1. The Heat Land A King
Will the Miami Heat win the NBA title in 2010-11?
Henry Abbott, TrueHoop: There's no reason they couldn't. It's a one-out-of-thirty proposition. Which means you can be the best team in the NBA and still not make it out of random chance. It's like throwing a dart -- the best darts players in the world still miss quite often. So, if I had to bet on any single team I'd bet on the field.
But I assume they'll be able to get their hands on a center who can play reasonable defense and some shooters and say they'll be right there in the mix. They'll be there with the Lakers, Magic, Celtics and whoever emerges as the West's next big team with a real chance.
J.A. Adande, ESPN.com: No. Three is a great start, but it's not enough. Who will be their James Posey, their P.J. Brown, their Derek Fisher? Need some savvy vets and depth before I'm ready to proclaim them champions. Not better than the Magic yet, and the Celtics might be able to hold them off for a year.
Kevin Arnovitz, ESPN.com: Despite the fact that the restraints of the salary cap will force the Heat to assemble a menagerie of spare parts around their three superstars, they must be considered the favorites to win the 2010-11 title. Until further notice, NBA defenses are allowed only five players on the floor during live play. Miami will have three players who demand double teams when situated at their favorite spots on the floor. Even if the defense gives both minimum-contract players on the floor the full Rondo treatment, it can't possibly blunt a full assault from the troika. If that's not enough, Wade and James, at the respective wing spots, will compose the most stifling perimeter defensive tandem in the league.
Chad Ford, ESPN.com: I think they'll make it out of the East. Whether they can beat the Lakers remains to be seen. Clearly they have the best threesome we've seen in the league ... but until we know more about how the Heat can fill out the roster, it's premature. Good role players at the minimum are hard to come by. I expect Orlando and Boston to put some heat on them in the East. Possibly the Bulls, too, depending on how they fill out their roster. In the West, I think it remains the Lakers all the way.
John Hollinger, ESPN.com: Certainly they're contenders, but I think it's unlikely they'll actually win. The Heat will have to contend with two teams in particular -- Orlando and the Lakers -- that they seem unlikely to match up well against. Against Orlando, Miami has no size to contend with Dwight Howard, and in the past two postseasons the only teams that stood a chance against the Magic had seven-footers who could match up with the Magic's behemoth.
Against the Lakers, the Heat would have a shortage of quality depth in the frontcourt to match up with L.A.'s myriad weapons (Pau Gasol, Andrew Bynum and Lamar Odom), and of course Ron Artest is about as good a LeBron James defender as you could design if you were building from scratch.
Chris Sheridan, ESPN.com: No, I do not believe so. I think Lakers still have enough to knock them out in a seven-game series, particularly because of the size factor. Miami can't match up with Gasol/Bynum, especially if Bynum is back at 100 percent. Kobe can lock up Wade, Artest can get into LeBron's head more than the video of that burning Cavs. No. 23 jersey did.
Marc Stein, ESPN.com: No. Not unless you can assure me that multiple shooters and two serviceable big men are on the way in a hurry. But I give Pat Riley great odds of ultimately doing far better in his search for players to take low-dollar contracts than a lot of people expect, because he frankly deserves the benefit of the doubt after the coup he just pulled off.
Let's face it: No one in Miami is going to get a grace period after this saga, least of all LeBron. He just invited new levels of scrutiny for the rest of his career ... if that's even possible. But what was Riley supposed to do? Say no to a trio of Team USAers who are all under 30? You sign the three stars, then worry about the rest. If they haven't won it at all after two seasons, then start worrying.
Free Agency Dimes past: June 30 | July 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7
2. LeBron Breaks Hearts In Cleveland
3. Is Miami A Title Team? Thorpe's Analysis
I was just listening to the sports talk radio in New York, and they had Donnie Walsh on. They were saying how amazing it was that even now, nobody has any idea where LeBron James is going. Walsh said he had all his spies out there, checking on this or that, and nobody knew.
I find that shocking.
