The title defense begins tonight in Boston.
THE LINEUP
Oct. 22, 2024 | What’s inside today’s edition?
The Defense Begins: Boston will celebrate its title before
beginning a new banner quest
L.A. Premiere: The Lakers host the Wolves as they play in
their sixth straight Opening Night
Raising 18: Before a new championship chase begins, get an
inside look at Boston’s title run
Dunk Score: Player tracking and NBA data science analyze
every dunk from every game
Power Rankings: How the teams stack up before the season tips
off tonight
BUT FIRST… ⏰
Opening Night is just hours away…
It’s been 127 days since the confetti fell to
the TD Garden floor as the Boston Celtics celebrated winning the
2024 NBA championship.
Tonight, the Celtics will raise banner 18, collect their
championship rings and begin their quest to repeat against the
Knicks to open the 2024-25 season (7:30 ET, TNT).
That’s followed by a Western Conference clash between the
Wolves and Lakers in L.A. (10 ET, TNT
).
1. ONE LAST CELEBRATION BEFORE THE PURSUIT OF 19
For years, 17 championship banners hung in the rafters of TD
Garden, but 18 hung in the Celtics’ practice facility.
The 18th one was blank, providing a daily reminder of the
standard by which the franchise measures success. A reminder of
what the practice sessions, workouts and film studies were all
about – being the team to fill in banner 18.
After years of disappointment – including four losses in the
East Finals and one in the 2022 Finals in the span of eight
seasons – the 2023-24 Celtics were able to finish the job.
Tonight, before they try to become the first team to
successfully defend the title since the Golden State Warriors
(2017, 2018), they will commemorate their 2023-24 title by
raising banner 18 to the rafters and collecting their
championship rings.
Once the ceremony is complete, it will be time to get back to
business, as the Celtics host the Knicks in the opening game of
the 2024-25 NBA season (7:30 ET, TNT).
Two summers ago, a roster shake up was needed to take the
Celtics to championship heights with the additions of Jrue
Holiday and Kristaps Porzingis ahead of the 2023-24 season
This summer was a different story, as the Celtics retained
their entire core
from the championship team, looking to run it back with visions
of banner 19 in their eyes
However, they will be without Porzingis to open the season as
he recovers from offseason surgery to repair a rare leg injury
Meanwhile, the Knicks are coming off back-to-back Playoff
exits in the East Semifinals and – similar to the Celtics two
summers ago – used this offseason to revamp its roster with two
significant additions.
Early in free agency, the Knicks struck a deal with the Nets
to send Mikal Bridges over the bridge from Brooklyn to Manhattan,
reuniting the former Villanova Wildcat with some of his college
teammates
Then just before training camp (in similar timing to when the
Celtics added Holiday), the Knicks acquired four-time All-Star
Karl-Anthony Towns from Minnesota
The moves were bold and the Knicks are banking on them paying
off
as they look to build on last year’s No. 2 seed finish in the
East (14 games behind Boston) and a deeper Playoff run. They
couldn’t ask for a better first test than the defending champs to
open the season.
2. WOLVES, LAKERS OPEN SEASON WITH HIGH HOPES
Last season, both Anthony Edwards and the Timberwolves made
enormous leaps – bounding over opponents both on the court (see
Section 4 ⬇️) and in the standings.
Edwards went from All-Star to All-NBA Second Team in 2023-24,
combining elite play with an electricity and flair that few can
match
Minnesota went from 42 to 56 wins – their 14-win improvement
the third-largest in the league – and reached the West Finals to
match the deepest Playoff run in franchise history
As the Wolves open the 2024-25 season tonight against the
Lakers (10 ET, TNT), they look to take their next leap
and challenge for the team’s first-ever NBA Finals berth. With
Karl-Anthony Towns traded to New York, all eyes will be on
Edwards to lead the way
For the first time in four years, the Los Angeles Lakers enter
a season with the second-most championships in NBA history – as
Boston’s 18th title broke the tie with L.A. after the Lakers had
evened the banner race at 17 apiece with their 2020 title.
Since then, the Lakers have had two first round exits (2021,
2024) and one Western Conference Finals appearance (2023), with
their last two postseasons beginning in the SoFi Play-In
Tournament
As he begins his 22nd NBA season – trying Vince Carter for the
most in NBA history – can LeBron James lead the Lakers on another
deep Playoff run
at the back end of his career?
In a career packed with historic achievements, LeBron and his
son Bronny (L.A.’s second-round pick) will become the first
father-son duo
to share the court in an NBA game this season. Will that moment
come during tonight’s opener?
3. RAISING 18: RELIVE BOSTON’S TITLE RUN AHEAD OF RING NIGHT
Every championship story is unique, told through
the lens of the players, coaches, organization and city they
represent.
For the 2023-24 Boston Celtics, the road to hoisting the Larry
O’Brien trophy was littered with past disappointments and a
determination to use those previous shortcomings as fuel to
championship glory.
In ‘Raising 18’ – a nine-part docuseries
chronicling Boston’s championship season – fans get a
behind-the-scenes look
at the ups and downs of the nine-month journey from training
camp to champagne.
