**Obligatory Spoiler Alert: This article contains spoilers up to Season 5, Episode 2 of Breaking Bad. You've been warned.**
Over the past four and a half years, devotees of AMC's masterpiece of a program, Breaking Bad, have witnessed a transformation...and learned a formula. Walter White has evolved from a terminally ill high-school teacher trying to raise funds for his family by cooking meth in Combo's mom's RV, into a ruthless, manipulative kingpin who will betray his partner, intimidate his family, and poison an innocent child to protect his own self-serving interests. But no matter how you feel about Walter White, the formula for seizing power on Breaking Bad remains the same. To run the crystal meth market in the ABQ you need territory, money, heart, guts, and most importantly, the product. Just like the recipe for Heisenberg's world famous blue meth, there is a complicated formula for success in the NBA. To grasp the Larry O'Brien trophy, teams need equal parts great coaching, talent, and chemistry (pun NOT intended), as well as some combination of monetary resources, an attractive market, and savvy management. Most of the dust has settled on this NBA season's wild free agency period, and as usual, only a few true contenders for next season's title in the always top-heavy association have emerged.
Teammates for now...
But not for long...
When Walter White laid waste to his boss, druglord/Pollos Hermanos proprietor Gustavo Fring, in last season's unforgettable finale, "Face Off," the infamous Heisenberg effectively reshuffled the power board in the Breaking Bad landscape, leaving only several characters with the chance to be the proverbial "last man standing." Season 5 opened with a flash into the future- a new look, New Hampshire-residing Mr. White celebrating his 52nd birthday by purchasing a massive machine gun in the parking lot of Denny's. If we've learned anything from our tour of the ABQ so far, it's that all roads to power are littered with death and destruction. Among the NBA's elite, anything less than a ring amounts to failure and the death of your season. To commemorate Breaking Bad's return, here are five comparisons between next season's NBA contenders and the remaining players in the southwestern meth game.
The Miami Heat = Walter White
You come at the King, you best not miss.
The ruthless Kingpins at the top of their respective games. Mr. White completed his climb to Don status when he turned Gus into Albuquerque's version of Harvey Dent, while The Heat blew up their biggest competitor, the Oklahoma City Thunder, in a five game demolition in last years' NBA finals. Nary a soul would argue that either got to the top "the right way" (if such a thing even exists). Yet, both Heisenberg and the Heatles have what everyone else in their world wants. In Walter's case it's the formula for his 99% pure blue methamphetamine, and in Miami's case it's the world championship trophy. Both are also skilled manipulators: Pat Riley and the Heat convinced one of the team's main tormentors, erstwhile Celtic Ray Allen, to join them for half the price; Walter exploited the intensely loyal Jesse into assisting in Gus' murder, when it was really Walter who poisoned Pinkman's pseudo-stepson Brock. Both are in the process of building evil empires and squashing anyone who dares to step to the throne. Heisenberg's got the product and the personnel, with Jesse and Mike Ehrmantraut now firmly on the team. Miami's got LeBron, D-Wade, Bosh, and Ray Allen. Like it or not, they're not going away. Unless a feel good story can step to the forefront...
The Oklahoma City Thunder = Jesse Pinkman
Can the kids put the fists to Big Brother?
The young kids who rose to the top with heart, tenacity, and skill. They've played the game at the highest level, only to have their heart torn out. In the back of his mind, Jesse still knows that all of his considerable pain and loss has directly resulted from his partnership with Mr. White. While Kevin Durant, Russell Westbrook, and James Harden's ascension to NBA heaven was denied by their cruel older brother, the Heat. Both endured their bumps early- Jesse with the losses of Jane and Combo, his beating at the hands of Hank Schrader, and his Meth infused depressions. The Thunder were woeful before building through the draft and positioning themselves to be at the top of the NBA for years to come. In season 4, Jesse proved that he is a rival for Walter in skill: he can cook his meth, has street smarts that impressed Mike and Gus, and has powerful survival instincts. OKC has shown that they have the firepower to take down anyone in the league, save for the Heat, with their supremely talented 23-and-under trio. However, both Jesse and the kids from OKC are slowly learning that in order to wear the crown, you must get dirtier than you had ever before imagined. Heart and skill alone won't get you there, you must also learn to be unequivocally ruthless. Another parallel between the two is their loyalty. Pinkman has remained loyal to Mr. White, despite all that his former chemistry teacher has done to him. Durant and Westbrook quietly re-upped with long-term deals for the Thunder, remaining loyal to each other and to the franchise that drafted them despite countless others trying to manufacture beef between the two superstars and angling to break them apart. The tenuous relationship between Jesse and Walter has always been the driving force behind Breaking Bad, and the burgeoning rivalry between Miami and OKC for NBA dominance is shaping up to be the rivalry that defines the league for years to come. Can the kids shake their oppressors and rise to the top? Only time will tell.
The Boston Celtics = Hank Schrader
Does it look like...
They're Scared?
