NFL Week 15 Winners and Losers

After many weeks of waiting, teams are finally clinching playoff berths. Some teams secured their divisions and have chances at the number one playoff seed. Even more exciting are the teams that had chances to clinch and couldn’t, setting up more anticipation for the holidays. It’s time to see who or what else stood out during week 15.

Winners: Aaron Rodgers

It’s been a rough season for one of the NFL’s all-time best quarterbacks. While Aaron Rodgers has been mediocre this year, he’s starting to get back to his old form the past few weeks. Sunday might have been his best game in two years.

Rodgers completed 16 of 30 passes for 289 yards, three touchdowns and a 120 quarterback rating in a late win against Jacksonville. Two of the three scores went to receiver Davante Adams in the second half and both gave New York a lead. Aaron Rodgers also converted a two point conversion for the third week in a row. Yesterday’s two pointer forced the Jaguars to tie the game late. That tie led to a game-winning touchdown Rodgers led.

While Aaron Rodgers won’t be back with the Jets next season, he’ll be viewed favorably by most teams as a quarterback who can return to MVP form if he finishes the regular season playing like he has the last few weeks.

Houston Texans

Houston hadn’t beaten a playoff caliber opponent in months due to late game blunders. The Texans played one of their best games of the season yesterday and beat the desperate Dolphins.

The offense did enough with quarterback C.J. Stroud IV throwing two touchdowns to receiver Nico Collins. Kicker Ka’imi Fairbairn made all his field goal and extra point attempts. The defense sacked and intercepted Miami starting quarterback Tua Tagovailoa three times (each) and gave up less than 250 yards of offense.

The best part for Houston was their fourth quarter shutout. After the Texans gave up a touchdown to tight end Jonnu Smith with four and a half minutes left in the third quarter, head coach DeMeco Ryans got the defense to tighten up. Both Dolphins fourth quarter offensive possessions ended in interceptions. That fourth quarter shutout led to Houston winning the AFC south and clinching a playoff spot.

James Conner

Runningback James Conner has been Arizona’s best offensive player this year. Whenever franchise star quarterback Kyler Murray’s struggled, Conner’s stepped up and kept the Cardinals in close games. When Murray and the passing attack plays well, Conner’s on another level.

Arizona’s decisive home win versus New England was led by the newly re-signed starting runningback. Conner ran 16 times for 110 yards and two touchdowns. He also caught five passes for 28 yards. Although both his scores were in the fourth quarter when the Cardinals had a double digit lead, James Conner already had more than 100 all-purpose yards and sparked ten of Arizona’s 16 points.

James Conner should be the main offensive player if the Cardinals have any chance of winning the NFC west. He does almost everything to keep Arizona’s offense relevant and can help steal at least one more division win.

Sean Payton

Many viewers wondered if Denver would keep head coach Sean Payton after this season if the Broncos had another awful year. Well, Payton led Denver to their first winning record in a decade. It’s also the first winning record for the franchise since their last championship. He could be a coach of the year candidate.

The Broncos trailed all but one quarter in a crucial home game against Indianapolis. This was the first game Denver played in years that would determine how close they’d stay in the playoff race. The Broncos needed a strong finish against a Colts defense that flustered rookie quarterback Bo Nix and shutdown the running game.

Payton’s team responded with a 21 point fourth quarter. Nix threw two touchdowns and linebacker Nik Bonitto returned a fumble/interception for a touchdown after an Adonai Mitchell lateral pass. The win all but eliminates Indianapolis from playoff contention.

Better news came for Denver when Los Angeles (more on them later) got crushed at home against Tampa Bay. The Broncos are second in the AFC west and could draw a weaker opponent for wild-card weekend.

Losers: Jake Haener

Every year there’s a quarterback fans forget for all the right reasons. This year it’s Jake Haener.

