NBA 2k20 Ratings Revealed: Who’s The Best In The Game?

NBA 2k20 Ratings Revealed: Who’s The Best In The Game?

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In what had become easily the most memorable and tumultuous NBA offseason in recent memory, or maybe ever, the anticipation and impatience for basketball to get back on television has seldom been higher. As per the tradition of every offseason, the hard-working folks at 2k Sports are cooking up their annual iteration of the game of basketball in virtual form.

NBA 2k20 is practically right around the corner and fans of the game, and NBA players alike, cannot wait to take to the sticks to play as their favorite team and players, create their own MyPlayers, control NBA franchises in GM Mode and much more.

Ronnie Singh, known as “Ronnie 2k”, the curator of the NBA 2k brand, recently took to Twitter to inform the 2k community of their widely anticipated rating show, showcasing the official ratings of the 20 best players in our 2020 iteration of virtual basketball on the Xbox One, PC, Nintendo Switch and Playstation 4. Ronnie and his game-developing partner in crime, Chris Manning, let their fans

It has become a yearly tradition of Ronnie’s this time of year to drop some exquisite in-game screenshots and debate-inciting numerical grades on the league’s most prominent players. And accordingly, shock, jubilation, and contempt are felt by each and all fanbases around the NBA as they catch wind of their favorite player either being snubbed from the 90 club, being severely underrated or having an inaccurately-high rating.

Nonetheless, check below to see where your favorite players lie on the best-in-the-game scale. With a new year approaching, some numbers may pop out more than others so do not (or do, they’re your favorite players anyway) be surprised how 2k rated the game’s best hoopers in their new game.

2k20’s 20 Best Ballers

Year after year, LeBron James has been unanimously dubbed the best player in the world, and according to NBA 2k, he is still considered to be the most lethal player in the video game.

News flash: he still is.

Coming into his 17th season, the astoundingly conditioned King of Basketball is the best player to use in the game. James will be a 97 overall, which is a one-point improvement from his 96 overall rating in 2k19. This rating follows his one-year hiatus from the top spot, since 2k19 standard cover athlete and 2018-19 MVP Giannis Antetokounmpo, heralded the spot a year ago.

Just below LeBron (but not by much) stands his new roommate of sorts in LA’s Staples Center in Kawhi Leonard. The two-way dynamo brought some extra company to California by acquiring Paul George, on the same exact night he committed to the Clippers over the Raptors and LeBron’s Lakers. Yet this year, he is more than ready and willing to challenge LeBron for the throne in LA. Leonard eclipsed his “system player” adage this year by winning a title over the behemothic Golden State Warriors in one of the most impressive individual postseason runs anyone has ever seen and has evolved into being a trusted, all-around threat that can transform a franchise into a contender in a matter of a season.

Leonard also earned a 97 overall rating, which means by year’s end, basketball fans of all sorts will hopefully be treated to not only the Battle of Los Angeles and a pantheonic battle for the ages but the first-ever neutral western conference finals in league history.

Right after those two is the current league’s Most Valuable Player Giannis Antetokounmpo with a 96 overall rating. The Bucks’ homegrown superstar put up historically gaudy numbers this year, nearly earning both MVP and Defensive Player of the Year honors, as he had the second-highest defensive rating in the 2018-19 season (only behind the Heat/Trailblazer’s Hassan Whiteside).

It is debatable conveying the point that Giannis felt the sting of the cover curse, as he has his best season as a professional basketball player. Antetokounmpo took to social media on Sunday to follow one measly request to Bucks fans next year: do not call him “MVP” just yet.

Here is the complete list of the 20 best-rated players in NBA 2k20.

