Nuggets eye repeat, new-look Celtics and Bucks favored in East as NBA
season tips off
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[October 20, 2023]
By Rory Carroll
(Reuters) - The Denver Nuggets head into the 2023-24 NBA season as
defending champions but not necessarily the title favorites after
the Boston Celtics, Milwaukee Bucks and Phoenix Suns all upgraded
their rosters via blockbuster offseason acquisitions.
The Nuggets bring back the same starting five that delivered the
franchise its first championship last season, led again by the
tandem of Finals MVP Nikola Jokic and sharpshooting guard Jamal
Murray.
But the Nuggets must survive the loss of key role players Bruce
Brown and Jeff Green in a competitive Western Conference that
includes a Suns squad that added Bradley Beal to create a Big Three
with Kevin Durant and Devin Booker.
The Golden State Warriors, determined to add another title before
their championship window closes, nabbed veteran guard Chris Paul.
The team boasts a mix of all-time greats in Stephen Curry, Klay
Thompson and Draymond Green and promising young talent like Jonathan
Kuminga for head coach Steve Kerr to direct.
"The West is so hard to predict because there's such a thin margin
for error," Warriors general manager turned ESPN broadcaster Bob
Myers said on a call with reporters.
"Denver you clearly have to separate out a little bit because they
just did it. They lost a little bit of their bench depth, which is
not something just to ignore.
"But they still have what you might argue is the best player... in
Jokic who can control possessions on offense as good as LeBron
(James) ever did from a different type of position. Denver is
great."
James and the Los Angeles Lakers, who fell to the Nuggets in the
Western Conference Finals last season, have designs on lifting the
Larry O'Brien trophy come June, as do the steadily improving Memphis
Grizzlies.
"We can all throw out our predictions, but this is a tough one in
the West," Myers said.
SEISMIC SHIFTS
While seismic offseason shifts are nothing new in the
player-empowered league, the transformation of the Celtics in the
Eastern Conference is striking.
The team raised eyebrows in June by trading their longest tenured
player, fan favorite and defensive heartbeat Marcus Smart, as part
of a three-team deal that brought big man Kristaps Porzingis to
Boston in a high risk, high reward move.
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Oct 15, 2023; Denver, Colorado, USA; Denver Nuggets guard Jalen
Pickett (24) controls the ball against Chicago Bulls guard Quenton
Jackson (29) and forward Onuralp Bitim (17) in the fourth quarter at
Ball Arena. Mandatory Credit: Isaiah J. Downing-USA TODAY Sports
Nervous fans breathed a sigh of relief a month
later when Boston made Jaylen Brown the highest paid player in the
league with a five-year, $304 million supermax contact extension.
Then the front office landed point guard Jrue Holiday, who along
with Brown, Porzingis, All-Star Jayson Tatum and the
underappreciated Derrick White, comprise arguably the best starting
five in the league.
The Bucks meanwhile were surprise winners of the Damian Lillard
sweepstakes. With him joining two-time league MVP Giannis
Antetokounmpo, the team is sure to be an offensive juggernaut.
They were, however, forced to part with Holiday to secure Lillard
and their perimeter defense could suffer as a result.
Unlike the crowded Western Conference, Myers sees a simpler picture
taking shape in the East.
"In the East, I do think there's two teams that are in a tier by
themselves and that's Milwaukee and Boston," he said.
"Personally, if you made me choose, I would put Boston ahead right
now of Milwaukee."
Like Boston and Denver, Milwaukee's starting five is impressive but
the team lacks depth and all three clubs will be at the mercy of
injuries to star players as the 82-games season wears on.
The NBA regular season tips off on Tuesday. The league will hold its
first ever in-season tournament starting on Nov. 3 and concluding
Dec. 9 in Las Vegas. The NBA Finals begin June 6.
(Reporting by Rory Carroll in Los Angeles; Editing by David
Gregorio)
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