I would have picked the Suns until they managed to beat San Antonio. Dallas seems likeliest to me. Kidd and the team hasn't exactly clicked, everyone else seems to be in gear already. If they don't get their act together soon...
Dallas has the schedule in their favor.
http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/dailydime?page=dime-080308-09Which of the nine teams in the wild, wild Western Confernce bidding for 50 wins is not going to the playoffs?
That might be easier to answer once you know which of these nine teams has the least (and the most) favorable remaining schedule.
With roughly one-fourth of the regular season to go and a highly irregular race shuffling the West's eight playoff seeds almost daily, it's the perfect time to rank the schedules from easiest to toughest entering Friday night's play. Which we suspect will give West coaches one more reason to curse the Lakers.
1. LOS ANGELES LAKERS
Games remaining: 13 home, 8 road
Record against teams still to play: 19-8
Composite winning percentage of remaining opponents: .515
Games left against teams with records over and under .500: 12 over, 9 under
Toughest stretch: March 14-20, with four straight road games against the Hornets, Rockets, Mavericks and Jazz.
Outlook: The Grizzlies will continue to be subjected to bitter jabs from the Lakers' conference rivals for handing Pau Gasol to Los Angeles for nada. But the schedule-makers are bound to wind up as the No. 2 target once the other West teams realize Kobe and Co. have the closest thing to a cake schedule over the next six weeks. How cake? No team in the West's top nine has fewer road games remaining. The Lakers, furthermore, have just three back-to-backs left. It's a combination which suggests that they can make a real push for the No. 1 seed even if Andrew Bynum doesn't make his comeback from a knee injury before the playoffs.
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2. DALLAS MAVERICKS
Games remaining: 12 home, 8 road
Record against teams still to play: 17-13
Composite winning percentage of remaining opponents: .506
Games left against teams with records over and under .500: 11 over, 9 under
Toughest stretch: March 27-April 6, with five of six games on the road and a home date with their old pals from Golden State.
Outlook: The Mavs opened a crucial flurry of home games with a lifeless loss to a Houston team they've routinely handled for years, but Dirk Nowitzki was out on a one-game suspension. Sporting the West's No. 2 home record at 25-4, Dallas still plays eight of its next nine games at home with only a trip to Miami to break things up. There are lots of challenging dates in that run, but the Mavs clearly play better in Big D. The games also are favorably spaced out, with only two back-to-backs left. Given what some of the competition has to cope with, Dallas can't ask for much more in its ongoing search for the continuity and defensive cohesion that has yet to materialize with Jason Kidd.
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3. HOUSTON ROCKETS
Games remaining: 10 home, 11 road
Record against teams still to play: 21-10
Composite winning percentage of remaining opponents: .512
Games left against teams with records over and under .500: 11 over, 10 under
Toughest stretch: March 19-April 6, with eight of 10 games on the road.
Outlook: Outlook: The Rockets' remaining home schedule includes only four teams with winning records (Hornets, Lakers, Celtics and Suns) so their road challenges will obviously be tougher. Yet I have to say the team I saw firsthand Thursday night was the most confident and unified group of Rockets since Yao Ming arrived in Houston ... even with Yao out injured. Given that they have won 11 in a row on the road and have begun playing at a faster tempo sans Yao, they might be able run with teams like Golden State and Denver. I don't see anything on the schedule that suggests they will be slipping out of the top eight.
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4. UTAH JAZZ
Games remaining: 11 home, 9 road
Record against teams still to play: 20-12
Composite winning percentage of remaining opponents: .519
Games left against teams with records over and under .500: 11 over, 9 under
Toughest stretch: April 4-16, with nothing but tough assignments in the season's final six games.
Outlook: The Jazz, remember, are one of only three teams in the West's top nine with a losing record on the road (13-19). So their four-game trip to the East next week is Jerry Sloan's first concern, followed by that unforgiving April. Utah will be done with its back-to-back obligations by then, but there will be no let-up late, since those final six games will be home dates with San Antonio, Denver and Houston and roadies in New Orleans, Dallas and San Antonio. Let's not forget, though, that the Jazz have not lost a home game in 2008, which is one big reason they remain a heavy favorite to win their division.
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5. PHOENIX SUNS
Games remaining: 11 home, 10 road
Record against teams still to play: 16-11
Composite winning percentage of remaining opponents: .538
Games left against teams with records over and under .500: 14 over, 7 under
Toughest stretch: March 18-April 1, with seven of nine games on the road and stops in Detroit and Boston on March 24 and March 26.
