The Golden State Warriors, for the third successive season, are the first team in the NBA to reach the 20-win marker.
They've
also stretched their ridiculous all-time record to 111 games without
losing two regular-season dates in a row, thanks to Sunday night's big
fourth quarter in Minneapolis. (The next-longest such streak is Utah's
95 games in a row without losing two straight from 1997-99.)
So
there was no chance, in other words, that the Warriors' meek showing
Saturday night in Memphis could endanger their status as the top team in
ESPN.com's weekly NBA Power Rankings.
The Cleveland Cavaliers have leapfrogged the Toronto Raptors to regain their rightful spot as the highest-ranked Eastern Conference representative on our ladder, while the New York Knicks
are suddenly right there with the NFL's Giants in their back-page
worthiness by virtue of their unexpected rise to a heady No. 12. The
Warriors, though, were never in doubt for a second successive week at
No. 1 after throttling Chris Paul's LA Clippers in last week's marquee matchup.
The
Clips, by contrast, have sunk to No. 7, passed up by both Houston and
Memphis after the surprising Rockets and Grizzlies went a combined 8-0
last week.
There's plenty more, as always, for you to dig into
within the rest of our 1-to-30 order. Profuse thanks go to ESPN Stats
& Information and the Elias Sports Bureau -- with research ace Micah
Adams running the point -- for providing such helpful background data
to help your tireless Committee (of One) arrange things.
Previous rankings: Week 7 | 6 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 | Training camp
1. Golden State Warriors
2016-17 record: 21-4
Previous ranking: 1
When
they lose, they really l-o-s-e; three of the Warriors' four defeats to
date came by 20 points or more after only two losses total in the
20s over the previous two seasons. Chances always were, however, that
Golden State would have to endure at least one unsightly showing on such
a compacted trip, which comes to an end Tuesday night in New Orleans
after five games in seven days and nearly 6,000 air miles traveled in
that span. The Dubs were spectacular with their ball movement in the
game that mattered most, shredding the Clippers despite the fact that
they didn't even shoot the 3 well that night. So perspective is badly
needed if you're in the mood to make too much about what happened in
Memphis.
2. Cleveland Cavaliers
2016-17 record: 17-5
Previous ranking: 4
It's
good to be the champs. They can lose three in a row to earn a drop to
No. 4 from the heartless (and clueless) Committee (of One), then uncork a
4-0 week in response -- leading off with yet another win over Toronto
-- to get Clevelanders everywhere cackling at the Committee for not
being smart enough to understand that the Cavs were merely bored after
Thanksgiving. It also helps to have that LeBron James
guy, who will have the honor of celebrating his 32nd birthday in 18
days as the only player in league history with more than 27,000 points
and 7,000 assists.
3. San Antonio Spurs
2016-17 record: 19-5
Previous ranking: 3
Tim
Duncan's historic No. 21 will be retired in a postgame ceremony Sunday,
so a teary week for your trusty Committee awaits. We do have a surprise
planned to commemorate the occasion, mind you, but that's as much as we
can say about it for now. Stay tuned. In Kawhi Leonard
news, meanwhile, Duncan's heir apparent -- both in terms of importance
to the franchise and his devotion to spotlight avoidance -- is up to
seven 30-point games this season after San Antonio smoked poor Brooklyn
on Saturday night. Kawhi had only four such games coming into this
season ... all of them coming last season.
4. Toronto Raptors
2016-17 record: 16-7
Previous ranking: 2
Did
we doom the Raptors to a third loss already this season to Cleveland by
bumping them up to No. 2 last week? Blame us if you wish, Torontonians,
but the Raps' strong play at both ends during their recent six-game
winning streak -- as well as the shock to the system of a three-game
Cavs skid -- gave us all the justification we needed. Don't forget that
the Raps have won eight of nine to help the locals get through their
MLS Cup disappointment and are tied with the Warriors for the league lead in offensive efficiency despite playing at a much slower pace. Which ain't easy to do, folks.
