Jonathan Vilma makes big play early in first game of 2012 season

21 Oct
2012
by Maggie Hendricks in Fantasy Football, General

Jonathan Vilma made an immediate impact in his first game this season. Vilma, who was both rehabbing a knee injury and appealing a suspension because of his alleged involvement in the New Orleans Saints' bounty scandal, was moved from the physically-unable-to-play list to the Saints' 53-man roster on Wednesday.

Though he didn't start against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Vilma made a big play early. He hit Tampa Bay quarterback Josh Freeman, forcing an incomplete pass.

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Terrell Suggs picks up a sack in first game back from Achilles injury

21 Oct
2012

Reigning NFL Defensive Player of the Year Terrell Suggs defied the odds when he was added to the 53-man roster on Saturday, less than six months removed from a partially torn Achilles tendon that was surgically repaired in early May -- and just three days after returning to the practice field after spending training camp and the first six weeks of the regular season on the "Reserve/Non-Football Injury" list.

Suggs' amazing recovery continued when he not only dressed for Sunday's game against the Houston Texans, but began earning his $4.9 million base salary by picking up his first sack of the season and No. 83.5 of his 10-year career, which now has him tied for 46th place with Leonard Marshall and La'Roi Glover.

Though he was expected to play a backup/situational role until he works himself back into game shape — Suggs was compared to an offensive tackle by Pete Prisco of CBSSports.com before Sunday's game — Suggs started the game and his sack came on his seventh play of the game, and the Texans' ninth play from scrimmage.

Suggs beat Texans right tackle Derek Newton on an inside stunt and dropped Matt Schaub for a seven-yard loss on a 1st-and-10 play midway through the first quarter. Including the sack, Suggs had three tackles, including one on Arian Foster after an eight-yard run on 3rd-and-18 two plays after his sack, and got another hit on Schaub later in the first quarter.

It may be awhile before "T-Sizzle" is 100 percent and back in a full-time role, but even an out-of-shape Suggs gives the Ravens a pass-rushing presence they otherwise lacked, and his return fills an on-field leadership void created with last Sunday's season-ending to Ray Lewis.

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Lakers waive Reeves Nelson, Ronnie Aguilar (Yahoo! Sports)

20 Oct
2012
EL SEGUNDO, Calif. (AP) -- The Los Angeles Lakers waived forward Reeves Nelson and center Ronnie Aguilar, trimming their training camp roster to 18 players.
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Saints LB Vilma activated, TE Graham stays behind (Yahoo! Sports)

20 Oct
2012
NEW ORLEANS (AP) -- The New Orleans Saints have moved linebacker Jonathan Vilma from their physically unable to perform list to the active roster, meaning he could play for the first time this season on Sunday at Tampa Bay.
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Greg Salas, pair of Rams offensive linemen earning increased practice squad salaries

18 Oct
2012

Following the final roster cuts before the start of the 2012 regular season, the New England Patriots acquired wide receiver Greg Salas from the St. Louis Rams. The transaction made sense as the price to acquire Salas was cheap (late-round draft choice in 2015), the Patriots have the league's oldest receiving corps (average age of 29.9 years), and he caught 27 passes for 264 yards while playing for Patriots offensive coordinator Josh McDaniels as a fourth-round pick out of the University of Hawaii by the Rams in 2011.

Salas was inactive for the first two games of the regular season before he was waived by the Patriots to free up a roster spot for Deion Branch. Salas was re-signed to the practice squad on Sept. 20 at a rate of $8,800 per week ($149,600 over a full season), much higher than the $5,700 per week practice squad salary minimum. Two weeks later, the Patriots increased Salas' practice squad salary to the same $465,000 rate he had been earning while on the 53-man roster.

According to a source with knowledge of the situation, an undisclosed club attempted to sign Salas to their 53-man roster, prompting the Patriots to raise his salary.

Paying a practice squad player at an active roster rate is nothing new to the Patriots. At one point during the 2011 season nearly all of the players on the eight-man practice squad were being paid above the minimum, including current active roster center/guard Nick McDonald and current practice squad players Matt Kopa, Alex Silvestro and Malcolm Williams. This season, Kopa is earning $8,820 per week ($149,940 rate), the same rate that center/guard Thomas Austin had been earning prior to his release. Austin is currently on the Carolina Panthers' 53-man roster.

