2019-2020 Predictions

Now that the dust has settled and every team has just about filled out their full roster, it is time to asses where everyone is at and make sure predictions for the 2019-2020 NBA season. I’m going to look at team accomplishments as well as individual awards. Let’s dive right in.

Eastern Conference Standings:

  1. Milwaukee Bucks
  2. Philadelphia 76ers
  3. Brooklynn Nets
  4. Indiana Pacers
  5. Boston Celtics
  6. Toronto Raptors
  7. Miami Heat
  8. Detroit Pistons

I believe that there are only three teams that can compete consistently in the Eastern Conference. Barring an injury, I think that the 76ers are going to be the champions of the conference.

Western Conference Standings:

  1. Los Angeles Clippers
  2. Utah Jazz
  3. Houston Rockets
  4. Golden State Warriors
  5. Los Angeles Lakers
  6. Portland Trailblazers
  7. Denver Nuggets
  8. San Antonio Spurs

Oh the drama of the Western Conference! The West is going to be incredibly fun to watch this season. I stirred over the order to place teams 2-8. Picking them out of a hat would be as accurate as you could get. It’s all up in the air. As it did this season, I believe that the seeding will come down to the last two or three games for each team. In what is going to be a dogfight of a post season for the conference, I believe that the Clippers are going to come out on top.

NBA Champion:

Philadelphia 76ers

If the 76ers are able to avoid major injuries to their two stars of Embiid and Simmons, I feel like the supporting case will be enough to get them past the Clippers in a tight championship series. If there is an injury to either of them, the title makes its way to Los Angeles.

Season Awards

Coach of the Year:

Doc Rivers – Los Angeles Clippers

How often does the man at the helm of the best team win coach of the year? Very often. Almost every year. Doc Rivers has always been a fantastic coach. He’s been gifted two of the top-five players in the game this summer. He’ll have a fantastic scheme built around them and his team will succeed in route to the best season the team has ever had.

Rookie of the Year:

Zion Williamson – New Orleans Pelicans

He has all of the skills. He was the clear favorite by every scout to be the best player coming out of this draft class. He’s gifted. His talents will take him as far as his mindset lets him. Other than a lack of focus, the only thing that will stop Zion from bringing the new hardware to his collection is an injury. I believe the other rookies will be fun to watch, but there is a reason he has been called “the next LeBron” for the last year.

Sixth Man:

Lou Williams – Los Angeles Clippers

If the Clippers are going to be as good as everyone seems to believe, then Williams is going to have to have a year just like last year. I believe he will. The players around him are much better. The driving lanes will be more open. He will have extra space to shoot from deep because the defensive focus will be on the two superstars the team added this summer.

Defensive Player of the Year:

Rudy Gobert – Utah Jazz

The way that I see this award is that this is Rudy’s award until he stops caring. His defensive statistics have been much better than anyone else in the league over his last two seasons. Those numbers will be no different this year. They will more than likely be better. He’ll continue to anchor the defense of the team and his numbers will back it up

Most Valuable Player:

Giannis Antetokounmpo – Milwaukee Bucks

There are a whole lot of options for this award. You’ve got four contenders in the city of Los Angeles alone. I believe that Giannis will continue to improve and that his jumpshot won’t make a massive amount of improvement, but that it will be enough that people notice the percentage bump. I also believe that he’ll benefit from three other things: playing in the East will allow him to pad his stats, he didn’t build a “super team” and his second fiddle is much less of a player than many others in the conversation, and I believe that his team will once again be the best team in the Eastern Conference.

Mudiay’s Unusual Route to SLC

Emmanuel Mudiay may be on his way to becoming this season’s Royce O’Neal for the Utah Jazz. Royce was always an underdog. He was not heavily recruited in high school. He played at a smaller school in the University of Denver, after that he transferred to Baylor for two years. He was undrafted following his senior year. Following the draft, he went the international route to try to make his way to the NBA. He spent two years playing collecting a paycheck playing in Europe. He received a summer league invite from the Jazz in 2017. It was all uphill from there. Royce worked his way into the rotation. He wasn’t just a benchwarmer. He became an integral part of the rotation. With injuries hitting some of his other teammates, Royce found his way into the starting lineup. He has consistently been the team’s sixth man since signing a long-term deal with the team in 2018.

As a player, Emmanuel Mudiay’s path to the NBA seems like it has been the opposite to what Royce went through. The backstory to Mudiay started in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. He and his two brothers were left with one parent at a very early age when their father passed away due to a heart condition. Amid the country’s civil war, his mom was able to transplant the family to America where Mudiay became a basketball sensation.

As a high school basketball player in Texas he exploded onto the scene. The three bothers all were gifted on the court, but Emmanuel’s talent was going to carry him the farthest. He finished his senior year being the nation’s fifth-highest ranked recruit according to ESPN and the number one recruit by many other sites. He originally committed to play basketball at SMU in Texas. He later withdrew his commitment to the university and signed a one-year $1.2 million deal with Guangdong Southern Tigers of the Chinese Basketball Association.

