A Reflection on the NBA One Year After the Death of Kobe

basketball BW.jpg

Yesterday, along with being my son's birthday, was the one year anniversary of Kobe Bryant's passing. He, along with seven other people, including his daughter Gigi, all perished in a helicopter crash.

It was tragic, it brought out a ton of feelings in me, and a year later I am still stunned. I had not thought of it until I listened to the Lowe Post, and Zach Lowe and Howard Beck spent the entire hour talking about it. It was a very interesting and enlightening listen.

Lowe made a statement, and it really rang true for me. He said it seems so long ago, but also so recent. He is right. Kobe did pass one year ago, but so much has happened since then. Personally I got, and had to give up, a dog. My kids advanced a grade in school. There is a new administration in DC. There was a riot at the Capitol. RD and I have done multiple pods. And there is still a deadly pandemic raging across the US and other countries. The pandemic kind of took over everything, as it should, less than two months after Kobe passed. We all kind of forgot because everything shut down. Almost every business, sports, jobs and schools shut down for months. We are still dealing with shut downs. Things reopened and shut down again. Sports have started and stopped and been postponed and rescheduled. I have not been to a movie theater or a restaurant in ten plus months. My kids spent the last part of last school year, and the beginning of this year, learning from home. We are switching to virtual Friday's this week in fact. I know a lot of other kids that have not been to school since March of 2020. My wife has been working from home since April. All of this, and so, so much more has happened, and is still happening, since Kobe passed. So when I listened to that pod, and sat with it, that was when it hit me. One year has already passed and is in the rearview since those eight people died last January.

Going from a strictly basketball perspective, looking at the game since Kobe passed, it has been crazy. The Lakers won the title, dedicated it to Kobe, but they won it in Orlando, in the "bubble". I don't think any of us saw that coming. Also, I am very curious how someone like Kobe would have reacted to the bubble. I think he would have gone the LeBron and Jimmy Butler route, and treated it as a business trip. But still, totally crazy. And now, with no fans at the games, and players being tested everyday, how would Kobe have dealt with all of this? Again, I think he would have treated it like he did everything else on the court, with an addicted obsession, and probably crushed everyone else. So it is interesting to me to see who is thriving, and who is not doing so great with the bubble and the new season. Guys like LeBron, and Dame and Nikola Jokic, Joel Embiid, Giannis and AD, they have all thrived. That is because they have adopted that "Mamba Mentality", and they don't let this stuff affect their game. They treat it like business, and when the playoffs roll around, they will be the ones ready to go. But we have some of these younger guys, guys that were born in the late 90's and early 2000's, that are struggling because they didn't get to see prime Kobe. They only saw him at the end, when he was on a bad Lakers team, and he was jacking up 30 shots a game. I think that says a lot about his influence on the modern game. The guys who looked up to him, who watched him when they were young, the ones who wanted to emulate him, they are the ones that are thriving. I was not a Kobe fan, but he was a great, obsessed and singularly focused individual on the basketball court. That was what made him so great, and so infuriating as a watcher of the NBA.

Kobe is gone, but his legacy will forever live on, you can see it in today's players and games and it will be there for sometime now. RIP Kobe, and the other passengers. You will never be forgotten.

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing and the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast.

Come and support Ty and the podcast on Patreon.

Follow Ty on instagram and twitter.

SeedSing is funded by a group of awesome people. Join them by donating to SeedSing.

Ty Watches the NFC and AFC Title Games

football.jpg

Yesterday was a rough day for personal and sports reasons for myself. The personal stuff is none of your damn business, but the sports stuff, I am here to talk about it.

The Super Bowl is set. We have the Bucs and the Chiefs facing off in two weeks. If the Bills had won, this would have been the most white trash Super Bowl of all time, but the Chiefs saved us from that.

The Chiefs proved how good they truly are. Buffalo was hot, they were the darling team, they even took a lead, just like the Titans last year, and then Patrick Mahomes decided enough was enough, and he was spectacular. He is the best QB in the game right now, and it isn't even close. ESPN went as far to give Buffalo the "advantage" at QB prior to the game, and I think word got back to, not only Mahomes, but the Chiefs defense. Mahomes, as I said, was awesome. The Chiefs D might have been better. They suffocated and harassed and pretty much, for them, dominated the Bills "explosive" offense. They shut down Josh Allen too. Outside of the first drive, he was very mediocre. The Bills run game was pretty much non-existent and Stefon Diggs was blanketed all game. And after that first drive, on the Chiefs next five drives, they scored, or knelt on the ball to go to halftime. Mahomes was finding all of his receivers, the O line was stout and the run game did just enough, basically what they ask of them every game, and the Chiefs won going away. It wasn't as close as the final score suggested. The Chiefs made easy work of the Bills, they looked dominant, and they should be the favorites going into the Super Bowl.

The NFC title game was a different story. Green Bay was bad, especially in the first half. They could not stop the Bucs. To give up a TD like they did to end the first half is something that should never, ever happen. To fumble on the opening drive of the second half and let the Bucs score immediately was brutal. To give up so many third down conversions, that is inexcusable. I would not be surprised, and no one else should, if Mike Pettine is let go today. But Green Bay did make it a game. After going down 28-10, they scored on their very next drive, then picked off Brady and scored again. They missed a 2 point conversion, but still, they cut an 18 point lead to 5 going into the fourth quarter. Then it was a slog. Brady threw two more picks, but the Packers never capitalized. They punted both times. The Packers run game never materialized. But still, they had a chance. The Bucs did add a late field goal to push their lead to 8, but Green Bay got the ball, and they put together a drive. But, and I will never understand this decision, decided to kick a field goal just before the 2 minute warning. They cut the lead back to five, they did have all three timeouts, but still, why did LaFleur decide to kick? I don't know that I will ever understand this decision. It was a bad call in my opinion, and I said as much as I watched the game unfold. But, and this is where I got really pissed off, the PI call on 3rd and 8 against the Packers was a bad, bad call. The whole game the refs were letting both teams be very aggressive with the receivers. Both teams were grabbing and pulling and locking arms, and the refs were letting it go. They called it like this all game, until Tom Brady and the Bucs needed a call, on a pass that was very clearly uncatchable, with about a minute and some change left. This gave Tampa the first down, they were able to run out the clock, and the Packers were left with another unfulfilling season, and Tom Brady gets to go back to the Super Bowl, which just happens to be in Tampa this season. Look, I am not a Tom Brady fan, I know he went to Michigan, but outside a very few former Wolverines, I don't really follow them when they get to the pros. But, I have also never really bought into the whole conspiracy that the NFL wants Tom Brady to be in the Super Bowl. But man was it hard to see that call, then realize where the Super Bowl is being played, not to buy into some of that. Green Bay did not deserve to win. They played awfully. But, to leave it up to the refs, to give Tampa a call when they hadn't all game, I mean, it is hard not to think that, in some very, very small way, that the NFL wants their golden boy to be on the big stage. I mean, think of the stories that the major media will get to write for the next two weeks.

The game is a home game for the Bucs. Brady leaves New England, goes to the NFC and Tampa and leads them to yet another Super Bowl appearance for him, his tenth. Brady is 43 years old. He and Gronk are teammates again. That is so much more salacious and click worthy than Green Bay facing the Chiefs. The only real story if that was the outcome would be a rematch of Super Bowl One. But now ESPN and Sports Illustrated and Bleacher Report get to write about all the stuff I said, plus a matchup of the GOAT, and the up and coming usurper to the GOAT. I mean, I will watch the game because it is the Super Bowl, but boy will I be rooting for a Chiefs blowout. I am bored and sick and tired of all the Brady nonsense. I am sure I sound like a sour fanboy today, but I do not care. Again, Green Bay did not deserve to win, but it should not have been decided by the refs on a call that they hadn't made all game.

Anyway, if you all want a prediction, I am picking the Chiefs to win, but do not be surprised if Brady and the Bucs get some kind of miraculous late call in a close game that gives them the win. I'm just saying. Go Chiefs.

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing and the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast.

Come and support Ty and the podcast on Patreon.

Follow Ty on instagram and twitter.

SeedSing is funded by a group of awesome people. Join them by donating to SeedSing.

RIP Hank Aaron

a9684f872839ad3e4da8ad181e2915e1.jpg

Hank Aaron passed away today at 86. By all accounts he passed peacefully in his sleep. That seems like the ideal way to go out for such a great person.

Hank Aaron is, and always will be, the home run king in my eyes. In fact, I am sure he’s the home run king in most people’s eyes. Aaron did it without the help of PED’s, he had to do it in a very racist filled era, he had the longevity to do it and he did it with class. Hank Aaron was the epitome of class. I will always remember the video I saw when he broke Babe Ruth’s record, and that guy ran on the field to congratulate him, Aaron didn’t push him away or try to get him removed, he patted him on the back. He was just such a good guy.

Aaron was also never this “home run” hitter. I mentioned his longevity, he played for 22 years. He hit 40 plus home runs only six times. He had plenty of seasons with 30 or more, but nothing like we saw in the steroid era, or since. He was a solid average hitter too. He was pretty much a .300 plus hitter every season until his last two. He got on base a lot. He was a solid fielder. He played the entire game, and he played it great. He is a well deserved hall of fame player. He more than earned it. He never won a World Series, but he did win an MVP in 1957. He was a 19 time all star. He won two batting titles. He led the league in home runs and RBI’s four times. And he was a two time gold glove winner. That’s one hell of a resume.

When you separate the person from the game, Aaron was a complete class act. He did everything with grace. He never crossed the line with celebrations. He would hit a home run and just simply run the bases. He was a consummate teammate. He was honored with a Presidential Medal of Freedom. He was asked by countless people, including my Wolverines football, to come and speak or be an honorary captain or just pass down some wisdom. He’s an icon to old and new players. It’s clear he was so loved, and that he loved baseball. Hank Aaron was one of the good ones. This was a guy that my dad would show me because he wanted me to conduct myself like Aaron did on the field. My dad does not have a bad thing to say about him. My mom adored him. RD was a fan, as were my other brothers. This, and everything I wrote about above, are why I respect and admire and look up to Hank Aaron.

Hand Aaron will be forever remembered. He will be forever loved. Now he gets to rest. I’ll miss him, and so will many others. At least we have the memories and the old sports clips. Rest In Peace Hank Aaron.

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing and the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast.

Come and support Ty and the podcast on Patreon.

Follow Ty on instagram and twitter.

SeedSing is funded by a group of awesome people. Join them by donating to SeedSing.

Tennessee Football is a Disaster Stuffed in a McDonald's Bag

football.jpg

I was going to not do sports for a week, but this story coming out of Tennessee is too wild to not talk about.

Up front, I was never a Jeremy Pruitt guy. In fact, and this includes Josh Gattis, former Alabama coaches don’t seem to truly succeed when they leave. Lane Kiffin is not a good head coach. Kirby Smart has made one title game, but he’s had some teams and talent that should have them as a contender every year. Steve Sarkisian, time will tell, but the past two head coaching jobs for him just flat out didn’t work. And now we have Pruitt. Pruitt was a total mess at Tennessee. They may be even more irrelevant at the moment than Michigan or Texas. Tennessee used to be one of the true “blue blood” programs, but they’ve crashed way, way down to earth. At least Texas and Michigan are still making bowl games in non COVID seasons. Tennessee has just been in a rut. They did start this year ranked, but they were quickly removed, and just kind of put in the trash bin the rest of the season. When news came out that Pruitt was fired, I was not surprised. Everyone could see that coming. What shook me with this story was Phillip Fulmer being let go, eight other coaches as well and the infractions, namely the money in McDonalds bags.

This is nuts. This is the type of stuff that happened in the 80’s with SMU. I think kids should be paid in the NCAA, but not like this. This is cheating. This is the wrong way to do this. This is what you do when you don’t know any better. This is what gets you caught. Add in the fact that Tennessee didn’t even have to buy him out of the rest of his contract shows how poorly he handled all the incoming infractions. Pruitt clearly didn’t learn anything from Nick Saban. I’m sure Saban has done stuff like this, but he does it smart. So does Coach K and John Calipari. I fully believe it. But Pruitt was so blatant. The other guys know how to do it quietly. Not Pruitt or Fulmer. To just hand out money in essentially trash bags, they may as well have put dollar signs on a white bag. This is so bad, I thought it was a joke. I thought I was reading The Onion when these reports came out. I’m just flabbergasted at how hard they went for it, and how poorly they executed it. Also, this is going to forever stain Pruitt. I wouldn’t hire him for any job at any level. This guy is going to have to totally revive his career, and still then, if he does it, this McDonalds money bag hand over will always stay with him, as it should.

Just a few days later, Tennessee is feeling the aftermath. Players are transferring at an alarming rate. Big time recruits are already in the portal. The university needs to not only hire a whole new staff, they also need a new AD. And a lot of big names won’t even give them an interview. This job is now tainted. I saw some people they mentioned as candidates for the job, and it’s rough. There’s a bunch of low level assistants, some non power five guys, and the name that keeps popping up the most, is Hugh Freeze. That would be a titanic mistake. I mean, the guy left a complete mess at Ole Miss, and because he had a few solid years at Liberty, he is going to get what once was a major power five job? This would only further push them into irrelevance. Freeze would find some other way to add more sanctions to a program that is going to get absolutely torched soon. As far as the AD job goes, again, who’s going to want to take on such a mess? No big names will. I guarantee that. Tennessee is going to have to take a chance, or get the Hugh Freeze of AD’s.

This could not have ended any worse for Pruitt or Tennessee. Pruitt is now a pariah. He will never be able to build himself up to a respectable head coach anywhere again. I truly believe that. Phil Fulmer’s legacy is tainted too. He has a title, but this story will also hang with him the rest of his life. And Tennessee, they may become the 21st century’s version of SMU. I don’t know that they will get the “death penalty”, but they’re going to be sanctioned to hell, and recruiting is going to be real, real tough. This whole thing is one of the wildest stories I’ve seen in my college football viewing life. I’m still dizzy from everything I’ve read. Tennessee hasn’t been great, but this is going to make them a total afterthought.

