley Iwundu

Clippers waive Harry Giles

Lakers waive Cameron Oliver, Chaundree Brown, Joel Ayayi, Trevelin Queen

Warriors waive Mychal Mulder, LJ Figueroa, Jordan Bell, Avery Bradley

Kings waive Emmanuel Terry

Suns waive Chasson Randle

Blazers waive Marquese Chriss, Patrick Patterson, Quinn Cook

Jazz waive Nino Johnson

Wolves waive Brian Bowen, Chris Silva, Isaiah Miller, Matt Lewis

Thunder waive Mamadi Diakite

Grizzlies waive Matthew Hurt

Mavs waive Carlik Jones, Tyrell Terry

Spurs waive Al-Farouq Aminu

Pelicans waive John Petty Jr. 

I still believe in Harry Giles and Quinn Cook and Shaq Harrison, still believe those guys can fit in somewhere and I'm curious to see Ayayi get a shot somewhere


Signings/Extensions

Celtics sign Jabari Parker (1yr), convert Broderic Thomas to 2-way contract

Knicks exercise rookie extensions on Immanuel Quickley, Obi Toppin, RJ Barrett and sign Luka Samanic to a 2-way contract

Wizards sign Daniel Gafford (3yr/$?), claim Joel Ayayi (Lakers) off waivers, pick up rookie extensions of Deni Avdija, Rui Hachimura

Hawks pick up rookie extensions on De'Andre Hunter, Onyeka Oknogwu, Cam Reddish and re-sign Kevin Huerter (4yr/$65m)

Grizzlies exercise rookie options on Desmond Bane, Ja Morant, Branon Clarke and sign Jaren Jackson Jr (4yr/$105m) contract extension

Rockets convert Daishen Nix to a 2-way contract and claim Garrison Matthews (Celtics) off waivers, sign him to 2-way contract

Lakers claim Avery Bradley (Warriors) off waivers, sign Jay Huff to 2-way contract

Warriors sign Gary Payton II and claim Jeff Dowtin (Magic) off waivers and sign him to 2-way contract

I agree with all of these moves (and I recuse myself from the 2-way deals). 

Pacers re-sign Malcolm Brogdon (2y/$45m extension)

Pacers and Brogdon are a good fit, good signing.

Magic re-sign Wendell Carter Jr (4yr/$?)

Ballsy and interesting for the Magic to choose to re-up Carter considering he just arrived in Orlando and is among a pile of youngsters looking to get extended. Was this just more convenient or is Carter really the guy for them? (If so, then a Suggs-Carter-Isaac is the core, yes?)

Suns re-sign Mikal Bridges (4y/$90m) and Landry Shamet (4yr/$43m)

I'm cool with the Suns signing Bridges and even Shamet, but how you gonna leave Ayton hanging to sign Shamet? (The problem is re-signing Chris Paul, he's the one hogging up all the capital) Not sure why signing Shamet was such a priority, I like Shamet and I think he fits in Phoenix but we can't wait a coupla games to see? 

Bucks sign Grayson Allen (2yr/$20m)

The peak perfection of Grayson Allen could be worth 2yr/$20m to the Bucks, but since we have yet to see that perfected Allen, I'm a little surprised by this move. Might work, might be a tradeable deal if it doesn't. 

Pelicans re-sign Jonas Valanciunas (2y/$?m) extension

I always liked Valanciunas, seems like New Orleans would want to see him paired with Zion before extending him, but even without seeing the dollar amount, I would think the deal is tradeable and therefore not a bad deal. 


Raptors exercise rookie extensions on Malachi Flynn, Precious Achiuwa

Wolves exercise rookie extensions on Anthony Edwards, Jalen McDaniels

Mavs exercise rookie extension on Josh Green

Spurs exercise rookie extensions on Devin Vassell, Keldon Johnson

Kings exercise rookie extension on Tyrese Haliburton

Thunder exercise rookie extensions on Ty Jerome, Darius Bazley and Aleksej Pokusevski

Yes to all. (This is a good place to start with Most Improved candidates)

Bulls convert Tyler Cook to 2-way contract

Cavs convert RJ Nembhard and Tacko Fall to 2-way contracts

Nets convert David Duke to 2-way contract

Jazz convert Malik Fitts to a 2-way contract

Suns sign Ish Wainwright to a 2-way contract

I have no idea what teams need/want in a 2-way contract, so I can only assume that these moves are the correct ones. 


Front office minutiae

Bucks gives GM Jon Horst multi year extension

Drafted well, didn't get in the way of a new stadium, won a championship. Yeah, pay him. 

Tuesday, October 26, 2021

2021-22 NFL (Week 7)

Games I watched (some of):

Broncos 14-17 Browns

The Browns were the better team and they moved the ball pretty well, but they sputtered around the goal and never did pile on the points the way it felt like they should. The Broncos are a nice team, they play hard, they don't suck and they'll win games they probably shouldn't win, not saying they're a playoff team but if the Chiefs stay this bad and the Pats don't pick it up, the Broncos are not eliminated yet by any means. I still think the Browns are one of the best teams in the AFC and even with Keenum, I think they'll do just fine.

WTF 10-24 Packers

The WTF's (I call them the 'Marons') went for it 4th down instead of kicking the easy FG...and failed. Later on, they went for it on 4th down instead of kicking the easy FG....and failed. Then late in the 4th quarter when they're down by 17 (because they kept passing up scoring chances), they kick the meaningless FG instead of going for it. There ya go: this team isn't just bad, they're stupid. The Packers keep rolling and I guess I'm coming around because even though the offense didn't really do anything, I didn't mind. This game was well in hand, they didn't need to do much, so they didn't. Can they turn it on when they need to?  Are they conserving energy? I dunno, but for now I'm just gonna let it go. 

Bengals 41-17 Ravens

This game was even in the 1st half. Ravens started off the 2nd half with a TD, made the score 17-13. Yeah, that was it for the Ravens. The Bengals straight curbstomped the Ravens for the last 25 minutes of this game. You could feel the 'everyone gets a TD!' vibe on the Bengals sideline once they realized they had solved the Ravens D. Lamar Jackson was expecting a closer game, I think this game just game just got away from his defense and he didn't really know what to do. Bad day for the Ravens, but they're still good, just a division opponent got the best of 'em, no biggie. For the Bengals, though, they've been getting beat down by the Ravens for ages, so this must've felt good for them. Everyone was making plays, everybody got some, the D looked good, and Burrow is the man. I thought the Bengals would be good by year's end, but they're ahead of schedule, they're firmly in the playoff talk now. 

Bears 3-39 Bucs

Bad day for the Bears. The Bucs pass rush diced up the Bears O-line in the 1st half and made this game over so quick that there wasn't much to see. Sucks to be the Bears but they need to just forget this game. As for the Bucs, hey, an easy W is great thing.

Colts 30-18 Niners

Weird game, weird weather. Crazy rain storm but really only for the 2nd and 3rd quarters, the opening and closing were less messy. I still think the Niners are the better team, they ran so well early on, then stopped doing that as the weather got worse--even though it was the only thing they were good at! I don't understand their game plan at all. The Colts are an okay team that will win games if they're allowed to hang around, perhaps they're better than that but I'm not ready to make that leap. 


The rest of the slate:

Chiefs 3-27 Titans. Look: when the Chiefs figure out how to get Tyreke back into their offense (yeah, his numbers are fine but his importance is bigger than that), then the Chiefs offense will be fine again. As for the defense being awful, that's not really fair: it's the offense that keeps letting this team down and that puts more pressure on the D (an already not very good defense). The Chiefs might flail all year long, but I doubt it, they'll be back at some point, probably soon enough to get back in the post-season game. As for the Titans, not sure if they're getting going or peaking early (I kinda suspect the latter, honestly) but they have two strong wins in a row and they are in godawful shitty division, so there's still time for them to dominate. 

Falcons 30-28 Dolphins. Yeah. The Falcons really tried to give this away and the Dolphins still couldn't take it. Feels like the Dolphins have a pretty good shot at the #1 pick (Lion pride will eventually net some W's). The Falcons still have time to get their shit together (meh, I don't see it happening). 

Jets 13-54 Pats. Yeah. 

Panthers 3-25 Giants. The Panthers strikes me as the kind of team that mails it in from time to time; they can play hard or they can play not hard and that seems like who they are. Giants saw a chance to lay a smackdown on a sleepy team and they grabbed it, good W for NYG.  

Eagles 22-33 Raiders. The Raiders are up/down, feels like they're up at the moment. I'm still in on Hurts, I still think the Eagles can be a spoiler down the stretch, I still think the Eagles are the same mediocre team that is getting slightly better than what they've been all season. I still think the Raiders are pretty good, scary if you take them lightly, probably not good enough to be called 'good' just yet. 

Lions 19-28 Rams. A twist: the Lions came out aggressive and built a nice lead that the Rams eventually overtook, as opposed to the Rams running up a big lead and letting the Lions come back late. Same result, though. 

Texans 5-31 Cards. Yeah, sounds right.

Saints 13-10 Seahawks. I caught the very end of this game: the Saints did what needed to be done and the Seahawks didn't. We can tell ourselves that it was Geno Smith's fault....eh, might be true. I can't help thinking that the Saints are the better version of what the Seahawks wanna be.

Monday, October 25, 2021

2021-22 NCAA Football (Week 8)

Games I watched (some of): Not much, seriously I ran errands and shit, this slate left me cold. 

I did see a chunk of the 4th quarter off Illinois-Penn State, where I was mostly just looking up thinking, 'Okay, Penn State, whenever you're ready'. Illinois had a sequence at the beginning of the 4th quarter, where they kept scoring TD's and getting them taken off for penalties. It just felt like they were never going to score again. They kicked the FG to tie it up and that was all it took. 9 OT's later they stole the W. Wow, what a lame loss for the Nittany Lions. Illinois is not a good team and they didn't even play particularly well in this game and after 9 overtimes, Penn State still couldn't outscore them. Jeez!


Top 25

Handled their business

(2) Cincinnati, (3) Oklahoma, (4) Alabama, (6) Michigan, (10) Oregon, (12) Ole Miss, (13) Notre Dame, (16) Wake Forest, (17) Texas A&M, (21) Southern Methodist, (22) San Diego State, (23) Pittsburgh, (24) UT-San Antonio

Bad beat

(25) Purdue. They snuck into the rankings simply because they stung overrated Iowa the previous week. Nice W but they're not as good as Wisconsin (a good team for three quarters that can't finish games).

Not so good

(7) Penn State. Bad loss, bad bad bad loss. Clearly they were looking ahead to the tough part of their schedule. Illinois was the trap game and they fell for it. 

(8) Oklahoma State. Meh. Not sure they're really any better than Iowa State. This is a bad beat except that the Cowboys were so highly ranked. 

(14) Coastal Carolina. App State claims another one! Felt like Coastal had that kind of monster offense that would just keep getting W's, but Boone don't go easy. 

(18) North Carolina State. I was getting impressed by their good W's over Clemson and Boston College, but they fell for the Hurricane. Tsk tsk. 


Next week's interesting matches:

(6) Michigan @ (8) Michigan State (all right, time for the B-10 to unpack itself)

(10) Ole Miss @ (18) Auburn (finally feels like we've figured the next two best teams in the SEC West, this could be a fun game)

(20) Penn State @ (5) Ohio State (okay, all B-10 this weekend)

Thursday, October 21, 2021

2021-22 NBA (pre-season predictions)

I'll just throw down my pre-season predictions for the season because it's always fun to look back and see how wrong I was. 


MVP: Giannis Antetokounpo (Bucks)

Here's my pool of potential MVP candidates: Donovan Mitchell (Jazz), Devin Booker (Suns), Chris Paul (Suns), Luka Doncic (Mavs), Anthony Davis (Lakers), Lebron James (Lakers), Nikola Jokic (Nuggets), Steph Curry (Warriors), Paul George (Clippers), Ja Morant (Grizzlies), Damien Lillard (Bazers), De'Aaron Fox (Kings), Karl-Anthony Towns (Wolves), Anthony Edwards (Wolves), Dejounte Murray (Spurs), Jakob Poeltl (Spurs), Zion Williamson (Pelicans), Jalen Green (Rockets), Shai Gilgeous-Alexander (Thunder), Giannis Antetokoupo (Bucks), Trae Young (Hawks), Kevin Durant (Nets), James Harden (Nets), Jimmy Butler (Heat), Kyle Lowry (Heat), Bam Adebayo (Heat), Jaysun Tatum (Celtics), Julius Randle (Knicks), Nikola Vucevic (Bulls), Joel Embiid (Sixers), LaMelo Ball (Hornets), PJ Washington (Hornets), Bradley Beal (Wizards), Malcolm Brogdon (Pacers), Domantis Sabonis (Pacers), Collin Sexton (Cavs), Jerami Grant (Pistons), Jalen Suggs (Magic)

There are a few guys on this list that I'd be shocked if they won; but I'd be double dog super shocked if someone NOT on this list won MVP. From the list above, go through and pick the team that will either dominate the regular season or vastly improve over last season, then pick that team's leading scorer and you got a good shot at picking the MVP. 

