Wednesday, December 27, 2023

Wrapping up 2023: A Low Key Terrible Year

 Goodbye 2023.  And honestly, good riddance.



It's been a low-key terrible year.  I've been through years that were worse, on a personal level and on a world-wide level (one obvious example:  2001).  But 2023 seemed to be bad on multiple levels without ever getting too deep in it's misery.  It was a low-level fever that never broke- and very little good to come from it.

Take the Ukraine-Russian war.  It continued throughout 2023, no closer to a resolution than it was at the start of the year.  The casualities are near half a million- and if there is any hope that it will be ending soon, I am not hearing about it.

Then add the growing fighting in the Middle East.  Hamas' attack on October 7th wasn't an invasion; it was a group of thugs trying to provoke a fight by abusing innocent people.  Neither Israel nor Palestine will have peace or safety as long as Hamas exists.  

It feels like we are in a slow-moving growing worldwide conflict, and that there is nothing that can be done to avoid it.  Just a growing sense of dread.

On the US Front, it feels similar (though not nearly as deadly).  Barring some shocking election results in the primary, we are headed towards a 2020 Presidential rematch that no one wants.  It's up to the voters to select someone other than Biden or Trump; according to the polls, that isn't likely to happen.  

Even the entertainment seems dreary.  The Dodgers have just spent over $1,145,000,000.00 on baseball players this offseason.  Yeah, they'll be a superteam.  Is that going to be enjoyable to watch, even for them?

If I dig down, I can find some good news; the strikes for the writers and actors was resolved.  Inflation hasn't been beaten, but we've managed to hit a balance to raise the interest rates enough to lower inflation without causing a recession.  But even that seems fleeting.

There's been worse years.  But 2023 just seems to be dreary.  

Here's hoping the next year is better.

Thursday, November 16, 2023

Goodbye, X

 I left 'X' (the former Twitter) today.  Deactivated my account permanently.  I'd been on the site since... 2009?  Something like that.

Goodbye


Mainly, I was following the Marie Kondo question- "Does this bring joy?"- and more and more, the answer was a resounding 'no'.  The original concept of Twitter- a place where anyone could post a short message- was great.  People could put up short messages, break news, come up with witty quips.  I followed a lot of people on the site; not only friends, but whoever was in a field that interested me; poker players, professional wrestlers, chefs (I picked up a ton of recipes).  

Was there politics?  Absolutely- I followed several people, not only people who I agreed with (Jonah Goldberg, Megan McArdle), but people I disagreed with (Matthew Yglesias) to see their opinion.  

But over time, the site got more and more toxic.  And yes, part of the blame belongs to Elon Musk- a man who has some brains and a ton of resources and seems to be using them to be a player in a culture war.  But he just greased the skids- this has been coming for a long time.

Social media- Twitter, Facebook, TikTok, etc- has been a powerful tool.  It's given everyone access to a megaphone that can be heard across the planet.  But it's a tool that we've abused, and one that I don't think we are ready to handle properly.  The rise of social media has been accompanied by a rise of depression, and we as a species are far more toxic to each other than we were 30 years ago.  

I would have guessed a tool that would let us see the insights of everyone on the planet would help us understand each other.  On this, I've been proven wrong so far.

Much like the Supercomputer in Wargames, I've realized that social media is a strange game, and the only winning move is not to play.  So I've withdrawn from the world's megaphone.  I don't expect to ever be back.


Sunday, November 5, 2023

Going Infinite: Thoughts about SBF, Crypto, and the Cult of Personality

 I have finished Going Infinite, Michael Lewis' book about Sam Bankman-Fried and the Rise and Fall of FTX.  A few thoughts:

Would you give this man 15 billion dollars?


1)  Bankman-Fried has been found guilty of seven counts of fraud, and I firmly believe the evidence is correct and that he is guilty.  What I don't know is if his intention was to actually steal the money or he was just so criminally reckless with the money that it's missing or taken by other people.  The book is full of stories about how little he paid attention to any sort of guardrails to protect the financial interests of either himself or the people around him.

2)  Lewis is a great writer. (he did a better job explaining the 2008 financial crisis to me than anyone else in his book The Big Short).  He also finds Bankman-Fried a fascinating character, and paints him in a better light than most people expect.  Lewis doesn't hide the facts, but when his opinion comes out, it is more favorable on Bankman-Fried than you would expect.