1. LeBron James, 97 overall

2. Kawhi Leonard, 97

3. Giannis Antetokounmpo, 96

4. Kevin Durant, 96

5. James Harden, 96

6. Stephen Curry, 95

7. Anthony Davis, 94

8. Paul George, 93

9. Damian Lillard, 92

10. Joel Embiid, 91

11. Kyrie Irving, 91

12. Nikola Jokic, 90

13. Russell Westbrook, 90

14. Klay Thompson, 89

15. Karl-Anthony Towns, 89

16. Jimmy Butler, 88

17. Kemba Walker, 88

18. Donovan Mitchell, 88

19. Rudy Gobert, 88

20. Blake Griffin, 88

NBA 2k20’s Best Dynamic Duos

Ronnie 2k and Chris Manning also announced the averaged total overalls of the league’s five-best dynamic duos at the beginning of the rating broadcast, which was live on Twitter. A league that changes more than a fitting room at a clothing store, the NBA was welcomed to two new duos for fans to enjoy watching and playing as in 2k20 when the game gets released to the public in September. So many superstars teamed up this year to create a new sense of leverage in the league, so that the era of big threes and superteams takes a backseat to the re-emergence of impactful all-star duos, seemingly all throughout the league.

Kevin Durant and Kyrie teamed in Brooklyn, the Klutch Sports business conglomerates in LeBron and Anthony Davis plan to sell out the Staples Center this offseason, Russell Westbrook reunited with his former Thunder buddy James Harden in Houston, and those are just to name a few of the superstars teaming up to contend for a title in the most open field to do so in nearly a decade. Check out below who made the top-five list of the best “Dynamic Duos” in NBA 2k20.

NBA 2k20’s Highest Rated Rookies

This year is just like every other year when fans of struggling teams can only hope that a rookie is talented enough to flip the fortune and future of their NBA franchise in their first years as pros. In the draft this year, we are being treated to one of the deepest draft classes at just about every position, and the kids that are coming into the league plan to make the most tectonic of impacts as they take to an NBA court for the first time. In the long wait for 2k20’s release, Ronnie 2k and Chris Manning additionally dropped the ratings for the top 5 best rookies to be in the game.

NBA 2k20 is set to release on all consoles (Playstation 4, Xbox One, PC, Android, iOS and Nintendo Switch) on September 6, 2019.

Jul 16, 2019 No Comments
Russell Westbrook Traded To Houston Rockets – Full Trade Details

Russell Westbrook Traded To Houston Rockets – Full Trade Details

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James Harden’s most recent post-game presser came by way of a crushing game 6 loss to the Golden State Warriors in this year’s Western Conference semifinal, and the perennial all-star guard descended some ambiguous quotes to journalists in his exit speech.

“I know exactly what we need to do. We’ll figure it out this summer.”

On July 11, 2019, The Houston Rockets figured it out, and all they had to do was exile their 9-time all-star point guard to the Oklahoma City Thunder to get a familiar face. That is, to James Harden, at least.

Regardless of whatever media-fabricated fallacy written about Chris Paul and James Harden’s failing relationship, speculation was put to rest at around 8 p.m. when 11-year Thunder veteran Russell Westbrook was traded from the very franchise that heralded him to the Houston Rockets, ultimately reuniting him with his former Thunder cohort in Harden. Paul, on the other hand, was promptly discarded to the Thunder as a result of the trade.

Call it creating cap space by shedding a massive 3 year, $159 million contract for an aging-yet-productive 34-year-old, or call it a means of accentuating the dismay Harden had for the 9-time all-star by Rockets General Manager Daryl Morey committing to Harden long-term as the franchise cornerpiece, and finally separating the two that showed their “differences of opinion” throughout the season.

The Rockets, on Thursday evening, moved on from what felt like a period of hope for the Rockets and their pursuit of beating rival Golden State with a star-studded backcourt and look to a new duo of two former league MVPs to run Mike D’Antoni’s drive-kick favorable and pick and roll-heavy motion offense.

The Miami Heat had also been in contention for Westbrook’s services, but both the Heat and Thunder could not reach an agreement in the recent days due to Miami’s reluctance to include their younger players in a trade package. The Thunder wanted to do right by Westbrook and accepted his preferred destination of Houston after a tumultuous offseason that involved the trading of all-star and MVP runner up Paul George to the Clippers.

Westbrook stood around, time after time, trade after trade, and stayed loyal to the Thunder. The time has finally come for Westbrook to look for a new location to contend for a title right away. And the 30-year-old guard does not have any longer to stick around for another rebuild.

