The Bill Simmons Podcast - Celtics on the Brink With Doc Rivers
Episode Date: June 13, 2024The Ringer's Bill Simmons shares some solo Celtics reactions (0:34) before he is joined by Bucks coach Doc Rivers to discuss taking over in Milwaukee midway through the season, a wacky Eastern Confere...nce postseason (6:42), the Celtics taking Game 3 in Dallas, NBA stories, and more (23:17). Host: Bill Simmons Guest: Doc Rivers Producer: Kyle Crichton Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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coming up, the Celtics are one win away from an NBA title and Doc Rivers is here. That's next.
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We're also brought to you by the Ringer Podcast Network,
where I put up a new rewatchables.
On Monday, we did Breaking Away.
You can watch it
on the Ringer Movies YouTube channel,
or you can just listen to it.
I also did two podcasts this week,
one with Rosillo on Sunday,
and then another one on Tuesday.
Did a six-pack,
talked to Chris Mannix,
even talked some boxing at the end. So,
if you missed that, that is there. This is the third podcast of the week, and it's a big one.
Just had game three of the NBA Finals. I am in Dallas, Texas. I went to the game. The Celtics
prevailed. They played all the hits. They looked great. Then they didn't. Then they did. They pulled it out. They're 79 and 20, which is absolutely, it's just incredible.
They haven't lost in the playoffs on the road.
And one thing, Doc and I talked about a bunch of this stuff.
Doc Rivers is coming on in a second.
The Jalen Brown piece of it.
It is so cool to watch a guy for their entire career and then have what's happening to Jalen happen as a fan.
I remember this happened with Paul Pierce.
I remember writing a column about it back when my fingers worked.
When Paul Pierce won in 2008, which was my favorite thing about the 2008 title other than being there with my dad.
It felt like we'd been on a journey with him.
You know, they drafted him in 98.
He fell to the 10th spot and he was on that crappy Patino team for a couple years.
And then he literally almost gets stabbed to death
on my birthday in 2000.
Survives, plays all 82 games
and was just a tough MF-er.
And then had this rollercoaster ride the next couple years,
made the Eastern Conference Finals with him.
Then by 2004, they're a lottery team.
He starts acting out, which Doc and I talk about in the second.
2005, seems like they're going to trade him.
He sticks around, and then he turned into a pro.
And KG and Ray show up.
They win the 2008 title.
And he becomes this beloved Celtic that game one, game two, you still see him at the games.
You know, he's still a huge part of the franchise.
His number is retired.
He's one of the best 50, 55 players of all time.
And they show him in the games that it means something.
Because this is a guy that is, you know,
that we went, had all the ups and downs with.
We won a title with him.
We cared about him.
He delivered for us and he's still around
and he's still a part of the franchise.
And that's something that I think, you know,
it gets a little lost with professional sports these days.
Guys bounce around.
A situation like Curry with the Warriors becomes so rare.
I think one of the cool things about Brown and Tatum,
not just the fact that they've been together for this long and they have all these playoff scars now.
The scars, you need the scars to win the title.
The game tonight, the scars start popping up.
They're up 21.
All of a sudden,
the lead's three
and it's one.
You're battle tested.
That's what this team is.
They're mentally tough
in a way that they weren't
a couple years ago.
A big piece of it is Jalen.
Jalen, two years ago,
and even last year,
probably would have folded
in a game like today.
In this game,
he was awesome.
And he made the biggest shot of his career with,
I don't know, 65, 70 seconds left, up to the lids on a basket.
Dallas is playing great defense and he just comes through.
And he's been coming through this whole playoffs.
He's been coming through the whole season. And I voted for him all NBA,
partly because of the intensity that he just had
day after day after day after day after day.
But you think back, he gets drafted.
The Celtics booed the fans.
Some of the fans booed the pick
because I think people wanted Jamal Murray.
And he shows up.
Tatum shows up a year later with a little more fanfare.
And for a while there, Jalen was like the middle brother.
We never knew.
I even did a podcast at the beginning of this season about he didn't play well the first couple weeks of the season. He'd gotten that big contract and it's like, what's going on with this
guy? Is he trying to justify the contract? Where are we? And just to watch him evolve and stand
among the legends. If they can pull off one more win here, the 18th title for the Celtics team
and Brown and Tatum,
they're going to be the biggest reasons.
