DA's Morning Tip

DA's Top 15 Rankings: Houston Rockets, Boston Celtics soaring

(Last week’s record in parenthesis; last week’s ranking in brackets)

1) Houston Rockets (3-0) [2]: Their confidence at both ends through the roof, and they showed why in convincing, comfortable back-to-back road wins at San Antonio and Cleveland.

2) Boston Celtics (4-0) [5]: Rich get richer with reported Greg Monroe signing. G-Money is no stopper, but he won’t have to be in Boston; he’s there to put the ball in the bucket as early and often as possible after taking off the warmup jacket.

3) Toronto Raptors (3-1) [3]: Philly native Kyle Lowry, after scoring 11 points in 26 minutes early Sunday afternoon in Toronto as the Raptors beat Memphis, nonetheless made it to Minneapolis in time for kickoff of Super Bowl LII Sunday evening, coming out of pocket for private transport.

4) Golden State Warriors (1-2) [1]: Kerr’s right; these guys are bored out of their minds, and need the All-Star break bad.

5) San Antonio Spurs (1-2) [4]: Rodeo Trip callin’: six straight away from Texas from Feb. 7 through 26, including the odd “last game in Denver before the All-Star break/first game in Denver after the All-Star break” daily double.

6) Minnesota Timberwolves (2-2) [6]: Don’t think there’s a nascent Shabazz Muhammad (21.1 percent on 3-pointers; 41.8 percent on twos) market out there.

7) Washington Wizards (3-0) [12]: Tomas Satoransky, every bit of 6-foot-7 at the point in place of John Wall, is not throwing up on himself so far at either end of the floor in Wall’s absence.

8) Milwaukee Bucks (3-1) [10]: For now, not looking to make a deal to replace Malcolm Brogdon. Still looking for a big, though, before trade deadline.

9) Oklahoma City Thunder (0-4) [7]: While I’m sure the Thunder would love to get Avery Bradley from the Clippers to replace Andre Roberson, even as a rental, it’s hard to see how OKC could make that work. One, the Clippers want first-round picks back in every potential deal, and because OKC has already committed its 2018 and 2020 first-round picks — and because the 2020 first has protections through 2022 — the Thunder doesn’t have an available first to trade until 2024, due to the Stepien Rule. Two, the Clips don’t want to take on salary that could hinder their pursuit of impact free agents in 2019, so it’s unlikely to see them taking a chance that, say, Patrick Patterson would opt out of his 2019-20 season ($5.7 million). Doesn’t make a Bradley deal to OKC impossible. But it makes it very hard.

10) Cleveland Cavaliers (1-2) [8]: Kevin Love just called a meeting with his teammates to yell at them for a change.

11) Indiana Pacers (3-1) [14]: Thaddeus Young coming on: 59.3 percent (51-86) from the floor during Pacers’ recent 6-2 patch.

12) Miami Heat (1-3) [9]: I’ll be shocked if the Heat doesn’t make a deal before the deadline. I still think Tyreke Evans/future second for Justise Winslow makes all kinds of sense for both Miami and Memphis.

13) New Orleans Pelicans (1-2) [11]: In the convoluted world of Pelicans/Hornets/Bobcats history and statistics, Anthony Davis is now the Pelicans’ all-time leading scorer.

14) Portland Trail Blazers (2-2) [15]: Streak of 17 straight games scoring 100 or more points ended in last-second loss to Boston Sunday.

15) Philadelphia 76ers (1-3) [13]: No one in the City of Brotherly Love cares that the Sixers still need shooting this morning.

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Longtime NBA reporter, columnist and Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Famer David Aldridge is an analyst for TNT. You can e-mail him here, find his archive here andfollow him on Twitter.

The views on this page do not necessarily reflect the views of the NBA, its clubs or Turner Broadcasting.

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