Outlook: By no measure do the Suns have an easy stretch-run schedule. But they have bigger challenges and chores, obviously, than obsessing over the degree of schedule difficulty in the midst of this, uh, complicated integration of a newcomer named Shaquille O'Neal. Steve Nash keeps calling it a late-season training camp, but the itinerary (having only four more back-to-back sets, for example) are livable compared to most teams. The Suns also have several very winnable games sprinkled in with their two remaining showdowns with San Antonio, Houston and Denver and the roadies against the Pistons and Celtics. At least we think so.
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6. DENVER NUGGETS
Games remaining: 10 home, 12 road
Record against teams still to play: 15-9
Composite winning percentage of remaining opponents: .515
Games left against teams with records over and under .500: 13 over, 9 under
Toughest stretch: March 18-April 1, with a five-game road trip that starts in Detroit and includes Allen Iverson's long-awaited return to Philadelphia, followed by a four-game stretch in which the Nuggets play host to Dallas and Golden State and play Phoenix twice.
Outlook: Four of the Nuggets' final seven games are against teams that will be out of playoff contention. The assignment, then, is turning this past week's big home wins over Phoenix and San Antonio into a road spark that can last until April, with daunting dates looming Saturday at Utah and Monday at San Antonio. If the Nuggets can't beat the Jazz or the Spurs, they will lug a 12-19 road record with them on that long five-game journey, which features the unappetizing possibility of Iverson's old team boosting its own unexpected playoff chances (and dealing Denver's odds a real blow) when AI goes to Philly as a visitor for the first time on March 19.
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7. GOLDEN STATE WARRIORS
Games remaining: 10 home, 12 road
Record against teams still to play: 19-10
Composite winning percentage of remaining opponents: .522
Games left against teams with records over and under .500: 14 over, 8 under
Toughest stretch: April 1-6, with a four-game trip through the Southwest Division that pits the Warriors against every Southwest team but Houston.
Outlook: Only San Antonio has more games left against teams with winning records (15) than Golden State, whose 14 remaining games against teams over .500 include eight roadies. The bigger issue, however, might be the playing-time load being shouldered by Baron Davis and Monta Ellis. Davis hasn't missed a game all season, for the record, but he's averaged nearly 42 minutes over the past seven games, with Ellis at nearly 44 minutes. Will Don Nelson use his bench more down the stretch? Can Nellie's guards continue to stay fresh if he doesn't? And how much longer will Andris Biedrins be out? All big questions for a team that, under the circumstances, probably will have to consider it a success if it makes the playoffs for a second straight season.
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8. SAN ANTONIO SPURS
Games remaining: 10 home, 12 road
Record against teams still to play: 22-14
Composite winning percentage of remaining opponents: .561
Games left against teams with records over and under .500: 15 over, 7 under
Toughest stretch: March 12-25, with six of eight games on the road.
Outlook: You'd think the Spurs would have a home-heavy schedule after getting through their famed Rodeo Road Trip in February. But you'd be wrong. Friday night's game at Denver completes only the first of six remaining back-to-backs. It adds up to a demanding stretch run for the oldest team in the field, especially since the easiest road games San Antonio has left -- Philadelphia, Chicago, Portland and Sacramento -- aren't gimmes at all. Only a West-low seven of the Spurs' final 22 opponents, in fact, are teams with sub-.500 records.
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9. NEW ORLEANS HORNETS
Games remaining: 10 home, 12 road
Record against teams still to play: 19-14
Composite winning percentage of remaining opponents: .551
Games left against teams with records over and under .500: 14 over, 8 under
Toughest stretch: March 8-22, with two games against the Rockets, a trip to Detroit and home dates with the Spurs, Lakers and Celtics crammed into a seven-game span.
Outlook: It's a good thing the Hornets are so comfortable traveling, because they still face a six-game East swing -- their longest trip of the season -- after they get through the aforementioned seven-game crunch. The Hornets also must play four of their final five games away, with the April 16 season finale in Dallas capping the last of seven back-to-backs still hanging over them. Inexperience and injuries, respectively, derailed these guys in March in Chris Paul's first two seasons. They are a different team now, needing only a 9-13 finish to be a 50-win team, but no one in the West will see a tougher finishing kick.
Marc Stein is the senior NBA writer for ESPN.com