We're at the halfway point! Hornets doing better than expected at 21-20, but still not a very good basketball team. We beat the Lakers, which was my favorite win so far. Being able to beat a powerhouse like the Lakers is certainly a good sign and something to keep fans in the seats.
Now for the standings.
Atlantic
Philadelphia 76ers (28-16)
Boston Celtics (29-17)
New York Knicks (27-19)
Brooklyn Nets (23-22)
Toronto Raptors (11-32)
Central
Indiana Pacers (27-15)
Chicago Bulls (22-26)
Milwaukee Bucks (20-24)
Detroit Pistons (15-28)
Cleveland Cavaliers (14-31)
Southeast
Miami Heat (31-12)
Atlanta Hawks (20-24)
Washington Wizards (20-24)
Charlotte Bobcats (13-31)
Orlando Magic (11-32)
Southwest
San Antonio Spurs (32-11)
New Orleans Hornets (21-20)
Memphis Grizzlies (21-22)
Dallas Mavericks (20-24)
Houston Rockets (16-30)
Northwest
Oklahoma City Thunder (29-14)
Utah Jazz (28-16)
Minnesota Timberwolves (27-18)
Portland Trail Blazers (27-18)
Denver Nuggets (18-26)
Pacific
Los Angeles Clippers (28-17)
Los Angeles Lakers (26-18)
Golden State Warriors (25-18)
Sacramento Kings (21-22)
Phoenix Suns (21-22)
We are currently 9th in the West, with Memphis and Sacramento one game behind us. Incredible.
Rather than taking a look at our own team (which I'll do at the all-star break), we'll take a look at the surprising teams in the league.
Brooklyn Nets (23-22)
Ersan Ilyasova (19.5 ppg, 9.7 rpg), Anthony Morrow (16 ppg) and Marshon Brooks (13.2 ppg) are all big reasons why this team is doing so well, not to take anything away from star Deron Williams (18.9 ppg, 10.6 apg) and leader Gerald Wallace (14.1 ppg, 5.4 rpg) of course.
Chicago Bulls (22-26)
Problems stem from Luol Deng (39.8% fg) and Joakim Noah (43.4%), as well as the bench, led by Jeff Green (41.9%) and Lester Hudson (38.4%). They just cannot score the ball very well this year.
Atlanta Hawks (20-24)
Josh Smith has only played in 19 games, and is only shooting 41.7% in those games. Teague and Williams are both struggling as well, though Horford and Johnson are doing their job.
Orlando Magic (11-32)
Jason Richardson is chucking away but can't hit anything (12 FGA and 36% fg), and no one outside of Dwight Howard can score the ball.
Utah Jazz (28-16)
I can eat my shorts here, since I was a hater at the beginning of the season. But Al Jefferson (16.5 ppg, 8.4 rpg) and Kevin Garnett (13.8 ppg, 9.7 rpg) anchor this team inside and Jeremy Lin (16.4 ppg, 7.1 apg) and Paul Millsap (15.7 ppg, 6.9 rpg) are doing damage as well.
Golden State Warriors (25-18)
The core from last year of David Lee (19.2 ppg, 8.0 rpg), Stephen Curry (18.1 ppg, 7.1 apg) and Andrew Bogut (11.4 ppg, 9.4 rpg, 2.7 bpg) are putting in work, and wingmates Klay Thompson (16 ppg) and Harrison Barnes (11.9 ppg) are just lethal from outside (46.3% from 3 for Klay Thompson, 45.3% from the floor for Barnes).
Denver Nuggets (18-26)
Al Harrington at center is the main issue, as he's only hitting on 41.1% from the floor and only pulling down 6.6 rebounds. Danilo Gallinari (37.7%) and Wilson Chandler (33.3%) are also struggling majorly from the floor, making it hard for the Nuggets to get any kind of consistent scoring.