Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Remembering Seattle

"Thank you Seattle," said the T-Shirt sarcastically.

This shirt, made by Warpaint clothing, is a nose-thumbing at Seattle and their fans who had their team ripped from them though they lobbied to save it.

The classic Supersonics logo is depicted in OKC blue and distastefully reminds still-tender Seattle fans that what used to be their team is now just four wins from the NBA Finals.

After the shirt was publicized by New York Times writer Howard Beck, the outrage (and death threats) over twitter forced Warpaint to issue a semi-apology and declare their intention to stop selling the shirts. The controversial shirt is just the latest sting in the contentious relationship between Sonics fans and Thunder fans.

“I miss Seattle a lot. It was my first city that I lived in on my own. It was a great city to play for. It was unfortunate for the fans what happened, but it’s time to move on," said the NBA's leading scorer Kevin Durant.

"I’m sure they’ve moved on. But in the back of my mind, I still have a thing for Seattle and always am going to remember what they’ve done for me.”

Kevin Durant was there when the team was terrible near the end of it's run in Seattle.

Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz hadn't owned the team long when he sold to Clay Bennett. Bennett made some half-hearted promises about keeping the team in Seattle though he had hosted the hurricane-driven Hornets for a season and had a new arena in place in Oklahoma, Bennett's home town.

When the city of Seattle voted not to publicly fund a new arena, the team broke the lease at Key Arena two years early and moved to OKC and the rest is history.

Except for the future. And a bright future at that.

OKC is easily the best, most exciting young team in the League. But lest we forget, the Sonics once were as well. Watching the Seattle Supersonics leave is a lesson for all NBA franchises.

The documentary Sonicsgate: Requiem for a Team won "Best Sports Film" at the 2010 Webby Awards, and goes into depth about the team background in Seattle and behind the scened to see what happened that led to the relocation of the team.



Friday, May 11, 2012

Awards Predictions 2012: MVP

Most Valuable Player

picks and analysis by Devin Gray (@devingray33) and Pat Choi (@patty_choi
 
PC - LeBron James, Miami Heat
LeBron James deserves his third MVP trophy after his highly successful regular season. He's had one of his best statistical years and it has also been his most productive one. James leads the league in efficiency per 48 minutes and is averaging 27.2 ppg, an improvement from last season, 7.9 rpg (a career high), 6.2 apg (first among forwards) and 1.9 spg with improvements in fouls, turnovers and free throw percentage from his first season with the Heat. His most astounding improvements this year are in his production in scoring. He's averaging a career high 53% field goal percentage on 19 shots attempted per game and a career high 36.2% three-point percentage. James' effect on both the offensive and defensive side of the ball is what led to the Miami Heat's 46-20 record, second in the Eastern Conference. He is the best two-way player in the league, he leads his team in points, assists, rebounds and steals and is the single biggest reason why the Heat are fourth in point differential. Most people believe that James should never receive another MVP title because he's playing along side all-star and future hall of famer, Dwyane Wade. But without Wade this season James carried his team with a 14-1 record. 
Oh yeah, and he literally jumped OVER John Lucas on an alley-oop

DG - Kevin Durant, Oklahoma City Thunder
All year long the Thunder looked like a lock for the number one seed in the NBA, and falling short of that has dampened the enthusiasm for Kevin Durant as MVP. Regardless, the Thunder finished 47-19, third in the NBA, but still ahead of Miami. The MVP Race is clearly between LeBron and KD, and the Durantula slightly edges out the King. Durant recently locked up his third consecutive scoring title averaging 28 points per game to become the first player since Jordan to three-peat. A dominant scorer with a feathery touch and a lanky 6’9” frame allow him to get shots up above any defender, and he’s much improved on defence as well. This season, Durant established career highs in rebounds with eight per game, blocks with 1.2 and field goal % shooting .496 while playing all 66 games. KD dropped his career-high 51 this year, and was named All-Star Game MVP, so being named regular-season MVP would be the icing on the cake to another fantastic season where Durant has made another leap, just when you thought he'd reached his full potential.
KD for double-MVP?
 Video - Kevin Durant top 10 plays of the 2012 season

