Imperial Valley Press

Analysis: It’s a new day in the NBA, and a welcomed change

- BY TIM REYNOLDS AP Basketball Writer

LAS VEGAS — There is no favorite.

This is what the NBA wanted. And needed.

The biggest piece of valid criticism about the league in recent years has been its predictabl­e. Golden State got to the last five NBA Finals. LeBron James had made it there eight years in a row, four with Miami and then four more with Cleveland. Brooklyn used to be the ‘other’ team in New York, and the Clippers used to be the ‘other’ team in Los Angeles.

No more.

Welcome to a new NBA. If you think the Clippers can win it all next season, or the Lakers, or Utah, or Philadelph­ia, or Milwaukee, or Houston, or Denver, or even Golden State and maybe a few others, you’re right.

Technicall­y, there is a favorite: The sports books in Las Vegas, after hearing the news that Kawhi Leonard and Paul George are heading to the Clippers, listed them as the best bet Saturday to win the 2020 NBA championsh­ip. Yes, the Clippers. A team that has won exactly four playoff series since moving to Los Angeles in 1984. A team that had 12 consecutiv­e losing seasons a generation ago.

There wasn’t much NBA intrigue at this time last year. The Warriors were adding DeMarcus Cousins to a team that won the last two championsh­ips and were seemingly locks to win a third consecutiv­e title.

Everyone knows it didn’t work out that way.

Toronto took care of that. It was just more proof that what seems obvious at this time of year doesn’t always come to fruition.

This year, though, the newfound balance of power — dare we say “parity” — seems like a done deal.

The East still has a 60-win team in Milwaukee returning the reigning MVP in Giannis Antetokoun­mpo and shooting guard Khris Middleton, so the Bucks may be the favorite right now on that side of the league. Philadelph­ia lost JJ Redick and Jimmy Butler, adding Josh Richardson and Al Horford to a team that looks be dominant defensivel­y. No one will count out Boston, because of Brad Stevens and now Kemba Walker.

Miami got better even after losing Dwyane Wade with the addition of Butler — and the Heat might throw their hat in the ring if Russell Westbrook is indeed available following the George trade to the Clippers. Brooklyn gets Kyrie Irving this season and now knows it’ll be adding Kevin Durant next season, once he returns from his Achilles rehab.

Atlanta’s young core may be the most promising in the NBA.

And let’s not forget the East also has the reigning NBA champion Raptors, albeit without Leonard and Danny Green.) But the West ... wow.

The Clippers kept Patrick Beverley, have an amazingly talented bench led by Lou Williams, a coach everybody wants to play for in Doc Rivers and now gets two of the very best players in the game with Leonard and George.

 ?? AP PHOTO/CRAIG MITCHELLDY­ER ?? In this April 16, file photo, Oklahoma City Thunder forward Paul George (left) looks to pass the ball around Portland Trail Blazers forward Al-Farouq Aminu during the first half of Game 2 of an NBA basketball first-round playoff series in Portland, Ore.
AP PHOTO/CRAIG MITCHELLDY­ER In this April 16, file photo, Oklahoma City Thunder forward Paul George (left) looks to pass the ball around Portland Trail Blazers forward Al-Farouq Aminu during the first half of Game 2 of an NBA basketball first-round playoff series in Portland, Ore.

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