You know, there's Derek White,
there's Drew Holiday,
there's Al Horford,
there's the KP in the first couple games,
there's the bench,
there's the dramatic improvement,
Joe Mazzulla, Brad Stevens.
You can go on and on and on.
But ultimately, it's Tatum and it's Brown.
And it was always kind of Tatum as the favorite child
and then Brown as like the other brother.
We love him, he's great,
but not quite as much as Tatum, right?
And now it feels like they're equals.
And to watch that dude come through tonight,
it was just really thrilling.
I've watched this guy play for eight years
and I feel like we've watched him
just solve different video game levels,
and then tonight was one of the final levels.
And I hope he's, you know,
I hope he's a Celtic for life.
You never know with this business.
You never know what happens
when professional basketball guys bounce around.
But it really felt like,
in the last couple weeks,
he cemented some sort of place in Celtics lore.
You knew it was going to happen with Tatum.
And then the people like Drew and Derek White
and Holiday and even KP,
those are the people like how we think about DJ
and Danny Ainge and Paul Silas
and all these Celtics from years past.
But this is the Jays.
This is the era.
And it's been earned.
These are co-partners,
co-stars,
co-superstars.
Jalen, 30 points tonight,
eight rebounds,
eight assists,
and was just absolutely awesome.
And we talk about it
with Doc Rivers in a second.
But I'm really happy for that guy.
I just want to say that.
So we're going to bring in Doc Rivers
for the first time in a long time.
We're going to talk about his Milwaukee Bucks experience,
everything he learned the last six months,
and then we're going to dive into game three in the Celtics
and everything that we saw during the finals.
I had a great time.
Let's bring in our friends.
Pearl Jam. All right, I'm taping this.
It is 10.30 Texas time.
Just went to game three of Celtics-Mavericks finals,
which we're going to talk about in a second.
But once upon a time, I had an occasional podcast partner
who would come on and we would talk basketball
and I really looked forward to it and I had a great time
and I thought we really had something special.
And then one day, I see the bottom ticker of ESPN
and my podcast partner,
who had told me at dinner just a couple of weeks before with Larry David as a witness,
how you didn't miss coaching. This was the most relaxed you'd ever been. You can't believe you
had to take a year off. And then all of a sudden in a couple of days, you were the Milwaukee Bucks
head coach. And your explanation was, I have a chance to coach Giannis.
That was really it.
Yeah.
It was so funny because we had dinner, great dinner.
Everybody was relaxed.
I was very relaxed at the time.
And then the Bucks opportunity came up and I took it.
It was just such a good opportunity.
Not only Giannis with Dame and
Chris Middleton, a team that had won it already. Yeah. Things changed quickly.
Well, and the case I made and we hadn't, we didn't really have a long conversation about it, but
you know, I was hurt. I was trying to put the pieces together, but ultimately you've been
competing your whole life, right?
Since, I don't know, when you started playing basketball, but then you played forever.
Then you coach forever.
And it's just this switch.
You just couldn't flick it off.
You have to compete.
You know, it's true, Bill, but I would say this.
I was not going to just take any job that I told you guys that that night um if a coaching job had just
opened that I didn't think it was the right organization or the right people uh the right
guys to coach uh an opportunity to win or at least bill winning I was out um and if that job had never
surfaced again I was not going to take a job I was literally sitting there. I was getting better at golf. Finally. Uh, you know,
that's not what I heard, but fine. I'll believe it on the pod. Yeah. We do have to talk about
that because I heard right when I left, there's a guy named Larry David who made a comment
that he's going to lose money now. Is that true? I think that is true. Oh my goodness.
I think it is true. I'm going to let them live with that. I'm going to let them live with that
comment. What was it like to just walk into a season without a training camp and without a
summer and without any knowledge of the team you're coaching and you're basically just coach
for hire coming in, trying to figure out your team, the players, all the coaches you're coaching and you're basically just coach for hire coming in trying to figure
out your team the players all the coaches you have you're in a new city you're living in a hotel room
like what were the what were the first like three four weeks like it was hard uh bill way harder
honestly uh than i thought you know i coached for over 20 years i thought i can just jump right back
into it um and and get things going.
And that just wasn't the case.
First of all, we were going to go on our toughest road trip of the season right out of the gate.
I think the biggest thing that I would say for anyone who has done this is that you don't have your staff.
And I found that to be very difficult starting out.
And all the guys that I had were fine coaches.
They were good.
They just wasn't mine.