Westbrook, widely dubbed as the king of triple-doubles, will more than likely replace Paul as the primary ball-handler in the system, potentially relegating Harden back to his natural shooting guard spot. We have yet to see if the old OKC chemistry will still be there and if the two can coexist on the floor at the same time. What is known, however, is that myriad of toxicity that hung over the Rockets heads all year like a dark cloud will finally pass, now that Paul is out of the picture.

Oklahoma City did not walk away from this trade with just Chris Paul along, as there is still a bevy of first-round picks for 2020 and beyond at Thunder GM Sam Presti’s disposal, all of which materialized themselves throughout this free agency period.

As the Brodie takes his talents to Houston to pair up with his good friend in Harden, add this to the list of blockbuster deals in what has felt like the most shocking offseasons in NBA history. For once, it feels as if the league is without a domineering big three of sorts for the first time in quite a while.

The 2019-2020 season is gearing up to be one of the most parity-filled, exciting and unpredictable years in recent memory and with Westbrook heading down the border to H-Town, that parity could either increase, making the West that much more difficult to win, or decrease, if Harden and Westbrook’s styles of play are not dynamic enough to make each other better.

Jul 12, 2019 No Comments
For Those Who Have Placed All The Blame On Kyrie: Here’s Why You’re Not Entirely Correct

For Those Who Have Placed All The Blame On Kyrie: Here’s Why You’re Not Entirely Correct

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It seems the Kyrie-Celtics marriage has come to an abrupt and corrosive conclusion for both sides and we do not even need until Sunday night (that is, when the annual league-wide free agent moratorium kicks off) to determine whether or not Kyrie Irving has played his final game on the parquet.

Add in the pressure cooker of being on a roster awash with talent and title-contending expectations in the winnable Eastern conference with the persistent media always trying to grab that salient, drama-inducing quote to keep Irving’s name in hot water, and you have a toxic situation that not even the average 6-time all-star would be able to stomach.

Irving’s time as a Celtic was marred with the attention that you would expect a superstar to get, especially after his controversial implications of wanting to be a “focal point” elsewhere after his first breakup with LeBron and the Cavaliers. An esteemed facade of leadership in the model of what LeBron brought to the Cavs is what Kyrie challenged himself to replicate.

That is until it became time to face the difficult scenarios fit for a natural leader to navigate himself and his followers through. From losing streaks at the beginning of the year, a team-wide inability to create a collective sense of chemistry, and coaching insufficiencies too great to overcome to the blaring sirens of free agency discussions involving Boston’s core of Tatum and Brown, the encrypted puzzle of dealing with these issues by quieting them on-court and in the ears of the media got too difficult for Irving to solve.

Now, it seems like the dissatisfied 6-time all-star is facing some harsh flogging on his character from just about every media outlet, whether on TV or on the internet. Folks are citing Kyrie’s estranged individuality as a reason for some marquee free agent destinations to not take a chance on him, like the Brooklyn Nets, who proclaimed a little under a month ago that they would not consider giving Irving a max deal unless he brought Kevin Durant with him.

Yet, seldom do not bring up the proclivity he brings on a nightly basis, regardless of the C’s being in the win column or not. I mean, it is still Kyrie Irving we are talking about here. A 24-ppg scorer that is easily the most dangerous on-ball creator in the entire sport, making Irving’s case that much more polarizing.

It is rather remiss to ignore what Irving can bring and he is no stranger to a tireless work ethic, and courage to knock down what is still arguably the most significant shot in the history of the NBA Finals back in 2016. And with Irving’s accolades on the table for the Celtics to admire in lieu of a prospective future ahead, it as if Irving encountered the worst-case scenario in a new destination by trying to be that model of authority.

It should be realized that not all of Irving’s recent pitfalls were self-inflicted. Celtics fans have every right to feel dejected at the current product and be upset at Irving’s attitude and way of handling every situation placed in his hands. But that should not mean the other Celtics walk away from this unscathed.