Which teams will "dominate" this year? In the East I'd go with the Bucks (Giannis) and Hawks (Trae); in the West, I'd say it's Jazz (Mitchell) and Suns (Booker/Paul). Which teams will most improve over last year? I'd say Hawks (Trae) in the East and Mavs (Luka) in the West. Which are the "casually brilliant" teams that we'll kick ourselves if we don't acknowledge? Obviously it's the Nets (Durant/Harden) and the Lakers (Lebron/AD).  

Giannis, Trae (two votes for Trae), Mitchell, Doncic, Booker, Paul, Durant, Harden, Lebron and Davis. That's a pretty good top nine. I'll take Giannis because I think the Bucks will lead the East--fairly casually, I might add--which would be an improvement on last year. And Giannis is going to do everything with grade-A effort and a smile. And he won the championship after getting snubbed by all the voters last year. Time for a return to the top for Giannis. 


Rookie of the Year: Jalen Suggs (Magic)

Not every team has a worthwhile candidate, a coupla teams have too many worthwhile candidates, but I'd say this is your list for Rookie of the Year: Justin Johnson (Hawks), Dae'Ron Sharpe (Nets), Quentin Grimes (Knicks). Ayo Dosunmo (Bulls), Jaden Springer (Sixers). James Bouknight (Hornets), Kai Jones (Hornets), Chris Duarte (Pacers), Corey Kispert (Wizards), Scottie Barnes (Raptors), Even Mobley (Cavs), Cade Cunningham (Pistons), Jalen Suggs (Magic), Jared Butler (Jazz), Austin Reaves (Lakers), Bones Hyland (Nuggets), Moses Moody (Warriors), BJ Boston (Clippers), Keon Johnson (Clippers), Zaiare Williams (Grizzlies), Greg Brown (Blazers), Davion Mitchell (Kings), Leandro Bolmaro (Wolves), Joshua Primo (Spurs), Trey Murphy (Pelicans), Alperen Sengun (Rockets), Jalen Green (Rockets), Tre Mann (Thunder), Josh Giddey (Thunder)

A lot of those guys are barely gonna see the floor this year (I didn't even bother to add Jonathon Kuminga (Warriors), for example, because even though he was a top 10 pick, I doubt he'll get more than 5 minutes a night), while a lot of these guys are gonna play way too much because their teams are terrible. Let me explain my main criterion: I see the Rookie year as an audition for the future, not something in itself. It is rare for a Rookie to lead the league in any statistical category or lead his team deep into the playoffs, so it isn't anything in the particular Rookie year that matters, I'm looking for future performance and who showed the most in their time on the court, not necessarily just the stats they piled up. Who will display the leadership or just undeniable flat out talent that makes you want that guy on your team? Which guys make you regret not picking them? Which guys just look like stars or even ideal role players? Which guys will transcend their current team situation to shine out?

I'll narrow that list to: James Bouknight (Hornets), Kai Jones (Hornets), Chris Duarte (Pacers), Scottie Barnes (Raptors), Even Mobley (Cavs), Cade Cunningham (Pistons), Jalen Suggs (Magic), Bones Hyland (Nuggets), BJ Boston (Clippers), Keon Johnson (Clippers), Davion Mitchell (Kings), Alperen Sengun (Rockets), Jalen Green (Rockets), Josh Giddey (Thunder)

I could be reaching on Jones, Hyland, Boston, and Johnson, but I think those guys are gonna get rotation minutes and be fairly impressive. On the other hand, perhaps I am dismissing too quickly guys like Primo or Kispert, who will probably play. Also, I should say that while I think the 2021 draft has a lot of nice players that are going to play for a while, I didn't really see anyone that struck me as an obvious superstar. Also, there are guys that I like that I think will take a while to develop and may well be considered the best in this class in the future, but aren't likely to break out as rookies: Kuminga (Warriors), Mobley (Cavs), Boston (Clippers), Sengun (Rockets).

I'm going with Suggs (Magic) because I think by year's end he will be the clear leader on his team, whereas I don't think Cunningham (Pistons) or Giddey (Thunder) or even Green (Rockets) will get to that point this year. For runner-up, I'll go with Barnes (Raptors) because I think he's gonna be great in the Raptor rotation and may well be the most coveted player come contract extension time. (Wonder if I would still have them as my top two choices if Suggs was in Toronto and Barnes was in Orlando as was predicted to happen before draft day? I'll go ahead and answer that: No, I don't think I would've those two as my top two. Just throwing that out there)

 

6th Man: Patty Mills (Nets)

This is a tough one because there are two ways to forecast this: go back over previous winners and grab one or find someone you've never heard of and bet it all on that guy. Though the bench is important, all the bad ass dudes wanna be starters, so no one covets the role of 6th Man the way they should. For example, to me the obvious dude to win this year--to dominate the voting for this award this year--is Russell Westbrook (Lakers), but it probably won't work out that way. If I was Coah Vogel, I wouldn't play Westbrook with Lebron or AD, I'd make him king of the 2nd string and let him pick and choose his own crew; I'd keep my starting five separate and I'd let Westbrook lord over the bottom of the roster in his own way. But that's not how it's gonna work (oh, maybe by playoff time the Lakers might look something like that but they sure won't start off that way).  So who is the 6th Man for the Lakers? I dunno. 
Indeed, for any team it's hard to predict ahead who will be the guy that gels the 2nd string, that comes off the bench and creates action or settles turmoil. Also, award voters tend to prefer scoring to non-scoring, so  a reliable vet that will pile up monster rebounds (Andre Drummond (Sixers), for example) or come off the bench for more of a defensive role (Cam Johnson (Suns), for example), will likely lose votes to a flashy scorer that actually puts up mediocre average stats (Jordan Clarkson (Jazz), for example). Also, coming off the bench for a good team will likely earn more favor than playing well off the bench for a team going nowhere (like Jarrod Vanderbilt (Wolves), for example).  

My short list in no particular order: Immanuel Quickley (Knicks), Patty Mills (Nets), Tyler Herro (Heat), Luke Kennard (Clippers), Jalen Brunson (Mavs), Terry Rozer (Hornets). But if you're looking for a good scorer from a good team that everyone already knows? Oh, that would be Lou Williams (Hawks), who's definitely worth keeping on the short list. 

Defensive Player of the Year: Drue Holiday (Bucks)

There is the obvious pick (Rudy Gobert (Jazz)) or a sentimental fave (Jimmy Butler (Heat)) or even a wacky should/could kinda pick (Ben Simmons (Sixers?)). But I think by the end of the year, voters will look back to the 2020-21 playoffs and remember just how damn amazing Holiday was all through last year's playoffs. If Holiday plays anything like that this year--tough to do over the long haul of a regular season--then I think he gets some 'long shadow' votes recalling back to the previous season. 

Although if you're looking for new blood, keep an eye on Devin Vasell (Spurs), Tyrese Hailburton (Kings), Jaren Jackson Jr (Grizzlies), Mo Bamba (Magic), OG Anunoby (Raptors), Matisse Thybulle (Sixers), and don't forget Nerlens Noel (Knicks) or Marcus Smart (Celtics). 


Coach: Frank Vogel (Lakers)

In the East I'd expect votes for : Mike Budenholzer (Bucks), Nate Macmillan (Hawks), James Borrego (Hornets) and Billy Donovan (Bulls). In the West, I'd say votes go to: Monty Williams (Suns), Mike Malone (Nuggets), Tyronn Lue (Clippers) and Vogel (Lakers).

Look, the Lakers are going to be good whether we want them to be or not. Lebron will will them to greatness, even if dragging the dirty laundry (Melo, Ariza, Dwight, etc.) is more trouble than its worth. Vogel will take the brunt of the criticism when it all goes wrong but he'll get some glory from the voters if he has the Lakers headed in the right direction by season's end. And I think he will. It'll take a while for this squad to round into shape. They've taken on a lot of high profiles used-to-be's and negotiating the order in which they get dumped over the side of the boat will be traumatic and exasperating and I think Vogel will be a magnet for most of that. Normally, the coach just takes the blame and that's how it goes, but I think there's a slow turning at work that will make the voters appreciate all the shit that they will have dumped on Vogel throughout the season and will reward him with their pity votes. I think the Lakers will be funky for most of the season (for which Vogel will get blamed) but they'll be right by the end of the season (for which Vogel will be rewarded). 


Exec of the Year: Travis Shlenk (Hawks)

Obviously we haven't seen the moves the GM's will make in season and that will likely determine the winner of this award. But I think Shlenk has put together an almost perfect roster this summer, adding slyly good vets, picking up two steals in the draft and cementing the status of Nate MacMillan as pater familias of this team. The Hawks are ready to kick ass and I don't think they'll need to make moves at the deadline, which is probably why Shlenk won't win, but I think it's exactly why he should!


Regular season predictions:

East

Top 6: Bucks, Hawks, Nets, Heat, Celtics, Knicks

Play-in: Bulls, Sixers, Hornets, Pacers

Lottery: Raptors, Wizards, Cavs, Pistons Magic


West

Top 6: Jazz, Suns, Mavs, Lakers, Nuggets, Warriors

Play-in: Clippers, Grizzlies, Blazers, Kings

Lottery: Wolves, Spurs, Pelicans, Rockets, Thunder


Playoff predictions:

East

Bucks over Sixers, Hawks over Bulls, Nets over Knicks, Heat over Celtics

Bucks over Heat, Hawks over Nets

Bucks over Hawks in 7


West

Jazz over Blazers, Suns over Clippers, Warriors over Mavs, Lakers over Nuggets

Warriors over Jazz, Lakers over Suns

Lakers over Warriors in 7


Finals

Bucks over Lakers in 6


There you have it. Doesn't even seem necessary to play the games any more. 

Wednesday, October 20, 2021

2021-22 NBA Pre-Season (Southeast Division)

Hawks

Out

Kris Dunn (trade to Celtics), Brandon Goodwin (declined to tender qualifying offer), Nathan Knight (declined to tender qualifying offer), Tony Snell (renounced free agent rights), Bruno Fernando (trade to Celtics); (Hawks also briefly held Johnny Hamilton, Ibi Watson, DaQuan Jeffries, Jahlil Okafor, AJ Lawson before the end of pre-season)

Didn't need Dunn, Snell or Fernando. Not relying on Goodwin or Knight or any of those other dudes that passed through this summer. Nothing missed in this pile. 

In

#20 pick Jalen Johnson (Duke), #48 pick Sharife Cooper (Auburn/2-way), Gorgui Dieng (1yr/$4m), Timothe Luwawu-Cabarrot (1yr/$1.9m), Delon Wright (trade with Kings),  

Dude, I think Johnson could be the steal of this draft. And I think Cooper could be the steal of the 2nd round--and the Hawks didn't even need either of those guys! I think they got younger, deeper, cheaper all at once. I always liked Dieng (not sure he does much here, though), always liked TLC (if Bogdan misses time, TLC could get some minutes), always liked Wright (a reliable vet to guy with the youngsters). I love all of these Ins--I loved all of the Outs!--and the Hawks were already a team ready to take another step. Brilliant off-season, just fuckin' brilliant!

Re-signed

Coach Nate McMillan (no longer 'interim'), Solomon Hill (1yr/$2.4m), John Collins (5yr/$125m), Lou Williams (1yr/$5m), Trae Young (5yr/$172.5m), Clint Capela (2yr/$45.5m), Skylar Mays (2-way)

Coach McMillan came in midway last season and got this team cookin', so giving him the full hire was a no-brainer move. Hill is nice, continuity is a good thing, the deal is cheap. I was impressed with Collins last season, he's ready to get paid, good move. Lou keeps doing his thing, I think he fits the vibe, I think he understands when to go off and when to leave it alone, think bringing him back is the right move. Trae made a believer of me and I (like the Hawks) am all in, give him whatever he wants. A little surprised they re-upped Capela so readily given the other extensions that are in the pipeline, but this is a good deal (and a very tradeable deal), so I think it's the right move. 

Rest of the roster

Danilo Gallinari, Bogdan Bogdanovic, De'Andre Hunter, Onyeka Okongwu, Cam Reddish, Kevin Huerter

(Can they flip Gallinari for Gary Harris?) Love Bogdanovic, didn't even really get the full taste of what he can do on this team last year. Love Hunter, think he's gonna take a step forward. Like Okongwu, looks like he can do things down low. Love Reddish, hurt through most of the playoffs, balled out when he could. Love Huerter, all the little things that guy provides are gonna do so much for this team.  

Summer '22 free agents

Wright, Williams, Huerter, Dieng, Hill, Luwawu-Cabarrot; Hawks already exercised team options on Hunter, Okongwu and Reddish.

(Huerter got paid) With all the youngsters they gotta pay, the Hawks are gonna be hard pressed to find money for vets next summer, so I figure Wright, Lou, Dieng, Hill and TLC all move on unless they're willing to play for less money (which they might).  

