{{{2020-2021 Official NBA Thread - Covid-19 influenced Edition,Dec. 22: Opening night/ Lakers vs Clippers preseason at 9}}}

25. Golden State Warriors
  • Last season: 15-50, 30th in offense, 26th in defense
  • In: Kelly Oubre (trade), James Wiseman (drafted No. 2), Brad Wanamaker (one year, $2.3 million), Kent Bazemore (one year, $2.3 million)
  • Out: 2021 first-round pick (top-20 protected)
  • SportsLine projection: 33.4 wins
No team is projected to improve more, according to SportsLine, but that's mostly because they were terrible last season. This offseason was supposed to be about putting three stars in their early 30s in a position to compete for their fourth championship together, but that became impossible when one of them -- Klay Thompson -- tore his Achilles the same day as the 2020 NBA Draft. Hours later, Golden State used the No. 2 pick on an enormous 19-year-old center with tantalizing upside and a lot to learn. Some helpful rotation pieces followed, most notably a versatile 24-year-old forward who cost them a first-round pick and is on an expiring contract.

If the two-time MVP and the former Defensive Player of the Year on the roster stay healthy and perform at an elite level, maybe this team can outperform preseason projections. Ultimately, though, the front office will be judged on what becomes of the rookie who will likely begin his career playing behind Kevon Looney.
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26. Sacramento Kings
  • Last season: 31-41, 18th (T) in offense, 19th in defense
  • In: Tyrese Hailburton (drafted No. 12), Glenn Robinson III (one year, $1.6 million), Hassan Whiteside (one year, $1.6 million), Frank Kaminsky (one year, $1.6 million)
  • Out: Bogdan Bogdanovic (FA), Kent Bazemore (FA), Harry Giles (FA), Alex Len (FA)
  • SportsLine projection: 33.3 wins
The Kings might have hit a home run in the draft, and that might turn out to be the only thing that really matters about this offseason. They can't be amped about one of their best players walking for nothing, though, and it's hard to discern what their offseason goals were. The fact that their reportedly disgruntled shooting guard and their 32-year-old stretch big are both still on the roster is somewhat surprising.

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27. Washington Wizards
  • Last season: 25-47, 16th in offense, 29th in defense
  • In: Russell Westbrook (trade), Deni Avidja (drafted No. 9), Robin Lopez (one year, $7.3 million), Raul Neto (one year, $1.6 million)
  • Out: John Wall (trade), Ian Mahinmi (FA)
  • Sticking around: Davis Bertans (four years, $80 million)
  • SportsLine projection: 30.9 wins
Wednesday night marked the end of an era. Washington traded the bloated contract of its former franchise player for another bloated contract, surrendering a protected first-round pick in the process. The hope is that the new guy, who plays the same position, will mesh well with its other star guard and show the world that he's much better than he appeared to be when he was trying to play through an injury. The other team involved in the transaction is hoping for the exact same thing from its new guy.

It's a risky move because the Wizards' current franchise player might not want to spend the rest of his prime with them. There's some real scoring punch on this team, but the veteran rim protector they signed can't fix this defense by himself.
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28. Charlotte Hornets
  • Last season: 23-42, 27th (T) in offense, 25th in defense
  • In: Gordon Hayward (four years, $120 million), LaMelo Ball (drafted No. 3)
  • Out: Nicolas Batum (waived), Dwayne Bacon (FA)
  • Sticking around: Bismack Biyombo (one year, $3.5 million)
  • SportsLine projection: 24.5 wins
There is a logic to the most stunning contract of free agency: The Hornets have put together a respectable starting five, giving the No. 3 pick some real structure as he adjusts from the NBL to the NBA. Most rebuilding teams, however, would not pay $120 million for that.

Charlotte has some stuff to figure out with its guard rotation, and its chances of competing for a playoff spot largely depend on its 19-year-old lead playmaker. If he and everybody's least favorite free-agent acquisition bring the best out of the young forwards on the roster, this team could turn out to be pretty competitive -- and a League Pass favorite. The cost of this, though, is more than that dollar figure: Pretty competitive is another way of saying just good enough to not get a high pick in next year's draft.
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29. Orlando Magic
  • Last season: 33-40, 23rd in offense, 10th (T) in defense
  • In: Cole Anthony (drafted No. 15), Chuma Okeke (drafted No. 16 in 2019, missed season with torn ACL), Dwayne Bacon (two years, $3.5 million, non-guaranteed second year)
  • Out: D.J. Augustin (FA)
  • Sticking around: Michael Carter Williams (two years, $6.6 million), James Ennis (one year, $3.3 million) Gary Clark (two years, $4.1 million)
  • SportsLine projection: 32.0 wins
Orlando's most promising player tore his ACL in the bubble, and some organizations would have taken this opportunity to have a gap year: Move all the vets, bottom out and add another core player in a stacked draft.

This is not what the Magic did. They'll probably be a bit worse offensively with a 20-year-old rookie in the spot that was previously occupied by a 33-year-old floor general, but they'll be disciplined, get stops and, health permitting, be in the mix for a lower-rung playoff spot. Excited?

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30. Detroit Pistons
  • Last season: 20-46, 20th in offense, 22nd in defense
  • In: Jerami Grant (three years, $60 million), Killian Hayes (drafted No. 7), Isaiah Stewart (drafted No. 16), Saddiq Bey (drafted No. 19), Delon Wright (trade), Mason Plumlee (three years, $25 million), Josh Jackson (three years, TK), Jahlil Okafor (two years, $3.2 million) Wayne Ellington (one year, $1.6 million), Rodney McGruder (trade), Dzanan Musa (trade)
  • Out: Christian Wood (sign-and-trade), Luke Kennard (trade), Bruce Brown (trade), Tony Snell (traded)
  • SportsLine projection: 19.8 wins
A thoroughly confusing offseason, from the $60 million man to the Dewayne Dedmon waive-and-stretch and the second-round picks sent to the Clippers. The three best young players from last season's roster are gone, and in the short term Detroit's roster is a hodgepodge of vets, rookies and a few notable players in their mid-20s.

