WESTERN CONFERENCE PREDICTIONS
While the Warriors will be for the foreseeable future the
pick to win the NBA Western Conference, LeBron James' arrival with the Lakers
serves notice not only to Golden State, but also to the rest of the West that a
new champion could be on the horizon.
That new champion likely will not emerge this season as
James is surrounded by young players along with several journeymen, but if the
four-time MVP can get a player like Kawhi Leonard to join him next season,
there could be a shift coming in the powers of the West.
All that being said, until a team proves it can beat the
Warriors, and that includes James with whomever he wants to team up with, this
is Golden State's conference.
HERE'S A LOOK AT THE NBA WESTERN CONFERENCE IN 2018-19:
TEAM RISING
LAKERS — With the
addition of LeBron James, Los Angeles is projected by Vegas to win than 13 more
games than it did last season (48.5). While that may be a little bit optimistic
considering the depth of the West, the Lakers are bound to get much better
simply with the addition of the King.
TEAM FALLING
TIMBERWOLVES —
Jimmy Butler giveth and Jimmy Butler taketh away. After acquiring the former
Bulls guard during the offseason in 2017, the Timberwolves went from 14th in
the West with 31 wins to eighth with 47. Now Butler wants out, and until
Karl-Anthony Towns and Andrew Wiggins prove they can lead this team to greener
pastures, it would be far too optimistic to say this team wins more than 40
games. Case in point: Minnesota was 10-13 without Butler in its lineup last
season.
UNDER-THE-RADAR TEAM
MAVERICKS — This
is not to say the Mavericks will make the playoffs, but with the addition of
DeAndre Jordan, a second year for Dennis Smith Jr., a stud rookie in Luka Doncic
and added talent around Harrison Barnes, it isn't hyperbole to say Dallas,
24-58 in 2017-18, could win 10 more games this season and possibly even more
than that.
UNDER-THE-RADAR PLAYER
PELICANS G Jrue
Holiday — The New Orleans guard had a coming-out party of sorts in the Western
Conference quarterfinals, when the Pelicans swept the Trail Blazers. Holiday
averaged 23.9 points, 6.3 assists and 5.7 rebounds in the postseason and 19
points per game in the regular season. People realized who he was when he dominated
Portland's backcourt defensively, and he may now have the cachet and attention
to earn a second All-Star selection.
DIVISION PICKS
NORTHWEST:
Thunder — OKC struggled all last season to incorporate Carmelo Anthony into its
offense and it cost the team wins throughout the season. Now it's the Russell
Westbrook and Paul George show and with an entire season focusing on that, the
Thunder should win the Northwest.
PACIFIC: Warriors
— Do we even need to explain this? If so, you're in the wrong place.
SOUTHWEST:
Rockets — Houston lost two big defensive pieces in Trevor Ariza and Luc Richard
Mbah a Moute, but its biggest threat in the division, the Pelicans, lost
DeMarcus Cousins, a huge reason for New Orleans' success against the Rockets.
Add that to a division with the Mavericks, Grizzlies and a recently
injury-riddled Spurs team and Houston should win the Southwest again.
PLAYOFF PICKS
1.
WARRIORS
2.
ROCKETS
3.
LAKERS
4.
PELICANS
5.
THUNDER
6.
JAZZ
7.
BLAZERS
8.
NUGGETS
CONFERENCE CHAMPION
WARRIORS — Golden
State is the four-time defending champion in the Western Conference and
two-time reigning NBA champion, and it added if not the best, one of the best
centers in the game in DeMarcus Cousins. And it lost virtually nothing from its
core.
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