What a mess. Hopefully they don’t hire Hugh Freeze. Maybe, if they avoid him, they can save face on one thing. We’ll see.

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing and the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast.

Come and support Ty and the podcast on Patreon.

Follow Ty on instagram and twitter.

SeedSing is funded by a group of awesome people. Join them by donating to SeedSing.

The Jacksonville/Urban Meyer Experiment Will Not End Well

football.jpg

I feel like I give the University of Ohio State enough credit on this site, but today boy am I going to shit on Urban Meyer and his latest coaching decision.

As of yesterday, Urban Meyer was confirmed as the next head coach of the Jacksonville Jaguars. This is going to be an unmitigated disaster. I have really, honestly tried to find ways in my brain that this works out for him. I thought about the evolution of the NFL game, especially on offense. I thought he may be able to get some kids he recruited before he left the university of Ohio State. I thought about some coaches who left college and have succeeded in the NFL. I even tried to put stock in the amount of money and leeway he is going to get. Nothing comes out good, at least in my opinion. The NFL has evolved. The game is faster, and there are more run/pass options than ever before. Lamar Jackson is an MVP and a super star. Guys like Baker Mayfield and Russell Wilson are showing what you can do with a little mobility. The game has changed. But, Urban Meyer has only ever coached college teams, and his opponents, especially out of conference, have been pretty awful. That will not happen in the NFL. Meyer cannot tell the Jags front office to schedule a game against a CFL or XFL team. There is no Bowling Green or Miami of Ohio. There is no Stephen F Austin. There are some bad NFL teams, but they are filled with professional players, and the Jags are the worst of them all. They are the MAC or D-1AA school of the NFL.

Sure, Meyer may land Justin Fields or Trevor Lawrence, and the Jags have a solid running back, but they have no real receiving threats, a shoddy at best O line and a real bad defense. There's a reason they won only one game, and it wasn't because they decided to tank. They are a bad football team, that is, at the very least, four years away from being competitive. Meyer is going to have to adjust, and for the first time in his coaching career, he is going to be the underdog always. And sure, he can draft or trade for kids he recruited, kids he knows, kids he has even coached, but I don't think the really good ones will leave decent situations to join Urban Meyer in Jacksonville. This isn't college where a kid can just up and transfer. These guys are on contracts, most want to win, or at least be in the playoff conversation, and most of them don't really care about who they played for, only who they play for right now. Is Ezekial Elliot really going to leave Dallas, where he is paid a fortune, and can be in the playoff conversation because of how bad that division is, just to go play for Urban Meyer? No way. Is Michael Thomas going to bounce out of NOLA because he has some odd Buckeye connection? Even if Drew Brees leaves after this year, the Saints will still be a far, far, far better team than the Jaguars. Even take a guy like Terry McLaurin. Why would he leave Washington, a team that was in the playoffs, and he is their star wideout, to go play for Meyer in Jacksonville? It is not going to happen. Urban Meyer is going to find this aspect very frustrating. He doesn't have his pick anymore. The Jags have cap space, but real pros do not want to go play in Jacksonville. Real pros want to compete. Meyer is in for a rude awakening when he realizes that he cannot just recruit people anymore.

When I tried to find parallels for college coaches that had instant success, then sustained it, no one came to mind. Jimmy Johnson and Barry Switzer both dominated the college game, then came to the pros and won Super Bowls, but they went to established Cowboys teams that were built to win. The Jags are a total rebuild. Chip Kelly had one good season in Philadelphia, again with a proven roster, then he totally faded into obscurity. Steve Spurrier had one great preseason game, then NFL players adjusted to his coaching style, and Washington was awful. Pete Carrol's first time around was bad, then he went back to college, then took the Seahawks job, but they had Marshawn Lynch, and a dominant defense. It just doesn't work for these gimmick, system coaches. People may throw Kliff Kingsbury at me, but Arizona was 8-8, missed the playoffs, and are not as good as one media company, The Ringer, may tell you. The offense Meyer runs is so gimmicky, but it works in college because teams do not have time to adjust, or are not on the same level talent wise. Everyone in the NFL was a star at their college and are as good as anyone else. Coaches also make adjustments daily. Meyer is going to have to game plan for guys like Andy Reid, Matt LaFleur, John Harbaugh, Mike Tomlin, Frank Reich and Sean McVay. These are all proven coaches, all have been to the playoffs, some to the Super Bowl, and some have won the Super Bowl. I would take any of those guys before Meyer.

The fact is that Meyer’s offense will also get easy to stop very fast, especially with such a young roster. And even throw in the money and the time, if Jacksonville wins three games this next season, and four the following, are the people in charge really going to still have a long leash? Are the fans going to be willing to wait even longer? Look at what just happened in Philadelphia. Doug Pederson won the Super Bowl three years ago, and he is gone. Ron Rivera was super successful, and won a ton of games while at Carolina, but no Super Bowl wins led to him being let go. Marvin Lewis always had the Bengals in the playoffs, but that wasn't enough even for that moribund franchise. Urban Meyer is like a shiny object, but shiny objects can get real messy real quick. If he only has seven to ten wins in two combined seasons, I wouldn't be shocked if he starts to get mentioned as a "hot seat" candidate in year three. And that is if he makes it that far.

We all know what happened at his last two jobs. Mysterious illnesses popped up, and they forced him out. I do not buy into any of that nonsense. The dude is a liar, he is pretty scummy and when trouble comes his way, he makes something up so no one can blame him. If Jacksonville is no good for two years, and they won't be, I'd bet more on him finding another "illness" than him getting fired. He will find some new excuse, make wild gestures and weird faces on the sidelines, and then he will suddenly disappear. Only this time the commentators and opposing teams and coaches will not call him a "fighter", or commend him for "toughing the season out". He will be considered a quitter if/when it comes to this inevitable conclusion.

Urban Meyer is a great college coach, with a very checkered past. I do not see him duplicating any of that success in the NFL. The coaches, players and staff are so much more prepared, and quite frankly, better than anything he will offer the Jaguars.

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing and the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast.

Come and support Ty and the podcast on Patreon.

Follow Ty on instagram and twitter.

SeedSing is funded by a group of awesome people. Join them by donating to SeedSing.

Is James Harden Worth Everything the Nets Gave Up?

basketball BW.jpg

I wrote about the best fit for James Harden yesterday, and like it was supposed to happen that way, he was traded right as I was finishing up my piece. I swear. Brooklyn was the best fit, I still believe that, and I did not write that after the trade. Since the trade is official now, the Nets announced it today, I do want to break it down, and why I personally do not think it will end in a title, or even a Finals appearance for Brooklyn.

This trade was involved. It was a three team deal, and the Nets gave up a ton of depth, and pretty much their future. I get that Harden is worth a lot, and he is a perennial MVP candidate, and he is one of the greatest scorers of all time, but the Nets gave up way, way too much. They offloaded Taurean Prince, Jarrett Allen, and the biggest piece in my opinion, Caris Levert. They also gave up, I believe, seven picks and pick swaps. They gave up a whole, whole lot to get a third star. Levert was later traded to the Pacers for Victor Oladipo, and Jarrett Allen ended up on the Cavs. I think, if I look at the trade as a whole, the Pacers probably got the best of the deal, getting a younger Oladipo. And the Cavs, I mean, they maybe have every center in the league on their roster, but getting Jarrett Allen is a big deal. He brings great rim protection, and he is young. The Cavs could be a threat in two to three years if they keep this young core together. The Rockets came out fine. I mean, they got Oladipo but he is on the last year of his deal. He has been awesome this season, and if he can keep it up, and John Wall stays relatively healthy, they could find themselves in the play in. They also have a treasure trove of picks. I feel like the Thunder, Pelicans and now the Rockets own the draft until 2026. This move may not have gotten the Rockets the "star" they coveted, but they got Oladipo, and all those picks I mentioned. They veered from the star chasing into more of a make this trade for the future of the franchise. They have endless options for trades, or just drafting some of the top prospects now.

Now to the big fish move, the name that everyone was talking about, the Nets added James Harden. I already mentioned who they gave up, but they still have a decent roster. You have Harden at the 2 now, Kyrie Irving at the 1, if he ever decides to come back, Joe Harris at the 3, KD, who is as good as ever, at the 4 and Deandre Jordan at the 5. This is a solid lineup. I do not know about the depth, but I am sure they have three guys that are real NBA players on that bench.

Here is where it gets tricky for me. This offense is going to be dynamic, especially when/if Kyrie comes back. They could put up 150 a night with ease. I'm serious. You have three guys capable of going for 40 any night. But, they do not have a very good defense. Deandre Jordan has been bad this year, full stop. He got flat out benched the other night. It was a DNP- Coach's Decision. He is not the same guy he was in LA or with the Knicks. He just doesn't have it anymore. We all know about Harden on defense. He chooses to forget that end of the floor. He puts in no effort at all. He is a zero on defense. His offense makes up for it, but man is he bad on defense. He is also very out of shape at the moment, and has looked disinterested in basketball. Maybe a change of scenery changes that, but it doesn’t get him in NBA shape. That is on him. KD is very good defensively, but he is going to be asked to do so much more, and he is going to be stretched very, very thin. Steve Nash and crew are going to need him to do everything. It may be a bit much. Joe Harris is fine, but I would much rather have Levert. Harris is a better 3 point shooter, but Levert is a better creator, and he is a longer defender. He can also guard multiple positions. And Kyrie, it all depends on where his head is at. Even when he plays, he isn't great on D, unless he is committed. Right now, he seems committed to every except basketball. And that is fine. I'm all for him doing whatever makes him happy. But this team just took a major hit on D. I said they could average 150 a night, and they may need too. Teams are going to score at will. Big men in the East, like Embiid, Giannis and Bam Adebayo are going to feast on Deandre Jordan. Opposing backcourts are going to pretty much get where they want on the floor. KD is the only guy I see on that roster that would give me a pause when game planning offensively against the Nets. I'm also concerned about the ball movement. Is the ball really going to fly around? How many touches will Harris and Jordan get? Are they going to become forgotten teammates? I think it's possible. I'm also concerned with how Harden has played the game since he has been in Houston. I do not know that he can just adjust to not being "the guy" in an offense when that has been his identity for almost a decade now. He is not the best player on this team. Not even close. That is KD. And KD I do not worry about. He is so adjustable and smooth and can do everything. He is a master of the game, and I think he will be fine. And finally we have Kyrie. How will he work with Harden? We barely know how he does with KD because they have barely played together. Harden is another dominant personality, and he is a better offensive player than Kyrie. I also think Kyrie is going to be frustrated playing with these other two because he is the third option now. The whole reason he wanted out of Cleveland and Boston was so he could be the guy. Well, he is definitely not the guy right, or second guy, right now with the Nets. I'll be very curious how he meshes with KD and Harden, if he does come back and play this season.

All in all, Harden got what he wanted, but I do not think it spells a title for them. They will still have to go through the Bucks, 76ers, Heat and Celtics in the East. And if they are able to do that, they will have either the Lakers, Clippers, Nuggets or some other West powerhouse team. The Nets got a star, they got better offensively, but they sacrificed far too much, and they got exponentially worse on defense. I'm excited to see them play, but I do not think they are a serious threat to win the title this year, or even next year.

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing and the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast.

Come and support Ty and the podcast on Patreon.

Follow Ty on instagram and twitter.

SeedSing is funded by a group of awesome people. Join them by donating to SeedSing.

The Nets are James Harden's Only Good Option

basketball BW.jpg

Editor’s note: Minutes after Ty submitted his article, James Harden was traded to the Brooklyn Nets. Ty will have thoughts on the trade tomorrow.

James Harden did pretty much everything he could last night to get what he wants.

Harden wants out of Houston, he wants to go to the 76ers or the Nets and he made that abundantly clear in his post game press conference. He even ended it by saying he did everything he could for the team, and then he just left. This press conference was pretty loaded. Let’s discuss.

First off, "everything he could" for that team? He led them to the West Finals once (although Chris Paul was much more integral to that team), and he blew it. He played horribly against the Spurs when they were without Kawhi in a game 6 that ended Houston's season. He had great regular seasons and terrible postseasons. I mean, if that was "everything he could" do, Houston should have no problem, or no qualms, trading him. He did not get to the Finals, he won one MVP, he consistently demanded trades for stars, who he then immediately clashed with, and he does not know how to play true basketball anymore. Don't get me wrong, Harden is an all time great scorer. I won't say player, but as far as scoring goes, he revolutionized the game. But he is no fun to watch, and I would hate playing with him, as did Dwight Howard, Chris Paul, Russell Westbrook and now John Wall and Boogie Cousins.

Harden also seems selfish. He always wants the ball, wants things his way and if he doesn't like what is going on, he will just refuse, or do things that make it nearly impossible to keep him. I thought Houston would do a lot to keep him, and he even started out playing okay basketball. But this past week he has fallen way off, and he looks disinterested. Quite frankly, even if I were a contending team that needed a scorer, I would not actively pursue Harden. The asking price is far too much, he doesn't play defense, he has had the past six years plus playing the exact way he wants to, and I would not expect him to re-sign with my team in the next two years. Whatever team trades for him, and it may happen today, is going to pay a steep price, and I think they will regret it sooner rather than later.

The four teams that have been kicked around are the Raptors, Celtics, 76ers and Nets. Lets just wipe the Celtics and Raptors off that list. Their GM's are too smart, they won't give up young up and coming stars and they will not trade a massive amount of picks for him. I would also not want to pair Harden with either Jayson Tatum or Pascal Siakim. That would just diminish all their personal gains as top options. The 76ers is an interesting exercise, but I would not want them to do that to Joel Embiid. Embiid is playing some of the best basketball of his life right now. Simmons is doing what he does best, Danny Green and Seth Curry, along with Tyrese Maxey are providing the shooting they need and Doc Rivers has this team looking solid. I don't think I'd want to mess with that right now. The 76ers, maybe, just maybe, have found out what type of team they want to be, and they seem to be maximizing that. I also would not trade Simmons, who is, I believe, eight years younger than Harden. He has way more potential, and I would not want anything to happen to my man Joel Embiid. The 76ers should stand pat in my opinion.

