The Official NBA Season Thread: I’m like Jayson Tatum in the Olympics I'm not playing

There will be a documentary on Ben Simmons one day. 6’10” physically, 4’10” mentally.

There's a shootout going on in OKC. I don't want to get OKB on me, but there is a lot of grifting in Shai's game, and you should have a healthy amount of concern about it because grifters don't historically win titles.
Chet changes everything. True unicorn at the 5. They’re gonna get better every year as he gets better.
 
There will be a documentary on Ben Simmons one day. 6’10” physically, 4’10” mentally.


Chet changes everything. True unicorn at the 5. They’re gonna get better every year as he gets better.
I can agree here, none of the guys I am thinking of have played with a Big that had this much upside as Chet does.
 
Good win by the Cavs. These are games you want to see a team who is undefeated win. Don't lose to the "bad" teams. And you play the Celtics on Tuesday. You want to go into that game undefeated. You need to establish something against the Celtics.
 
Can't wait for step two of this disaster; the benching of Klay Thompson
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i've never seen anything like Towns' ability to never look under control on a drive to the rim
 
Brandon Miller with the serious sophomore slump

His confidence looks like it isn’t there—way too much hesitation in his game. Not sure he’s being used right, either. He never took this many spot up 3’s last year.
His role has changed significantly this year right? He basically was the number one option last season with LaMelo and Bridges missing most of last season as I recall. Now they’re back.
 
Good win by the Cavs. These are games you want to see a team who is undefeated win. Don't lose to the "bad" teams. And you play the Celtics on Tuesday. You want to go into that game undefeated. You need to establish something against the Celtics.

Not to bring up the 1986 Celtics, but they were 67-15, won the title, easily one of the three or four best teams of all time. Except most of their losses were to sub-.500 teams. They would take nights off and probably left 4-5 more wins on the table.
 
Can't wait for this book. Hollinger and David Aldridge collab.

A celebration of basketball by way of the 100 greatest players to ever grace the court in the history of the NBA—from The Athletic’s foremost basketball writers and analysts the game has to offer. With a foreword by Charles Barkley.

Over the course of 100 luminous player profiles, the best sports newsroom on the planet paints vivid portraits of the game’s most compelling characters. There’s George Mikan, who was cut from his high school team because he wore glasses, then went on to become the fledgling NBA’s first transcendent star. Gary Payton, called “The Glove” for his skintight defense, who talked as much trash to his teammates as he did to his opponents on the court. Dennis Rodman, who started playing basketball at age 20, and in a few short years went from working as a janitor at the airport to being one of the strangest superstars that sport has ever known. Allen Iverson, who drew inspiration from hip hop for his inimitable style and swagger, on and off the court. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, who was so dominant in the paint that they changed the rules—and Steph Curry, who was so dominant outside it that he seemed to expand the very boundaries of the court.

The Basketball 100, edited by award-winning reporters David Aldridge and John Hollinger, also answers the game’s toughest, most important questions: How should we weight championship rings, versus statistical profiles, versus the “eye test”? Were the great players of yesteryear, like Wilt Chamberlain and Bill Russell, propelled by the inferior athleticism of their competition or would they have been transcendent in any era? And of course, who’s the GOAT—MJ or LeBron? Speaking of GOATs, for the book, Hollinger (inventor of the statistical metric PER) has created a new benchmark, GOAT Points.

Wonderfully written, authoritative, and full of joy, The Basketball 100 is a fitting tribute to the greatest sport in the world.
 
His role has changed significantly this year right? He basically was the number one option last season with LaMelo and Bridges missing most of last season as I recall. Now they’re back.

Yeah I’d imagine that’s a big part of it. New coach and new schemes, too. It looks like Coach Lee is taking a page from the C’s book and going for the jillion 3’s a game thing. Only problem is Charlotte has nowhere close to the personnel for that to be consistently successful like it was/is in Boston.

Lots of things to figure out for that whole team, from the players to the coaches. At least they compete, I guess.
 
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