Lakers have ingredients to go over 62-win total

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Lakers have ingredients to go over 62-win total
By early December, you can bet Kobe Bryant will be asked about the Los Angeles Lakers' chances of winning 70 games. It's a question that needs not be asked until February or March, if it's an issue at all.

But now is the time to start speculating for wagering purposes, so here's a more relevant question: Will the Lakers win at least 62 games?

Not even Bryant knows for sure, and he shrugged off talk of 60-plus wins, but he's surely setting expectations of that type.

"It's tough, but you've just got to get up to play every night, and you've got to have a couple lucky breaks here and there," Bryant said after the Lakers beat the Sacramento Kings 98-92 Thursday in a preseason game at the Thomas & Mack Center.

"You try to stay healthy, play the right way and hopefully be clicking on all cylinders when the playoffs come around. Motivation is not very hard with this group."

The Las Vegas Hilton sports book recently posted NBA regular-season win totals, with the defending champion Lakers (62) atop the list and the Kings (241/2) at the bottom.

The Lakers were 65-17 last season, and they are in position to be better this season. Ron Artest adds defensive toughness, young center Andrew Bynum's bad right knee is stronger, and Pau Gasol, Lamar Odom and Derek Fisher return.

Except for Trevor Ariza's departure to Houston, the championship team is loaded and intact, and coach Phil Jackson is still on the bench.

Bryant is a leader who won't allow a letdown. As long as he stays healthy -- and he has started 82, 82, 77 and 80 games the past four seasons -- the Lakers won't lose often.

Get ready for a fast start, too, because the Lakers play 17 of their first 21 games at home, and most of the opponents are weak.

"The Lakers scored a coup when they were able to sign Artest. I don't believe Artest will have a Terrell Owens-type negative effect on the team by causing dissension or locker-room problems," Vegas Sports Authority handicapper Jim Kruger said. "Artest gives the Lakers one of the best frontcourts in the league, assuming Bynum stays healthy and plays to his abilities.

"Re-signing Odom is also a huge factor in making the Lakers the without-a-doubt favorite in the Western Conference. Over the past four seasons, the conference winner has topped 62 wins six times out of eight possibilities. With the Lakers, the only side I'd take would be the 'over.' However, a team going over a high number like that has more risk than I want to take."

Aside from drama and potential distractions, if the Lakers have a weak link, it's at point guard with Fisher and Jordan Farmar.

Also, Kruger pointed out the Lakers "have a difficult situational schedule" with more back-to-back games (19) -- games played without a day's rest against an opponent with rest -- than any other team. Only one of those 19 games is at home. In the past five seasons, teams playing without a day off against a rested team have won only 39.9 percent straight up. In that situation on the road, that percentage dips to 35.8.

The bottom line is bet the Lakers over 62 wins or skip it.

"The oddsmakers expect the biggest improvements from last year in the Washington Wizards, Los Angeles Clippers and Oklahoma City Thunder," Kruger said. "The only double-digit drop in the posted season win numbers is with the Houston Rockets."

Artest jumped off the Rockets' ship, and they have lost Yao Ming for the season and Tracy McGrady for at least a large portion of it.

Kruger recommended betting the Portland Trail Blazers over 431/2 wins last season, and they finished with 54. He's touting Brandon Roy and the Blazers to go over 521/2 this season.

"Portland stands the best shot at beating the Lakers to win the Western Conference," said Kruger, whose Web site is Vegassportsauthority.com.

"A team I would avoid playing 'over' is the Miami Heat due to the enormous dependency on the stellar play, and good health, of superstar Dwyane Wade.

"Washington is improved, and Gilbert Arenas is currently healthy, but can the Wizards improve last year's record by 23 games? Interestingly, last season saw three teams improve their prior season wins by 20 or more. In each of the four years before that, only one team topped the 20-game improvement mark."

? CLOSING NUMBERS -- After a 3-3 showing last week, here are my six college football picks for Saturday (home team in CAPS):

UNR (-8) over UTAH STATE; California (-31/2) over UCLA; IDAHO (-71/2) over Hawaii; CENTRAL FLORIDA (+14) over Miami; Washington (+61/2) over ARIZONA STATE; UNLV (+161/2) over Utah.