Thursday, May 10, 2012

Awards Predictions 2012: Bust

Biggest Disappointment

picks and analysis by Devin Gray (@devingray33) and Pat Choi (@patty_choi

PC - Lamar Odom, Dallas Mavericks
Usually an awards ceremony forgets the biggest disappointment, but we didn't, and my player that I name as the biggest bust is Lamar Odom. He was last season's sixth man of the year for the Lakers, but has played at his career lowest in all stat categories with the Mavericks this year including a career low 20.5 mpg. Odom requested a trade to a contending team after he heard he had almost been traded to the New Orleans Hornets in a three-team deal before the season began. He could never find his roll on the Mavericks’ team and could not consistently get solid minutes. In early March, Odom missed a few games for 'personal reasons' but it was actually hidden from the decisions of head coach Rick Carlisle. Dallas then assigned him to their NBA D-League affiliate. Finally the end of his time with Dallas came when they decided to list him inactive for the rest of the season, so they potentially could use him as a trade asset until the end of his one-year contract. Odom's career is certainly not over, he just needs to forget this season happened and get in better shape to focus on which contending team he can help win a championship in the 2012-2013 season.
Video: Lamar Odom interviewed early in the season in Dallas


DG - The Charlotte Bobcats
Unlike real awards shows which only acknowledge excellence, we have picked examples of on-court 'talent' that has not performed up to expectation. While the Bobcats' expectations were minimal going into this season compared to the expectations Odom had upon moving to Dallas, posting the NBA's worst winning percentage of all time deserves some recognition in the biggest disappointment category. The Bobcats were historically bad winning just .106 of their games and finishing with a final record of 7-59. The Bobcats were awful, lost their last 23 games in a row, coach Paul Silas and forward Tyrus Thomas actually fought in the locker room, Bismack Biyombo showed he was still very raw, while Kemba Walker battled DJ Augustin for playing time, Corey Maggette played in only 32 games, they didn't have Gerald Wallace, Boris Diaw left for San Antonio, Eduardo Najera fractured his forehead, and Gerald Henderson was their leading scorer. Just an ugly year in Charlotte, but hopefully Anthony Davis can fix all that.
 
Video: Corey Maggette bounce-pass to Caron Butler



Tuesday, May 8, 2012

Awards Predictions 2012: All-Rookie

picks and analysis by Devin Gray (@devingray33) and Pat Choi (@patty_choi)

PC - All-Rookie First Team
Center - Tristan Thompson, Cleveland
Forward - Kenneth Faried, Denver
Forward - Kawhi Leonard, San Antonio
Guard - Ricky Rubio, Minnesota
Guard - Kyrie Irving, Cleveland

PC - All-Rookie Second Team 
Center - Bismack Biyombo, Charlotte
Forward - Chandler Parsons, Houston
Forward - Klay Thompson, Golden State
Guard - Iman Shumpert, New York
Guard - Isaiah Thomas, Sacramento

Isaiah Thomas, proved he was an NBA PG while Iman Shumpert impressed with defence
DG - All-Rookie First Team
Center - Tristan Thompson, Cleveland
Forward - Kenneth Faried, Denver
Forward - Kawhi Leonard, San Antonio
Guard - Ricky Rubio, Minnesota
Guard - Kyrie Irving, Cleveland

DG - All-Rookie Second Team 
Center - Bismack Biyombo, Charlotte
Forward - Klay Thompson, Golden State
Forward - Iman Shumpert, New York
Guard - MarShon Brooks, New Jersey
Guard - Isaiah Thomas, Sacramento



Awards Predictions 2012: All-Defense

picks and analysis by Devin Gray (@devingray33) and Pat Choi (@patty_choi)

DG - All-NBA First Defensive Team
Center - Tyson Chandler, New York
Forward - Serge Ibaka, Oklahoma City           
Forward - LeBron James, Miami
Guard - Chris Paul, L.A. Clippers
Guard - Tony Allen, Memphis

DG - All-NBA Second Defensive Team
Center - Dwight Howard, Orlando
Forward - Josh Smith, Atlanta
Forward - Shawn Marion, Dallas
Guard - Andre Iguodala, Philadelphia
Guard - Rajon Rondo, Boston

LeBron guards all positions and turns defense into offense
PC - All-NBA First Defensive Team
Center - Tyson Chandler, New York
Forward - Serge Ibaka, Oklahoma City           
Forward - LeBron James, Miami
Guard - Andre Iguodala, Philadelphia
Guard - Tony Allen, Memphis

