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My Sixth Man is a Blog

03 Oct 2007 02:06 pm

The Washington Wizards may not know how to play defense worth a damn, but they do have one asset in spades that other teams lack -- political magazine writers moonlighting as basketbloggers prepared to defend them from John Hollinger's smears -- so let me quote Chris Orr from The Plank on his prediction that the Wizards will go 33-49:

Hollinger comes to his cataclysmic conclusion by making incontrovertibly true observations (the Wizards play atrocious defense) and downright odd ones--e.g., suggesting Caron Butler is going to get worse because he just had "a career year at 27." First off, Butler has improved every year for the last three years, so this wasn't some kind of strange outlier. (Indeed, the "career year" was only marginally better than his previous year--18.41 PER to 17.11 PER, using Hollinger's own vaunted stat for overall performance.) As for the fact that his best year so far came at 27(!), I'm not even sure whether Hollinger thinks that's too old or too young; it seems to me a pretty typical place to have a (to date) career year.

The real question, however, is whether or not we can proclaim the Wizards to be the Association's bloggiest team. Agent Zero himself is a blogger. Dan Steinberg's DC Sports Bog for The Washington Post sets the pace for newspaper sports blogging. And, of course, the team has its following among the world's highly trained professional political pundits. Advantage: Wizardsphere.

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Comments (10)

The Wizards can't hold a candle to Curt Schilling, who once was so into a particular RTS game that he bought the company. He also plays (or played) evercrack.

Dave Berri also covers the Wiz with the argument that the real stars are AD and ET, Grunfeld's perhaps overpaid free-agent signings from a few years ago. Antwan is the real underperformer, and lucky for the Wiz, he's on his last year. Okafor in 08.

By the way, it looks like The Poet's careet is over.

I can't wait for opening night in Boston (from Agent Zero's blog):

"listen here. On November 2nd, we're going to go into that building, we're opening up Boston. Right now I'm telling the Boston fans: You guys are going to lose. It's not going to be a victory for Boston. You might as well just cheer for me, because Boston isn't winning in Boston for the season opener. I'm sorry."


You might as well just cheer for me. Awesome!

I know many commenters hate D Berri, but the post on Berri's blog the other day about the Wiz was interesting. In essence, it said that the Wiz had a bunch of good role players, but that Agent Zero was simply not good enough a star player to get them to the promised land. (Essentially, it is the opposite analysis of a team like the Nets or Celtics, which have good top stars, but the role players suck.)

Al,

I haven't read Berri's post but how can the jury be in on Arenas and the Wiz' chances to make the promised land?

Last year was the first year they had a real chance to play as the team is currently constructed (including the fact they have no center to speak of) and both Butler and Agent Zero were MIA. Lets see how they do this post-season before we start writing Arenas' obituary.

"the Wiz had a bunch of good role players, but that Agent Zero was simply not good enough a star player to get them to the promised land."

Meh. Put Kobe on the 'zards and they're still not close to the elite.

"By the way, it looks like The Poet's careet is over."

Sad stuff.

And while I don't have access to Hollinger's piece, I don't understand why he thinks the 'zards would have that drastic a falloff unless Arenas is physically lamer after the injury.

I'd pencil them in for 43 wins.

Stein's power rankings are pretty weird in a bunch of places.

He thinks Seattle is going to be better than Portland, NY, Sacto, and Philly.

He thinks Miami won't make the playoffs.


Comments closed October 17, 2007.

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