If only.
LA Times says it, it must be true . . .
http://www.latimes.com/sports/la-sp-...#axzz2fCC8DQA3
BEN BOLCH / ON THE NBA
As Miami Heat goes for No. 3, here are six teams that stand in the way
Miami may be the odds-on favorite to win its third NBA championship in a row in June, but The Times' Ben Bolch lists three teams in each conference that could stop the Big Three in their quest.
By Ben Bolch
September 16, 2013, 5:32 p.m.
Three-peat is so 1988.
The term purportedly coined by Byron Scott and definitively trademarked by Pat Riley amid the Lakers' failed bid for a third consecutive NBA le in the late '80s should be discarded like the faded T-shirts bearing the slogan that were once standard attire inside the Great Western Forum.
It's time for a new Rileyism, particularly with the current team president of the Miami Heat chasing another championship to go with the ones his team won in 2012 and '13.
In the spirit of the quest, here's a trio of alternatives for the Heat this season:
Big Three for Three. An homage to the collective success of Heat stars LeBron James, Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh since joining forces in 2010.
Three Down, Five to Go! A reference to James' infamous tally of how many championships he intended to win in Miami.
Lords of the Rings: The New Trilogy. A sequel to the J.R.R. Tolkien fantasy series, with presumably fewer casualties.
Standing in Miami's way are at least a half-dozen teams that intend to break the spell the Heat has cast over the rest of the NBA.
Oddsmakers at the Las Vegas Hotel & Casino make Miami 2-to-1 favorites to win the NBA championship in June, though it's not going to be as easy as a stroll down Biscayne Boulevard. Nobody has won back-to-back-to-back les since the Lakers in 2000-02 and nobody has been to four consecutive NBA Finals since the Boston Celtics in 1984-87.
"There's a reason these teams don't do it," TNT analyst Steve Kerr said. "Emotionally, it's just exhausting to keep doing it year after year, particularly when you have to deal with everything Miami has to deal with on a daily basis, just the constant critiquing and scrutiny on the team, and then you factor in the injuries with Wade and Bosh and their health. I don't think Miami will get out of the East this year."
Kerr is picking the Bulls to unseat the Heat. Here's a look at the top three threats to Miami from each conference:
Western Conference
1. San Antonio. The Spurs' biggest challenge may be forgetting the final 28.2 seconds of regulation from their Game 6 collapse in the Finals in Miami. There's also the ticktock of their aging core, though Tim Duncan is coming off his finest season in years and Kawhi Leonard, only 22, has supplanted Manu Ginobili as the team's third-best player.
Coach Gregg Popovich also manages the fatigue factor better than anyone, even if it means writing a six-figure check payable to "The NBA" for sending his stars home early from a trip.
"At some time Duncan is not going to be able to do what he's incredibly done, particularly the last year," said Jeff Van Gundy, an analyst for ABC and ESPN. "But I'll wait to see it go downhill before I predict it's going downhill."
2. Oklahoma City. Kevin Durant and Russell Westbrook may be the first 20-somethings to experience empty nest syndrome.
A year ago, their team unloaded budding superstar James Harden in a budget-conscious move. This summer it failed to retain his replacement, Kevin Martin, because of similar financial constraints, giving the promising but unproven Reggie Jackson and Jeremy Lamb a shot.
We'd hate to hear about the five-year plan. Fortunately, Durant and Westbrook are enough to beat most teams.
3. Clippers. The new coach, Doc Rivers, is among the best in the league. The new cast of sharpshooters should make the offense even more dynamic. But the old concerns about the development of Blake Griffin and DeAndre Jordan just won't go away.
"Obviously, they're at much different levels in their play," Kerr said of the big men, "but the further improvement of each one is critical. Griffin took a step forward last year and I think he has to take another step this year offensively. They need to be able to go to him in a tight game where there's no easy baskets and he needs to be that guy. He's not quite there yet.
"Jordan needs to anchor the defense and be more consistent."
Eastern Conference
1. Indiana. Rather than take offense at the notion that they needed more offense, the Pacers did something about it. They signed a more capable backup point guard in C.J. Watson, a proven scorer in Luis Scola and a prolific three-point shooter in Chris Copeland.
The biggest boost to a Pacers offense that averaged 94.7 points per game last season 23rd in the league isn't a newcomer. The return of Danny Granger from a knee injury that kept him out for all but five games last season should give Indiana scoring punch at every position.
Plus there's Paul George, the league's reigning most improved player who is on the verge of helping the Pacers break through to the Finals.
2. Chicago. Derrick Rose has been sidelined for so long now that his return invites the skepticism of a Sasquatch sighting; you'll believe it when you see it.
The hope is that an able-bodied Rose and still-improving mainstays Luol Deng and Joakim Noah give Coach Tom Thibodeau some traction after last season's stuck-in-the-mud feel.
"I just feel like it's all sort of teed up for Chicago with Rose coming back, guys like Noah and [Taj] Gibson entering their prime," Kerr said. "I think Chicago will have something special this year."
3. Brooklyn. The starting lineup of Deron Williams, Joe Johnson, Brook Lopez, Kevin Garnett and Paul Pierce has accounted for 35 All-Star game appearances.
Van Gundy dismissed concerns about the zero games the Nets have played together under rookie Coach Jason Kidd.