Haener was named starter for New Orleans last Friday by interim head coach Darren Rizzi. While social media quickly joked and memed his team photos taken earlier this season, his on-field play wasn’t funny. Washington was on its way to an easy shutout win with Haener leading the Saints offense. Jake Haener completed four of ten passes for 49 yards and an interception before Rizzi pulled him for Spencer Rattler after one half.

Many analysts said the Saints could’ve beaten the Commanders had Rattler completed a few more passes at the end of the game. Yes, Rattler did well in the half he played and should’ve converted a crucial two point conversion at the end. However, when a new starting quarterback leads an offensive possession more than five plays just once in five tries, that’s usually a sign of an incoming loss. The new quarterback usually doesn’t last more than a few games. At least Jake Haener can say he got to play in an NFL regular season game.

Jameis Winston

Unlike the unfortunate Jake Haener, Jameis Winston has been in the NFL for ten years, was a number one overall draft pick, and a league record holder. Their only similarities were ugly Sunday losses.

Winston underperformed against an elite Kansas City defense. He completed 16 of 25 passes for 146 yards and three interceptions. Two of the three turnovers ended offensive drives that would’ve led to points and one interception led to a Chiefs touchdown. Winston was benched after the third interception at the start of the fourth quarter.

Cleveland’s quarterback mess will continue regardless of who starts. Many believed the Browns had a chance to win more games with Jameis Winston under center. He’s led Cleveland to two wins and a lot of hair-pulling moments with his wild, turnover prone moments. Winston should return to a backup quarterback role next year.

Los Angeles Chargers

The first half of Tampa Bay v. Los Angeles was what many expected. It was a close game where both offenses put up double digit points, but the defenses also made great plays. The second half stunned many as the Chargers looked lost.

The Buccaneers played aggressive in the third quarter and scored 17 points. 14 went to franchise star receiver Mike Evans for a combined 92 yards. Tampa then closed out the game with a ten point fourth quarter. Los Angeles was shutout the second half and both fourth quarter offensive possessions ended in turnovers on downs.

It’s possible this was an early test for the Chargers before they got into the playoffs. Some teams need a late season loss to get ready for the postseason. It didn’t help that division rival Denver won a crucial conference game and is now second in the AFC west. Los Angeles can’t have another embarrassing home loss before the playoffs.

Seattle Seahawks

Seattle entered Sunday night as the NFC west division leader and a playoff favorite. They left Sunday night out of the playoff race with an injured starting quarterback.

Green Bay was ready and started the game with a touchdown on a near six minute, 10 play, 63 yard drive. After Seattle’s first offensive possession ended in a three-and-out, the Packers scored another touchdown on a five minute, eight play, 80 yard drive.

The Seahawks were close to getting back into the game multiple times but committed too many errors. The first possession Seattle scored on, quarterback Geno Smith took a six yard sack on a third and three. The next possession, Smith threw a careless interception in Green Bay’s endzone to cornerback Carrington Valentine. That interception ended what was the best offensive possession Seattle had in the first half.

The night got worse when Geno Smith injured his lower leg mid-way through the third quarter. Backup quarterback Sam Howell came in and was overwhelmed, facing constant pressure and was sacked four times.

While the loss stung, it was Seahawks lack of fight and loss of Smith that stood out. Seattle was known to dominate their home games. That advantage has disappeared and the Seahawks have won a single home game in their last six. According to ESPN’s SportsCenter with Scott Van Pelt, that’s the second most losses for a team at home since week five (the Giants are worse as they have lost all six of their home games). Seattle’s a sub .500 team at home since November 2023. NBC broadcasters Mike Tirico and Cris Collinsworth saw throughout the game that the once feared and raucous fanbase was split with travelling diehards from Green Bay.

It was also Seattle’s third game this season where the offensive line allowed seven sacks or more in a game (also via SportsCenter with Scott Van Pelt). That’s the most allowed by the franchise in a season. One issue is how many offensive linemen have been hurt and then returned to full health throughout the season. Still, NFC teams realize if they can beat Seattle’s offensive line, they’ll usually leave with a win. That’s why even if Geno Smith isn’t seriously hurt, he shouldn’t consider playing another game the rest of this season. His health shouldn’t result in at least one extra game in January.