Rams Investing In Developmental Offensive Linemen

The Rams were not the team that attempted to poach Salas, but they are currently paying a pair of practice squad offensive linemen at an increased rate. Brandon Washington, a fifth-round pick out of the University of Miami by the Philadelphia Eagles, has been earning a practice squad rate of $9,500 per week ($161,500 over a full 17-week season) since joining the Rams in Week 1. The 6-foot-3, 320-pound Washington played left guard before moving to left tackle for the Hurricanes, but is viewed as a guard prospect at the NFL level.

In addition to Washington, the Rams are paying offensive tackle Ty Nsekhe at an increased rate. The 6-foot-8, 325-pound Nsekhe played his college ball at Texas State and had arena league stints with the Corpus Christi Sharks, Dallas Vigilantes, Philadelphia Soul and San Antonio Talons from 2009 to 2012 before he was signed by the Indianapolis Colts on Aug. 1. Nsekhe was waived by the Colts and claimed by the Rams and appeared in 15 snaps (eight on offense, seven on special teams) in two of the three games he on the 53-man roster before he was waived and re-signed to the practice squad.

When initially re-signed to the practice squad, the Rams began paying Nsekhe at the same $9,500 per week rate that Washington had been receiving, but that was quickly bumped up to $22,900 per week ($389,300 over a full season), $41.18 per week less than the 26-year-old had been earning on the 53-man roster. Several clubs had been interested in Nsekhe when the Rams waived him and increasing his rate should help keep him in Earth City.

Other Practice Squad Players Earning Increased Rates

Minnesota Vikings running back Jordan Todman - $10,000 per week ($170,000)
New Orleans Saints wide receiver Andy Tanner - $7,000 per week ($119,000)
New York Jets tight end Hayden Smith - $6,875 per week ($116,875)
Philadelphia Eagles wide receiver B.J. Cunningham - $6,000 per week ($102,000)
Seattle Seahawks quarterback Josh Portis - $6,700 per week ($113,900)

At the beginning of the season, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers had been paying defensive end Markus White at a practice squad rate of $299,999. White re-joined the Washington Redskins' 53-man roster (by doing so, White was guaranteed three game checks totaling $82,059) before he was released and rejoined the Buccaneers practice squad, where he spent four days before being elevated to their 53-man roster on Oct. 13. (White was waived on Thursday.)

As noted by Shutdown Corner this week, Baltimore Ravens inside linebacker Josh Bynes had been earning an increased salary while on the team's practice squad.

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Ball Don’t Lie’s 2012-13 NBA Season Previews: The Brooklyn Nets

17 Oct
2012

For the first time in two years we'll have an orthodox, full-length NBA season to look forward to. No lockout nonsense, and precious little obsession as to whether or not LeBron James will ever win the big one. He's won it, already, and our sanity as NBA followers is probably better off as a result. However big that shred of sanity is remains to be seen, following yet another offseason that once again proved that the NBA is full of Crazy McCrazytons that appear to take great delight in messing with us continually.

As a result of that offseason, and the impending regular season, why not mess with Ball Don't Lie's triptych of Kelly Dwyer, Dan Devine and Eric Freeman as they preview the 2012-13 season with alacrity, good cheer, and bad jokes.

We continue with the really, really cool Brooklyn Nets.

Kelly Dwyer's Kilt-Straightener

The addition of a pro basketball team to the borough of Brooklyn interests me. The addition of a second pro basketball team into the city of New York — even the ABA's old New York Nets played all the way out in Long Island — is a groovy thing, even if the team's former owners and local politicians did terrible and duplicitous things on their way toward razing a community's worth of homes to put a big brown stadium on the corner. The color scheme and Jay-Z's presence and Deron Williams' weird ascension as some sort of talk-the-talk superstar? Less interested, but thanks for the summertime fodder.

Now, the basketball. Now, a Nets team that is full of big-ish names with giant contracts and, presumably, happy and healthy feet. Ready to give coach Avery Johnson a cast worth his time, a team he can mold in his plucky image, and a chance to make it back to the Finals he visited as a player in 1999 and coach in 2006.