Over/Under: 47.5 (Over, 2nd in the East)

I'm in! I never got Trae Young, I didn't see it at Oklahoma, didn't get the pre-draft hype, thought the Hawks were spinning their wheels with him. But last year in the playoffs, they gelled and it all made sense: Trae is Steph outside the three point line and CP inside the free throw line. And that cast around him is pretty good. Last year in the playoffs, they were missing Bogadanovic, Hunter, Okongwu, and Reddish for stretches and still made the final four. Throw in two draft picks that I think were both steals, adding understated reliable vets and anointing Nate MacMillan as coach, and I just think everything about this team is cooking right now. And because they're winning with such youth, they won't take nights off, they won't be load-managing, and well frankly, they're too stupid to not try to win every night. I think they're going to play like unsatisfiable bullies that are gonna club teams night after night. If you wanted a shock pick for most regular season W's, it's the Hawks. And for what it's worth, I see the Eastern Conference playoffs as mostly a rerun of last year


Heat

Out

Andre Iguodala (team declined option), Precious Achiuwa (traded to Raptors), Goran Dragic (traded to Raptors), Nemanja Bjelica (free agent), Trevor Ariza (free agent), Kendrick Nunn (rescinded qualifying offer); (Heat also briefly held DJ Stewart, Dru Smith, Ja'Vonte Smart, Mich Potter before the end of pre-season)

Iguodala, Bjelica and Ariza weren't prefect fits for this team, I think the Heat are better without them. Nunn is a tough loss, though, felt like they had a reliable 2nd string PG but he wanted to play for the Lakers. Achiuwa was a nice young talent, Dragic a nice reliable veteran, but giving up both for a coupla years of Kyle Lowy is probably the right move. 

In

Markieff Morris (1yr/$2.6m), Kyle Lowry (trade with Raptors), PJ Tucker (2yr/$14.3m), Marcus Garrett (2-way), Caleb Martin (2-way)

Lowry in gives them a reliable center of their offense that I think should transform the Heat for the better. Markieff and Tucker give them some craziness that should make the Heat crazier. 

Re-signed

Dwayne Dedmon (1yr/$2.4m), Duncan Robinson (5yr/$90m), Gabe Vincent (2yr/$3.5m), Max Strus (2yr/$3.5m), Omer Yurstseven (2yr/$3.2m), Jimmy Butler (3yr/$136.4m), Victor Oladipo (1yr/$2.4m), Udonis Haslem (1yr/$2.6m)

The Dedmon deal is reasonable. Robinson had to get paid, it's the right move. Vincent, Strus and Yurtseven are for continuity at the bottom of the roster, probably good moves. Re-upping Butler is the no-brainer of the summer. Bringing back Udonis Haslem....still makes no sense to me (something about 'Heat culture' or something). Oladipo on a bargain basement deal is a move the Heat just have to make, even if it goes nowhere; healthy Oladipo might be more than this team needs--could be a distraction, too, this move could backfire.

Rest of the roster

Bam Adebayo, Tyler Herro, KZ Okpala

I love Bam, think he's gonna do just fine with Lowry. I love Herro, but he needs to step up his game to get the next big contract. Okpala is a nice player, I think he'll find time in this rotation. 

Summer '22 free agents

Haslem, Morris, Dedmon, Oladipo, Okpala; team option on Herro, player option for Tucker

Surely this will be the last season for Haslem, right? Morris and Dedmon will probably be on the move next summer. Okpala could get a Heat deal if he squeezes into this rotation. Oladipo is probably gone, but if he comes back strong this year, it could throw off the Heat's calculations and make for weird moves (we'll see). Herro and Tucker will both be back next year. 

Over/Under: 48.5 (Under, 4th in the East)

I'm betting that this is the year that the Heat embrace the regular season and actually contemplate seeding, instead of just thinking of themselves as naturally deserving. We'll see, it's been a while since they've even tried to care about the regular season, but if they get going early on, I think it could be a boon to their playoff hopes. Can this team win a title? Yeah, I think they can. Butler-Bam-Lowry is a formidable trio and the surrounding mix of vets and youngsters make for some worthwhile ingredients for Chef Spoelstra. I think this team is already complete, doesn't need to make moves, just needs to figure out what they've got and go get W's. I could be wrong, but I think the Heat are in it to win it all season long this year.  


Hornets

Out

Brad Wanamaker (free agent), Grant Riller (declined to tender qualifying offer), Malik Monk (free agent), Nate Darling (declined to tender qualifying offer), Devonte Graham (sign/trade with Pelicans), Caleb Martin (waived), Bismack Biyombo (free agent), Cody Zeller (free agent); (Hornets also briefly held LiAngelo Ball, Jalen Crutcher, Cameron McGriff, Xavier Sneed, DJ Carton before the end of pre-season)

Too bad they couldn't hold on to Malik Monk, never as good as he could've been with the Hornets, but I think he's about to take his next leap and that could've been in a Hornet uni. Oh well. Graham has basically already been replaced. Martin and Zeller and Biyombo and Wanamaker are just ready to be replaced.

In

#11 pick James Bouknight (Connecticut), #19 pick Kai Jones (Texas), #37 pick JT Thor (Auburn), #56 pick Scottie Lewis (Florida/2-way), Arnoldas Kulboka (2-way), Mason Plumlee (trade with Pistons), Ish Smith (1yr/$4.5m), Kelly Oubre (2yr/$25m), Wesley Iwundu (trade with Pelicans), 

Bouknight, Jones and Thor all some tasty highlights in pre-season, eager to see if they can get some run. A Plumlee for a Zeller , Ish for Graham, Oubre for Monk, these are all fine moves. 

Re-signed

Coach James Borrego (multi year extension), Terry Rozier (4yr/$96.3m)

I like Borrego, just feels like he's got a good handle on that team. If he can keep LaMelo moving forward, then he's worth it. Re-upping Rozier is not what I would've thought was going to happen, but he's been good for them, so keep it going. 

Rest of the roster

Gordon Hayward, LaMelo Ball, Miles Bridges, PJ Washington, Cody Martin, Jalen McDaniels, Vernon Carey Jr.

If Hayward stays healthy, this team can be really good. LaMelo is going to put his stamp on this team this year. I love PJ Washington and Bridges, too, those two give real spine to this squad. The other guys all should improve, can be nice contributors. 

Summer '22 free agents

Bridges, Iwundu, Martin; team options on Ball and Washington

(Bridges got paid) Iwundu and Martin are probably both gone. Ball and Washington will both absolutely be re-upped. 

Over/Under: 38.5 (Over, 9th in the East)

The Hornets are gonna be a fun League Pass team this year. LaMelo and PJ and Bridges are fun a trio, I think Bouknight, Jones and Thor are all gonna be good, I think Oubre and Ish Smih are nice pickups, I think Rozier is the right kinda crazy for this squad and if Hayward stays healthy, the Hornets could be really good. Or this could all be fool's gold and none of it goes anywhere....that's also a strong possibility. Either way, the Hornets are gonna be fun to watch.


Wizards

Out

Alex Len (free agent), Isaac Bonga (declined to tender qualifying offer), Ish Smith (free agent), Robin Lopez (free agent), Garrison Matthews (declined to tender qualifying offer), Russel Westbrook (traded to Lakers), Chandler Hutchison (traded to Spurs), Caleb Homesley (waived); (Wizards also briefly held Jay Huff, Jordan Schakel before the end of pre-season)

Well, obviously moving on from Westbrook will bring huge changes to this team....though I strangely don't think the team will be any better or worse than they were with him. Len and Bonga just didn't fit, Ish and Lopez are butterflies that weren't gonna stay, felt like Hutchison could've been given a chance here but oh well. 

In

Coach Wes Unseld Jr (4yr contract), #15 pick Corey Kispert (Gonzaga), Kentavius Caldwell-Pope (trade with Lakers), Kyle Kuzma (trade with Lakers), Montrezl Harrell (trade with Lakers), Spencer Dinwiddie (trade with Nets), Aaron Holiday (trade with Pacers), #31 pick Isaiah Todd (USA), Jordan Goodwin (Exhibit 10), Jaime Echenique (Exhibit 10)

New coach! Not sure I see how that changes anything for this squad, but always nice to get a fresh start, I suppose. I'm not that big on Kispert, feel like they could've reached with this pick or traded into next year, rather than just grabbing the consensus guy that just doesn't look like a pro to me; we'll see. KCP, Kuzma and Harrell bring a new look to the side. Dinwiddie is Westrbrook-ish (though with lower highs and higher lows). I like Holiday, should be a solid 2nd string PG. I dunno, out with some old, in with some new, somehow this team doesn't look any different to me even though they drastically overhauled their roster. 

Re-signed

Raul Neto (1yr/$2.1m), Cassius Winston (2-way)

Neto is a reliable vet PG off the bench (nice trade bait, too). Winston could see some growth this season.

Rest of the roster

Bradley Beal, Davis Bertans, Thomas Bryant, Rui Hachimura, Deni Avdija, Daniel Gafford, Anthony Gill, Devontae Shuler

Beal is awesome but curiously cool with being mediocre. Bertans already seems like a bust, though I think he's actually still reasonably effective (if a little overpaid). Bryant, Hachimura, Avdija, Gafford and Gill are all nice young players that could/should take a step up this season. 

Summer '22 free agents

Harrell, Bryant, Holiday, Neto, Gill; team options on Hachimura, and Avdija; player option for Beal

Harrell, Bryant, Holiday, Gill, Hachimure and Avdija are all auditioning for that next contract (whether from the Wizards or someone else). I suspect Neto either moves on or retires. Beal is gonna do whatever he wants to do (seems like staying in DC is what he wants).

Over/Under: 33.5 (Under, 12th in the East)

If all the parts of this team that are capable of improving all blow up together, then this team could be fuckin' amazing! Which seems impossible, which is why I gotta think they're gonna have more disappointments than pleasant surprises. There is a worthwhile core of vets (Beal, Dinwiddie, KCP, Harrell, Kuzma, Bertans) and an intriguing core of prospects (Kispert, Hachimura, Avdjia, Bryant, Gafford) and even a smattering of you-never-knows (Neto, Gill) but somehow I just don't see how it adds up to anything worthwhile. I got them in the Lottery. 


Magic

Out

Chasson Randle (declined to tender qualifying offer), Sindarius Thornwell (declined to tender qualifying offer), James Ennis (free agent), Otto Porter (free agent), Dwayne Bacon (waived); (Magic also briefly held Jason Preston, Jon Teske, Jeremiah Tilmon and Devin Cannady before the end of pre-season)

Meh. Otto Porter was never really right for this squad, so he's not a loss. Ennis is ready to move on. What's up with Bacon? I thought that guy had some staying power, maybe not. 

In

Head Coach Jamahl Mosley (4yr contract), #5 pick Jalen Suggs (Gonzaga), #8 pick Franz Wagner (Michigan), Robin Lopez (1yr/$5m), E'Twuan Moore (1yr/$2.6m), Admiral Schofield (Exhibit 10), Hassani Gravett (Exhibit 10), BJ Johnson (status?)

Bringing in Mosley to lure Luka away from Dallas? Well, sounds nice but I doubt it, we're just gonna have to see if this guy can actually coach. I love Suggs, my pick for ROY, I think the Magic are blessed to have Suggs fall to them. I feel like Wagner was a reach but he might be a nice pro. Lopez is a fine big man vet. Moore is a fine vet off the bench. I loved Schofield in NCAA, haven't yet seen him make the jump to the pros.

Re-signed

Ignas Brazdekis (2-way), Mo Wagner (2yr/$3.6m), Wendell Carter Jr. (4yr/$?), Jeff Dowtin (Exhibit 10)

Coupla Wagners now. They gave Carter the bag, okay. Dowtin made plays in pre-season (though I doubt he'll make the team). Another shot for Brazdekis. 

Rest of the roster

Gary Harris, Jonathon Isaac, Markelle Fultz, Terrence Ross, Mo Bamba, Cole Anthony, Chuma Okeke, Michael Carter-Williams, RJ Hampton

(Harris for Gallinari? Magic interested in that move?) This is a make-or-break year for Isaac, sorry to see him on the wrong side of the media going into this season, seems like a good kid. If Isaac busts out, this Magic team will be really weird. Fultz, too, is a guy that might blow up outta nowhere (or he might not). Ross is trade bait in this roster. I don't think Bamba comes back. I think Anthony will quickly become trade bait. If Okeke can get over injuries, he'll get playing time. MCW is trade bait. Hampton is another wild card on a team full of wild cards: I think there's a good chance that Hampton blows up and either takes over this team or gets traded in splashy fashion.

Summer '22 free agents

Harris, Bamba, Lopez, Carter-Williams, Moore; team already exercised options on Anthony, Okeke, Hampton and Carter

Harris will not be back next year. I don't think Bamba, Moore or MCW will either. You know Lopez is a Disney guy (yes, Disney people are real and they're out there), so paying in Orlando is probably a dream come true for him whereas most NBA guys eschew the Florida scene; I wouldn't be surprised if Lopez becomes a real fixture with the Magic. 

Over/Under: 22.5 (Under, 15th in the East)

An intriuing pile of talent--too much so! This team will be trade talk all season long. And when Suggs comes in and takes over the team, it'll just get weirder. Which of these guys will blossom and which will be shipped out? There will be some of both, I'm sure, but on this team success will just create turmoil (and that's how you get a top 5 pick in next year's draft!).

2021-22 NBA Pre-Season (Pacific Division)

Suns

Out

E'Twaun Moore (free agent), Langston Galloway (free agent), Torrey Craig (free agent), Cheick Diallo (renounced rights), Tariq Owens (renounced rights), Jevon Carter (traded to Nets)

There's something about the inertia of player movment that explains why the Suns got virtually nothing out of Torrey Craig even though he seems like the perfect guy for them (he could be their PJ Tucker); instead, he got bounced from Denver to Indy through the Suns and they just didn't bother to hold on to him. Oh well, not a huge loss, I just thought he was good fit for their bench. Moore and Galloway are two old school vets, this team already has that role covered. Always thought Diallo was gonna find himself, but not yet. I don't know Owens or Carter. 

