Actually, they're a lot closer to Dodge -- Dodge City, KS -- than they were up in Seattle. But you know what we're talking about: These guys can settle into their new home now and won't face another lame-duck season in Seattle, where emotions were turning sour and being directed at the basketball operation when there weren't owners around to boo. The love that will emanate from the folks at the Ford Center -- where they still stand, rah-rah style, until the home team scores its first points -- should be worth a few victories all by itself.
Russell Westbrook can play. Now.
Most veteran GMs will tell you that it doesn't matter where a player is picked if he does what he's projected to do. So the idea that Westbrook went too high at No. 4 in June really is wasted fretting if he gives this club what it needs at point guard. And based on his summer league play in Orlando (18 points, five assists, four rebounds in his debut; 15 points in the first half of his second game), that seems highly likely. No one figures to be nostalgic for the Luke Ridnour era. "I knew he was going to come in here and play well,'' prized second-year wing man Kevin Durant said. "He's a fun player to watch and he's even funner to play with." And who doesn't like funner?
What went wrong:
There still is no flag-planting, lightning-rod, go-to player.
Bringing Desmond Mason back, to the club and the city, is a nice feel-good move that added a helpful role player. Acquiring Joe Smith in the three-cornered deal with Milwaukee and Cleveland added another terrific personality and lunch-pail player. Mason and Smith also has those much-coveted expiring contracts. But they never have been fiery team leaders and they're hardly franchise players. The relocated Sonics remain a team of someday-will-bes and once-weres, with no star player in his prime.
They're very unbalanced right now. The 1 spot is very thin. Westbrook and Watson, maybe Mike "Benchwarmer" Wilks if he's still here. Watson can't run an offense and Westbrook isn't proven. Wilks doesn't really basketball.
Then their 4/5 spot should see a rotation of Wilcox/Smith and Petro/Collison. Collison is the best player in their frontcourt but PJ likes Petro to start.
I think inside is going to be a bigger problem than point guard. I just don't see a lot of scoring and size there. But with Durant, Westbrook, and Green those 3 guys have potential to be really good NBA players you can build a franchise around.