Los Angeles Times

TRENDING …

- — Eric Pincus

East or West?

The Golden State Warriors are the best team in basketball — and the San Antonio Spurs aren’t far behind. But the Western Conference’s recent history of dominance over the East might be coming to an end. While it’s early in the season, the initial returns show 12 Eastern teams with winning or .500 records through Thursday’s games; only nine teams can make that claim in the West.

Last season, three Eastern Conference teams made the playoffs without winning records (Milwaukee Bucks, Boston Celtics and Brooklyn Nets), while the Oklahoma City Thunder missed out entirely as the ninth-place team in the West, despite a 45-37 mark. The NBA seems to be creeping closer and closer to leaguewide parity, albeit with everyone looking up to the Warriors.

Okafor impresses

With all of the NBA focused on Golden State’s red-hot start, the dismal Philadelph­ia 76ers are essentiall­y the anti-Warriors.

The bright spot for the team is the play of Duke center Jahlil Okafor, whom the Lakers passed on with the second overall pick in June’s draft. Through a dozen games, Okafor is scoring 18.8 points a game, tops among the rookie class, along with 7.5 rebounds and 1.7 blocks. With rookie guard D’Angelo Russell still trying to prove his mettle, Okafor has a number of Lakers fans wondering what could have been.

LaVine’s emergence

Minnesota Timberwolv­es point guard Ricky Rubio was recently hobbled with a hamstring injury, giving Zach LaVine, the 2015 NBA dunk contest champion, a chance to show he’s more than just a high-flying athlete.

Through a four-game span without Rubio, the former UCLA Bruin averaged 21 points and 4.5

Zach LaVine assists while making 45.0% of his three-point attempts. The Timberwolv­es didn’t win a game over that stretch, but LaVine, the 13th overall pick in the 2014 draft, has shown he’s one of the top players in his draft class. Minnesota has a competitiv­e roster, featuring LaVine and the No. 1 picks in the last two drafts, Andrew Wiggins and Karl-Anthony Towns.

Chalmers to the rescue

The Memphis Grizzlies haven’t looked quite like the same bruising playoff contender they’ve been for the last five years, losing six of their first nine games this season. Looking for help, the Grizzlies acquired reserve point guard Mario

Chalmers from the Miami Heat. Immediatel­y Chalmers has made an impact, averaging 18.7 points through three appearance­s — all Memphis wins.

Cousins’ suspension

The Sacramento Kings have already experience­d their share of turmoil through this very young season. After a 1-7 start, the Kings held a vociferous team meeting that inspired a three-game winning streak and led to forward/ center DeMarcus Cousins’ Western Conference player of-the-week award.

The peace didn’t last long. Cousins threw a forearm to the head of Hawks big man Al Horford in a loss Wednesday in Atlanta, leading to a one-game suspension for Cousins and a loss in Miami without him the next day — keeping the Kings near the bottom of the standings in the West.

Limping along

The New Orleans Pelicans can partly attribute their miserable start —11 losses in their first 12 games — to injuries. Coach Alvin Gentry has not had a run of good luck in his first season with the franchise, losing forwards Anthony Davis and Luke Babbitt, centers Omer Asik and Kendrick Perkins, and guard Jrue Holiday for multiple games. Some positive news for the Pelicans: Talented guard/forward Tyreke Evans is nearing his season debut, after knee surgery sidelined him during training camp.

 ?? Matt Slocum Associated Press ?? NO. 3 PICK Jahlil Okafor, shooting against the Mavericks’ Zaza Pachulia, has quickly made an impact with the 76ers.
Matt Slocum Associated Press NO. 3 PICK Jahlil Okafor, shooting against the Mavericks’ Zaza Pachulia, has quickly made an impact with the 76ers.
 ??  ?? DeMarcus Cousins
DeMarcus Cousins
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