Did you miss out on the original introductory piece of the “Bring It Back” series? Well do yourself a favor and check out right here how we’re doing this multi-part NBA series!
This week we’ll hit the Eastern Conference. Some teams may look a little funny, so have an open mind! We’re going to field 8-10 man rosters, some might go up to 15 but it’s just the best players on the teams. It’ll be fun because some teams might not have a complete team at all and may just include some guys who might be injured, but they’re still going to be a big part of the way this goes. This is all going to depend on the teams and my research of players available and pick the best of the best players that each team drafted and finally where they landed in the draft.
Now, Time to display some teams!
Atlantic Division
Boston Celtics

Starters:
Guard: Avery Bradley; 1st round (19th pick, 19th overall), 2010 NBA Draft
G: Joe Johnson; 1st round (10th pick, 10th overall), 2001 NBA Draft
Forward: Paul Pierce; 1st round (10th pick, 10th overall), 1998 NBA Draft
F: Jared Sullinger; 1st round (21st pick, 21st overall), 2012 NBA Draft
Center: Al Jefferson; 1st round (15th pick, 15th overall), 2004 NBA Draft
Bench:
F: Jeff Green; 1st round (5th pick, 5th overall), 2007 NBA Draft
G: Tony Allen; 1st round (25th pick, 25th overall), 2004 NBA Draft
G/F: Gerald Green; 1st round (18th pick, 18th overall), 2005 NBA Draft
G: Randy Foye; 1st round (7th pick, 7th overall), 2006 NBA Draft
G: Marcus Smart; 1st round (6th pick, 6th overall), 2014 NBA Draft
G: James Young; 1st round (17th pick, 17th overall), 2014 NBA Draft
C: Lucas Nogueira; 1st round (16th pick, 16th overall), 2013 NBA Draft
G: E’Twaun Moore; 2nd round (25th pick, 55th overall), 2011 NBA Draft
Analysis:
Overall, for the first team, this squad looks very good. Joe Johnson, Al Jefferson and Jared Sullinger jump off immediately as the 3 players that would lead the way for this team followed by Paul Pierce, Avery Bradley with Jeff Green and Gerald Green coming off the bench. There’s a nice mix of youth and veteran leadership on the team that includes guys like Tony Allen and Marcus Smart able to come off the bench to provide solid perimeter defense. The immediate problem here though is there is no real depth in the front court beyond the starters unless you count an undersized Jeff Green and an inexperienced Lucas Nogueira. Still, this is a very good team overall.
Brooklyn Nets

Starters:
G: Jordan Crawford; 1st round (27th pick, 27th overall), 2010 NBA Draft
G: Kyle Korver; 2nd round (22nd pick, 51st overall), 2003 NBA Draft
F: Ryan Anderson; 1st round (21st pick, 21st overall), 2008 NBA Draft
F: Derrick Favors; 1st round (3rd pick, 3rd overall), 2010 NBA Draft
C: Mason Plumlee; 1st round (22nd pick, 22nd overall), 2013 NBA Draft
Bench:
G/F: Chris Douglas-Roberts; 2nd round (10th pick, 40th overall), 2008 NBA Draft
C: Brook Lopez; 1st round (10th pick, 10th overall), 2008 NBA Draft
F: Kenyon Martin; 1st round (1st pick, 1st overall), 2000 NBA Draft
Analysis:
Holy shooting Batman. Between Jordan Crawford, Kyle Korver and Ryan Anderson, there will be 3’s a plenty with this team. The front court depth is good with Derrick Favors, Mason Plumlee and Brook Lopez and all 3 can interchange each other for minutes on this team. Front court seems good, the problem here is there’s no real back court guys or a guy who can create his own shot with the ball in his hands. Jordan Crawford is by no means an everyday starting point guard or starting guard for that matter in this NBA. Other teams with better back courts and guys who can create will exploit this team. Also, perimeter defense could be a HUGE problem. Live and die by the 3, Brooklyn.
New York Knicks

