
The Black Mamba vs. Superman
As the Orlando Magic dispatched the heavily favored Cleveland Cavaliers, the NBA Finals just got interesting as they face another opponent who will be considered the favorite. The Los Angeles Lakers are basketball royalty. The franchise has won 14 NBA Championships, and are now in the NBA Finals for a record 30th time in the 63 years the NBA existed. The Orlando Magic have only been in the NBA for 20 years, debuting in 1989. This is their second time in the NBA Finals, their last finals appearance came in 1995, where they were swept against the Houston Rockets.
The Lakers got to the finals by defeating the Utah Jazz in five games, struggled through a depleted Houston Rockets team in seven games, and fought off the Denver Nuggets in six games. The Magic on the other hand, defeated the Philadelphia 76ers in six games, outlasted the defending champion Boston Celtics (without Kevin Garnett) in seven games, and dispatched the best team in the NBA in six games.
If the Magic think they are going to fly under the radar, then they are only fooling themselves. They have proven they are a legit contender, using their 3 point barrage and strong inside play as momentum to carry them to the finals. The Lakers have more talent than anyone in the league and when they put it together and stay focused, they are tough to beat.
Orlando Magic Starting Five:
PG: Rafer Alston 12.7 PPG
SG: Courtney Lee 8.8 PPG
SF: Hedo Turkoglu 15.2 PPG
PF: Rashard Lewis 19.4 PPG
C: Dwight Howard 21.7 PPG
Bench:
Mickael Pietrus 10.5 PPG
JJ Redick 6.2 PPG
Anthony Johnson 4.3 PPG
Marcin Gortat 3.3 PPG
Tony Battie 2.2 PPG
The Magic are not afraid to go their bench for production. They have nine players who have played a minimum of 16 games in the playoffs. Their sparkplug is Pietrus who averages a shade below 26 minutes per game. He’s the French build of Michael Jordan (6-6 215 lbs), and he did a decent job of playing LeBron James during the East Finals.

Pietrus looks to have a repeat performance in the NBA Finals
He will most likely guard Kobe Bryant when called upon off the bench. The Magic give matchup problems from positions 3-5. Turkoglu and Lewis are big men who play like guards, and Howard is a man-child in the paint and when he gets his touches, he’s almost unstoppable. They are shooting a blistering 36.7% clip from the 3-point line and shot 40.8% in the Eastern Finals. They rebound, they defend well, despite at the fast pace they play on offense, and they don’t get frustrated easily (see the Boston series, as well as the Cleveland series). Note to the Lakers: You are not playing the Denver Nuggets.
Los Angeles Lakers Starting Five
PG: Derek Fisher 7.1 PPG
SG: Kobe Bryant 29.6 PPG
SF: Trevor Ariza 11.4 PPG
PF: Pau Gasol 18.2 PPG
C: Andrew Bynum 6.3 PPG
Bench:
Lamar Odom 12 PPG
Shannon Brown 5.7 PPG
Jordan Farmar 5.1 PPG
Luke Walton 3.8 PPG
Sasha Vujacic 3.8 PPG
Josh Powell 2.0 PPG
The Lakers are deep, talented, and borderline enigmatic. We never know which Laker team will show up. The one who got hammered by a depleted Rocket team in Game 5, or the one who closed out the Nuggets in Game 6. Kobe is only as good as his supporting cast. When players like Gasol, Odom, Bynum, and as of late, Ariza are doing well, they are a well-olied machine. When they are in a funk, missing shots, turning the ball over, the Lakers are doomed to get blown out. Kobe just has to be Kobe and the rest of the Lakers just need to play their roles in order to win. It will be curious to see what Phil Jackson does in this series to combat the quickness of Orlando. My guess is that he’ll insert Odom in the 4 spot, and move Pau to the 5 spot for defensive purposes.

- Pau has to be a force this year…and not be on the side of a milk carton like last year…
Last year, I was very critical against the Lakers after their performance against Boston…
Okay, I was really harsh on them.
Alright, alright fine, I said some pretty mean ish about them.
The LA Lakers were soft as tissue paper. Everyone, from the MVP (yes I said it again), to their last role player, played soft. You can’t cry after every missed call in the NBA Finals, you just can’t get punked out the way they did, you can’t blow a 24 point lead in the 3rd Quarter in Game 4 at home, you can’t blow a 19 point lead in Game 5 also at home, but barely win, and you can’t under ANY circumstances get blown out on the road by 39 points in a game-clinching Game 6. You just can’t have that happen.
Yeah, that was pretty brutal, but from the outlook, I hope the Lakers change their ways, for their fans’ sake.
Matchups:
This one is a push. Both of these guys must shoot well in order for them to play well. If one outplays the other, it could be a big key in winning and losing a game.
Do I really have to go in depth with this one? yawn*
Edge: L.A.
This is going to be interesting battle. Ariza is a long, athletic defender and Hedo is a crafty veteran who has a few inches on Ariza. When it comes down to it, I’ll take the vet over the young gun. Edge: Orlando.
Odom is probably the second best player on the Laker team…when he has his mind right and Lewis has become somewhat of an assassin withhis late game heroics. I would say push for the simple reason with Odom, but if he doesn’t play well, Lewis will own him.
Gasolis going to need some help guarding Howard one-on-one. No one has been able to really keep him in check because of his strength. I don’t see the Lakers doubling Howard down low, because if they do….someone is going to linger around the three point line and Orlando is shooting well from there last time I checked.
Edge: Orlando.
Coaching:
The Zen Master is going for ring number 10. This isn’t his first rodeo by any means. He has a way of manipulating how the officials call the game later on. Whether it’s the next game, or a pivotal one down the road. He’s calm, cool, collected, and when his teams aren’t playing well, he lets them handle the adversity on their own. This is Van Gundy’s first finals appearance as a head coach and he’s done a remarkable job getting this far. He’s never stopped coaching, always making adjustments, and has his team playing solid basketball throughout the playoffs. With a matchup like this, you have to go with the experience.
Edge: L.A.
After looking at these two teams, I’d say they are about even. There is some drama added to this story, as Jameer Nelson might come back to play in this series. Nelson was key in the regular season matchup, averaging over 25 points in the two games. I’m not so sure if they really need him for this one, because we don’t know how effective he would be coming off that shoulder injury he had. However, I’m going with the underdog in this one.
Magic in six.