This rebuild is clearly a work in progress, and the roster will likely look different by the trade deadline. It is difficult, however, to justify the price the Pistons paid for the two free agents who came off the bench in Denver last season.
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30. Detroit Pistons
  • Last season: 20-46, 20th in offense, 22nd in defense
  • In: Jerami Grant (three years, $60 million), Killian Hayes (drafted No. 7), Isaiah Stewart (drafted No. 16), Saddiq Bey (drafted No. 19), Delon Wright (trade), Mason Plumlee (three years, $25 million), Josh Jackson (three years, TK), Jahlil Okafor (two years, $3.2 million) Wayne Ellington (one year, $1.6 million), Rodney McGruder (trade), Dzanan Musa (trade)
  • Out: Christian Wood (sign-and-trade), Luke Kennard (trade), Bruce Brown (trade), Tony Snell (traded)
  • SportsLine projection: 19.8 wins
A thoroughly confusing offseason, from the $60 million man to the Dewayne Dedmon waive-and-stretch and the second-round picks sent to the Clippers. The three best young players from last season's roster are gone, and in the short term Detroit's roster is a hodgepodge of vets, rookies and a few notable players in their mid-20s.

This rebuild is clearly a work in progress, and the roster will likely look different by the trade deadline. It is difficult, however, to justify the price the Pistons paid for the two free agents who came off the bench in Denver last season.
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Da fuck is this team doin'. :smh:

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Well they have to do something, I believe if many owners had their way, it would be little money going out
Moves don't even make sense from a basketball perspective. Once this virus clears up I wanna check out that new arena in Detroit when the Sixes come to town.

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2020-21 NBA schedule release: Warriors-Nets, Lakers-Clippers tip off season; games unveiled through Christmas


The new season tips off Dec. 22, and the NBA has unveiled the matchups from opening night through Christmas Day
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The 2020-21 NBA season will tip off with a doubleheader on Dec. 22, featuring the Brooklyn Nets and Golden State Warriors in the first game and the champion Los Angeles Lakers and crosstown rival Los Angeles Clipperscontinuing their rivalry to close out opening night.

From there, the Wednesday night slate will feature two potential playoff previews. The Milwaukee Bucks and Boston Celtics will kick off the evening, and then Chris Paul will make his Phoenix Suns debut in a battle with the Dallas Mavericks.

The league released their Christmas Day schedule as well. The day will begin with the Miami Heat hosting Zion Williamson and the New Orleans Pelicans. The battle of the two-time MVPs follows, with Stephen Curry and his Golden State Warriors battling Giannis Antetokounmpo and the Milwaukee Bucks. Kyrie Irving will then play his first game in Boston as a member of the Brooklyn Nets, and the headliner will be a duel between LeBron James and Luka Doncic, as the defending champion Lakers host the up-and-coming Mavericks. The evening closes with a second-round rematch between the Clippers and the Denver Nuggets.

The league is planning on releasing the schedule in portions, to allow for flexibility for make-up games if needed due to the COVID-19 pandemic. While the league finished the 2019-20 season safely inside a bubble environment down in Orlando, the NBA is opting to compete the upcoming season in each team's home market.



While the turnaround between the ending of last season and the start date for this new one is the quickest in league history, the NBA wanted to get back on its traditional schedule as much as possible going forward, and wanted to wrap up the season before the 2020 Olympics in Tokyo in the summer. In order to do that, the league reduced the number of regular-season games from 82 to 72, and postponed All-Star Weekend in Indianapolis to 2024.
 
Why you should expect an ugly 2020-21 NBA season filled with COVID-19 drama and unpredictable outcomes
The NBA succeeded inside a bubble, but how will it fare in the real world dealing with a surging COVID-19 pandemic?

he good news: We've got another NBA season -- one loaded with absurd talent, fascinating storylines, rising stars and up-and-coming teams -- bearing down on us.

The bad news: It's going to be a rough and rocky road, one full of positive COVID-19 tests, injuries, unpredictable outcomes and enough uncertainty to make 2020's sports calendar look, by comparison, tame and reliable.

That's the takeaway from numerous conversations CBS Sports has had with NBA league sources -- executives, scouts, former players and more -- since the league this week released a 134-page guide to navigating a pandemic that postponed last season, has altered every facet of American life and continues to rage.

The NBA itself, in fact, has been clear about how unlikely it is that its successful bubble in Orlando will even remotely approximate a regular season outside of it. We heard it in the news that 48 of 546 players tested positive, an ominous sign.


We also heard it in the memorandum itself: "It is likely that some staff, players, and other participants in the 2020-21 season nonetheless will test positive or contract COVID-19, particularly as the virus remains prevalent in particular team markets and surrounding communities. The occurrence of independent cases (i.e., cases not spread among players or team staff) or a small or otherwise expected number of COVID-19 cases will not require a decision to suspend or cancel the 2020-21 season."

Translation: It's going to get ugly. And we're going to push through this season anyway.

Here are some key takeaways, thoughts and concerns based on CBS Sports' conversations with those across the NBA as the league prepares for another once-in-a-lifetime basketball challenge.


It's going to be bad
That's the universally agreed upon point: If you think the NFL's ups and downs have been disruptive, you haven't seen anything yet. Though the league has prohibited team employees from discussing the reality, in private conversations there is a shared certainty that there will be many, many problems this upcoming season as players and team employees test positive and potentially whole teams are rendered unavailable for long stretches.