PC - All-NBA Second Defensive Team
Center - Dwight Howard, Orlando
Forward - Kevin Garnett, Boston
Forward - Luol Deng, Chicago
Guard - Paul George, Indiana
Guard - Chris Paul, L.A. Clippers

Tony Allen has proven himself to be one of the elite perimeter defenders in the NBA

Note: Dwight Howard not on the All-NBA First Defensive Team
This season showed why Dwight isn't a lock for best-at-everything center. He usually dominates the position, but an off-year and a lack of public support gave Tyson Chandler the Defensive Player of the Year. How could you put the DPOY on the All-NBA Second Defensive Team? It doesn't make sense. And since there's only two spots for centers, unless you're going to bend the rules and make one of them eligible for the forward position, it has to be Chandler on the first team and Dwight on the second.

Monday, May 7, 2012

Awards Predictions 2012: All-NBA


picks and analysis by Devin Gray (@devingray33) and Pat Choi (@patty_choi)


DG - All-NBA First Team
Center - Dwight Howard, Orlando
Forward - LeBron James, Miami
Forward - Kevin Durant, Oklahoma City
Guard - Kobe Bryant, L.A. Lakers
Guard - Chris Paul, L.A. Clippers


PC - All-NBA First Team
Center - Dwight Howard, Orlando
Forward - LeBron James, Miami
Forward - Kevin Durant, Oklahoma City
Guard - Kobe Bryant, L.A. Lakers
Guard - Tony Parker, San Antonio

Chris Paul > Tony Parker?
Do you commend Tony Parker on his career-high 7.7 assists per game while Chris Paul averaged "just" 9.1 assists per game? Do you recognize Parker's leadership role on the 50-win, Conference-leading Spurs, or Paul for his role in making the Clippers respectable and winning 40 games in his first season in LA? Final team record may be the deciding factor.

No Love?
The numbers don't lie for Kevin Love who averaged 26 points and 13.3 rebounds, but how is he supposed to crack the All-NBA First Team at Forward when he has to compete with the two most likely MVP candidates in LeBron James and Kevin Durant? Love's case would be strengthened if the Wolves had made the playoffs, but they finished just 26-40 and Love's season came to an end after 55 games.

DG - All-NBA Second Team
Center - Andrew Bynum, L.A. Lakers
Forward - Kevin Love, Minnesota
Forward - Dirk Nowitzki, Dallas
Guard - Russell Westbrook, Oklahoma City
Guard - Tony Parker, San Antonio

PC - All-NBA Second Team
Center - Andrew Bynum, L.A. Lakers
Forward - Kevin Love, Minnesota
Forward - Dirk Nowitzki, Dallas
Guard - Russell Westbrook, Oklahoma City
Guard - Chris Paul, L.A. Clippers

Dirk > Carmelo? 
Melo played in 55 games this year to Dirk's 62, but averaged 22.6 points to Dirk's 21.6. Percentage-wise, Dirk is more effective from every spot on the floor, though Melo handles the ball more, gets more minutes and assists. Both the Knicks and Mavs were struggling to avoid getting swept in the first round of the playoffs despite these stars. It's a toss-up, but we both go Dirk this time.

Westbrook > Wade? 
Westbrook averaged 23.6 points, 5.5 assists, and 4.6 rebounds to Wade's 22.1, 4.6, and 4.8. Wade played in 49 games while Westbrook played in all 66. Both play second bill on their respective teams to MVP candidates, but both are top-10 players in the League. Westbrook simply had a better year, emerging as one of the best players in the NBA.

DG - All-NBA Third Team
Center - Marc Gasol, Memphis
Forward - LaMarcus Aldridge, Portland
Forward - Carmelo Anthony, New York
Guard - Dwyane Wade, Miami
Guard - Rajon Rondo, Boston

PC - All-NBA Third Team
Center - Marc Gasol, Memphis
Forward - LaMarcus Aldridge, Portland
Forward - Carmelo Anthony, New York
Guard - Dwyane Wade, Miami
Guard - Rajon Rondo, Boston

Rondo > Rose?
Last seasons' MVP played in just 39 games this year fighting constant injuries that "limited" him to 21.8 and a career-high 7.9 assists. Rondo though led the league in assists with 11.7 per game, while scoring 11.9 points in 53 games this season. Rondo was the only player to record more than one triple-double and he exploded for six such games this season including a monster 18 point, 17 rebound, 20 assist game.

