Showing posts with label Houston Rockets. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Houston Rockets. Show all posts

Monday, March 11, 2013

NBA News 2013: Learning From The Kings' Thomas Robinson Mistake

DeMarcus Cousins at the Drew League/Goodman Le...
DeMarcus Cousins at the Drew League/Goodman League basketball game in August 2011 in Washington, DC. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Coming into this year’s draft, Thomas Robinson was considered one of the most “NBA ready” prospects available. An athletic 6’9 240 forward coming off an All-American season at Kansas, he had a defensive position (the 4) and a skill (rebounding) that would immediately translate to the next level. But while Robinson’s collegiate statistics were eye-popping, the holes in his game meant he would only be effective in a limited number of roles in the NBA, at least initially. The Sacramento Kings passed on several players with substantially higher upsides to make the “win now” selection in Robinson; eight months later, they dealt him to the Rockets for pennies on the dollar.

In a draft where Damian Lillard went No. 6 and Andre Drummond went No. 9, you would like to get a little more out of the No. 5 pick than Patrick Patterson, Toney Douglas and Cole Aldrich. Patterson has some value as an undersized stretch 4, but he’s a role player in his third season set to become much more expensive in the near future. With more talented players behind him in Houston, the Rockets would have been looking to give him away this summer. And while Robinson will be a more useful player in Kevin McHale’s uptempo system, he will probably never be a frontline starter. When the Kings selected him, they were thinking short when they should have been thinking long.

From an on-court perspective, Robinson didn’t make much sense for the Kings. DeMarcus Cousins is a low-post center who can’t protect the rim, so his ideal frontcourt partner is a shot-blocking power forward who can space the floor from the three-point line. It would be hard to find a worse fit than Robinson, an undersized big man without a consistent perimeter shot. Instead of making each other better, they made each other worse: they couldn’t co-exist defensively or get out of the other’s way on offense. As a result, with Cousins averaging 31 minutes a night, Robinson slowly slipped out of the rotation.

He will have a better chance to showcase his game with the Rockets. Rather than running an offense built around a post scorer, the Rockets spread the floor and attack with a barrage of pick-and-rolls. Robinson’s speed and finishing ability make him an excellent roll man and the four-out offense creates a lot of room for him to attack the basket. Not only is he now on the receiving end of James Harden’s passes, their breakneck pace (No. 1 in the NBA) gives him more chances in the open court. He’s more effective in transition, where he can use his speed and athleticism to his advantage, than in the halfcourt, where his lack of skill can be easily exploited.

All that said, Houston isn’t a perfect fit for him either. Since he can’t consistently knock down a perimeter jumper, it’s hard to play him and Omer Asik at the same time. The Rockets' offense is based around spacing the floor, and neither Robinson nor Asik can make a defense pay for leaving them open 15 feet from the rim. Asik is the only thing preventing their defense from collapsing in on itself like a neutron star, meaning Robinson will have to learn to shoot to play 30+ minutes a night with Houston. With the Kings, he had a 34% effective field goal percentage outside of 10 feet. Right now, he is best used as a small-ball 5, which means that if another team has a quality 6’10+ post scorer who can punish his lack of size down low, it’s going to be hard to find him minutes.

Developing an outside shot will be crucial for Robinson’s career. Since he’s unlikely to ever develop into an elite shot-creator, either with his back to the basket or off the bounce, a consistent jumper is the only way he can play as a power forward. When he plays as a 4, he can use his lateral quickness to defend in space on the perimeter; when he plays as a 5, he has to be an interior defensive presence and a rim protector. In college, he only averaged 0.87 blocks a game and outsourced defensive responsibility to Jeff Withey. That’s not going to work in the NBA, particularly when his skill-set demands a more offensive-minded big man next to him. He’ll have a long pro career regardless, but he’ll be a third big man if he doesn’t become more skilled offensively.

Robinson may have been more NBA ready than many of his peers, but that really isn’t saying all that much. For 99 percent of rookies, the first year in the league is mostly about survival. Not only have they just received a life-changing amount of money, but they have to become accustomed to the grind of an 82-game schedule. Players from BCS conferences might see an NBA-caliber player at their position once or twice a month; in the NBA, they match-up with multiple NBA-caliber players every single night. Their heads are spinning so fast that it seems unfair to even ask them to learn the complicated help-side defensive principles they never had to bother with in college.