This leaves us with the Nets. The Nets have two stars, Kyrie and KD, but who in the world knows what is going on with Kyrie right now. Hell, I don't think Stephen A Smith was out of bounds in saying he should retire. Kyrie has other interests, and he is clearly politically active, maybe he should go do that for a while. He may find he loves that. He doesn't need basketball in his life anymore, at least that is how it seems to me. But KD is back, and he has looked pretty good. He is looking more and more like himself. He is as dangerous as ever on offense, and his defense is getting back up to speed. I watched a little of the Nets-Nuggets game last night because I have not seen KD play yet this year, and he did look good. I also like the other guys the Nets have. Joe Harris is a solid 3 and D player. Both Jarrett Allen and Deandre Jordan have been solid pick and roll guys, and Allen is a dominant rim protector. Caris Levert has been feasting on second units, and he is a third shot creator, which is great for this team. Taurean Prince seems to be doing a little better. So, if I were the Nets, would I risk my future, hell they may have to mortgage it, just to have Harden for two years?

This is where I balk a little. Harden has played with KD, but that was a lifetime ago. They are two totally different players now. What if Kyrie wants to come back? Who runs point then? Would this relegate a guy like Levert or Prince to miniscule minutes? Would Harden be willing to change his style of play? There are a ton of questions, but Harden is an all time great scorer. You don't just hang up the phone if the Rockets come calling, But I think there are just far, far too many questions. Also, do the Nets want to do almost the exact same thing they did when they traded for KG and Paul Pierce? Are they willing to be really good for 2-3 years, then have to rebuild all over again?

I just don't know. I do not know that I would trade that much just to get a disgruntled James Harden. I guess time will tell. Maybe we will have an answer soon.

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing and the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast.

Come and support Ty and the podcast on Patreon.

Follow Ty on instagram and twitter.

SeedSing is funded by a group of awesome people. Join them by donating to SeedSing.

Alabama had No Equal in College Football This Season

football.jpg

Last night's college football playoff championship game was pretty telling about the 2020 season.

First off, Alabama was the class of the 2020 season. There was no team even close to how good, prepared and well coached they are. They clearly had the best players, and if they lost players to injury or COVID, they had more than capable replacements. Hell, last night a safety was ejected for targeting in the first half, the commentators made a big deal about it, but even after he was gone, Alabama seemed just fine in the secondary. They more than deserve their rings.

Second, the University of Ohio State proved last week that they may be the second best team in all of college football this past season, but they were clearly not at Alabama's level. I have seen people say they were missing too many important players to COVID, or that losing Trey Sermon on the first drive killed them, but honestly, even at full strength, I do not think they would have kept it that close. I thought prior to the game they would be able to keep it close. I had personally predicted it to be a close game. I think I had Alabama winning by a TD, something like 42-35. I thought that the university of Ohio State would have been able to score with Alabama for a while. That was not the case. They answered the first two scores for Bama, but after that it was a wrap. Alabama had a historic first half. Heisman winner Devonta Smith set three different records in the first half. I think Mac Jones only had three incompletions on twenty plus pass attempts. Najee Harris was ripping off four plus yards a carry, and he had a rushing score and receiving score before halftime. They bulldozed Ohio State in the second quarter. I believe Alabama outscored them 28-10 in the quarter, and took a commanding 35-17 lead into halftime. And while Bama looked unstoppable, after the two TD drives, Ohio State looked kind of lost. It makes sense. They did have key guys out with COVID. They only played eight total games counting last night. Justin Fields did not look like the top 10 pick he has looked like in the past. The offensive line couldn't open holes for the run game. The receivers, when the game was still kind of up for grabs, were being locked down. The University of Ohio State looked like a mess. But, is it because of the shortened season, or because of Alabama? I think it is a little bit of both, but something like 20 percent the shortened season, and 80 percent Alabama. Or maybe more like 95 percent Alabama.

I cannot stress how good Alabama was all year, and how well they played, and were coached last night. LSU's offense last year was seen as this otherworldly, never before seen type thing. Well, Alabama's season stats were almost identical, and Mac Jones beat some of Joe Burrow's records last night. Najee Harris, while not putting up the same rushing numbers as Edwards-Helaire did for LSU, he still had three scores, and could not be tackled by one player. He was also a bigger threat in the pass game. And while I heaped endless praise on Devonta Smith yesterday, he is going to get more right now. He had 12 catches for 215 yards and 3 scores, all in the first half. Alabama schemed ways for him to get open, got him the ball in open space, got him in position to be guarded by linebackers, and he showed why he was the definitive Heisman winner last night. He did all of this in only two quarters by the way. He did play in the third, but he broke his finger, and they pulled him for the rest of the game. That was the correct choice for him, and for Alabama. I also want to point out the coaching last night. Nick Saban is a true prick, but the dude can coach college football. The NFL did not work for him, but he has found a home in Tuscaloosa, and he, I am shocked to be saying this, is the greatest college football coach of all time. I have felt this way for a while now, and last night just hammered that home for me. He had his kids ready to play, he surrounds himself with very good assistants, and his players play for him. They get excited to play for him and they love to play for him. They also go out on the field with a workman's ethic. They, and this truly surprised me, do not do too much celebrating. They act like they've been there before. I respect that. The closest Devonta Smith got to celebrating was when he caught a seam route TD, and pointed at Mac Jones to give him credit. This is what I, and many other people do, when we get a good pass in basketball for an easy bucket. I don't really consider that a "celebration". Alabama's defense was well prepared too. This is supposed to be their "weaker" unit, but they looked awesome last night. Dylan Moses was flying all over the field. The D line was stout. Patrick Surtain shut down whatever side of the field he was on. Even their special teams unit was better because they were barely on the field. I think they punted twice, and kicked one field goal.

On the other side of the field, the university of Ohio State may have been short handed, but they got flat out out coached. Ryan Day had zero answers for what Nick Saban did to him. Day is a great offensive mind, but it felt like he used all of that up on Clemson. He coached scared last night. He punted in plus territory on fourth and nine, down three scores. He ran the ball twice to get off the field before halftime. His defense made zero adjustments. The run game was nonexistent. Justin Fields played timidly. The University of Ohio State is a really, really good team, probably the second best team in the country, but they did belong on the same field with Alabama last night. The game was a blowout, and I probably should have expected that. I would've liked to see the Big Ten win a title, but it was pretty clear early on that Bama was going to run away with this game. And I want to give one more shoutout to Devonta Smith. He is an all time great, and boy was he fun to watch last night.

Congrats Alabama, you guys are still the best, and it clearly isn't very close at the moment.

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing and the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast.

Come and support Ty and the podcast on Patreon.

Follow Ty on instagram and twitter.

SeedSing is funded by a group of awesome people. Join them by donating to SeedSing.

Devonta Smith Was the Right Choice for the Heisman Trophy

football.jpg

I have wanted to write about Devonta Smith winning the Heisman since last week, but then all the madness happened. I'm still angry, upset, unnerved and scared by what happened. Those monsters that incited, and took place in those riots need to be arrested and removed from office. But, with the CFP title game on tonight, what better time than now to finally give my thoughts on Smith winning the Heisman. Oh, and he also won the AP Player of the Year award too.

I have to admit, I was rooting for Smith to win. I am not an Alabama fan by any means. In fact, I do not like any of the four teams that played in the playoff, and I may only watch the title game for a bit tonight because I truly couldn't care less who wins. But of the four guys, and in a season marred by COVID and other random injuries, I figured why not give it to someone other than a running back or QB.

We see the RBs and QBs win all the time. I think there have been very few instances where a non running back or QB has won the Heisman, and that is BS to me. In fact, the last non RB or QB to win was Charles Woodson in 1997, the GOAT by the way. Some names that have won it since then, Eric Crouch, Jason White, Troy Smith, Sam Bradford, Tim Tebow, Jameis Winston, Johnny Manziel and Marcus Mariota. Some guys that were up for it in those seasons, Manti Teo, Rocket Ismail, Randy Moss, Larry Fitzgerald and Amari Cooper. I'd take the guys that did not win it over the others if we just look at career success. But when I dug a little further into this season, when I looked at the finalists and decided to watch each one play, it was clear that Smith was the best, and most deserving player. Kyle Trask had a fine season for Florida, but without Kyle Pitts he was a mess, and he looked real bad in their bowl game. Mac Jones is an okay QB, but he is a system guy. He didn't change the position like Tua did when he was at Alabama. Jones is a lot like Jalen Hurts was when he was at Alabama, just not as athletic. He ran the system. He got the ball to Smith, and then Smith did great things with it. And Trevor Lawrence, he did not deserve to win just because of his career. This is a season award, not a college career award. He also missed two games because he got COVID. The people stumping for Lawrence are the same that claimed Peyton Manning deserved the award when Charles Woodson won it because Manning had a "better college career" than Woodson. I don't see any championship rings on Manning's fingers. I saw one on Woodson's. The only season Lawrence could have won it, in my opinion, would have been for his freshman season.

When I watched Smith I came away most impressed. The separation he was able to get, the speed in the open field, it was unmatched. When Jaylen Waddle went down early in the year a lot of people thought Bama's offense would slide. They got better, and that was because of Smith. Sure it helps to have Najee Harris in the backfield, but the way Smith took over a secondary, made the defense have to constantly game plan for him, it helped Alabama stay great on offense. He was the unsolvable problem for opposing defenses. He was the one that opened things up for Harris and Jones and the rest of that offense. But that wasn't the only thing he did. Smith put up gaudy numbers this year. In 12 games, not counting tonight obviously, he had 105 catches, 1,641 receiving yards and 20 touchdowns. He averaged 15.6 yards a catch. He averaged almost 9 catches a game and 136 receiving yards a game. In the semifinal game he had 7 catches, 130 yards and 3 TD's. In the SEC title game he had 15 catches, 184 yards and 2 scores. Against LSU he had 8 catches, 231 yards and 3 scores. He averaged 28.9 yards a catch in that game. And against their biggest rival, Auburn, he had 7 catches, 171 yards and 2 scores. The kid put up video game numbers. It is unreal. I would have been happy if a Michigan receiver did anything close to half of what Smith was able to accomplish. And when you compare his stats to the other finalists, it isn't even really close. Trask threw for 4,200 plus yards and 43 TD's, but struggled against top flight teams, especially Alabama and Oklahoma. Mac Jones just barely threw for 4,000 yards, had 36 TD passes, but almost half of that wouldn't have been possible without Smith. And Trevor Lawrence only threw for 3,100 plus yards, 24 TD's and missed those 2 games. He also did not look great in their last game.

Devonta Smith was, far and away, the best player in college football this year. He more than deserved this award. It is kind of crazy he is the first wideout since Desmond Howard to win the award. I assume he will have a good game tonight, but we will see. He is going up against a solid secondary, but every other secondary, good and bad, he has faced, he has torched. Congrats to Devonta Smith, a much deserved Heisman win for a non QB or running back.

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing and the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast.

Come and support Ty and the podcast on Patreon.

Follow Ty on instagram and twitter.

SeedSing is funded by a group of awesome people. Join them by donating to SeedSing.

Ty's 2021 NFL Playoff Preview

football.jpg

Much to my surprise, and thank you for the heads up RD, the NFL playoffs start tomorrow.

I will not give the league credit, there were far too many problems, but they did get through a full 16 game regular season. I don't know how, I don't know how many players actually got COVID, and I was stunned at how they handled everything. But hey, they did it, and tomorrow, 14 teams have their eyes on winning the Super Bowl. They added two more teams in each conference this year, which, whatever. I guess it means more money. But MLB did this first, then the NBA had the play in tournament in the bubble, so the NFL is just copying stuff that has already been done. With all this being said, I will do a prediction column as I am want to do, and give you my pick for Super Bowl champ.

I'll start with the AFC.

In the AFC the Chiefs are the 1 seed, and they are the only team with a bye. They may also be the best team in the NFL. They also have the best QB, and that goes a long, long way. The Chiefs are going to go far.

In the 2-7 matchup we have the Bills and Colts. This won't be anywhere close to as bad the last time the Bills were in the playoffs, when they got beat by the Jaguars, 10-7. This should be a good game. Buffalo is much better than I thought offensively, and they have a solid defense. The Colts are a solid team, but they needed help to get in, and they barely made it. They do have a defense that may slow down Buffalo, but not enough to win. I have Buffalo pulling away in the third, and winning with ease.

In the 3-6 game we have the Steelers and Browns. I dislike both these teams. I think both are highly overrated. I think both are much worse than their records. This is a true toss up to me. Pittsburgh is playing at home, but after starting 11-0, they have really stumbled. The Browns are in the playoffs for the first time in a while, but they are still the Browns. I'm going with the Steelers because Mike Tomlin is a proven winner, and he will not let the Browns beat his team at home.

The 4-5 is the best game in this round, featuring Baltimore and Tennessee. Both teams are sharp. Both teams love to run the ball. Both teams play good defense. They are as evenly matched as it comes. But, Baltimore has past playoff woes, and the Titans have Derrick Henry. As much as I want the Ravens to win, and boy are they on fire right now, I just don't think they will be able to stop Henry, and I think the Titans will control tempo, control clock and grind out a close win.

This means that the Chiefs and Bills and Titans and Steelers would face off in the second round. The Bills have had a great year. That all stops here. The Chiefs can exploit their defense. The Chiefs defense will make enough plays to help. They will win, and probably going away. As for the Steelers and Titans, the Titans will win, they will win by a lot and they will show everyone how overrated the Steelers truly are. I wouldn't be shocked to see Derrick Henry go for 200 plus yards and a few scores.

This means we would have the same AFC title game as last year, but it won't go down like last year. The Chiefs are on the verge of a dynasty, and they will make an easy trip to their second straight Super Bowl.

Now for the NFC.

The Packers are the one seed, and they have been shockingly solid this year. They get the bye week.

The 2-7 matchup is the Saints and Bears. The Saints are really, really good on offense, and after having no healthy running backs, they are all back, and that means Alvin Kamara is back. This also seems like Drew Brees' last run, and while I may disagree with his politics, the dude is a very, very good QB. The Bears backed into the playoffs, they are being led by Mitch Trubisky and the defense is nowhere near as good as last year. They are going to get demoralized in this game, especially with it being in New Orleans. I could honestly see the Saints putting up 50.