Starters:
G: Iman Shumpert; 1st round (17th pick, 17th overall), 2011 NBA Draft
G: Tim Hardaway Jr; 1st round (24th pick, 24th overall), 2013 NBA Draft
F: Trevor Ariza; 2nd round (14th pick, 43rd overall), 2004 NBA Draft
F: David Lee; 1st round (30th pick, 30th overall), 2005 NBA Draft
C: Nene; 1st round (7th pick, 7th overall), 2002 NBA Draft
Bench:
F: Channing Frye; 1st round (8th pick, 8th overall), 2005 NBA Draft
G/F: Wilson Chandler; 1st round (23rd pick, 23rd overall), 2007 NBA Draft
F: Danilo Gallinari; 1st round (6th pick, 6th overall), 2008 NBA Draft
F: Kostas Papanikolaou; 2nd round (18th pick, 48th overall), 2012 NBA Draft
F/C: Jordan Hill; 1st round (8th pick, 8th overall), 2009 NBA Draft
G: Landry Fields; 2nd round (9th pick, 39th overall), 2010 NBA Draft
G/F: Cleanthony Early; 2nd round (4th pick, 34th overall), 2014 NBA Draft
Analysis:
A few of these guys are members of the Carmelo Anthony trade, in Wilson Chandler and Danilo Gallinari particularly. The pieces look great and can compete on a night to night basis but the big thing here is, who’s your star? An often injured David Lee or Nene? I don’t see it. A lot of these guys are nice role players and have careers in the NBA because they do a lot of great things, in reserve roles for the most part. Overall though, it is a solid team. There might not be too much to wag a finger at in the back court with Chandler, Shumpert, Hardaway, Fields, Early being your main rotation guards. The lack of a star is real, but this team could find a way to compete by spreading the wealth between all players.
Philadelphia 76ers

Starters:
G: Jrue Holiday; 1st round (17th pick, 17th overall), 2009 NBA Draft
G: Lou Williams; 2nd round (15th pick, 45th overall), 2005 NBA Draft
G/F: Andre Iguodala; 1st round (9th pick, 9th overall), 2004 NBA Draft
F: Thaddeus Young; 1st round (12th pick, 12th overall), 2007 NBA Draft
C: Nikola Vucevic; 1st round (16th pick, 16th overall), 2011 NBA Draft
Bench:
G: Michael Carter-Williams; 1st round (11th pick, 11th overall), 2013 NBA Draft
C: Joel Embiid; 1st round (3rd pick, 3rd overall), 2014 NBA Draft
G: Thabo Sefolosha; 1st round (13th pick, 13th overall), 2006 NBA Draft
F: Marreese Speights; 1st round (16th pick, 16th overall), 2008 NBA Draft
G/F: Evan Turner; 1st round (2nd pick, 2nd overall), 2010 NBA Draft
G: Elfrid Payton; 1st round (10th pick, 10th overall), 2014 NBA Draft
F: Moe Harkless; 1st round (15th pick, 15th overall), 2012 NBA Draft
G/F: K.J. McDaniels; 2nd round (2nd pick, 32nd overall), 2014 NBA Draft
F/C: Lavoy Allen 2nd round (20th pick, 50th overall), 2011 NBA Draft
F: Jerami Grant; 2nd round (9th pick, 39th overall), 2014 NBA Draft
Analysis:
This isn’t even the entire list of players, had to leave off a couple of guys, but, wow. The back court jumps out as an immediate dominating factor. Holiday, Carter-Williams, Iguodala, Turner, Williams, Sefolosha, Payton and McDaniels all bring different things to this team. There are so many lineups you can use with this. You can go all scoring and throw in Holiday, Williams, Turner, Young and Speights or you can go all defensive and mix it up with Payton, Carter-Williams, Sefolosha, Embiid and Vucevic. Then sprinkle in guys like McDaniels, Allen and Iguodala that could work in either lineup. The main front court rotation of Young, Vucevic, Embiid and Speights is intimidating enough and when you mix that up with the 3 headed point guard monster in Carter-Wiliams, Holiday and Payton, each guy brings something to the table that no one wants to deal with.
This team might just be the standouts for this division and the whole conference, due to its diversity and skillset. Picking a starting lineup was near impossible, but had to be done and look for Vucevic to be the star here.
Toronto Raptors

