The Brooklyn Nets Are Still In Limbo Mode For NBA x Disney World
When the NBA Restart happens at the end of this month it’ll also mark thirteen months since the Brooklyn Nets scooped one of the most monumental days in the franchise’s history.
Tagged with: NBA
When the NBA Restart happens at the end of this month it’ll also mark thirteen months since the Brooklyn Nets scooped one of the most monumental days in the franchise’s history.
Of all the lengths that various sporting leagues are going to around the world in order to finish what they started before the world was struck with a global pandemic, the NBA is going the furthest.
Near the very end of The Last Dance, among the final moments of the final episode of the docuseries, Michael Jordan stares down the camera and tells us how much it tears him up inside that his Chicago Bulls never got the chance to go for championship number seven.
In the pantheon of great NBA Draft classes... nobody is ever going to talk about 2013. More likely they’ll be waxing lyrical about the jewels of 2003. They’ll be singing the praises of what 1984 had to offer. They’ll be glowing with love for 1996 crew. But 2013 is probably way down at the other end of the spectrum.
“Due to unforeseen circumstances the game has been postponed.” - That was the line from the PA announcer at Chesapeake Energy Arena, roughly half an hour after the Oklahoma City Thunder were supposed to have tipped off against the Utah Jazz.
The Brooklyn Nets began this strange old season in a strange new transition, caught between the positive battler team-culture vibes of their recent past and the all-in superstar vibes of their future.
See, all it took was a bit of rest. No sooner had Steven Adams come back from eight days off during the All Star break, apparently largely spent training his new dog, than he’d ripped back into it for the Thunder at the level we’d been hoping to see from him all season.
And here we are. A week after the trade deadline passed with the Oklahoma City Thunder choosing to sit comfortably back in their seats with no knockout offers forthcoming, they now roll into the great big period of rest and recalibration that is the All Star Break.
Well folks, the time has come and gone. The NBA Trade Deadline passed at 9am on Friday in Aotearoa time and as of that moment Steven Adams was effectively confirmed as an Oklahoma City Thunder player for the remainder of the season.
The Brooklyn Nets were undercover darlings of NBA culture by the end of last season. With no relevant draft picks and only a couple of players with any real trade value when Sean Marks took over as GM, the Nets somehow managed to go from rock bottom to the playoffs within four years and they did it through all the things that the basketball zeitgeist loves to see…
This Thunder season has been a pretty fascinating one. It wasn’t supposed to be, they were meant to be a tame if competitive losing team that could beat a playoff team if they dropped their game but otherwise would live in the lottery with all their hoarded future draft picks. Except that everything’s kinda clicked into place instead.
Alright, it’s time to get back on the Steven Adams beat for real now. It’s been a strange old couple months as the Oklahoma City Thunder franchise adjusted to life without Russell Westbrook for the first time ever and adjusting to losing a guy who’d had such a record usage rate was always going to require some time.
What’s happened since is that the Thunder have started to figure things out. Perhaps not coincidentally that’s happened as Steven Adams has been playing the best basketball of his season so far, looking as healthy as he has to date and living it up in the box scores as a result. Even his free throws have come good!
We’re now fourteen games into the NBA season for the Oklahoma City Thunder and eleven games into Steven Adams’ own campaign. That’s eleven games of evidence as to what’s going on and we’re still none the wiser.
The early days of the new NBA season were a false start for Steven Adams. Coming off the supreme touch and control he seemed to have in preseason, building up some lofty expectations, he was a shadow of himself across the first week or so as a left knee contusion clearly affected his ability to play to his capacity.
Steven Adams has always done the little things that help a guy like Russell Westbrook thrive. Now he has to do the thriving, which is a very exciting prospect – and one we got a delicious taste of in preseason when he was one of the most effective dudes out there across the whole NBA.
The state of the Oklahoma City Thunder has changed drastically over the last few months but all the words that are spoken and all the deals that get made and all the hypotheticals… nothing quite hits home like that first opportunity to see the team together in uniform ahead of a new season.
We do know one thing for sure and that’s that with the plethora of draft picks that they acquired in those two trades – which could see them with multiple first round picks for the next five years if things break right – this is a team that is ready to embrace a rebuild. The cupboard is stocked full.
Sooner or later some clever bugger is going to write the definitive history of the first eleven years of the Oklahoma City Thunder and it’s going to be essential reading. Since the franchise upped and moved from Seattle they’ve remained one of the most fascinating teams out there… and it all comes down to three straight draft picks.
And there it is. We knew Russell Westbrook was going to be traded, it was just a matter of where and when and a cheeky Woj Bomb on a Friday arvo cleared all that up. Russell Westbrook to the Rockets, Chris Paul and two future first rounders (plus two potential pick swaps) to the Thunder in return.