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JonLP24

(29,322 posts)
1. This would benefit the Central Time Zone teams in the long run
Fri Feb 6, 2015, 07:27 AM
Feb 2015

His comment about them having their own plane loses me, I never pictured them flying coach but it is well known for teams to get hammered on west coast trips or east coast trips, it is especially tough for the coast teams.

Before Cleveland racked up 12-straight, they were hammered out west. My Suns are actually the last team to defeat them, they were able to regroup winning back-to-back at the Staples Center before this comfortable home-stand. A few seasons ago the Suns started out the season I think 12-19, finished. 42-40. The difference? Home games.

It is very impressive Atlanta & Golden State lead the league with the records but I notice both teams have played more home games so far. I took a look to see Golden State had a brutal east coast trip. Yes, in fact it starts today.

Fly out @ Atlanta
Fly out to NY Knicks in back-to-back nights.
Turn out and head to Philadelphia Monday.
Take a day off play in Minnesota
before coming home Fri Feb 20 to host the Spurs.
Then turn back around and head to Indiana 22nd
@Washington 24th
@Cleveland 26th
@Toronto 27th
@Boston March 1st
@Brooklyn 2nd

Then they begin a comfortable stretch with the only road games Denver, Phoenix, Portland until they have to fly out to Memphis the 27th.

Atlanta begins a brutal trip out west March 11: Denver, Phoenix, LAL, Sacramento, Golden State, Oklahoma City before coming home.

A central time zone team is better able to handle the swings of the NBA season, I agree there is an unbalance (not as bad though.. Charlotte & Miami aren't bad at all) but if you have teams playing 4 games each against divisional opponents, 30 games out-of-conference you'd have to have a schedule that is very balanced but no matter how you slice it, the teams in the middle of the country can handle those Boston, Miami, LA-Golden State-Portland trips better than the coastal teams.

Its kinda interesting, my Suns spent most of post-Amare years just outside looking in but now that they're 8th & Kevin Durant is 9th somebody talks about changing it. Its been imbalanced for as long as I remember, before the West started sending 8 50 win teams to the playoffs, the East was better top to bottom before Jordan retired(2nd time).

But I'm well aware of of the difficulties the Suns face when traveling further East outside the MST, especially killer road trips. Oklahoma City has a very bad road record, no reason for it. (On edit: I just realized they're in the Northwest Division. Forgot they didn't move them out when they did, their road record actually does make a bit of sense)

I remember Phil Jackson as a coach with the Lakers say over-and-over they will not go 72-10. He also said same thing for the Heat shortly after signing James & Bosh, pointing to Chicago's location in the CST why they can't do it.

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