Starters:
G: Terrence Ross; 1st round (8th pick, 8th overall), 2012 NBA Draft
G: DeMar DeRozan; 1st round (9th pick, 9th overall), 2009 NBA Draft
F: P.J. Tucker; 2nd round (5th pick, 35th overall), 2006 NBA Draft
F: Chris Bosh; 1st round (4th pick, 4th overall), 2003 NBA Draft
C: Roy Hibbert; 1st round (17th pick, 17th overall), 2008 NBA Draft
Bench:
C: Jonas Valanciunas; 1st round (5th pick, 5th overall), 2011 NBA Draft
F/C: Ed Davis; 1st round (13th pick, 13th overall), 2010 NBA Draft
F: Quincy Acy; 2nd round (7th pick, 37th overall), 2012 NBA Draft
F: Charlie Villanueva; 1st round (7th pick, 7th overall), 2005 NBA Draft
F/C: Andrea Bargnani; 1st round (1st pick, 1st overall), 2006 NBA Draft
F: Bruno Caboclo; 1st round (20th pick, 20th overall), 2014 NBA Draft
Analysis:
Scary, scary front court but no true point guard. Hibbert, Bosh, JV, Davis and Acy will definetely scare and intimidate teams. Interior defense will win this team games, that’s for sure. The problem here is, there is no point guard even on the roster. Not one. Terrence Ross or DeMar DeRozan will have to go out of their comfort zones to control the ball. While both these players are definitely talented enough to do so, it will take away from the other skills they have. P.J. Tucker and Acy will play big roles as ‘glue’ guys, guys who will keep different lineups strong when they’re on the court. No real serious 3 point threat either besides Ross and if you go deep in your bench to Villanueva or Bargnani, but that’s a stretch I don’t think anyone would want to take. The key here will be Bosh, Hibbert and JV dominating the paint, challenging the other teams in the division to score on them.
Central Division
Chicago Bulls

Starters:
G: Derrick Rose; 1st round (1st pick, 1st overall), 2008
G: Jimmy Butler; 1st round (30th pick, 30th overall), 2011
F: James Johnson; 1st round (16th pick, 16th overall), 2009
F: LaMarcus Aldridge; 1st round (2nd pick, 2nd overall), 2006
C: Joakim Noah; 1st round (9th pick, 9th overall), 2007
Bench:
F: Taj Gibson; 1st round (26th pick, 26th overall), 2009
F/C: Kevin Seraphin; 1st round (17th pick, 17th overall), 2010
G: Kirk Hinrich; 1st round (7th pick, 7th overall), 2003
G: Ben Gordon; 1st round (3rd pick, 3rd overall), 2004
C: Matt Bonner; 2nd round (16th pick, 45th overall), 2003
G: Norris Cole; 1st round (28th pick, 28th overall), 2011
C: Jusuf Nurkic; 1st round (16th pick, 16th overall), 2014
G: Tony Snell; 1st round (20th pick, 20th overall), 2013
G: Gary Harris; 1st round (19th pick, 19th overall), 2014
F: Elton Brand; 1st round (1st pick, 1st overall), 1999
Analysis:
That starting lineup immediately jumps out as a strong suit for this team. Rose and Butler handling their backcourt business while Aldridge and Noah do what they do on the interior, both offensively and defensively? It’s a recipe for domination. James Johnson is a player that can feed off open opportunities because one of the big 3 in Rose, Butler or Aldridge will draw a lot of attention on any given night. The bench is solid too with good interior defenders and scorers in Gibson and Seraphin and then where you have Rose and Butler who can create their own shot as well as shoot if needed you take them out to bring in either Gordon or Hinrich who are primarily perimeter players at this point in their careers and bring some diversity. Overall, the team has shooting with Hinrich, Gordon and Bonner, Good interior play by the big men and youth too boot. A very good team from top to bottom and one of the best.
Cleveland Cavaliers