LaMarcus Aldridge > Blake Griffin? 
LA averaged 21.7 and 8 rebounds while Griffin averaged 20.6 and 10.8. Blake played in all 66 games, while Aldridge played in 55. Griffin's free-throw percentage brings him down though as he shot just 52% from the line compared to Aldridge's 81%. Both were All-Stars this year and though Griffin usually gets the shine because of all the highlights, Aldridge should be recognized as an All-NBA player.

Tough luck – Rose, Hibbert, Granger, Harden, Nash, Griffin, Garnett


Friday, May 4, 2012

Awards Predictions 2012: Rookie

Rookie of the Year

picks and analysis by Devin Gray (@devingray33) and Pat Choi (@patty_choi)

 
DG - Kyrie Irving, Cleveland Cavaliers
Seeing as how we’re allowing players whose seasons were marred by injury take home awards (see my Lin pick for MostImproved), I can see how Rubio could win Rookie of the Year, but Kyrie Irving dominated in his own way. Irving averaged 18.5 points and 5.4 assists to Rubio’s 10.6 and 8.2, playing the scorers role required by his Cavs team. Irving played 51 games this year, ten more than Rubio, and established himself as a go-to scorer when the game is on the line. In his rookie year, he was already the greatest clutch performer in the NBA (Clutch=4th quarter or overtime, less than 5 minutes left, neither team ahead by more than 5 points) scoring a runaway league-best 56.4 points per 48 minutes of clutch time (http://www.82games.com/1112/CSORT11.HTM) . Not bad for a guy who only played 11 games in college, no summer league, and debuted in a shortened season.
Video: Kyrie Irving's top 10 plays of the 2011-12 season

PC - Ricky Rubio, Minnesota Timberwolves
The Minnesota Timberwolves fight for the playoffs during the last quarter of the season would have looked very different if the Spanish rookie had been healthy, and if Rubio didn't go down with a torn ACL he would be the top candidate for this season's Rookie of the Year award. As a starter he pushed the Timberwolves to an 18-13 record. After he was out with the injury, Minnesota went to finish the season 5-20. In 41 games Rubio averaged a rookie-leading 8.2 assists per game (sixth in the league) and led all rookies in steals with 2.2 per game (tied second in the league).
Video: Ricky Rubio- A Season Cut Short


Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Preseason Predictions Revisited

Before this season started I made my predictions as to how each of the teams would finish. Looking back I can see which teams surprised me, underperformed, or maybe I predicted bang on. The actual final record is listed in blue, my preseason record prediction is listed in red, and the difference is listed after in green.
East
Chicago – 50/16... 53/13 = -3
Miami – 46/20... 56/10 = -10
Indiana – 42/24... 39/27 = +3
Atlanta – 40/26... 46/20 = -6
Boston – 39/27... 44/22 = -5
Orlando – 37/29... 41/25 = -4
New York – 36/30... 42/24 = -6
Philadelphia – 35/31... 38/28 = -3
Milwaukee – 31/35... 25/41 = +6
Detroit – 25/41... 30/36 = -5
Toronto – 23/43... 30/36 = -7
New Jersey – 22/44... 22/44 = 0
Cleveland – 21/45... 18/48 = +3
Washington – 20/46... 12/54 = +8
Charlotte – 7/59... 20/46 = -13 
West
San Antonio – 50/16... 38/28 = +12
Oklahoma City – 47/19... 51/13 = -4
LA Lakers – 41/25... 41/25 = 0
Memphis – 41/25... 38/28 = +3
LA Clippers – 40/26... 42/24 = -2
Denver – 38/28... 37/29 = +1
Dallas – 36/30... 46/20 = -10
Utah – 36/30... 33/33 = +3
Houston – 34/32... 26/40 = +8
Phoenix – 33/33... 28/38 = +5
Portland – 28/38... 44/22 = -16
Minnesota – 26/40... 26/40 = 0
Golden State – 23/43... 25/41 = -2
Sacramento – 22/44... 20/46 = +2
New Orleans – 21/45... 23/43 = -2