The actual business of stopping the other team might get in the way of all that. In the way of 50 wins, even. There is potential, sure, and Avery's scheming to perhaps rely on at some point, but these Nets are going to look like a Secaucus-styled horror show at times on that end, and it could hamstring whatever hopes that $81 million payroll might have.

Williams could help, here, turning things around for the first time in his career on that defensive end and working as the sort of two-way player that typically earns $100 million contracts. Williams has never tried to be an all-out stopper defensively, and considering his shape and length I'm not entirely convinced he'd have as much success were he to follow-through. Brook Lopez is absolutely helpless as a weak side helper, rebounder, and (most importantly) screen and roll defender; and while Kris Humphries can help clean up Lopez's issues on the glass, he shares his step-slow attitude defensively.

Ardent Nets fans will no doubt bring up Gerald Wallace (traded for because GM Billy King forever wants to look a pretty Gretel to Larry Brown's Hansel) and Joe Johnson as the saviors, here, and it's true that they defend (and defend well) the two positions where the champion Miami Heat make their hay. Wallace looked a little older than his age last year, though, and the sheer minutes Johnson has piled up thus far in his career (nearly 35,000, already) has lessened his overall impact.

The team will score, we should remind, featuring a lineup full of contributors that on paper would seem to fit in perfectly with each other.

This will be a fantastic screening team, full of good footwork and planted posteriors. Wallace, Williams, Johnson, Humphries and Lopez's face up games may all come and go; but they won't all go at once. And with Deron filling in angles and hitting the obvious targets the Nets will routinely play as the team you can't close out on — even if they miss two-thirds of their three-pointers on the night.

Helming it all won't be Williams, the talkative star, but Avery Johnson. Johnson's uneasy departure in Dallas a few years back created a strange ending to what appeared to be an obvious pairing that would last for years. And though the Nets' swoon was by design, Dallas' run to the 2011 championship in a season that saw the Nets top out at just 24 wins couldn't have been any fun to work through. Johnson and Williams had to endure yet another season of waiting in 2011-12, biding their time until the team's cap space could bring help seemingly ages after the franchise seemed relevant.

Johnson, presumably, was on board with all the new moves; and he's had months to configure the various parts into something special. And because of the ages, skill sets, and payroll whomp that this team packs, this is more or less Avery's crew for a while now.

He's been in the background, as the Nets trot out new unis and Jay-Z and D-Will and J-John and B-Lopz, but his sideline work and schemes could be the difference this season. At nearly five years removed from having a team worth shouting about in Dallas, we're going to get a chance to see just how significant a sideline presence Avery Johnson can be.

Projected record: 46-36

[Fantasy Basketball '12: Play the official game of NBA.com]


Fear Itself with Dan Devine

It is tonally appropriate that the NBA season tips off just before Halloween -- because on any given night, each and every one of the league's 30 teams can look downright frightening. Sometimes, that means your favorite team will act as their opposition's personal Freddy Krueger; sometimes, you will be the one suffering through the living nightmare. In preparation for Opening Night, BDL's Dan Devine considers what makes your team scary and what should make you scared.

What Makes You Scary: Enough balance to turn a bottom-10 offense into a top-10 unit. The Nets averaged the eighth-fewest points per 100 possessions in the NBA during the 2011-12 season, and when you take a look at the roster that took the floor in the team's last go-round in New Jersey, it's not hard to understand why. More than 4,100 total minutes went to Shelden Williams (now out of the league, but still a No. 1 husband), Johan Petro (still in the league simply because it's good to be tall), Shawne Williams (who followed a comeback 2010-11 season as a 3-point bomber with the New York Knicks by missing more than three-quarters of his triples in Newark), DeShawn Stevenson (who celebrated his 2010-11 title win by posting the second-worst Player Efficiency Rating in the league) and the ghost of Mehmet Okur (reduced to a spectre by Achilles and back injuries). Add to that multiple hole-plugging cameos by replacement-level types (Dennis Horner, Andre Emmett, Jerry Smith, Larry Owens, Armon Johnson) employed solely to keep game clocks moving until the Center stage could shift from Prudential to Barclays, and basically the gifts of all-world point guard Deron Williams and another strong season from power forward Kris Humphries were the only things keeping the Nets from being what my old boss Trey Kerby might call an all-time yikes festival.