In

Landry Shamet (trade with Nets), Elfrid Payton (1yr/$2.2m), JaVale McGee (1yr/$5m), Chandler Hutchison (2-way), Chasson Randle (Exhibit 9)

I'm the guy that actually like Elfried Payton on the Knicks last season, but I understand why they shipped him out; oh well, I think he'll be fine as a CP-backup. I like Shamet, another bomber from the wing, keep it going. I always thought McGee was underappreciated--not an Ayton replacement (you need to sign that guy!) but a worthy minutes-getter. Curious to see what's up with Hutchison, he was a promising prospect not that long ago. 

Re-signed

Abdel Nadar (2yr/$4.2m), Cameron Payne (3yr/$19m), Chris Paul (4yr/$120m), Frank Kaminsky (1yr/$2.1m)

I thought Payne's performance in the playoffs last year merited him a much better deal than $6m/per so I'd say this is a great keeper for the Suns; Payne can augment CP or replace him, good versatility in the continuity. Personally, I'm not as huge a fan of CP as everyone else, I think he just showed you he can't win a championship, but I guess no one else sees it that way; I would've tried to feature him in a splashy sign/trade but I guess the 'basketball' people would tell me I'm an idiot (and thus kept the normally idiotic owner Sarver from doing something I actually think is a good idea); yes, I get it, he'll be great in the regular season, I expect the Suns to be comfortably top 4; but I don't think he's the future of the team, so I would've moved on and started over. I was never a fan of Kaminsky, think he's diet Plumlee at best (barely a Zeller!), don't really see what good he does for this team (though I can imagine him to be a thoughtful contributor in practice). I always liked Nadar, thought he'd found a spot in OKC but their allergic to talent right now, oh well; I think he's a nice bench piece for the Suns. 

Rest of the roster

Devin Booker, Deandre Ayton, Jae Crowder, Dario Saric, Mikal Bridges, Jalen Smith, Cameron Johnson

Booker's ready to blow up, 1st rd pick in the fantasy draft, low key MVP candidate. Can't believe they didn't re-sign Ayton--he was instrumental in getting through the West last year!--but I can see his regular season performance being sorta disappointing (since he's an underappreciated player lingering in the shadows of a young stud (Booker) and an overrated stathead whore (CP); too bad, man, maybe the next team will appreciate you more), I can see Ayton moving on next summer, which sounds dumb as hell as I write that. Re-upped Bridges, smart move, that kid is a kinda awesome. Crowder and Saric (will Saric play this year?) are dudes that know their roles, know what to do, solid pros. I was blown away by Johnson last year in the playoffs, had moments of doing whatever he wanted, sneaky underrated guy. Smith looked like a bust last year, perhaps the Suns think he can challenge for Ayton's minutes (and extension)? 

Summer '22 free agents

Ayton, Bridges, McGee, Payton, Kaminsky, Randle; team options on Johnson, Smith, Nader

(They signed Bridges today; good move) I'd re-up Ayton, not sure what they're waiting for, they kinda treat him like trade bait (did they really just go all in on CP so that they can make a major trade in the middle of the season?), but if he has a sub-par year, they might get a stupid good deal (or give up on a solid prospect). The rest are probably just rentals that'll move on next summer. I definitely expect them to re-up Johnson, not sure about Smith or Nader.

Over/Under: 51.5 (Over, 2nd in the West)

Look, I'll be honest: I've never been a CP guy and I think last year just proved to the world--CONCLUSIVELY!--that this team isn't going to win a championship as constructed. I would've blown it up by shipping out Paul and re-upping Ayton, but that's precisely what the Suns didn't do. Instead, they alienated one of their core players to fawn over an aging (overrated) PG who just showed you that it'll take Anthony Davis, Jamal Murray and Kawhi Leonard being forced into a woodchipper for his team to have any shot at a title. Why build around an old guy when you've got a fine young core? Oh well. That said, the Suns (led by Paul) should be a regular season juggernaut, a night in/night out lunch money thief that piles up W's. And then they'll lose in the playoffs. (Then they lose Ayton....then they're stuck with Paul...then they're in lottery again and everyone wonders how they got here)


Lakers

Out

Devontae Clark (declined to tender qualifying offer), Kostas Antetokounpo (declined to tender quaifying offer), Alex Caruso (free agent), Andre Drummond (free agent), Ben McLemore (free agent), Dennis Schroeder (free agent), Jared Dudley (retired), Markieff Morris (free agent), Wesley Matthews (retired?), Alfonzo McKinnie (waived)

I kinda love Caruso and if the Lakers could've kept him I bet they would have, but he was good enough to get more money somewhere else, so they had to let him go. I think they rebounded from Shroeder well (and I never thought he was the right fit for them anyway), so while they could've used him, I think they'll be fine without him. Dudley was done, Markieff was always up and down, Matthews was done, McLemore is a practice player, McKinnie just never became as good as I thought he could have. I like Drummond myself, but I understand the game just isn't built for him any more and if he wants big money he has to move on, but I'm a little surprised the Lakers couldn't find a way to keep him, he's still a mindless rebounder. 

In

Austin Reaves (undrafted free agent), Joel Ayayi (undrafted; 2-way), Carmelo Anthony (1yr/$2.6m), Dwight Howard (1yr/$2.6m), Kendrick Nunn (2yr/$10m), Kent Bazemore (1yr/$2.4m), Malik Monk (1yr/$1.8m), Trevor Ariza (1yr/$2.6m), Wayne Ellington (1yr/$2.6m), Russell Westbrook (trade with Wizards), Rajon Rondo (1yr/$2.6m), DeAndre Jordan (1yr/$2.6m), Wang Zhelin (current status?), Austin Reaves (1yr/$1m), Cameron Oliver (Exhibit 10), Trevelin Queen (Exhibit 10), Frank Mason  (current status?), Sekou Doumbouya (2-way)

Getting Monk and Nunn are absolute bargain basement deals is the coup of the off-season. Of course, no one will notice that because the suits will keep trying to sell you on the mixed bag that is: Carmelo (washed), Howard (slightly useful), Bazemore (fan favorite but not gonna contribute much), Ariza (washed), Ellington (coupla corner 3's but not much else), Rondo (either brilliant or useless but impossible to predict which), Dendre (washed). Westbrook can still play, but I'd say the way to use him is off the bench, give him the keys to the 2nd string and get him to go 6th Man, otherwise he may be more trouble than he's worth on the court. And what's the deal with Doumbouya? This is 4th team in a matter of weeks, three teams thought he wasn't worth a flyer? 'Sup wit dat?

Re-signed

Coach Frank Vogel (multi-year extension), Talen Horton-Tucker (3yr/$30.9m), 

Vogel has the weirdest job in all of sports: great if you win, brutal if you don't, but either way totally worth more money; good deal, the Lakers can pay coaches forever, go ahead and take care of the man. Apparently Lebron loves THT, okay, because I never saw much in him. 

Rest of the roster

Lebron James, Anthony Davis 

If Lebron and AD are healthy in May, the Lakers will win the West. 

Summer '22 free agents

Rondo, Jordan, Howard, Ellington, Ariza, Anthony, Bazemore, Monk; player options for Westbrook and Nunn

Keep Monk, move on from the rest. I would expect both Nunn and Westbrook to re-up.

Over/Under: 52.5 (Under, 4th in the West)

If Lebron and AD are healthy in May, the Lakers will win the West. I think rotating their playing time throughout the season is the way to keep them healthy and that'll mean relying on Westbrook, which will be fun and rewarding at times, but grueling an heartbreaking at times, too (that's the Westbrook way). Add in all the oldheads getting buckets an the Lakers should be a good--not great--regular season squad. I think they're firmly in the top-6 but not the top of the table. This team is about the post-season, not the regular season. 


Warriors

Out

Jordan Bell (declined to tender qualifying offer), Kelly Oubre (free agent), Kent Bazemore (free agent), Alen Smailagic (waived), Eric Paschall (traded to Jazz), Nico Mannion (went to Europe), 

Oubre felt like more than a stopgap when they picked him up last season, but that's ultimately what he was, doesn't feel like a big loss because it doesn't feel like he was ever really here. Paschall had some nice moments as a rook but kinda disappeared last year, seemed like he was more valuable as a trade. Smailagic was a guy they raved about when they drafted this relative unknown in the 2nd round a coupla years ago, either he didn't pan out or they were just blowing smoke the whole time. Bazemore is probably more useful to the Lakers or Nets. Bell is a nice player but not a big loss and Manion had some buzz as a prospect but he's probably better in Europe. 

In

#7 pick Jonathon Kuminga (G-League), #14 Moses Moody (Arkansas), Nemanja Bjelica (1yr/$2.1m), Otto Porter (1yr/$2.4m), Andre Iguodala (1yr/$2.6m), Chris Chiozza (2-way), Avery Bradley (1yr/$2.6m), LJ Figueroa (pre-season)

Porter replaces Oubre, Bjelica gives them another crafty vet that can bomb 3's, Iguodala is player-coach phase at this point (seems a great fit with the youth movement), I thought Bradley felt like a nice fit but they let him go. Chiozza has long had promise, perhaps the Warriors are the right team for him.  

Re-signed

Steph Curry (4yr/$215m)

Can never give Curry too much money, this is a great deal, totally worth every penny. 

Rest of the roster

Klay Thompson, Andrew Wiggins, Draymond Green, James Wiseman, Kevon Looney, Jordan Poole, Gary Payton II, Damion Lee, Mychal Mulder, Juan Toscano-Anderson

If Klay can be Klay again, this team will be great again. Personally, I love Wiggins, I think he's a perfect fit for this team, glad they never succumbed to the trade talk, he doesn't need to score he just needs to be there. Draymond needs to be traffic cop on this team, a job for which he is either perfect or terrible; we'll see. I like Wiseman, I expect him to be downright useful come playoff time. I admire Looney and Poole for all they've endured in their time with the Warriors, I hope the team rewards them both. Toscano-Anderson is the bridge to Moody and Kuminga. 

Summer '22 free agents

Looney, Bradley, Iguodala, Porter, Bjelica, Payton, Lee, Mulder, Toscano-Anderson, Figueroa; team options on Wiseman and Poole

I expect them to keep Wiseman and Poole. If there's money for Looney and Toscano-Anderson, I can see them both back. That's probably it for the rest of those guys (although I can totally see Iguodala becoming their Udonis). 

Over/Under : 48.5 (Under, 6th in the West)

I like the Warriors. I like the mix of youth and vets they've got going and I think its gonna work just fine. They'll be up an down but I expect them to be in the top-6 and to be ready for the post-season. (Okay, full disclosure: I love Klay, I've really missed Klay and I hope he's back to being a badass sooner rather than later) Obviously the Warriors are all about Klay at this point and the better he is, the further they'll go. Can they win the title? Yeah, they can. (I'd give them a better shot than the Suns)


Clippers

Out

DeMarcus Cousins (free agent), Patrick Patterson (free agent), Rajon Rondo (trade with Grizzlies), Patrick Beverley (trade with Grizzlies), Daniel Oturu (trade with Grizzlies), Yogi Ferrell (waived)

I think Beverley still had some value to the Clippers and I always kinda liked Ferrell. Otherwise, the Clippers are not damaged by missing out on any of the rest.   

In

#21 pick Keon Johnson (Tennessee), #33 pick Jason Preston (Ohio), #51 pick (BJ Boston Jr (Kentucky), Justise Winslow (2yr/$8m), Eric Bledsoe (trade with Grizzlies), George King (Exhibit 10), Harry Giles (Exhibit 9), Moses Wright (Exhibit 10), Isaiah Hartenstein (Exhibit 9)

Is Coach Lue gonna play rookies? My gut is that dude will play whoever is working on any given night, so I expect to see Johnson, Preston and Boston (my pick for the steal of the draft), especially since I suspect Winslow and Bledsoe will be spotty at best. I still believe in Giles, the Clippers will either swallow him whole or become reborn in that wide-open thrill ride of an offense the Clippers will feature. I was always curious about Hartenstein, little surprised he didn't get a better deal elsewhere, so (like Giles) he probably either blossoms or disappears.  

Re-signed

Amir Coffey (2-way), Reggie Jackson (2yr/$21.6m), Kawhi Leonard (4yr/$176m), Nicolas Batum (2yr/$6.5m), Terence Mann (2yr/$22m)

Jackson played well in the playoffs last year, opportunistic and shoot-happy, bringing back the old Lou Williams days and frankly I think that's fine; LA needs some crazy swag to it and Reggie Jax, for better or worse, is that guy; I like this signing. Kawhi wants how much? Can't we give him more? Kawhi is one of those golden children that you just can't shower enough money on. Even if he is out for the year, re-upping him is an absolute no-brainer. I like Batum, seemed reborn in the playoffs last year and that's nice, this is a friendly deal, I like it. Mann blew up in the playoffs and the expectations (right or wrong) are definitely gonna be higher this year, that alone warrants a raise; I like this deal. Don't know Coffey. 