Five Things That Stand Out

1) Portland – 28/38... 44/22 = -16
I came into the season pretty high on the Blazers. I thought Nate McMillan was doing a great job, they had just signed Jamal Crawford, Raymond Felton looked ready to break out, Marcus Camby and Kurt Thomas could still produce even if Greg Oden never came back, Gerald Wallace was a key addition, LaMarcus Aldridge was going to be an all-star, and Wes Matthews and Nic Batum were the secret weapons that would secure Portland not just a playoff spot, but homecourt as well. Then the wheels fell off. Portland started the season 7-2, but faded soon after that. Felton and McMillan clashed, Wallace was dealt to New Jersey, Camby to Houston, Aldridge had a hip injury later in the year and McMillan lost his job. The 44-win season I predicted never came to fruition, and the Blazers stumbled to just 28 wins.

2) San Antonio – 50/16... 38/28 = +12
Yeah, I was one of the people who doubted the Spurs this year. I figured that last years' first round upset by the eighth-ranked Grizzlies was the final run in the Spurs decade-long dynasty. There were rumors that Tony Parker would be traded, Duncan is 36, Manu is 34, and though I figured they'd still make the playoffs, I never expected the Spurs to be sitting on top of the conference once again. Kudos to the Spurs for making the doubters wrong and for keeping on doing what they do best.

3) New Jersey– 22/44... 22/44 = 0, Minnesota– 26/40... 26/40 = 0, LA Lakers– 41/25... 41/25 = 0
My predictions matched up fairly well for the most part, with some obvious surprises and disappointments, but I nailed New Jersey, Minnesota and Los Angeles right on the head. The Nets and Wolves really could have posted better records if Deron Williams and Ricky Rubio hadn't missed significant time. The Lakers at 41 wins was just what I expected with the loss of Phil Jackson and the departure of Lamar Odom.  

4) Miami – 46/20... 56/10 = -10Dallas – 36/30... 46/20 = -10
Both of last years' NBA Finals participants finished with exactly ten wins less than I had anticipated. For the Heat, it was a mixture of overconfidence (56 wins, really?) and them losing some games they really should have won. I expected more of the defending champs from Dallas though. Even though they'd lost JJ Barea, Tyson Chandler, and DeShawn Stevenson, they'd picked up Vince Carter and Lamar Odom. The former sixth-man of the year Odom really crapped out, never fit in, and was eventually dismissed from the team, while it took Dirk a while to round into shape, and the Mavs stumbled right out of the gate. While the Heat are poised to make a deep playoff run from the two seed, the Mavs are in tough as the seventh seed facing the Oklahoma City Thunder- a fate they could have avoided had they just picked up a few more wins.

5) Charlotte – 7/59... 20/46 = -13
Nobody could have predicted the Bobcats would post the worst winning percentage of all time with .106, even if they had tagged them for last in the league before the season began. I thought the Wizards would do worse, but the finished the year with the 20 wins I predicted for the Bobcats after closing on a six-game win streak. The Bobcats were awful, lost their last 23 games in a row, coach Paul Silas and forward Tyrus Thomas actually fought in the locker room, Bismack Biyombo showed he was still very raw, Corey Maggette played in only 32 games, Boris Diaw left for San Antonio, Eduardo Najera fractured his forehead, and Gerald Henderson was their leading scorer. Ugly year in Charlotte.

Tuesday, May 1, 2012

Awards Predictions 2012: Defensive Player

Defensive Player of the Year

picks and analysis by Devin Gray (@devingray33) and Pat Choi (@patty_choi)
 
PC - Serge Ibaka, Oklahoma City Thunder
Serge Ibaka is the leading candidate for the Defensive Player of the Year award this season in my opinion. His individual stats alone are eye popping, Ibaka manages to lead the league in blocks per game at 3.7 in only 27 minutes of action and averages 7.6 rebounds per game. He also has had three games of 10 or more blocks: there have only been three different players to do it in the last five seasons. He’s also a huge reason why the Thunder are having so much success this year, his individual improvements have directly improved his teams’ defence. The Oklahoma City Thunder are number one in blocks per game at 8.2, an improvement from last year’s 5.9 per game. Also the Thunder have improved in both opponent points allowed and opponent field goal percentage. 