3)  Bankman-Fried comes across (in my own opinion) as an idiot savant.  He's brilliant, especially at lateral thinking.  But he's also incapable of empathy, and not only believes he is smart, but that there is no point listening to other people.  At one point in the book, when he talks about how outsiders want him to bring in a CFO (Chief Financial Officer), his quote from the book:

"There's a functional religion around the CFO," said Sam.  "I'll ask them, 'Why do I need one?'  Some people cannot articulate a single thing the CFO is supposed to do.  They'll say 'keep track of the money' or 'make projections.'  I'm like, What the fuck do you think I do all day?  You think I don't know how much money we have?"

I think we see how that turned out.

4)  Here's my big question:  Why the hell did so many people give this guy so much money?  He had investors giving him 15 billion dollars.  That's $15,000,000,000.00  

I get that he's smart.  Big deal- I know lots of smart people.  I wouldn't give them my life savings.  

This isn't a Theranos situation, where the company outright lied about what they were capable of doing.  I can understand investors falling for that.  But even after reading the book, I don't understand either what his business model was supposed to be, nor why would people trust that this reckless sociopath would be the place to invest.


I admit that I'm biased- I've gone from being a skeptic of Cryptocurrency to now believing it is a complete scam.  So when a company based around Cryptocurrency is found out to be guilty of fraud, it just reinforces my beliefs.  But obviously a lot of people trusted his company- and specifically, trusted him.  Investors have decided to investor in the founder, even though they've been burned so many times before.  You'd think that people who were responsible for other people's money would expect more safeguards than invest because they think the founder is the next Steve Jobs.


Sam Bankman-Fried is an odd character; I enjoyed the book Michael Lewis wrote about him.  But I'm glad I never invested a dime in him- and I don't understand why others did.


 

Wednesday, October 11, 2023

NBA Predictions 2023-2024

 Eastern Conference:

1.       Boston
2.       Milwaukee
3.       Cleveland
4.       New York
5.       Philadelphia
6.       Miami 

7.       Brooklyn
8.       Orlando
9.       Atlanta
10.     Chicago


11.     Toronto
12.     Indiana
13.     Detroit
14.     Washington
15.     Charlotte 


Playoffs:
·         (play-ins):   Oralndo over Brooklyn; Atlanta over Chicago; Brooklyn over Atlanta
·         Boston over Brooklyn, Milwaukee over Orlando, Cleveland over Miami, New York over Philadelphia
·         Boston over New York, Cleveland over Milwaukee
·         Boston over Cleveland


Western Conference:


1.       Denver
2.       Phoenix
3.       LA Lakers
4.       Oklahoma City
5.       Golden State
6.       Memphis

7.       Sacramento
8.       New Orleans
9.       Minnesota
10.     Dallas

11.     LA Clippers
12.     Utah
13.     Houston
14.     Portland
15.     San Antonio








Playoffs:
·         (play-ins):   Sacramento over New Orleans, Minnesota over Dallas, Minnesota over New Orleans
·         Denver over Minnesota; Phoenix over Sacramento; Memphis over LA Lakers; Oklahoma City over Golden State
·         Oklahoma City over Denver; Phoenix over Memphis
·         Phoenix over Oklahoma City




More notes:
·     The East is weird; the top two teams shook up their roster and improved, on paper.  The only teams I really think are tanking (Charlotte and Washington) are in the East.  And Philadelphia is the team most likely to completely fall apart.  I think the teams that are the most stable (Cleveland and New York) might thrive, at least in the regular season

·     My fear for the Cavaliers is that they might be the next Utah- a great regular season team that doesn't have a playoff gear.  For this year, I have them winning two rounds (including shocking Milwaukee), but not able to voercome Boston
         

·     The West will be a dogfight.  There are eleven teams that can make a good argument.  Someone will finish in the lottery

·     There are four teams (Lakers, Clippers, Phoenix, Golden State) that are old, injury-prone, and top-heavy.  Someone is due for an awful year.  I'm picking the Clippers to fall apart, but I could see any one of these teams having a disaster of a season.


·         MVP?  The top contenders (Embiid, Jokic, Giannis) have all won the award.  I don't like Dallas enough to think Luka will win.  I'm picking Tatum

·         ROY?  Even finishing last in the West, Wembayana will impress enough to win the ROY

·         Finals?  There will be a shakeup in the playoffs, but I do think Boston is built to thrive in the postseason.  The West is a crapshoot; I'm picking Phoenix but won't bet heavily on it (they are two injuries away from the lottery; they are also a healthy year away from winning it all)

       Going with the Celtics to win the title.  After all, Boston's been without a championship long enough.