The solution? Deal with it.

Play subs. Use the expanded rosters. Look to your G league squad. Lean on your veterans and stars to try their best to convince guys in the locker room to act properly outside of it. But the show will go on, even as everyone from the commissioner's office to individual markets understand that an out-of-control pandemic, in a world where many don't take it seriously -- the reality of America right now -- will also be the reality of the NBA.

And the show will go on
Most believe commissioner Adam Silver and the league will do everything in their power to finish all, or most, of the season. This, too, reflects reality beyond the league: Commerce is doing all it can to continue even as COVID-19 pushes back.

We want to be healthy. We want jobs. And the goal is to try and achieve both of these in tandem.

There's also a sense that the rush to return so quickly after October's Finals strategically bakes in some early games if the NBA is forced to cut its 72-game season to, say, 65 or 60 or fewer.

Yes, the goal and expectation, because of television contracts and the financial realities of playing even fewer games, is to play all 72. But the quick turnaround does create some flexibility if things get really bad.


Injuries this season are just as scary a specter for a team's chances as COVID-19
One interesting feeling in the league is that injuries to players weigh just as heavily on organizations, or even more so, than the fear of a rash of positive COVID-19 tests.

There's a fatalistic resignation that coaches, executives and players simply can't control the spread of an invisible virus and the private-if-selfish actions of some of those team employees and players. That feels inevitable, the thinking goes, just as it has been across the country.

Person after person said some version of: "People are going to get it, it could be bad, just hope for the best and get through it."


But injuries are another matter -- one, in theory, you can have more control over -- and several sources pointed to international soccer as an example of what happens when a condensed schedule follows a woefully short offseason.

And that's a rash of injuries.

The NBA is not the NFL. Outside of what happened to the Broncos' entire stable of quarterbacks (and in some cases, a particular starting QB) an NFL team can win games even if one of its best players goes down to COVID-19 or injury. But take the best player off almost any team in the NBA, particularly for a long stretch, and that team is likely in deep trouble.

That fact will be compounded by a Western Conference that, at least right now, does not have a single team that isn't eyeing itself as a potential playoff team.


All of big-time sports are a war of attrition, with champions almost always requiring the good luck of avoiding serious injuries to win it all. This year will be, sources stressed over and over, a year of utter unpredictability as much due to a possible crop of injuries as to COVID-19 issues.

Load management
It's worth keeping an eye on whether or not the league will offer up a quiet moratorium this year on punishing load management. The NBA should ease up, and if it does, expect to see teams sitting stars as often as they can afford to do so.

It will also be a brutal balance and required skill to know how to sit enough guys enough times to be healthy come the playoffs, but not so many so often that you fall out of the top six and face your season ending in a game or two.


It's anyone's season
Yes, the favorites are the favorites. But the sense that COVID-19 will affect large chunks of the season and injuries will multiply aggressively compared to past years has many convinced that all you need is a chance to turn it into glory. And that's before you include the fact that play-in games for the bottom-two seeds in each conference increases the field of potential luck boxes.

Let's say you're, oh, the Pelicans. You could finish 10th, play a No. 7 seed weakened in the play-in games by injury, and then find yourself against a playoff team decimated by COVID-19 that week or more injuries that season.

Unlikely?

Many don't think so. Many believe that luck, attrition, and good behavior out in a pandemic-laced world will decide the winners from the losers.


Weakest link theory
This was referenced in different ways many times. The idea is this: Your weakest links on the floor could affect your team for weeks as depth becomes even more important, and your weakest links away from the arena could literally wreck your season.

It only takes one player to behave selfishly and contract the virus to bring a team's season to a close or leave its chemistry and unity in tatters.

Tanking team could tank the season for everyone else
This was another interesting point several people raised. It's far from certain everyone will avoid bars, clubs, friends, restaurants -- to in effect lock yourself down for months while out in a world full of COVID-19 -- even when you have reason to do so. But what happens when a team starts, say, 6-17?


A player or players who no longer care because their season is effectively over -- players who are angry, disgruntled, resigned to a sense of meaninglessness on the court -- could wreak havoc on an actual contender or the entire league.

Many expressed severe doubt that terrible teams will have anything approaching 100-percent acceptable COVID-19 behavior week after week, month after month.

You can't fight human nature outside of a bubble
Unfortunate fact: During this offseason, sources say, several NBA players located in cities with severe limitations have flown to NBA cities with few.

Bars and clubs, it was explained, aren't closed everywhere, and so it's no wonder that nearly 50 players tested positive between Nov. 24-30.

It wasn't just the bubble that prevented this in Orlando. It was the team leaders within it. A guy like, say, LeBron James could keep an eye on his teammates in Orlando and make sure they were all on the same page about staying cautious and staying cleared to play.

That won't be true, or as true, during a regular season in the real world. So, again: Expect many positive COVID-19 tests and resulting problems.
 