If a team is depending on a rookie to be a foundation piece, they aren’t going to be very good. If they need a first-year player to be a complementary piece, he won’t be the one who pushes them over the top. There are situations where a rookie can fill a minor role on an elite team, like when the Heat drafted Norris Cole to match-up with smaller second-unit PG’s in 2011. Even if there was a higher-upside player on the board, Miami made the correct decision in taking a guy who gave them minutes in the NBA Finals as a rookie. However, for the most, there’s really no reason to draft a player based on what they are going to do in their first year.

When a player reaches the end of their rookie contract, what they’ll be able to do as they enter the prime of their careers is far more important than what they’ve done at the beginning. Coming out of UCLA in 2009, Darren Collison and Jrue Holiday both slipped in the draft. Holiday fell to No. 17 because he was many years away from his ceiling; Collison fell to No. 21 because there were questions about how high his ceiling was. Four years later, Holiday is an All-Star and Collison is falling out of favor with his third different team. Does it matter if Collison was a substantially better player in their rookie season?

Before this year’s draft, everyone acted like Andre Drummond was the biggest gamble on the board because of the lack of polish in his game. In reality, the real gamble was passing on a 6’11 270 monster with his type of freakish athleticism. If Sacramento had taken Drummond, he could have formed one of the biggest front-lines in the NBA and perhaps even made Cousins expendable down-the-road. Because the learning curve for rookies is so steep, drafting players is like shopping for a new car: they lose half their value once you take them off the lot. And if you go into the draft expecting that they will all need time to develop, you might as well take someone who can develop into something special when you get the chance.

http://basketball.realgm.com/article/226557/Learning-From-The-Kings-Thomas-Robinson-Mistake

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Tuesday, February 12, 2013

NBA News 2013: James Harden enters break with Rockets hot

English: James Harden, a player for the Oklaho...
English: James Harden, a player for the Oklahoma City Thunder at ARCO Arena. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

James Harden’s head will be on a swivel long before the NBA All-Star Game finally tips off on Sunday.

As the Houston Rockets’ lone All-Star and the unofficial host of the festivities that will take place in his team’s town, he’ll be pulled a few dozen different ways for appearances, interviews, photo-shoots and — last but certainly not least — his job as a coach in the celebrity game on Friday. But considering his young-and-upcoming team is still in need of the sort of talent that will be in ample supply at the event, he’ll leave some time for the sort of recruiting effort that is tailor-made for this annual, star-studded scene.

“I’ll do a little bit of recruiting during the All-Star break, but my main focus is on just trying to get this team focused on every single game, every practice,” Harden, whose team has significant salary cap space that can be used this summer if they don’t do a major deal before the Feb. 21 trade deadline, told USA TODAY Sports on Sunday.

“I can’t worry about who we want to recruit and things like that. … For the most part, we’re trying to make the playoffs.”

http://www.hoopsworld.com/james-harden-enters-break-with-rockets-hot-recruiting/

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Tuesday, January 22, 2013

NBA News 2013: Is Terrence Jones NBA Ready?

English: Patrick Patterson following a game ag...
English: Patrick Patterson following a game against Clarion University (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

The life of a rookie, even a first-round pick like Terrence Jones, can be a humbling and trying experience in today’s NBA. When the Houston Rockets drafted two more forwards this past June to add to the already packed stable of hybrid bigs on their roster, one of those picks – Jones – had to expect a battle to remain on the roster. More than two months into the 2012-13 NBA season, it’s been just that: a struggle to stay on the active roster and off the Rockets’ Developmental League affiliate, the Rio Grande Valley Vipors.

Even with fellow first round pick Royce White AWOL for the majority of the season, Jones has seen his fair share of D-League action over the course of two separate stints in Rio Grande Valley. The good news for both the Rockets, and Jones for that matter, is that the 21-year old rookie out of Kentucky is treating it like a learning experience and taking it all in stride.

