Dwight Howard moved on and Derrick Rose came back, though Kobe Bryant
won't quite yet. Nine first-time coaches are coming in and Commissioner
David Stern will soon head out.
With different looks all around
the NBA in 2013-14, one familiar sight remains: LeBron James and the
Miami Heat are entering another season as the team to beat.
The
two-time defending champions will collect their rings Tuesday night
(Wednesday, PHL time), then open against the Chicago Bulls, who with a
healthy Rose might be the team that can unseat the Heat.
Or maybe
it's San Antonio or Indiana, both a game away last year — actually, the
Spurs were just seconds away — from finishing off Miami. Perhaps it's
the Nets or Clippers, after both picked up pieces of the old Celtics
that had the Heat's respect but not their number.
If someone does dethrone King James, it won't be because he was satisfied with two titles and lost his edge.
"When
the hunger is gone, I'm going to give it up," James said. "I've got a
talent and I'm going to take full advantage of it. So I'm hungry.
"I
love the game. There's nothing I would do more than play this game of
basketball. So the championships are all great, but I'm playing for more
than that. I've got a bigger calling than that."
If he means
becoming the best ever, he might be on his way. With four MVP trophies
and no noticeable weaknesses, the gap with his peers is getting larger
and the one with the greats before him is shrinking.
"He's the
best on the planet right now. I don't know what you can do, but just
hope that he misses," said Nets coach Jason Kidd, one of the nine
coaches getting his first opportunity. In total, 13 teams changed
coaches.
James did miss in the closing seconds of game six of the
NBA Finals, but the Heat got the rebound to set up Ray Allen's tying
three-pointer, pulled it out in overtime and won game seven to deny the
Spurs a fifth title.
San Antonio may get another chance to finish
the job, or may not even be the best team in Texas after Howard joined
James Harden in Houston.
Howard bolted after one unfulfilling
season in Los Angeles, where he and Bryant never found a working
partnership. The center already seems happier and healthier in Houston,
where he and Harden can build a potent inside-outside tandem.
As
for Bryant, he'll watch the Lakers' opener, and who knows how much more,
while he continues to rehab from a torn Achilles' tendon. Questions
over how well he can play at 35 after such a serious injury, along with
Howard's departure, created unusually low expectations for the Lakers.
Instead,
the buzz in Los Angeles is about the Clippers, who hired Doc Rivers to
coach while Paul Pierce and Kevin Garnett went to Brooklyn after
Boston's breakup. That also could make both longtime losers not only the
current kings of their cities, but also contenders to reach the NBA
Finals — which are returning to the 2-2-1-1-1 format after 29 years of
2-3-2.
Here are five other things to watch around the NBA this season:
SITTING SPEEDSTERS:
While Rose returns after sitting out last season with a torn ACL,
Russell Westbrook and Rajon Rondo remain out recovering from knee
surgeries. A healthy Westbrook makes Oklahoma City a title contender
while Rondo could help the Celtics exceed expectations — or perhaps
become the next player they trade.
UP and COMERS:
They're not ready to contend for a title, but keep an eye on New
Orleans, Washington and Cleveland, all with dynamite young players who
may be good enough to carry their franchises back to the postseason.
CHANGING COMMISSIONERS: Adam
Silver replaces the retiring Stern as commissioner on February 1,
exactly 30 years after Stern took office. Silver has done much of the
heavy lifting for years, but he'll be replacing one of the greatest
executives sports has seen. "I'm excited for the league and for the
future, and for the fact that having been at the league now for 36
years, we've reached this point and there's a really extraordinary
executive in Adam ready to take it to the next level," Stern said.
SUMMER STORIES: Business
will really pick up after the next NBA champion is crowned. Kansas
freshman Andrew Wiggins, should he decide to enter the draft, could
become the most sought-after prospect in years. Free agency will then
open on July 1 with James and Carmelo Anthony perhaps set to top the
class.
WHO WINS?: The Heat are the choice of
everyone from odds makers to the executives who voted in the NBA.com GM
survey. But they were enormous favorites last season after a 27-game
winning streak during a 66-win regular season and almost fell. This
time, there's even more teams capable of finally knocking them off.
"They are the favorites, but I don't think they're the heavy favorites,"
Hall of Famer and TNT analyst Charles Barkley said. "Everybody's
picking the Heat right now, but there's some teams, they're going to
have some stiff competition."
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