As I have e-mailed all kinds of people over the last few days, I could not believe more strongly that LeBron James is going to Miami. Chad Ford and I reported something pointing in that direction yesterday, and Chris Broussard made the point far clearer today. If it's a secret where he's going, it's hardly a very well-kept secret. (Broussard's story has more than 8,500 comments at the moment.)
In my mind, what's left to wonder about now is: How's that going to work? What does a LeBron James, Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh team look like? Are they going to eat all of the Heat's available cap space, or are they going to leave some crumbs to attract better-than-the-minimum teammates?
These are questions for David Thorpe. I asked him to engage his big basketball mind to help us picture what this might look like on the court. His thoughts:
• To read the entire blog entry, click here.
4. Daily Dime Live Wrap
ESPN.com writers and TrueHoop Network bloggers are chatting with fans, giving their opinions about free agency -- all in Daily Dime Live.
5. What's Left In Cleveland?
ESPN.com
Never in our country's history has one person meant as much to a major town as LeBron James does to Cleveland. It's almost become counterproductive. Would you want to live in a city that's totally dependent on one person, even if that person is you? And would a bunch of pleading people plus one sad-faced state of Ohio convince you to stay?
These are sensitive times in Cleveland, where the locals have accused me of hating their town just because I said New York is a better city (it is; but Cleveland gets the nod over Indianapolis) and LeBron might never be welcome within the city limits again. It's one thing for outsiders to bash Cleveland, but if one of their own abandons them ...
• To read the entire blog entry, click here.
6. Allen's Deal A Win-Win
ESPN Boston
ORLANDO, Fla. -- In the moments following the Boston Celtics' summer league triumph over Charlotte on Wednesday, Celtics president of basketball operations Danny Ainge and coach Doc Rivers huddled together in a hallway outside the Boston locker room at the RVD Sportsplex.
When the duo reappeared a few minutes later, Rivers joked, "Talk to Danny, he's got some news for you."
It seems he wasn't joking, after all.
Just a few hours later, Ainge and the Celtics pulled off their latest offseason coup, re-signing Ray Allen to an extremely team-friendly two-year, $20 million contract.
• To read the entire column, click here.
7. Complete 2010 Free-Agent List
8. Lakers Still The Team To Beat
ESPN Los Angeles
There's a new Big Three standing in the way of the Lakers and a three-peat championship.
LeBron James announced he was joining his buddies Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh in Miami on Thursday, hoping to validate his nickname of "The King" by winning a ring and unseating the Lakers from their throne.
Before it became official, Kobe Bryant addressed the new super squad with the Lakers firmly in its crosshairs on Wednesday from his camp in Santa Barbara, Calif.
"You put a group of guys like that together, it's obviously extremely formidable," Bryant said. "You look at the Celtics and what they were able to do with their Big Three; absolutely they're a threat."
• To read the entire column, click here.
9. Can Miami Pull Off Beasley Deal?
ESPN.com

The surest way to know that LeBron James-to-Miami is a done deal before LeBron's official announcement?
If the Heat trade away Michael Beasley to create even more salary-cap space before the show starts.
As of noon ET Thursday, Miami did not have a trade taker for Beasley, after numerous sources said that the Heat -- as they've been doing for weeks -- continued to shop 2008's No. 2 overall pick with vigor for much of Wednesday.
Yet sources say that a four-team trade scenario between the Heat, Raptors, Bobcats and Rockets hatched on the eve of LeBron's hourlong "Decision" special on ESPN would enable Toronto to bring back an asset or two in the wake of Chris Bosh's departure but also avoid taking back Beasley. Which is believed to be the only sort of sign-and-trade that the Raptors would consider.
• To read the entire blog entry, click here.
10. What's Next For Knicks, Lee?
ESPN.com
LeBron James and David Lee are the last of the top uncommitted free agents on our Top Free Agent list.
Once LeBron announces his intentions tonight at 9 p.m. on ESPN, Lee should know pretty quickly where he'll land.
League sources tell me that the Warriors are in the lead to land Lee in a sign-and-trade with the Knicks if New York doesn't win the LeBron lottery tonight.
• To read the entire blog entry, click here.


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