The 3-6 match up is between divisional opponents, the Seahawks and Rams. The Rams are not the same team from two years ago when they made a run to the Super Bowl. They are more predictable and not nearly as good. The Seahawks started strong, then kind of faltered. They are awesome offensively, but not very good at all defensively. The Rams will make it closer than it should be, but Russell Wilson is way, way, way better than Jared Goff, and he will lead the Seahawks to a win.

This 4-5 matchup is so much worse than the AFC. Washington, at 7-9 overall, faces off against the Tom Brady led Tampa Bay Buccaneers. The Bucs may not have Mike Evans, but it doesn't matter. Washington is mediocre, plays in a terrible division, and they will get blown out. Tampa, while not great, is much better than Washington, especially offensively.

So that leaves us in round two with the Packers playing the Saints and the Seahawks facing the Bucs. The Seahawks and Buccaneers game is one of those games where I do not want to root for either team, I do not care who wins and I will not watch one second of it. Going off the season, I will pick Tampa. Russell Wilson is younger, and frankly, better than Tom Brady right now. But he has no help defensively, and Bruce Arians is a better coach, at the moment, than Pete Carroll. Tampa will find a way to make it to the NFC title game.

I do have a personal stake in the other game, obviously. I want the Packers to win. They should win. The Saints are not good in cold weather stadiums, and it will be freezing in Green Bay. Green Bay has struggled on run defense, but has been okay in passing defense. I also think Green Bay will be able to run and pass on New Orleans. Aaron Rodgers is having an MVP type season, and for as much flak as I gave Matt LaFleur, he has done a solid job getting the best out of his players. Combine that with the Saints struggles outside their dome, I think the Packers will win this game.

So we have Green Bay and Tampa in the NFC title game. Green Bay better win this damn game. They are better at every level, and Tom Brady has come out and said he is glad to not be playing in cold weather anymore. They will have to go to Green Bay, and Green Bay is the better team. Of course I am going with the Packers.

That means I have Kansas City and Green Bay in the Super Bowl. A rematch of Super Bowl 1. As much as I'd like to pick my team, the Chiefs are better, younger, better coached and have a dynasty. The Chiefs will win. It may be close for a bit, but Patrick Mahomes will find a way, as he always does, and he will bring a second straight Super Bowl to Kansas City. Get ready to see the Chiefs as much as we saw the Patriots, because that is what is going to happen.

There is my NFL playoff preview. Hopefully no one gets COVID, and good luck to all the teams.

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing and the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast.

Come and support Ty and the podcast on Patreon.

Follow Ty on instagram and twitter.

SeedSing is funded by a group of awesome people. Join them by donating to SeedSing.

Michigan and Texas Football are Missing the Road Back to Greatness

football.jpg

Today I want to talk about two different college football teams, and their head coaching situations. One is Texas, and the other is Michigan. I will save Michigan for last because that is my school, my team, and I have some strong, and anger, towards how Jim Harbaugh is handling that mess.

First let’s talk about Texas. I am surprised, but maybe I shouldn't be, that they fired Tom Herman. Yes, they never met expectations, they were always a perennial top 10 team and would go on to win 6 to 8 games and then play in a lower tier bowl. Herman did not deliver Texas back to the promised land their fanbase had hoped. But, he was only there for, I think, three years. That is not really a long enough time to get the program on his terms. I felt like they didn't give Charlie Strong enough time, but Herman was there as long as him, so maybe this is what Texas does now. Herman also recruited fairly well, had good players coming in, but this past season, I guess to the big wigs, wasn't enough for him to keep his job. Again, surprising, but not really when you break it down. Texas is a blueblood. They are football in that state. I'd go as far to say that the Longhorns are more important than the Cowboys. Full stop. And the team was just not good enough. They weren't winning the Big 12. They couldn't keep up with Oklahoma. They were losing early season non conference games that they had no business not winning. Texas was, and still is, trending down. That is not good enough for them.

Also, I do not think that hiring Steve Sarkisian is going to solve the problem. Does Texas not remember his time as head coach of Washington? Or when he was the OC for the Falcons? It was a disaster. Some people will say he did great at USC, and Alabama's offense this season is top of the line, but look at the talent discrepancy. I could call plays for Alabama, and definitely that USC team he was the OC on, and we'd average 40 plus points a game. USC back in the early 2000's, and Alabama now, they get the best of the best. They always have the top talent. Third stringers on those teams would start on almost any other D-1, power 5, top 25 team. That's the truth. Sarkisian will not have that at his expense at Texas. He will have to go out and do the recruiting himself, and the kids he will go after, a lot of them will choose Alabama or the university of Ohio State and Clemson before even thinking about Texas. Hell, they will have to fight Oklahoma just within their conference. While firing Herman was a surprise, hiring Sarkisian makes even less sense to me. But maybe he will work out, who knows.

Now on to Michigan. This whole situation is an absolute mess, and Jim Harbaugh is the only person to blame. I wasn't on board when Michigan hired him, grew to like him very much, even without living up to his own personal expectations, and now what he is doing, just dragging everyone along while openly looking for an NFL job, it is just, quite frankly, embarrassing and annoying. It is so frustrating that he is dragging his feet, not signing the extension that has been on the table for over a week now and not telling anyone what he plans on doing. His players, his assistants, even AD Warde Manuel has no idea what he is going to do, and that is wrong. Everyone has done anything and everything he has wanted since they hired him in 2014. They have bent over backwards to his every whim, and this is how he decides to handle himself. It is gross. People get so mad at players for transferring every year when they don't play, but applaud coaches when they wait out their own college team for an NFL opening. That is wrong. Coaches can leave whenever they want, no matter how unsuccessful or successful they are, and no one bats an eye. But, if a player transfers after one season, without knowing anything about that kid, the media and coaches will destroy that kid. That is the upsetting part.

The real personal problem with me, I want Harbaugh back as Michigan's head coach this upcoming season. I don't think the options on the table are any better. I think if they make a change they will be back to a full rebuild, a full culture change. They will lose a ton of players to transfers. I think a lot of this solid recruiting class they have will ask out, and rightfully so. It would be a total letdown if Harbaugh continues to wait and wait and wait. I also do not know that the NFL is necessarily breaking down doors to get to him, but I imagine there are talks going on, which is going to make this never ending extension situation drag out longer and longer. If he doesn't sign the extension with Michigan by tomorrow, I fully believe he is going to leave for either the Jets or Chargers job, and leave Michigan an even bigger mess than when Lloyd Carr was all but forced to retire. Warde Manuel, the coaches still on staff and players are all waiting, but Harbaugh seems fully content to just sit and make them wait even longer, until he has exhausted any and all other options. That is wrong, but damn it, I hope he returns. That is my own nonsense that I have to work through.

These two schools, which were once great, and are now not, are going in separate directions, but I feel like both are going to end up in the same spot, the middle.

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing and the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast.

Come and support Ty and the podcast on Patreon.

Follow Ty on instagram and twitter.

SeedSing is funded by a group of awesome people. Join them by donating to SeedSing.

Best of 2020: Top Sports Moments

2020.jpg

Today I have my top five sports moments of the year.

Again, I could have gone cliché and picked the obvious choices. I mean, in early March all of the sports shut down. It was a wrap. No March Madness, the NBA season stopped, the MLB never really got started, the NHL stopped, pro soccer was postponed, golf, hell, even NASCAR had to stop for a while. Football, both professionally and at the collegiate level, had months to be prepared, yet they did nothing. They have had multiple postponements and cancellations. It has been a mess. These are the moments I will remember most from 2020, but I like these lists to be about good things, things that made me happy or excited as a sports fan. I don't want it to be all doom and gloom. We do enough of that on the podcast. And I was successfully able to get a top five list of pretty great sports moments of 2020. I will always look back at this year with a wince when it comes to sports, but the five things I picked will help put a smile on my face.

Coming in at number five I have the Chiefs winning the Super Bowl. They have the best QB in the game right now. They made a habit of getting down big in the playoffs last year, and mounting pretty amazing comebacks, and the Super Bowl was no exception. For three plus quarters the game was pretty boring, and it looked like the 49ers were going to win an ugly game. Then Patrick Mahomes and Deangelo Williams and Andy Reid woke up and mounted yet another double digit comeback effort. It was pretty cool to see Mahomes do the things he does regularly on the biggest stage. I loved seeing the 49ers flop, I have never been a fan, and I was stoked for Andy Reid to finally get that ring. I am not a Chiefs fan, but I have a good amount of friends who are, and as always, I was happy for them. The Chiefs are going to be a force to be reckoned with for a while now too. They are a great team, and it started this year with a Super Bowl win.

At number four I have Sarah Fuller being the first woman to kick for a division 1 power five conference football team. She made her debut kicking off against Mizzou. She then kicked an extra point in the very next game. This is a humongous deal. The fact that a woman got into a legitimate D-1 football game is a humongous first step, with many more to come, towards equality in sports. Women are just as good as men, sometimes even better. The fact that Vanderbilt realized this, put her in the game and let her play was awesome. I am in awe of what Fuller was able to do. Add on the fact that it was within such a masculine sport, more props to her. This is so cool. I am all about fair play and playing the person who is the best, no matter the gender or anything else. Fuller was clearly the best person they had to kick for them, so they let her do it and she succeeded. I hope she gets to do it again next season when it will be a little more like a "regular" season. But this was cool and a great step in equality in all D-1 sports.

The top 3 moments are all NBA. Just letting you all know.

At number three I have the new format of the All Star game. Having captains of teams is cool, the "draft" is fun, although it is more for show than anything else, and letting fans vote is still super important. But the addition of making it more competitive towards the end of the game, and giving the money to charity, that is the cherry on top. When this game got down to the final quarter, when it was all ramped up, this was like watching a playoff game. It was, for all intents and purposes, the greatest pickup game of basketball anyone could ever imagine, behind only the Dream Team scrimmages. Players bought in, super stars were fighting and struggling for every point, rebound and assist. Players were locking in defensively. It was so cool to see these guys go so hard in an all star game. Most all star games are a glorified scrimmage, but this was not when they got into the fourth quarter. I loved it, I was on the edge of my seat at the end. And I don't even care that it ended on free throw shots. Hell, if anything, when AD missed the first one, I was more nervous for him. I know there is no all star game this year, for many very good reasons. But when we get back to some kind of normalcy in the sports world, I hope the NBA keeps this new format, which I am sure they will.

At number two I have the NBA bubble. This was a massive, massive success from the NBA, and all the people involved. When they had to shut down the league on March 11th, I had no idea, as with everyone else I imagine, when or if they would come back, and how they would do it. When this bubble idea came up, I was intrigued, but had many questions. The NBA answered them all. Players and staff had daily tests, they couldn't leave their resort hotels, they could only hang out with the people on their teams, when teams got beat they had to leave immediately. Everything they did worked. They had zero positive tests in the three plus months they were there. I know it was a physical and mental strain on the players there, but the NBA proved they could get the season done, and do it without anyone getting COVID. And I bought that there were fans in the stands when I heard the pumped in crowd noise while watching from my home. The ratings may not have been as great as everyone was hoping, but I watched a ton of the games and all of the playoffs and I enjoyed every single second of it. I was so impressed that they pulled it off.

But the NBA did do one thing better than the bubble, coming in as my top sports moment of 2020, was the NBA players strike. Jacob Blake, an unarmed black man, was shot by a white police officer even though he did nothing wrong at all. This happens all too often in our society, and it needs to stop. To all those "All Lives Matter" dummies out there, all lives cannot matter until Black Lives Matter. That is what we all have been saying for so long now. The Blake shooting was the straw that broke the camel's back for the NBA players, especially the players for the Bucks. Blake is from Milwaukee, and plenty of Bucks players have been very vocal about police brutality and police officers aggressiveness towards African Americans. They decided, as a team, without telling any media members, that they were going to not play in their playoff game that night. This set it off. The Magic quickly followed suit. Then the Thunder and Rockets protested their game that night. Then the entire NBA decided they were protesting. The NHL followed suit. Some NASCAR drivers did the same. MLB players and teams decided they were going to join the protests. This made the whole world stop and look, but it was the NBA, and more importantly, the Milwaukee Bucks that started this movement. We are sick and tired of all the BS and brutality and actions of people in power. It is intensified when professional athletes, especially super stars, let everyone else know this. The fact that, along with the entire Bucks team, LeBron James and Anthony Davis, Kawhi Leonard and Paul George, Jamaal Murray, Donovan Mitchell and so many, many more old and young stars stood up for what they believed in, and did this protest was truly amazing. I love the NBA. I always have, and I always will. Seeing this, seeing all these teams and players band together and fight for what they believe in, this moved me in a way that sports never has before. I was so proud to be a fan of the NBA when they protested. It made me so happy and so glad and showed me that these guys are people too, and they are sick and tired of all the nonsense. I don't know that any other sports moment will live up to this one in my lifetime. I am very happy I got to see this as it happened, and I am forever grateful to everyone who used their platform to make this protest happen. This was a truly amazing, once in a lifetime moment.

That's it for sports. Come back tomorrow for my top 5 podcasts/podcast episodes of the year.

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing and the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast.

Come and support Ty and the podcast on Patreon.

Follow Ty on instagram and twitter.

SeedSing is funded by a group of awesome people. Join them by donating to SeedSing.

This Year's College Football Playoff is Made for TV

football.jpg

Next week will be my best of lists. I am still working on some things, and I need a little more time. It is a bit tougher for certain things because I have been busy watching old shows or movies with my kids. With that, this week is going to be some sports, a movie review and some random pop culture things.

