So the Suns, Sonics, Spurs, Kings (probably) and Mavericks still look pretty solid in the West while the Heat, Pistons, Wizards and Cavaliers look safe in the East.

But there hasn't just been dizzying change at the top. Oh, no, it's happened at the bottom too. The West's two no-chance teams, the Hornets and Warriors, have been joined by the Jazz (see my preseason predictions for sharp commentary on that bunch).

In the East, I have to turn off the sarcasm for a few paragraphs because there really has been a wee little bit of movement. The Raptors and Nets, Vince Carter's old and new teams, have managed to rally from being totally out of it to being on the bubble. Just barely.

The Raptors even staged a little hot streak in January, after the Carter trade, going 8-3 at one point and climbing to within six games of .500. Since then, they've given back that ground, going 3-8, and they're tied for 12th in the conference, five games out of the playoffs and probably out of it, but I'm trying to be positive. The Nets, who were 7-14 when I dismissed them in December, have gone 16-16 since, which in the East gets you closer to the postseason. They're 10th, three games out.

But the real surprise has been the Bulls, who began a five-game winning streak the night my earlier column appeared, and have gone 22-8 after a 4-15 start. If they stay that hot for the rest of the season they'll win 50 games, which may be enough to challenge the Pistons for the Central Division title and the second seed, and would almost certainly be enough for a fourth seed. Right now they're seventh in the conference, but only three games back of the fourth-place Cavs.

The Bucks and Knicks are also just barely hanging on to slim, and I do mean slim, playoff hopes in the East, the Nuggets, Clippers and Trail Blazers in the West.

It looks like the next two months will come down to the Celtics, Magic, Sixers and Pacers fighting for three spots in the East, and the Rockets, Grizzlies, Lakers and T-Wolves fighting for three spots in the West, the Rockets with a two-game leg up.

I really underestimated the excitement in December.

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Free the Stanley Cup! [PERMALINK]

This column is throwing its weight, all zero virtual ounces of it, behind the Free Stanley movement, an effort to wrest the Stanley Cup from the control of the NHL. Free Stanley, a group founded by a trio of hockey fans from Edmonton, argues that the league doesn't own the Cup, but is merely the trustee.

Lord Stanley bought the trophy in 1892, intending for it to be a challenge cup for Canadian teams and appointing two trustees. The trustees decided in 1910 that only pro teams would compete for the Cup, and within a decade of the NHL's founding in 1917 the Cup became the exclusive trophy of the league's champion.

Trusteeship was turned over to the league in the late '40s, on the condition that the NHL remained the best pro hockey league in the world, based on caliber of play. Free Stanley posits that if you're not playing, you can't be the best league in the world based on caliber of play.

That seems logical to me. Let's have a tournament that includes the champions of the various European and North American professional leagues. Beats what we've got now.

What we've got now is the league and the players union trying to justify their inaction and intransigence, which led to the cancellation of the season this week.

I just caught a moment of NHL commissioner Gary Bettman's appearance on James Brown's national radio show Thursday. Bettman entered into a Socratic dialogue with the host, asking him what sport he spends most of the year covering.

"The NFL," answered the student.

"And what does the NFL have that we don't have, Grasshopper?" Bettman asked.

The answer was a hard salary cap, and, using the kind of logic by which you can prove that Ray Charles is God, Bettman proved that its salary cap has made the NFL the most successful league in American sports.

Maybe Brown followed up on this point, but just in case he didn't: Listen, Gary, here are some of the things the NFL has that the NHL does not.

  • An exciting product.
  • Revenue sharing dating back 40 years.
  • Resulting league-wide economic strength that allowed the NFL to break the union and win the cap in the first place, and which provides enough revenue that it can shortchange the players and still pay them handsomely.
  • An economic plan that at no point included radical, ill-conceived expansion and the vain hope that such expansion would lead to real growth before the franchise fee windfalls ran out.
  • A corporate culture and business philosophy set up by a commissioner who was a man of vision, as opposed to being an idiot.
  • Cheerleaders.
  • Not sure if that last one's relevant.

    Previous column: Canseco, NHL: The readers write

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