This year's Nets team, as you might have heard, is built a little bit differently, the result of a massive roster overhaul during the offseason. Sixteen of the 22 players who wore Nets uniforms last year are gone, with a dozen new names (at least nine of which are likely to stick) dotting the current Brooklyn roster, headlined by six-time All-Star shooting guard Joe Johnson. On paper, the overall upgrade looks monstrous -- as Kevin Pelton writes in the just-released Pro Basketball Prospectus 2012-13 (an absolute must-read for hardcore hoops fans and just about the best way you can spend $10.02), the Wins Above Replacement Player metric estimates all that locker-room change to be worth about 14 wins, a massive shift that would have bumped the Nets from the fourth-worst record in the East last season all the way up into a tie with the Knicks for the seventh seed in the conference playoff bracket. The Nets have their sights set a bit higher this year, of course, due in large part to a gigantic expected improvement on the offensive end.

The duo of Johnson and Williams -- two big-for-their-position guards skilled at both posting smaller defenders and facilitating in the pick-and-roll, at both stroking the jumper (while Deron's overall field-goal percentage was down last year, his mid-range splits were excellent) and beating close-contesting defenders off the dribble -- will give Avery a boatload of options in the half-court (especially if Joe's truly cool with moving away from all those isolations he used in Atlanta). When healthy, Brook Lopez (18.4 points per 36 minutes on 50.4 percent shooting and 79.6 percent from the foul line for his career) ranks among the game's most talented offensive centers, and after missing all but five games due to foot injuries last year, he's reportedly 100 percent and ready to resume his role as the Nets' primary post threat.

With those three taking the lion's share of the shots, it's difficult to imagine two better role players to fill out the starting lineup than Humphries and Gerald Wallace, both of whom are eminently capable of contributing double-figure scoring based solely off offensive rebounds, transition opportunities and timely cuts made while defenses key on their higher-billed teammates. Plus, Johnson's insertion into the starting lineup should strengthen the bench, as sophomore spark plug MarShon Brooks will now bring his gunner's instincts to the second unit. He'll team with Bosnian stretch four Mirza Teletovic (one of the Euroleague's top scorers and 3-point shooters a season ago, who hit four bombs during Tuesday's preseason matchup with the Boston Celtics) and possibly reclamation project Andray Blatche, who, for all his defensive/conditioning/decision-making/leadership issues, still has plenty of offensive talent. They'll be counted upon to provide scoring punch off the bench alongside guards C.J. Watson, Keith Bogans and rookie Tyshawn Taylor, all of whom can shoot the long ball.

Add it all up, and the result should be a season-long offensive surge in Brooklyn that comes at opponents in waves and has them wishing for the days of Johan Petro. (They will be the only ones.)

What Should Make You Scared: A defense still porous enough to give back many of those offensive gains. While coach Johnson left Dallas with a reputation as a defense-first coach, his New Jersey teams (due, at least in part, to an overall dearth of talent) have struggled mightily in that end, ranking 21st among 30 NBA teams in points allowed per 100 possessions in his first season at the helm and dropping all the way down to 29th last year. They allowed the third-highest opponent field-goal percentage and gave up the league's second-highest 3-point mark, allowing offenses to shoot 61.8 percent within five feet of the basket and a league-worst 43.6 percent from between five and nine feet away. They posted bottom-five finishes in points allowed off turnovers, on the fast break and in the paint, and finished in the bottom third of the league in second-chance points conceded. It was pretty rough, and while the offseason influx of talent should help some, I'm not sure it's going to get much better.

Joe Johnson should represent an improvement over Brooks in the starting lineup, but while he and Williams have both shown the ability to D up in the past and their big backcourt combo should allow them to effectively switch assignments on the fly without conceding too many mismatches, neither one is a true lockdown perimeter defender. A full season of Wallace at small forward should help, too, but fans expecting the lights-out defensive maniac who terrorized opposing wings in Charlotte will be disappointed by the step(s)-slower version of "Crash" they find three years later on the wrong side of 30 -- he's not quite the same guy, and faster swingmen can beat him off the bounce.