NBA opening night: Warriors vs. Nets, Lakers vs. Clippers provide no shortage of intriguing storylines
Kevin Durant will make his Nets debut against his former franchise while James Wiseman will make his pro debut
https://www.cbssports.com/writers/michael-kaskey-blomain/

By Michael Kaskey-Blomain

22 hrs ago5 min read


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After a historically short offseason, the NBA is set to kick off the 2020-21 season on Dec. 22 with a two-game slate. The first game of the season will be between the Brooklyn Nets and the Golden State Warriors, and the second will feature Los Angeles' two teams -- the Lakers and Clippers. Given those games, there will be no shortage of storylines on opening night. Here's a look at five of the most intriguing.
1. Kevin Durant makes Nets debut against his former franchise
After missing the entirety of the 2019-20 NBA season due to the Achilles injury that he suffered in the 2019 Finals, Kevin Durant will finally make his debut as a member of the Brooklyn Nets on opening night. Durant was a reigning two-time Finals MVP at the peak of his powers at the time that the injury occurred, so it will be extremely interesting to see what he looks like back out on the court for the first time in well over a year. The fact that Durant's first game as a Net comes against his former franchise adds a layer of intrigue to the matchup.
Durant walked away from the Warriors after just three seasons, and afterwards he said that he never felt fully accepted in Golden State.
"I came in there wanting to be part of a group, wanting to be part of a family, and definitely felt accepted," Durant said. "But I'll never be one of those guys. I didn't get drafted there... Steph Curry, obviously drafted there. Andre Iguodala, won the first Finals, first championship. Klay Thompson, drafted there. Draymond Green, drafted there. And the rest of the guys kind of rehabilitated their careers there... As time went on, I started to realize I'm just different from the rest of the guys. It's not a bad thing. Just my circumstances and how I came up in the league. And on top of that, the media always looked at it like K.D. and the Warriors. So it's like nobody could get a full acceptance of me there."



Given this background, it's only fitting that the first game in the next chapter of his career comes against the Warriors.
2. First look at Kevin Durant and Kyrie Irving as a duo
In addition to the game between Golden State and Brooklyn being Durant's debut with the Nets, it will also be the debut of Durant and Kyrie Irving as a duo. Both players signed with Brooklyn in free agency in 2019 but dealt with injury issues throughout last season. Durant missed the entire campaign, while Irving was limited to just 20 games.
On paper, the combination of Durant and Irving projects to be one of the most dynamic duos in the entire league, however chemistry could be a concern, given Irving's history. Plus, like we have seen time and again, throwing star players together doesn't necessarily guarantee success. If it did, the Rockets would have won a title over the past couple of years, and the Clippers wouldn't have lost in the Western Conference semifinals last season. Only so much can be learned from one game, but it will be great to finally get to see Durant and Irving out on the floor together.

3. James Wiseman will make his NBA debut for the Warriors
James Wiseman was one of the most highly-hyped prospects heading into the 2020 NBA Draft, and he will get to make his pro debut against the Nets on opening night. The Warriors selected Wiseman with the second overall pick in November's draft, and he projects to play a role on a Warriors team that will be looking to climb back into contention in the Western Conference after a down season due to a multitude of injury issues. It's not every day that a rookie will have an opportunity to come in and immediately contribute to a contender, but that could very well be the case with Wiseman. Wiseman could play limited minutes early on as he gets acclimated to the NBA, but it will be interesting to get a first look at him in the league nonetheless.
4. The battle of L.A.
It's safe to say that the NBA views contests between L.A.'s two teams as marquee matchups. The Lakers and Clippers played against each other on opening night last season, and then again on Christmas Day, and now here they are opening up the season playing against each other again. Many expected the two teams to meet in the Western Conference finals last season, but that didn't happen as the Clippers fell to the Denver Nuggets in the conference semifinals. Both teams tweaked their rosters over the offseason, and heading into the 2020-21 season, both are again expected to be at the top of the conference. This game will be a nice early barometer to see how L.A.'s two teams stack up against each other at the beginning of the season.
5. Same city, different jersey for Montrezl Harrell
After spending the last three years of his career with the Clippers, and blossoming into the reigning Sixth Man of the Year with the team, forward Montrezl Harrell defected to the Lakers in free agency. While Harrell doesn't hold any ill will toward the Clippers, it's clear to him that the Clippers didn't want him back, and that's not something he'll likely forget.

"When I was playing for the Clippers, I gave it everything I had every night when I laced up my sneakers," Harrell said. And now that I'm here with the Los Angeles Lakers, that's the same thing I'm gonna do here," he said. "This is my job, and I'm blessed to be on a team that was strong enough and deep enough and have the talent enough to win the championship last year... But like I said, as far as [if] they wanted me back, obviously it doesn't seem that way, does it?"
Harrell obviously won't have to wait long to face his former franchise. It will be interesting to see if he comes out looking to send a message.
 
NBA MVP odds: Luka Doncic, Anthony Davis lead candidates presenting best betting value entering 2020-21 season
An obvious favorite stands out in the MVP race

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By Sam Quinn
20 hrs ago12 min read
Only three players have ever won three consecutive NBA MVP awards. Two of them -- Bill Russell and Wilt Chamberlain -- did so before the merger. The third, Larry Bird, had the advantage of consolidation amongst his competition. Three-time MVP Moses Malone joined 1981 winner Julius Erving in Philadelphia right as Bird's streak began. Three-time winner Magic Johnson spent that entire period alongside six-time winner Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. Those teammates split votes and Bird waltzed to three trophies in a row. Johnson only won his first award when Abdul-Jabbar dipped below 20 points per game for the first time in his career.
Trends like these tend to be far more powerful in selecting MVPs than actual on-court value. If that was the only criteria, Michael Jordan and LeBron James would have approached a dozen trophies apiece. Neither of them won three MVP awards in a row. It raises the bar on Giannis Antetokounmpo as he tries to match Bird, Russell and Chamberlain. He might be the most valuable player on the court again this regular season, but convincing voters of that is going be difficult in light of his second consecutive postseason collapse. His performance, through that lens, is going to seem somewhat empty, fair or not. Humans determine who wins this award, and humans are fallible.
The upside to that is opportunity. Few MVP races have ever been this open going into a season. So let's look at what tends to lead to MVP awards, and which candidates fit enough of them to be considered viable MVP bets.
All odds via William Hill Sportsbook
The Favorites (10-to-1 or lower)
Best choice: Luka Doncic (+450)