Notes: The writer, editor and publisher is officially on break with the publishing of this article. This is the last Winners and Losers for the NFL season. Wild-card weekend playoff picks will be up before January eleventh.

Happy Holidays to you all. Many thanks to those who have read, liked, commented on and shared jdsportscorner.com articles this year. The first post of 2025 will contain more updates of my growing writing career in the sports journalism field. May you all enjoy the rest of 2024.

NFL Week 14 Winners and Losers

The fourteenth week of the regular season eliminated teams from playoff contention and solidified division leaders. The postseason is a month away and most franchises are getting ready for a higher playoff seed or the offseason. Time to break down this weekends winners and losers.

Winners: Zach Charbonnet

Seattle went into Sunday without starting runningback Kenneth Walker III and played their second game against Arizona in three weeks. Not only did that put more pressure on starting quarterback Geno Smith to get creative and throw for more yards behind a young offensive line, it was a test for the runningbacks to get more positive yardage against a Cardinals defense that’s improved each week.

Charbonnet had his best game of the season and led Seattle to a 30-18 road win. He ran 22 times for 134 yards and two touchdowns. Charbonnet’s second score was a 51 yard run in the second quarter. That gave the Seahawks their first double digit lead of the afternoon.

One of the best parts of Zach Charbonnet’s breakout game was how he adapted. The offensive line did well and created open holes, but the backup runningback created a lot of problems for Arizona’s defensive front with his agility and creativity. Charbonnet’s big game led Seattle to their third divisional win of the season and shows coach Mike Macdonald can count on him in must-win games.

Tampa Bay Buccaneers

I wrote on here back in August that Atlanta or Tampa Bay would win the NFC south in a close race. December would be the month we’d see which team pulls away. It’s safe to say after Sunday the Buccaneers should be the team that wins the south.

Tampa Bay rolled over Las Vegas in a 28-13 home win. Quarterback Baker Mayfield completed 18 of 29 passes for 295 yards, three touchdowns, two interceptions and a 101.9 quarterback rating. Mayfield started hot and played his best on the Buccaneers last scoring drive, throwing his third touchdown to receiver Jalen McMillan.

When Raiders kicker Daniel Carlson made a field goal to cut Tampa’s lead to four, the Buccaneers defense knocked out quarterback Aidan O’Connell and played tighter defense. Tykee Smith’s interception off an O’Connell pass late in the third quarter eliminated any chance of Vegas getting their third win of the year.

It got better for the Buccaneers when Minnesota pulled away in the second half versus the Falcons and won 42-21. Tampa Bay is now in sole possession of first place of the NFC south. Both rivals have one team with a winning record each on their schedules, but that one game advantage after yesterday gives the Buccaneers the edge.

Byron Murphy Jr.’s one handed interception against Kirk Cousins

Speaking of Minnesota, their win wasn’t the only impressive feat against Atlanta.

Cornerback Byron Murphy Jr. had a fabulous, one handed interception against Falcons quarterback Kirk Cousins with six minutes left in the fourth quarter. One would’ve thought he was the receiver if the uniforms weren’t different. Down 14, Atlanta had a chance to score and cut the Vikings lead to seven. That would’ve forced Minnesota to play smart and wear down Atlanta’s defense.

Murphy Jr’s sixth interception of the season sealed a Vikings win. He also downed the ball in the endzone, giving Minnesota enough room to start another scoring drive. That’s a play no one will forget anytime soon.

Losers: Will Levis

Tennessee had an opportunity to build offensive confidence, beat a division rival that’s almost quit the regular season, and give fans some hope. None of that happened in a home loss to Jacksonville.

Tennessee entered the fourth quarter against the Jaguars with six points. Starting quarterback Will Levis struggled against a defense that can’t stop deep-field threats and mobile quarterbacks. Levis excels in both areas, but went 19 of 32 for 168 yards.

