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The 10-man rotation, starring the potential return of Christopher Bosh's adventures in the Multiverse

'The Advenures of Christopher Bosh in the Multiverse' was pretty good. (Screencap via Borscht Corp.)

A look around the league and the Web that covers it. It's also important to note that the rotation order and starting nods aren't always listed in order of importance. That's for you, dear reader, to figure out.

C: Cultist. Borscht Corp., the people who brought us "The Adventures of Christopher Bosh in the Multiverse," have launched a Kickstarter to produce a second episode that "reveals why LeBron James really left the Miami Heat." Let's all do the right thing here, friends.

PF: The National Post. A fun conversation between Eric Koreen and Dave Hopkinson, who's been a member of the Toronto Raptors' sales team since the very first day of the organization and now ranks as Maple Leaf Sports and Entertainment's chief commercial officer, on (if you'll forgive a phrase borrowed from the team's cultural ambassador) starting from the bottom when it comes to selling basketball in Canada.

SF: Hardwood Paroxysm and SB Nation. A pair of great big honkin' season previews from two massive collections of talented people. Dig in and get to learnin'.

SG: PistonPowered. Patrick Hayes on the importance of the Detroit Pistons not repeating the mistakes the organization made with Grant Hill now that a new potential franchise-changing talent, center Andre Drummond, is starting to come of age.

PG: The Triangle. Zach Lowe runs through 10 takeaways from the somewhat surprising failure of the NBA's attempt to push through draft lottery reform at Wednesday's Board of Governors meeting.

6th: SB Nation. David Roth with a lovely reminiscence on a young Nets fan's love for the late Drazen Petrovic, who would have turned 50 years old on Wednesday: "[…] Petrovic mirrored and elevated our willfulness like no one else. He made stubbornness transcendent, took common careless will and shaped it and made it beautiful in a way that we could not. We were so hungry, and he fed us."

7th: Nylon Calculus. Ian Levy considers whether Markieff Morris can shoot the 3 often enough and well enough to take on the sort of increased role he'll need to play for the Phoenix Suns this year.

8th: Forbes. Longtime Los Angeles sportswriter Mark Heisler on all this Kobe stuff: "If Bryant really wanted to destroy the Lakers from within, he could just retire."

9th: Sports Illustrated Longform. This is more a college/international basketball story than an NBA one, but who cares? Luke Winn on the similarities and differences in the NCAA recruitments of Arvydas Sabonis and his son, Domantas, is a worthwhile read full of great little notes and a scene-stealing appearance by Rasheed Wallace.

10th: Hang Time. John Schuhmann wrote last week that, in general, there's no correlation between ball movement, player movement and offensive efficiency. In the specific context of the Golden State Warriors, though? Those dudes should pass the ball more, and the numbers bear it out.

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Dan Devine is an editor for Ball Don't Lie on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at devine@yahoo-inc.com or follow him on Twitter!

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