The class of the East for the next few years will be Boston. I really don't see any up and comers other than those that came out in the last part of the season, notably Philadelphia. Cleveland, with the tightwad management that it has will probably stand pat and not give Lebron any help, again... The possible notable exception that may come out of nowhere next year might be Chicago. Orlando will probably remain as they were this year.
I know more about the West teams. The Spurs are not done. Duncan should be effective at least another 2 or 3 years, but the Owner of this team, unfortunately for them, is another tightwad. They need to clean house of the old bench players that are just no longer productive, e.g., Finley, Horry, etc., and they need a young consistent shooting guard to start (if they intend to continue to have Ginobili come in off the bench), also a replacement for the ineffective Oberto is necessary, plus another couple of young scorers coming in off the bench. With their finances it is hard to see how they can bring off a big change for an impact player however.
Teams that will stand pat are Dallas, and Utah. Utah really does not need to change that much though a couple of quicker players coming in off the bench would help. Dallas will just basically dry out on the vine next year. The Kidd trade was disastrous, and the management whittered away their good young futurable players, that could have helped them, during the year. Denver will remain Denver. Ever the high-scoring team, that does not know how to play defense, at least since the now forgotten likes of T.R. Dunn and Fats Lever retired. That brings us to Phoenix. I really don't know what to make of this team. I do not even have any idea of what system will be installed with a new coaching staff. This has been a team that for a while all of the major players had to play their maximum for the team to win. Very questionable defensively, and I can not think that O'Neal, with another year under his belt, will find the way to lead this divided team to the promised land.
New Orleans - a tweak here and there and this team will contend the next few years in the West. They only lack experience. Houston is tough to figure, great defense. I think that with just one more bona fide scoring forward this could be just a tough nut to crack in the future.
Golden State - depends on who resigns during the off-season. Another team that it is a pleasure to watch play ball offensively, but that needs defense if they really want to pass to the next level.
Portland - the jury is out on this team. For it's youth, it did a great job this year. I want to see how this team plays with their injured Center before I can have an opinion. Could be a dark horse next year.
Last, my team, the Lakers. Lots of questions for the off-season. They need to resign Odom, and I am sure that there are lots of contending franchises out there that would love to subtract this players from the Lakers if they can. Fisher is getting a bit long in the tooth by now, though still effective. I personally don't think that Farmar is quite ready for the prime time as yet. Everybody in Los Angeles seems to think that Bynum is the man of the second coming. As a Laker fan, I might hope so, but I still have to see how next years team will insert him into the line-up. I can foresee compatibility problems with a possible Bynum-Gasol-Odom front line. It is just possible that the Lakers may try to form a second unit with Gasol as the center piece. For me, the sooner they get rid of "goofball" Radmanovic, the better - just too inconsistent, no defense. Where are we going to stick Ariza, in the second unit? Defensive specialist?