"When Garnett and Ray Allen came to the Celtics that first year," Van Gundy said, "they won it and they had never played together. I think people make too much of people not playing together. Smart players playing together, it doesn't take any time or very little time."
And the NBA champion is
San Antonio.
The Pacers finally zoom past the Heat in the playoffs before being totaled by the more savvy Spurs. Ginobili and Leonard make their free throws in the final minute this time and Duncan gets to call every digit on one hand a ring finger.
Three-peat is forgotten. Just as it should be.
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We are doomed. But this is correct:
"1. San Antonio. The Spurs' biggest challenge may be forgetting the final 28.2 seconds of regulation from their Game 6 collapse in the Finals in Miami. There's also the ticktock of their aging core, though Tim Duncan is coming off his finest season in years and Kawhi Leonard, only 22, has supplanted Manu Ginobili as the team's third-best player."
Who cares!!!
You want a list?
Also, you forgot your ? .![]()
You are pathetic.
Troll queen is back, I see.
I find it funny that non-fans of the Spurs can see it but the homers can't. That's definitely pathetic.
Wow, great find, Russ.
This is what he meant to say if he were being honest.
Last edited by xmas1997; 09-17-2013 at 07:39 PM.
You are just a racist hater. You hate everyone that comes from south of your Texan border. Mike Levin would be proud of your extreme racism.
I don't think we will win this year. I was one of the biggest supporters of the Spurs being huge contenders for winning the championship before EACH of the last three seasons, including calling them being a major threat coming off the 50 win season when everyone was jumping ship.
However, now things are different. Duncan just had a miracle year. . .it's probably not going to happen again. Why? He was jacked up for that season, he wanted to win another le. He got there and the rest of the team blew it. He's probably spent half the summer in depression and will be less up for yet another long trudge back to the postseason, along with another grueling, emotionally exhausting run only to have his fate be in other people's hands again.
Then we have Parker. . .will he be healthy?
Then there's Ginobili, who has drastically declined to the point where I consider him to be a slightly more skilled Gary Neal. And by that I mean hey sometimes he has a really good game, once every ten games or so. And sandwiched around that are 4-5 ty games and 4-5 average ones.
We do have Diaw still, but will he stop eating like a hippopotamus?
How much will Leonard impove this time? His improvement first has to negate Ginobili's rapid decline before it can start adding anything to the team.
We don't even have a backup PG that most teams in the league would even have on their roster.
Splitter is a ghost in the playoffs.
etc.
We're gonna be worse this year than last year. Only way we win this year is if the Heat get knocked out first or someone significant on that team isn't healthy like Wade or Bosh.
I hate it when the "supposed"experts start picking the Spurs, because that is usually when they don't win it all.
LA times jinxing the spurs?
You are absolutely right on. Tim is a pro but a guy can only take so much... Last year was a perfect storm. Everything went our way until the final 26 seconds of Game Six...
Perhaps Belli will surprise us and Manu won't be such a negative with reduced playing time as a result...
We're going to be BETTER than last year, and we're coming home with the hardware, but continue to hide under your bed.
LA Times spitting the truth, with the Lakers not in the mix.
We will take that bet.
Duncan is getting better each year.
Parker is in his prime.
Leonard is 22 (and may not be on the decline just yet).
Can Ginobili possibly be worse than June '13?
The up-and-coming Spurs are poised.
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Read the "Duncan's summer workout" thread. Dude is shadowboxing and has been training all summer. He is pissed and could easily have a similarly spectacular season what with all the workouts and focus this offseason. Green, Leonard, Diaw, Cojo, Baynes and Splitter could all step up to varying degrees. Plus we upgraded the two weakest spots on the roster with Belli coming in for Neal and Pend switching out Blair's weakened efforts.
Manu skipped National team play for ARG and has been working out in South America with a Spurs trainer for the last month.
This is a team that had all but stolen a le from the nike-fed super group last June, it was the Spurs' to lose. And now they upgraded the weakest spots on the roster, fringe roleplayers had another year to acclimate with the system and should make even more impact, and the core is still capable with only Ginobili really looking to revamp how he contributes.
We were #2 last season, and all the parts are coming back. Some might even be stronger. No reason we can't finish #1 this season. Especially if Beasley starts passing the dabs round the Heat locker room.
But I agree, like Van Gundy says, the wheels will eventually have to come off, but until they do, Spurs look pretty strong and capable.
Great post man!
1) It comes down to health, we enter playoffs healthy and we have as good a chance as anyone.
2) Duncan's new playing weight should keep father time away for another year.
3) Kawhi's development.
4) Very underrated and won't be talked about much by media but like Bruno noticed during the prep games for Eurobasket, Diaw is playing with extra aggressiveness and it looks like he wants to translate that to the NBA season as well.
5) First full year with Splitter in starting line up.
6) Change in bench rotation.
7) Finally have a true back up PG to start the season in CJ.
Major jinx attempt by the LA newspaper, tbh.
LA Times = THE TRUTH..............
Nando's continued development should be a huge boost for the Spurs next year. That should push them over the top to a Finals Trophy.
If Pop would have let Nando play in the Finals this year, we wouldn't even be having this conversation. The Spurs would be CHAMPS.
I still think that the Spurs have a great shot at winning it all. The system still works well enough to come within 28 seconds of the trophy. Not giving up on it now.
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