As a matter of fact, if you did not see this very divorce as an impending reality midway through the year, you were not paying enough attention.

To put it shortly: this team did not play together. On paper, the Celtics were practically crowned Eastern Conference champions ahead of the 2018-19 season, and how could they not have? At the beginning of the year, the Milwaukee Bucks were stacked with an astronomically-gifted superstar in Giannis Antetokounmpo but were not as prominent with their depth and postseason experience. Rival Philadelphia suffered the same inefficiency with only Joel Embiid, Ben Simmons. Toronto had Kawhi, but only Kawhi if crunch time came around because Kyle Lowry was infamous for his postseason gips.

This was easily the best on-paper team in the East, projected to build on their dominant 2017-18 run to the conference finals. One year later with a returning (but hobbled) Hayward, the Celtics suffered from Brad Stevens incapability to put together his “positionless basketball plan”.

Al Horford, the team’s model of professionalism and decorum, not being vocal enough to challenge the emotional Irving when difficulties arose.

Brooding personalities from the likes of free-agents-to-be in Terry Rozier and Marcus Morris dominated team philosophies much maligned from traditional Celtic basketball, as spot-up and isolation looks in the half-court got the C’s away from that same exact style of play that got them to a game 7 against LeBron’s Cavs in the conference finals.

Consider that along with Jayson Tatum’s apprehensiveness to reach superstar potential in his second year prompted a second-round exit by the Bucks, a lot of unhappy fans and some satisfied prognosticators.

As things transpired from bad to worse for the Celtics, Brad Stevens said that he knew from the beginning it was going to be a challenging season for Boston.

“The bottom line is that we had seven perimeter guys who were all very good players, and all of them brought something different and unique to the table,” Stevens said. “If you ask any one of them, I’m sure they’ll tell you it was hard to find all that they wanted this season. I don’t lose any sleep over that. They were all extremely competitive, well-intentioned guys. The pieces just didn’t fit.”

A recent report from ESPN’s Jackie MacMullan explained another external issue that deviated the Celtics into playoff failure, and that had to do with Kyrie taking issue with the partying habits of his younger teammates. Per the report, Irving was “Irked” by a late-night trip to the strip down South Beach in Miami during a January road trip, and an ensuing back-to-back.

“On Jan. 9, the Celtics blitzed the Pacers in Boston, then flew out that night to Miami, arriving at the team hotel after 2 a.m. on Thursday,” MacMullan said. “Boston was set to play the Heat later that night, but, team sources said, that didn’t stop some of the young players from heading to South Beach, where the clubs stay open well past 5 a.m. It’s not uncommon for NBA players to go out when they’re on the road, but Irving was irked teammates decided to do it in the middle of back-to-back games.” The Celtics ended up getting plowed by the Heat in a 115-99 beatdown.

Also, in the report, MacMullan broke down what happened right after the game in the Celtics’ locker room.

“Reporters clamored to ask Irving about it after the game, but he had disappeared. After nearly 30 minutes, he was found shooting baskets on Miami’s practice court, hoping some of his teammates who had played so poorly might join him and none of them did,” MacMullan stated. “By the time Irving returned to answer media questions, most of his teammates were gone. Asked to explain why he felt compelled to engage in the postgame session, Irving said, “I just wanted to feel good going into the next game. We’re staying over in Miami, so I’d rather be in here than be out in Miami right now.”

One game later, the Celtics’ Florida road trip ended up in another loss, this time to the Orlando Magic by way of a missed Jayson Tatum game-winner, a shot that wasn’t supposed to be his. As Brad Stevens drew up the play in the huddle during the team’s final timeout, Irving objected to where he was supposed to get the ball. As the best player on the floor should be, Irving was a primary option on the play, but Hayward decided to hit the supposedly open Tatum in the corner instead.

After Tatum’s miss, Irving’s overzealous reaction that included jawing at Hayward while flailing his arms in disbelief, went viral on just about every social media site you could imagine. Irving publicly apologized and faulted the behavior on his misjudgment in the heat of the moment.

