First of all, the idea of "having anyone but Howard play Gasol is a mistake" is incorrect in this: if the Lakers go with Gasol/Bynum, as they always do to start the game, you *MUST* cover Gasol with Lewis, because Pau is going to step out, and Bynum is going to be in the low post. Anyone who thinks the correct notion is to cover Bynum with Lewis or Turkoglu in the post and sent Howard out to guard Gasol is a fool. I don't like Bynum; I think he's entirely overrated. Yet if Gasol is outside the lane, no sane coach is going to pull Howard out of the lane to go cover him, when you've got Rashard Lewis, who, although he isn't a stellar defender, isn't a bad one.
This, however, is the problem that Orlando is going to face; they will not be able to control Laker rebounders. Essentially, much as Howard is going to try to carry the rebounding load by himself, and despite the fact that he's the best rebounder by far in this series, it's the Odom rebounding factor that is more decisive. Lewis/Odom isn't mobile vs. slow power forward type; this rebounding match-up, based on power, goes to Odom, and based on quickness is a wash. Rashard Lewis is effective as a rebounder because he counts on winning the quickness match-up. Odom's close to his quickness, and is a better rebounder by technique.
That said, the key for the Lakers this series is Gasol/Bynum, because, much as I like Gortat (and think Orlando's best shot is by playing him ahd Howard together), if you can draw fouls on Howard and sit him on the bench, all of a sudden, those Magic shooters don't see the light of day, and I don't trust Rafer Alston and Mikeal Pietrus to attack the rim and draw fouls against a Gasol or Bynum. Jameer Nelson - MAYBE. Not Alston/Pietrus.
Bottom line is this: the whistle will decide the series. LA has several people who can draw fouls on a strong drive - the most notable being Kobe. Orlando's best in this regard is Turkoglu, and he's nowhere in the class of drawing fouls of Kobe/LeBron/Wade. Los Angeles is going to be on the free-throw line, and Orlando is going to be on the three-point line. (That's not necessarily a comment about bad officiating, and it's definitely not meant to say that "LA gets all the whistles," even though in this series, they're going to. In this series, due to style, THEY SHOULD.)
Los Angeles should steal a page out of Detroit's book from the 2004 Finals. How do you deal with Shaq - or in this case, Howard? You don't have to if he's on the bench. Attack him, draw some fouls, and force the coach to pull him. And if the whistles go too heavily against Howard, it may be HOWARD who takes himself out. He's at 5 technicals.
If Kobe steals a page from Wade and LeBron, and attacks the lane with the zeal and passion of those two, this series might barely go 4 games. But I don't think Kobe is interested in working *THAT* hard.
Orlando does have a chance, however. First, you have to keep Howard out of foul trouble. Second, you have to deny LA the ability to drive the lane (and that goes a long way toward assuring the first point). If the Lakers try to live from the outside - if they try to outshoot the Magic from 3-point range, they will likely lose the series. That's why you have to have Gasol be aggressive to the goal if you're a Laker fan. And Kobe's at 5 technicals himself.
If the Lakers attack the goal aggressively, and run the ball through Gasol and use his passing in helping that attack, the series favors the Lakers. And if they don't, then they deserve to lose.
Offensive aggresssiveness toward the basket favors LA. Rebounding favors LA. Defense favors LA. Coaching favors LA. Bench - in my opinion favors LA. The only two things that favor Orlando are 1) the team with the better starting Center - in this case, Howard vs. Bynum - generally wins the series (which is why last year was such a shock to me), and 2) Orlando is a better 3-point shooting team. (Of course, you live by the outside shot, you die by the outside shot.)
As for Derek Fisher, Sasha Vujacic, and Jordan Farmar, Phil Jackson needs to institute this policy: you can only take as many 3-pointers as you get rebounds. Run through the half-court offense through the bigs and Kobe. If LA tries to shoot 3's with Orlando, they lose.
My call: Lakers in 6. Why 6? Because of the stupid 2-3-2 format. Orlando will win 2-of-3 at home, and in this series, that justifies this HORRIBLE 2-3-2 format, because in a 2-2-1-1-1 series, there would only be 5 games.
Who am I cheering for? Orlando, because I love Howard and like Lewis and Nelson (even though his style has driven me crazy up until this year), although I won't mind Gasol and Ariza getting rings.
Oh. I forgot that tidbit. Think Orlando is sorry they gave up on Ariza now? That Ariza/Evans deal worked out *REALLY* well for LA.