Quick observations/thoughts on what has been a most interesting season to this point:
- The Best Is Ahead: Paul George, Jrue Holliday, Eric Bledsoe, Kenneth Faried, The Denver Nuggets,
- The Best is Behind: The Boston Celtics, The Los Angeles Lakers, Manu Ginobili, Deron Williams, Low Post Scoring, Joe Johnson, Shawn Marion, Michael Beasley,
- Defense isn't overrated. Take the Memphis Grizzilies 93.5 Points Per Game (26th in league) vs. 89.2 Point Allowed Per Game (1st in the league), Indiana Pacers 94.4 PPG (22nd), 90.0 vs. PAPG (2nd) and the Chicago Bulls 92.3 PPG (29th Overall) vs. 92.3 PAPG (3rd). Good for a 122-77 (.613) overall record. Just saying.

- The Celtics have shown admirable heart and pride in the wake of Rondo's departure, but they don't have that guy (Rondo) who can steal a big game on his own. I know C's fans want me to say this, after all, these Celts are thriving off the 'Us Vs. The World'/'Nobody Believes in Us!' mentality to this point.
- We all felt great about Golden State. Now they can go back to being Golden State.
- We all felt great about the Los Angeles Clippers. Now they can go back.... not yet, these Clips might just be for real.
- NBA PG play truly has hit a golden era, with elite talents like Paul, Westbrook, Rondo, Rose, Parker, Curry, Williams (gulp), Nash (double gulp) already established, and with players like Kyrie Irving, Jrue Holliday, Ty Lawson, Damian Lillard, Jeff Teague, and Brandon Jennings all on the rise, the ball truly is in good hands.
- Death. Taxes. The San Antonio Spurs.
- Is the ROY award already safely stored in Damian Lillard's home trophy cabinet? It should be.. Maybe 4 years in college does help at that position.
- Granted Larry Sanders is no where near being the leagues best player, he might be the most watchable.
- The Heat's streak has been nothing short of impressive, a mix of dominant wins and gut check grinds, they've got the whole league on notice. LeBron continually sticks to his sportsman rhetoric imploring it's "simply about striving for continuous improvement", somehow even when his game should be inevitably cresting he seems to find 'continuous improvement'. Best in the world.
- LeBron has pushed the gap between him and Durant a little wider this season, especially with his increased awareness of maximizing each possession. His FG% and increased work below the free throw line is a testament to his growth into unquestionably the world's best basketball talent.
- That said, Durant is a worthy 'Malone' to LeBron's 'MJ'. Playing with an increased edge to his game this year. Durant has also expanded his game - incorporating more of a facilitating do-it-all role with the departure of James Harden.

- Speaking of James Harden, safe to say he has answered any skeptics questions with regard to whether or not he was a 'franchise' guy. The Rockets are looking pretty smart right about now.
- Oklahoma City may not have gotten enough for Harden, but they still made off alright and who knows what they would have gotten for him with less leverage down the line. They've landed on their feet with Kevin Martin, plus they'll have more financial flexibility going forward. All of that said, imagine - Harden, Durant, Ibaka, and Westbrook all out there for one more season? If both the Rockets and Thunder did alright in this trade, I guess it was just us fans that lost. 70 wins would have been realistic.
- While the Rudy Gay era seemingly had gotten off to a great start, let's remember those times while we're paying for his 37M contract over the next two years. Being a realist. There will be tough times, Rudy Gay is not a franchise player. Heads up.
- I understand Calderon had to go, that said, I will miss watching him operate a screen and roll.
- The Lakers are easily the most laughable...wait intriguing...no, laughable....yet intriguing .500 team in recent memory. None of the pieces seem to fit and the architect is a 'specialist' who only seems to have one style of play. If Kobe isn't willing this team to an additional 6-8 wins, playoffs aren't even a question. What's gotten into Kobe this year anyway, chatty fella all the sudden.

- In my estimation the Slam Dunk Contest is not really broken it just needs participants to accept that they're aren't many new original dunks out there; gimmicks are not a way to make up for this lack of room for physical creativity. It's gotten to the point where its either a corny gimmick dunk or the degree of difficulty is so out of whack that the dunk is next to impossible to complete without numerous attempts, which greatly detracts from the flow of the event. My suggestion, do moderately difficult dunks with incredible enthusiasm, athleticism, speed and power and that will be enough for most of us. Superstars in the event would undeniably help, but isn't a necessity. That said, put me down for 50$ in the Lebron v. Blake Griffin dunk fund.
