Andrew wrote:It's great to see the Nuggets make the playoffs, but I still believe LeBron James has locked up the ROY award. The best Melo can probably hope for is co-ROY, but I still predict that LeBron will stand alone.
Redbulls wrote:I think this actually edges Carmelo over Lebron merely based on the fact that wins mean more that stats. Anybody can put up good stats on a bad team (in the East for that matter). Carmelo has not only been able to put up numbers but has been able to put them up against the elite teams in the west. He's managed to lead his team where nobody expected him to do his first season. There's no question that Lebron has more skills, however Carmelo winning it would send out a better message to the younger players up and coming.
There's more to the Cavaliers' collapse than just losing point guard Jeff McInnis, which is what everyone wearing wine and gold has pointed to. Indeed, McInnis' injury immediately signaled the team's descent from the playoff race.
It is so apparent that McInnis, a fierce competitor who's never really been seriously injured in his NBA career, tried twice to come back from injuries before he was anywhere ready to do
so.
But as there is often in life, there's so much more to the story. Others have had their
role.
LeBron James has gotten frustrated.
He wants to take over games and win them on his own. And he has the power to do so; he's shown it all year. But he tends to force things, a natural for rookies.
During the losing skid, his turnovers and offensive fouls are up. He often carries that frustrated attitude over to the defensive end, where he tries to make great plays and misses or allows his man to score too easily.
That's OK; he's going to get better. James' growth from the beginning of the season to the end has been inspiring, hinting of how great his career will be.
Forward Carlos Boozer has gotten tired.
Boozer's defense, especially off the dribble, has been weak in the stretch run. He's become more foul prone of late, often because he's a step slow. He hasn't been as active within the offense, either. He's played more minutes than at any time in his life. They're hard minutes, and it's worn him down.
Eric Williams has become injury-prone.
His second half was marred by one pain after another. A bruised knee, a twice-injured right wrist, a bruised Achilles tendon. At age 31, he couldn't cope with those pains and be effective. His production dip hurt the team's rotation.
It could go on and on. The defense has become susceptible to dribble penetration and isn't very good in transition.
This is not a secret; every team they play tries to beat them up and down the floor.
The finger of blame doesn't miss the coaching staff, either. They've often used McInnis as an excuse instead of finding an answer, not that they haven't tried numerous options. But they, too, are still learning their personnel.
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