Going for Title #18


Tuesday, October 3, 2023

MLB Playoff Predictions 2023:

National League:

Wild Card Round:
- Phillies over Marlins, 2-0
- Brewers over Diamondbacks 2-1


Division Series:
- Braves over Phillies 3-1
- Dodgers over Brewers 3-1


Championship Series:
- Braves over Dodgers 4-2


American League:

Wild Card Round:
- Rangers over Rays, 2-1
- Blue Jays over Twins 2-1


Division Series:
- Orioles over Rangers 3-1
- Blue Jays over Astros 3-2


Championship Series:
- Orioles over Blue Jays 4-1


World Series:

- Atlanta Braves over Baltimore Orioles, 4-2


Rooting rankings:

  1. Texas Rangers
  2. Tampa Bay Rays
  3. Toronto Blue Jays
  4. Baltimore Orioles
  5. Atlanta Braves
  6. Minnesota Twins
  7. Milwaukee Brewers
  8. Philadelphia Phillies
  9. Arizona Diamondbacks
  10. ...
  11. ...
  12. Los Angeles Dodgers
  13. Houston Astros
  14. ...
  15. ...
  16. ...
  17. ...
  18. Florida Marlins (STILL BITTER ABOUT 1997!)


Your 2023 MLB Champions


Thursday, September 14, 2023

Thoughts with Whiskey- 2023-09-14

Tonight's Drink of Choice:  Blade and Bow Bourbon.


* Just returned from a vacation to the Northwest (Portland, Seattle, Vancouver).  It's a gorgeous part of the country- mountains and ocean, not too hot nor too cold.  The scenery is outstanding.  It's expensive, and the traffic is a nightmare- but I completely understand why people love that part of the country.  I love living in Ohio- but I think that part of the country would be my second choice.

* Seattle and Vancouver were fun.  Portland... not so much.  The city has fallen badly since the last time I went there (over 10 years ago).  It's an example of The Broken Window Theory- visible signs of crime and disorder lead to worse conditions.  All three cities had grafitti- only Portland looked (and felt) dirty.  All three cities had homeless people- Portland was the only one of the three that felt unsafe.  

*  But Oregon itself?  Fantastic!

Oregon is beautiful



* The GOP is opening an inquiry to look at Impeaching President Biden:  Of course they are. 

Here's the thing- Biden did do something wrong.  The evidence is clear that Hunter Biden allowed himself to be paid millions of dollars by Burisma, because they believed that having Hunter meant access to (then Vice-President) Joe Biden.  It was an obvious conflict of interest, and Joe Biden should have been much more forceful in vowing that there would be no undue influence.  

Was it wrong?  Absolutely.  Is it impeachable?  Anything is impeachable if you get enough votes.  But I don't think most voters would say Biden should be removed from office over it.

Here's the dilemma- Constitutionally, Impeaching is the only way Congress has to condemn bad behavior from the President.  When your only tool is a hammer, everything looks like a nail.  When your only tool is Impeachment- everything looks impeachable.  We're going to see a lot more Impeachment hearings in the future unless this gets changed- no matter who the President is.

So we'll go through this hearing, taking up our time, when what Congress needs is some partial measure- a declaration of condemning the President's behavior- that could be argued, voted on, and moved on.  

* Football season has started, and for the first time in almost a decade, I'm in a fantasy football league.  I sat down the wrong QB, but somehow managed to win the game.  Don't ask me how.  

* I do feel bad for fans of the New York Jets.  They went all in on winning this year, and now their season is over when Aaron Rodgers tore his ACL.  I root for Buffalo (and how the hell did they lose that game?), and I felt bad for the Jets.



Wednesday, August 30, 2023

NFL Predictions 2023-2024

My main theories going into these predictions:

  1. Good franchises find ways to win games they should not
  2. Bad franchises find ways to lose games they should not
  3. Once a franchise is good or bad, expect them to stay that way until proven otherwise


My guess as the Super Bowl LVIII Champions

NFC


East:

Philadelphia 12-5
Dallas 11-6 (Wild Card)
NY Giants 9-8 (Wild Card)
Washington 7-10

Notes:  by far the best divison in the NFC


North:
Detroit 10-7
Minnesota 9-8
Green Bay 7-10
Chicago 5-12

South:
Atlanta 10-7 
Carolina 8-9
New Orleans 7-10
Tampa Bay 5-12

West:
San Francisco 13-4 
Seattle 12-5 (Wild Card)
Los Angeles Rams 5-12
Arizona 2-15 


Playoffs:
Philadelphia over NY Giants
Seattle over Atlanta
Dallas over Detroit

San Francisco over Dallas
Philadelphia over Seattle

Philadelphia over San Francisco



AFC

East:
Buffalo 11-6
Miami 10-7
New England 9-8 
NY Jets 7-10

Note:  ANother tough division- really, any team could finish above .500

North:
Baltimore 11-6
Pittsburgh 11-6 (Wild Card)
Cincinnati 10-7 (Wild Card)
Cleveland 6-11

Note:  Toughest division in the AFC.  A three-way dogfight for the division crown.