The two most important drives of the game after Jacksonville took a four point lead turned into turnover on downs. Levis completed only short passes after Calvin Ridley’s 30 yard catch and run on the first play of the penultimate drive. His three straight, forced incompletions led to the Jaguars getting their third win of the season.

It’s been a wild year for Will Levis. His inability to get the Titans more wins due to his drop in play at serious moments validates the views he’s not a quarterback who can lead a franchise to at least a division title.

Buffalo Bills

Many sports pundits will harp on MVP front-runner Josh Allen’s amazing gamestats and laud Buffalo for only losing by two points to a playoff contender. The comeback and stats are ok, but losing on the road to a Rams team they were favored to beat makes the Bills one of Sundays biggest losers.

For one of the few times this season, Buffalo’s corners were outplayed as Los Angeles receivers Cooper Kupp and Puka Nacua did whatever they wanted for four quarters. The receiving duo combined for 17 catches, 254 yards and two touchdowns. When Kupp and Nacua weren’t shredding the Bills secondary, runningback Kyren Williams ran through Buffalo’s front seven with little resistance.

The loss is a step back for the Bills after they beat Kansas City and trailed them for the one seed by one loss. Buffalo is now the third seed in the AFC and would draw Baltimore on wildcard weekend if the standings stay the same. The Ravens pummeled the Bills early in the season and they have the better roster and coaching staff. There’s little chance Buffalo gets the one seed if Kansas City goes into Pittsburgh on Christmas and wins. That could hurt the heads of the same people going crazy over empty stats in a two point loss.

Thomas Brown’s coaching debut

What a circus in Chicago. Bears players and staff members wanted former coach Matt Eberflus fired after complaints of poor leadership and not wanting to win after a jaw-dropping Thanksgiving loss in Detroit. One would think that firing would’ve given Chicago a better chance to win, especially since their next opponent was a battered 49ers team on the road. Talk about wishful thinking.

It was a lopsided loss in San Francisco and the Bears didn’t score until the game was out of reach midway through the third quarter. Interim coach Thomas Brown had a week and a half to prepare Chicago against a depleted 49ers roster and a head coach that could be traded next year. At one point in the first half, San Francisco had 310 yards on offense while the Bears had two. The score made people wonder if the 49ers All-Pro offense was fully healthy.

There’s one month of Chicago football left and that might be too long for any serious fan. Brown has four games left to show why he can be a head coach. Unfortunately they’re all against playoff favorites, (three are against division rivals). It’s also possible Chicago considers another full roster rebuild if things look worse by January.

Analyzing a Decade into Adam Silver’s Tenure, Part One: Is this the best we could get?

NBA Commissioner Adam Silver implemented a lot of changes since the COVID-19 pandemic. However the league doesn’t have a good direction moving forward like it did with predecessor David Stern.

Yahoo senior NBA reporter Vincent Goodwill ended March with a well-written article detailing the fast-changing landscape taking place in the league. In Goodwill’s article, the main focus was how commissioner Adam Silver has been tasked with maximizing profits, growing the game and making sure the players compete after new rules take place. The league’s improved with players rights, safety and dialogue compared to 20 years ago. Most of the improvements are because Silver values the league and cares about who benefits.

There has been a lot of difficult things to navigate through. Most issues took place after the COVID-19 pandemic almost five years ago. The play-in at the end of the regular season draws ratings, but many viewers complain it disrupts a sport that should be determined by the top eight teams. A good number want to forget about the remaining four play-in teams not in the top eight. There’s the creative and new in-season tournament, but it isn’t needed less than one month into a new season. What’s there to show for a tournament that doesn’t stand out compared to the playoffs in April?

There’s also the recent All-Star game format fiasco. Silver believes that how the NHL does their All-Star game, so should the NBA. While it’s a preposition, popular analysts like Stephen A. Smith had a strong rebuke of the new format idea. The NBA has been criticized for constant elimination of defense, terrible officiating and a growing season schedule. There’s now a rule in place that any player up for an award must play 65 games to be considered. Silver’s not respected nor taken seriously enough by the players when it comes to play and events like the All-Star game.

