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Allanon
12-09-2008, 07:18 PM
Lakers on pace for 75 wins
Celtics on pace for 75 wins
Cavs on pace for 70 wins

How crazy would it be if 3 teams got 70 wins in 1 season by motivating each other for HCA? Realistically speaking none of the 3 will win 70.

It's a rather impossible feat but What If?

Should make a rather interesting season for fans of these teams or basketball fans in general. Enough commentary, here's the article.

Here's a 70 win tracker to keep pace with the 95-96 72 win Bulls (http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/features/best)

Eastern Conference Insider: Celtics, Cavs enter 70-win talk (http://www.nba.com/2008/news/features/rob_peterson/12/09/120908eastinsider/index.html)

By Rob Peterson, NBA.com
Posted Dec 9 2008 4:02PM

As the NBA season passes the quarter mark, the Boston Celtics and the Cleveland Cavaliers have begun flirting. Not with each other, mind you, but with two historic numbers: 70 wins and a .854 winning percentage (or for you statistical sticklers, .8536).

Based simply on their 20-2 record and a .909 winning percentage, the defending champs are on pace for a blistering 75 wins (74.5 wins, but we rounded up). The Cavaliers, at 17-3 and a .850 winning percentage are on pace for 69.7 wins. Considering we play full games in the NBA and that we rounded up for the Celtics, we'll extend the same courtesy to the Cavs; 70 it is.

Every NBA fan knows only one team has ever reached the magical 70-win plateau: the 1995-96 Chicago Bulls, who tore up the league with a 72-10 record for a .878 winning percentage. While it's too early to definitively say the Celtics or the Cavs (or the 17-2 Lakers) can realistically reach 70 wins, it's never too early to speculate about making history. In his Dec. 5 PER Diem column, ESPN.com stats guru John Hollinger projected the Cavs, not the Celtics or the Lakers, have the best chance of reaching the 70-win plateau. Cleveland general manager Danny Ferry poo-pooed such speculation.

"I don't pay attention to projections," Ferry said. "For this early in the season, the players and coaches have worked hard and have really put together a bunch of good games together. We like our team and we need to focus on trying to find ways to improve."


Ferry's comments come one year to the date Boston coach Doc Rivers made similar comments to the Chicago Sun-Times after his Celtics started last season at 17-2.


''The record's nice and all that, but that's not our goal,'' Rivers told the Chicago Sun-Times on Dec. 9, 2008. ''I don't even know what our record is, but whatever it is, that's not what our goal is. We're just trying to get better and improve.


"You know, we've won games, but we can be a better basketball team. Everybody in our locker room, as long as they have that understanding, we're going to be OK.''


They were more than OK. Boston also started last season at 20-2 and had a 70-win pace after 35 games with a 30-5 record, but they never had a .854 winning percentage at any time after that. They reached 51-12 before losing game No. 13 at home to Utah on March 14.
With 70 gone, the Celtics focused on another number: 17, as in the franchise's 17th title. Three months later, they had it after defeating the Lakers in The Finals.


In the end, that's what matters most: an NBA championship. Through 20 games this season, Ferry believes the Cavs have built a solid foundation on both ends of the floor.
"Our offensive efficiency has been really good," Ferry said. "We have done a great job of moving the ball. Even more important, our players have established a strong defensive identity early in the season."


The stats bear out Ferry's comment. NBA.com's John Schuhmann notes in his latest Power Rankings (http://www.nba.com/powerrankings), in which the Celtics and the Cavs are one-two, Cleveland has the league's best offense (116.0 points per 100 possessions) and the second-best defense (101.1 points per 100 possessions).


Still, fast starts don't guarantee successful finishes. In addition to last season's Celtics, two other teams in the last three seasons have had a 70-win pace with one-quarter of the season gone: the 2005-06 Pistons and the 2006-07 Mavericks.


Detroit set a sizzling initial pace winning 37 of its first 42 games for a .881 winning percentage. The Pistons, however, would go 12-7 in their next 19 games. The Pistons' quest for 70 ended when they were defeated by the Knicks on March 17, 2006 for their 13th loss of the season.
In 2007, the Mavericks made it all the way to 62-12 before their road to 70 wins stopped with a loss to Denver on April 6, 2007.


The Pistons finished 64-16 but fell to LeBron James' Cavs in six games in the Eastern Conference Finals. The Mavs didn't even make it that far in the postseason. After posting the sixth-best regular season record in history at 67-15, the top-seeded Mavs fell to the Golden State Warriors in the First Round in six games.


As you can see, the road to 70 wins is littered with the bones of some quality NBA squads. Still, it's extremely rare to see three teams play at such an exalted level even for the first quarter of the season. And with the Celtics and the Cavs pushing each other for the top seed in the East, NBA fans -- and opponents -- could continue to see these two teams pursue excellence while they pursue each other.


"Like every team we will have our challenges but the team has really started to build good habits as a group," Ferry said. "They have had really good focused practices and players have had a one-game-at-a-time mindset."


One game at a time? Yep, but they're still a long way from 70.

Ghazi
12-09-2008, 07:19 PM
Not gonna happen.

Armando
12-09-2008, 07:21 PM
Nope the schedule has alot to with it. The Cavs and Celtics have yet to go on a West coast trip I believe. Also the Lakers have yet to play the East's elite on the road. Washington does not count.

YellowFever
12-09-2008, 07:23 PM
A.....

Snowball.....

Has......

A.......

Better..........

Chance...........

In..........

Hell.........

lurker
12-09-2008, 07:24 PM
The Hawks will end the season 73-9. Book it.

JamStone
12-09-2008, 07:25 PM
No.

Reck
12-09-2008, 07:30 PM
One team is unlikely to win 70 games. Now you say 3? NO!

Trainwreck2100
12-09-2008, 07:30 PM
The Spurs are gonna run the table the rest of the year and they too will end with 70+

sonic21
12-09-2008, 07:38 PM
no way

Ghazi
12-09-2008, 07:40 PM
Mavs 74-8

Brazil
12-09-2008, 07:56 PM
If one team can make 70 it will be an eastern one, not going to happen for the west: too dense conference, long trips, jet lags, tough back to backs...

Lakers_55
12-09-2008, 08:07 PM
bump this post in February if the chance is still there. I say 60 wins, possible for all 3. 70, no way!

manufor3
12-09-2008, 08:52 PM
A.....

Snowball.....

Has......

A.......

Better..........

Chance...........

In..........

Hell.........

sook
12-09-2008, 09:00 PM
bs thread i didn't expect this from you Allanon :(

xtremesteven33
12-09-2008, 09:04 PM
cmon allanon, ur better than that!! haha

Anti.Hero
12-09-2008, 09:37 PM
There can be only one.



Regular season lulz.

hater
12-09-2008, 09:37 PM
u do realize they have to play each other??? not possible.

Brazil
12-09-2008, 09:44 PM
bump this post in February if the chance is still there. I say 60 wins, possible for all 3. 70, no way!

+1

Allanon
12-09-2008, 09:49 PM
Bitches.

I did the disclaimer in the first post and it's more likely nobody even hits 70.

I don't think it's gonna happen but what if :D

Anti.Hero
12-09-2008, 09:51 PM
MJ would come out of retirement, join the Spurs, and go 80-2.