5. Houston Rockets
2016-17 record: 17-7
Previous ranking: 6
With
our annual First Trimester awards coming out later this week, we
assumed as recently as Friday night that Mike D'Antoni was a lock to win
Coach of the First Trimester. Turns out he's got a battle on his hands
with Memphis' David Fizdale, thanks to what the Grizzlies keep doing
despite playing without Mike Conley and Chandler Parsons. But D'Antoni might well win it anyway, in a nod to the impact he's had on unleashing the best James Harden we've ever seen. It also doesn't hurt to have Patrick Beverley back, either, as evidenced by Houston's 11-2 record since Beverley's return and the huge impact he's made when Harden needs a breather.
6. Memphis Grizzlies
2016-17 record: 17-8
Previous ranking: 11
Congrats to our old colleague John Hollinger, one of three Memphis front-office executives to receive a contract extension last week
amid the injury-riddled Grizzlies' wholly unexpected 17-8 start. But I
had to chuckle when I saw that the Grizz, before their 21-point pounding
of the Warriors, had won the first five games of their winning streak
by a combined total of 13 points and have been living off their close-game success
so far. Professor Hollinger and I used to have epic arguments at the
proverbial office water cooler about how impressive (or random) the
results of close games really were. Perhaps that tune can still change!
7. LA Clippers
2016-17 record: 17-7
Previous ranking: 5
We're not yet 25 games into the Clippers' schedule, and frankly, we're dizzy: They're
a legit top-tier team on the Cavs/Warriors level! No, wait, they're a
mirage! No, wait, they thrashed the Cavs in Cleveland and thus they're
back! No, wait, we shall never consider them title material again after
the manner in which they lost at home to the Dubs again! The flawlessness of Chris Paul's
20-point, 20-assist, zero-turnover gem against New Orleans can't
camouflage the sheer exasperation these guys inspire in a season where
we really need a true challenger or two to emerge to challenge the
Golden State/Cleveland duopoly.
8. Oklahoma City Thunder
2016-17 record: 15-9
Previous ranking: 8
With 12 triple-doubles in 24 games, Russell Westbrook
is on pace for 41 of them this season, which would tie the
single-season mark established by the one and only Oscar Robertson in
the Big O's historic 1961-62 season, when Robertson played 79 of 80
games and averaged a triple-double. Our trusty research ace/noted
quipster Micah Adams couldn't resist pointing out that Westbrook's
inability to stretch his streak of consecutive triple-doubles beyond
seven by falling short in Sunday night's win over Boston -- combined
with Tim Frazier's
triple-double for the victorious Pelicans in Phoenix -- means that the
rest of the NBA has reclaimed a 14-12 edge over Angry Russ when it comes
to triple-doubles for the season.
9. Utah Jazz
2016-17 record: 15-10
Previous ranking: 9
For all the justified props Gordon Hayward has been getting during Utah's 8-2 surge, don't ignore what Rudy Gobert has been doing since landing that nine-figure contract
on Halloween. Beyond all of his rim protecting, Gobert is leading the
league in field goal percentage (.671), ranks second in screen assists
(5.9 per game per NBA.com/Stats) and is averaging career highs in points
(11.8 PPG) and rebounds (11.6 RPG) as well as blocks (2.8 RPG). Maybe
best of all for the injury-plagued Jazz: Gobert is the only Utah starter
who hasn't missed multiple games due to health woes.
10. Chicago Bulls
2016-17 record: 13-10
Previous ranking: 7
The
Bulls didn't just inflict San Antonio's first road defeat of the season
last Thursday night. The Bulls also prevented the Spurs -- when San
Antonio sat just one win away -- from matching the longest road winning
streak at the start of any one season; Golden State's 14-0 launch last
season established the record. And there's more: Chicago also stopped
the Spurs from becoming the only current NBA franchise to sport an
all-time road record of .500 or better. That's deep. That's also what
we've come to expect from these Bulls, who tend to play up (or down) to
the competition. (San Antonio, for the record, is now 814-816 all-time
in road games, which is pretty crazy when you think about it.)
11. Boston Celtics
2016-17 record: 13-11
Previous ranking: 10
Quite an agonizing week on the scoreboard for the Celtics, who started it by taking a one-point loss at Houston when Al Horford
uncharacteristically missed on an opportunity inside at the buzzer and
ended it with a one-possession loss in Oklahoma City in which they
managed to halt Russell Westbrook's run of triple-doubles but came up
short regardless. Yet you can probably guess where we're going from
here. Some things, frankly, are just bigger than basketball. And dare we
say that the unsettling nature of a bomb scare on the flight to OKC, hoax or not, most certainly qualifies.