While some of these changes are to grow revenue and make the game safer, it’s also difficult to watch and pay attention to for nine straight months. Silver’s predecessor David Stern got many things wrong in his 30 year tenure, but he also got a lot of things right. Stern knew how to grow the league, who to promote and market, how to get players and owners on the same page and how to make events fun. Adam Silver has failed to make the NBA fun once play resumed (minus increasing the number of games), made both the players and owners unhappy (for various reasons) and doesn’t know how to grow the league past revenue, sales and promotions.

It doesn’t help commissioner Adam Silver that with the longer schedule and added tournaments, the playoff race is a non-factor. Yes, all but a half dozen teams can clinch high seeds, but there’s no reason to watch a sport an extra week or two when audiences know who’s going to at least a play-in game for two or three more extra days.

While it’s important the consumer understands the league’s current business model, viewership has declined every week of this new season. I’ll discuss in the next NBA power rankings (part two) how gambling has tied in and how the league struggles to stay at or near the top while balancing revenue and growing the brand for future generations. Commissioners consistently balancing both is how they leave a positive mark once stepping down. They also need to deal with certain obstacles and detriments that harm the sport. When one is prioritized more than the other, business plateaus. There should be easier solutions implemented before the profits become losses.

Minnesota center Rudy Gobert was ejected out of a March 8th loss to Cleveland for making the money gesture at referee Scott Foster. While Gobert’s a controversial player on and off court, it’s another chapter in how the players don’t trust officials to make the right calls.

Here’s the first power rankings of the new season. Similar to the NHL rankings, this one will be objective in placement as the season is still young.

#30 Washington Wizards (last season’s final ranking: 30)

Congratulations to Washington on their recent accomplishment. The Wizards join last year’s Pistons as the second team in the last nine years to lose every game in November. Unlike Detroit, there’s little hope they play better before spring.

#29 Utah Jazz (last season’s final ranking: 22)

You won’t find a blunder like the one Utah committed in a home loss against the Lakers December first. Jazz coach Will Hardy called his last timeout right before Colin Sexton’s game-winning layup. Utah lost by one point and Hardy’s been compared to former Chicago Bears head coach Matt Eberflus.

#28 Toronto Raptors (last season’s final ranking: 24)

Toronto’s offense is better, but the defense has to improve. It’ll be a hard month to play better with the number of postseason favorites on their schedule.

#27 Philadelphia 76ers (last season’s final ranking: 17)

Philadelphia’s the true test of patience for anyone doing power rankings. While the NHL power rankings weren’t too difficult outside of Nashville, the 76ers push the envelope on how they play worse each game. From former league MVP center Joel Embiid’s extreme load management, players arguing in the locker room and now Paul George’s left leg injury, Philadelphia went from title contender at the start of the season to selling tickets for $1 in their Wednesday home game against Orlando.

#26 Charlotte Hornets (last season’s final ranking: 28)

Franchise star point guard LaMelo Ball’s fully healthy yet Charlotte has the worst field goal percentage 21 games into the season. The efficiency will get better but it could be slower than expected.

#25 Portland Trail Blazers (last season’s final ranking: 26)

Portland surprised viewers with their better start to the season despite injuries to center Deandre Ayton and forward Matisse Thybulle last month. Solid play from guards Anfernee Simmons and Shaedon Sharpe makes the Trail Blazers more competitive than last year.

#24 Chicago Bulls (last season’s final ranking: 19)

If there’s any national station talking about the Bulls, the conversation is on how Josh Giddey shouldn’t be a point guard. This wasn’t what Chicago had in mind when they traded for him in the offseason. Though a lot of analysts did say trading Alex Caruso for Giddey wasn’t a good idea. The Bulls are a mess despite the roster talent.

