Written on August 25th, 2010 by Eric Felkeyno shouts

The speculation and drama that surrounded the free agent class of LeBron James, Dwyane Wade, Chris Bosh, Dirk Nowitzki, Paul Pierce, Ray Allen, Carlos Boozer, Rudy Gay, and co. slowly and slowly gained steam for years before culminating in an eight-day media frenzy from July 1-8.
This year, Carmelo Anthony appears to be headed down the same path. (more…)
Written on July 8th, 2010 by Eric Felkeyno shouts
The first major pieces of NBA free agency fell into place early Wednesday morning, and it had nothing to do with a certain Akron native.
ESPN’s Chris Broussard was the first to report that Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh would be teaming up for the Miami Heat next season, and the rumor was quickly confirmed.
It ended a chaotic six-day stretch that saw rampant speculation on where the two would be playing. At first, Miami seemed like the most logical destination for Wade, but Chicago kept creeping up in conversation. The fact that Wade’s ex-wife and kids live in Illinois had many believing he would play there just to be close to his children.
Similarly, Chris Bosh’s name was linked to the Cavs when the Raptors said they would cooperate in a sign-and-trade with Cleveland. But Bosh dismissed those rumors by saying he didn’t want to play in Ohio, and played it off today with a superficial story about how not knowing where LeBron would play being the biggest factor in that decision.
In the end, he couldn’t pass up an opportunity to play with one of the NBA’s elite.
“We’ve wanted to play with each other and we have a golden opportunity to do that. We’re going to take advantage of it,” stated Bosh.
While not on the same level as superstars such as Wade, James, Kobe Bryant, and Kevin Durant, Bosh is an extremely skilled forward that could easily thrive playing alongside someone like Wade (a la Pau Gasol in L.A.).
The acquisition of Bosh immediately makes Miami instant contenders in the East. Even with a supporting cast of Quentin Richardson, Michael Beasley, and Jermaine O’Neal, Miami finished above .500 and earned the fifth seed.
That roster will see upgrades at almost every position. Instead of an aging O’Neal, the Heat will boast a crafty left-hander who will torch most opponents who try to defend him one-on-one.
It’ll soften up defenses on Dwyane Wade and allow him more room to operate. Plus, he won’t have to function with the responsibility and expectations of the entire team on his back every play. He can afford to play a few less minutes and preserve his energy for the postseason.
Look at Miami’s main competition in the East. Boston will be another year older, and while they still should be a playoff threat, it’s unlikely that they’ll have a dominant regular season.
If Cleveland loses LeBron James, they go from a 61-win No. 1 seed to a 35-40 win team at best.
Even though Atlanta kept their same nucleus in tact, they’ve pretty much peaked over the last two years. There’s no reason to believe that Miami can’t jump them.
Chicago and Milwaukee have both improved, but are their ceilings higher than Miami’s if the Heat add a few more pieces? Unless the Bulls land James, it doesn’t appear likely.
But that does lead to another burning question…what other pieces does Miami look to add? That all depends on the decision of one LeBron James.
James will announce his destination Thursday night on ESPN. If he chooses Miami, it somewhat complicates things in South Beach.
The salary cap was set today at $58 million, about $2 million more than expected. But even with that, if James is in Miami, all three players will have to play at a discount (technically, they could have two max contracts and one guy making less, but it seems likely that they would divvy up the money three-ways).
While Wade and Bosh didn’t lobby for James to join them, they certainly were open to the idea. Wade said, “we would love for LeBron to join Miami — who wouldn’t? But at the same time, LeBron is going to make his own decision.”
With James, they certainly would have the best one-two-three punch in the league…and arguably in history. But there are certain pitfalls that would come with it.
First, what does it say about the “team” aspect of those three when Wade and Bosh simultaneously make their announcement, but James waits and makes his in an elaborate, drawn out presentation of his “greatness”? Already, one would think there would be chemistry issues.
Second, with those three max players, the Heat would have no choice but to plug in low-level players at other positions. While they could get decent players at discounted rates (just for the opportunity to play with the trio), the way money has been thrown around this offseason, it seems unlikely.
This is most likely an opinion of the minority, but it seems like the Heat could be better off without James. Here’s the argument:
Wade is clearly the alpha dog of the time. He’s the leader, the floor general, the one who handles the ball in the final seconds of a close game. He maintains his throne as the king of South Beach.
Bosh is the No. 2 option, if only ever-so-slightly. He immediately becomes one of the two best superstar sidekicks in the league (along with Pau Gasol), whether he likes that title or not. But he shouldn’t view himself as a sidekick—instead, he can be the player that makes a really good team great.
He needs to pretty much exclusively watch tape of what Gasol does for the Lakers: dominate when called on, find ways to contribute (defense, rebounding) at other times, and serve as the premier paint enforcer.
With no James, it makes working out a sign-and-trade for Bosh with Toronto a little easier as well. They can move Michael Beasley’s contract, freeing up extra space for complementary players.
They’ll need a legitimate three-point shooter. Guys like Mike Miller and Kyle Korver immediately spring to mind, players that can spread the floor even more and allow Bosh and Wade more room to operate.
They’d also have room to go after bigs in Brendan Haywood or Udonis Haslem.
While the team is far sexier on paper with James, they may be more complete at every position without him, as well as determining a leader on the floor. From a chemistry standpoint, that’s a big plus.
After LeBron’s announcement, things should become a lot clearer around the league. But at this moment, one thing is for sure: Miami is by far in the best position of any free agent buyer.
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