South:
Jacksonville 11-6
Tennessee 8-9
Indianapolis 8-9
Houston 4-13

West:
Kansas City 11-6
Los Angeles Chargers 10-7  (Wild Card)
Las Vegas 7-10
Denver 5-12




Playoffs:
Jacksonville over Cincinnati
Buffalo over Pittsburgh
Los Angeles Chargers over Baltimore

Kansas City over Los Angeles Chargers
Buffalo over Jacksonville

Buffalo over Kansas City

Note:  Honestly, any team here could be in the NFC Championship game


Super Bowl: Buffalo 36, Philadelphia 31





Sunday, August 27, 2023

2024 election kickoff

A few random thoughts as the GOP had their first primary debate in Milwaukee, kicking off the 2024 Presidential season:


Let the games begin...


1)  The skillset to be elected to a national office and the skillset to actually govern well once elected barely overlap, and seem to be growing further apart over time.  Being entertaining, clever with improv quips, and being able to raise money doesn't really help that much once you've actually won the office.  

2)  The GOP candidates keep acting like there will be an event- an indictment, a health issue, something- that removes former President Trump from the field.  That way, they can appeal to his voters without actually attacking him.

Maybe it's a smart strategy- but I doubt it.  People have been looking for something to cause voters to drop Trump for seven years.  

My question to all of the other candidates- why should the people who voted for Trump in the past vote for you over Trump instead?  What is your case to them?  

Because right not, ignoring Trump- or worse, sucking up to him- is a very bad look for all of you.

3)  I feel bad for Mike Pence.  Remember, the January 6th mob wasn't chanting to hang Joe Biden; they were chanting 'Hang Mike Pence'.  He did the right thing on January 6th and avoided plunging the country into a Constitution Crisis.  As he reward, a mob tried to kill him, his own president backed the mob, and he's despised by both parties.  

He's not my choice for President- I don't agree with him on much.  But I honestly believe he deserves a medal and heroic commendation.

4)  I remain a fan of Nikki Haley.  I don't agree with her on everything, but I think she is more capable of running the country than any of the alternatives.  I think she could win the general election.  But I don't know if the GOP primary voters are interested- she's currently 3rd in polling, but 30 points behind Trump.  

5)  As for the Democrats?  I think Biden's done a very good job- he's reduced unemployment without causing a recession, he's supported the Ukraine without getting us involved in the war.  But he'll be 81 in November, I don't know if he can handle four more years, and I don't have any reason to think that VP Harris is capable of being a good President.  I'll vote for Biden over Trump.  Any other GOP candidate, and my vote is gettable.  

Tuesday, July 18, 2023

Spitballing the future

 As I type this, the Screen Actors Guild (SAG) and the Writers Guild of America (WGA) are on strike.  This looks like it might be a long strike.  There are issues about compensation and residuals from streaming services- but those will likely be resolved when both the strikes and the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers (AMPTP) find a number that is acceptable by all parties.

The more significant issue is about the us of Artifical Intelligence (AI) to replace both the actors  and the writers, without compensation.  From the striker's point of view, AI can potentially be used to replace them, costing their careers.  

We've already seem films where special effects have recreated dead actors to have parts in the film- and dead actors do not get paid.  If studios could replace the actors and writers with AI, they would.  

Is this the future of Hollywood?



Is the technology at a point where the fear is realistic?  Maybe not- but the studios certainly act like it's possible.  As a general rule, if the technology exists, it will be used.

Ever since the 19th Century, there has been a fear that technology would replace workers.  In general, with every technology development, some jobs are lost- but more jobs are created.  The computer cost thousand of typists their jobs- and created thousands more for programmers.  

Is AI going to be different?  I don't know.  Technology has made life better for billions of people- and in theory, there will be a point where technology does so much of our work that fewer people need to actually work (or the same number of people work fewer hours).  If- when- we reach that point, we need to rethink the entire world's economy.

