The Eastern Conference may be getting overlooked again, but Paolo Banchero isn’t buying the idea that the West has all the juice.
For years, the conversation has tilted the same way. Twelve of the last 20 champions have come out of the West, and in only two of the last 17 seasons has the East finished with the better combined record.
The star power has leaned that direction too, with all but three of the last 13 MVPs playing for West teams. Kevin Durant, LeBron James, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Nikola Jokić, Victor Wembanyama - the league’s brightest lights have mostly been out there.
Then the Knicks went and changed the tone a little.
New York knocked off Wembanyama and the San Antonio Spurs in five games, a result that added fuel to the idea that the East might be closer to the West than it’s been given credit for. Banchero, the Magic forward, thinks that’s been true for a while.
"I mean it's a lot of big names coming to the East," Banchero recently told Yahoo Sports' Kelly Iko. "I've always felt like the East is the better conference, even though I think in the past we've been more slept on. I think you saw that this year with the Knicks and their run.
"The East is wide open in my opinion - a lot of guys feel that, that's why a lot of free agents are coming. But I'm excited and the team's excited."
The offseason has already added more fuel to that argument. It started with the Milwaukee Bucks sending Giannis Antetokounmpo to the Miami Heat in a six-player, five-pick blockbuster, a massive intraconference move that shook the league even if Milwaukee without Antetokounmpo wasn’t good.
Other East teams have also made their cases. Indiana should pick up where it left off with Tyrese Haliburton, Pascal Siakam and Ivica Zubac.
Atlanta and Philadelphia both got better. Toronto could be considerably improved if the Kawhi Leonard trade goes through, and Detroit would also take a step if it keeps Jalen Duren, though that remains TBD.
The Knicks, meanwhile, are the reigning champions, even if they were not among the teams that improved and lost Mitchell Robinson in free agency. Still, they’re expected to be arguably the top seed in the East in 2026-27, assuming there’s no championship hangover.
Boston and Cleveland didn’t improve either. Cleveland, in particular, is a possible landing spot for LeBron James, who is a free agent for the first time since 2018.
And the middle of the conference looks crowded enough to make the whole thing even more unpredictable. Last season, six teams finished within three games of one another, and that kind of logjam could easily show up again. If Orlando stays healthy for around 50 games, Banchero believes the Magic can fight for homecourt along with Detroit, New York, Miami, Indiana and Philadelphia, among others.
"Last year wasn't what we wanted. It didn't go how we wanted," Banchero said, per Iko. "But a lot of people are going to forget about us and count us out, so it's on us to go and show that we're an elite team in this league.
In Other News...
Sixers Let Another Needed Wing Slip Away In Free Agency
The market for wings keeps moving, and one more name Philadelphia had a chance to consider is off the board. Ziaire Williams, a 24-year-old former lottery pick who spent last season with Brooklyn, has found a new home, leaving the Sixers to keep sorting through a free-agent class that has not exactly been overflowing with young, athletic help on the perimeter.
For a team trying to round out its roster around Nick Nurses pace and spacing preferences, Williams made sense as the kind of long, versatile option that can soak up minutes and give a bench some juice. He also fit the profile of the wing depth Philadelphia has been trying to replace since Kelly Oubre Jr. moved on, which is why passing on him now reads like another small but meaningful miss in a summer full of them. [Read more 🡒]
Draymond Green Just Sent Sixers Fans A Message They Needed
Draymond Green weighed in on a familiar kind of NBA conversation this week, one that tends to follow star duos whenever the cameras are off and the speculation starts. His point was simple enough: players can live very different personal lives and still coexist just fine on the court, and a lack of constant off-court closeness does not automatically mean there is real animosity.
For Philadelphia fans, the message lands in a place they know well. Green pointed to the Joel Embiid-Ben Simmons era as an example of how relationship talk can become its own storyline in this city, even when the on-court picture is more complicated than the noise around it. He also used his own long-running relationship with Steph Curry to make the case that some partnerships do not need daily summer contact to work, which leaves the bigger question less about friendship and more about how all the pieces fit once the games start. [Read more 🡒]
Hawks Suddenly Pulled Into A Joel Embiid Debate They Cannot Ignore
The Joel Embiid conversation has a way of forcing everyone to think in extremes, and a speculative trade pitch aimed at Atlanta is no exception. Philadelphias dilemma is familiar by now: the centerpiece is still one of the leagues most dominant players when healthy, but the cost of waiting on health has become harder to ignore as the years and salary climb.
Atlanta, meanwhile, would have to decide whether a swing that big is worth reshaping the roster around a veteran star with real injury questions attached. The appeal is obvious on paper, but so is the risk, which is why this kind of proposal lands less as a simple rumor and more as a referendum on how both franchises view their timelines. [Read more 🡒]
