Preseason is meaningless, but the magic are showing some serious intensity so far - their victory margin is + 24.2 according to ESPN - but unless they trade Wince (which could easily happen with his huge expiring contract) before the deadline, and Dwight gains some mental toughness, they won't get past the celtics.
Without double-checking, I think their starters are logging more minutes than most team's.
Well, why let facts get in the way of what you "think"?
The Magic have been relatively healthy compared to the Celtics, Heat, Lakers, Cavs, and Blazers - but in Thursday's game vs the Bobcats they didn't play three starters at all, and QRich and Nelson had very limited minutes:
"Stan Van Gundy tells fans he’s sorry he didn’t play starters
Kurt Helin
Oct 15, 2010, 1:34 AM EDT
Preseason games see some odd lineups, rested stars and big minutes for guys who will spend the season in the D-League. In short, don’t confuse preseason with NBA basketball as you know it.
But the tickets aren’t any cheaper for fans. The beer is not less expensive. The parking still sets you back. At those prices, you still deserve a show.
Thursday night in Orlando fans didn’t get much of one — and not just because the Bobcats were in town. The Magic sat every starter. No Dwight Howard, no Jameer Nelson, no Vince Carter, no Rashard Lewis. People were upset. Okay, nobody was too angry about missing out on Lewis, but that’s not the point, the show took a night off.
And Stan Van Gundy is sorry.
The Magic coach took the unprecedented step of calling back the Orlando Sentinel’s Magic blogger Brian Schmitz well after the game ended asking him to pass along word to the fans he was sorry.
“I want to say I’m sorry and I was wrong. I thought I reasoned it through, but I can’t justify it. If it was the first game that somebody came out to see, you bring your kids…. I’d be upset, too.
“I won’t do it again.”
Van Gundy had every right to see his backups play and see how they would do — it’s preseason."
My point was that starters' minutes in the preseason are meaningless and vary greatly from team to team, depending on their priorities, but since you brought it up:
Magic starters avg. minutes:
Gm 1 24.2, high 27
Gm 2 22, high 27
Gm 3 23.8, high 26
Gm 4 21, high 24
Gm 5 28.25, high 32
Lots of teams played their starters about the same or higher avg minutes in their 1st game, for example:
Heat (not counting injured Wade), 24.25
Kings 28
Blazers 25.6
Bobcats 22.4
Wizards 29
Nets 26
And the Celtics, who have so much depth and have played their starters less than almost every team, and have limited the O'Neals and KG's time, played 29.6 vs the Knicks in their 1st meeting...