Rest of the roster

Paul George, Marcus Morris, Luke Kennard, Serge Ibaka, Ivica Zubac

PG impressed me immensely last year, didn't think he was that kinda guy any more and he announced that oh yeah, he still is. Does Kawhi-less success in the playoffs translate to the long haul of a regular season? I dunno, but Morris, Kennard and Zubac are reliable (if occasionally lackluster) core background crew. Ibaka still knocks down shots and plays D. I like this core, I think they can win without Kawhi (they just won't be scary without Kawhi).  

Summer '22 free agents

Ibaka, Giles, Hartenstein; team option on Zubac; player option for Batum

Ibaka probably has to jump ship next year (Nets? Lakers? Celtics?, etc?). Giles and Hartenstein are basically auditioning for next summer's contract offers; I'm rooting for both of them. I like Zubac, not top tier but reliable, still young, good team guy, I think he's worth bringing back (but we'll see). I fully expect Batum to pick up his option (even if its for a trade). 

Over/Under: 45.5 (Under, 7th in the West)

The Clippers are a weird team, man. Every time you're ready to believe in them, they fuck up something bad; but when you give into the notion they suck, they become some kind of poor kid dream on Xmas morning. (This is the Eli Manning effect: Eli elevated shitty teams and dragged down good teams) How good will the Clippers be? Well, I still kinda like the roster and I like Coach Lue to figure out what's working on a nightly basis. So I think this team, even without Kawhi, should still be pretty good. But I also still expect them to scuffle down the stretch (and to possibly have some brutally awful stretches throughout the year).


Kings

Out

Kyle Guy (declined to tender qualifying offer), Louis King (declined to tender qualifying offer), Hassan Whiteside (free agent), Delon Wright (traded to Hawks), Justin James (waived)

No devastating losses for Sacramento. The Kings' depth at the G position allows them to casually move on from Wright, one of the most coveted 2nd string PGs in the league; the Kings' PG/SG depth leaves everyone assuming that more than just Wright will be pried from them soon. I always kinda liked Whiteside more than most (the poor man's Gobert), but the Kings don't really need him. The other guys I don't know.

In

#9 pick Davion Mitchell (Baylor), #39 pick Neemias Queta (Utah State/2-way), Tristan Thompson (trade with Celtics), Alex Len (2yr/$7.6m), Emanuel Terry (Exhibit 10), 

I was blown away by Baylor's run through the tourney last year (though perhaps I'm of the dying breed still into college ball), I think Mitchell's gonna be good right away and have a long career, I think he's a great pick for anyone, even the Kings. Thompson and Len are why the Kings can move on from Whiteside; both perhaps only minimally useful, ideally a platoon of the two get net some rebounds, while avoiding foul trouble, so I think the pairing could work. I don't know Queta or Terry. 

Re-signed

Richaun Holmes (4yr/$46.5m), Terence Davis (2yr/$8m), Moe Harkless (2yr/$9m), 

I love Holmes, fun to watch, plays angry, I like that deal for the Kings, simultaneously affordable and tradeable. Harkless, too, is a dude I always liked, very affordable deal for a crafty reliable vet. I don't know Davis. 

Rest of the roster

De'Aaron Fox, Buddy Hield, Harrison Barnes, Marvin Bagley, Tyrese Haliburton, Damian Jones, Chimezie Metu, Jahmi'us Ramsey, Robert Woodards, Damian Jefferson, Ade Murkey,

I love Fox, think he could go up a level this year. I like Hield, should be a reliable filler upper (tradeable deal, 3 years declining). I think Barnes is the best kind of vet (seems like a Cuban kinda guy, wonder if he can get back to Dallas?), I think he forms a solid core player. I still believe in Bagley; I love Haliburton, gonna be a reliable crafty kinda guy for years to come, built to be a hired gun.  

Summer '22 free agents

Bagley, Thompson, Jones, Terry; team option on Haliburton

I can definitely see a 3-team Magic deal with Bagley attached; I think the Kings should encourage Bagley to blossom then either sign him (if he blows up it'll be worth it) or let him walk (hey, we gave the guy a shot and now someone else will give him a shot).  I can see him being weird 3-team trade filler (the Magic could be a partner for them), but I'd rather see the Kings give him one last chance to be the all-round threat he was built to be. I doubt he's back with the Kings next year, him blowing up is the only thing that keeps him in Sactown, I can see him finishing the year but I don't see him re-signing. Thompson is 'thanks for everything' press conference, not someone the front office will spend much time contemplating; if he can still play, he's a buyout for a shot at an MLE with the Lakers or Nets or I can see him retiring. As for Haliburton, they should pick that up now (wouldn't be surprised if they already have). 

Over/Under: 36.5 (Over, 10th in the West)

Some good talent, some good depth. Seems like they off to a bad start with Bagley (guys, you kinda need Bagley to be good, whether you keep him or ship him out, you need Bagley to be good!) and there is a logjam on the roster that will keep trade talk always hovering (Ben Simmons just hanging out there). So even though I like the talent and how they're building, I just think extracurricular nonsense will doom this team. That said, I'd love to see them in the play-in, bet they'd put on a show.

2021-22 NBA Pre-Season (Northwest Division)

Jazz

Out

Derrick Favors (traded to Thunder), Juwan Morgan (declined to tender qualifying offer), Matt Thomas (waived), Ersan Ilyasova (free agent), Georges Niang (free agent), Jarrell Brantley (waived); (Jazz also briefly had Justin James, Derrick Alston Jr. MaCio Teague, Marques Bolden, before the end of pre-season)

Favors played in Utah last year? When did they pick up Ilyasova? I don't even remember those guys in Utah. I always liked Niang, but he's exactly the kinda guy that someone else overpays, so probably for the best that the Jazz let him walk. 

In

Hassan Whiteside (1yr/$2.4m), Rudy Gay (2yr/$12.1m), Eric Paschall (trade with Warriors), #40 pick Jared Butler (Baylor), Malik Fitts (Exhibit 10), Nino Johnson (status?), 

Whiteside is a just a shadow of Gobert, gives some continuity I suppose off the bench and the deal is low enough to be harmless. I like picking up Rudy Gay, perhaps the most underrated player of the last decade (hey, man, tell yourself that he sucks and then watch him play...he doesn't suck) and this could be a really good pairing: a wily vet looking to make one last run at a title and an upstart squad that has underperformed the last few years, Gay could be a real difference-maker for them. Paschall had some nice moments as a rookie, kinda disappeared last year, not sure what to make of him (oh, yeah: lifelong pal of Donovan Mitchell, so perhaps Utah is the place for him). I liked all those Baylor guys in the tourney last year, not even sure which one Butler is, but the Jazz are probably wise to bring him in. 

Re-signed

Mike Conley (3yr/$68m), Trent Forrest (2-way)

Did they overpay Conley or is it just a necessity for Utah to shower untold gifts on anyone that gives them the time of day? (Well, I guess it could be both) I still like Conley and I think he fits in Utah, so pay the man. 

Rest of the roster

Rudy Gobert, Donovan Mitchell, Bojan Bogdanovic, Joe Ingles, Jordan Clarkson, Royce O'Neale, Udoka Azuibuike, Miye Oni, Elijah Hughes,  

Gobert is one dimensional but really really really good at his one dimension, so probably totally worth it (for now). Does Mitchell have another level to rise to or is he a finished product? Either way I think he can still be an all-pro this year. Bogdanovic has had perhaps the most impressive growth of any player I've seen: dude, his rookie year, he couldn't get playing time on a godawful Nets squad and a coupla years later he was marking Lebron in the playoffs--and not getting destroyed! Who does that? Love Bogdanovic and Ingles, think they're perfect for this team. Clarkson is the classic overrated/underrated guy, taking full ownership of the Jazz 2nd string is his legacy and I think it's a good one (though he could definitely step back this year). O'Neale is a nice player, shows the depth of that rotation. If anyone can get anything out of Azuibuike, it'll probably be Utah. 

Summer '22 free agents

Ingles, Whiteside, Oni, Paschall; team option on Azuibuike

Ingles is getting up there, not sure he gets re-upped next year, on the other hand this is Utah, where overpaying is just built in, so...I dunno. I doubt Whiteside will be back and I have no idea about Azuibuike. But I suspect Paschall and Oni both get re-upped. 

Over/Under: 52.5 (Over, 1st in the West)

I like this team, they know who they are, they're well coached and the rotation has grown together over the years. They're built for the regular season, they're built to win Tuesday night games. I wasn't shocked that they lost out in the 2nd round last year but I was shocked by the way they went out: giving up a big lead to the Clippers was precisely what I thought this team would avoid. How does that experience shape them going forward? Well, I think it makes them even tougher in the regular season, but even weaker in the post-season. I have them as the #1 team in the NBA this season (and losing in the 2nd round again). 


Nuggets

Out

Shaq Harrison (declined to tender qualifying offer), JaVale McGee (free agent), Paul Millsap (free agent); (Nuggets also briefly held Matt Ryan, Davon Reed, Giorgi Bezhanishvili, Tarik Black before the end of pre-season)

I like Harrison, McGee and Millsap but on this team they were superfluous. I think they can move on from all three.

In

#26 pick Bones Hyland (Virginia Commonwealth), Jeff Green (2yr/$10m), Petr Cornelie (2-way)

Hyland looks like a fun player, if he can acclimate to the mile-high-ness, he should be a regular rotation guy. I like Green, the ultimate overrated/underrated guy: thought he was the Nets' MVP at times last year, the Nets thought he was imminently replaceable...oh well, they can both be right. 

Re-signed

Will Barton (2yr/$30m), JaMychal Green (2yr/$17m), Austin Rivers (1yr/$2.4m), Aaron Gordon (4yr/$86.6m), Michael Porter Jr (4yr/$172.5m), Markus Howard (2-way)

Those are reasonable deals for Barton, Green and Rivers. I believe in Gordon as a third banana kinda guy, so I like that deal, too. As for the Porter deal, well, if he blossoms then it'll be worth it. 

Rest of the roster

Jamal Murray (potentially injured for the entire season), Nikola Jokic, Monte Morris, Facundo Campazzo, Zeke Nnaji, Bol Bol, Vlatko Cancar, PJ Dozier

Murray likely won't play this year, which just means all the more MVP votes for Jokic, right? Jokic is such a smart player, such a crafty veteran, he'll get the most out of the supporting cast and he'll need them without Murray. Morris and Campazzo and Bol are nice players that will get some run. Dozier, though, plays a little more than I like to see and I don't know the others. 

Summer '22 free agents

Campazzo, Rivers, Bol, Cancar; team option on Nnaji; player option for Jeff Green

I dunno. I reckon they'll keep Bol because he should still have good upside and a low price tage. Not sure about Campazzo or Cancar. Rivers proably moves on. I assume they'll re-up Nnaji if he does anything this year. As for Green, he probably won't find better money, so I can see him back.

Over/Under: 47.5 (Under, 5th in the West)

Without Jamal Murray, this team won't be great or go that far in the post-season. But Jokic really is awesome, man, and I think he alone will carry them to a lot of W's and a comfortable top-6 spot in the West. Porter is prime for a breakout and while he is not a replacement for Murray's game, he will score a lotta points and that ain't bad. I like bringing in Jeff Green and I think the supporting cast is still pretty good, I think the Nuggets will be a reliable winning team all year long. 


Blazers

Out

Carmelo Anthony (free agent), Enes Kanter (free agent), Harry Giles (declined to tender qualifying offer), Rondae Hollis-Jefferson (free agent), TJ Leaf (declined to tender qualifying offer),  Derrick Jones Jr (traded to Cavs), 

Anthony has been washed for a while now, never understood why the Blazers even wasted their time with him. Kanter is a fine player in the right environment (born to be a Laker, I'd say), Portland probably wasn't it. I still think Giles can turn into something but the Blazers are perhaps a little too impatient to give him time. Hollis-Jefferson is fine on a deep rotation team (Raptors, for example) but not a finely tuned instrument for a Western playoff contender. Leaf and Jones were probably just practice players on this team. So, not much to overcome here. 

In

Trendon Watford (2-way), Cody Zeller (1yr/$2.3m), Ben McLemore (1yr/$2.3m), Tony Snell (1yr/$2.3m), #43 pick Greg Brown (Texas), Larry Nance (trade with Cavs), Dennis Smith Jr. (1yr/$1.8m), Marquess Chriss (Exhibit 9), Patrick Patterson (Exhibit 9), Quinn Cook (Exhibit 9), 

Just a batch of new vets to replace the old vets. Zeller gives them...not much. McLemore is quick and...otherwise not much. Snell is...not gonna do much here. Nance could be fun but I feel like he's getting here at the wrong time. Smith will be okay off the bench but isn't gonna move the needle. Not sure if Brown is gonna get playing time. (I believe Chriss, Cook and Patterson are all already gone) Uh, while I didn't lament what they lost, I'm not too excited about what they're bringing in either. Feels like the deck chairs have been re-arranged. 

Re-signed

Norman Powell (5yr/$90m), Keljin Blevins (2-way)

I liked that Trent-for-Powell trade last year (one of those rare trades that works perfectly for everyone involved) and the whole point was to re-sign Powell. Okay, I like Powell and I think he earned his money, but does he now elevate the Blazers? I dunno.  

Rest of the roster

Damian Lillard, CJ McCollum, Robert Covington, Jusuf Nurkic, Anfernee Simons, Nassir Little, CJ Elleby

Lillard is still the man. McCollum is one of the great second bananas of our time. Covington is a nice defender. Nurkic is a crazy man (always nice to have one of those around). Simons and Little are overhyped but hey, why not? With Powell, this adds up a to a nice short rotation, but doesn't feel like they're taking a deep dive in the playoffs. 