Capitalism is the best economic system available because it does the best job encouraging growth.  But if we have reached the point when the technology can provide everyone with their needs, then Capitalism is no longer needed.

I recenlty heard a great phrase- "Rodenberry Socialist".  Based on the world of Star Trek, technology has met the needs for everyone.  We are not at that world yet, and will likely not be close in a hundred years.  But with AI, and three-dimensional printing... we can see the path where something like that is possible.

But that is in the future.  The future may be wonderful, but the current road is bumpy- especially for the strikers.  

Tuesday, June 27, 2023

No snark

I think I've lost the capacity to appreciate snark.

Not 'lost my sense of humor'.  I still laugh.  Give me the weirdness of Steven Wright, the musical genius of Weird Al Yankovich, the Improv of a 'Whose Line', the jokes of a John Pinette, and I'm laughing as much as I always have.

But snark- defined as 'an attitude or expression of mocking irreverence and sarcasm'- I don't find that stuff amusing anymore.  

I used to.  My basement has a collection of comedy CDs- Bill Hicks, Denis Leary.  I can quote Sam Kinison as much as anyone.  And yet...

The Titan Submersible story...  five people take a submersible down to explore the wreckage of the Titanic.  The vehicle suffered a catastrophic implosion, killing all five.  If they were lucky, their deaths were instantaneous and painless.  It's a tragedy- five people lsot their lives, including a teenager.  

Supposedly, the vehicle was made of materials that weren't qualified to go that deep into the Ocean.  Assuming that's true, there should be anger at the people who were so reckless to attempt something so risky.

There should be anger.  Instead, there's snark.  Mocking laughter at the horrific deaths of five people.  Jokes about the controller, about a dead billionaire.

I've even see people try to justify their jokes- claiming that the world has gone so haywire that they have the right to make fun of a total stranger's death, that because of tragedy A, B and C went unnoticed, that we should mock this tragedy.

I don't get it.  Maybe if I was younger, I would.  It just comes across like people are looking for an excuse to be cruel.  Whatever the problems of the world today, a lack of cruelty isn't one of them.

Robert Frost said, “If we couldn't laugh we would all go insane.”  Maybe.  But we ought to do a better job deciding what is worth laughing about.


Wednesday, June 7, 2023

Why?


"It is not enough to succeed. Others must fail."

Supposedly, this quote is attributed to Gore Vidal.  or Genghis Khan.  Or Larry Ellison.  But whoever created it... man, it's an ugly sentiment.

Is this something we should take life advice from?




Life's not a zero-sum game.  Never has been.  I'd much rather be middle class now that the richest person in 1916.  Life has gotten better- which means that, for one of us to be successful, the other one doesn't have to lose.  Everyone can be better.  Which is the opposite of the sentence above.

That mentality- the idea that someone has to fail for you to succeed- should be dying.  Instead, it's not only thriving, it's growing.

Look at social media- there are far more stories reported and linked that talk about someone's failure- or the hope for someone's failure.  

A thought experiment.  Keep track of the stories you read online this week.  What is the ratio of positive stories- stories about people or things succeeding- compared to negative stories, tearing down people or ideas?  

I'm as guilty as anyone.  But I'm noticing it more- and I don't like what it says about me.  So I'm trying to stay positive in what feels like a negative era.  

To an extreme?  Maybe.  I've been accused of being nothing but 'rainbows and unicorns' before.  

But I want to succeed.

Hell, I want everyone to succeed.

What's wrong with that?

Tuesday, May 9, 2023

NBA Lottery: Booking Edition

 The NBA Lottery is on May 16th.  This is a big lottery- not only is their a franchise player in Victor Wembanyama , but the top of the draft has some players that people are raving about:  Scoot HendersonBrandon Miller, the Thompson Twins.  I don't think the lottery is rigged.... but IF it was, here's how I'd book things.

Victor Wembanyama... a franchise player for some team.


Note:  There's one NBA franchise that I am fan of (The Cleveland Cavaliers) and a couple I despise (Miami Heat).  Outside of that, my rule is to support teams that haven't won the title in a long time, unless I have a reason to support or not support this team



My Crazy Dream Booking: Winners of the lottery- Portland, Indiana, Utah, go 1-3 in some order; Oklahoma City goes 4th

Portland, Indiana, and Utah are all teams that have not won the NBA title since I started following basketball.  None of the teams have tried to tank, and they have a stable franchise that should allow a Wembanyama to flourish.

