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More Playoff Predictions and Musings

 

by Ed Weiland (4/19/08)

 

The past couple of seasons I’ve done the playoff preview by breaking down each team and how they played with or without a particular player, since a trade or for the final two months, etc. My point was to look for a sleeper team that might be somewhat underrated going in, the way Detroit was in 2004. That method usually didn’t find much, produced some mixed results and was too time-consuming for me to complete this year, so I wanted to change things up and simply try to defend my pre-season picks of Phoenix beating Boston in the Finals.

 

The East

 

The Celtics will win. Not really a newsflash, but this is a team that put up some wildly good numbers in both wins and point differential. Their top competition is a Pistons team coached by a guy whose teams have never overachieved and have often underachieved in several playoff runs. There’s a good, but hardly great Orlando team and the defending champ Cavaliers going through a down year. The rest of the East field isn’t really worth mentioning. This will be fairly easy for Boston.

As compelling as the West has been this season, there isn’t a truly great team in the bunch. Any of the 8 playoff teams could emerge as champ and it wouldn’t be a huge surprise. Because of this, logic might say that the Celtics should be favored to win the championship. After all the Eastern playoffs should be like a walk in the park and they’ll be refreshed and ready when a bruised and battered champion finally emerges from the brutal Western playoffs. But history suggests the Western champ might have the advantage. Throughout history, the team from the stronger conference has a good record in the finals, winning around 70% of the time. When it’s a situation like the Celtics are in this season, the team with the best overall record being from the much weaker conference, that team has been tripped up along the way much more often than not. Here is a list of teams in a simlair situation to this year’s Celtics. They had the best record in the league while playing in the significantly weaker conference:

 

 

I didn’t include the ’52 Royals, ’91 Blazers, ’92 Bulls and ’93 Suns. All teams were in the same position as having the best record in the league from an inferior conference, but the difference was pretty insignificant, so I didn’t include them. I will note that the ’92 Bulls were the only team in that group to eventually win a championship. Can the Celtics buck this trend? Possibly. At 66 wins and a 10+ point differential, they’re certainly in all-time great team territory. It wouldn’t surprise me at all if they ran through the playoffs in a “take no prisoners” style like the ’83 Sixers, ’91 Bulls or ’01 Lakers. But those teams all came from the stronger conference, unlike these Celtics. I’m also a little leery about Doc Rivers going into the finals. He’s been the perfect coach for this group so far. But the playoffs are a different game and if the Celtics don’t get into unstoppable mode, he may have to do some serious coaching and match wits with a Jackson, Popovich or D’Antoni. That’s something no Celtics’ fan wants to see.

 

 

 

The West

 

I’ve decided to stick with my preseason pick of the Suns to win the West and their first championship. I feel the West is winnable by any one of the 8 teams and they’re so close in talent that nothing would surprise me. I didn’t like the Marion-Shaq trade. I felt the team was fine as they were, but it does give them the big bodies to beat San Antonio in round one and that might be their biggest hurdle, depending on how things turn. Another thing I like about Phoenix is this is likely the last chance for the Nash team to get their title. They’ll be a year older next year and might decide to cut costs just a little bit more. That should keep them a little more focused. If they do fall short, Phoenix fans would have to start wondering if this is one of those jinxed franchises, like the pre-2004 Red Sox or the Minnesota Vikings. The Phoenix Suns have always been a team that has been consistently strong and entertaining. They’ve had some great players and have provided their fans with some great drama. They’ve never been down for an extended period and have often been part of the league’s elite.  Their management has always been willing to make the bold move to put their team in a position to win. It’s not like they’re the Clippers who have just been bad. It’s just that they’ve never been able to win the big one. They’ve lost 6 conference finals and 2 finals. No team has been that close so many times without having won. No team has gone as long as the 39 years the Suns have without a championship in the same city. Here’s a quick rundown of some of the near-misses in the Suns’ history. Some are big, others not so much, but all were near misses that kept this franchise from accomplishing truly great things.

 

 

The ending to the last one is unwritten at this point. If my prediction holds, the Suns will win their first title and erase all the near-misses and heartbreak of the past. If I’m wrong, the Suns can just add another chapter to their history. As far as the individual series, I see it breaking down like this: Cleveland, Orlando, Detroit Boston, New Orleans, Houston, Phoenix and LA winning round 1. Followed by Orlando, Boston, Phoenix and LA in the conference finals. Then Phoenix beats Boston in the finals.

 

 

 

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