Kings. They have the most talent by far of those three.
yes but they also have Cousins and now Rondo to add to the "drama". If the team can coexist, yes they can make it. Effort from start to finish is another story in my opinion. I think the edge will go to the Blazers. Aldrige was a big loss but they signed several decent "B" players. A better bench than last season also. Maybe trying to mirror what the Celts are doing. Lillard is one of a better young pgs in the league
Lots of question marks surrounding the Lakers. I think Kobe and Russell will butt heads. Kobe will probably be down on Hibberts neck all year. He won't have issues with new additions like Bass and Williams.
Hey 100% agreed on the Kings experiment. I absolutely believe it could fail, but it doesn't mean it will. If you guys haven't noticed, I strongly believe the Nets are going to give the Celtics a high lottery pick this year, but hey, for all I know, the Nets will be an eastern conference powerhouse. I'm not trying to bring up to spark debate about the pick because there are plenty of threads about it already. My point is, we don't know what's going to happen until the season commences. I for one think the Kings will be the best of these three teams.
I don't buy the Blazers this year necessarily but what they are doing is pretty smart. They lost basically everything that made them a psuedo-contender not named Damian Lillard but instead of going the 76ers route, they've built up a team of proven and likable role players (Ed Davis, Al-Farouq Aminu, Gerald Henderson) and young talent with some upside (CJ McCollum, Noah Vonleh, Mason Plumlee, Meyers Leonard). I think they know they won't be good but since the West is filled with teams that are going to fight for the playoffs, they don't have to worry about it because they'll probably get a top 10 pick this year regardless.
To me it doesn't even matter who has the best chance to make the playoffs because I don't see any of these teams making it.