Once opponents get past the perimeter and into the paint, they're unlikely to find much opposition from Lopez or Humphries, neither of whom are strong shot-blockers or especially stout post defenders. I'm a bit less worried than some about Lopez's much-discussed struggles as a defensive rebounder, given that both of his frontcourt mates are plus defensive rebounders and both Williams and Johnson have been league-average or slightly above in defensive rebound rate at their positions over the last three years, but he's still not going to change many shots or strike fear into the heart of opposing drivers. The second unit will be bolstered somewhat by Watson's quickness at the point and Reggie Evans' gifts on the defensive glass, but as anchored by all-O/no-D contributors Brooks, Blatche and Teletovic, it will still likely surrender nearly as many points as it gives up.

Given health and the Little General's motivational talents finally being brought to bear on a more athletically gifted roster, a defensive improvement is likely. But moving out of the bottom third of the league seems like it'll be an awful tall task for this particular collection of defenders, which will make it awful difficult for these Nets to stick around very long come playoff time.

Eric Freeman's Identity Crisis

There is no more important asset for a basketball team than talent, and yet the more loaded squad does not always win. What we've seen in recent seasons isn't only that the best team wins, but that the group with the clearest sense of self, from management down through the players, prevails. A team must not only be talented, but sure of its goals, present and future, and the best methods of obtaining them. Most NBA teams have trouble with their identity. Eric Freeman's Identity Crisis is a window into those struggles, the accomplishment of realizing a coherent identity, and the pitfalls of believing these issues to be solved.

The Nets are now in Brooklyn, city of the hip and rich, and therefore they're a much different entity than the group that left New Jersey just a few months ago. With help from Jay-Z, the franchise now boasts mainstream appeal. With the addition of Joe Johnson and the return of Brook Lopez from injury to join Deron Williams, they also figure to be pretty good. Unfortunately, because they have so much salary committed to three players (plus Gerald Wallace, not exactly making a pittance), they figure not to improve much over the next few seasons. What you see now is what you'll get for a while.

That puts them in roughly the same boat as their friends across the bridge, the Knicks. What makes the Nets different, though, is that they're looking to establish themselves in a new location rather than focusing on recapturing past relevance. For the Nets, it's enough to compete for a mid-level playoff spot, possibly win a series, and head into the next season with a postseason berth nearly assured. By accomplishing those goals, they'll set up about proving they're for real, win some fans for life, and help turn Brooklyn into the major-market destination that it can very well become.

That might not be exactly what Nets fans want in the short term, and it certainly doesn't jibe with Mikhail Prokhorov's promises that the franchise will bring home a title within the first five years of his ownership. Long-term, though these are important gains for the Nets. Their move to Brooklyn is not just a cosmetic change — it has the potential to reform the organization and turn it into one of the few teams that superstars actively want to play for. And while the Nets struck out in their first attempt to get one of those players, the interest that Dwight Howard showed suggests he won't be the only player with Brooklyn on his mind.

The Nets are likely a long way off from regular title contention, but it's rare for any team to dream of that outcome without relying on the luck of the draft. Making the playoffs this season is the first step for them. Even if they don't match the Knicks record or finish, they might end up with a much more successful season.

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Thunder top Bobcats 120-98 in home preseason debut (Yahoo! Sports)

16 Oct
2012

Oklahoma City Thunder forward Serge Ibaka (9) dunks in front of Charlotte Bobcats forward Byron Mullens during the first quarter of a preseason NBA basketball game in Oklahoma City, Tuesday, Oct. 16, 2012. (AP Photo/Sue Ogrocki)

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) -- The Oklahoma City Thunder's first home game since the NBA Finals turned into a showcase for a handful of training camp invitees trying to earn the final roster spot.


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Love, Roy lead Wolves over Haifa 114-81 (Yahoo! Sports)

16 Oct
2012

Maccabi Haifa's Cory Carr, right, makes a pass as Minnesota Timberwolves' Chase Budinger defends in the first half of an NBA exhibition basketball game against the Israeli team, Tuesday, Oct. 16, 2012, in Minneapolis. (AP Photo/Jim Mone)

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -- With six new faces on the roster and a couple of injuries early in the preseason, Minnesota Timberwolves coach Rick Adelman hasn't had much of a chance to get some cohesion going in a group that figures to enter the regular season with playoff expectations.