It seemed like a misdemeanor offense, but it festered into the diffidence being felt at this moment by the Celtics and their fans alike. Surely, the Celtics were reportedly “puzzled” on how Irving became so disillusioned with them in the span of just two years. Other reports came in that the 6-time all-star was “not interested” in signing 100 basketballs for charitable partners of the Celtics that everyone else on the team signed. Sounds like that was yet another indication of his dismissive attitude towards how Boston treated him in his tenure as a Celtic.

It has been just about a year since Kyrie made his preseason comments at a panel for Celtics season-ticket holders about planning to re-sign with the Celtics “if they’ll have him back next year”, but now the forecast for that dreamy insight is all but tethered from the realization that the Kyrie project was an outright failure.

And really, it boils down to a debate of two factors, and what factor was more detrimental for the Celtics: Was it Irving’s now-scarred perception, style of play different from an all-around point guard and individualized personality that drew headlines whenever he talks, or was it the rigidity of Stevens’ system, as it was not able to integrate a player that beneficially hijacked the offense to dazzle in isolation, and Stevens’ failure develop a well-in-his-prime Irving into an even better player that could propel the guys around him into superstardom?

It could also be that, just like a majority of bad breakups, the Celtics and their vision of what a franchise superstar should be just did not align with Kyrie’s.

Maybe, and just maybe, the Celtics and Kyrie’s differences proved that they were not the right fit for each other and there may not be a venerable reason to admonish Kyrie for that.

As Danny Ainge prepares to turn to the next chapter of Beantown basketball, signing the dually-talented Kemba Walker is the Celtics’ No. 1 priority, and a priority that could very well be handled before the end of Sunday night. After the Celtics drafted bench depth for the foreseeable future and do not sound to be quite finished with sources saying that the Celtics are looking for a big man to compliment Walker in free agency after Al Horford’s eventual departure, the adage of the classy hard-nosed, defensively sound and system-operant Celtics could be making a comeback soon enough.

Yet the Celtics’ future as an immediate contender, Jaylen Brown’s preferred tenure as a Celtic and Jayson Tatum’s ability to become a franchise cornerpiece are all questions that need to be answered. Moreover, no one knows how the Celtics will perform with their on-floor chemistry impacted without Irving commanding the offense on a nightly basis. For now, Celtics fans, and fans of Kyrie Irving can collectively see this short and exciting period in Celtics history as a stepping stone back into the greatness that the 17-time world champs once delivered.

“I want Kyrie to find happiness,” Stevens says. “If he does move on, I wish him nothing but good health and success. I saw a lot of great qualities in him. I really don’t think it’s anyone’s fault. If you blame anyone, it’s me. I’m the guy who couldn’t fit the pieces.”

Jun 28, 2019 No Comments
Report: Kristaps Porzingis To Be Offered 5-Year, $158 Million Mavs Offer

Report: Kristaps Porzingis To Be Offered 5-Year, $158 Million Mavs Offer

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As the NBA’s free agent bonanza sets itself up for next week, the first big monetary number has been released to the public and for the Dallas Mavericks, they can only hope it is enough to deter their newly-acquired 7’3 dynamo of a center in Kristaps Porzingis from seeking other destinations this offseason.

Per a report from Yahoo’s Shams Charania, the Mavs are likely to offer their restricted free agent (RFA) a five-year max contract worth over $158 Million. Charania reported that both Porzingis’s camp and the Mavericks brass will meet when free agency opens up this Sunday.

Porzingis was shipped from New York to the Mavericks via a trade with the Knicks back in early February. Porzingis, who was taking off the 2018-19 season to rehab a torn ACL suffered a season ago, grew disgruntled with the Knicks organization and requested a trade due to the team’s downward future as a losing franchise. The Knicks ended up fulfilling his request to be out of the Big Apple by trading him, Tim Hardaway Jr., Courtney Lee and Trey Burke to the Mavs while getting the prospective second-year guard Dennis Smith Jr. and tenured big man DeAndre Jordan.