NBA WIN TOTALS

2009-10 regular-season win totals for all 30 NBA teams, as posted by the Las Vegas Hilton:

Team Wins

Los Angeles Lakers 62

Cleveland Cavaliers 61

Orlando Magic 57

Boston Celtics 56

San Antonio Spurs 54

Denver Nuggets 52

Portland Trail Blazers 52

Utah Jazz 49

Dallas Mavericks 48

New Orleans Hornets 46

Atlanta Hawks 44

Detroit Pistons 41

Phoenix Suns 41

Toronto Raptors 41

Washington Wizards 41

Chicago Bulls 40

Philadelphia 76ers 40

Miami Heat 40

Charlotte Bobcats 37

Golden State Warriors 35

Houston Rockets 35

Oklahoma City Thunder 35

Indiana Pacers 34

Los Angeles Clippers 34

New York Knicks 31

New Jersey Nets 28

Memphis Grizzlies 27

Milwaukee Bucks 25

Minnesota Timberwolves 25

Sacramento Kings 24

(Teams must play 82 games for action)
 

Lumi

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JOINING A CHAMPION: Artest agreeable so far

JOINING A CHAMPION: Artest agreeable so far

JOINING A CHAMPION: Artest agreeable so far

Explosive forward fitting in well with Lakers teammates


Whether Ron Artest liked it or not, he had no trouble finding the spotlight in garden-variety NBA markets such as Indianapolis and Sacramento.

Avoiding center stage in Los Angeles while suiting up for one of sports' most storied franchises will be near impossible. But maybe that's part of Artest's modus operandi.

"I think it's cool. I enjoy being in that type of environment," the incendiary 29-year-old forward said Thursday, prior to the Lakers' 98-92 preseason victory over the Sacramento Kings at the Thomas & Mack Center. "You've got to be blessed to be placed in that type of situation, so I take it as a blessing to be here."

Artest says living in Los Angeles fits him nicely, though he is putting his own unique spin on the city.

"I like to have fun, so I'm going to enjoy L.A.," he said. "I'm 'Hollyhood,' that's what I'm telling everybody."

Artest, who had seven points and seven rebounds against the Kings, said finding a comfort level with his new teammates didn't take long at all.

"I fit in right away. They're all easy to get along with," he said. "They all welcomed me with open arms."

Lakers star Kobe Bryant, who had 18 points, four rebounds and four assists, confirmed Artest's assessment.

"He's blending in extremely well," Bryant said. "It's pretty seamless actually."

Lamar Odom says Artest's blend of unique skills is reason enough to welcome him.

"He's one of the only players who can shut his man down and then get you 20 points," said Odom, who left the game early in the second half with a shin injury. "Ron Artest can impact the team without shooting. His passing is underrated. His ballhandling is underrated. Of course we know he's one of the best defensive players probably ever."

Bryant and Odom are part of a nucleus that returns nearly intact from the 15th championship team in Lakers history. As the only significant addition to a title winner, Artest said he is well aware he's under pressure to not rock the boat.

The logical assumption is his role will be similar to that played last season by Trevor Ariza, who bolted to the Houston Rockets as a free agent in the offseason. More than anything Artest will be called upon to defend and rebound, which he is capable of doing consistently.

Artest defines his role much more simply: "Whatever Phil (Jackson) says my role is, that's my role. He hasn't really addressed that yet."

The coach's early appraisal is that Artest needs to be more assertive, but he acknowledges that Artest is trying to fit in first.

"We're kind of getting Ron integrated in what we're trying to do," Jackson said. "He still looks like he's standing around watching guys play at times and he's not really as involved as much as I'd like."

Artest and his teammates were plenty active in the first half Thursday before a crowd of 14,741, racing to a 63-48 lead. But they had to hold on late after the Kings rallied to within three points.

Andrew Bynum had 24 points and eight rebounds to lead Los Angeles. Jason Thompson compiled 19 points and 14 rebounds for the Kings and Spencer Hawes scored 18.

Artest, who started and played 26 minutes, changed more than the team name on his jersey when he joined the Lakers. Having worn Nos. 15, 23, 91, 93 and 96 at his previous NBA stops, he has switched to No. 37 as a tribute to Michael Jackson. That's the number of weeks Jackson's "Thriller" album topped the charts.

"For me, I'm obsessed with Michael. I bought tickets to his first show in London and was going to see him and then he passed away," Artest said. "It was tough for everybody, not just me. It affected millions, maybe billions of people."
 

proguy747

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every night against the lakers is the nba finals for that team.

going to be tough. The road games will be extra tough with jackson at home...
 

Scoop Mackenzie

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WRONG--sorry Lakers will be great bit will not break records or even win a championship.
proguy747 said it...and that is truth!!


s c OO p
 
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