12. New York Knicks
2016-17 record: 14-10
Previous ranking: 15
Concern
about Phil Jackson's reputation among potential free-agent targets
after the whole LeBron James "posse" controversy has been replaced by
mounting concern about what Jackson's ongoing commentary about Carmelo Anthony is doing to alienate the star he actually has on the roster. The secondary scare here is that the constant churn of Phil headlines continues to overshadow the fact that the Knicks, winners of 11 of 15
to capitalize on a manageable stretch of schedule, have been a pleasant
surprise on par with Chicago. The fact that everyone's so focused on
the off-court extracurriculars might explain why New York has received
so little of the same love that the Bulls are getting for an equally
surprising start.
13. Charlotte Hornets
2016-17 record: 14-10
Previous ranking: 14
A heavy loss at Cleveland in the opener of a five-game trip could have been much worse if Kemba Walker's
scary-looking collision with LeBron James resulted in more than a knee
contusion. Fortunately for the Hornets, Walker insists he'll be on the
floor for Monday night's stop at Indiana. For more on Walker's All-Star
bid, we refer you to our recent visit with him on the TrueHoop Conversations podcast.
For more on whether Charlotte will continue to play with more focus and
edge on the road than it does at home, as Steve Clifford contends, stay
tuned this week.
14. Indiana Pacers
2016-17 record: 12-12
Previous ranking: 12
As
flat as the Pacers looked during the game and as down as they looked
after it on Friday night in Dallas, I certainly wasn't expecting what we
saw the next night against Portland, when Indiana rallied from 20
points down back on their home floor -- not even when you factor in the
Blazers' well-chronicled defensive frailties. Paul George
scored 15 points in one stretch of the fourth quarter en route to a
decisive game-high 37, but few teams at this juncture are as tough to
read as the Pacers, who swept their season series with the Clippers and
posted another nice win in Oklahoma City to offset all the nights you
think something is really wrong behind the scenes.
15. Detroit Pistons
2016-17 record: 13-13
Previous ranking: 13
If
you thought last Sunday was a low point in Motown -- when the Pistons
followed up three impressive wins on the road with a home defeat to Stan
Van Gundy's old pals from Orlando -- think again. Detroit was outscored
on its home floor 32-12 by the Joel Embiid-less
Sixers in the opening quarter this Sunday. Philly hadn't won a first
quarter so decisively since the 2007-08 season. The Pistons, though, are
still one of 11 teams in the East sitting at .500 or better. The West,
strangely, only has seven.
16. Atlanta Hawks
2016-17 record: 12-12
Previous ranking: 20
Not
exactly sure how, but the Hawks were still ranked No. 2 leaguewide in
defensive efficiency last week in the throes of their 1-9 freefall that
dropped them all the way down to No. 20 on our ladder. On this Rankings
Monday, you'll still find them at No. 3 somehow in the DE standings.
Given the recent struggles, though, Atlanta's comeback from 20 points
down at the half to win in Milwaukee -- this season's first such
comeback from any team on the NBA map -- has to provide Mike Budenholzer
some encouragement, since it suggests his guys are still scrapping. The
comeback had a historic element, too, since the Hawks had never before
recovered from a halftime deficit that big. They were 0-149 in that
situation, believe it or not, in the franchise's 68-season history.
#youcanlookitup
17. Milwaukee Bucks
2016-17 record: 11-11
Previous ranking: 16
We have no choice but to press pause on all the justifiable slobbering over Giannis Antetokounmpo
just when Milwaukee became the first team in the league this season to
surrender a lead of 20-plus points and lose (Friday night at home to
Atlanta) ... and then unraveled down the stretch on the road in
Washington after Bucks coach Jason Kidd publicly lamented that his young
team needs to "close games better." All that, of course, after a narrow
home loss to the powerful Spurs to start a sour week. Those are all
games Giannis, Kidd & Co. are really going to wish they had socked
away when the schedule, as everyone keeps saying, starts to get tougher.
Let's face it: Milwaukee still badly misses Khris Middleton every day, no matter how ridiculous The Greek Freak is.