Starters:
G: Kyrie Irving; 1st round (1st pick, 1st overall), 2011
G: Andrew Wiggins; 1st round (1st pick, 1st overall), 2014
F: LeBron James; 1st round (1st pick, 1st overall), 2003
F: Tristan Thompson; 1st round (4th pick, 4th overall), 2011
C: J.J. Hickson; 1st round (19th pick, 19th overall), 2008
Bench:
G: Jamal Crawford; 1st round (8th pick, 8th overall), 2000
G: Dion Waiters; 1st round (4th pick, 4th overall), 2012
G: Danny Green; 2nd round (16th pick, 46th overall), 2009
F/C: Carlos Boozer; 2nd round (6th pick, 34th overall), 2002
G: Sergey Karasev; 1st round (19th pick, 19th overall), 2013
G: Andre Miller; 1st round (8th pick, 8th overall), 1999
F: Anthony Bennett; 1st round (1st pick, 1st overall), 2013
G: Allen Crabbe; 2nd round (1st pick, 31st overall), 2013
F: Jae Crowder; 2nd round (4th pick, 34th overall), 2012
G: Joe Harris; 2nd round (3rd pick, 33rd overall), 2014
Analysis:
So this is what they would look like if they didn’t trade some assets huh? Interesting to see the players that LeBron possibly could’ve paired up with. Immediately, you see the best starting lineup in the conference right here lead by the world’s best player, LeBron James. Irving is going to do what Irving does and a young Andrew Wiggins will learn from LeBron and feed off the opportunities created by the attention Irving and LeBron attract. Thompson and Hickson will primarily play big roles in the interior to pull down rebounds and play some tough interior defense with Boozer coming off the bench to rotate in for them. Shooting off the bench with Crawford, Waiters, Green and Karasev spells for a tough time for any team trying to defend them. Andre Miller will provide that veteran leadership and will play solid minutes off the bench with Bennett, Crowder, Harris and Crabbe developing from the players in front of them. Experience, leadership, interior defense, rebounding, great scorers and this team just looks scary on paper.
Detroit Pistons

Starters:
G: Brandon Knight; 1st round (8th pick, 8th overall), 2011
G: Arron Afflalo; 1st round (27th pick, 27th overall), 2007
F: Kyle Singler; 2nd round (3rd pick, 33rd overall), 2011
F: Greg Monroe; 1st round (7th pick, 7th overall), 2010
C: Andre Drummond; 1st round (9th pick, 9th overall), 2012
Bench:
G: Kentavious Caldwell-Pope; 1st round (8th pick, 8th overall), 2013
G: Rodney Stuckey; 1st round (15th pick, 15th overall), 2007
F: Amir Johnson; 2nd round (26th pick, 56th overall), 2005
F: Jonas Jerebko; 2nd round (9th pick, 39th overall), 2009
F: Tayshaun Prince; 1st round (23rd pick, 23rd overall), 2002
F: Jason Maxiell; 1st round (26th pick, 26th overall), 2005
F: Austin Daye; 1st round (15th pick, 15th overall), 2009
F: Khris Middleton; 2nd round (9th pick, 39th overall), 2012
F: Chase Budinger; 2nd round (14th pick, 44th overall), 2009
Analysis:
Right out the gate, you notice the current mainstays for the Pistons now, are still here. KCP, Singler, Monroe and Drummond are key and pivotal parts to this team. Monroe and Drummond will do what they do on the interior with scoring and rebounding while playing tough defense. Knight and Afflalo are going to score, and score a ton, feeding off each other. The problem here though when you hit the bench is the dropoff in talent compared to other teams. There’s a main rotation of the 8 guys but they just are as good as some other teams and compared to others, maybe worse. Especially as you go deep down the bench with no true point guard or center coming off the bench to sub in. It’s just a bunch of guys who can play those positions but aren’t as good at in those spots compared to other reserves on other teams.
Indiana Pacers

Starters:
G: Jerryd Bayless; 1st round (11th pick, 11th overall), 2008
G: Paul George; 1st round (10th pick, 10th overall), 2010
F: Kawhi Leonard; 1st round (15th pick, 15th overall), 2011
F: Tyler Hansbrough; 1st round (13th pick, 13th overall), 2009
C: Miles Plumlee; 1st round (26th pick, 26th overall), 2012
Bench:
G: Lance Stephenson; 2nd round (10th pick, 40th overall), 2010
F: Danny Granger; 1st round (17th pick, 17th overall), 2005
F: Solomon Hill; 1st round (23rd pick, 23rd overall), 2013
F: Shawne Williams; 1st round (17th pick, 17th overall), 2006
G/F: James Jones; 2nd round (20th pick, 49th overall), 2003
Analysis:
The rotation will be small here, probably 7,8 deep. Anyone on the wing will have a horrible time trying to score by the long arms of George and Leonard but the immediate issue is if you get by them, whos stopping you inside? Plumlee and Hansbrough who are good bench players but can’t compete with some of the better big men. Stephenson and Granger off the bench can come in and score but there isn’t a lot of interior players to be scared of for this Pacres team. Leonard and George will be fun to watch though, that’s for sure. Imagine seeing the arms of ‘The Claw’ or ‘PG13’ when trying to pass the ball? Good Luck.
Milwaukee Bucks