I wasn't used to what they did.
I inherited two staffs, Bud's old staff and then Adrian's new staff,
because they kind of co-mingled.
And so now I'm coming in as a third person.
You know, that was difficult trying to figure out who I would use
in different spots defensively, offensively.
All that was hard.
And then we had all the injuries.
But it took a while.
But I will say this, by the end of it, I felt like, man,
this is going to be a great job um you know obviously
with yannis out and and dame injured and chris playing at probably 90 with his health uh you
knew you wasn't going to go far in the playoffs i did feel like if somehow we could sneak this
first round out without yannis uh with d Dane getting healthy, but not healthy. Uh, if we can
get to the second round and Giannis comes back, I thought we could, we could make a run. Um,
but that never happened. So the Giannis injury that, I mean, we've seen that injury a couple
of times where they're a little cagey about how long it's going to be. But if you, if you just
Google the injury, you're like, Oh, that's a month and a half injury. So, you know, at least it's three, four weeks, right? And of course, that takes you
through the first round. So, you know, you're going to the first round without Giannis, basically.
Yeah, I knew if anybody can come back, it would probably be him. But I never thought that he
would make it back for the first round. I was hoping. There was whispers that maybe game seven.
I don't think that would have happened.
And truth be told, because after the playoffs were over and watching them work out, I don't think he would have made it back for the Knicks series until probably game three or four.
But, you know, that's how players are.
You have to have health.
You have to have a lot of things to go for you, go your way.
And we just didn to have health. You have to have a lot of things to go for you, go your way. And we just didn't have that.
Does the KD, what happened
to him in 2019,
hang over the heads of a situation
like that? It has to, right?
It really does. I was surprised by that
because it
wasn't an Achilles, but
it looked like one.
Just like I was actually at the KD
game. Yeah, it was clippers no no no no the
rockets yeah it was the rockets and austin was playing for the rockets uh i think that was the
first time or maybe the second time in my life that i got to see austin play a live game that
i wasn't coaching him yeah and i remember sitting in the stands, and right when it happened,
you know, as you did and everyone did, we thought, oh, wow,
he just tore his Achilles.
Yeah.
You know, now with Giannis, I didn't know, but I can tell you,
forget the KD flashback.
For me, it was a KG flashback.
Utah.
Because Utah, I remember sitting next to Eddie Lacerde,
and KG was running down the floor all by himself,
and he just stopped and went to the floor.
And I remember Eddie Lissert turned to me and said,
this is bad because no one's around.
Like, that's the bad injuries in our league.
If you run into collision, injuries rarely happen.
It's when you're running by yourself and your body decides I've had it with something. And so honestly, when that happened, that was the first thing that I thought
about was Kevin Garnett. And somebody like Giannis, he seems so indestructible. You just assume
it's like a LeBron thing. It's shocking when he even tweaks anything. You're like, how are you
even hurt? You're superhuman. So when to watch him go down, you go, oh boy, this has to be bad to have him be hurt.
No doubt. Especially knowing that he doesn't like to sit in practice. He doesn't like to sit in
games. You know, fortunately we were up by like 40 against your Celtics that night, if I remember right.
But even that game got close after the Yottas went out.
They made a run.
So it was an interesting night for sure.
What was the most surprising thing just being with him day to day for two months that you weren't expecting?
Obviously, you coached against him.
You had a pretty good feel for him.
But was there anything you learned from the day to day?
He's a much better
playmaker than I thought. You know, the energy and the athleticism, some of the things he does,
Bill, you can watch him every day for the rest of your life, but some of the things he does,
you'll shake your head every night, you know, taking off from the elbow, one dribble from
half court, making it to the basket. I mean, he does things that no one else can do.
But coming in and taking the job, I thought one of the things that I had to do was make
him a better playmaker, see if he can be a facilitator.
And I was surprised at his vision.
Like, he really has good vision.
And he, in a lot of ways, was our point guard at times for us.
And I think that's one of the reasons we miss him so much against the Pacers.
And then other than that, he's our best player.
But his vision surprised me.
It gave me more hope that when we get this right,
that we can really do some things offensively.
It was funny talking to you on podcasts about Milwaukee before you took that
job when you didn't know you were going to take the job and talking about
Giannis and Dame,
how it's a little harder to mix those guys that maybe people think because
ways people can sag off,
you know,
cause Giannis isn't a great three point shooter and just little tricks and
just things you have to do.