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Fan wearing Jose Mijares cookie medallion shows off ultimate team accessory

15 Oct
2012
by David Brown in Fantasy Baseball, General

Always on the lookout for unusual moments on TV, @cjzero spotted this San Francisco Giants superfan wearing what appears to be a one-of-a-kind medallion. By possible coincidence, the goateed charm also happens to bear a resemblance to bearded lefty Jose Mijares in cookie form. The other items worn by the fan — the cap, jersey and orange flag are fine (if corporate) expressions of a fan's love for his team. But a homemade cookie medallion depicting (even if by accident) a  well-fed, one-out left-hander from the San Francisco bullpen? Now that's dedication to roster detail.

I wonder if the artist who created this piece could do a watch with Ryan Theriot's face, or earrings with the likeness of George Kontos? Brandon Crawford leggings? There's already Panda Sandoval headgear, Brian Wilson beards and Tim Lincecum hair. Could a Giants fan conceivably accessorize his or her entire body with jewelry featuring the bulk of the 40-man roster?

Love baseball? Enjoying the postseason?
Follow @AnswerDave, @bigleaguestew, @KevinKaduk on Twitter,
along with the BLS Facebook page!

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Ball Don’t Lie’s 2012-13 NBA Season Previews: The Charlotte Bobcats

15 Oct
2012

For the first time in two years we'll have an orthodox, full-length NBA season to look forward to. No lockout nonsense, and precious little obsession as to whether or not LeBron James will ever win the big one. He's won it, already, and our sanity as NBA followers is probably better off as a result. However big that shred of sanity is remains to be seen, following yet another offseason that once again proved that the NBA is full of Crazy McCrazytons that appear to take great delight in messing with us continually.

As a result of that offseason, and the impending regular season, why not mess with Ball Don't Lie's triptych of Kelly Dwyer, Dan Devine and Eric Freeman as they preview the 2012-13 season with alacrity, good cheer, and bad jokes.

We continue with the Charlotte Bobcats.

Kelly Dwyer's Kilt-Straightener

As bottoming-out goes, this resembles Napoleon's exile or Electric Light Orchestra's contributions to the "Xanadu" soundtrack. Not only did last season's Charlotte Bobcats set a record for NBA futility, turning in the worst winning percentage in league history, they did so while working with parts that weren't certain to carry over into the hoped-for Next Era. Tyrus Thomas, sure to be released. Kemba Walker and Bismarck Biyombo — OK, I guess. Corey Maggette, clearly a rental. Paul Silas, deserving far better than the ignominy that his team's record handed him.

The village had to be destroyed, though, after years of meddling and shortsighted patchwork. The problem in Charlotte is that years of mismanagement by owner and former personnel boss Michael Jordan had salted the earth well before the lean-tos he created were burned down by current GM Rich Cho. Jordan has done well, so far, in backing off and letting Cho run his team; but in fairness to cynicism the duo hasn't exactly had to come to loggerheads yet — Cho and Jordan agreed that payroll must be slashed, and the drafting of Michael Kidd-Gilchrist with the second overall pick last June was a no-brainer.

Potentially relationship-defining loggerheads await, but for now the Bobcats are going to take baby steps. As wonderfully documented by the Charlotte Observer's Rick Bonnell and NBA.com's John Schuhmann, new coach Mike Dunlap has gone to great lengths to dissuade his already-lacking team from lining up for shots that would barely help the 1986 Boston Celtics stay in games, much less the 2012 Charlotte Bobcats. The long 2-pointer is to be eschewed, and Dunlap is to be credited for having the confidence to attempt to make a clear initial mark in his ascension from an interim NCAA head coach to the head man of a team owned by Michael [Franklin!] Jordan.

No amount of spreadsheet assistance will significantly help this crew, though. Especially when Corey Maggette — though he was dogged with a 1940s-appropriate field-goal percentage while missing 28 games — has been jettisoned for an upgrade in Ben Gordon (plus potential lottery pick), but one that shoots half as many free throws per minute and tosses up plenty of long twos along the way. MKG, the rookie, is really the team's only significant addition, and Thomas' mercurial ways remain mainly because it was cost prohibitive to waive a guy they'd have to still pay while investing in a minutes replacement.