18. Washington Wizards
2016-17 record: 9-13
Previous ranking: 24
John Wall's
52 points in a home loss to Orlando accounted for the highest total
from a Washington player in defeat since the legendary Earl Monroe rung
up 56 in an L to the Lakers in February 1968. Wall outscored Orlando's
starters by a bucket and joined Klay Thompson, Kevin Love
and Russell Westbrook on the short list of players this season who know
how it feels to score 30 points in a half. But it still wasn't enough.
At least Wall's sixth 20-and-10 game of the season four nights later
wasn't wasted along with it, thanks to the Wizards' late rally past the
visiting Bucks.
19. Portland Trail Blazers
2016-17 record: 12-13
Previous ranking: 17
Turns out that the return of Al-Farouq Aminu
has not cured all of the Blazers' ills as they had hoped. After winning
in Chicago to launch a daunting stretch of eight of nine games on the
road, Portland has lost its past three games and surrendered at least
115 points in the two games of those three that Aminu played. Allen Crabbe and Evan Turner, meanwhile, are earning a combined $35 million this season but rank 88th and 95th, respectively, out of 95 shooting guards in ESPN's Real Plus/Minus rankings.
20. Denver Nuggets
2016-17 record: 9-15
Previous ranking: 23
Is
rebounding overrated? The 9-15 Nuggets are making that case as the
league's No. 1 team on the boards, hauling in 54 percent of available
rebounds. Denver last led the league in rebounding in 1992-93, when Dikembe Mutombo
was the interior anchor in the Mile High air. Speaking of famous former
Nuggets: Carmelo Anthony will be back in Denver come Saturday looking
for his first win at the Pepsi Center as a visitor. Since being traded
to New York in 2011, Melo's Knicks are 0-4 in Denver, with Anthony
having played in three of those games.
21. Orlando Magic
2016-17 record: 10-15
Previous ranking: 19
The
Magic have yet again followed up a promising week with another
worrisome one, proceeding from a 4-1 road trip, which they capped by
winning in Washington despite John Wall's 52 points, to two poor
defensive showings at home (Ls to Boston and Denver) sandwiched around a
109-88 loss in Charlotte that saddled Orlando with a league-leading 10
games in which it has failed to register at least 90 points. This won't
help fan morale either: Frank Vogel says the club is weighing whether to
send out-of-favor swingman Mario Hezonja, taken fifth overall in the 2015 NBA Draft, to the D-League to get the minutes he's not earning in the Magic Kingdom.
22. Los Angeles Lakers
2016-17 record: 10-16
Previous ranking: 18
When
he had a full complement of 10 players to mix and match, Luke Walton
had the Lakers routinely springing surprises. That's been a lot harder
to pull off with D'Angelo Russell and Nick Young
missing, which has caused what was a top-10 offense in the season's
early stages to crater, putting additional pressure on L.A.'s flimsy D.
But Russell made his long-awaited return Sunday night after a 3-9 funk
in his absence, while Lou Williams continues to be at the forefront of
our thinking for the Sixth Man of the First Trimester, which will be
unveiled at week's end.
23. Minnesota Timberwolves
2016-17 record: 6-18
Previous ranking: 22
These
are obviously not the circumstances Tom Thibodeau was hoping for in
advance of Tuesday's sure-to-be-overhyped return to Chicago for the
first time as a visiting head coach. The Wolves, when you weigh it based
on playing time, rank as the NBA's youngest team at an average age of
24. Youth, though, can only excuse so much for a squad that was billed
for such great things by Committee friends we trust so much, be it
ESPN's own Brian Windhorst or Wolves superfan (and former top-10 tennis
stalwart) Mardy Fish. Minnesota's schedule has been brutal lately, but
there's simply no getting around the fact that this team is 6-8 this
season in games in which it has held a fourth-quarter lead,
including Sunday night's fall from 10 points up to start the fourth
against mighty Golden State. Those eight losses are tied with
Philadelphia for tops in the league.
