
Volume I: Mid-December Report — The Juggernauts, the Anomalies, and the Infirmary
Three sims blocks are officially in the books. We have crossed the 20-game threshold. The sample size is no longer small; identities are hardening, tier lists are forming, and the sim engine has begun handing out both absolute glory and devastating heartbreak.
From an ungodly super-team in Texas to a brutal injury wave reshaping the Eastern conference, here is the definitive, comprehensive breakdown of the NPBSL landscape as we head deeper into the autumn calendar.
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Three sims blocks are officially in the books. We have crossed the 20-game threshold. The sample size is no longer small; identities are hardening, tier lists are forming, and the sim engine has begun handing out both absolute glory and devastating heartbreak.
From an ungodly super-team in Texas to a brutal injury wave reshaping the Eastern conference, here is the definitive, comprehensive breakdown of the NPBSL landscape as we head deeper into the autumn calendar.
1. THE POWER TIERS: STANDINGS RADAR
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THE WALKING DEAD ZONE: MIDWEST DIVISION
The Alpha: San Antonio Spurs (22-2)
The Reality: There is San Antonio, and then there is a massive crater where the rest of the Midwest is supposed to be. The Spurs are playing video game basketball, pacing the league with a staggering 128.3 PPG and a +17.3 point differential. They are a flawless 12-0 on their home floor. The Sacramento Kings (13-10) are a distant second, floating 8.5 games back and facing an identity crisis. The Denver Nuggets (10-10) are treading water at .500, while the Houston Rockets (11-13) are wasting massive nights from their core just trying to avoid falling into the basement alongside a deeply struggling Dallas Mavericks (7-15) squad.
.The Alpha: San Antonio Spurs (22-2)
The Reality: There is San Antonio, and then there is a massive crater where the rest of the Midwest is supposed to be. The Spurs are playing video game basketball, pacing the league with a staggering 128.3 PPG and a +17.3 point differential. They are a flawless 12-0 on their home floor. The Sacramento Kings (13-10) are a distant second, floating 8.5 games back and facing an identity crisis. The Denver Nuggets (10-10) are treading water at .500, while the Houston Rockets (11-13) are wasting massive nights from their core just trying to avoid falling into the basement alongside a deeply struggling Dallas Mavericks (7-15) squad.
THE PACIFIC DRAG RACE
The Contenders: Seattle SuperSonics (17-5) & Phoenix Suns (16-5)
The Reality: This is the most competitive, high-octane division in the league. The Sonics hold a microscopic half-game lead, fueled by a 4-game win streak and a lethal 117.8 PPG offense. Phoenix is matching them blow for blow, boasting an imposing 12-1 record in the desert. Below them sits a ruthless mid-tier: the Trailblazers (13-9), Timberwolves (12-10), and Lakers (11-12) are all locked in a brutal cage match where dropping two games in a sim block can plunge you from home-court advantage out of the playoff window entirely.
.The Reality: This is the most competitive, high-octane division in the league. The Sonics hold a microscopic half-game lead, fueled by a 4-game win streak and a lethal 117.8 PPG offense. Phoenix is matching them blow for blow, boasting an imposing 12-1 record in the desert. Below them sits a ruthless mid-tier: the Trailblazers (13-9), Timberwolves (12-10), and Lakers (11-12) are all locked in a brutal cage match where dropping two games in a sim block can plunge you from home-court advantage out of the playoff window entirely.
THE ATLANTIC CIVIL WAR
The Contenders: New Jersey Nets (18-7) & Boston Celtics (17-7)
The Reality: A true clash of styles. The Nets have carved out their top spot via supreme road execution (11-4 away from home). The Celtics, meanwhile, are suffocating opponents with a league-best defense that allows a stingy 100.3 PPG. The 76ers (11-12), Knicks (6-16), and Bullets (6-17) are already completely out of the division race, watching the top two heavyweights trade blows from a massive double-digit distance.
.The Reality: A true clash of styles. The Nets have carved out their top spot via supreme road execution (11-4 away from home). The Celtics, meanwhile, are suffocating opponents with a league-best defense that allows a stingy 100.3 PPG. The 76ers (11-12), Knicks (6-16), and Bullets (6-17) are already completely out of the division race, watching the top two heavyweights trade blows from a massive double-digit distance.
THE CENTRAL COMFORT ZONE
The Alpha: Milwaukee Bucks (14-7)
The Reality: Milwaukee has executed a clinical opening 21 games, building a comfortable 3-game cushion in the Central. They are a dominant 8-1 at home and an elite 9-3 within conference play. The Detroit Pistons (12-11) and Indiana Pacers (12-12) are stuck in a classic .500 holding pattern, waiting for the Bucks to blink—though Milwaukee looks too disciplined to offer any easy windows.
.The Reality: Milwaukee has executed a clinical opening 21 games, building a comfortable 3-game cushion in the Central. They are a dominant 8-1 at home and an elite 9-3 within conference play. The Detroit Pistons (12-11) and Indiana Pacers (12-12) are stuck in a classic .500 holding pattern, waiting for the Bucks to blink—though Milwaukee looks too disciplined to offer any easy windows.