Summer '22 free agents

Covington, Nurkic, Simons, McLemore, Snell, Zeller; (the team option on Little has already been exercised)

Covington becomes trade bait if the Blazers don't win early. Nurkic probably gets re-upped (could be a sign/trade candidate). Simons is in the soccer coach paradox: if he's good, he becomes too expensive to keep, if he's cheap enough then you don't want him back. McLemore and Snell and Zeller are year in/year out guys at this point, maybe they toil for the Blazers again next year, but likely they'll all move on. 

Over/Under: 44.5 (Under, 9th in the West)

I love Lillard and McCollum but I'm not sold on the core around them. Powell and Covington are nice but not real difference makers. Nurkic is fun but can't be relied upon. Simons and Little are trapped in the Portland hype machine. I like Billups but life is never easy for a 1st time coach. I like watching Lillard and McCollum but I think they're not gonna win as many as they need to. 


Wolves

Out

Ed Davis (free agent), Ricky Rubio (traded to Cavs), Jarret Culver (traded to Grizzlies), Juan Hernangomez (traded to Grizzlies), team president Gersson Rosas; (Wolves also briefly held Brian Bowen, Chris Silva, Isaiah Miller and Matt Lewis before the end of pre-season)

Davis is a nice vet but not irreaplaceable. I always liked Rubio but his return to the Wolves was never particularly necessary, so moving on doesn't seem much of a loss. I guess the Wolves finally just gave up on Culver, though he's had some nice moments. Moving on from Hernangomez (Spanish for 'plumlee'), huh? Okay, I guess they know what they're doing. Boardroom shenanigans got Rosas run (hey, none of my business).

In

Taurean Prince (trade with Cavs), Patrick Beverley (trade with Grizzlies), Nathan Knight (2-way), McKinley Wright (2-way), Leandro Bolmaro (4y/$11m-ish), Vince Edwards (status?)

Prince slides into the spot vacated by Culver/Hernangomez, I can see him fitting in nicely. Beverley is still loud and crazy enough to be a useful vet on a young team (sliding into the Rubio spot). I don't know Bolmaro, a draft pick from a coupla years back, could be a diamond. 

Re-signed

Jordan McLaughlin (3yr/$6.5m), Jarred Vanderbilt (3yr/$13.8m) 

I liked Vanderbilt, he came in and led them through injuries last year and handled himsef just fine. That deal strikes me as a bargain. I don't know McLaughlin. 

Rest of the roster

Karl-Anthony Towns, D'Angelo Russell, Malik Beasley, Anthony Edwards, Josh Okogie, Jake Layman, Jaden McDaniels, Naz Reid, Jaylen Nowell, 

Towns is the superstar that doesn't seem to wanna be a superstar, which is awkward. Russell is not the superstar he thinks he is (but he's getting paid like one, which is awkward). Beasley missed most of last season due to wrangling with the law (which is awkward). Edwards could turn into full-Giannis right before our eyes, which would be extraordinary (but probably a little awkward). Okogie is still a year away (which is predictable). Layman is probably near the end of his roster-filling career. McDaniels and Reid might blow up and be awesome (or maybe afterthoughts by the trade deadline). Who knows with this team? There's talent there but none of it has evolved as it should (I actually still blame Thibodeau) and while this could be the year it all comes together, this could also be the year where they blow it all up and start over. We'll see. 

Summer '22 free agents

Beverley, Okogie, Layman; team options on Edwards, McDaniels and Nowell

I'll say they keep Okogie, pass on Layman, allow Beverley to walk (but leave the door open if he has no suitors). Definitely keeping Edwards and McDaniels, possibly Nowell. 

Over/Under: 35.5 (Over, 11th in the West)

The Wolves are in that place where they can improve tremendously and still make no difference at all. I think that is the type of year ahead for them: they'll be promisingly better in every way and yet still never come close to the playoffs. I got Edwards as the bust out star of next year--I'm telling ya: don't be surprised if he turns into Giannis over night. I think by next summer we could be thinking about this team in an entirely different way. Next year could be the year for this team but I don't think it'll be this year.


Thunder

Out

Tony Bradley (declined to tender qualifying offer), Jaylen Hoard (waived), Svi Mykhailiuk (rescinded qualifying offer), Josh Hall (waived); (Thunder briefly held Kemba Walker, Alperen Sengun, Miles McBride, Rokas Jokubaitis, Rob Edwards, Charles Brown Jr., Melvin Frazier Jr., Scotty Hopson, DJ Wilson before the end of pre-season)

Meh. This is the Thunder so none of these guys really matter--and they'd be shipped out if they did!

In

Derrick Favors (trade with Jazz), #6 pick Josh Giddey (Australia), #18 pick Tre Mann (Florida), Mamadi Diakite (claimed off waivers), #32 pick Jeremiah Robinson-Earl (Villanova), Vit Krejci (4yr/$6.3m), #55 pick Aaron Wiggins (Maryland/2-way), Paul Watson (2-way) 

Highest paid player on the team: Derrick Favors, ladies and gentlemen! I like Favors as much as the next guy, if he's the 7th best guy on your team, then you might have something. But as the highest paid, highest profile guy in his first year....oh brother. This team just ain't even trying to win. And there's a 2nd year on that deal, so he's not moving, he'll be back next year. Giddey looks like fun, should make an interesting running mate with Pokusevski and there's no pressue to win because they're playing a top-3 pick. Mann and Robinson-Earl will definitely get minutes. Diakite and Krejci are just pracice guys, I'm guessing. 

Re-signed

Mike Muscala (2yr/$7m), Shai Gilgeous-Alexander (5yr/$172m) 

Muscala knows how to keep getting them checks! (Good for him) Shai Gilgeous is the man and I'd love to see him to pick this team up and put it in his pocket. Either OKC is the future for him or he gets moved in a blockbuster next summer (I'd say 50/50). 

Rest of the roster

Gabriel Deck, Alksej Pokusevski, Darius Bazley, Ty Jerome, Theo Maledon, Kenrich Williams, Luguentz Dort, Isaiah Roby

If this team had any stars, then this pile of young guys would look more promising. But considering they're looking to Pokusevkis and Williams and Roby to play big minutes in decisive moments is precisely why they'll be drafting #1 next summer. 

Summer '22 free agents

(none); team options on Muscala, Pokusevski, Bazley, Jerome, Roby, Diakite; player option for Favors

Next summer is when they have to decide what to do with SGA, indicating another year of bottoming out or a move for some stars and a shot at building a whole new roster. That's gonna determine which guys they keep and which they let go. (But Favors will definitely be back)

Over/Under: 23.5 (Under, 15th in the West)

The Thunder have no interest in winning. I like most of their young players, but I can't help thinking they'll all be better on other teams. This team is playing for the #1 pick, so if they start to win games, expect a Covid outbreak to shut it down (yeah, I just went full conspiracy theory on ya, right there!).

2021-22 NBA Pre-Season (Atlantic Division)

Nets

Out

Chris Chiozza (declined to tender qualifying offer), Mike James (declined to tender qualifying offer), Jeff Green (free agent), Spencer Dinwiddie (sign/trade to Wizards), Timothe Luwawu-Cabarrot (free agent), Tyler Johnson (free agent), Landry Shamet (traded to Suns), Deandre Jordan (traded to Pistons), Reggie Perry (withdraw qualifying offer), Alize Johnson (waived), Juan Pablo Valet (traded to Pacers), Isaia Cordinier (renounced draft rights); (Nets also briefly held Jahlil Okafor, Sekou Doumbouya, Edmond Sumner, Jordan Bowden, Brandon Rachal, Josh Gray, Bryce Brown,  before the end of pre-season)

You'd think a maxed out team wouldn't have room for so much coming and going, but the Nets have quite the off-season report. This team is not going to be built around youth any time soon, so a guy like Chiozza is a roster-filler not a prospect; he may be great at basketball but he was never gonna find that out in Brooklyn, so no harm done. The parade of vets that are probably washed (Deandre) is smaller than I would've thought, but the mid-level guys that the Nets just don't have room for (Dinwiddie, TLC, Jeff Green, Tyler Johnson, Shamet) is an interested collection. Perhaps they'll regret these losses (hey, man, Green was their most reliable player going into the post-season last year), but they really won't have time for regretting stuff.  

In

#27 pick Cam Thomas (Louisiana State), #29 pick Day'Ron Sharpe (North Carolina), James Johnson (1yr/$2.6m), David Duke (Exhibit 10), Deandre Bembry (1yr/$1.9m), Patty Mills (2yr/$12m), Paul Millsap (1yr.$2.6m), #44 pick Kessler Edwards (Pepperdine/2-way), Elijah Millsap (status?), Jevon Carter (status?), Davontae Cacok (Exhibit 10), 

Cam Thomas looks like a baller and Sharpe might be a useful big body, but I'd be shocked if either of them played at all on this team. I love picking up Patty Mills: a reliable, settle-down guy that can knock down shots and play high energy defense, Mills (like Green last year) will end up being their MVP for stretches of the season (I guarantee). I like Millsap and Johnson as much as the next guy, not sure they're gonna do much here. 

Re-signed

Bruce Brown (1yr/$4.7m), Kevin Durant (4yr/$194.2m), Blake Griffin (1yr/$2.6m), LaMarcus Aldridge (1yr/$2.6m)

They treat Brown like their mascot, but he's the beating heart of the team, I hope he gets paid better next year. KD is still the shit, so the Nets are still in it. Blake and Aldridge can still be okay stopgaps (man, how many stopgaps can one team have?).

Rest of the roster

James Harden, Kyrie Irving (well...theoretically), Joe Harris, Nicolas Claxton

Harden is still amazingly efficient. Kyrie is really great (when he's out there). Joe Harris is arguably the best non-Steph shooter in the league (yeah, I said that). I like Claxton, underappreciated in this environment.

Summer '22 free agents

Brown, Aldridge, Griffin, Johnson, Millsap, Bembry, Claxton, Cacok, Duke; player options for Harden, Irving and Mills have player options

Gotta bring back Brown and probably Claxton. But all them vets might be swapped out to LA next season. I expect Harden, Kyire and Mills all back next year.

Over/Under: 56.5 (Under, 3rd in the East)

The Nets will halfheartedly glide to 3rd in the East. I think the Bucks will play with consistency and be the best, I think the Hawks are young and dumb and will collect W's the way Vietnam vets collect ears. The Nets, on the other hand, will have moments of brilliance and moments of controversy (NYC teams are built for it), and without really trying too hard they'll be better than almost everyone else. They'll do this without ever truly coming together as a team and they'll think they're just naturally better than everyone else and their inability to rise above will doom them in the playoffs.


Celtics

Out

Kemba Walker (traded to Thunder), Guerschon Yabusele (signed with Real Madrid), Tacko Fall (declined to tender qualifying offer), Tremont Waters (declined to tender qualifying offer), Evan Fournier (sign/trade to Knicks), Semi Ojeleye (free agent), Tristan Thompson (traded to Kings), Carsen Edwards (traded to Grizzlies); (Celtics briefly had Moses Brown, Kris Dunn, Ryan Arcidiacono, Juwan Morgan before the end of pre-season)

Frankly this is all addition by subtraction: Kemba turned out be the opposite of what they needed, Yabusele never did find a spot, Tacko was a fun sideshow but nothin more, Waters wasn't gonna make it, Fournier was a good idea but didn't work out, Ojeley is just hard to watch, Thompson was never what they needed, Edwards just didn't find his spot. These are plusses, not minuses.

In

Bruno Fernando (trade with Hawks), Denis Schroeder (1yr/$5.9m), Enes Kanter (1yr/$2.6m), Josh Richardson (1yr/$12.2m), Sam Hauser (2-way), Al Horford (trade with Thunder), Juan Hernangomez (trade with Grizzlies), Theo Pinson (Exhibit 10), Garrison Matthews (Exhibit 10), Chris Clemons (pre-season)

Schroeder on a bargain basement deal, reunited with Horford and Kanter, finally getting themselves a Hernangomez (Spanish for 'plumlee'), and I still think Fernando could turn into something. Not sure why they re-upped Richardson, but it might work out. Getting rid of the guys that needed to go (when the coach becomes GM, a Michael Corleone-style house cleaning was in order, right?) was such the priority that replacing those guys is just a bonus. Not sure any of these guys are the right fit but I know the guys they're replacing weren't either, so feels like a step direction anyway. 

Re-signed

Marcus Smart (4yr/$77m), Robert Williams (4yr/$48m), Luke Kornet (1yr/$?)

I love Smart--a born Celtic (they'd be mad to let him go). I'm intrigued by Williams, might blow up this year. Kornet seems like a nice guy.  

Rest of the roster

Jayson Tatum, Jaylen Brown, Romeo Langford, Jabari Parker, Aaron Nesmith, Grant Williams, Payton Pritchard 

Tatum and Brown will take this team as far it will go; if they're healthy the C's could be great. Nesmith and Pritchard should both get better this season, makes for good continuity in the rotation. Langford, Parker and Williams are pros, they should be reliable minutes guys.  

