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Staff writer Rick Bonnell predicts the 2009-10 season.
Best acquisition
The candidates are Hedo Turkoglu (Toronto), Richard Jefferson (San Antonio), Rasheed Wallace (Boston), Mike Miller (Washington) and Shaquille O'Neal (Cleveland).
I think Turkoglu is a great addition to the Raptors, for his ability to make plays in the fourth quarter for himself and others. But the NBA is all about forcing defenses to make hard choices (as in the Lakers adding Pau Gasol). Shaq isn't close to what he once was, but he still demands a double-team, as does LeBron James. How do you guard the other three Cavs?
Teams to watch
In the West, it's the San Antonio Spurs. They're running out of time to win another title, but adding Jefferson and Antonio McDyess could catapult them ahead of the Denver Nuggets as the team most equipped to challenge the Lakers.
In the East, it's the Washington Wizards because this has potential to go dramatically in either direction. Gilbert Arenas is a reality show, but the man can play. So can Antawn Jamison and Caron Butler. Miller was a great acquisition. They could still implode, but in a way so entertaining Fox should buy the TV rights.
Comeback player
It's too easy to pick Boston's Kevin Garnett (great, previously injured, aging player on a team that contends for a title). It's too subtle to pick Milwaukee's Andrew Bogut (a skilled and savvy true center on a team nobody cares about).
So how about Andrew Bynum? After the injury, he played little more than a bit part in the Lakers' championship run. But he still has huge potential on a team with a lot of options. He could end up being a neat story on a team likely to win it all again.
COACH ON HOTTEST SEAT
You really don't want to be Lawrence Frank in New Jersey. How are that team's woes his fault?
When they had established talent (Jason Kidd, Richardson, Vince Carter), this guy was Jeff Van Gundy-Lite: The workaholic, cerebral video guy-turned-head coach. Now, with a bunch of kids, he's as stale as second-day bagels.
Rookie of the year
I'm a contrarian, so I hate picking chalk. I would love to say Minnesota point guard Jonny Flynn, who was made for this era when hand-checking is outlawed. But who in his right mind wouldn't tab No.1 overall pick Blake Griffin?
He's not just a tall guy with coordination. He's a player with developed skills. And he will be a difference-maker.
All-NBA
G Kobe Bryant, Lakers
G Dwyane Wade, Heat
C Dwight Howard, Magic
F LeBron James, Cavaliers
F Tim Duncan, Spurs
MVP
I wouldn't want to live next to Kobe Bryant. He would always have the greener lawn, the cleaner car, the better cookout and the perfect 10-year-old's birthday party. But that compulsive competitive zeal is why he's my pick (over LeBron James) for MVP.
Champion
See above; Bryant is the alpha male among all alpha males. And the Lakers have surrounded him with so many toys (Gasol, Bynum, Lamar Odom and Ron Artest) that I just don't see the Cavaliers winning.
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