Starters:
G: Brandon Jennings; 1st round (10th pick, 10th overall), 2009
G: Jodie Meeks; 2nd round (11th pick, 41st overall), 2009
F: Jabari Parker; 1st round (2nd pick, 2nd overall), 2014
F: Dirk Nowitzki; 1st round (9th pick, 9th overall), 1998
C: Andrew Bogut; 1st round (1st pick, 1st overall), 2005
Bench:
F: Giannis Antetokounmpo; 1st round (15th pick, 15th overall), 2013
C: Larry Sanders; 1st round (15th pick, 15th overall), 2010
F: Ersan Ilyasova; 2nd round (6th pick, 36th overall), 2005
G: Ramon Sessions; 2nd round (26th pick, 56th overall), 2007
F/C: John Henson; 1st round (14th pick, 14th overall), 2012
G: Jimmer Fredette; 1st round (10th pick, 10th overall), 2011
F: Luc Mbah a Moute; 2nd round (7th pick, 37th overall), 2008
F: Johnny O’Bryant; 2nd round (6th pick, 36th overall), 2014
F: Jon Leuer; 2nd round (10th pick, 40th overall), 2011
Analysis:
This team top to bottom is the only one that might be able to challenge that Sixers team. When healthy, a lineup of Jennings, Meeks, Parker, Nowitzki and Bogut will be tough to compete with. Meeks can shoot at will, Jennings can create, Parker is a phenominal 2-way player in the making, Dirk is a legend and Bogut is good both defensively and offensively in the interior. The bench of the “Greek Freak”, Sanders, Sessions, Fredette, Ilyasova and Mbah a Moute can cause a some chaos, especially to those teams who might not be as skilled as these guys are on the bench. You have perimeter scoring in Nowitzki, Ilyasova, Meeks, Fredette, guys who can create in Jennings, Dirk, Parker and Giannis as well as interior guys who will be there to clean up any messes in Bogut, Sanders and Henson. This team is a scary one to think about.
Southeast Division
Atlanta Hawks

Starters:
G: Jeff Teague; 1st round (19th pick, 19th overall), 2009
G: Jason Terry; 1st round (10th pick, 10th overall), 1999
F: Marvin Williams; 1st round (2nd pick, 2nd overall), 2005
F: Pau Gasol; 1st round (3rd pick, 3rd overall), 2001
C: Al Horford; 1st round (3rd pick, 3rd overall), 2007
Bench:
F: Josh Smith; 1st round (17th pick, 17th overall), 2004
G: Dennis Schroder; 1st round (17th pick, 17th overall), 2013
F: Mike Scott; 2nd round (13th pick, 43rd overall), 2012
G: Shane Larkin; 1st round (18th pick, 18th overall), 2013
F: Boris Diaw; 1st round (21st pick, 21st overall), 2003
F: James Ennis; 2nd round (20th pick, 50th overall), 2013
Analysis:
I see this team and think, wow it might be the same but then again, it’s a far cry from what the best team in the NBA looks like now. The front court rotation of Gasol, Horford, Scott, and Smith make for an interesting mix of guys with different skill sets make for a couple different looks for sure. Terry shoots, much like Korver, Williams does the intangible things, much like Carroll, Gasol can go inside and out, much like Millsap, and the bench is still the same for the most part. Diaw is an upgrade from Antic, you still have Schroder, Scott and you add a guy like Josh Smith who can bring some athleticism and interior scoring as long as he doesn’t step out and shoot three’s this team should be just fine. There might not be a guy who can be on the perimeter and create his own shot outside of Jeff Teague, but it might not matter when Teague, Horford and Gasol get cooking.
Charlotte Hornets