So then you take the job.
And did you feel like you unlocked that at all by the end of the season or no?
Yeah, I thought we got really good at a lot of little things with Dame and Giannis.
You know, I thought, first of all, they start connecting,
and their two-man game was becoming lethal.
I think it was second or third best in the league,
and it still, in my opinion, hasn't scratched.
You know what was the most difficult thing?
And it took me a little bit to figure it out.
Dame didn't have the ball in his hands a lot at times.
And it was hard to visualize, like, why is this happening?
And the reason is on misses, when Giannis gets the ball, he's elite.
You want him to break out. Dame was going backwards half the time to go get the ball. Giannis gets the ball, he's elite. You want him to break out.
Dame was going backwards half the time to go get the ball.
Giannis is gone.
And so then, okay, so on Mises, Dame doesn't get it unless it's thrown ahead to him
or unless it comes to him in the action, but he has to be in front of the ball
for that to happen.
And then on Mates, Giannis brought the ball up some,
and then Chris brought the ball up some.
And I started thinking, like, wait a minute.
If that happens, we're cutting about 80% of the time
that Dame is used to having the ball from Portland.
And you just can't do that.
And so what we came to by the end on makes,
Dame brought the ball up the floor 90 90% of the time on misses,
we wanted Giannis to go.
And so we're getting the best of both worlds.
And that's to me is where we're headed.
We really never got a chance to,
to work on it,
but I thought that was a huge breakthrough for us.
And the,
the damn situation where he gets traded,
he leaves his family behind.
He's going through a divorce and just seemed like a lot of personal stuff that was weighing him down.
How did you navigate that during the season and try to get his spirits up?
That's hard.
That was really hard.
Two things.
And, you know, it's funny because I was podcasting with you and golfing with Larry.
I didn't even realize that Dane was traded
two or three days before training camp.
And so Dane was telling me, we were at dinner,
and he said, Coach, I didn't work out all summer.
It's the first time in my life that I've not worked out.
I was so scared of getting injured working out.
Oh, because he was a possible trade, yeah.
Yeah, he knew he was going to get traded.
So he said, you know,
I did some light running. I did some shooting with no one in the gym,
but I didn't go at all. He said, I was, I'm, I'm out of shape.
And, and, and he was honest about it.
That's one of the reasons you love him because he is honest. He said,
this is the worst shape I've ever been in. And I, and you know,
when you start camp that way, you don't
ever get in shape. You never catch up. And he felt that way. It's, it's funny. You know, I start
calling them names, like, like jokingly, uh, with them, you know, talking about his weight and he's
heavy and all summer now, you know, he's, I'm working twice a day. Uh, I'm down to this, like,
he is so proud that he's in great shape right now already,
which is amazing.
It also tells you, you know, and I shared this with him last week.
I said, it's amazing.
You're doing two days right now.
And the Celtics and the Mavs are still playing.
Right.
It just tells you how long of a journey it is for you to win a championship.
There's half the league is back to work for next season.
And we still have two teams playing.
It doesn't look like two teams will be playing much longer,
but we have two teams playing.
Yeah.
There was a photo the other day at KD and Chet and another guy all working
out, getting ready.
And it is like, it is crazy.
It's so long.
Plus we had the Olympics this year.
And, you know, we'll see.
But I'm sure you're watching the playoffs,
and we haven't talked, at least on the podcast, in 2024.
But you're watching the playoffs, and it's just so funky, right?
Denver loses in round two.
You have the East just kind of loses its marbles.
Butler gets hurt.
The Knicks just fall apart one guy by one guy by one guy.
You lose half your team and Bede's hurt
and then he's healthy, but he doesn't still seem...
And the East just completely falls apart.
So on the one hand, everybody's like,
well, Boston, they haven't beaten anybody.
On the other hand, the East blew up.
But you're probably watching it going,
holy shit, if we had just gotten by round one, you know,
we match up with Boston the best in the conference.
Well, we felt that. You still have to beat them. You know, Bill,
they're awful good and you got to give them their credit.
They've been the best team in the NBA the entire season.
And it's almost like no one wanted to believe it. You know,
it's almost like no one wanted to believe it. You know, it's everywhere.
The criticism of Jason Tatum and of Brown and who's the best player.
And they're just, I tell you, first of all, I don't think Joe gets enough credit.
I've shared that with you before.