The youngsters will be a year better, and Gordon is an upgrade over Maggette. The youngsters weren't starting quality to begin with, though, and Gordon is the guy that could barely get off the bench for a Detroit Pistons team that lost over 60 percent of its games last year. Baby steps, to be sure, and another miserable watch to behold in Charlotte.

Cap space, eventually, and two smart ones at the GM and head coaching position working for the biggest, erm, "competitor" in sports. And babies, spread out over nearly six months of steppin', probably can only step to about six more wins, pro-rated.

Projected record: 15-67

Fear Itself with Dan Devine

It is tonally appropriate that the NBA season tips off just before Halloween -- because on any given night, each and every one of the league's 30 teams can look downright frightening. Sometimes, that means your favorite team will act as their opposition's personal Freddy Krueger; sometimes, you will be the one suffering through the living nightmare. In preparation for Opening Night, BDL's Dan Devine considers what makes your team scary and what should make you scared.

What Makes You Scary: Having nothing left to lose means nothing is (or should be) off limits. One benefit to hitting rock bottom is that there's nowhere to go but up, and nothing but opportunities to improve after such a massive fall. That's the opportunity facing the Bobcats following last season's historically wretched 7-59 campaign, and first-year coach Mike Dunlap seems intent on taking advantage of it as best he can by experimenting to maximize Charlotte's still developing roster.

Last year's Bobcats struggled in just about every facet of the game -- they featured the league's least efficient offense and defense in terms of points scored per 100 possessions; they made the league's fewest shots, hitting an NBA-worst 41.4 percent of their field goals and 29.5 percent of their 3-pointers; they grabbed the league's fourth-lowest rate of rebounds on both the offensive and defensive glass; only three teams forced opponents into turnovers less frequently; and so on. Relative to the other 29 NBA teams, there wasn't a single thing that the Charlotte Bobcats did well. The best they could hope for was league-average, which they approached in turnover rate and reached in free throws taken per field goal attempt. (Cue the ticker-tape parades for adequate turnover and free-throw rates.)

The downside, then, is that Dunlap inherits a team with absolutely nothing on which to hang its hat. The upside is that with no superstars in need of placating, no historical legacy that must be served and no established identity to speak of, he can just try a whole lot of different things and see what sticks. Fast-paced four-hour practices designed to improve conditioning and decision-making when fatigued? Sure. Putting a governor on sophomore Kemba Walker's athleticism by telling him to stay out of the air to see if slowing him down speeds up his development at the point? Worth a shot.

Giving second-round swingman Jeffery Taylor, whom the coach thinks can be a defensive stopper behind No. 2 overall pick Michael Kidd-Gilchrist off the bench, the green light to foul out for the first third of the season so long as the fouls result from aggressively attacking opposing wings? Sounds good. Betting big on small-ball lineups intended to push pace (the 'Cats played slower than league average last year, finishing 17th in possessions averaged per game) in the hopes of creating offensive mismatches and trap-heavy defensive pressure with the backcourt speed and quickness of Walker, Gerald Henderson, Ben Gordon and Ramon Sessions? Why not? Why not try everything? What have you got to lose?

Dunlap knows that this year is about figuring out what he's got in the cupboard, mixing ingredients in a quest for something, anything, that works. If nothing else, that could make the Bobcats difficult to predict night in and night out, and over the course of an 82-game season, unpredictability can be worth at least a few wins if favored opponents are napping.

What Should Make You Scared: A talent deficit at virtually every position and the prospect of any gains being incremental at best. It will, however, only be "a few wins." Charlotte still profiles as the worst team in the NBA this season because, despite some sound moves by general manager Rich Cho over the summer, this is still a roster in desperate need of more good players.

As noted above, the Bobcats are going to rely heavily on their backcourt in a variety of small-ball lineups this season, but outside of the steady-if-unremarkable Henderson (solid wing defense and a team-leading 15.1 points per game last season, albeit on field-goal and 3-point-shooting marks that, while both career highs, were still below league-average), that will mean relying largely on hope. They have to hope that Walker can find cleaner looks near the basket than he did as a rookie and actually finish them, after making fewer than half his attempts at the rim and just 28.8 percent from between three and nine feet, according to Hoopdata; improving his 36.6 percent field-goal mark (fifth-worst in the league among players who got at least 1,000 minutes last year, ahead of only Jason Kidd, Ricky Rubio, Lamar Odom and Earl Watson) is essential to revitalizing Charlotte's stagnant offense.