2. THE INDIVIDUAL LEADERBOARDS: THE STATISTICAL GODS
When you look across the individual player metrics, the league’s elite are putting together historical campaigns three sims into the season:
THE EFFICIENCY MARVELS
- The Physical Anomaly: Charles Barkley (Minnesota) is completely ignoring standard basketball logic. He’s pouring in 27.7 PPG and snatching 10.7 RPG while leading the league in field goal percentage at a blistering .616.
- The Perimeter Snipers: The three-point arc belongs to Steve Kerr (Pacers) and Michael Adams (Cavaliers), who are converts to absolute efficiency, hitting at .580 and .575 respectively.
- The Automatic Stripe: If you foul Jeff Hornacek (Bucks), you are essentially gifting Milwaukee points. He is converting at an unbelievable .979 clip from the free-throw line.
3. THE INFIRMARY REPORT: THE 56-DAY CRASH
The sim gods are entirely unfeeling, and the most recent sim block left a trail of destruction that has completely upended the award races and division dynamics.
THE SACRAMENTO CRISIS
The headline of the month is the devastating loss of Kevin McHale. He wasn't just leading the Kings; he was dominating the entire league's offensive tracking data. A broken foot sidelining him for 56 days means Sacramento has to find a way to replace 32 points and 11 rebounds an outing for nearly two full months.
THE ATLANTIC DOOR SWINGS OPEN
The first-place New Jersey Nets are facing a brutal test of their depth. Losing defensive anchor Anthony Mason for over a month alongside center Mike Gminski strips away their interior presence right as the Boston Celtics are closing in. If the Nets survive this window and retain the Atlantic lead, it will be an absolute miracle of coaching adjustments.
.4. EXECUTIVE INSIGHT: THE DARTH VEGITO AUDIT
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To wrap up this State of the League, we look to the executive suites. When cornered by reporters regarding how Sacramento intends to stay afloat without their MVP-level cornerstone, the characteristically blunt and combative Kings GM Darth Vegito offered a masterclass in resiliency:
RPF: : “Darth, devastating news today about Kevin McHale going down with a broken foot. Fifty-six days is a massive blow. What was your immediate reaction when the medical staff gave you the diagnosis?”
Darth: “What was my reaction to the McHale injury?
My reaction was Frye this game. It's rough. You plan and plan and plan. Pull off these difficult trades, see this vision in your mind that is already hard to pull off. Then you make the trades happen, then comes the tweaking of game plans and depth charts. You see positive things, players are clicking. Then...BOOM! it all goes to shit just like that. Not to mention, draft collateral is usually spent. These types of ijuries are the most costly to teams because they can affect your entire future. Maybe you have a 2 year window...this kills a whole year.
So my reaction was WTF, but then quickly went to "how do I pivot and salvage this season without the current League Leading scorer". I had a handful of GMs express doubt in my McHale pickup and what I gave up form him. I guess they get last laugh due to injury, but I think him leading the league in scoring validated my vision. Now what do I do in the meantime?”
RPF: : “With the scoring leader out for two months, how do you adjust? Does this change your aggressive stance in the Midwest Division, or do you look to the trade market for immediate help?”
Darth: “How do I adjust and what moves do I make or can be made?
Well I think a just posted trade answers this question. The trade was:
Kings Receive:
•Antoine Carr
•1990 Bucks 1st
Jazz Receive:
•Willie Anderson
•Terry Tyler
•1990 Kings 1st
This wasn't the perfect trade, but in this situation when you have a player of McHale's caliber go down your options are usually limited. I can talk about my process a bit. First of course I'd like to directly fill the hole for the player and position that went down. And what do I have to trade for a player? And what teams would be willing to part with a player of the caliber I'm looking for? The answer to that question is usually the teams on the bottom of the standings.
I look for players that checks those boxes. Now what I ended up finding wasn't exactly what I wanted, but it gets the job done I hope. I don't think I'll use Carr to directly fill that Center position, but I do think AC Green is athletic enough and strong enough to slide into that 5 spot. I'll start Charles Jones at the 3 for a bit and have Willie spell him when he gets into inevitable foul trouble. Obviously this does NOT fill the massive hole McHale is leaving but I hope it keeps me afloat in the powerhouse Western Conference. Mitch will have to step up, no doubt. It's time to show up for the younger players on this team.”
RPF: : “Final question—do you have a message for the Kings fan base right now who might be worried the season is slipping away?”
Darth: “My message to the Kings fan base is that there's one thing they can always count on. This leadership team will always do what's in the best interest of the team and city and that's doing whatever it takes to have this team winning for as long as possible. While that means having to rebuild and retool on occasion, this we hope is NOT one of those times. We plan to keep competing for a playoff spot and then when McHale returns, scare the living shit out of some teams in the playoffs.“
Thanks if you made it this far...