Summer '22 free agents

Schroeder, Kanter, Parker, Fernando, Pinson, Matthews; team options on Langford, Williams, Nesmith, Pritchard

I don't suppose anyone is expecting Schroeder to re-sign next summer, this is an audition year for him (the soccer coach paradox: if he's good enough to keep then he'll be too expensive to stay and if he's cheap enough, then he's not worth keeping). Kanter and Parker (and maybe Fernando and Pinson, too) are in the journeyman phase, who knows what jersey they'll be wearing next year; I think they can both be worthwhile contributors for the Celtics this year. 

Over/Under: 45.5 (Over, 5th in the East)

Tatum and Brown are still maturing, so there's upside built into this roster. I like bringing back Horford, I'm okay with bringing back Kanter. Pritchard and Nesmith and Time Lord should improve. Marcus Smart will be doing Marcus Smart things and I think Schroeder will fit in and find his spot. This isn't a perfect team but I think they're gonna be good together and come playoff time, they'll be dangerous. 


Knicks

Out

Norvel Pelle (waived), Frank Ntilikina (declined to tender qualifying offer), Jared Harper (declined to tender qualifying offer), Theo Pinson (declined to tender qualifying offer), Elfird Payton (renounced free agent rights), Luca Vildoza (waived); (Knicks also briefly had Kai Jones, Keon Johnson, Jeremiah Robinson-Earl, Tyler Hall, Dwayne Bacon, Brandon Goodwin, Myles Powell before the end of pre-season)

Personally I kinda liked Payton last year (yeah, I was the only one) but even still he's not a big loss here since Randle/Kemba will do all the ball handling. Ntilikina just never blossomed in a Knick uniform (not sure if he's capable of blooming but it's for someone else to find out). The other guys are easy come/easy go (though Jones, Johnson, Robinson-Earl might become nice players). 

In

#25 pick Quentin Grimes (Houston), Jericho Sims (2-way contract), Kemba Walker (2yr/$17.9m), Evan Fournier (trade with Celtics), #36 pick Miles McBride (West Virginia), Aamir Simms (Exhibit 10), MJ Walker (Exhibit 10), Wayne Selden Jr. (Exhibit 9), Brandon Goodwin (status?), Luka Samanic (2-way?)

Kemba on a bargain basement deal is worth it, though I kinda got my doubts about Kemba at this point (has anyone in the history of sports maxed out their potential more than Kemba?), worth a try but I don't have much faith in this working out. Fournier, on the other hand, will take a while to acclimate but once he does, I think he'll be fine with Randle and contribute nicely down the stretch. Jericho Sims actually looks more interesting to me than Grimes or McBride. The others are just others, man. 

Re-signed

GM Scott Perry (2yr extension), Nerlens Noel (3yr/$27.8m), Alec Burks (3yr/$30m), Derrick Rose (3yr/$43.6m), Taj Gibson (2yr/$10.1m), Julius Randle (4yr/$117m)

The Knicks have hewed to a regular system the last few years: sign the forgotten free agents to short term deals that can be quickly re-upped if it works out (Nerlens, Burks, DRose, Taj and Julius) or quietly discarded if it doesn't (Elfrid Payton); some poo-poo that philosophy but I think it fits the Knicks perfectly (and it netted them Julius Randle, so far, so good); does Perry deserve more money? Sure, why not. I like all these guys and giving Randle long term money is such an obvious move, I'm a little surprised the Knicks didn't fuck it up.

Rest of the roster

RJ Barrett, Kevin Knox, Obi Toppin, Immanuel Quickley, Mitchell Robinson, 

I like Barrett, I like Toppin, I kinda love Quickley, I like Robinson, hell I'm still in on Knox (is he paying rent on Thibodeau's dog house?). Good growth potential on the NYK bench. 

Summer '22 free agents

Knox, Robinson; team options on Barrett, Toppin, Quickley.

Seems like Knox is trade bait, but I expect Robinson to definitely get re-upped. Barrett, Toppin and Quickly will all be picked up.

Over/Under: 41.5 (Over, 6th in the East)

After their disastrous performance in the playoffs last year (seriously, man, outside of Rose, they all played like shit), it's easy to think this Knicks team just fluked their way to 4th place by overachieving. Well, I'm gonna tweak that take a little bit: they fluked their way to 4th place because so many other teams underperformed last year. The Knicks were what they were--and still are what they are--but I think other teams this year will take the regular season more seriously, making the Knicks fall to 6th place while actually being just as good (if not better) than last year. Are the Knicks good? They're okay and if Kemba has a renaissance, they might even be a dangerous post-season team. And there's the crux of the biscuit: this is a pretty good regular season team that has no real shot of getting better in the playoffs. So I expect the Knicks to be pretty good, maybe even better than last year, firmly a playoff team, but then get stomped in the 1st round again. Knick fans are built to be disappointed, so telling them that their team is headed in the right direction (for the first time in decades) is cold comfort. But it's true. 


Sixers

Out

Anthony Tolliver (waived), Gary Clark Jr (declined to tender qualifying offer), Mike Scott (free agent), Dwight Howard (free agent), Rayjon Tucker (waived), George Hill (free agent); (Sixers also had Haywood Highsmith before the end of pre-season)

Oh yeah, I forgot they had Tolliver. I was never a Mike Scott guy (okay, I'll say it: weirdest tats in the NBA), I can kinda see it, but not really, so he does not strike me as a loss to this ream. Howard and Hill had some veteran cache, I suppose, but I think they're both better on other teams. 

In

#28 pick Jaden Springer (Tennessee), #53 pick Charles Bassey (Western Kentucky), Andre Drummond (1yr/$2.4m), Georges Niang (2yr/$6.7m), Shaq Harrison (Exhibit 10), Aaron Henry (2-way), Grant Riller (2-way)

I guess they didn't lose much but they didn't add much, did they? Does anyone really think Springer or Bassey is going to contribute this year? And what does Drummond do for the Sixers? I don't see a role for him at all. I like Niang but he's not a big minutes guy, hardly seems like a culture-changer. I'm all for Shaq Harrison getting another shot, but there's not much coming or going from Philly this summer. 

Re-signed

Danny Green (2yr/$20m), Furkan Korkmaz (3yr/$15m), Joel Embiid (4yr/$196m), 

Green knows who he is and he's won a ring before, so he's a made man, I guess that's good enough for a team with championship pretensions. I like Korkmaz, I can see him taking a step forward this year. Embiid is your cornerstone, gotta pay the man. 

Rest of the roster

Tobias Harris, Ben Simmons, Seth Curry, Matisse Thybulle, Tyrese Maxey, Shake Milton, Isaiah Joe, Paul Reed

Does Simmons play here the whole season? (I say 'yes') He'll be a distraction--could be a real big one if he wants to be--though making some free throws could turn the narrative around. Weird team, weird vibe, good talent but internal dissension, so who knows? I like Harris, I think he's underrated, he got the contract he got and that's that. Curry is fine but it feels like they rely on him a little more than they should. Thybulle is a great young defender, I bet he'll score a little more too (ha, probably more than Simmons!). Maxey and Milton are both waiting to take off, I think they'll both be good rotation guys.

Summer '22 free agents

Drummond, Harrison; team options on Thybulle, Maxey, Milton

Definitely picking up all options, definitely not bringing back any free agents. (Hmmm....a quiet summer is approaching for the Sixers, right?)

Over/Under: 50.5 (Under, 8th in the East)

I like Embiid as much as the next guy, I'm a much bigger fan of Harris than most, and I think Maxey, Milton and Thybulle make for the right kind of young core. But until they figure out Simmons, this team goes nowhere. I was never much of a Simmons guy (I've been telling you the whole time that FT% was his Achilles' heel) but now I've downright soured on him and I think the Sixers have got to move him, he just doesn't work there at all any more. I just think there's too much turmoil and it's gonna bite them throughout the season.


Raptors

Out

Jalen Harris (waived), Stanley Johnson (free agent), DeAndre Bembry (waived), Paul Watson (waived), Rodney Hood (free agent), Aron Baynes (waived), Kyle Lowry (sign/traded to Heat); (Raptors also briefly held Alex Antetokounpo, Reggie Perry, Freddie Gillespie and Josh Hall before the end of pre-season) 

Well, losing their franchise cornerstone (Lowry) is a tough blow but the rest of the losses are hardly even worth mentioning. 

In

#4 pick Scottie Barnes (Florida State), #46 pick Dalano Banton (Nebraska), #47 pick David Johnson (Louisville/2-way), Precious Achiuwa (trade with Heat), Goran Dragic (trade with Heat), Ishmail Wainright (2yr/$2.5m), Sam Dekker (1yr/$1.8m), Justin Champagnie (2-way), Isaac Bonga (1yr/$1.7m), Svi Mykhailiuk (2yr/$3.6m)

I penciled the Raptors in to take Jalen Suggs (Gonzaga) with the #4 pick and I was kinda shocked when the zagged because I'd already begun imagining a world of Suggs as the Raptors' new go-to guy (and Barnes as the next interesting prospect to wither on the vine in Orlando); but now I see it: Barnes slides right into the rotation with everyone else and in a coupla months everyone forgets that he's a rookie. Suggs would've taken over the Raptor culture--and that may have been a good thing--but for now Barnes is a plug and play guy that should be among rookie leaders in Minutes Played. Surprised me at first but now I love that pick, makes perfect sense. I'll go ahead and admit that Goran Dragic is one of my all time favorite players, a guy that could do no wrong and the Raptors are lucky to have him. Achiuqwa (like Barnes) goes right into the rotation and plays regular minutes right away, a great pickup. Hell, I even like Svi and Dekker, I can see both of them getting run in Toronto.

Re-signed

Khem Birch (3yr/$20m), Gary Trent Jr (3yr/$51.8m)

Both of these are good deals. Trent is perhaps a little rich but I do think he has more upside than most of the rest of the roster, so I'm cool with it.

Rest of the roster

Pascal Siakam, Fred Van Vleet, OG Anunoby, Chris Boucher, Malachi Flynn, Yuta Watanabe

All those dudes could be better next year. Anunoby is primed for a breakout, Siakam is primed for a bounce back, Boucher and Flynn should both improve. A lot of upside on the Raptor roster.

Summer '22 free agents

Dragic, Boucher, Dekker, Watanabe, Bonga; with team options on Achiuwa and Flynn; player option for Mykhailiuk 

Dragic will probably move on, but I can see all of the other dudes returning. 

Over/Under: 36.5 (Over, 11th in the East)

I know right? After all my hype, I don't even have the Raptors making the play-in game. Why? Well, I don't know. Can this team be as good as the Philly greasefire? Yeah, why not? Could the Knicks regress or the Celtics underwhelm? Absolutely. Can the Raptors make the playoffs and be dangerous? Yeah. Their kooky deep rotation usually becomes a liability in the post-season but the Raptors embrace it and could make it work. On the other hand, except for that Kawhi year, they never have made it work. So I got them 11th and out of the playoffs (yeah, all that sounds weird, don't it?). 

2021-22 NBA Pre-Season (Central Division)

Bucks

Out

Bryn Forbes (declined team option), Sam Merrill (traded to Grizzlies), Jeff Teague (free agent), Justin Jackson (free agent), PJ Tucker (free agent), Axel Toupane (declined to tender qualifying offer)

Meh. None of those guys were essential, the Bucks'll be just fine without them.

In

George Hill (2yr/$8m), Rodney Hood (1yr/$2.2m), Semi Ojeleye (1yr/$1.8m), Grayson Allen (trade with Grizzlies), #60 pick Georgios Kalaitzakis (Greece), Tremont Waters (1yr/$1.7m), Justin Robinson (2-way), #54 pick Sandro Mamukelashvili (Seton Hall/ 2-way), Elijah Bryant (Exhibit 10), Javin DeLaurier (Exhibit 10), Rayjon Tucker (1yr/$1.6m)

Hill is a regular season guy (but I wouldn't count on him in the post-season), might be a handy tool to get through the grind til April. I've watched enough to Ojeleye to wonder why anyone would want him on their team....except maybe the Bucks. If you're just looking for a big body defensive tough guy replacement for PJ Tucker, well, I guess Ojeleye could do that, but I wouldn't expect any more out of him. Hood is not so reliable due to injuries, but when he plays he is a pretty good scorer and that deal is cheap enough to make the flyer worth it (again, he feels like padding to get the real stars to the playoffs). Likewise with Grayson Allen (what's with all the Dukies?), the contract is manageable enough to make it worth giving him a shot, we'll see how hungry he is. Don't know the other guys, be surprised if we see them at all this year. 

Re-Signed

Coach Mike Budenholzer (3-year extension), Bobby Portis (2yr/$8.9m), Thanassis Antetokounpo (2yr/$3.6m), 

Coach Bud is a champion, a hero, got a 3-year extension...and he was one KD jumper from getting bounced in ignominious fashion; hey, man, that's modern sports. I think Coach Bud fits the Bucks, I think re-upping him is a good move. Likewise with Portis (I thought Portis could've gotten paid, chose to stick with the champs instead, ballsy move) and Thanassis: they know who they are and what they do for this team and that's why they're back for another shot at a title. 

Rest of the roster

Giannis Antetokounpo, Khris Middleton, Jrue Holiday, Brook Lopez, Pat Connaughton, Donte DiVincenzo, Jordan Nwora

Still a good trio anchoring this squad. Still a good bench supporting them. Still got the right coach, loyal fans and a good vibe.