Episode 1
: Championship or Bust – With the stakes of the new season
clear, go inside training camp with new addition Kristaps
Porzingis, who dropped 30 points in his Boston debut
Episode 2: Sacrifice and Reward – Look back at the rise of the
cornerstone duo of Jaylen Brown and Jayson Tatum and how a
players only meeting in training camp set the tone that everyone
must sacrifice for the betterment of the team
Episode 3: Clicking – The Celtics are hitting on all cylinders as
offseason additions Jrue Holiday and Porzingis fit in seamlessly,
including Brown introducing KP to Atlanta’s best wings on a road
trip
Episode 4: Great Expectations – A throwback to Paul Pierce giving rookie
Tatum a lesson in Celtics history and the pressure that comes
with such a legendary past. And how some tough losses in the
regular season added to that pressure
Episode 5: Mindset – In his second season at the helm, coach Joe
Mazzulla’s unique approach, intensity and connection with his
players helps the team keep its foot on the gas down the stretch
of the regular season
Episode 6: Skip No Steps – The Playoffs open with a familiar nemesis –
the Miami Heat. Adversity hits as a bad Game 2 loss and the loss
of Porzingis in Game 3 tests Boston’s mettle and requires more
from ‘Raising 18’ narrator Al Horford
Episode 7: Stay Ready – After Boston’s role players rise up to fill the
void left by KP against the Cavs, Jaylen Brown’s determination
and leadership are on full display in Boston’s sweep of Indiana
in the East Finals as Boston punches its ticket to the Finals
Episode 8: The Return – Facing a Dallas team with two of the NBA’s best
closers, Boston was briefly back at full strength with the
triumphant return of Porzingis in a Game 1 win. In Game 2, it was
Derrick White who showcased his All-Defensive Team status with a
clutch chasedown block to put Boston up 2-0
Episode 9: 18 Banners – A Game 3 win put Boston on the precipice of
history only to be followed by a blowout loss on the road. How
would the team handle adversity in the Finals? With Tatum and
Finals MVP Brown leading the way to the title – finally reaching
the goal they had set together years prior
4. INTRODUCING THE ‘DUNK SCORE’
A monster dunk can happen at any moment –
sending the crowd into a frenzy and becoming a viral sensation
racking up views, likes and shares across social media.
But those numbers don’t necessarily capture the greatness of
the slam.
What if there was a way to analyze every dunk in every NBA game
and find out which slam rises above the rest based on data rather
than just the eye test?
Introducing the ‘Dunk Score’
from the NBA Stats team.
The Anthony Edwards dunk above – which topped the NBA’s top
100 dunks
list from last season – also generated the highest dunk score of
the year at 124.4
Edwards posted three of the top six dunk scores from 2023-24
and gets his first chance to post a Dunk Score in 2024-25 tonight
when the Wolves visit the Lakers
Jalen Johnson dunk So, how does this work? How can every
in-game dunk be broken down to an unbiased, singular score in
real time?
It begins with player tracking data gathered from a computer
vision-based system built by Hawkeye inside every NBA arena. The
system computes a coordinate (x, y, z) for 29 body parts of every
player, as well as the game ball, 60 times per second.
The NBA Stats team combines that data with innovative data
science to analyze every dunk based on four subscores:
Jump is all about the athlete’s verticality & explosiveness
in the air
Power captures the raw force of the dunk
Style measures dunk flashiness, quantifying how much flair the
player adds to their dunk
Defensive Contest adds context by evaluating how much defensive
pressure the dunker faced
Add those subscores together to get the overall Dunk Score for
that specific slam. | Dive deeper
into the data science behind the Dunk Score
Keep in mind, the Dunk Score is impartial – it does not take
into consideration the status of the player performing the dunk,
whether it’s a preseason game or Game 7 of the Finals, how much
time is left or even the score of the game.
It just measures the dunk in its purest form based on the four
subscores.
Like advanced stats helped basketball fans gather a fuller
understanding of the game, the Dunk Score adds a scientific
data-based evaluation of every slam to bring a better
understanding to one of the most jaw-dropping plays in the game.
5. POWER RANKINGS ENTERING WEEK 1
On the eve of Opening Night, NBA.com’s John Schuhmann released
his initial Power Rankings
for the 2024-25 season.
The rankings will be updated every Monday throughout the season
and we’ll keep you updated on the biggest rises and falls in the
Starting 5.
Here’s a closer look at the top 10 ahead of the season’s
opening tip.
1. Celtics: The 2023-24 champs open the season with a target
on their back and the No. 1 spot in the rankings
2. Thunder: After becoming the youngest team to earn a No. 1
seed, OKC added a pair of veterans to help solidify its roster in
hopes of a championship run
3. Knicks: New York had a busy offseason in adding Mikal
Bridges and Karl-Anthony Towns to a squad that earned the East’s
No. 2 seed a year ago
4. Timberwolves: After trading one former No. 1 pick in Towns,
the Wolves will look at another in Anthony Edwards to continue
his ascent in season five
5. Nuggets: The 2022-23 champs have lost a few pieces from that
title team, but with three-time MVP Nikola Jokić running the
show, they remain contenders
6. Suns: The second season of the Kevin Durant-Devin
Booker-Bradley Beal trio begins with a new coach and a new point
guard
7. Mavericks: Fresh off a trip to the Finals, Luka Doncic,
Kyrie Irving and Co. added a sharpshooter with championship
experience in Klay Thompson
8. Sixers: A busy offseason saw Philly add nine-time All-Star
Paul George to its core of Joel Embiid and Tyrese Maxey, but a
preseason injury has PG’s Week 1 status unknown
9. Cavaliers: Cleveland resigned its core players in the
offseason with eyes on a deeper Playoff run after exits in the
first and second rounds, respectively, the past two years
10. Pacers: Indy ran its high-powered offense all the way to
the East Finals last spring. They were a surprise last season,
but now the league will see them coming
This top 10 could look very different not only week to week but
by the end of the season.
NBA.com’s Shaun Powell breaks down 10 clues that could make for
a truly unpredictable
2024-25 season.