Friday, April 27, 2012

NBA:  OKC & Minnesota Down, Nuggets Go Forward.

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NBA:    BY achieving a victory against the Oklahoma City Thunder on Wednesday, April 25, the Denver Nuggets became a single winning game away from achieving the NBA-Western Conference’s number six playoff seed, which whipping the Minnesota Timberwolves in Denver’s last game of the 2011/12 season would guarantee. On Thursday, April 26, the Nuggets took care of business, they defeated the Timberwolves, 131-102.

The Nuggets have been a winning team, and here’s the better side of the good: in addition to the Nuggets maintaining its 103.7 points per game average throughout most of the regular season, nine of its games won were versus the likely to be post-season contenders, among them, the Dallas Mavericks, Los Angeles Lakers, the Miami Heat, the L.A. Clippers, Boston Celtics, Chicago Bulls, the Orlando Magic, and the Timberwolves. Only one of the nine wins was by fewer than 103 points, vs. the Lakers, 99-90.

Five of those nine Nuggets-defeated teams are already the number one franchise of their division---the Thunder, the Lakers, the Celtics, the Heat, and the Bulls, an indication that the post-Carmelo Anthony/Billups Nuggets haven’t been the left-behind franchise they were expected to be since the 2011 Nuggets revision began with the popular star shooters Anthony and Billups sent from Denver to the New York Knicks in exchange for several unknowns from the Knicks.

The only leading division team that the Nuggets haven’t beaten this year with those former Knicks aboard, are the San Antonio Spurs, a contest during which the Nuggets were one point shy of three digits, losing 114-99. Only in four of 66 games played this season have the Nuggets finished with less than 90 points, neither of the four below 81.

Other Nuggets stats address the team’s ride into the post-season. Not only have seven Nuggets players achieved double-digit averages, 11 Nuggets players have double-digit averages in the execution of blocks, 13 in the employment of steals, 15 with double-digit assists (four of these players have triple-digit assist totals), and 12 Nuggets players have triple-digit rebound totals, while 10 have high triple-digit field goal totals. Noteworthy about these Nuggets individual player stats is that there are numerous other NBA franchises with players that have higher numbers in most of the listed categories, yet across the rosters of those teams are fewer players with double- and triple-digit totals, and also fewer double-digit scorers than the Nuggets have had, though the Nuggets highest ppg holder hasn’t attained more than a 16.3 ppg average (guard, Ty Lawson), when several NBA teams can boast of having shooters with 20+ ppg averages. Reflected, then, is the Nuggets emphasis on teamwork over star power.

No Nuggets player stands out the way that the Thunder’s Kevin Durant, the Lakers Kobe Bryant or the Heat’s LeBron James can---Nuggets formidability has maintained from head coach George Karl’s insistence on the “We” instead of the “Me,” and that is what could bring the Nuggets past the first round of the playoffs and serve as a model for future NBA reliance on a motto, “Teamwork reigns!” ending any rushes within NBA teams to trade three or four above-the-margin “team first” players for the next Durant, Bryant or LeBron. It’s a safe guess that in recent months the New York Knicks front office and head coach have been paying lots of attention to “We” over “Me,” even with that Linsanity breakthrough.  
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