OKC is in the same boat, but OKC is a newer franchise who moved from Seattle, so I have less sympathy for them.
  
What Should Happen: Winners of the lottery:  San Antonio, Detroit, Orlando, Portland

The bottom five franchises all have a 10% chance or more to win the lottery.  San Antonio has the worst talent, but they are a model of franchise stability, not to mention the greatest coach of all time (IMHO)

What Will Happen: Winners of the lottery:  Charlotte, Houston, Detroit, Chicago

Charlotte is up for sale.  If I was the NBA and the lottery was rigged, I'd make sure Charlotte got the franchise player to raise the selling price (and the money the other owners would get from the sale).

Houston is a major market that is in the middle of a rebuild.  Detroit has young talent that one more player could elevate.  Chicago is a major market with a good team- and owes Orlando their top pick if it's not 1-4.  

What I’m Terrified Will Happen: 
Dallas, New Orleans, Charlotte, Washington

Dallas and New Orleans have both drafted franchise players (Luka Doncic and Zion Williamson), and can't make the playoffs.  Seems overkill to give either team Wembayana.  Charlotte is a bad franchise.  Washington is boring and on a treadmill.

If I Was Booking This And I Hated You: The Lakers get Victor Wembanyama

This isn't technically possible.  But the Lakers have over a 50 year history of getting players they have no business getting.  

Sunday, May 7, 2023

Thoughts with Whiskey- 2023/05/07

Haven't posted in a while, and drinking a Buffalo Trace Bourbon to end the week and ponder some random stray thoughts...


* I don't even care enough about the Royal Family to make fun of them.  If you have an opinion about them, one way or another, great.  

* Overdue to get back on eating healthier...  with the weather getting warmer, going to try making fruit smoothies for breakfast.  Adding some spinach for health and peanut butter for protein and fat.  

* Hated seeing the Cavs lose badly in the first round.  I know they are a young team, and I hope they learn from this and come back next year.  

* Never would have guessed that James Harden would thrive in the playoffs.  If the 76ers get to the Finals, it elevates his place in NBA history.

* The national debt is over 31.5 trillion dollars.  And yet no one in Washington DC is serious about addressing this.  Which means one of two things- either they believe the debt isn't a real problem, or they think it's a problem that the cure (higher taxes and spending cuts) is so much worse that they can't apply it.  I think it's a serious problem that needs to be addressed immediately, and I hope I am wrong.  

* Finished season 3 of The Mandalorian and Season 2 of Single Drunk Female.  Looking for a new show to binge.  Any recommendations?



Sunday, April 9, 2023

NBA 2022-2023 Playoff Predictions

 After a wild regular season, the playoffs are finally set on the final day of the season.  Let's make some semi-educated guesses!


Eastern Conference:

Play-ins:

  • Maimi Heat defeat Atlanta Hawks
  • Chicago Bulls defeat Toronto Raptors
  • Chicago Bulls defeat Atlanta Hawks
First Round:

  • Milwaukee Bucks defeat Chicago Bulls, 4 games to 0
  • Boston Celtics defeat the Miami Heat, 4 games to 1
  • Philadelphia 76ers defeat the Brooklyn Nets, 4 games to 3
  • Cleveland Cavaliers defeat the New York Knicks, 4 games to 3
Second Round:

  • Milwaukee Bucks defeat the Cleveland Cavaliers, 4 games to 2
  • Boston Celtics defeat the Philadelphia 76ers, 4 games to 3

Conference Finals:

  • Boston Celtics defeat the Milwaukee Bucks, 4 games to 2


Western Conference:

Play-ins:

  • Los Angeles Lakers defeat Minnesota Timberwolves
  • New Orleans Pelicans defeat Oklahoma City Thunder
  • New Orleans Pelicans defeat Minnesota Timberwolves


First Round:

  • Denver Nuggets defeat New Orleans Pelicans, 4 games to 1
  • Memphis Grizzlies defeat the Los Angeles Lakers, 4 games to 1
  • Sacramento Kings defeat the Golden State Warriors, 4 games to 2
  • Phoenix Suns defeat the Los Angeles Clippers, 4 games to 3
Second Round:

  • Denver Nuggets defeat the Phoenix Suns, 4 games to 1
  • Sacramento Kings defeat the Memphis Grizzlies, 4 games to 3

Conference Finals:

  • Denver Nuggets defeat the Sacramento Kings, 4 games to 1


NBA FINALS:

Denver Nuggets defeat the Boston Celtics, 4 games to 2