To start this week, I want to talk about the College Football Playoff. The four teams that made it, Alabama, Clemson, Notre Dame and the university of Ohio State, were totally expected by me, and some others I knew. And I am not here to shit on two teams I despise, or how it really feels like it will be Clemson-Alabama for the title for the third or fourth time playing for the title. That is not my point at all. And while I feel bad for Texas A&M, Oklahoma and Florida, they each had reasons why they didn't get put in. The only team of these three that has a real argument is Texas A&M. But they didn't get picked, and they will just have to get over that. I actually feel worse for Cincinnati and Coastal Carolina. Both those teams finished their seasons undefeated, playing double digit games. But they both play in lower level conferences, and the playoff is constructed to keep these teams out. It is just like the BCS, and how they treated Boise State. The lower level teams do not get a fair shake, and that has to change. They need to add more teams. Now is the time to make it an eight or twelve team playoff. They could've easily expanded this season, used COVID as to why, and no one would be griping like they have for two days now. It would have been cut and dry, and everyone would've been happy.

My real point today, the four teams that made it are in there strictly for TV purposes. Alabama and Clemson deserve their spots. Alabama is undefeated, won every game, and won them mostly by wide margins and no one put a real scare into them. Clemson is 10-1, but the 1 was with a backup QB on the road, and it took overtime for Notre Dame to beat them. We just saw in the rematch what a fully healthy Clemson can do against the very same team. Now we have Notre Dame and the university of Ohio State. The university of Ohio State is undefeated. They beat four teams by well over 30 points. They have a Heisman candidate at QB. They were picked to run away with the Big Ten. They did win the Big Ten title game, but it was too close. They also only played six games. One cancellation was their fault, the other two were their opponents. The Big Ten also changed their rules to allow them to play in the conference title game. Do I think they will play well against Clemson in their matchup, yes. Do I think they will win, no. They still have COVID issues, Justin Fields does not look as good as he did last year and they barely beat Northwestern and Indiana. Those are two ranked teams, but the university of Ohio State didn't do to them what Clemson just did to Notre Dame, or what Alabama did to the whole SEC. The reason the university of Ohio State is in is because they will draw so many more people to TV than Coastal Carolina, Cincinnati or even Florida and Texas A&M. They have one of the biggest fanbases in the world. And hey, they did win every game they played. Notre Dame did beat Clemson early in the year, albeit shorthanded. They won every game they played until this past week. They did struggle with some inferior opponents, but found ways to win. This Notre Dame team reminds me of the team that played Alabama in the BCS title game when they had Manti Teo. Or even better, the one that made the playoff a few years back and got crushed by a freshman led Trevor Lawrence Clemson team. Notre Dame is a solid team, with a good run game. But, I don't trust their QB to win a game, and their defense should get shredded by Alabama. This may be Alabama's best offensive team, and that is saying something. I think they will fight and play hard, but, just like this past weekend, Alabama is just a better team. I wouldn't be stunned if Alabama wins by four touchdowns. But again, Notre Dame has fans all over the world. They will draw so many eyeballs because we are all home and watching games from our living rooms. And that matchup, Notre Dame and Alabama is much more enticing than Alabama and Cincinnati.

So when my friends that I chat sports with ask me if the committee got it right, I say no to the teams, but unequivocally yes to the TV market. These four teams, this playoff, during this pandemic, was all about getting people to watch so the NCAA could try and recoup some kind of money they lost from all the cancellations and postponements and lack of fans at the games. The teams they pick actually makes so much sense to me, even if I disagree with their top four. College football is a business, and the people at the top know that. That much is clear with the CFP this season.

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing and the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast.

Come and support Ty and the podcast on Patreon.

Follow Ty on instagram and twitter.

SeedSing is funded by a group of awesome people. Join them by donating to SeedSing.

A Time of Uncertainty with Michigan Wolverine Football

football.jpg

I know I have been on a sports kick recently, and I promise I am going to get back to more pop culture stuff in the coming days and weeks. I have my best of lists coming up, I am going to get caught up on some shows and movies I have been holding off on, and I will definitely be writing about them all. But I want to do one more, for now, piece on Michigan football.

I know we just did a podcast about it, and I have had a lot to say on the website. But, as of yesterday, their season is all but over. They had to cancel their game against Iowa because they have a COVID outbreak that is not getting any better. Reports said they would've been without upwards of 50 players had they tried to play this weekend. It would have been pointless to travel to Iowa City to let third stringers and scout players get the snot beat out of them. I also fully expect them to not take any bowl invite. I know every team is eligible this season, but they do not deserve, nor should they, go play in a bowl game. The season is over, let these kids go home and get better and start focusing on next season. This season has been a wash, it has been brutal and they were not good. Not at all. This may be one of the worst Michigan teams I have ever watched. They were unprepared, under coached and got flat out beat by most teams. They did beat Minnesota, a mirage game I have been calling it, and they had to go to three overtimes to beat Rutgers. They probably should have been 1-5. And if they played these three games they had to cancel, they would have finished 2-7, maybe 3-6. All of it would have been pointless, just like this whole college football season.

Originally I was all for these kids trying to play, but as I stated on our most recent pod, I have come full circle, and I do not think any of these kids should be playing. They are essentially free laborers for their schools, and the coaching staff. The players make zero dollars, and they are risking their lives to play a game. I would be saying this if Michigan were 8-0 right now too. This has nothing to do with how bad their season was, this is all about how dangerous, more so than ever, this season has been.

For all intents and purposes, Michigan football is done for 2020. A bad year was closed out by a third straight cancelation. Jim Harbaugh is telling current players and recruits he is "committed" to Michigan, yet a three year extension sits on Warde Manuel's desk waiting to be signed by him. This off season is going to be as odd as I can remember, and it will chart the direction Michigan is going to go in for the foreseeable future. I do feel for the seniors on this team that really wanted to play. I also feel for the underclassman that will be declaring for the draft. They didn't get a full year, it was bad when they did play, and who knows how many may have played their last football game ever. But, for the kids returning, and the ones that are signing their letters of intent today, and in the future, I wonder where their head is at right now. Harbaugh, as mentioned, is still keeping everyone in limbo. If he signs the extension he will be at Michigan for another four years. I think that would be best for the program. Yes, this year was bad, but it is one season. And yes, I know they have really struggled against top ranked teams and their rivals. But I'd like to give Harbaugh the life of the contract and the extension. I know some have said that he has interest in the NFL, but I don't know if that is reciprocated. Some people in the know say yes, others say no. I also don't know why his stock would be any higher now, after a few less than okay seasons. Also, why would he want to leave Ann Arbor when he can do whatever he wants there. He is the king of that city. He makes more money than any other state employee. He is a rah rah guy. None of that would be true in the pros. He would make less than most of his players, and he would essentially be a CEO. He would be told by the GM and owners who to play, and when to play them and how much time. In college he makes those calls, and no one else. That is not the case in the NFL. The people higher up make those choices. They want their rookies, and cheap guys to play. If Harbaugh does decide to leave, and this team needs to hire a new coach, they are rebuilding. There will be more attrition than ever, and they would easily be a bottom feeder in the Big Ten. I don't want that, and I know most sane Michigan fans agree. Michigan also has a solid recruiting class coming in, but all that crumbles if they overhaul the entire staff. They would also lose a ton of talent currently on their roster. The kids at Michigan now came to play for Harbaugh and for his staff.

I hope Harbaugh stays. With that being said, they probably should make some changes on both sides of the ball. I am as avid a Don Brown fan as can be. I love his attacking style and his demeanor. He has had some great defenses at Michigan. But his refusal to make changes will be his downfall. I think they need to move on from him, as much as it pains me to write that. He was great, but he just isn't cutting it anymore. Their defense has been bad against top flight teams his whole tenure, and this season they were bad against everyone. They need a change. On offense I don't want them to get rid of Josh Gattis. I want them to fully hand the offense over to him. It is clear that Harbaugh is still making choices on that side of the ball, and it has killed this team. They haven't really got to try the whole "speed in space" thing to its fullest extent yet. There has been too much running and predictability. I love establishing a run game, but to run it every second and long has become boring and easy to stop. I also want to see the QB, whoever it may be, let it rip. I want them to air it out. If the university of Ohio State and Alabama and Clemson can do it, Michigan can too. They need to adapt. This isn't the late 80's, early 90's three yards and a cloud of dust anymore. They need to start passing to set up the run game more. I do think some position coaches may need to change, cough cough, Jay Harbaugh, and let Gattis pick the replacements. This team also needs to get tougher and meaner and play with more pride. They need more Devin Bush like players. I miss him so much. Michigan is still Michigan. They can still play with anyone, and win 10 games and be important. They just need to remember that. I also think they should try and retain Harbaugh, but with all the caveats that are on the extension they are waiting for him to sign. This team can still be good. But, this off season will either make or break this team.

I really hope it works out for obvious reasons. But, as always, I have my doubts. Time will tell.

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing and the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast.

Come and support Ty and the podcast on Patreon.

Follow Ty on instagram and twitter.

SeedSing is funded by a group of awesome people. Join them by donating to SeedSing.

Ty's 2020-2021 NBA Preview: Predictions

basketball BW.jpg

I finished my preseason countdown of the NBA teams yesterday, and I come to you today with playoff predictions, award winners and some surprises, both bad and good, for the upcoming season. I think, like last year, there is no definitive favorite, although the Lakers are close. But, I could see upwards of five or six teams winning it all, and none would surprise me. I think the West is still much, much better too, but the East's top five or six teams are going to be very competitive. With that, let's get to my playoff picks.

I'll start with the East as usual. Also, I know they have the play in tournament back this year, and that rules, but I am going to go with the top eight teams in both conferences to further my picks. Okay, from eight to one in the East I have, Orlando, Atlanta, Toronto, Philadelphia, Brooklyn, Boston, Miami and Milwaukee. This is pretty much the same as last season, with Atlanta taking Indiana's place. I just don't think Indiana is quite good enough to make another playoff push. I also think they will trade some key guys during the year. And Brooklyn could very easily be a top three seed if KD and Kyrie play like themselves, or they could fall off if either guy isn't as good or focused or gets hurt. The other teams seem pretty solid to me.

In round one Orlando will get easily dispatched by Milwaukee in five games. Orlando always wins one game. Atlanta will be a fun first round opponent, but Miami is too good on defense to let it go no longer than six games. Toronto and Boston will be the best first round matchup in the East, and it will go seven games and be a bloodbath, but Boston has too much talent not to win the series. And I love the Philly-Brooklyn 4-5 matchup. It will be fun, probably brutal at times, but if KD is 75 percent of himself, and Kyrie shows up, the Nets best two players are better than the 76ers two best players. I will be rooting for Philly all year, but Brooklyn, if fully healthy, is just too good. I have the Nets in seven.

That would leave us with a Milwaukee-Brooklyn and Miami-Boston in the East semis. These are two good matchups, and I think it is the best four teams in the East. This was where Milwaukee blew it last year, and maybe they will again. I personally do not think they will. Giannis is going to be even better. Getting Jrue Holiday was a major upgrade, and Milwaukee is deeper and better defensively than Brooklyn. KD will give them a run, if he is healthy, but I don't see Milwaukee letting it go more than six games. Miami and Boston will be a rematch from the bubble, but this time I think Boston will get the better of Miami. Their matchup last season was great, and due to the fact that Boston will be pushed by Toronto makes me think that they will beat the Heat. It will go seven, Jimmy Butler and Bam Adebayo will give the Celtics fits, but the Celtics are so young, so talented and have gritty playoff experience.

That leaves us with Boston and Milwaukee in the East Finals. I have picked Milwaukee to get this far the past two seasons, but not to the Finals. This is the year it changes. Giannis is more locked in, they upgraded the point guard position in a major way with Holiday, and they are the best defensive team in the league. This is the year the Bucks finally get over the hump and make the Finals. That pick is for you dad.

Now for the Varsity. The West has every team vying for a spot, save maybe for the Thunder. But SGA may have something to say about that. The other fourteen teams have legitimate cases for making the playoffs, and the play in tournament is going to be awesome. It may be better than the actual West playoffs. With that, in order from eight to one, I have Phoenix, Houston, Utah, Dallas, Portland, Denver, LA Clippers and LA Lakers. This could have been different if Klay was healthy, or if Sacramento could ever figure it out, or if the Spurs get coached the hell up, or if the Pelicans super young, super athletic talent figures it out. But right now, this is how I see the West playing out. The sprint of a season will make it a brutal run to get here, but these are the top eight teams to me. I wanted to put Memphis in there, and I hope they prove me wrong, but I just think they are going to take a teeny step back.

That means the 8-1 is Phoenix and the Lakers. This would be a sweep if Chris Paul wasn't on the Suns. He will not let this team get swept, and I feel like he will win them two games. But the Lakers will prevail in six, and I don't think they will have to use LeBron as much, saving him for later rounds. Houston, and this is totally dependent on if they keep Harden or not, will get easily passed over by the Clippers. The Clippers are on a revenge tour, they are a much better defensive team, and can score for days. That series will go no more than five games. Utah and Denver will be a very fun first round matchup. This was the first round in the bubble, and it was an incredible series. This time around, and I know I said I was going to stop doubting Denver, I think the Jazz will win. They will have everyone, hopefully, and they only lost last year when Conley's three pointer lipped out. I think Utah wins in a hard fought seven game series. Dallas and Portland is going to be a fun, defenseless, series. The scores of every game could be 150-145. Each team will light it up. Luka Doncic and Dame Lillard will go at one another. But I am going with Portland in seven. Dame is good in early round playoff series. Portland is deeper and a touch better on defense, and I feel like having Nurkic is going to be big for the Trailblazers.

That leaves us with the Lakers and Trailblazers facing off, and the Clippers and Jazz. I kind of thought this was how the West was going to play out last year before the shutdown. The Trailblazers are better this year. I love that Nurkic is back, and he was incredible in the bubble. But the Lakers are too talented, and with a, hopefully for them, well rested LeBron, they shouldn't have too much trouble with Portland. Dame and McCollum may do enough to pull out one game, but I don't see it going past five. The Clippers and Jazz looked like the West Semis in the bubble, until Conley's three rimmed out. I think a fully healthy Jazz could pose a problem for the Clippers. And given Paul George's inconsistent playoff career, who knows what he will bring to the table. I also think that Rudy Gobert could feast on the Clippers lack of size. But Kawhi is too good, Lou Will will have a game where he goes for 30, Beverly will shut down Conley and I think the duo of George and Kawhi will neutralize Donovan Mitchell. I have the Clippers in six.