I think he is such a detailed coach. I mean, in the game tonight, he
fouls up
six with
22 seconds he was trying to foul.
Those are strategic
things that are big,
but watching
how they play
is just absolutely
beautiful. How they play basketball
right now. They share the ball.
Everybody accepts their role.
They know exactly where each other is at.
I don't know how many more slot cuts they're going to get in this series
where a guy drives, a guy drives from the slot or cuts from the slot.
It's a layup.
You drive, you find the corner guy.
They're making the right plays every night, and they're over themselves.
That's what I say to you all the time about it's so hard to win.
It is so hard to win a title.
And, you know, but when you see it, you also see it's visual to me.
It's like art for me.
When you watch, you watch every single guy that is over themselves,
there's no drama, there's no jealousies.
Everybody is good with their role.
Everybody is becoming a star in their role.
And when you watch Boston, you know,
Jalen, Brown's going to be the MVP, I guess, of the finals.
Through the first three games, definitely.
Yeah, but you can make a strong case for Holiday.
After the second game, I would have said he was leading the way.
Yeah, and he did stuff tonight.
Like, defensively, I thought the play where he drove
and got kicked for the three might have been the biggest play of the game.
And he just does it over and over.
White makes a big three.
You know, when it came down to it and Dallas made that run,
the two biggest shots was I think Holiday drove, kicked for a three.
White makes the second three.
Back-to-back, bam, the game's put away again.
And it's what they do.
They're just a solid, well-coached team who, you know, Kevin
Garnett made this comment years ago. Sometimes you're good enough to win, but you can't because
you're not ready to win. And Boston, watching them play right now, they're ready to win.
They're just playing that way. I want to dive into this because I went to the
game tonight and I saw the same thing you did, but let's take a break.
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So you're talking about when teams get over themselves,
which I think is a great way to put it.
There was a moment in this game,
I was sitting behind the Celtics bench,
like about 10 rows up,
and they go on that run in the third quarter.
And I've watched so much of this team
over the last seven years,
but the one thing they have this year
is they'll go on these runs and they
know it's happening as it's happening, right? There's like a little swagger to them now that
I just don't feel like they had in other years. They'll go up 85-70 at the end of the third
quarter. And then they hit to two threes at the start of the fourth quarter. They're up 91-70.
And I was watching the bench and how locked in everybody is. And it really reminded me,
I texted Steve Kerr. I was
like, this reminds me of what was happening with you guys two years ago. It was somewhere between
the fourth and the fifth game of the finals and just the team lot, the Warriors locked in. And
you know, these moments in the series where you're like, oh, they figured this out. I remember this
happened with the 08 Celtics
in the Piston Series,
somewhere between game five and game six, right?
And somewhere in game six, it was like,
this is over, they're winning this.
What happens?
How does, explain,
because you coach teams that that's happened.
What happens when the five guys lock in like that
and the bench locks in
and everybody's just like, holy shit, this is it?
It's a combination of the whole season. And everybody's just like, holy shit, this is it. It's a combination
of the whole season. And it's funny, I had this conversation with our team this year
and our staff, like each round you get better. People who have never been on the journey
have no idea how much you improve from round to round as a basketball team. And it's not that you're
improving as a player. You're improving as a team. You start trusting each other more. You start
getting less insecure about stuff, individual stuff. You're no longer concerned about the one
thing, and that's giving yourself to the team. You buy into everything.
And there's a happy place.
Bill, I really believe this.
There's a happy place that teams get to.
And the only way they can get to it is by, you know,
sometimes it happens in the Eastern or Western finals.
You can see, oh, boy, they just hit the button.
And now you're going to have to beat them.
You know what I mean?
And,
and Boston's been there.
Um,
but even in this series,
you can see like a year ago,
they lose the game tonight.
I agree.
They lose that game.
I actually think they lose it twice.
I think they lose them the first quarter when it's 19 or nine and the
crowds into it.
I think they start doing hero ball threes and all of a sudden they're down 20.
And then they lose it again in the fourth quarter as the lead's slipping away.
Crowd's into it.
They can't buy a basket anymore.
Everyone's just jacking up 20-footers.
And I think they definitely would have lost it in 22.
They definitely would have lost it last year.
And it's the difference.
And it comes down at the end of the day to trust the two things that happens.
Your star players trust everyone on the team, including the coaches. And then the, the role
players trust themselves and they trust the star players. And then when that all happens,
it's almost impossible to beat that team.