#23 San Antonio Spurs (last season’s final ranking: 27)

When coach Gregg Popovich had another stroke and star center Victor Wembanyama missed some games after a bruised right knee, veteran point guard Chris Paul stepped up. Paul’s been one of the Spurs’ better free agent signings the last five years. Chris Paul’s leadership got San Antonio wins against Sacramento and Oklahoma City, two teams expected to make the playoffs this year. The Spurs will be a tough team to keep out the play-in.

#22 Detroit Pistons (last season’s final ranking: 29)

The Pistons have more wins after one month than they had after December 2023. They finished November at 8-9 for the first time since the 2018-2019 season. It’s already a success for Detroit and coach JB Bickerstaff was a great hire for the team. They might be the best early season story.

#21 New Orleans Pelicans (last season’s final ranking: 11)

Unlike Philadelphia, New Orleans has legit reasons for a poor start. Injuries to stars Zion Williamson, Dejounte Murray, Brandon Ingram, C.J. McCollum and Jose Alvarado doomed their season after a month. It’s not fair when so many people were excited to see how New Orleans would hold their own in the west.

#20 Miami Heat (last season’s final ranking: 18)

We might be having a different conversation about Miami if they pulled out wins in November against Phoenix and Detroit. If we take those two games out of the Heat’s first month of the season, they’ve beaten playoff hopefuls Minnesota and Indiana while losing to Denver, Sacramento and division rival Orlando. Miami’s not a good team to start the season.

#19 Brooklyn Nets (last season’s final ranking: 23)

This will be one of the hardest teams to analyze throughout the season. Brooklyn barely beat New Orleans and Charlotte but almost beat Boston, New York and Cleveland. The Nets are last in rebounding but top five shooting three-pointers. At least they’re interesting to watch.

#18 Atlanta Hawks (last season’s final ranking: 20)

After last rankings had the hilarious mediocre Hawks stat, Atlanta’s won five straight to get back to over .500 at 12-11. One couldn’t find a more average sports franchise if they tried.

#17 Indiana Pacers (last season’s final ranking: 13)

Indiana still has a top ten offense but the defensive issues balance out the positives. The Pacers are a bottom three team in rebounding and that’s a factor in losses to Orlando (twice), Philadelphia and New Orleans. They have to show growth on defense or it’ll be a fast postseason exit.

#16 Memphis Grizzlies (last season’s final ranking: 25)

Almost every basketball fan knew last year was an anomaly for Memphis. Now that almost everyone’s back fully healthy, the Grizzlies are top three in rebounds and field goal percentage and second in points scored. Starting forward Jaren Jackson Jr. has improved the most for the veterans while rookie Scottie Pippen Jr. and undrafted center Jay Huff look like offseason steals.

#15 Milwaukee Bucks (last season’s final ranking: 9)

Milwaukee should feel good they won seven of their last nine but remember, this was a championship team that decided to tweak their roster two years after winning a championship. The Bucks remain stagnant since winning their second franchise title back in 2021. That’s a shame since many wanted to see the smaller franchise dominate the league this decade.

#14 Sacramento Kings (last season’s ranking: 14)

If Sacramento makes the playoffs as a top six team, forward De’Aaron Fox has to be an MVP candidate. He’s averaging 28 points, five rebounds, six assists and two steals a game. It would be criminal for him to miss accolades and awards he deserves.

#13 Houston Rockets (last season’s final ranking: 20)

Ime Udoka should be the favorite for coach of the year. Houston’s gone from worst team in the league to division leader in the southwest and second place in the western conference. It’s a surprise the Rockets are this good.

#12 Phoenix Suns (last season’s final ranking: 12)

Though star forward Kevin Durant will only miss a week with a sprained ankle, Phoenix is a different team without him. They’re 10-2 when Kevin Durant plays and a stunning 2-6 without him. No wonder Suns owner Mat Ishbia said Durant’s not leaving.