- The Skills Competition is broken and is silly, re-vamp it or lose it.
- Guys who don't get enough love (Until now): Chandler Parsons has been a huge part of the quick resurgence in Houston, Nickola Vucevic (11.5 RPG) has been a beast Orlando - the unlikely best player in last summer's Dwight Howard, Andrew Bynum, Andre Igoudala flopbuster. Mike Conley has been a crucial part of the Grizz's success this season. I think it's his development that helped management come to it's decision to let Gay go. Knowing that the Grizz are in better hands letting Conley decide where to put the ball at the end of games, than they were just clearing out and letting Gay create a mid range jumper. Beyond that everything else Gay brought to the table was expendable for the price tag.
- Kyrie Irving leapfrogged his way from the fringe of being an NBA All Star to being an NBA Superstar during All Star Weekend. What a coming out party, Uncle Drew has arrived.
- The Knicks are not ready to compete with the Miami Heat for the Eastern Conference title. Sad to say, but not from what I've seen.
Let's forecast the biggest question marks each team faces going forward into the stretch run of the NBA season, where clearly some teams have very different motivations than others. I'll organize the teams in order of questions they face on their way to the title or their improving future. i.e. The better the team, the fewer the question marks. I think that makes sense.
Miami Heat - ? - Can anyone beat the Heat? With so many questions of the Heat over the past 2 seasons it seems that they've flipped the script in 2013 and now the questions only apply to their competition. The Heat's only real concern remains their ability to protect the rim and control the backboard in their own paint. Chris Anderson seems to have provided a lift. Can Bosh and LeBron do enough rebounding to limit the minutes of Anderson and Anthony, allowing the Heat to run the small line ups they like best? Few questions here. Streaking in the Quad.
Oklahoma City Thunder - ?? - The Thunder have played with an edge, perhaps slighted by doubters following Harden's departure? Whatever the case, the Thunder have looked like a top tier team throughout the season; Durant and Westbrook have been brilliant again, but it's been Ibaka's continued development that has been a big part of their return to last seasons form. Questions that remain: Have the Thunder gained enough experience from last season to make it over the hump in 2013? Will the Thunder miss James Harden's ability to create in the half court late in playoff games when the defense begins to tighten up? (A la the 2012 WCF v. the Spurs) Will Russell Westbrook continue to make the transition from self interest to team interest?
San Antonio Spurs - ?? - Despite another run of regular season dominance, it's all about post season production for these veteran Spurs who have been through about as many battles as Napoleon. Can the Spurs old bodies hold up? Does Ginobili still have any of his late game heroics left? Is the ball in Parker's hands in the crunch now? Will the Spurs (re: Tim Duncan) make one last final stand before heading off into the sunset? How will Popovich draw my admiration yet again?
Los Angeles Clippers - ??? - The Clips have been a pleasant surprise this season, talent living up to expectations, a rarity these days. Despite the elevation in their status out West, a post season bid could hardly count as sufficient for the new 'kings' of L.A.. Can the Clippers play well enough in the half court to excel within the usual confines of playoff basketball? Will coach Vinny Del Negro have to shorten up his bench in the playoffs? At who's expense? (You know CP3 is going to get his, but the Clips are loaded on the perimeter... Jamal Crawford, Chauncey Billups, Willie Green, Matt Barnes, Grant Hill, Caron Butler, Eric Bledsoe - Not everyone will get the minutes they're used to, this will be fine if they keep winning, if they get down... maybe not so much.) And lastly, will DeAndre Jordan do this again?
Memphis Grizzlies - ??? - The Memphis Grizzilies are the NBA's throwback, while everyone else seems to be looking to go small and take advantage in transition with quickness and athleticism, the Grizzilies have chosen to go big and this gives them a unique advantage heading into the post season. The Grizz excel in the half court, something that figures to be a factor in the tightened up, slowed down pace we routinely see in the months of May and June. Can the Grizz keep up with some of the perimeter athletes on the opponents they'll face? Can Mike Conley hold his own against some of the other elite guards of the West? (He doesn't need to outplay them, just hold even so their advantage inside can be played as the Grizz's trump.) Will they miss Rudy Gay's end of game ability to create his own shot? Without Gay in town, who shoots the last shot? Given the right match up the Grizz should be a force to be reckoned with.