This gives us the battle of LA in the West Finals. I thought this was what was going to happen last year. But unlike last year, I think the Lakers will pull out a seven game series win. This will be more competitive, the Clippers will show up, George will be better, Kawhi will give LeBron headaches. But the Lakers got better this offseason, and they have more size, and maybe even more depth now than the Clippers do. I think Davis will go nuts in this series too.

That leaves us with a Lakers-Bucks finals. If you had asked me to pick a winner 10 minutes ago I would have picked the Lakers to go back to back. But, Giannis just signed the super max, and that changes things. He won't be berated with questions about where he will play next season. He will be free to be himself. He won't have some weird burden looming over him. And Jrue Holiday was such a great pickup, I am really over the moon for the Bucks right now. Maybe this is for my dad, maybe I like Giannis too much, maybe I think Mike Budenholzer is due. I don't know why, but I am going with the Bucks to win the title, in a very good, very close seven game series. I have a feeling it will be epic.

As for awards, let's see. It is tempting to go with one of the first three picks in the draft for rookie of the year, but I think each of them have specific reasons why they won't win it. Edwards isn't even close defensively yet, Wiseman will be no more than a role player and LaMelo Ball is playing in Charlotte. I also don't like many other lottery picks to win it. I really, really want to pick Obi Toppin because he was my top prospect, and I love his game, but the Knicks are going to be real bad. I'm going to "go out on a limb here", and pick Cassius Stanley. He was a second round pick, and he may not even start the year. But at some point he will get some real run with the Pacers, assuming they blow it up, and I think he will have a Malcolm Brogdon-esque rookie season. For most improved I always want to give this to a player on the cusp of stardom. For example, I would have given this to Bam Adebayo last year. Hell, he may have won it for all I know. This season I am going to give it to Ben Simmons. I think he will feel more free to play his style with Doc Rivers at the helm and a slew of shooters around him. I think that will make him more prone to shoot from outside, and he already has the rest of his game intact. Sixth Man of the Year will be Norm Powell. No more Montrezl Harrell or Lou Williams. If Norm Powell meets the criteria, he will be instant offense off the bench for the Raptors, he provides solid defense and he is the definition of a modern sixth man. Coach of the Year I am going to go with Mike Budenholzer. Now that Giannis has signed on, and Jrue Holiday is there, and this team shoots threes and plays exceptional defense, I think Budenholzer will let go of the reins a bit, and let this team play to its fullest potential. He will loosen his minutes restrictions, he will let his best players play and his team will reap the benefits of it all. Defensive Player of the Year is going to be a big. I'm just not totally sure which yet. Will it be Gobert? He is the best rim protector and playing in a contract year. Will it be AD? He wanted it last year, didn't get it, so maybe he will go extra hard. Will it be Draymond? While not a big, he does guard every position, looks to be in shape, and if Golden State still has visions of making the playoffs, he will have to be the Draymond of old. Or will it be Giannis again? He won it last year, I'm sure he wants to win it again, and he is becoming a modern day Shaq on both ends of the floor. In the end I'm going to go with Gobert. He, as stated, is the best rim protector and wants to sign a humongous contract this offseason. He is going to be a problem this year.

Finally we have MVP. Will it be LeBron, or Giannis for a third straight year, or Kawhi, or someone way off the radar. I don't think Giannis will win it again. It seems that voters in the NBA are very wary of giving back to back, let alone three straight times, the same award to someone. LeBron may not have enough minutes. The Lakers are coming off a title, they have so many good options that LeBron will be able to sit games and they can still win, and AD will steal votes from him. I don't think Kawhi will get it because he is not that type of player. He just wants to beat the hell out of people and win titles. He could care less about those other trophies. So that leaves us with a total outside option. I'd love to pick Brad Beal, but the Wizards will not be a playoff team. Luka and Trae are awesome, but neither plays a lick of defense. Zion and Ja aren't ready to be MVP options yet. Maybe next year. But, in my mind, the MVP should come from a playoff team, preferably a top three team in either conference. Going by this criteria narrows the list for me, but actually makes it a little easier. I am picking Jayson Tatum to win the MVP this season. Look, I do not like the Celtics, never have, but Tatum has only gotten better each year, he goes hard every night, and this just seems like the next logical step in his career. I feel like he is going to have a great year, and I think the NBA will reward him by giving him the MVP.

Okay, that does it for my NBA preseason predictions. We are officially one week away from the start, and I cannot wait.

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing, the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast, and the greatest basketball writer on the internet.

Come and support Ty and the podcast on Patreon.

Follow Ty on instagram and twitter.

SeedSing is funded by a group of awesome people. Join them by donating to SeedSing

Ty's 2020-2021 NBA Preview: Can Win It All

basketball BW.jpg

Today is the final day of my NBA countdown. We are eight days away from the start of the regular season. I will do predictions tomorrow, but as far as my rankings, this is it. These are the best of the best. These are the teams that have the players, coaches, staff and fortitude to win it all. The only thing stopping these teams are COVID or injury. I hope neither happens to any of them.

At number 5 I have the Boston Celtics. The Celtics are loaded with great young talent, they have one of the better head coaches and they have, for such a young team, lots of playoff experience. They also got rid of an albatross contract. The only thing that worries me with this team is depth. But man is their starting five loaded. Jayson Tatum is a straight up star. He can score from anywhere, he is lethal, he has the killer mentality, he plays defense and he just gets better and better. I am a true believer that he is a future face of the league. Jaylen Brown is an elite defender, and he is hyper athletic. His jumper is improving and he is asserting himself as the firm number 2 on this team. He may waffle from time to time, but he always makes up for it. Marcus Smart is the new age Tony Allen. He is a menace on defense. He can guard pretty much all 5 positions and he can draw fouls and mess with opponents heads. He isn't great offensively, but he is good enough. When Kemba Walker is healthy he is one of the better scoring guards in the NBA. He is also a solid perimeter defender. He is a better fit on this team too. He is so much better fitting in than being the star. He is injured, and will miss a month or two, but when he is back, the Celtics have three guys in the starting five that can go for 20 every night. Robert Williams may float in and out of games, miss some meetings and over sleep. But when he is engaged, this kid is good. There is a reason he slipped to the Celtics in his draft, but there is also a reason he was considered a lottery pick. He is starting to show flashes, and if he can reach some of his potential, he will only help this team. Daniel Thies is a solid defender. He does the dirty things for this team. Jeff Teague is a fine player, and that is all he has to be here. Grant Williams got decent, important minutes in the playoffs, and that is big for him. After these guys is where it gets murky. They gave Tristan Thompson too good of a contract for him. Tacko Fall is more of a spectacle than a player. Carsen Edwards and Romeo Langford haven't done much in their two years. Semi Ojeyle seems to be getting passed over. This is the worry for me with this team. But that starting five, and first two off the bench are more than enough for me to like them as a contender out of the East.

At number 4 I have the Miami Heat. Some said it was the bubble, others said it was Jimmy Butler, but I just think the Heat are a very good team, and they deserved to be in the Finals last season. Jimmy Butler proved yet again how important and viable he is on a top team. He willed them to the Finals. He had them as prepared as one player could. Bam Adebayo just keeps ascending. He is one of my absolute favorite players to watch. He goes hard, he rebounds and plays defense and he is becoming a great low post player. Adebayo is awesome. Tyler Herro has done more at 20 than I could ever imagine. He averaged double figures in the Finals. He averaged double figures as a teenager in the early playoffs. This kid is a straight up scorer. Now he has to play defense. Duncan Robinson is one of the most lethal shooters in the game, and the kid has earned every minute he now gets. He has made a name for himself, and all he has to do is shoot. He too needs to improve defensively. Goran Dragic re-signed there, and he is a perfect sixth man on this team. He runs their second unit so well. Kendrick Nunn had some ups and downs, and didn't play as much in the Finals. But, he can heat up at any moment. Andre Iguodala and Udonis Haslem are old, and their primes are way past them, but I would love to have two guys like that on my team. They are additional coaches when on the floor. Getting Avery Bradley will help their already good defense. Meyers Leonard provides front court depth. This team is good, and a return trip to the Finals wouldn't surprise me at all. Jimmy Butler is that dude.

At number 3 I have the LA Clippers. I was so very high on this team last year, and they totally blew it. They ran out of steam, they let the bubble get to them, and they lost a 3-1 lead to the Nuggets. They led to Doc Rivers leaving, and them letting a few other players walk. But this team is still loaded, they have to have revenge on their minds and I love hiring Ty Lue to take over as the head coach. Kawhi Leonard is not going to break down like he did in the bubble again. He will be back and he will be back with a vengeance. I wouldn't be shocked to see him return to his Spurs and Raptors self. He is a robot, but a robot that will be out for revenge. Paul George just signed a max deal, he is engaged to be married and it looks like he is having fun again. I know he said some stuff about the coaches last year, but who cares. This guy is an elite scorer and an even better defender. He just needs to stay focused. They also have Patrick Beverly and Lou Williams and Reggie Jackson back. Beverly is still an upper tier defender and his shot is better, Lou Will is a great, great bench scorer and Jackson plays all out every night. He may shoot too much, but he goes hard. Marcus Morris is a good dude to have on your side, and his shot is solid. Ivica Zubac is an underrated, solid big man. I like replacing Montrezl Harrell with Serge Ibaka. He may be older, but he is taller, he is a better shooter and still a bit better around the rim on defense. Luke Kennard adds long range shooting. And Nic Batum can still do some little things. The Clippers should bounce back. I would not be surprised to see them really challenge the top of the West. Some guys will need to step up, and play better than they did in the bubble, which I think they will. The Clippers will be just fine.

At number 2 I have the Milwaukee Bucks. The Bucks have the two time reigning MVP. Giannis is one of the best players in the league, and listening to him in interviews only furthers my belief that he is still getting better. Once he starts to hit his outside shot a bit more consistently, he will be as unstoppable as Shaq. He is also the best defender in the league. I love the addition of Jrue Holiday. He is a major upgrade over Eric Bledsoe, and he and Giannis will be a very formidable duo. Khris Middleton is another lockdown defender, and he can really shoot the ball. He needs to play better this year, but he will have ample shot opportunities playing next to Giannis and Holiday. He just needs to knock them down. Brook Lopez adds size and shooting. Donte DiVincenzo is inconsistent, but he can light it up. I wonder if his name being in trade talks will affect his play. Same thing for DJ Wilson, except he was barely seeing the floor anyway. Giannis brother Thanasis is there, and while it is cool that they are on the same team, I don't know how much he will truly see the floor. Bobby Portis is okay, but he shoots a bit too much, and people still only really know him from punching out another teammate in Chicago. And adding DJ Augustin adds a nice veteran, but also age. This team will be all about Giannis and Jrue Holiday. If they coalesce as I expect them to, they will be on top of the East.

The final team, the best team going into the season is the defending champs, the LA Lakers. They are here, they deserve it and they are, at least on paper, a much better team than the one that just won the title. They have LeBron back, and that is humongous no matter what. He was amazing in the bubble, and especially in the Finals. I still like Jordan as the GOAT, but LeBron is definitely the second greatest player ever. And no disrespect to Dywane Wade and Chris Bosh and Kyrie Irving, but he will be playing with his best teammate ever again this year, Anthony Davis. The two of them were a devastating pair. And Davis actually played a little better without LeBron on the floor. Davis is one of the best defenders in the league, he is probably the best big on offense and he showed some strength and ability to not get injured last season. He is also just now entering his prime. If they just had these two guys, and three of my friends I hoop with starting, they'd be a playoff team. Lucky for them though they have real NBA players, and they are solid. Kentavious Caldwell-Pope took a major step last year, and I fully buy him as a solid third or fourth option. He was awesome in the Finals. They replaced guys they let go of, Rajon Rondo, JaVale McGee and Dwight Howard, with Marc Gasol, Montezl Harrell and Dennis Schroeder. Gasol is a better defender and passer than both McGee and Howard. Harrell is a bull dog and a force on offense. Schroeder is a younger, and better offensive scoring version of Rondo. They upgraded all three of those positions. Alex Caruso is a solid player. I don't like the hype surrounding him, but that isn't him, that's the ESPN's of the world. He works well with LeBron's game. Talen Horton Tucker looks like a steal in the preseason. And Kyle Kuzma and Wes Matthews will be solid bench guys, if they keep them both. The Lakers only got better, and they should be the hands down favorites heading into this season.

There you have it, my teams ranked from 30-1. This feels right. I will be back tomorrow to wrap up my preseason NBA preview with predictions and award winners. Also, I want to wish my wife a very happy birthday. She is cooler than any other wife out there. That is just facts. Happy birthday, I love you.

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing, the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast, and the greatest basketball writer on the internet.

Come and support Ty and the podcast on Patreon.

Follow Ty on instagram and twitter.

SeedSing is funded by a group of awesome people. Join them by donating to SeedSing

Ty's 2020-2021 NBA Preview: The Almost Contenders

basketball BW.jpg

Today we enter the top 10 of my NBA countdown. My next five teams have aspirations, and the talent, to be title contenders, but a few minute things stand in their way. They are on the cusp, but they need absolutely everything to fall perfectly for them.

At number 10 I have the Utah Jazz. People are so quick to forget that they were a spin away from beating Denver in the playoffs last season. If Conley's jumper had gone in, we could have had a totally different outcome. It didn't, and the Jazz were left to pick up the pieces after another first round exit. Donovan Mitchell is a star. That dude is awesome, he is hyper athletic, his jumper continues to improve and his defense is getting there. He is one of my favorite younger stars in the league. He is a beast also. He goes hard every night. Getting Mike Conley last year was supposed to be the thing that put them over the top, but he needed far much more time to adjust to their roster. When he figured it out though, this team was pretty darn good. Conley is still an elite point guard, and I think he will show everyone this year who may have forgotten. Rudy Gobert is going to be burdened with the fact that he will forever be the poster child of what not to do when you have the CoronaVirus. He did all that nonsense, then infected Mitchell, and now he will forever be the guy who caused the league to shut down for three months. But he is a very good basketball player. Don't forget that. He is great in the low post. He is a dominant rim protector, and he is very solid in the pick and roll. He is also in a contract year, so I wouldn't be surprised if he went out and dominated other big men this season. Bojan Bogdanovic is back after suffering a season ending injury prior to the bubble. He will add spacing and knock down shooting. Joe Ingles isn't much of a defender, but the dude is a solid trash talker and a decent shot creator. Jordan Clarkson is instant offense off the bench. He could be their Lou Williams. Derrick Favors iis a solid backup to Gobert, and he is a good defender. I love the Udoka Azubuike pick. He will get to learn, and wait before he has to see meaningful minutes, and that is major. Outside that though, the one thing that holds them back for me, is their lack of depth. It gets pretty iffy after Favors and Clarkson come off the bench, and that is why they aren't a Finals contender just yet. The Jazz are a playoff team, but they have to get out of the first round before I take them super seriously.