Luka Doncic artificially improved his 2020-21 MVP odds substantially through one major 2019-20 flaw: The Mavericks were terrible in the clutch. Dallas lost 24 games featuring NBA-defined clutch situations, fourth-most in the NBA, and as a result, the Mavericks were the No. 7 seed when most metrics suggested they should be far higher. By net rating, for example, Dallas finished third in the Western Conference.
This matters because team improvement tends to drive MVP narratives. Over the past decade alone, Derrick Rose, Stephen Curry, James Harden and Giannis all won their first MVP award after their team's record improved by at least 10 games. If we assume Doncic doesn't have some great flaw in the clutch (which seems safe after his performance in the bubble), The Mavericks are going to have a significantly higher winning percentage next season just based on regression to the mean late in games. Clutch numbers are typically quite random. All signs point to the Mavericks simply being unlucky in that arena.
That false improvement will help drive Doncic's candidacy, but the very real growth the Mavericks should make defensively will help as well. Dallas had the most efficient offense in NBA history last season in scoring 115.9 points per 100 possessions, but ranked 18th on defense behind a roster built to prioritize scoring. The newer model comes with greater balance. Swapping Josh Richardson in for Seth Curry was a meaningful defensive upgrade. Willie Cauley-Stein over Dwight Powellshould be one as well, especially if he's healthy and committed in playing for his first winning team. The offense might take a step back with those swaps, but Dallas should comfortably remain one of the top two or three scoring teams in basketball. If the defense hovers around the top 10, history says we have a top seed. Top seeds produce MVP candidates.
Bandwagons form around those candidates quickly, and Doncic has another advantage on this front. Kristaps Porzingis will miss the beginning of the season while recovering from knee surgery. Now, that will hurt Dallas on both ends of the floor, but if the Mavericks can weather the storm, teammate injuries are another factor that tends to work in favor of candidates. Kevin Durant won in 2014 with Russell Westbrook missing significant time, and Steve Nash won in 2006 with Amar'e Stoudemire out for most of the season. Porzingis shouldn't be out as long as those players were, but momentum can form behind Doncic's candidacy quickly without him. Then, when he returns, it comes down to winning and maintaining his statistical pace.
There are a few reasonable doubts. With less shooting around him, Doncic might post inferior individual numbers even if he improves as a player. He also had some ankle issues last season. Missed time is especially damaging in a condensed season. But Doncic is justifiably the favorite here. There are too many factors that typically lead to MVP awards pointing in his direction.
Second choice: Anthony Davis (+800)
Four players occupy this group, and none stand up to Doncic on paper: LeBron James, Anthony Davis, Stephen Curry and Giannis. We've already discussed the major impediment to Giannis' candidacy. Curry is unlikely to win enough games now that Klay Thompson is out for the season. That leaves James and Davis.
The Lakers themselves seem to be planning for the idea that James won't be an MVP candidate this season. Dennis Schroder and Montrezl Harrell are additions seemingly geared at driving regular-season bench production. That is especially valuable if your aging, four-time MVP winner plans to enact an aggressive load-management regimen. Even if James does play enough to remain in the race, one of his main arguments last season was how poorly the Lakers played offensively without him. That shouldn't be an issue with Schroder and Harrell in place. There's also the fact that James is going to turn 36 less than two weeks into the season, and not many 36-years-old win MVPs.
Davis is a flawed candidate for different reasons. A big man hasn't won MVP since Dirk Nowitzki in 2007, and that award left a bad taste in the mouths of voters when he lost in the first round of the postseason. Davis is probably going to disappoint statistically to an extent as well. His playoff shooting is not remotely sustainable. Davis shot below 37 percent on mid-range jumpers in each of his last three seasons. In the playoffs? He just missed 50 percent on meaningful volume. That's Kevin Durant territory. If he regresses to even his typical shooting numbers, voters are going to wonder why he couldn't maintain his playoff dominance.
But Davis is going to enter the season as the Defensive Player of the Year front-runner. He'll also presumably have plenty of nights without LeBron on the floor to showcase himself. James will likely campaign on his behalf. There is going to be a narrative push toward at least one Laker after they were shut out of last season's awards entirely: James finished second in MVP, Davis finished second for Defensive Player of the Year, Frank Vogel finished fourth for Coach of the Year and Rob Pelinka's peers knocked him all the way down to seventh on the Executive of the Year ballot. The Lakers proceeded to win the championship, and there will be a push for retribution. If Davis even approaches his playoff efficiency (and otherworldly defense), he'll be in the running.
If he happens to do so on the team with the best regular-season record? He probably wins. Of the past 15 MVPs, 11 have played for the team with the most wins. There is a good chance that either Davis or James can claim the "best player on the best team" argument, and the one who does instantly vaults toward the top of the heap.
The Fringe Candidates (between 10-to-1 and 25-to-1)
Best choice: Damian Lillard (+2000)