Indiana Pacers - ???? - The Pacers have the East's best chance at preventing a third consecutive Eastern Conference Championship from the boys in South Beach. Even if that chance only equates to them being a proverbial snowball in the Miami 'Heat', see what I did there. That said, at least the Pacers represent something of a challenge for the Heat; size up front and nearly flawless execution on the defensive end. The Pacers play good enough on the defensive end to keep them in most every game, it will come down to the production of Hibbert in the middle and on the glass (a Heat weakness) and their ability to limit turnovers, preventing transition opportunities for the Heat. If they can keep the game in the half court then they have a fighter's chance at pulling off the upset. Can the George's, Paul and Hill, operate aggressively on offensive while limiting turnovers? Can Hibbert return to the dominant offensive presence he was for parts of last year and protect the rim from Miami's slashers? Can Lance Stephenson and Paul George match the athleticism of Lebron and DWade? Is Danny Granger done? Is Paul George the 'man' when the chips are down?


That's it for teams that I think have a legitimate shot at winning their conference (i.e. making the finals). While the following teams might not have a shot at the title this season, there's always next season and they'll be using the rest of the season to evaluate an answer some of their own questions heading forward.
Denver Nuggets - ????? - The Nuggets are one of the leagues best secrets going 28-6 in their last 34 game, after starting out the year 18-16 on a difficult schedule that saw them on the road for 22 of those first 34 contests. The Thunder are 24-10 over a similar sample. With numbers like that the Nuggets probably deserve some mention along with the teams above, I'll concede that, but I'm just not quite convinced that they've achieved the pedigree of the teams above. Make no mistake Denver is good, this is most attributable to their renewed effort on the defensive end of the court which let them down in the early part of the season, uncharacteristic of a George Karl team. Another reason for their improvement has been the play of Ty Lawson, who continues to be an underrated game changer at the point guard position for the Nugs. Can this team win without a bonafide go-to guy in crunch time? Is Javale McGee's potential worth the time and effort it may take to help him achieve it? Can Andre Miller play forever? After years of acquiring 'pieces', are the Nuggets ready to begin building their foundation on the likes of Gallinari, Igoudola and Lawson? Is that enough? Is Wilson Chandler back to the Wilson Chandler of 2010? Will he ever be?
Houston Rockets - ???? - What a leap the Rockets have made, after treading in the backwaters of the Western Conference for nearly 3 years now the Rockets finally had the pieces they needed to acquire the big name free agent they've coveted for so long. Transformed into a new team, the additions of both James Harden and Jeremy Lin have seen the Rockets become a high powered scoring offense that looks to be in a perpetual attack mode. Asik has lived up to his billing, protecting the rim, clearing the glass and taking out the garbage, and Chandler Parsons has been a revelation as a fill-in-the-blanks wing scorer and defender. The Rockets look poised to return to the playoffs and will look to develop their young nucleus as the season pushes on. Can Thomas Robinson return to the form that made him a top 5 lottery pick less than 12 months ago? Can the other Rocket guards find a way to give James Harden a little more help so he doesn't wear down so much over 4 quarters? Can the Rockets develop or land a power forward that can either spread the floor, or help Asik with some of the heavy lifting inside?

Golden State Warriors - ????? - Where did the defense go? Will Andrew Bogut ever be able to get himself back onto the court for prolonged stays and will he ever be able to regain the dominance he had for that one half season in Milwaukee where he led the league in rebounding? When is Klay Thompson going to start improving again? The Warriors made great strides this season and a playoff berth is all but assured, that said, they haven't been the same team on the defensive end in the second half of the season and that has been the reason for their dramatic slide down the Western Conference table.