24. Miami Heat
2016-17 record: 7-17
Previous ranking: 21
Turns out that injuries aren't the Heat's only obstacle during this humbling launch to life post-Dwyane Wade. As noted the other day by our pal Tom Haberstroh,
Miami recently endured a 10-game stretch in which it surrendered a
seemingly unfathomable 117 points per 100 possessions with the
blocks-obsessed Hassan Whiteside
on the floor, compared to just 93.9 points per 100 possessions when its
box-score-filling machine was sitting. And then the Heat lost to the
Bulls for a second time this season ... with D-Wade scoring 28 points to
twist the knife.
25. Philadelphia 76ers
2016-17 record: 6-18
Previous ranking: 30
Instead
of dwelling on the 76ers' league-leading four losses by 25 points or
more -- they're tied in that category with the Lakers, actually --
Philly suddenly sports a two-game road winning streak for us to dissect,
with Sunday night's triumph in Detroit made triply impressive by the
fact that Joel Embiid was on a night of imposed rest against the
Pistons. T.J. McConnell
was just one assist shy of a triple-double against the Pistons in
leading the Sixers to their sixth win, territory they couldn't touch
last season until Jan. 20.
26. Sacramento Kings
2016-17 record: 8-15
Previous ranking: 26
It was yet another week for the Kings -- despite DeMarcus Cousins' skepticism about a move materializing between now and the Feb. 23 trade deadline
-- that presumably pushes them closer to deal mode. Hoping to use a
robust road win in Dallas as some sort of springboard, Sacramento
instead followed that up with a home loss to the Knicks, then a meek
showing in Salt Lake City. Adding to the woes: Sacramento also found out
that its recent postponement in Philadelphia
has been rescheduled as part of a brutal road trip before the All-Star
break that now spans eight games and features three back-to-backs.
27. Dallas Mavericks
2016-17 record: 5-18
Previous ranking: 28
A 31-point home loss to Sacramento not only had Rick Carlisle calling timeouts he didn't have
but led to the first postgame team film session in Carlisle's career.
The crazy thing is, judging by the way Dallas responded in Friday's home
win over Indiana, Carlisle's tactics worked. Wes Matthews (21.4 PPG on
46.8 percent shooting from deep) has quietly found his best groove as a
Mav during this recent spell of 3-5 competency -- and Dirk Nowitzki
is said to be inching closer to a return to the practice floor -- but
Carlisle will miss seeing his old friends from Indy on the schedule
after Dallas averaged 116 points in its season split with the Pacers.
28. Brooklyn Nets
2016-17 record: 6-16
Previous ranking: 29
The Nets are in Houston on Monday night and Jeremy Lin is slated to make his comeback
after missing Brooklyn's last 17 games (4-13) with an ankle issue. Good
timing for storytellers, since the occasion will reunite Lin and his
former Knicks coach Mike D'Antoni, while it's obviously huge as well for
Lin's new team, which relies on him to run the offense. New Nets coach
Kenny Atkinson has instead been forced to survive without his preferred
quarterback for 40 days. The Donatas Motiejunas saga, meanwhile, means Brooklyn is now 0-for-3 in restricted free agency in the Sean Marks era, but that was an offer sheet you suspect Marks knew from the beginning that Houston would match.
29. New Orleans Pelicans
2016-17 record: 8-17
Previous ranking: 25
The Pelicans, through Sunday, have already lost 67 man-games to injury, which doesn't even account for the time Jrue Holiday
missed to start the season nursing his wife through the scariest of
surgeries. So the notion that Alvin Gentry should be under fire for the
Pels' deepening struggles strikes us as more than unjust. But the job security questions
are being fired right at Gentry these days, which is what happens when
you lose at home to the Sixers when Philly is sporting a 23-game road
losing streak. (An aside: We are deeply indebted to our beloved and
scrumptious Shaya for helping to fuel this edition of the rankings Sunday night!)
30. Phoenix Suns
2016-17 record: 7-17
Previous ranking: 27
When the Suns and Lakers got together Friday night at Staples Center, it wasn't just a matchup of two teams that love to push the pace while struggling mightily on D.
It was a reminder that, more than four years removed from the Steve
Nash sign-and-trade blockbuster on July 4, 2012, neither team has found
what you would call solid footing yet. Heading into Phoenix's ultimate
119-115 victory, these teams were 24th (Suns) and 28th (Lakers) in
winning percentage in the four-plus seasons since the deal despite the
presence of three top-10 picks on both rosters.
No comments:
Post a Comment