It would be easy to say that Lillard's bubble production was unsustainable and should be ignored, but ...
  • Across an 11-game stretch in January and February of 2020, Lillard average 40.9 points on over 50 percent shooting from behind the arc.
  • On a 10-game stretch in February and March of 2018, Lillard averaged 35.4 points on a 9-1 record.
  • Over eight games in March of 2017, Lillard averaged 34.3 points on over 52 percent shooting from the field.
History says that at some point this season, Lillard is going to go on a hot streak that warrants MVP consideration. For a narratively-driven award, those streaks really matter. Normally, these streaks come with Lillard's Trail Blazers far enough down the standings that it doesn't make a difference. That probably won't be the case this season.
Portland ranked third on offense despite missing Jusuf Nurkic, Zach Collins and Rodney Hood for most of last season. All three should be far healthier this season. The only major rotation piece that left was Hassan Whiteside, who is being replaced by the similarly productive Enes Kanter. The Blazers will score a ton of points, but their 27th-ranked defense would have made it nearly impossible for Lillard to compete for this award if it was left untouched. It wasn't. Robert Covington and Derrick Jones Jr. are major improvements on that end of the floor, and both should perform needed offensive functions well. Covington shoots. Jones can be a pick-and-roll partner for Lillard. If Portland's offense remains stable and its defense takes a major leap, the Blazers will contend for a top seed in the Western Conference. With Lillard's typically stellar numbers and an inevitable hot streak buoying his narrative, he'll remain in this conversation deep into the season.
Second choice: Jayson Tatum (+2000)
Expectations are going to work in Tatum's favor this season. He enters the race with the same absent teammate advantage Porzingis has. Kemba Walker is going to miss the beginning of the season, and Gordon Hayward is now gone. The overwhelming assumption is that Boston should take a step back this season without him, but whether or not they actually will is a matter of debate. The Celtics were nearly five points better per 100 possessions with Hayward on the floor last season, but they'd also be justified in assuming Jaylen Brown and Marcus Smart have healthier seasons than they did in 2020. Boston also has five first-round picks across the past three NBA Drafts that have yet to contribute much in the regular season. If Grant Williams, Robert Williams, Romeo Langford, Aaron Nesmith or Payton Pritchard pops? A good chunk of Hayward's production can be mimicked. Tristan Thompson will help in this regard as well, albeit in different areas.
Where Hayward should be missed most is in his shot-creation. He finished third on the Celtics in assists, but for a team in which nobody averaged even five dimes per game, that loss is particularly devastating. But Tatum is taking meaningful strides on that front, too. Unlike the entire regular-season Boston roster, Tatum averaged five assists per game in the playoffs. With the ball in his hands more now that Hayward is gone, it wouldn't be a stretch to assume he reaches that mark in the regular season, either. He isn't LeBron, but he doesn't need to be. If he posts MVP-caliber scoring numbers, voters will forgive good-but-not-great production elsewhere. That's what Tatum needs to do to give himself a chance: Keep the Celtics where they were despite a possibly worse roster, and just continue to grow as fourth-year players usually do.
The Longshots (25-to-1 or higher)


Best choice: Joel Embiid (+4000)

Elton Brand overthought his 2019-20 roster. He acquired splashy names and forgot what has universally worked alongside the Joel Embiid-Ben Simmons duo: shooting. During the 2017-18 season, Philadelphia's starting lineup of Embiid, Simmons, JJ Redick, Robert Covington and Dario Saric blasted opponents by 20.5 points per 100 possessions. Swap in Jimmy Butler and Tobias Harris for Covington and Saric and that group "only" beat opponents by 19.4 points per 100 possession. This isn't rocket science. Put shooting around Embiid and Simmons and good things happen.
It took new GM Daryl Morey a couple of weeks to grasp that concept. Josh Richardson and Al Horford left. Seth Curry and Danny Green came in. Problem solved. The 76ers can shoot again. Their typically porous bench should improve as well. Dwight Howard just proved his capability as a low-usage backup center for a contender. He'll prop Philly up enough when Embiid rests to keep their record high. Matisse Thybulle is a future Defensive Player of the Year candidate. Morey is a player or two short of genuine depth, and if someone like rookie Tyrese Maxey pops? He has it.
If these basic tweaks get Philadelphia back up to the top of the East, either Embiid or Simmons is going to emerge as a candidate. Embiid is likelier. Points are critical in the MVP race. The last MVP who didn't lead his team in scoring was Nash in 2006. Simmons is the more stable defender, but Embiid has higher upside by virtue of his rim-protection role. If he's healthy, engaged and in shape for the full season, he might be the Defensive Player of the Year favorite. The odds of that have never been higher with Morey and Doc Rivers in town. If he plays his best all-around season on a roster equipped to support him, he is going to be a narrative favorite.
Second choice: Trae Young (+6000)
Once you go beyond 50-to-1, you're basically rooting for chaos. Young is a candidate equipped to capitalize on some possible short-season chaos. If the Hawks are a bottom-rung playoff team, he's out. If they sneak around the top five? He's in business. That's going to take some injuries, but it's not out of the realm of possibility.
The Hawks are going to score a lot of points. When Young was on the floor last season, they averaged 111.2 points per 100 possessions, which would have kept them around the top 10 offenses in basketball. Their issue was that when he sat, they had the worst offense in basketball by an utterly comical margin. At 95.7 points per 100 possessions, The gap between the Young-less Hawks and the No. 30 Warriors at 104.4 was bigger than the gap between those Warriors and the No. 4 Celtics (112.8). Atlanta should be meaningfully better on both fronts.
Young played the bulk of his minutes with rookies and sophomores last season. A whopping seven of his teammates last season had fewer than two years of NBA experience. Aside from John Collins, he was left alone to develop Cam Reddish, DeAndre Hunter, Kevin Huerter and Bruno Fernando. Those players will be older and better next season, and the Hawks get to throw Bogdan Bogdanovic, Danilo Gallinari, Clint Capela and Rajon Rondo into the mix. The Hawks added hefty doses of shooting, ball-handling and pick-and-roll finishing in a single offseason. Yes, Gallinari isn't particularly durable and, yes, Rondo's regular-season track record is iffy, but the sheer talent upgrade here is going to be enormous.
Young already has the individual component of this equation down. Players have averaged far less than 29.6 points and 9.3 assists and come away with MVPs for their troubles. If Young is slightly more efficient on a significantly better team, Atlanta's nuclear offense alone is going to get him into the race.
 