Los Angeles Lakers - ????? - There has been loads said/written about the Lakers so I'll try and keep it brief. After being appropriately maligned for much of the season thus far the Lakers seem to have found their mojo at just the right time making them a presumably scary first road match up for whoever gets the streaking Lakers in the first round. A Clippers/Lakers series would have made for a great first round match up, but with the recent Kobe/ Danhtay Jones brush up this now appears unlikely. That said, I still don't think the Lakers have things totally figured out in the way of a title run. Here's why. Can Kobe Bryant do everything, every night, purely by his strength of 'will'? Can the Lakers defend in the half court? Can the Lakers limit opponents transition opportunities? Can Dwight Howard and Kobe Bryant exist in the high pressure high intensity stage of the playoffs? Can anyone besides Nash or Kobe score from the perimeter for the Lakers? Will Dwight Howard be back next season? Is it time to start to look at the future in Los Angeles?
Brooklyn Nets - ?????? - The Nets season has to have been mildly disappointing. Deron Williams has seen his game take a bit of a step back, and Joe Johnson and Gerald Wallace haven't really meshed well. Long gone is Avery Johnson and that seemed to have given them a temporary boost but the season long malaise as continue. Not the best team in their conference, division or city, this isn't what the mad Russian had paid for. I hope things start getting crazy in Brooklyn. What the hell is wrong with Deron Williams? Why did they invest so much money in Joe Johnson and Gerald Wallace? Can any of the young talents on this squad emerge from under the perimeter rotation of vets Wallace, Williams and Johnson? Can Brook Lopez do this again, when everyone else plays better? Is there any value left in Kris Humphries?
Utah Jazz - ????? - Seemingly always steady in Salt Lake, the Utah Jazz have had another solid season in which they've seemingly over achieved yet again. I say this because despite having some talented players on their roster, they mainly all play the same position. Which begs the question, why didn't the Jazz deal either Paul Millsap or Al Jefferson before the trade deadline? With the emergence of talented young bigs Derrick Favours and former lottery pick Enes Kanter waiting in the wings it only seemed like the right time for the Jazz to make a move but they stood pat. I don't think this made any sense and until Utah answer it's questions up front, there will continue to be questions about their backcourt which currently employs Alec Burk along with 30something's - Mo Williams, Jamaal Tinsley and Earl Watson, all of whom are trending downward. What gives?
Portland Trailerblazers - ????? - Despite the arrival of soon to be rookie of the year Damian Lillard, the season seems to have slipped away from Portland. After an uplifting start to the season, the Trailblazers have slipped down the table as the season has progressed. Wil Nicolas Batum continue to develop his offensive production? Despite having solid or above average players in their starting five, the Trailblazers suffered from a lack of depth in 2012 with little else coming off the bench to spell it's starters. Will the bench be back? The rest of their season will be spent challenging those players to earn their spot in next season's rotation as their depth was a key issue. Another question they have to address is whether J.J. Hickson is in fact a Center? They undoubtably need to bring in another big body to help protect the rim and rebound, two things that despite his size and considerable skills, Lamarcus Aldridge does not do well.

Atlanta Hawks - ?????? - Same old, 6th place Atlanta Hawks. It seems every year at this time the Atlanta Hawks are in the bottom half of the Eastern Conference playoff race, Josh Smith is unhappy and the Hawks are talking about making changes. Maybe this time around it will happen, but for now the Hawks should be focused on continuing the development of Jeff Teague as he has proven himself to be an above average starting point guard so far this season. Can they find anyone on their bench who can score for them on the wing? Josh Jenkins? DeShawn Stevenson? I'm looking at you. With Louis Williams out, the Hawks have lacked wing scoring for most of the year and they'll have to deal with continued questions heading into next season, not to mention the Josh Smith migraine that never seems to go away. Has change of scenery ever appeared to be more of a necessity than for both Smith and the Hawks?
Dallas Mavericks- ????????? - Perhaps the team with the most little question marks is the Dallas Mavericks. While the big question might be the status of Dirk Nowitzki, I think we all know that both he and the Mavs want to see him back there next season, it just remains to be seen what will happen with all of the little questions in play. I'm referring to all of the 1year contracts the Mavs handed out prior to the season as it wanted to keep it's options open heading into this summer after striking out last summer. The Mavs have kept things very fluid with regard to their future and they can dump the 1 year contracts or reward them. Do they bring back O.J. Mayo who played very well while Dirk was out in the early part of the season. Is Collison a starting NBA point guard? Vince Carter has shown a willingness to bring his still exceptional scoring prowess off the bench for a discounted rate, will that option still be available to them going forward? The Mavs need to show Dirk something, or this could get ugly in Dallas. Perhaps Dwight?

