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NBA Power Rankings
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Miami HeatAs we approach the season’s midpoint, it is becoming more and more likely that Miami will in fact be a 60-win team. It is hard to imagine them not slowing down at some point, particularly if there is an injury, but it won’t happen anytime soon. |
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San Antonio SpursThe calls have been a little too close for the Spurs to feel comfortable, but they remain the undisputed best team in the Western Conference. A stiff challenge lies ahead with the Mavericks coming to town on Friday. A must-watch showdown on national television. |
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Boston CelticsAfter losing to Houston, Doc Rivers stressed the importance of establishing home court advantage in the East. Seeing that the Celtics will not be resting up for the playoffs will make for a thrilling Miami-Boston chase in the second half of the season. |
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Orlando MagicThe added firepower has made a difference in Orlando, and it has been working out in the Magic’s favor. They have been averaging 107.6 points per game on their current win streak, and it has come from several difference contributors. |
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Los Angeles LakersNothing quite like a home game against the Cavaliers to shake the cobwebs out. The Lakers had seven players in double figures as they dismantled the lowly Cavs 112-57 with an all-business efficiency. |
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Dallas MavericksThe Mavericks have gotten used to the idea of Caron Butler being gone for the season, but they have been desperately missing Dirk. Dallas has lost five of their last seven, with the only positive being Deshawn Stevenson’s rejuvenation as a consistent deep-ball threat. |
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Chicago BullsA couple of bad road losses to Philadelphia and New Jersey should be no reason to panic, but the Bulls clearly have not reached that point of Eastern Conference dominance just yet. |
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Atlanta HawksThe Hawks have won 9 of 12 since Joe Johnson returned from elbow surgery, and if that elbow stays healthy the Hawks should keep their standard pace of hanging around near the top of the Eastern Conference. They just have so many ways to hurt you, as Indiana found out on Saturday. |
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Oklahoma City ThunderNot an easy stretch ahead for a Thunder squad that has been struggling a bit on defense. They will face the Magic at home on Thursday then travel to the coast to face the Lakers in the Staples Center. It should be a revealing couple of days for an OKC team that is making a case for legitimate threat in the Western Conference. |
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Utah JazzThe Jazz have stumbled and slipped into a point of mediocrity that will not promise any kind of postseason success. If the Jazz want to become relevant, they need to get back to the aggressiveness that got them the 15-5 start. |
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New York KnicksThe Knicks seem to have gotten it back on track, handily taking care of Phoenix and Portland, but the biggest news is New York’s renwed involvement in the Carmelo Anthony discussion. Would adding Melo make this team an immediate title contender? Or would the pieces they would have to give up change the dynamic that has worked to get them to this point? |
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New Orleans HornetsThe Hornets supporting cast has not done a very good job keeping up with a Paul’s resurgence, but he has ben able to create enough offense to make them relevant again. New Orleans won’t stun anyone, but making it back to the playoffs is the first step for Monty Williams. |
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Denver NuggetsAll season the Nuggets have been a temporary bunch, constantly awaiting a Melo mega-deal. With the trade deadline a little over a month away, the blockbuster deal seems inevitable. Where this team can end up is entirely dependent on how the deal works out for Denver. |
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Portland TrailblazersPortland finally gets a scheduling break, with a pretty easy 10 days coming up. Nothing will cure offensive ails quite like New Jersey, Minnesota, and a pair of meetings with Sacramento. |
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Milwaukee BucksThe Bucks are finally starting to get it back together, and just in time. When Brandon Jennings gets back 100%, Milwaukee will still be in a position to make a run for the Eastern Conference playoffs. |
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Memphis GrizzliesThe Grizzlies are showing their best face to the best opponents in the league, but if they can’t turn these strong performances into wins they will find themselves once again on the short end of the stick in the West. The performance against OKC was good, but not good enough. |
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Houston RocketsThe Rockets can’t seem to stay above .500 so far this season. Every time they get there they collapse once again. A team that focuses far too much on the offensive production of one (Martin), they welcome Aaron Brooks back to the court. |
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Indiana PacersStill getting used to running an offense through Darren Collison and Roy Hibbert, the Pacers are doing a good job of beating the beatable opponents, but aren’t pulling off enough upsets to make any waves in the East. |
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Golden State WarriorsIt was recently pointed out that after playing more road games than any team in the NBA, the Warriors will have 15 of their next 17 games at home. Time get Oracle Arena rocking and time for the Warriors to make a run in the standings. |
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Charlotte BobcatsThe Paul Silas era has led to breakouts for D.J. Augustine and Gerald Henderson. One would think this could lead to a playoff repeat for Charlotte, but things will get tougher if New Jersey gets significantly stronger after the Denver deal. |
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Phoenix SunsIt’s time the Phoenix Suns blow it up. The trade has left Phoenix barren and playing with very little emotion. Steve Nash won’t accomplish much playing for a postseason-less team, so you might as well ship him to a contender to prepare for the future. |
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Toronto RaptorsTeams that live by the three ball die by the three ball. As long as perimeter shooting is such an important part of Toronto’s success it will hurt them when teams decide to tighten perimeter defense. Which is basically when the game matters. |
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Philadelphia 76ersAfter Friday’s upset of the Bulls, the Sixers were unable to keep the momentum going with close losses to Detroit and Indiana. They have Iguodala back from nursing an injured achilles, but he hardly looks effective yet. |
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Los Angeles ClippersThe Clippers have started getting consistent production out of the Davis/Gordon backcourt, perhaps a sign that having Baron in Los Angeles is the right move for the young Clips squad. I know Griffin’s highlight reel has benefited. |
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Detroit PistonsIf Detroit adds Johan Petro, it’s not changing the culture in Detroit. But I understand their will to free up cap room by getting involved in the Melo deal. It is time to start over in the Motor City. |
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New Jersey NetsThe rest of their season is dependent on what happens in the coming weeks. Could make or break Avery Johnson’s tenure in New Jersey. |
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Washington WizardsI will not write more than a sentence about the Wizards until they win a road game; because they do not deserve effort from me until I see it from them. |
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Sacramento KingsTyreke Evans being relegated back tot he bench usually is good news for the Kings upcoming opponents. They have dropped two in a row (and their last three) when Tyreke sits out. |
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Minnesota TimberwolvesDid you know the Timberwolves lead the NBA in rebounds per game? How about that! |
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Cleveland CavaliersI shall direct you to a simple question from the Cleveland Plain-Dealer, “What happened to the Cavaliers?” |
Chip Patterson writes for CBSSports.com’s College Football Blog and contributes at TheHoopDoctors.com.