Orlando is still on the outside looking in 07.17.2007
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Lewis, who turns 28 on August 8th, is coming off the best campaign of his nine-year career and was awarded with a lucrative contract. He averaged 22.4 points, 6.6 rebounds and 2.4 assists in 60 games this past season for the SuperSonics, who originally selected Lewis out of Alief Elsik High School in the second round (32nd overall) of the 1998 NBA Draft.
Orlando, which finished 40-42 and was swept by the Detroit Pistons in the first round of the 2007 playoffs, acquired Lewis from the SuperSonics on July 11th in a sign-and-trade deal in exchange for a future conditional second round draft pick.
All-Star Dwight Howard is the cornerstone of the Magic franchise. The 6-11 Howard, who signed a contract extension with the club on July 12th, led Orlando in scoring (17.6 ppg) and rebounding (12.3 rpg) in 2006-07. He shot an outstanding 60.3 percent from the floor, and has developed into one of the top big men in the league.
Before bringing in Lewis, Howard and point guard Jameer Nelson were the main building blocks. Nelson is a pure point guard who continues to improve his game with more experience. With Lewis in the fold, the Magic are hopeful they have put together a dangerous threesome that can help them compete with the elite in the postseason.
While the 6-10 Lewis is an explosive offensive player, he is not going to get the Magic to the next level. There is no doubt that the former Sonic can score from anywhere on the court. However, he is labeled as a "soft" player and for good reason. He does not like to get physical down low and seems to make his living from the perimeter.
If the Magic were looking for a one-dimensional player, then they got what they were looking for. A one-time All-Star, Lewis, who averaged a career-best 7.0 rebounds per contest during the 2001-02 campaign, will not help Howard significantly on the glass, but may help open up the low post for his new teammate with his outside shooting.
Lewis was an unrestricted free agent and was one of the big names in the free agent market this offseason. Orlando committed a lot of money over several years to their new starting small forward, and is banking on him to be the player that will make the club a perennial playoff contender for the next several years.
Fact, the Magic improved themselves by adding Lewis, but he is not kind of player that they needed to push them ahead of Cleveland, Chicago, Detroit and even the aging Heat.
Unfortunately, general manager Otis Smith was in a tough spot. He had salary cap room and Lewis was his best option in this year’s crop of free agents. It was obvious that Chauncey Billups was going back to the Pistons, and Gerald Wallace is a notch below Lewis. What was Smith to do?
The Magic don’t have a lot to trade. Howard is untouchable, while Smith would like Nelson to be the point guard for the next several seasons. They allowed forward Darko Milicic to become an unrestricted free agent. Milicic ended up inking a deal with the Memphis Grizzlies.
Signing Lewis definitely makes the Magic a better team. However, it is not going to be the move that pushes them past the top teams in the East in a best-of-seven series. There is still more work for Smith to do.
By tying up a lot of money in Howard and Lewis, Smith will now have to be creative through trades and in free agency. Nelson, who averaged 13.0 points and a team-high 4.3 assists in 2006-07, is at the point in his career where he is going to want an extension worth a substantial amount of money.
This was the year that Smith needed to make a big splash in the offseason. He did the best he could by obtaining Lewis. The only problem is that this was a big money move that is going to tie up a lot of cap space for the next several years.
Howard, Lewis and Nelson make up a solid nucleus and solidifies Orlando’s presence as a playoff contender, but it just doesn’t put the Magic in the same class with the elite teams in the NBA.