Granted, if the Knicks denied Porzingis’s request, he would have been able to either accept a one-year qualifying offer for $4.5 million for 2019-20 with zero guaranteed money after the season or sign a five-year extension worth $158 million. Now, it is becoming apparent that the All-Star center will get those $158 Million — but in Dallas instead of New York.

Keep in mind: the Mavericks have little to no shortage of cap space to use up, and reports are quickly spreading that the franchise could make a run at unrestricted free agent Kemba Walker of the Charlotte Hornets. Porzingis’ cap hold is significantly less than the first year of a new deal would be, so the Mavericks can keep an additional $10 million of cap free if they hold off on inking a new deal until after they pursue other additions.

Looking at the roster for the Mavericks, it is hard to ignore how talented they can become. Recently announced as the 2019 Kia Rookie of the Year, Luka Doncic is ready and welcome to share the hardwood with another European franchise corner piece. Supposedly, if you were to ask the Mavs on how to build a championship roster around an international talent, Mark Cuban can give you a clear-cut answer on the schematics.

2011 was the first time in over five years that the Mavs visited a championship series, and if Porzingis looks to be a fixture in Texas for the rest of his career, the chances are very high for 2011 to not be the last.

Jun 25, 2019 No Comments
NBA Free Agency: Mike Conley Traded To Utah Jazz

NBA Free Agency: Mike Conley Traded To Utah Jazz

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Put the trade rumors to bed. The Mike Conley era has come to an end in Memphis, and it is looking like their former first-round selection by way of the 2007 NBA Draft will be replaced by a new first-round selection at the same position during Thursday evening’s NBA draft. The Grizzlies’ all-time leader in points will be heading West to help mold Quinn Snyder’s squad into a proverbial contender in the West.

Per a report from ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski, Conley was dealt to the Utah Jazz in exchange for some pieces of bench depth in Grayson Allen, Jae Crowder, Kyle Korver, as well as the 23rd overall pick in this year’s draft and an additional first-round pick in next year’s draft.

Conley recently tweeted his thanks to the city of Memphis, Tennessee as he ventures to another chapter in his career.

The Grizzlies will get their first-round selection if the pick falls between the 8-14 range next year. If it does not, the same protection will apply in 2021. The protections decrease from there to top-6 six in 2022, top-3 in 2023 and top-1 in 2024 before converting to two second-round picks in 2025.

Upon the draft taking place tomorrow evening, it is more than likely that Memphis, who has the 2nd overall pick in this year’s draft will place the keys to the franchise in the hands of the versatile, self-dubbed “Point God”, Ja Morant. An overly-talented and abundantly-scouted point guard out of Murray State, Morant put up some pretty impressive numbers and highlights during his final year playing in the Ohio Valley Conference and drew some similarities to Russell Westbrook and Damian Lillard for his playmaking skills.

Looking forward to the upcoming season, the Jazz backcourt just got a lot better by pairing the young, athletic shooting guard in Donovan Mitchell to a defensive maestro in Conley, who earned NBA All-Defensive Second Team honors in 2013. Therefore, it is becoming increasingly evident that the Jazz will also see the departure of free-agent-to-be Ricky Rubio, their franchise point guard, to another destination since it is unlikely they can afford to keep both guards on one roster.

Jazz Head Coach Quinn Snyder will gain an intelligent, fundamentally sound point guard to run his offense, meaning that Mitchell will more than likely have more than enough floor spacing and additional coaching from Conley to develop into a perennial All-Star someday.

Moreover, Conley will fit right into Snyder’s Pick and Roll-heavy motion offense, and can expeditiously improve the abilities of other bigs in Rudy Gobert and Derrick Favors as well as skyrocket the numbers of their knockdown shooter in Joe Ingles during drive-kick scenarios.

Though the Jazz locker room may have gained another vocal presence on the floor and in the locker room, he does come at a substantial price. Conley will earn $32.5 million in 2019 through 20 and then $34.5 million the year after.

Both Memphis and Utah will not be able to make an official trade before June 6th. That is when the Jazz will be able to absorb the Conley deal with cap room left available. Because of this, the Jazz will end up selecting with the 23rd pick tomorrow night.

Jun 19, 2019 No Comments