At number 9 I have the Toronto Raptors. I know the Raptors lost Kawhi a year ago, and they lost Marc Gasol and Serge Ibaka this off season, but I just cannot quit this team. They may be the new Spurs. They are so well coached, and every player does their job to perfection. They may have lost a good core of the championship team they had, but they pushed Boston, and I wouldn't be surprised to see them back in the playoffs. Kyle Lowry is still there, and he is still awesome. He is a great defender, one of the smartest players I have ever watched, and I love the grit he plays with. I'm never going to second guess him ever again. They re-signed Fred Van Vleet, and to me, he is worth every penny. He is their point guard of the future. OG Anounoby is really becoming a very good player. He is switchable on defense, he is becoming a better shot maker and he is figuring it out. He just needs to stay healthy. Pascal Siakim showed some great flashes last season, and he could be one of the better up and coming faces of the league. He is so long and good at basketball. Norm Powell proved his worth last season. They need a knock down shooter, and he feels like that guy. Aron Baynes adds toughness. Chris Boucher is raw, but he can be good. They took a flyer on Stanley Johnson last season, and he was okay coming off the bench. The Raptors are always going to play tough and play good defense. Are they the title team they were a few years ago? No. But they are a playoff team, and they will be a tough out. You can count on that.

At number 8 I have the Philadelphia 76ers. They got rid of Brett Brown. They finally traded for some shooters. And if Ben Simmons and Joel Embiid can coexist and stay healthy, could this finally be the year? I am not so sure, and that is why I have them here. They are loaded with talent. Embiid is like a modern Hakeem Olajuwon. He is not Hakeem, no one will ever be Hakeem, but he is like a modern version. Ben Simmons may not be able to shoot, or maybe not willing, but he is amazing. He is a solid ball handler, he is a great passer, he can get to the rim. But the best thing about his game is his defense. He can lock almost anyone down. The 76ers missed him greatly in the playoffs last year, and it showed. Tobias Harris is a fine player, I just don't think he is a max guy. He can score, but he is not great on the other end, and he kind of fell off a bit last year. What the 76ers needed was shooting, and they looked to try and address that this offseason. They traded for Danny Green, Terrance Ferguson and Seth Curry. While not the greatest shooters in the world, Green brings championship pedigree, Ferguson is young and willing to learn, and Curry is a flat out shooter. Those are good guys to have around Embiid and Simmons. They signed Dwight Howard, and if he plays like he did last year, he is going to feast on second units in the East. Matisse Thybulle is one of the best young defenders in the league, he just needs to work on offense. And I like them taking Tyrese Maxey. He could be a solid point guard for them. I also think getting rid of Brett Brown and hiring Doc Rivers was a smart move. The 76ers have all the potential in the world, they just have to find a way to put it all together. They haven't yet, and that is what worries me.

At number 7 I have the Denver Nuggets. The Nuggets were in the West Finals last year. They took a game from the Lakers. They came back down 3-1 to the Clippers in the previous round. This team is underrated, even by me, but they need to be taken seriously. Nikola Jokic is awesome, full stop. He may not be the fastest, or the best leaper or even a good defender, but he more than makes up for those shortcomings with his basketball IQ. The dude is also an incredible passer. He is like the Patrick Mahomes of the NBA. I am still blown away by how good he is. Jamaal Murray more than found himself in the bubble, and he vaulted to being one of the better offensive players in the league. He can score from anywhere, and he is a very good ball handler. It is nice to have a guy that can get you a bucket when you need one. They re-signed Paul Milsap, and while he is not the all star he was in Atlanta, he is still a great vet to have on your team, and he can still have good nights. Gary Harris kind of slipped last year, but that was due to injuries and a full league stoppage. I think he bounces back. Michael Porter Jr, while I don't agree with his views on CoronaVirus, that dude can flat out score too. Denver is going to get to a point where they have to start him, and having him, Jokic and Murray is going to be absolutely lethal. I like Will Barton, he just needs to see the floor more. I would love to see Bol Bol play more. He was so dope in the seeding games, barely saw the floor if at all in the playoffs, but I just want to watch him play. He is so big, and he can stretch the floor. He can shoot threes. Monte Morris is a very solid bench/role player. The rest of the roster is kind of meh, but when you have Jokic and Murray, and been far in the playoffs, you get the benefit of the doubt. Denver is a perennial deep run playoff team now. I just wonder when they will take that next step. Hopefully for their fans it is soon.

The final team for the day, at number 6 I have the Brooklyn Nets. I have them this high for two reasons. One, they are in the East. Two, they get KD and Kyrie Irving back at full health this year. For as much as those two may rub people the wrong way, they are both champs, they have both hit humongous shots, one is an MVP winner and the other has MVP potential, and they are both amazing at basketball. Now they just have to coexist and stay healthy. The rest of the roster is solid too. I love Caris Levert. He is a Michigan kid, he has proven me very wrong about his career and he is a scorer. He is a creator too. Levert is a very, very good player. Joe Harris is a three and D specialist. He also plays very hard every night. Jarrett Allen has some of the coolest hair in the league, and he is not afraid to contest anyone. Go back and look at some of his blocks last season. Deandre Jordan is older, but he was handpicked by KD and Kyrie to be on this team, and he is still a very good pick and roll guy. Spencer Dinwiddie is a great microwave off the bench. He can light up first units, but I would have him as my star second unit guy. Landry Shamet was traded there, and I think he will fit in nice with Kyrie and KD. They're giving Jeff Green another chance, but hey, the guy wouldn't still be in the league if he didn't have immense talent. And I still like Taurean Prince. The fate of the Nets season rests on two guys. If they play well and it works, they could be a real contender. If not, they will not make the playoffs. I'm very interested in watching them play this season.

That's it for the day, and the week. Come back on Monday for my final 5 teams, and Tuesday I will have full predictions.

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing, the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast, and the greatest basketball writer on the internet.

Come and support Ty and the podcast on Patreon.

Follow Ty on instagram and twitter.

SeedSing is funded by a group of awesome people. Join them by donating to SeedSing

Ty's 2020-2021 NBA Preview: The One or Two Round Playoff Teams

basketball BW.jpg

Now we are getting to the good teams, the playoff teams. I would personally write these teams down in pen. Now, injuries, COVID positives and other random stuff can come up, and possibly will. But with the way these teams rosters are constructed now, it would have to be a major blow to move them out of the playoffs. They would have to lose star players for ample amounts of time. I don't think that will happen with these teams, and that is why I have them as "locks" for the playoffs.

At number 15 I have the Atlanta Hawks. Too high you say. Not enough defense you say. Won't mesh you say. I disagree with all of that. I also think Lloyd Pierce is going to prove how good of a head coach he is this year, and the Hawks will be back in the mix. Trae Young is great. No he is not Luka Doncic, and he can't shoot like Steph, but he has range for days, and he will find any way to score a bucket. His defense is lacking, and if he put some effort in it, a la Steph Curry, it would make a difference. But he is liable to go off for 30 plus any given night. I will take any day. I love John Collins. I do not want Atlanta to trade him either. I think he and Young are a good duo, and after admitting he didn't put in enough effort on D last year, he turned it around near the end of their season. He is also a bruiser in the paint. If Clint Capela can stay healthy, I don't see why he isn't the exact same player he was in Houston. Trae is a more willing passer than Harden, and Capela is going to get all the lob dunks he could ever want. He is also an okay enough rim protector. They ended up signing Bogdan Bogdanovic after the Milwaukee trade fell through. He adds even more space, and he is a solid shot creator. If DeAndre Hunter can play a little better defense, he is their version of Draymond or Kawhi. Kevin Huerter may lose minutes to Bogdanovic, but he is going to be instant offense off the bench, and I feel like he will light up second units. I could say the same for Cam Reddish. He lost some luster at Duke, but now he is being given the time and effort to do his own thing, and he is a very solid player, with room to grow. Rajon Rondo adds super intelligence and Danilo Gallinari is a very solid player when healthy. Kris Dunn is a bull dog on defense, and if that kid from USC they drafted is brought along slowly, he could be a solid bench guy. The Hawks went all in this offseason, and I applaud them for it. They will be in the playoffs this year.

At number 14 I have the Phoenix Suns. Here is another team that went all in, and it only took one guy to put them there. Getting Chris Paul was a humongous deal. After seeing what he did in OKC last year, while I may not like him as a player, I respect the hell out of his game. He is also going to be playing next to a younger, less ball hoggy version of James Harden, with Devin Booker. Booker is on the cusp of stardom. The kid can flat our score, he has improved his handles and he at least tries on defense. Booker wanted the Suns to make a push, and they certainly did when they traded for Paul. Deandre Ayton got better as the year went on, and was very good in the bubble. If he continues on this trajectory, he is going to fit in just fine with Booker and Paul. He is also a threat from outside, which is super useful for a 7 footer. Mikal Bridges had a very good rookie year, he can shoot and his arms are as long as any person's I have ever seen. He is going to be a very good NBA starter. Jalen Smith was a solid draft pick. He was a good big at Maryland, he is built and he hustles his ass off. Picking up Jae Crowder was quietly a great move. He adds shooting and defense, and an edge this team has lacked. Dario Saric seemingly refound his game in the bubble. And Elie Okobo might be ready to be a good bench contributor. The Suns had one of the better off seasons I can remember, and the sheer addition of Paul is enough for me to make them a playoff team, even with playing in the West.

At number 13 I have the Houston Rockets. Now, all of this depends on if they keep Harden, or what they get in trade. Houston is a mess, but Harden is the definition of a walking bucket, he is a perennial MVP candidate, and if he plays, Houston will find a way to make the playoffs. But if he is gone, they go way, way down on my list. Adding John Wall was puzzling, I wrote about that last week. He hasn't played in two years, seems like he is in okay shape, but I do not have any clue how he is going to look, and how he will coexist with Harden. PJ Tucker is awesome, I love watching him play, and he goes hard every night. But it seems like he wants out too, and losing him would really hurt this team. Eric Gordon is a very good three point shooter, and when he locks in on D he is good. But it seems like he may want out also. Singing Christian Wood was a good move. He was, lowkey, a very solid scorer in the post, and he can stretch defenders to the three. He fits in nice here. Tyson Chandler is on this team, but he rarely sees the floor. They signed Boogie Cousins, and while I love the reunion of him and Wall, Cousins is slow, and coming off two very brutal injuries himself. Gerald Green and Ben McLemore are fine bench guys, but they don't move the needle. And I like the addition of Thabo Sefolosha, but he isn't the lockdown defender he was in OKC. Houston's playoff hopes ride on Harden's shoulders. If he stays, and they don't have to trade him, they are in. But, if he leaves, if he gets traded, this will be a whole different conversation.

At number 12 I have the Portland Trailblazers. The Trailblazers are like the Magic, but they do have playoff success, just not as much as they would like. Damian Lillard is otherworldly. For me, he has surpassed Steph as the best pure scorer. He is Allen Iverson with a jumper. He is also a killer, which I love. Lillard is a star, and I will not hear otherwise. CJ McCollum is a perfect sidekick to Lillard. He is a great shooter, he can create, and he is a super smart player. He doesn't make any mistakes. Neither of them are great defenders, but they are so good offensively that it makes up for that. Jusuf Nurkic is back healthy, and he was a force in the bubble. I didn;t respect his game as much as I should, and that is on me. That dude is tenacious and solid and just a good NBA player. Carmelo re signed, and for as much flak as I might give him, he seemed to buy into being a bench guy and playing like "Olympic Carmelo". He can still put it up with the best of them. Getting Robert Covington helps with their defense, which is what this team lacks most. He can also space the floor, and will not allow teams to double Lillard or McCollum. I like Derrick Jone Jr too. He is probably the most athletic player in the league that you have never heard of, and he will do some highlight reel things for Portland. Zach Collins is coming off an injury, but if he is 75 percent of what he was prior to his injury, that is great for their second unit. Rodney Hood is also back after missing a year with injury. He is a good scorer and shot creator and should lead the second unit. Anfernee Simons is young, and coveted by other teams. I would keep him, but it is nice to have that in your back pocket. And adding Enes Kanter and Harry Giles makes them bigger and will give them a bit more flexibility. The Trailblazers will not be fighting for a playoff spot this year, they will firmly be in that 4, 5 or 6 range.

And at number 11 I have the Dallas Mavericks. Look, I am not a fan of this team. I think they whine and complain too much, and I do not like how major media outlets are so quick to point out their white savior in Luka Doncic. That being said, Doncic is awesome. He is a good shooter, a better passer and an excellent shot creator. He is as smart as advertised and the dude is legit. Kristaps Porzingis hasn't live up to the hype. But being the second or third guy seems to suit him just fine. He isn't a bruiser for how big he is, but he can sure shoot the ball. Tim Hardaway Jr has carved out a nice niche in the NBA for himself. He is a lockdown shooter, and I don't think he gets enough credit for his defense. Josh Richardson is another outside shooter for this team, and I think a change of scenery will certainly help. James Johnson is one of the baddest dudes in the league. He makes Jae Crowder look meek, and I think the Mavericks will like having him on their team. Boban is Boban. He is goofy, runs weird and was in "John Wick 3". But, you cannot teach height, and he is something like 7'6. Trey Burke seems to have found a home as a second unit scorer, and he fits in nicely. Willie Cauley Stein is a good pick and roll guy. And, if healthy, Dwight Powell adds depth. The Mavericks are a playoff lock now because of Doncic. He isn't as great as everyone says yet, but he is good enough to lead this team to the playoffs yearly.