“It’s been real beneficial,” Jones told HOOPSWORLD. “Just being able to get up and down, to get more experience and a chance to just get better has been great.”

Over the course of 11 games this season with the Rockets, Jones averaged just 3.1 points and 1.6 rebounds in limited minutes while looking every bit like a rookie in need of some polish. As a result, Houston has given Jones a direct message for his stints with the Vipors: make good use of increased playing time and develop your skills.

“Rebounding, scoring, defending and everything they want me to do when I get back [to the NBA],” Jones said of the Rockets’ expectations.

So far, Jones has done a solid job of trying to get better in each of those areas. In nine contests with the Vipors, Jones is averaging a double-double with 19.2 points and 11 boards per contest and his team was invited to the D-League Showcase in Reno, Nevada this past week.

“It’s very similar [to college],” Jones said. “Guys are going real hard, still fighting trying to get [to the NBA] and I see a lot of the same guys that I saw in college so there’s a lot of talented guys out there.”

In just a few weeks worth of action, Jones has established himself as one of the better players in the D-League, ranking among the league leaders in both rebounds per game and total double-doubles. Even though he’s not matching up against cream of the crop, NBA-level talent on a nightly basis in the D-League, it’s clear that Jones is taking the initiative to try to get better and make his way back to Houston.

“Yeah,” Jones told HOOPSWORLD as to whether or not he believes he can be an asset for the Rockets this season. “I know we’ve been doing very well right now, winning, so just whatever I can do to help”

Playing under Rockets’ head coach, and former Boston Celtics championship power forward, Kevin McHale has also benefitted the 6-foot-9, 250 pound Jones. Jones says McHale’s tutelage has played an important role early on in his development as an NBA four.

“It’s been good,” Jones said of learning from McHale. “Just to be able to get advice from a guy with experience, who knows the game from hands on experience and it’s just good to be able to have him as my coach.”

Despite a recent three-game skid, the Rockets have exceeded expectations this season featuring a 21-17 record – good for eighth in the brutally talented Western Conference. Second-year player Marcus Morris and third-year man Patrick Patterson have received the majority of run on the Rockets at the four positions, but it may not be wise to count Jones out just yet. As he showed last March in helping the Kentucky Wildcats to win a National Championship – and subsequently being drafted with the 18th overall pick – Jones has all the tools to succeed in the NBA.

The key will be how Jones responds to his stints in the D-League once he finds his way back onto the Rockets NBA roster. So far, Jones has shown that he’s willing to put in the time to be a better player but time will only tell if that will translate on an NBA floor.

http://www.hoopsworld.com/is-terrence-jones-nba-ready/

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Monday, October 29, 2012

NBA News 2012: Harden trade shows it’s all about the money

James Harden, Serge Ibaka, Victor Claver, and ...
James Harden, Serge Ibaka, Victor Claver, and Pau Gasol (Photo credit: ctsnow)

In professional sports, it’s often about the money. And at the end of the day, the Oklahoma City Thunder didn’t have the money for guard James Harden.

So late Saturday, the Thunder, who lost to the Miami Heat in five games in last season’s NBA Finals, traded Harden to the Houston Rockets for guards Kevin Martin and Jeremy Lamb, two first-round picks and second-round pick. The Rockets received center Cole Aldrich, guard Daequan Cook and forward Lazar Hayward in the deal.

Harden, the 2011-12 sixth man of the year and a London Olympics gold medalist with Team USA, and the Thunder had been involved in talks about an extension, but the two sides could not find common ground. Instead of risk losing Harden as a restricted free agent after the 2012-13 season, the Thunder decided to make sure they got something in return.

“While I never like having to send out quality players like Kevin Martin and Jeremy Lamb, this trade gives us a chance to make an immediate impact on the future of our franchise moving forward,” Rockets owner Leslie Alexander said in a statement. “James Harden was part of Team USA’s gold medal team at the London Olympics and is one of the most skilled shooting guards in the NBA. James, along with the mix of young players we already have in place such as (guard) Jeremy Lin, (forward) Chandler Parsons and (center) Omer Asik give us a very solid group of young, talented players who will form the core of our team.”