Starters:
G: Kemba Walker; 1st round (9th pick, 9th overall), 2011
G: Kobe Bryant; 1st round (13th pick, 13th overall), 1996
F: Michael Kidd-Gilchrist; 1st round (2nd pick, 2nd overall), 2012
F: Tobias Harris; 1st round (19th pick, 19th overall), 2011
C: Cody Zeller; 1st round (4th pick, 4th overall), 2013
Bench:
G: D.J. Augustin; 1st round (9th pick, 9th overall), 2008
G: Gerald Henderson; 1st round (12th pick, 12th overall), 2009
F/C: Brandan Wright: 1st round (8th pick, 8th overall), 2007
G: Shabazz Napier; 1st round (24th pick, 24th overall), 2014
C: Ryan Hollins; 2nd round (20th pick, 50th overall), 2006
F: Noah Vonleh; 1st round (9th pick, 9th overall), 2014
G: Raymond Felton; 1st round (5th pick, 5th overall), 2005
Analysis:
Kobe system with Michael Jordan?! This has to be a fantasy story. A back court of Kobe and Kemba makes for some intense scoring. MKG can defend very well on the perimeter and then you go inside with Zeller and Tobias Harris or Brandan Wright scoring can make somethings on the interior happen. Augustin, Henderson coming off the bench as the main guards in rotation help this team score as well. The youth with Napier and Vonleh make the future bright with this team, but it’s still Kobe’s time and Kobe’s team. Say Kobe does need some rest, there are guys who can come in an supplement some of what he’ll take to the bench with him. Plus, it’ll just be a an excuse for Kemba to snap if needed.
Miami Heat

Starters:
G: Marcus Thornton; 2nd round (13th pick, 43rd overall), 2009
G: Dwyane Wade; 1st round (5th pick, 5th overall), 2003
F: Bojan Bogdanovic; 2nd round (1st pick, 31st overall), 2011
F: Dorrell Wright; 1st round (19th pick, 19th overall), 2004
F/C: Jason Smith; 1st round (20th pick, 20th overall), 2007
Bench:
G: P.J. Hairston; 1st round (26th pick, 26th overall), 2014
F: Caron Butler; 1st round (10th pick, 10th overall), 2002
F: Rasual Butler; 2nd round (24th pick, 52nd overall), 2002
Analysis:
This team might be one of the worst in the East. There is no true big man on this team or a true point guard. They have Wade and then…no one else really. A pair of Butler’s on the bench are cool, I suppose, but it’s not going to be enough. Teams will have a field day shooting on the perimeter against Thornton, Wade and Bogdanovic and they’ll love going inside to against Wright and Smith. Miami will be very bad.
Orlando Magic

Starters:
G: Victor Oladipo; 1st round (2nd pick, 2nd overall), 2013
G: Courtney Lee; 1st round (22nd pick, 22nd overall), 2008
F: Aaron Gordon; 1st round (4th pick, 4th overall), 2014
F/C: Kyle O’Quinn; 2nd round (19th pick, 49th overall), 2012
C: Dwight Howard; 1st round (1st pick, 1st overall), 2004
Bench:
G: J.J. Redick; 1st round (11th pick, 11th overall), 2006
C: Anderson Varejao; 2nd round (1st pick, 30th overall), 2004
G: Mike Miller; 1st round (5th pick, 5th overall), 2000
C: Zaza Pachulia; 2nd round (13th pick, 42nd overall), 2003
F: Andrew Nicholson; 1st round (19th pick, 19th overall), 2012
Analysis:
This Orlando Magic team looks good with a pairing of Oladipo and Howard leading the way but besides Oladipo, there isn’t a guy who can create his own shot. They’re depleted on the interior, besides Dwight, but they do have some decent perimeter scoring in Lee, Miller and Redick. Just not a great team overall though beyond Dwight and Oladipo.
Washington Wizards

Starters:
G: John Wall; 1st round (1st pick, 1st overall), 2010
G: Bradley Beal; 1st round (3rd pick, 3rd overall), 2012
F: Otto Porter; 1st round (3rd pick, 3rd overall), 2013
F: Nick Young; 1st round (16th pick, 16th overall), 2007
C: Javale McGee; 1st round (18th pick, 18th overall), 2008
Bench:
G: Jordan Clarkson; 2nd round (16th pick, 46th overall), 2014
G: Shelvin Mack; 2nd round (4th pick, 34th overall), 2011
G: Devin Harris; 1st round (5th pick, 5th overall), 2004
Analysis:
This looks like the team John Wall first came into when he was drafted by Washington. Wall is going to lead this team surrounded by guys who need the ball in Bradley Beal and Nick Young along with Otto Porter and they can score, but what the real problem is, on the interior. There is nothing on the inside that teams should be scared of. Swaggy P is NOT going in the post and McGee will get exposed like crazy. Another bad southeast team.
Wow, what a nice group of teams! Keep it locked here and we’ll be back again with the Western Conference and break it down even further! Keep it locked!
[credit – basketball reference and nba.com]