#11 Dallas Mavericks (last season’s final ranking: 6)

Although it’s on Facebook, the site Full Court put some very interesting stats on the current Dallas winning streak. Franchise star point guard Luka Doncic has been a liability for the Mavericks and the starting forwards and centers. Dallas is a .500 team when he’s started games compared to 5-1 without him. It’s eye-opening that forwards P.J. Washington and Naji Marshall score 20+ points a game and Dallas’ offense averages ten more points without Doncic in the starting lineup.

#10 Los Angeles Clippers (last season’s ranking: 5)

Los Angeles went on a three game losing streak, four game winning streak, three game losing streak and five game winning streak. No wonder Ty Lue’s more gray than usual.

#9 Los Angeles Lakers (last season’s final ranking: 15)

Media outlets will talk about the emergence of shooting guard Dalton Knecht, and for good reasons. Right now the Lakers are doing well because Anthony Davis averages 28 points and eleven rebounds a game. This is how Davis used to play in New Orleans before the trade to Los Angeles. It would be fun if he stayed at this level of production the whole season.

#8 Golden State Warriors (last season’s final ranking: 16)

No one expected the Warriors to be a top team in the western conference after trading Klay Thompson to Dallas. Center Trayce Jackson-Davis and forwards Jonathan Kuminga and Andrew Wiggins have done well to start the season but the two areas that count for all but three of Golden State’s wins are better rebounding and bench depth. The Warriors haven’t had a decent scoring bench in years and they’re top three in second chance scoring opportunities. Once Golden State finds ways to stop choking fourth quarter leads, they’ll be one of the best teams in the west.

#7 Minnesota Timberwolves (last season’s final ranking: 3)

Star shooting guard Anthony Edwards was right for blasting his team on playing, “soft” and “growing apart.” A big reason Minnesota struggled was their drop in rebounding. Center Rudy Gobert can still get a good number of second chance points, but Minnesota’s one of the worst rebounding teams in the NBA. There’s a valid discussion that the nosedive in offensive rebounds is a downside of trading Karl Anthony-Towns to New York last summer.

#6 New York Knicks (last season’s final ranking: 8)

What a dominant win over Orlando. New York’s already a top five team in points scored and third best in both regular and three point field goal percentage. Now the Knicks are playing like the team many wanted to see in October. Don’t be surprised if the New York is in the top five or top ten all year.

#5 Orlando Magic (last season’s final ranking: 7)

The Magic have done well since star forward Paolo Banchero went down to a torn, right oblique. Franz and Moritz Wagner have stepped up on offense and Jalen Suggs is more efficient. That’s something to build on once Banchero returns.

#4 Denver Nuggets (last season’s final ranking: 1)

Two things can be true: Russell Westbrook’s 200th triple-double is a feat worth celebrating and he’s not going to be what makes the Nuggets a title contender. Denver needs starting point guard Jamal Murray to play like it’s the 2023 postseason if the Nuggets want to make a deep playoff run.

#3 Oklahoma City Thunder (last season’s final ranking: 4)

Signing center Isaiah Hartenstein was one of the best free agency moves for any team. Chet Holmgren’s hip injury means he’s out at least another month. The veteran Hartenstein makes Oklahoma City rebound better. It’s made the Thunder stay in first place in both the northwest division and western conference.

#2 Boston Celtics (last season’s final ranking: 2)

Should it concern more viewers a good number of Celtics wins to playoff contending teams have been closer than they should be? It’s still early in the season but keep an eye on Boston after Christmas. The Celtics have the depth and talent to wrap up the eastern conference before 2025. It’s odd they aren’t separating themselves this early.

#1 Cleveland Cavaliers (last season’s final ranking: 10)

Head coach Kenny Atkinson became the only coach in NBA history to win his first 15 games to start a tenure with a franchise. Cleveland will also improve throughout the season, especially on second chance scoring opportunities. That should get more attention.

Scoring depth from players like guard Ty Jerome (2) are a good reason Cleveland has the league’s best record.