The deal cuts to the heart of the plight of small- and mid-market teams such as the Thunder. Can they return all of their top players? Are they willing to have a payroll that surpasses the luxury tax and are they willing to pay the tax when they go over? The Thunder have more than $200 million tied up in salary for forward Kevin Durant, guard Russell Westbrook and forward Serge Ibaka through 2016-17.

Just before midnight ET, Durant tweeted, “Wow.”

http://www.hoopsworld.com/james-harden-trade-by-thunder-shows-its-all-about-the-money/

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Sunday, October 28, 2012

NBA News 2012: Oklahoma City Thunder trade should benefit Lakers

English: James Harden, a player for the Oklaho...
English: James Harden, a player for the Oklahoma City Thunder at ARCO Arena. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

The Oklahoma City Thunder and Houston Rockets pulled off a late offseason trade on Saturday that sent James Harden, Cole Aldrich, Daequan Cook and Lazar Hayward to the Houston Rockets for Kevin Martin, Jeremy Lamb and draft considerations.

Harden was a major factor in knocking the Lakers out of the postseason last May.

The move for the Thunder was more about economics than basketball.  The new collective-bargaining agreement includes increasingly punitive luxury taxes and Oklahoma City is already heavily invested in Kevin Durant, Russell Westbrook and Serge Ibaka.

The move will probably benefit the Lakers should the two meet again in the postseason.

Harden is a capable shooter and defender. In the playoffs against the Lakers, he was able to drive into the paint to either score or draw a foul.  Certainly the Lakers will have their hands full with Durant and Westbrook in the future, but Harden seemed to be the difference-maker in the series.

On paper, the Lakers have improved over last year, with the additions of Steve Nash, Dwight Howard, Jodie Meeks and Antawn Jamison.  Of course, the Lakers have to prove they can win even a single game after dropping all eight in the preseason.

Injuries have slowed the team's development, but the Lakers will round into form as they get healthy and grow more comfortable in Coach Mike Brown's offense.

The Thunder are still a major threat.  Martin can also shoot and get to the line, but he's not close to Harden as a defender or playmaker. Lamb's game is actually similar to Martin's, although he's younger and more athletic.

In the short term, it would appear the Thunder have taken a step backward.  If the Lakers can come together and stay healthy, the road through the Western Conference might have gotten slightly easier.


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Friday, October 5, 2012

NBA News 2012: Rockets working with Royce White

Houston Rockets logo
Houston Rockets logo (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Houston Rockets first-round draft pick Royce White is a no-show at training camp and said he and the team are working on a plan to address his fear of flying.

The 6-foot-8 White was the 16th overall pick after one season at Iowa State. White suffers from anxiety and fear of flying. He says on Twitter that he's working with the team on an "innovative plan" to balance treatment with the NBA schedule.

"Anxiety isn't keeping me from camp," White wrote, "taking a Proactive approach to my mental illness instead of reactive is.(hash)StayingAheadOfMyDisorder."

White said he has an agreement with the team to take a bus to select games. KRIV-TV reported that the agreement is pending league approval. The Rockets would not comment beyond a statement that said they "are committed to Royce's long term success and we will continue to support him now and going forward."

White said he offered to buy the bus himself.

"I will not travel every game via bus," he wrote on Twitter. "It was decided that the less flying the less stress."

The Rockets opened training camp this week in McAllen, near the Texas-Mexico border, the home of their development league affiliate.

White averaged 13.4 points, 9.3 rebounds and five assists at Iowa State last season. He initially enrolled at Minnesota, then left the program last year and eventually transferred after pleading guilty to theft and disorderly conduct in an incident at the Mall of America.

He's been open about his anxiety throughout his career and bluntly broke it down for reporters at his introductory press conference in Houston in June.

"Here's how it goes," White said. "I'm scared (going) to the airport, I'm scared going up, I'm uncomfortable in the air and I feel like a million bucks when we hit the runway."

White was also absent from the Rockets' media day Monday. The team made the short flight to McAllen later that day, and White started tweeting about his discussions with the team Wednesday night.

"There is nothing but very positive strides being taken right now between I and the Houston Rockets to support health," he wrote. "This innovative plan is being well thought out by both parties, when it's done I think an executable plan will be there...A Healthy plan."

