USA TODAY Sports Weekly

NBA winners, losers:

- Matt Eppers

Here are both from the first half; one team managed to be both.

It’s been a predictabl­y odd NBA season thus far amid the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. More than 30 games have been postponed due to health and safety protocols. The lack of fans can still make for an awkward viewing experience. The shortened offseason, compressed schedule and little practice time have made for some stilted play.

Still, there has been plenty of excitement on a nightly basis to keep NBA Twitter going in all of its vibrant, weird glory.

We take a look at the winners and losers from the first half of the season:

Winner: Joel Embiid

Embiid tantalized us for the first four years of his career. Even as he earned three All-Star appearance­s, two second-team All-NBA selections and two second-team All-Defense nods, we wondered just how good Embiid could be. We’re finally seeing it this season, and a healthy, inshape, engaged Embiid is completely dominant. He’s averaging a career-high 30.2 points to go with 11.6 rebounds, 3.3 assists, 1.4 blocks and 1.2 steals. He’s shooting career highs of 52.1% overall and 41.6% from 3point range. He’s a leading MVP and Defensive Player of the Year candidate while leading the Philadelph­ia 76ers to the best record in the Eastern Conference.

Winner: Utah Jazz

In purely basketball terms, the Jazz were the best team of the first half. They boast the league’s best record, a top-five offense, a top-five defense and the best net rating. Giannis Antetokoun­mpo called them the “best team in the West.”

And yet …

Loser: Utah Jazz

As Roman Pearce would say, the disrespect is real around here. The Jazz were the subject of plenty of doubt and the butt of jokes in the first half.

There was Shaquille O’Neal oddly criticizin­g Donovan Mitchell in a postgame interview after a win. Then Mitchell and Rudy Gobert were the last two picks in the All-Star draft. “There is no slander to the Utah Jazz,” LeBron James said. “You guys got to understand. Just like in video games growing up, we never played with Utah. Even as great as Karl Malone and John Stockton was, we never picked those guys in video games. Never.”

Tempers boiled over in the final game before the break, with Mitchell and Gobert lobbing profanitie­s at the referees and accusation­s they’re officiated differently because of their small-market status.

And as well as they have played, the Jazz still aren’t seen as the favorite in the Western Conference.

Winner: Phoenix Suns

The Suns were the breakthrou­gh team of the first half and sit in second place in the Western Conference. Chris Paul has been everything they hoped for running the offense. Devin Booker and their other young core players have taken big leaps. Coach Monty Williams has Phoenix playing with confidence as they enter the second half with 16 wins in their last 19 games.

Loser: San Antonio Spurs and Memphis Grizzlies

The second-half schedule crunch is going to be rough for everyone, but it will be particular­ly brutal for the Spurs and Grizzlies, who have the most games remaining with 40 each in 65 days. The Mavericks, Rockets, Bulls and Wizards have the next most with 38. The Clippers have the fewest games left with 34.

Winner: Brooklyn Nets

We expected the Nets to be good this season with Kevin Durant and Kyrie Irving. After making the biggest move of the first half and acquiring James Harden, they’re now true title contenders with the potential to be one of the most prolific offenses we’ve ever seen. The defense isn’t going to be great (and the addition of Blake Griffin won’t help on that end). But have you seen how many points they can score?

Loser: Houston Rockets

Sure, Harden didn’t comport himself very well in forcing his way out of Houston. But that does not lessen the sting of losing their best player, especially when it sends the team into a tailspin. The Rockets have plummeted out of playoff contention since trading Harden and enter the second half on a 13-game losing streak. With the toughest remaining strength of schedule, according to tankathon.com, they appear headed to the top of the lottery.

Winner: 2020 rookie class

This season’s crop of rookies was thought to be short on highend talent, but the Hornets look to have a franchise cornerston­e in LaMelo Ball. James Wiseman has flashed All-Star potential for the Warriors. Tyrese Haliburton has been the draft steal everyone thought he’d be for the Kings. And key rotation contributo­rs are emerging from the late lottery (Deni Avdija, Devin Vassell) and the back half of the first round (Saddiq Bey, Precious Achiuwa, Tyrese Maxey, Immanuel Quickley, Payton Pritchard, Desmond Bane).

Winner: Damian Lillard

NBA fans have known about Dame Time for years now. Lillard is bringing it to the masses this season with some truly absurd clutch numbers. He has scored the second-most points in the league during the final five minutes of games decided by five points or fewer while shooting 63.3% overall and 58.3% from 3-point range in those situations while keeping the Portland Trail Blazers in the thick of the playoff race.

 ?? RON CHENOY/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? After pairing veteran Chris Paul (3) with emerging young talent such as Devin Booker (1), the Suns have ascended to the No. 2 seed in the Western Conference.
RON CHENOY/USA TODAY SPORTS After pairing veteran Chris Paul (3) with emerging young talent such as Devin Booker (1), the Suns have ascended to the No. 2 seed in the Western Conference.

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