NBA announces 48 out of 546 players tested positive for COVID-19 from Nov. 24-30
8.8 percent of those tested yielded positive results
By Sam Quinn
Dec 2, 2020 at 6:35 pm ET1 min read
The NBA tested 546 players for COVID-19 during the period from Nov. 24-30, and the results were not overly positive. Of those 546, 48 tested positive, the NBA and NBPA announced in a joint statement Wednesday. That is a positivity rate of 8.8 percent, below the 10.2 percent national average, according to Johns Hopkins. Still, the contrast between that percentage and what the NBA just experienced in its Orlando bubble is substantial. Once the season resumed at Disney, the league did not experience a single positive test in the bubble.
So far, it has topped that total by 48, and those numbers will surely grow. Players have returned to their markets and are doing individual workouts before team workouts at training camp begin on Dec. 6. Positive tests are on the rise nationwide and statewide restrictions are significantly looser than they were when the pandemic began. Most experts expect a very bad winter from the perspective of the virus. The NBA is beginning to experience that.
There is no way of knowing exactly how many players have already had the virus at some point or another. There have been 85 confirmed cases, according to The Wall Street Journal's Ben Cohen, but there is no telling how many players had the virus and simply didn't make it publicly known. Others could have been asymptomatic. Without knowing how long antibodies offer protection, there is also the possibility that some players catch the virus twice. In short, we don't really know how bad this is or will get.
The NBA feels comfortable playing basketball in light of the pandemic because of the relative health of its players. Most NBA roster spots are occupied by young and fit athletes who are less susceptible to the effects of the virus. That doesn't make them invulnerable, though. Orlando Magic center Mo Bamba is still dealing with symptoms five months after his diagnosis, for instance.
The 2020-21 season is going to look much more like the 2020 NFL season than the NBA's perfectly executed Disney bubble. Players are going to catch this virus. If today's numbers are any indication, a lot of them already have.
 
NBA Christmas Day schedule: Ranking every matchup, with Lakers-Mavericks headlining reported slate of games
The NBA threw a few curveballs on the Christmas schedule
https://www.cbssports.com/writers/sam-quinn/

By Sam Quinn

Dec 2, 2020 at 11:13 am ET5 min read

lebron-luka.jpg




Christmas is the marquee day on the NBA's regular-season schedule, but it is especially important for the 2020-21 season. With the season tipping off on Dec. 22, two months later than usual, Christmas Day will serve as a sort of opening ceremony for the season, and as such, the league has loaded the holiday with some of its biggest matchups. The following five games have been tentatively chosen for Christmas Day, according to ESPN's Adrian Wojnarowski.
The league's entire schedule has not yet been released. The schedule for the first half of the season is expected to be announced shortly, but the second half will have to wait in case the NBA needs to leave some extra time to make up games missed because of COVID-19. A separate slate of marquee games is expected for opening night on Dec. 22, and a month later, on Martin Luther King Jr. Day (Jan. 19), the league typically offers a full day of games with several meaningful matchups.

1. Los Angeles Lakers vs. Dallas Mavericks
No, it's not the game we expected. Lakers-Clippers Part V will likely be their second-consecutive opening night tilt rather than another Christmas duel, and with the Miami Heat seemingly starting the season at home, it might be a little while before the NBA gives fans a Finals rematch. That should suit the viewing audience just fine. Lakers vs. Mavericks is still the best basketball game on the board.

The Lakers took three of their four bouts with the Mavericks last season, including a controversial November game that went to overtime after the officials missed an obvious illegal screen on Dwight Howard that set up Danny Green's game-tying shot. The narratives are simple enough to sell. LeBron James, after capturing his fourth Finals MVP award, is once again the NBA's undisputed best player. Luka Doncic is the odds-on MVP favorite, but perhaps also the favorite to take LeBron's throne. This game will be his first attempt at doing so this season. It won't be his last.

2. Boston Celtics vs. Brooklyn Nets
If not for COVID-19, this would hold the top spot. But alas, with many arenas either limiting attendance or banning fans outright, Kyrie Irving has managed to duck the wrath of Boston's fans yet again. Fortunately, he is no longer Brooklyn's headliner. All eyes are on Kevin Durant as he mounts his comeback from the torn Achilles tendon that cost him the 2019-20 season. All reports from those who have seen him work out and play pickup games have been positive, but nothing can match the intensity of an actual NBA game. This will presumably be his second, with Brooklyn expected to play a major part in the NBA's opening night lineup as well.

In it, he'll face the NBA player that most closely matches his playing style. Jayson Tatum isn't on Durant's level yet, but he flashed MVP potential as a tough shotmaker last season. With Gordon Hayward gone and Kemba Walkerbattling an injury, this is going to be Tatum's team from the start. That could create one of the best scorer's duels of the season.


3. Denver Nuggets vs. Los Angeles Clippers
The rivalry between Irving and Boston fans might be off, but the bad blood between the Clippers and Nuggets and is very much on. The Clippers are still nursing the wounds of their blown 3-1 lead, and reserve forward JaMychal Green seemingly threw salt in them by signing with the Nuggets and seemingly slighting the Clippers by praising Denver's heart and fighting spirit.

The Clippers believe they've cracked the Nikola Jokic code by signing Serge Ibaka. The Nuggets lost Jerami Grant and Mason Plumlee, two important elements of their upset. On paper, that would make the Clippers the favorites in this game. But, well, if you think that means you don't have to watch it, you clearly don't remember what happened the last time the Clippers were favorites against the Nuggets.

