The Nets‘ roster, as currently constructed, probably doesn’t have championship upside, but it also features plenty of veterans and isn’t meant to be a rebuilding lottery team. So what does that mean for the club’s expectations this season? The Nets may still be trying to figure that out, writes Brian Lewis of The New York Post.
“I don’t think, as a group, we know our ceiling,” guard Spencer Dinwiddie said. “Knowing that we don’t have our (own first-round) picks, obviously we’re not going to tank. No team that’s trying to be competitive wants to be in the play-in, so I’d say by process of elimination, that’s where you want to start. As high as we can take it, we want to take it.
“… We’re young in terms of our depth, but the people that are going to play are 30, 27, 28. So we’re in a winning position, not necessarily, obviously, a championship position like we were with the superstars. So it’s somewhere in the middle,” Dinwiddie continued. “But we definitely have a lot of youth in terms of our depth, and I think it’s fun to build culture and watch guys grow.”
As Lewis writes, claiming a top-six spot is a reasonable goal for the Nets, but the team will need to take a step forward in order to achieve that goal. Brooklyn went just 13-15 after the trade deadline — that pace wouldn’t have been good enough to qualify for the play-in tournament.
Here’s more from around the Atlantic:
- After arriving in Colorado on Tuesday evening, Sixers guard James Harden is participating in practice with the team on Wednesday, sources tell Adrian Wojnarowski of ESPN (story via Tim Bontemps of ESPN). Harden, who continues to seek a trade, skipped media day in Camden on Monday and the first day of training camp at Colorado State University on Tuesday.
- Veteran forward Otto Porter Jr., who was sidelined for most of last season due to a toe injury, was a full participant in the Raptors‘ first practice this week, tweets Josh Lewenberg of TSN.ca. According to Lewenberg, the hope is that Porter, who underwent surgery in January and continued to rehab the injury during the summer, will be available to open the season.
- While it’s unrealistic to expect him to match Fred VanVleet‘s production and replace his leadership, the Raptors are bullish on what Dennis Schröder can do this season after signing a two-year, $25MM+ deal with the team. Michael Grange of Sportsnet.ca and Lewenberg of TSN.ca note that Schröder’s big summer – including a World Cup gold medal – is a reason for optimism and take a look at the early impression he has made in Toronto.
Randle just got me back !!!!
He’s a big Bruce Lee guy. Even has a tattoo of the Philosopher. He’s got a second chance with me. I told you he was a drama Queen, right. Well this article explains some of it ………. “Be like Water” my friend !!!!
link to nypost.com
Water can visit in many forms. Including a hurricane.
Top-6 for the Nets?!
1) New York (most healthy players)
2) Milwaukee (Giannis’ knee)
3) Boston (Porzingis’ lack of health)
4) Cavs
Phili, Miami… they’re probably taking a step backwards. They have better roster construction than the Nets, who have more able bodies, but are redundant at undersized 2-Guard and Small-Forward.
If Jacque Vaughn can demonstrate that he needs more shooting at Center and Power-Forward, he can help convince Sean Marks to upgrade the roster. Without that, the Nets will have the right to battle in the Play-IN Tournament
If you’re the Raptors, do you legitimately try to add to this squad. Or do you trade Siakam now that Dame and Jrue are off the board.
Several teams will be interested. May make more sense to wait until Dec 15th when the entire league can bid on his services.
Other question would be, OG – is he worth a near max deal? Will they out bid other suitors? Will they trade him too?