That is it for today. Come back tomorrow for the next five teams.

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing, the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast, and the greatest basketball writer on the internet.

Come and support Ty and the podcast on Patreon.

Follow Ty on instagram and twitter.

SeedSing is funded by a group of awesome people. Join them by donating to SeedSing

Ty's 2020-2021 NBA Preview: The Maybe Playoff Teams

basketball BW.jpg

Day 3 of my NBA countdown has us close to teams that could be in the playoffs. With the expanded playoffs, and the play in tournament, I wouldn't be shocked if any of these teams make it. I also wouldn't be shocked if they don't. These teams, to me, are right on the edge of becoming perennial contenders, they just aren't quite there yet. Let's go.

At number 20 I have my favorite team, the Memphis Grizzlies. The Grizzlies were probably the biggest surprise of last season. I loved the Ja Morant pick. He was my number one prospect last season, and the Grizzlies have their building block for the foreseeable future. He is so good, so talented and, once his jumper becomes consistent, will be an MVP candidate. Jaren Jackson Jr is inconsistent, and gets hurt too often, but when he is on the floor, he is good. He is still figuring it out, but I have faith that he will continue to develop, and he and Morant will soon be a formidable duo. This is where things turn for me though. The Grizzlies weren't supposed to be good last year, but they were. Morant was awesome, and the rest of the roster played some of the best basketball of their careers. I think they will fall back to Earth this season. The roster, outside Morant and Jackson Jr, is not as great as it could be. Grayson Allen is somehow a contributor, but I do not like that kid at all. I also do not think he will see the floor as much this year. Dillon Brooks can be a lethal shooter, but he hogs the ball a bit too much, and his shot isn't totally consistent. They traded for Justice Winslow last year, but he has yet to play double digit games for them due to a plethora of injuries. Jonas Valincunas is good, but he is getting older, and his style of play is becoming extinct. I love Brandon Clarke, and I want him to get more minutes so he can really shine. Kyle Anderson and Tyus Jones are very blah to me. They still have Gorgui Dieng, but I would hope they find a trade partner for him soon. It is just, outside three guys, Morant, Jackson Jr and Clarke, they don't have the horses to compete in the West. Last year was great, and fun as a fan. But the team we saw in the bubble seems more indicative of how they will be this season. Morant is a star though.

At number 19 I have the Golden State Warriors. They would have been much higher, a playoff lock, if Klay didn't get hurt. He did, and they are left to kind of scramble now. Steph and Draymond are back. That is great for them, for Steve Kerr, and for their fans. I hope Steph stays healthy, and that he lights up the arena. I hope Draymond stays in shape and focused and returns to being the great defender and leader they need. I really like the James Wiseman pick. He has a ton of raw ability, and I think this coaching staff will bring him along perfectly. But then we have a mishmash similar to what they tried to do last year. Kelly Oubre Jr is a fine player. But, he is not Klay on either end of the floor. Marquess Chriss played his best basketball last season, but he was getting beat consistently on defense. Eric Paschall was a total revelation, and I think he will continue his upward trend, but teams will gameplan for him now. Kevon Looney is coming back from injury, but I just don't know how much he has left in his tank. Andrew Wiggins is Andrew Wiggins. I want to root for him, and I do, but at some point we all have to accept that he is a mediocre NBA player. Kent Bazemore was a solid signing, but he has been on like three teams in the last three years. He will not replace Klay either. Jordan Poole bounces from G League to the NBA. And Nico Mannion, go back and read my pre draft review on him to get my impression of him as an NBA player. Losing Klay is a killer, and I do not know if we will ever see the Warriors of the past ever again. The main guys are all older, coming off injuries and have to play a brutal schedule.

At number 18 I have the Washington Wizards. The only two reasons they are in this spot is because of Brad Beal and the fact that they play in the East. Brad Beal is a bonafide super duper star. He is a scoring machine, he has impeccable work ethic and he brings it every night. I think adding Westbrook was fine, and when he is healthy he plays great with good shooters. But he needs to know that this is Brad Beal's team. I think he will eventually buy into that, it is just a matter of how long that takes. Thomas Bryant is a good offensive center, but he gets chewed up on defense. He needs to improve that part of his game. I am glad they re-signed Davis Bertans because his shooting ability takes pressure off Westbrook and Beal. I want to see if Rui Hachumuira is like the guy we saw before the shutdown, or after. He was getting good, then the pandemic hit, and he really struggled in the bubble. Robin Lopez brings intensity, but not much else. Moritz Wagner is a big that can shoot, and nothing else. And Ish Smith and Shabazz Napier are essentially the same player. But, Beal puts this team in the playoff conversation, and if Westbrook can be a mixture of the player he was last year, and in his MVP season in OKC, the Wizards will be a lock to be in the play in tournament, at the very least. Beal is so much fun to watch.

At number 17 I have the Orlando Magic. The Magic are the definition of a team in NBA playoff purgatory. They are good enough to get the 7 or 8 seed, and then get crushed in round one. They play solid enough defense to win 40-43 games, and nothing more. They could have done some stuff this offseason, but they stayed put. They will most likely make the playoffs due to their defense, and they will get obliterated in round one. They could have traded Aaron Gordon, but they opted to keep him. He is fine, but he is, at best, a 4th or 5th guy on a good team. Markelle Fultz was light years better than he has been so far in the league, but he still cannot shoot, and teams know that. Johnathan Issac destroyed his knee in the bubble, and he will be out all year. That is a humongous blow to this team. Mo Bamba got a little better, but he is still rail thin, and he doesn't protect the rim to his fullest extent yet. Nikola Vucevic is about the only offensive threat they have, and he fills up the stat sheet, but he is about the only guy that doesn't play good defense on this team. Evan Fournier is okay, but that is it, just okay. Terrance Ross is a good bench player, but he is counted on way too much on this team. And replacing DJ Augutin with Michael Carter Williams only helps in getting a little younger. Orlando will be a 35-38 win team, get in the playoffs and get trounced. That is what they do. They need to make changes, but they will not commit to it just yet. Ownership seems fine with first round playoff exits every year.

The final team for today, the first you can pencil in for the playoffs, at number 16 I have the Indiana Pacers. I texted with some friends about my rankings, and they all thought this was way too low. They said Indiana should be higher. I disagree. I think they are going to take a step back. It won't be as dramatic as OKC's, but still, the Pacers will not be as good as they have been. I like their guys too. i like Victor Oladipo, but it seems like he wants out. I like Damontas Sabonis, but I don't think he is ready to be a franchise player. I back Myles Turner more than others, but always hearing your name in trade rumors has got to take its toll. I think Malcolm Brogdon was an excellent signing last year, but he got COVID prior to the bubble, and he wasn't super great when he returned to play. TJ Warren was a microwave in the bubble, but when he went up against real defenders, namely Jimmy Butler, he was shut down. Doug McDermott and Jeremy Lamb are okay shooters, but they are zeros on defense. And firing Nate Williams was a big time mistake in my opinion. I think the Pacers, as they are built right now, are good enough to make the playoffs, but they are not good enough to push a team, and they will most likely get bounced with ease in round one. They could also make a ton of changes during the season.

That's it for today. Come back tomorrow for the next five. We are in the group of all playoff teams, quickly approaching real contenders.

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing, the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast, and the greatest basketball writer on the internet.

Come and support Ty and the podcast on Patreon.

Follow Ty on instagram and twitter.

SeedSing is funded by a group of awesome people. Join them by donating to SeedSing

Ty's 2020-2021 NBA Preview: Not This Year

basketball BW.jpg

Day 2 of my NBA countdown features five better teams than yesterday, and again, I think the Thunder are going to be a force in a few years, but not that much better. The NBA really is down to about five or six teams, honestly maybe just three teams, that are true title threats. But at least it isn't like when the Warriors had KD and it was already a done deal that they would win when healthy. Let's get to it.

At number 25, and I cannot believe I have a team coached by Greg Poppovich this low, and I hope he proves me wrong, is the San Antonio Spurs. The Spurs have been one of the most reliable franchises in my entire two decades of fervently watching the NBA. They were always a playoff team, usually a threat to win a round or two, and would win titles from time to time. First it was teaming up Duncan with David Robinson, then drafting and developing Kawhi and then surrounding Kawhi and Duncan with some of the greatest role players ever. Then Duncan retired. Then Kawhi asked out. And here they are now. They were invited to the bubble, but they did not make the playoffs for the first time in forever. And while the Spurs have big names, DeMar DeRozan and Lamarcus Aldirdge, they are older, DeRozan wants out and they cannot keep up with the modern NBA. I am a DeRozan and Aldridge fan, I like both guys, but there is no way around the fact that they have aged, and not very well. I also like Rudy Gay, but I think he is as old as me, and he doesn’t have the juice he used to. I love the younger guys they have, like Lonnie Walker, Dejounte Murray and Derrick White, but they can't all be on the floor at the same time. I think Keldon Johnson has talent, he just has to be groomed, and it may take a few more seasons. Jakob Poeltl, Trey Lyles and Patty Mills are solid vets, but at this point they seem more like trade bait now. The Spurs have the greatest basketball coach of all time, and they will be competitive. The simple fact is, they don't have the talent needed, especially in the West, to make the playoffs.

At number 24 I have the Minnesota Timberwolves. I know they have playoff aspirations, and they took Anthony Edwards number one overall, which will help scoring, and they paired KAT with D'Angelo Russell, but I just don't see this team getting over the hump quite yet. They do have all that young talent, throw Jarrett Culver in there too, but they play in the West, and they don't play much defense. If the Timberwolves were in the East, maybe they have enough offense to overcome their defensive deficiencies. But they don't, and the top teams in the West will eat them up. For all the great things KAT and Russell do on offense, they are flat out bad defensively. Edwards is a brick house, and a walking bucket, but he didn't play much D his one year in college. Culver was supposed to be the defensive guru, but he didn't have the greatest rookie year on that end. I think he can be better, but it will take time. The rest of the roster is ho hum to me. Josh Okogie is fine, but no better than a bench player. They have Ricky Rubio again, but he is only older and slower. Malik Beasley can score, I just don't know how much time he will be on the floor. Naz Reid dominated the G League, but now he is going to have to play against the best of the best. And Jake Layman is so blasé. The Timberwolves are moving in the right direction, and I love that Flip Saunders son is the head coach, but they are still a few years away, and they need to keep this core together to reach any vision of what they expect their future to hold.

At number 23 I have the Charlotte Hornets. The Hornets did a few things right this offseason. They took Lamelo Ball, which was a smart pick, and were finally able to get off Nic Batum's contract. They found out Devontae Graham is a solid player, and were able to get rid of Michael Kidd-Gilchrist. They also finally shed Tyler Zeller and Frank Kaminsky. But then they took these moves, and the money left over, and went out and gave Gordon Hayward way, way too much money. They also gave Terry Rozier far too much money. For as great a player Jordan was, the GOAT, he is not a very good GM. They seemed to be doing correct stuff, then they did that deal for Hayward, and it just took me right back to the Batum deal. Hayward is a shell of the player he was in Utah, and only got worse, and bypassed by better players in Boston. Rozier is a solid offensive guy, but he is so much better in a Lou Williams role, than as a starter. Ball is going to be okay, and I think playing in Charlotte is big time for him, but he is a rookie, and a young rookie. Malik Monk is not the scorer I thought he would be coming out of college. PJ Washington is good, and he should get the bulk of minutes at the 4. Miles Bridges is hyper athletic, but I still don't know if he can shoot. Outside these guys it is a really mishmash of players. I thought they could compete for the playoffs this year, but it just doesn't look likely. I will watch them on League Pass because they should be fun, but fun doesn't equal wins.

At number 22 I have the Sacramento Kings. The Kings are still just an absolute mess. They cannot get out of their own way. They missed, at least so far, on the Luke Walton hiring. When he doesn't have guys like Steph and Klay at his disposal, it is a lot harder to coach. DeAaron Fox is awesome, and I am stoked that he got a max deal, but I do not see much else that is desirable about that team. Buddy Hield wants out, and his shot was off last year. Marvin Bagley cannot stay healthy. Harrison Barnes is going down the Rudy Gay path. Hassan Whiteside is a head case. Jabari Parker has been a bust, and he got COVID a few months ago. Richaun Holmes plays hard, but he just doesn't have that "it" quality. I like Tyrese Haliburton, but I feel like the Kings are going to screw him up. The Kings need to play fast and space the floor. The only problem, the only guy they have that can do that is Fox. No one else plays like that, or if they do, they cannot stay healthy. The Kings are in NBA purgatory.

My final team of the day, at number 21, I have the New Orleans Pelicans. Some may say this is too low for them, that they should be a playoff team, but I am not ready to put them there yet. I love the Stan Van Gundy hire. I think he will do very good things with that team. I also love how many picks they have in the near future. The Pelicans and the Thunder will own the draft for the next decade. And I like their young, talented core. But, they have issues with health and defense and depth. Zion Willamson is an other worldly talent. He is a once in a lifetime player. He is amazing. But, he has had issues at Duke and during his rookie year with injuries. I want him to stay healthy because I love watching him play. Lonzo Ball is a solid defender and very good passer, but he is a bad shooter. Brandon Ingram is an awesome offensive player, and I personally think he is their best overall player. He deserved his max deal. Jaxson Hayes is as raw as they get, but I bet Stan Van Gundy can mold him into a defensive force. I like the addition of Steven Adams, and I think Zion will too. But Adams doesn't add much space. And Eric Bledsoe and Josh Hart are okay enough to get some minutes. The big problem with this team for me is health. If they can stay healthy, and that is a humongous if, they could fight for the playoffs. I don't think they will, and I think they are still a bit young. They also have the West to deal with. New Orleans will be good, a perennial playoff team, just not yet.

That is it for today. Come back tomorrow for 5 more teams. We are starting to get to the better, possibly playoff bound teams.

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing, the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast, and the greatest basketball writer on the internet.

Come and support Ty and the podcast on Patreon.

Follow Ty on instagram and twitter.

SeedSing is funded by a group of awesome people. Join them by donating to SeedSing