Minnesota Timberwolves - ?????? - The season has been an overwhelming disappointment for T'Wolves fans, seemingly one of the West's 'teams to watch' heading into this season. Unfortunately all of the optimism soon gave way to disappointment as injury after injury plagued the Wolves season. First Rubio and Love would be late arrivals, then they lost Budinger and Kirelinko followed by Brandon Roy. With the season lost the Wolves now look at what they have heading into next year as Budinger and Love should be back for the final two months of the season. Will Love be convinced to extend his stay in dreary Minnesota? Will the core of Pekovic, Love, Rubio, Barea, Shved, Budinger and Williams mesh well enough to enter next season with the same confidence they entered this one? Can Williams take the leap from bench athlete to an all around starting NBA athletic wing scorer/defender? If so, maybe that keeps Love in town. If Love departs, it's back to the drawing board for the Wolves.
Toronto Raptors - ??????? - The Raptors began answering some of their questions with the move of Jose Calderon, Ed Davis to in a 3 team deal with Memphis and Detroit, landing Rudy Gay in return. With their playoff hopes soundly put to bed the focus shifts to next year as the Raps concerns become developing the games of former 3rd overall pick Jonas Valanciunas, as well as 2012 rookie selection Terrence Ross. In addition the Raps will be evaluating the recently formed nucleus of their squad as they move forward. Any attempts at locking down an extension of Rudy Gay's already monsterous contract should be considered vastly premature. Despite a great beginning to his time in Toronto, I expect Rudy will round into the form that made him expendable to the Grizzilies, which should remind us that he is in fact not a franchise player but more of a third banana. The development of Amir Johnson and Demar DeRozen is encouraging but this team still needs to add some major talent up front after striking out with bigs Ed Davis, Andreas Bargnani, in recent years. Can Rudy Gay be counted on to lead this franchise? Can Valanciunas develop into an starting level NBA big man? Can he be be an elite talent worth building around? How much longer do they have to overpay Landry Fields?
Cleveland Cavs - ??????? - The Cavaliers have had another season of ups and downs as injuries have taken their toll. No doubt the Cavs are wishing they had dealt the expiring contract of Anderson Varajao about 2 months into the season when he was leading the league in rebounds, defending the paint and basically peaking in potential trade value, his blood clot dealt a serious blow to that value and we hope he returns no worse for wear. That said, the Cavs lost a premium opportunity to send him away and acquire some good young prospects going forward. Unlike many of the other basement dwellers discussed above the Cavs do have a solid answer from which to build it's foundation, Kyrie Irving is a legit star in this league an should continue to be a game changer night in and night for as long as he can stay healthy and remain on the court. (Missed nearly the whole college season with an injury, missed games to due injury last season, missed games this season. Just saying.) If the Cavs are still pondering questions like, Is Alonzo Gee the answer? Now is the time to figure that out, at the very least we've found out that Dion Waiters can be a very good, the Mitch Richmond to Kyrie's Hardaway? The Dumars to Irving's Zeke? Time will tell. Waiters has shown a great knack for getting into the lane and tremendous body control in his ability to finish. This is especially the case in games in which Irving has missed, leading Waiters to step his game up. There's light at the end of the tunnel.
Washington Wizards - ?????? - The Wizards continue their attempt at changing the culture in Washington, after a dismal start to the season there have been some signs of encouragement for a Wizards team that appears high on talent, and low on experience and awareness at first glance. The return of John Wall has coincided with the Wizards improvement, I hardly think this is a coincidence. I'm not sure if John Wall is a game changer on a nightly basis yet, but he does serve to give the team a sense of identity when they have him at the controls. A poor man's version of Irving and Waiters, the backcourt of Beal and Wall seems to have the talent and potential to be a force in the coming years. The Wiz thought they had the athletic wing scorer/defender I keep talking about in the form of Trevor Ariza (atleast they're paying him like one), it's been an inonsistant year from Ariza but hopefully he has a strong close to the season. His production has improved since Wall's return to the line up so that's a positive, will this trend continue? Up front will aging vets Emeka Okafor, Jason Collins and Nene all be seeing reduced minutes to help with the development of forwards Kevin Seraphin and Kevin Booker? (probably too late to ever be more than a hand off the bench). That said there aren't really any other bigs on this roster, so it might be time to start looking at the March Tourney for the best one available.