4. Miami Heat vs. New Orleans Pelicans
The unstoppable force meets the immovable object. In one corner stands Zion Williamson, perhaps the most efficient rookie scorer in NBA history, a 280-pound pogo stick that can finish at the basket against anyone. In the other corner stands Bam Adebayo, a Defensive Player of the Year candidate and one of the breakout stars of the bubble. The appeal is obvious. If Williamson's push to become the face of the NBA is going to gain any ground this season, beating the defending Eastern Conference champions and their star defender on their home floor is probably the right place to start.



The downside here is two-fold. We all remember what happened last year when the league put the Pelicans on national TV at every opportunity only to watch Williamson miss most of those games with various injuries. Given his track record, we won't know for certain whether or not he is playing until the game is about to tip-off. If he sits? This is a dud. Even if he plays, there isn't exactly a rivalry between these two teams. They don't even play in the same conference. That's hardly a prerequisite for Christmas Day basketball, but a little narrative juice never hurt.

5. Milwaukee Bucks vs. Golden State Warriors
If Klay Thompson were healthy? We'd have a possible Finals preview on our hands. Instead, we probably have a mismatch. We saw an admittedly thinner version of the Warriors try their hand at Klay-less basketball last season. It didn't go particularly well, as the Warriors were outscored by 47 points in the first four games of the season before Stephen Curry went down with an injury. This year's squad will be better, but good enough to hang with the two-time defending regular-season champions on their home court? Probably not.

But hey, It's not every day that you get to see two two-time MVPs share the floor. The bromance between Curry and Giannis Antetokounmpo will surely create some social media buzz before and after the game as well. The No. 2 overall pick, James Wiseman, will likely be playing in his second NBA game, and Jrue Holiday will similarly be playing what is likely his second game as a Milwaukee Buck. There are storylines to soak in here even if the Bucks run away with the game early on.
 


Bron always bigging up light skin players publicly tryna win over "Team Light Skin". :lol:

I keep telling yall, when he's done he will open up about colorism and the preference for light skin players amongst Black NBA fans and how that affected his career. :yes:
 


Bron always bigging up light skin players publicly tryna win over "Team Light Skin". :lol:

I keep telling yall, when he's done he will open up about colorism and the preference for light skin players amongst Black NBA fans and how that affected his career. :yes:


boy u a fucking clown :lol: :lol:
 
NBA Targeting March 25th Trade Deadline
DEC 3, 2020 3:12 PM
The NBA is targeting a March 25th date for the 20-21 trade deadline.
The date is pending approval from the Board of Governors.
The All-Star break is scheduled for March 5th through March 10th. The second half of the regular season will take place between March 11th and May 16th. The play-in tournament will take place from May 18th until May 21st with the playoffs running from May 22nd through July 22nd.
 

Rockets’ James Harden misses first day of training camp after mask-less celebrations with Lil Baby: report
Coach said Harden was not at his scheduled workout Sunday because of NBA’s safety protocols

By Paulina Dedaj | Fox News

Fox News Flash top headlines for December 7
Fox News Flash top headlines are here. Check out what's clicking on Foxnews.com.
Houston Rockets star James Harden was absent from the team’s first day of training camp on Sunday after posting pictures over the weekend at rapper Lil Baby’s birthday party with no face mask on, reports say.

Head coach Stephen Silas said Harden was not at his scheduled individual workout on Sunday evening because of the NBA’s COVID-19 safety protocols, which required him to quarantine at home this past week, ESPN reported.
ROCKETS’ JAMES HARDEN TURNED DOWN RECORD-SETTING DEAL OVER OWNER TILMAN FERTITTA’S TRUMP SUPPORT: REPORT
“I’m not exactly sure what hoops he has to jump through in order to practice with the team," Silas said. "I would just say I want him here, and I want him to be a big part of what we're doing.”
Over the weekend, Harden celebrated with Lil Baby in Atlanta for his 26th birthday. The basketball star gifted him a new Richard Mille watch and a Prada bag filled with actual honey buns and a stack of $100,000 cash.



A Prada bag ’cause he proud of me full of honey buns with a honey bun, you know what I’m saying?” Lil Baby was heard saying in a video posted to social media. But it wasn’t the generous gift that made headlines.

NBA: TEAMS THAT BREAK VIRUS PROTOCOLS MAY LOSE GAMES, PICKS

No one in the video was wearing face masks or social distancing. Harden reportedly posted several pictures to his own social media showing the same.






It’s not immediately clear when Harden will be able to return for practice but Silas is looking forward to working with him in his first year with the Rockets.

“I'm excited to coach him and have him be a part of what we just had out there with a good practice, with a bunch of guys who are working hard on both ends of the floor and had a good vibe about them,” he said, via ESPN.

CLICK HERE TO GET MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM

Reports from last month indicated that Harden, who has two years left on his contract, had wanted out of Houston. When asked about his commitment to the team, Silas said that he would leave that question for Harden to answer himself.

"We're looking forward to having him here and getting to his individual workout. That's the word I heard from the pipeline. Once he gets here, obviously the best communication for me would be face-to-face communication – not text, not phone, not anything else."
 
All this shit Harden doing is still more tolerable than having a melanated Black American wife and family while being an NBA superstar.

Nothing is worse than 2 dark skinned black people procreating more dark skinned blacks. That makes you a villain because its such a revolutionary act against WS. Same for Zion, if he doesnt want to be the "new LeBron" this decade, he better find him a white girl to have some kids by, or its a wrap. The media already starting to turn on him.

As long as Harden dont start no Black fam anytime soon, he'll be good. He will take less criticism than the Lakers and if he joins the Nets, a lot of white people and Team Light Skin will treat him as a potential savior.
 
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