Summer '22 free agents

DiVincenzo, Allen, Hood, Ojeleye, Tucker, Waters, Nwora, Bryant, DeLaurier; player options for Connaughton, Portis, and Thanassis

Their perimeter is gonna need to be shored up next summer, that's pretty obvious. Shooters, defenders, they'll need them all. 

Over/Under: 54.5 (Over, 1st in the East)

I got Over. I think the Bucks will play with Champion swagger and absorb the new additions (Hill, Hood, Allen) to ice games in the regular season and pile up W's. I think the Bucks finish 1st in the East and I think that means at least 55 wins. 


Bulls

Out

Adam Mokoka (declined to offer qualifying contract), Ryan Arcidiacono (declined to offer qualifying contract), Cristiano Felicio (retired?), Daniel Theis (sign/traded to the Rockets), Denzel Valentine (free agent), Garrett Temple (sign/traded to Pelicans), Tomas Satoransky (traded to Pelicans), Thaddeus Young (traded to Spurs), Al-Farouq Aminu (traded to Spurs), Lauri Markkanen (traded to Cavs)

A mixed bag of youngsters and vets on the way out. Markkanen never quite found his stride in Chicago, nor did Valentine or Arcidiacono. I actually like Theis (not sure I 4yr/$36m like him, but he is a smart player) but this is Vucevic's team now, so Thies is probably expendable. Young, Satoransky and Aminu are still solid vets but not necessarily for the Bulls. I don't know Mokoka. But, at the end of it all: Bulls fan should be rejoicing that Felicio is finally gone!

In

Lonzo Ball (4yr/$85m), Alex Caruso (4yr/$37m), #38 pick Ayo Dosunmu (Illinois), #44 pick Marko Simonovic (Montenegro), DeMar DeRozan (3yr/$85m), Tony Bradley (2yr/$3.8m), Derrick Jones Jr (trade with Cavs), Alize Johnson (2yr/$3.6m), Stanley Johnson (Exhibit 9), Matt Thomas (Exhibit 9), Tyler Cook (Exhibition 10)

Lonzo and DeRozan to go with LaVine and Vucevic? I like it. A bit crowded perhaps, but a core full of crafty vets that know how to score is a great place to start. Vucevic is the most underrated player in the league and this is the best cast he's ever been a part of--is he primed for a Jokic-like breakout season? Not exactly but I do think Vucevic is a lot better than you've probably ever bothered to notice. I like Caruso's hustle and smarts, Alize Johnson will give reliable 3rd string PG minutes, Dosunmu is a promising rookie who should find his way into the rotation. Bradley is a big body that can...be a big body. Moving on from Markkanen and Theis doesn't seem so bad with this crew coming in. It'll make for a totally different Bulls team but as they round into shape, I think they can be really good. 

Re-Signed

Javonte Green (2yr/$3.5m), Devin Dotson (2-way)

Okay.

Rest of the roster

Nikola Vucevic, Zach LaVine, Patrick Williams, Coby White, Troy Brown Jr, Bryce Alford

I like this roster. I think the Bulls can be really good. As DeRozan and LaVine and Vucevic find their spots and negotiate the ball handling, I think Lonzo, White and Caruso (and ideally Dosunmu), will do just fine at getting looks for their scorers. 

Summer '22 free agents

LaVine, Jones, Brown, Johnson, Cook Thomas, Alford; player option for Bradley

Well, LaVine is the big whale they gotta bag next summer (or at least trade spectacularly). The others may well play their way into a bonus deal. 

Over/Under: 42.5 (Over, 7th in the East)

Barring injuries, I think this team has enough talent to easily eclipse 43 W's. The East is tougher but the Bulls are one of those tougher teams and as that core gets used to each other, I think they'll find success. I think they're a legit playoff team (meaning top 6), indeed I can see turmoil if they're not. Forget what people are saying: the core of this team is Lonzo and Vucevic with LaVine and DeRozan scoring from the wings. I think that works just fine, I think this team will not get outscored all that often. And come playoff time, they'll be the team that no one wants to play. 


Pacers

Out

Amida Brimah (declined to tender qualifying offer), Aaron Holiday (traded to Wizards), Doug McDermott (sign/traded to Spurs), Cassius Stanley (withdrew qualifying offer), Edmond Sumner (traded to Nets)

I like Holiday but not sure he was gonna fit in this squad, so probably not a big loss. The rest are just regular roster moves, nothing too traumatic to overcome.

In

#13 pick Chris Duarte (Oregon), #22 pick Isaiah Jackson (Kentucky), Torrey Craig (2yr/$10m), Brad Wanamaker (1yr/$1.7m), Nate Hinton (Exhibit 9), Duane Washington Jr (2-way), Terry Taylor (Exhibit 10), Keifer Sykes (Exhibit 10), DeJon Jarreau (2-way)

Duarte should be a fun rookie, plays hard, does a little bit of everything, I expect him firmly in the rotation by the all-star break. Jackson is a bit one dimensional (shot blocker), but I think he'll be real good at his one dimension and should be a reliable down-low defender (and should eventually learn to score), I think Jackson will be a firm part of their 2nd string as the season develops. I like Craig, I think his hard-nosed perimeter D will fit in nicely in Indy. Wanamaker is a serviceable 3rd string PG and I wouldn't pay him a ton but that deal seems just fine. Nothing earth-shattering but a string of nice additions.

Re-Signed

TJ McConnell (4yr/$33.6m)

I'm a huge McConnell fan, still think the Sixers fucked up big time but not locking him down long term years ago (he could still be playing for peanuts in Philly right now *smh*), and yeah I love this deal. Good for McConnell, good for the Pacers.

Rest of the roster

Malcolm Brogdon, Domantas Sabonis, Myles Turner, Caris LeVert, TJ Warren, Jeremy Lamb, Justin Holiday, Goga Bitadze, Oshae Brissett, Kelan Martin, Nate Hinton, Keifer Sykes, Terry Taylor

Still a good, if a little weird, collection of talent that should be pretty good if they can avoid injuries. Brogdon and McConnell make for the most underappreciated backcourt in recent memory, Turner and Sabonis are both underappreciated as well (though they cannot play together, meaning one probably has to go), LeVert and Warren are both primed for breakout years (meaning one probably has to go), Duarte and Jackson are two good rookies that should make the rotation pretty quick meaning that Lamb, Holiday and Bitadze are either bonuses or trade bait. This team should be cohesive but also should be wheeling and dealing, too. Gonna be a weird year for the Pacers, but they're plenty capable of overachieving. (Seems like Martin, Hinton, Sykes and Taylor are fighting for a single roster sport, I expect most of these guys to be gone by opening night)

Summer '22 free agents

Warren, Lamb, Wanamaker, Martin, Hinton, Sykes, Taylor; team option on Bitadze

Warren and Lamb on expiring contracts adds that much more fuel to the trade scenarios. (I wouldn't expect to see any of them in Pacer uniforms this time next year)

Over/Under: 42.5 (Under, 10th in the East)


Cavs

Out

Matthew Dellavedova (to Australia), Isaiah Hartenstein (player declined option), Jeremiah Martin (declined to tender qualifying offer), Taurean Prince (traded to Wolves), Larry Nance Jr (traded to Blazers), Damyean Dotson (waived), Brodric Thomas (waived)

They brought in enough to not worry about what was going out. That said, I always liked Nance and Prince and I'm curious about Hartenstein and Dotson. Oh well, they'll get their chances elsewhere. 

In

Tacko Fall (1yr/$1.7m), Denzel Valentine (2yr/$4.1m), #3 pick Evan Mobley (Southern Cal), Ricky Rubio (trade from Wolves), Lauri Markannen (trade from Bulls), Kevin Pangos (2yr/$3.5m), RJ Nembhard (2-way), Kyle Guy (Exhibit 10), Justin James (1yr/$1.6m), Ed Davis (status?), Brodric Thomas (2-way) 

Mobley is arguably the best player in the 2021 draft--though splitting time with Allen and/or Okoru on a PG-heavy squad might not be the best platform for him. I like Markkanen, still think he's got a lot of upside of versatile wingman, but not sure how he fits in this lineup, feels like he's going from one bad scenario to another. I've always liked Rubio and obviously this sets them up to trade either Garland or Sexton, but until they pull the trigger on a trade, it's just an uncomfortably crowded backcourt. Tacko is a bit of a sideshow but he'll have his moments. I think Valentine can be a reliable veteran 3rd string PG and this is probably a good place for him to get minutes in that role (well Garland or Sexton is gone).  

Re-Signed

Jarrett Allen (5yr/$100m)

I like Allen but it feels a little weird give him a hundred million right as you're drafting Evan Mobley...These two things seem at odds to me. Maybe this team just likes internal conflict.

Rest of the roster

Kevin Love, Cedi Osman, Darius Garland, Collin Sexton, Isaac Okoro, Dylan Windler, Dean Wade, Mifioud Kebengele, Kyle Guy, Lamar Stevens,

Surely there's a hole big enough for Kevin Love out there somewhere, right? Wasn't OKC put on this earth to absorb malcontents with horrible contracts? I always liked Osman, not sure he fits in any more with Markannen on his turf. Clearly, either Garland or Sexton has to go. Seems like Windler and Kabengele are already superfluous. I like most all of these players but I just don't see how they fit together. 

Summer '22 free agents

Sexton, Valentine, Guy, Fall

So it seems like Sexton is the first guy to get traded, right? Or can they move on from Garland in time to re-up Sexton? See, the roster is promising and yet complicated. 

Over/Under: 26.5 (Under, 13th in the East)

I dunno, man. A lot of nice players but I don't see how they fit together. They've got to move on from Love, they've got to choose between Garland and Sexton, it feels like they'll have to choose between Allen and Mobley, and where does Markkanen play on this team? They should be better, they should be a team on the rise, but they feel like a clusterfuck until one or two trades really puts this roster straight. 


Pistons

Out

Jahlil Okafor (traded to Nets), Sekou Doumbouya (traded to Nets), Mason Plumlee (traded to Hornets), Tyler Cook (waived), Jaylen Hands (renounced rights), Dennis Smith Jr (declined to tender qualifying offer), Wayne Ellington (free agent), Deividas Sirvydis (waived); (Pistons also briefly held Deandre Jordan (waived), the rights to JT Thor (traded to Hornets) before the end of pre-season)

How bad is Doumbouya to have been straight dumped like a prom night dumpster baby by three teams in one off-season? The Rockets aren't even paying him anything and they let him walk. Dang! Plumlees come and Plumlees go, not bad to have them but nor do you feel bad when they leave. Okafor is still hanging around, as is Ellington, looks like Smith is gonna be a flying Dutchman, too. I don't think they're going to regret waiving Jordan but JT Thor is gonna have some moments to keep an eye on. 

In

#1 pick Cade Cunningham (Oklahoma), #42 pick Isaiah Livers (USA), Kelly Olynyk (3yr/$37m), Trey Lyles (2yr/$5m), #52 pick Luka Garza (Iowa), Chris Smith (2-way), Jamorko Pickett (2-way),  Derrick Walton Jr (Exhibit 10), Cassius Stanley (Exhibit 10), Jared Cunningham (Exhibit 10)

If Cunningham is all that he can be, then the Pistons won't need any more than that. But even though I love Olynyk and think he's a perfect addition for the Pistons youth movement, it does feel like there was more out than in for the Pistons this summer. Maybe that's a good thing, maybe I'm overrating what's going out--and, again, if Cade plays like a #1, then no worries--but the Detroit youth movement needs to be exciting this year or this summer will look like a major bust. I dunno, not sure what they see in Garza just yet; I like him, I'm rooting for the guy, but he'll need to be letter perfect to play significant minutes in the NBA (seems to me like he was more of a candidate for a 2-way deal). 

Re-Signed

Saben Lee (3yr/$5.1m), Rodney McGruder (1yr/$1.9m), Frank Jackson (2yr/$6.1m), Cory Joseph (2yr/$10m), Hamidou Diallo (2yr/$10.4m)

I think Diallo is arguably the most underrated player in the league and the Pistons did well to pick him up for a bag of balls and re-sign him to a very affordable contract. Also, I'm still in on Bey and Hayes and the vet contracts for McGruder, Jackson and Joseph are very team friendly. These all feel like good moves. 

Rest of the roster

Jerami Grant, Josh Jackson

Oh yeah, Grant is actually their main scorer, I still kinda forget that that's the role he has grown into. Jackson: great athlete, still haven't seen a lick of basketball skill from him in all these years.

Summer '22 free agents

Jackson, McGruder, Jared Cunningham

Doesn't feel like the Pistons will be sweating next summer--unless their youth movement is an unmitigated disaster (which I don't think it will be). 

Over/Under: 24.5 (Under, 14th in the East)

24.5 wins would put them in line for a top-5 pick, which is probably not a bad outcome for the Pistons (their 1st rounder is top-16 protected, I think they'll easily cover that). This is a really young team that's gonna be led by a #1 pick that has to learn the ropes. Grant and Olynyk will keep the youngsters in form and Diallo will show the kids how to shine out, but really it's youngsters in all positions, so you can't expect this team to win many games. But I do expect them be a fun watch, the Pistons are going to the top of my League Pass rankings (I like youth movements I cannot lie). I've got to pick the under here just because there's no real incentive to be good, this team obviously needs at least another year to round into shape and another top-5 pick might be a delicious bonus next summer.