DG - Tyson Chandler, New York Knicks
This years vote is an anyone-but-Dwight-because-he’s-such-a-wanker vote. Tyson Chandler doesn’t wow with numbers and stats and compared to Dwight Howard’s 20.6 and 14.5, Chandler’s 11.3 and 9.9 don’t look so impressive, but the impact he’s had on the Knicks has been extremely positive (and Howard’s overall impact on the Magic this season is questionable). When the Knicks amnestied Chauncey Billups to make room to sign Chandler they were getting proven, championship-calibre defense and Chandler hasn’t let them down. A great help defender, he regularly compensates for the defensive deficiencies of Anthony and Stoudemire. Third in DPOY voting last year, Chandler earns the nod this year for taking a notoriously poor defensive Knicks team playing D’Antoni basketball from 23rd in points allowed per possession last season to fifth this season.



Awards Predictions 2012: Most Improved

Most Improved Player of the Year

picks and analysis by Devin Gray (@devingray33) and Pat Choi (@patty_choi)

DG Jeremy Lin, New York Knicks
While NBA big men like Andrew Bynum, Greg Monroe, and DeMarcus Cousins all improved marginally this year, the most dynamic emergence of a player in any sport in the past few years happened this year in with Linsanity in the NBA. The three-week stretch he put together in February saved the Knicks season and brought them permanently into the playoff picture. Through the ups and downs, the Carmelo’s and the D’Antoni’s, Lin is what made this Knicks team worth watching this season. The 6’3” point guard averaged 14.6 points (up from 2.6 last year with Golden State), 6.2 assists, 3.1 rebounds and 1.6 steals over 35 games. The growth from 2.6 to 14.6 could be explained by the jump in minutes, but per 36 Lin’s points per game still jumped from 9.6 to 19.6. He came out of nowhere to become one of the most impactful players in the league and sold the second-most jerseys trailing only Derrick Rose.



PC - Ersan Ilyasova, Milwaukee Bucks



For the MIP award this season, Ersan Ilyasova is my top nominee. In the same amount of games last season (60) with only a 2:30 minute increase, Ilyasova has increased almost every statistic per game. The biggest difference was his three-point shooting percentage, with an increase to 45.5% from 29.8%. He also improved his field goal percentage, rebounds to 8.8 from 6.1rpg, assists, scoring to 13 from 9.5 and he was 24th in the league in double-doubles. Ilyasova has been an average player in the league for three seasons, but now with improvements in consistency and production, he has turned himself into a legitimate starter for the Milwaukee Bucks. This season Ilyasova reached career highs in points (32), field goals made and attempted, rebounds (25) and minutes played.  


Awards Predictions 2012: Coach of the Year

Coach of the Year

picks and analysis by Devin Gray (@devingray33) and Pat Choi (@patty_choi)


PC - Gregg Popovich, San Antonio Spurs
The San Antonio Spurs tied the Chicago Bulls for the best record in the league but Gregg Popovich gets the nod over Tom Thibodeau because the West is the tougher conference to win in. A lot of people would pick Thibodeau to be the coach of the year because the Bulls held the number one spot over the Miami Heat in the East while their star Derrick Rose missed 27 games of the regular season, but Popovich also dealt with his stars missing games. Manu Ginobili missed 32 due to a broken shooting hand, and Tony Parker and Tim Duncan missed a total of 14 in a shortened season. During the 66-game regular season San Antonio started off with a horrid 13-9 record until the end of January, but for the next three months the Spurs went 37-7 with an .84 winning percentage. With the win on Sunday against the Utah Jazz in the first round of the playoffs, the Spurs have had three different occurrences with 11-game winning streaks this season since their win on Jan. 30th. 

DG - Tom Thibodeau, Chicago Bulls
The last bench boss to win back-to-back coach of the year awards in the NBA? How about NEVER. No coach has ever won the NBA’s coach of the year award in consecutive years, but this will be the year when Thibodeau wins again. A Bulls team that played 27 games without last year’s MVP Derrick Rose managed to once gain post a better record than the Miami Heat and win the best overall record in the NBA (Chicago holds the tie-breaker over San Antonio). The Bulls also missed Luol Deng for 12 games and Rip Hamilton for 38, but a deep bench bought into Thibs’ defensive mantra which made CJ Watson, John Lucas III and Mike James look like a dangerous backcourt. Where the Spurs had the best offence in the league, the Bulls clearly had the best defence allowing a league-low 95.5 points per 100 posessions. The Bulls also remained poised when faced with adversity, and lost back-to-back games just once all season.