They have to hope that Gordon (whom Dunlap wants to be the team's closer, should they get close to enough to closing) will be more productive in a reserve role in Charlotte than he was during his three seasons with the Detroit Pistons, where he shot well from deep but rarely looked especially invested or interested in being the same kind of aggressive scorer he was for the Chicago Bulls. They have to hope that they get the version of Sessions who shot nearly 50 percent from the field and knocked down triples during his 23-game regular-season stint with the Los Angeles Lakers, rather than the tentative bricklayer who shot his way out of Hollywood (and a starting job elsewhere) during L.A.'s disappointing playoff run. They have to hope Reggie Williams can find the stroke that made him one of the league's more intriguing bargains after two sharpshooting years with the Golden State Warriors (49.5 percent from the field, 35.9 percent from three, 83.9 percent from the line as a rookie, 46.9/42.3/74.6 in Year 2) before falling off a cliff once he hit North Carolina (41.6/30.8/72.5). They have to hope that Matt Carroll and Cory Higgins ... um, don't play.

And even if they get better-than-expected play from all of their backcourt pieces, the 'Cats will still be fighting an uphill battle up front, where the Bismack Biyombo-Byron Mullens tandem -- which played 467 predictably dreadful minutes last year in lineups that scored an average of 92.2 points per 100 possessions while allowing 106.9-per-100, according to NBA.com's lineup data tool -- will be outgunned just about every night. Biyombo and Mullens should both be better in their second full season of regular NBA playing time, but they're far from world-beaters, and when they hit the bench, they'll be spelled by the less-than-confidence-inspiring duo of amnesty victim Brendan Haywood and AARP opponent Tyrus Thomas.

They'll look and sound different, but on many nights, these will likely be the same Bobcats. Few things in the NBA could possibly be as frightening.

Eric Freeman's Identity Crisis

There is no more important asset for a basketball team than talent, and yet the more loaded squad does not always win. What we've seen in recent seasons isn't only that the best team wins, but that the group with the clearest sense of self, from management down through the players, prevails. A team must not only be talented, but sure of its goals, present and future, and the best methods of obtaining them. Most NBA teams have trouble with their identity. Eric Freeman's Identity Crisis is a window into those struggles, the accomplishment of realizing a coherent identity, and the pitfalls of believing these issues to be solved.

The Charlotte Bobcats were legendarily bad last season, so much so that they didn't really have an identity beyond "the worst ever." They do have a couple promising players, though, and those young men have enough similar skills that the Bobcats look like they could become a defense-oriented team once they mature. Bismack Biyombo and first-round pick Michael Kidd-Gilchrist certainly have the talent and levels of effort to succeed in that sort of system.

The issue, of course, is that the Bobcats still suck. It's hard to imagine them matching (or even coming close to) last season's level of wretchedness, but it's very likely that they'll be among the two or three worst teams in the NBA. Simply put, they have no one who can score with regularity. In that reality, it's hard to imagine that their young players — especially Kidd-Gilchrist — can focus on their strengths when the team needs so much.

At Kentucky, MKG thrived in large part because he didn't have to be a focal point of the scoring; the lineup was so loaded that he could take shots as they came and score largely within the flow of the offense and transition. The Bobcats don't have that luxury, and second-overall picks are usually expected to carry a large portion of the offense's responsibilities. The question, then, is if Kidd-Gilchrist (and by extension the entire team) will be able to develop into veterans naturally, or if the needs of a professional basketball team — even if they take a long view of success — will interfere.

The latter wouldn't necessarily be a bad thing. Russell Westbrook, for instance, was supposed to be a defensive specialist with limited offensive skills when the Thunder drafted him in 2008, and he's managed to become one of the best scoring guards in the league. That example, and the general difficulty of predicting the future of a team with no apparent strengths, emphasizes just how little we know about the 2012-13 Bobcats. They might have a basic idea of the team they want to become, but their identity will only reveal itself over time.

[Fantasy Basketball '12: Play the official game of NBA.com]

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