They Got Me
I've always tried to stay out of the way of the hip pick for sports. You know, the team that one journalist hypes up, and then the rest jump on the badwagon. Before you know it, they are the trendy pick to win their division, go deep into the playoffs, etc.
After the Cubs just missed out on the World Series, the media was hyping them up the following season. They didn't make the postseason.
This year for March Madness, many members of the media fell in love with Michigan State's talent and Boston College's toughness. They were both touted as dark-horse final four teams. They both went down.
A couple of years ago, it was the Seattle Seahawks. Then after their three straight losses to St. Louis, including the playoff loss at home, nobody picked them to make it to the Super Bowl this past season. I guess some people were a little bit too early to get both on and off their bandwagon.
Well this year it got me good. I fell hook, line, and sinker for the Golden State Warriors. I thought Baron Davis would be healthy and in shape, and he would challenge the other upper-eschelon point guards. I thought Mikael Pietrus would come out of his shell and light people up. I thought that the tandem of Troy Murphy and Ike Diogu would be a dominant power forward position (I still do, just give it more time). I liked the notion of Derek Fisher coming off the bench to hit tough shots. I thought Jason Richardson could handle being the money man for them, attacking the rim and becoming their go-to guy. I even thought Mike Dunleavy would do well as a sixth man once Pietrus took his job.
I didn't care that they had a previously successful college coach running the show. They had too much depth and talent to overcome that.
Boy did I blow that one.
Just for the record, if Nash wins the MVP, they got it wrong. LeBron, Dirk, and Kobe all deserved to finish ahead of him. I don't even care that Nash had a better statistical season this year. If that is your logic, then you probably thought that Matt Leinert deserved the Heisman this year. Truth be told, Nash won it last year, in a year when there weren't as many strong candidates. This year, LeBron, Kobe, and Dirk all did much more to catapault their teams to the playoffs.
Dirk lost another key component, and just like the year before, he won more games. The team also changed their mindset under Avery Johnson, and dealt with a plethora of injuries. He also took his game to another level, passing Kevin Garnett on the list of top power forwards in the West. (That may only be for this year, but it is still true.)
Kobe had a crew of castoffs and scored/willed his way to the 7 seed. And he's causing absolute fits for the Suns. It also helps that Lamar Odom has shined in his role during the second half of the season. I don't even like Kobe at all, but I still have him finishing third in this race to Dirk and ...
LeBron. LeBron dealt with just as many injuries as Dirk. He also had a first-year head coach in Mike Brown. The difference between Brown and Avery is that Avery had already been running the Mavs for half of last season. Even before that, Avery was coaching some games and some practices. He had a feel for most of that team. Brown came in cold turkey to a team with absolutely no identity, other than the fact that they had LeBron. By the way, they won 50 games and finished second in their division. Every other team in their division made the postseason as well. That ain't too shabby. Then you can look at his stats. He's got his hands all over every single statistic in the league, and despite the fact that Kobe averaged more points than anybody since MJ in 1987, LeBron wasn't that far off.
Add to all of this the fact that Nash cannot guard a tree, and something just doesn't seem right. Nash is no better than Jason Kidd was in the 2002 and 2003 seasons. I'm just saying. Maybe the Nash bandwagon carried over for a second season.


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