While playing in China, Mudiay started to see his draft stock fall. He suffered from a leg injury early on that affected him for the rest of the season. He was still taken as a lottery pick in the 2015 NBA draft. The Denver Nuggets selected him with the 7th overall pick. He was immediately thrown into the starting rotation and it did not work out very well for him. His statistics weren’t very good for a lottery pick. In three years with Denver he averaged 10.8 points, 4.2 assists, and 3 rebounds per game.

In February of his third season he was traded to the dumpster fire that is the New York Knicks. The organization was trying to acquire a better starting point guard than what they had. The issue for Mudiay was that he was expected to become a star for them. Trading for him was only a small portion of what the Knicks needed to do to turn things around. All the pressure though was put onto Mudiay as if he was the solution. The Knicks had been through a handful of coaching staffs through the previous five years. They had continuously struck out on signing any marquee free agents to put them back in the NBA spotlight. They were consistently at the bottom of the league instead of the top. And they had done a bad job of drafting and developing talent. It didn’t seem fair to have the pressure of being the solution for the organization all thrown onto Mudiay. After two semi-promising seasons with the Knicks, he averaged 11.8 points, 3.9 assists, 3 rebounds per game while trying to carry the team. The numbers weren’t what stuck out to teams around the league. The game finally looked like it was slowing down for him. Mudiay was finding his groove.

This summer his contract with the Knicks expired and he signed a one-year deal with the Utah Jazz. The Jazz are a team that many around the NBA view as having one of the best developmental staffs. They’ve taken many subpar players and turned them into role players. They turned Gordon Hayward into a household name. They helped Rudy Gobert turn into a two-time Defensive Player of the Year. And they’ve been right at Donovan Mitchell’s side at he’s made his ascendance to stardom.

Mudiay’s agent BJ Armstrong played a major role in getting him to Salt Lake City. Armstrong thinks highly of the Utah’s development staff and believe that with the guidance of Quin Schneider his client will be able to turn into the player he was projected to become as a high school athlete.

It’s way too early to project where Mudiay’s career with the Jazz will take him, but the team needed to add depth at the point guard position and Mudiay was the best player available. His upside gives the Jazz hope to what he can become with the right amount of coaching and a stable situation around him.

Welcome Mike Conley!

Last season that Jazz had one major issue that kept rearing its ugly head game after game. The issue was magnified as the regular season concluded and the Jazz were trounced in the playoffs by the Houston Rockets. The reoccurring theme was that the team needed to upgrade at the point guard position badly. Ricky Rubio is a nice player. He can direct and control an offense. He can get players the ball to score. And he excels at controlling the pass of a game. The issue that he caused for the team was that he was not a consistent threat to score. It allowed defenses to give Rubio space because they knew he wasn’t going didn’t have the ability to consistently put the ball in the basket, and they knew they could focus more on the scorers around him. Rubio’s contract expired when Utah’s season ended and he and the team were both able to go their separate ways.

The Missing Piece

On June 19th the Utah Jazz completed a trade that had been in the rumor mill for the previous six months. It happened. The team was able to get one of the leagues most consistent point guards of the last decade for backup players, a rookie, and a couple of late first-round draft picks.

Grizzlies Receive:

  • Kyle Korver
  • Jae Crowder
  • Grayson Allen
  • 2019 First-round pick
  • 2020 First-round pick

Jazz Receive:

  • Mike Conley

Even though this was a trade that was rumored to have been in the works since the middle of January, the news of it still shock through the NBA world. Almost all NBA analysts and sports news agency raved about the move. They talked about how this was the move the Jazz needed to make.

Mike Conley’s reputation as one of the best teammates in the league precedes him. He’s a great locker room guy. He’s not a complainer. And he’s a ‘team first’ player. He’s not concerned about his numbers – even though he leaves Memphis as the organization’s leader in games, points, assists, and steals.

Even though this was a trade that was rumored to have been in the works since the middle of January, the news of it still shock through the NBA world. Almost all NBA analysts and sports news agency raved about the move. They talked about how this was the move the Jazz needed to make. On ESPN’s The Jump, former NBA coach and 3-time champion Byron Scott said,

“I definitely feel he makes them a better basketball team, because he is one of the better point guards in the league. I think he is underrated as far as a lot of point guards that you talk about. He’s a gut that can get others involved. But Mike can also score. That’s something Ricky Rubio couldn’t do on a consistent basis. I like what the Utah Jazz did with this trade. I like Mike Conley a lot.”

Mike Conley is the spark the Jazz have needed at the point guard position since the team traded away Deron Williams in February of 2011. He’ll help the young team continue to grow and mature. He’ll help take the pressure to score off of players like Donovan Mitchell, Joe Ingles, and Rudy Gobert. And most important, he’ll help the Jazz win a lot of basketball games.