Detroit Pistons - ??????? - Will Bynum is 30? Is Brandon Knight a point guard? Do they go with Knight or Calderon going forward? How do we develop Drummond so that both he and Monroe can be on the courting playing together going forward? What do we do with Rodney Stuckey? (The Kings would probably love to have him.) What can we parlay Corey Maggette's expiring contract into? Needless to say this squad has it's issue but they're solid up front and have some options in the back court, they, like everyone else in the league, need a long athletic wing who can both create on defense and defend in isolation on the wing. Think Corey Maggette, except 10 years ago.
Phoenix Suns - ?????? - Now that the Suns have acquired another set of twins in the Morris brothers everything should be fine in Phoenix and if not at least the weather will be. Gortat has been solid inside but he's still undersized and is hardly an intimidating force in the paint, he could use a fellow big to help protect the rim and clear the class. The Suns should probably just focus on developing their young talents and look at making a run at the best free agents available as they've got some cap room and a seemingly desirable free agent locale, if only for the climate and training staff. Phoenix has a history of putting a quality product on the floor and I have a belief that they'll find a way to do this again soon.

Charlotte Bobcats - ??????? - It's nearly impossible to address the questions and concerns that face the leagues worst franchise for the second consecutive season. Near the leagues basement in both points per game scored and allowed, this team needs major help on both ends of the court. Kidd Gilchrist has shown the athleticism to show he belongs, but his offensive game is still years behind his defense. Not to mention he has hit the rookie wall harder than Mike Stanton hits a ball. How do we encourage Gilchrist to stay positive about his improvement while everything around him seems to be crumbling? Kemba Walker has shown an ability to score and get his, now he needs to continue to improve his ability to lead and make the game easier for his teammates. Can he be a pure point? Does he need to be? Not a lot to get excited about here, at least they'll find some help in the draft, lord knows MJ isn't getting any free agents to Charlotte with his tight pockets.
New Hip Hop 2.0
I've been working on a Top 100 Hip Hop Songs on 2012 for some time now, a labour of love we'll say. That should be out in the next couple days so this will represent a Top 20 of just about everything from 2013 to this point. Otherwise known as the 20 hip hop tracks I most want you to hear, enjoy!
20. Love Me - Lil Wayne Feat. Future & Drake
19. All Gold Everything - Trinidad James Ft. T.I., Young Jeezy & 2 Chainz
18. Last Day - Joe Budden Feat. Juicy J & Lloyd Banks -
17. Dope - Tyga Feat. Rick Ross
16. The Rise of the Ghostface Killah - Ghostface Killah
15. Major Distribution - 50 Cent Feat. Young Jeezy & Snoop Dogg
14. Light Blue - Lupe Fiasco
13. Tears For ODB (Truly Yours) - J. Cole
12. Unorthadox - Joey Bada$$ -
11.One of Those Nights - Juicy J Feat. The Weeknd
10. Danny Brown - Hottest MC
09. Power Trip - J. Cole Feat. Miguel
08.5am in Toronto - Drake
07. Immortal - Kid Cudi
06. Jonylah Forever - Lupe Fiasco
05. Thrift Shop - Macklemore & Ryan Lewis
04.Cypher - Hit-Boy Feat. Kent M$ney, Audio Push, B Mac The Queen, Schoolboy Q, Casey Veggies, Xzibit, Rick Ross, Method Man, Redman, Raekwon
03. 1 Train - A$AP Rocky, Kendrick Lamar, Joey Bada$$, Yelawolf, Danny Brown, Action Bronson, Big K.R.I.T.
02. Started From the Bottom - Drake
01. Long Live A$AP - A$AP Rocky
Bonus Cuts:
"Pocket Full" (Notorious B.I.G. Tribute) - Obie Trice
"Y.O.L.O." - The Lonely Island Ft. Adam Levine & Kendrick Lamar
"No Guns Allowed" - Snoop Lion Feat. Drake & Cori B
"F.A.S.T. Ride - Yelawolf
"I Only Say It Cause It's True" Classified Feat. Raekwon and Kuniva
Have a good weekend. Enjoy the madness!
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