White added that "my health now is great, the best its ever been." He said "the long term is the goal here."


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Thursday, October 4, 2012

NBA News 2012: Royce White Skips Start of Training Camp


The Rockets announced that rookie forward Royce White is not with the club in McAllen for training camp because of “personal matters.”

White also did not attend the club’s media day on Monday for the same reasons.

He told FOX 26 Sports the personal matters are related to the fact that he suffers from anxiety issues.

“We are trying to figure out a plan for me to be healthy and successful long-term,” White said. “It’s not really anything that’s going on right now. It’s more of trying to take a pro-active approach and trying to put together a solid plan.

“It is definitely linked with my anxiety sure, but it’s not so much as far as my anxiety now. Basically what happened was my doctor, we discussed it, and it was decided the way the plan was now just wasn’t logistically healthy.”

http://www.hoopsworld.com/royce-white-skips-start-of-training-camp/

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Tuesday, July 24, 2012

NBA News 2012: Darko Milicic interests Bulls

next life of chicago bullsnext life of chicago bulls (Photo credit: Lady Ema)
Cornstein confirmed the Bulls' interest to ESPNChicago, indicating that he was trying to explore different landing spots for his client. Milicic was amnestied by the Minnesota Timberwolves last week.

The timing of the Bulls' interest is curious given they are going to have to decide on Omer Asik's future in the coming days. Asik agreed to a three-year offer sheet with the Houston Rockets earlier this month and plans to sign it later this week.

The Houston Chronicle reported Wednesday that the Rockets have waived Jon Leuer and Jerome Jordan, clearing the way for Asik to sign the offer sheet. Once it becomes official, the Bulls will have three days to decide to match.

If the Bulls match the Asik offer sheet, they would be on the hook for an almost $15 million cap hit in the final year of the deal. That would severely limit them in a summer in which Luol Deng comes off the books and Carlos Boozer figures to be amnestied.

Bulls officials have not made any public statement regarding Asik, continually saying they wouldn't until they saw the official offer sheet. It appears they are about to be on the clock. If they choose not to match, Millicic will be an option.

The No. 2 pick of the 2003 NBA draft by the Detroit Pistons, Milicic has averaged 6.0 points, 4.2 rebounds, and 1.3 blocks over nine seasons with five teams.


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Thursday, July 19, 2012

NBA News 2012: Knicks decline to match Fields

Landry Fields of the New York Knicks during an...Landry Fields of the New York Knicks during an open practice session at the Madison Square Garden in October 2010. {| class="messagebox" style="margin: 0.5em auto; width: 100%; background-color: #f8f8f8; border: 2px solid #e0e0e0; padding: 5px; direction: ltr;" |align="center"| link=|25px → link=|25px | : File:Landry Fields laughing.jpg. |align="center"| 100x100px|original file |colspan="3"| |} Category:Extracted images (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
The New York Knicks decided Saturday night not to match the Toronto Raptor’s offer sheet to restricted free agent guard Landry Fields.

The Raptors signed Fields, 24, to a three-year contract worth nearly $20 million Fields on Wednesday. The Knicks had until Saturday to match it.

The 2010 second-round draft pick from Stanford averaged 8.8 points and 2.6 assists last season.

The final year of his new deal reportedly includes a sharp pay increase, similar to what the Houston Rockets offered restricted free agent Omer Asik, who played with the Chicago Bulls.

The Knicks reportedly also may not match the offer sheet given to popular point guard Jeremy Lin by the Houston Rockets.


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Tuesday, July 17, 2012

NBA News 2012: Suns win rights to Scola

Luis ScolaLuis Scola (Photo credit: jeffbalke)
The Phoenix Suns were awarded the rights to Luis Scola on Sunday by submitting the highest bid for the free agent forward, according to multiple reports.

Scola was waived by the Rockets on Friday via the amnesty provision, and several teams, including Dallas and Cleveland, submitted bids for Scola, according to NBA.com.

The Suns had to submit a bid of at least $3.3 million per year for Scola, and commit $10 million over three years.

