Chicago's Take On The Washington Boxers:Jennings V Felton:
They met 4 times last season, and Brandon Jennings absolutely dominated Raymond Felton. Despite the fact that Felton played for a playoff team, a team with a top defense, Brandon Jennings still averaged almost 20 points and 6 assists vs Felton, upping his FG%, and keeping a respectable (if not dangerous) 35% 3pt percentage.
In the one playoff series Raymond Felton has played in during his career, he played his usual minutes, and his scoring went down, his assists went down, his shooting % went down (both FG% and 3pt%), and his team was swept.
In the one series that Brandon Jennings has played in, just six games after his leading scorer went down, his minutes went up, his scoring went up, and his FG% went up. His team played a 3 seed without their best player and went to 7 games, while Felton's team played their series with their normal healthy roster, and he got worse, his team getting swept. Jennings owns this.
http://www.basketball-reference.com/play-index/h2h_finder.cgi?request=1&p1=jennibr01&p2=feltora01Miller V Ginobli:
These two have a history, and their H2H’s don’t look great...at least not for Washington. For the majority of the recent matchups between SAS and MEM (while Miller played there), Miller played the 2 while Rudy Gay played the 3. In those matchups Ginobli would often guard Miller, and vice versa.
The same is true when McGrady played in Orlando with Miller, and Miller would play the 2.
Their overall matchups over 18 games are 15.6 ppg (42% shooting), 3.3 rbs, and 4.2 ast per game for Ginobli, and 12.6 pts (45% shooting), 5.8 rebounds, 3.1 asts per game for Miller. Edge: Ginobli, but not by anything close to a mile. Miller is the worse player, but Ginobli doesn't render him ineffective. Also if Washington manages to get into a close game where Ginobli is hot, I can slide LeBron James, 2x All-NBA defensive selection, over to defend him if I need to.
Noah V Bynum:
They met twice last season, and both times, Noah stayed in the game for longer, and out-rebounded and out-defended Bynum. Bynum limited Noah’s FG%, but beyond that Noah fouled less and blocked more shots. Bynum came out looking the better scorer by the minute, but Noah came out the better player. I’d attribute that to 2 seasons spent as the emotional leader for the NCAA champion Florida Gators, as opposed to coming out of high school without any leadership experience.
Link to statsErsan Ilyasova V Luis Scola:
I took Ersan and Scola's season totals, finding the production per minute, then multiplied by 31 (to see production if they all played 31 minutes)
direct link to imageThe things Ersan does well (stretch the floor, rebound, defend), Scola cannot negate. The things Scola does well (score in the post, rebound, defend), Ersan cannot negate. I'm not saying this is a wash, Scola is the better player. But Ersan will be able to bother Scola's shot, and he'll be able to rebound on a comparable if not better rate.
I should also say regarding any concerns about me overrating Ilyasova, I'm not expecting an All-star series out of the kid. I'm expecting him to play 8 minutes more than his average, in a secure roll (instead of jumping up and down in terms of pt, like he did under Skiles), and average between 14-15 ppg, and 8-10 rebounds while shooting 35% from 3pt range (he is a career 35% shooter from 3). I think he's given a good body of evidence that he can accomplish that.
Scola is the better player, but Ersan is no slouch. He’ll keep Scola from helping Bynum in the paint by forcing a consistent cover at the 3pt line, and he should by all rights out-rebound Scola. Scola will get his points against Ersan, and there will be some baskets where they will be easy ones where Scola just gets the position he wants. I think though that Ersan has proven after a full season playing the power forward, that it won’t be often that Scola gets wherever he wants, and it won’t be often that he gets his easy baskets.I don’t need a lot from Ersan, I just need enough.
Also I expect him to cure cancer and un-cancel '
FireFly'
LeBron V Wilson Chandler:
LeBron James dominates Wilson Chandler in every facet of the game, without question. LeBron: 35 points, 7 rebounds, 9 assists, 55% FG, 42% 3pt, to Wilson Chandler’s 10 points, 5 rebounds, 2 assists, and 36% FG, 26% 3pt.
In their last game, LeBron scored 47 points to Chandler’s 6.
Link to statsConclusion:
There is, simply, no response to LeBron, and not enough from the other starters. My starting 5 absolutely dominates Washington’s, and considering Scola to be the only one with a shot of really exploiting his matchup on a game to game basis, I can’t see a way Chicago loses this series. We could talk about the bench play all day long, and I’d contest that my 10 man rotation is better if you look at the roles they’re asked to play, but the proof is right there in the starters. Washington doesn’t have a significant place to hang their hat, and they don't have an answer for LeBron. This should be there for the taking by Chicago.