The battle-tested, relentless, veterans who just won't go away. The Celtics were one quarter from taking down the eventual champion Heat, while Hank was on to Gus and his operation since he discovered the Pollos Hermanos napkin in vegan Gale's apartment. Hank has been obsessively tracking Heisenberg and his blue meth almost as long as the Celtics have been hunting for their elusive second title in the Big 3 era. Both have been injured, dismissed, and disrespected, but neither knows how to give up. They will just keep on competing until they collapse and the clip is empty. The Celtics have been tormented by the Heat the past two years, just as Hank has been unwittingly tormented by Walter. The Celtics just didn't have enough legs to take out the Heat in game 7, while Hank has literally been operating without legs since his deadly clash with the cousins in Season 3. The Heat-Celtics rivalry got even more personal when Miami pilfered Jesus Shuttlesworth from the Celts this summer. Back on his feet and back on the job, Hank is sure to have a pretty big say in Breaking Bad's final season. Meanwhile, Boston has engineered a brilliant offseason that served to firmly prop open their championship window. Despite Ray's loss, The Celtics are deeper, younger, and more athletic than last year's title contender. While the world mourned the Big 3 era and the end of Celtics contention, Danny Ainge actually upgraded the shooting guard spot with the acquisitions of 6th man extraordinaire Jason Terry and the extremely reliable and efficient Courtney Lee. Doc Rivers now has a rotation of Rondo, Garnett, Pierce, Jeff Green, Brandon Bass, Terry, Lee, Avery Bradley, Chris Wilcox, Jared Sullinger, and Jason Collins to play with, plus whatever they can get out of Fab Melo, Dionte Christmas and Kris Joseph. With most of those players locked up for at least the next two years, the Celtics aren't going away. And neither is Hank. Gritty, smart, skilled, experienced, and fiery. I'd say both Hank and the Celtics have a great chance to get their man.
The San Antonio Spurs = Mike Ehrmantraut
Separated at Birth?
Obvi.
Looks can be deceiving. Although Mike has the aesthetic appeal of Sloth from the Goonies crossed with geriatric Shrek, he has demonstrated time and again that he is one of the most lethal players in the game. This Jack-of-all-trades has the experience accumulated from a lifetime of doing dirt. From what we know after Sunday's episode, Mike was a presumably dirty Philly cop turned Albuquerque Private Investigator/Drug Ring Enforcer/Hitman. And somehow he he does all this despite being able to form only two facial expressions: mildly annoyed and perturbed. Coincidentally two adjectives that can often be ascribed to Mike's basketball coaching doppleganger and soulmate, Gregg Popovich. The Spurs have proven to be similarly lethal and insipid over the years, with their ruthlessly efficient brand of basketball. Pinpoint ball movement, quiet swag, versatility, and professionalism: it's the Spurs/Mike way. You have to love the game to truly appreciate the way these two work. Both have been kings of their respective trades, and are quietly angling to get to the top again. You may have thought that Mike was left for dead after catching a slug aiding Gus' escape from Don Eladio's crib, but never fear. There he was in the season premiere whipping a Dodge Charger across the border at 100 mph. Basketball "experts" have been closing the title window on the Spurs for years, yet they continue to reinvent themselves and remain contenders. Adaptation is key for these two. Mike did so by reluctantly joining Walter's new fledgling operation, and the Spurs remained relevant by evolving into an uptempo, high scoring juggernaut. No matter how old they get or how much heat is on them, these two are just too damn good to count out.
The Los Angeles Lakers = The Cartel
The quiet menace waiting for their return to power. The Cartel has been the silent entity so far this season. As far as we know, they have been thoroughly decimated by Gus' poison tequila powerplay. When Gus visited Hector Salamanca in the nursing home to crow that Jesse had killed his grandson, effectively ending his name, and subsequently provoking "Tio's" suicide pact with Walt, it seemed that the Cartel would be dormant for good. In this year's playoffs, OKC (Jesse) administered a similar killshot to the Lakers, causing most pundits to surmise that their reign in the west was over. However, there are just some things that never go away, no matter how soulless and trenchant they may be. Among them are violent Mexican cartels that control the flow of drugs into North American and the goddamn Purple and Gold. Just when you thought they were dead, the Lakers acquired Steve Nash, and have now emerged as a front runner for the game-changer, Dwight Howard. As currently constructed, the Lakers are not championship ready, but they do have the most attractive trade chip for D-12 in Andrew Bynum, the second best center in the game. Dwight teaming up with Kobe, Gasol, and Nash would instantly make the Lakers universal title favorites. It is a frightening threat to the current reality, as is a rejuvenated Cartel resuming their hunt for Heisenberg, and overthrowing him for control. After seeing the whole world on LeBron's jock this summer, we can be sure that Kobe's maniacal quest to win his sixth title and unseat Walt/LeBron at the NBA mountaintop will only intensify. When the old dogs regain their former power, there just may be a little hell to pay.
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