Scola, 32, averaged 15.5 points and 6.5 rebounds with Houston last season.

To make room, the Suns waived Josh Childress using the amnesty provision, the Arizona Republic reported.


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Wednesday, June 27, 2012

NBA News 2012: Rockets Trade Dalembert To Bucks

Houston Rockets logoHouston Rockets logo (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
The Rockets have moved up in the draft and now own the No. 12, 16 and 18 picks.

Houston has swapped the 14th pick for the 12th pick with the Bucks while also sending Samuel Dalembert to Milwaukee. The Rockets will receive Jon Leuer, Jon Brockman and Shaun Livingston in addition to the No. 12 pick.

The Rockets could save $4.7 million from their cap if Livingston and Leuer are waived, but a source contends they plan to keep both players.


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Thursday, September 23, 2010

NBA News 2010: LA Lakers 2010-2011 Preview

From left to right, Lamar Odom, Derek Fisher, ...Image via Wikipedia
Top Offensive Player: Kobe Bryant

Top Defensive Player: Ron Artest

Top Playmaker: Kobe Bryant

Top Clutch Player: Kobe Bryant

The Unheralded Player: Derek Fisher

Best New Addition: Steve Blake


Strengths

The Lakers have size, depth and star power. They're well coached and have both experience and continuity. LA can play big or play small – fast or slow. The trio of Bynum, Gasol and Odom provides tremendous versatility and rebounding up front.

LA's bench is vastly improved which should mean fewer minutes for the starters and strong legs come playoff time.

Kobe is still Kobe – and that's a problem for the league.


Weaknesses

The Lakers aren't especially young. Other than their rookies and the explosiveness of Brown, LA doesn't have the kind of foot speed and athleticism a team like the Oklahoma City Thunder can boast.

The Thunder were the Lakers toughest foes in the West last year and they're only going to improve.

While Bynum is still young, until he's able to play through a season without a knee injury – the Lakers aren't playing to their potential. Perhaps this is the year for Andrew but given that he's still going through rehabilitation on the knee from offseason surgery – it's certainly not a lock.


The Burning Question

It seems to be the same question every year. Can Bynum hold up physically?

The seven-footer is turning 23 on October 27th, a day after the Lakers open the season against the Houston Rockets.

In 2008, Bynum's knee injury kept him out for the entire postseason - a key factor in LA's loss to the Celtics. In 2009, Andrew made it back for the playoffs but was hampered significantly by the second knee injury.

Last season, Andrew tore his meniscus and while he still wasn't 100%, Bynum was able to play through the pain and give the Lakers a more credible effort.

Once he completes rehabilitation, be it in time for the season opener or even early December - he should have a clean bill of health.

Can he maintain it?


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Thursday, September 16, 2010

NBA News 2010: Rockets to limit Yao Ming's bone stress

Yao Ming playing against the Washington WizardsImage via Wikipedia
Houston Rockets center Yao Ming will not play more than 24 minutes a game next season in an attempt to limit stress on his bones, Rockets vice president and athletic trainer Keith Jones told the Houston Chronicle.

Under the plan, Yao will be strictly limited to 24 minutes, and he will even sit during crucial final-second possessions if he has passed the mark. If Yao plays fewer than 24 minutes one night, he will not be allowed more time in a later game.


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Tuesday, September 7, 2010

NBA News 2010: Who Will Be The Most Surprising Team?

Carl Landry (left) playing with the Houston Ro...Image via Wikipedia
This year, once again, some team will emerge from their apparent wreckage and blossom into a legitimate NBA contender for years to come. In the East, an early favorite could be Indiana, who finally found a real point guard in Darren Collison to pair with Team USA participant Danny Granger on the wing. 

The West has an obvious choice in the Houston Rockets, as Yao Ming returns from a year-long injury hiatus, but for a deeper sleeper, what about the Sacramento Kings?  With Tyreke Evans, last year's Rookie of the Year, paired with the Kings' suddenly beefy frontcourt (Carl Landry, Jason Thompson, Samuel Dalembert and  DeMarcus Cousins), the Kings have real potential for a breakout season, even if they don't make the playoff leap in the always-competitive West.


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