And you see it every year.
Every year it happens.
It happened to Denver last year.
You can go every year.
It's funny.
It was beautiful.
Golden State, their last title,
because they had won it,
but then they lost it.
And then they had to go back on a journey
and they had to bring in some of these young
guys. Jordan Poole played great for them.
And they had to...
It was like, yeah, Wiggins.
It was a retrust. And
what's better to watch is
Tatum is great to watch
and Brown's been great, but
it's awesome to watch Derek White.
I'm forgetting the backup center tonight.
Oh, Tillman.
This was a borderline Tillman game.
11 minutes, good defense on Luka.
He hit a big corner three.
He was great.
You know, Hauser made big shots in the first half.
Three for three.
Yeah, all trust, though.
That's all trust.
And the only reason Howser can make that shot
is the star players have to make a play,
and then they have to trust instead of forcing shots,
and that's what they do.
Watching the Celtics play in the first half
compared to watching the Mavs play,
it was just two different.
The Mavs, first time there in a long time, first time there
with this team.
And you can see the difference.
It just takes, it takes everything to win and the Celtics are doing it.
Yeah.
The Celts had 26 assists tonight.
Dallas had 15.
And what they've done to Dallas, the whole series is it's hero ball,
one-on-one stuff.
Nobody else is involved.
You know, Kyrie and Luke,
I think took 55 shots combined tonight.
And then you felt it in the end,
Luca fouls out and we'll talk about the six foul in a second.
But, um, and it becomes like, all right,
this is going to be Kyrie show win or lose.
And as a Celtics fan,
who's been with this Tatum Brown era now
for two-thirds of a decade, seven years,
this game played a lot of the hits where they look great.
Uh-oh, we're up 21.
Now it's 15.
Now it's 13.
Oh, there's a lid on the basket.
This is the exact type of game they've either lost
or almost lost 20 times this year.
But then there's this Kyrie piece where Kyrie,
he comes in as the big brother, right?
Tatum's first year.
And then it doesn't work out the second year.
And then, all right, the last level of the video game now
to go up 3-0 in the finals,
you got to beat this dude that you played with
and was supposed to be there for it.
It was just weird.
It was like surreal to watch, right?
It's like, this is how it's going to end in game three.
Yeah.
But you know, it's still, you know, it's, it's funny because Dallas has gotten a lot
of criticism because of their offense.
Right.
And what it's not their offense is what the Celtics are doing to their offense.
You know?
Yeah.
So explain that.
Explain what they're doing.
Cause I don't think people fully understand it.
Yeah, but you have two superstars on the Mavs,
and they know that they're going to garner help.
They come into the game knowing
that every team's going to send two guys.
They're always going to send an extra guy
when they get to the basket.
The Celtics aren't doing that.
They're staying home.
So in a lot of ways, the Celtics are getting away with guarding Luka
for the most part and Kyrie all the time, single coverage.
And even when they beat them off the dribble,
they're still not sending help.
They're saying, beat us over the top.
Make shots over the top.
We're going to get out to all your players.
And so, you know, it looks bad.
And by the way, spend energy doing that.
Yeah, spend.
Because Luka and Kyrie were dead in the third quarter
and then they rallied a little bit.
But when you're carrying an offense like that
and just over and over again, banging bodies,
and Luka's not in the greatest shape either.
Yeah, no.
No, he definitely is not.
And so those shots that Washington was getting
against Minnesota, they were wide open.
Now there's someone there.
And you can see, I don't know how many times,
I thought there was a play late
that they threw it to Washington into the corner
and he should have shot it right away.
And he drove to the paint.
And he drove it and it had nothing. And he drove to the paint. Yeah.
Drove it and had nothing.
And the reason he didn't shoot is because people have been there all night.
And so,
you know,
he's,
you know,
we always used to laugh.
He's seeing people that aren't there.
And on that one,
no one was there.
He should have shot the ball,
but that's what happens.
And,
uh,
give Boston credit.
Their defensive game plan has been fantastic.
And let's be honest,
they have the ability to do it.
They have so many good defenders.
To me, as good as Brown has been offensively,
he's been unbelievable defensively.
And not only on Luka, but more on Kyrie
because of his size and his physicality.
He's been amazing.
Yeah, I voted for Brown for All-NBA. And part
of the case was the two-way game and how hard he plays night to night. Because I think, especially
in where the league is in 2024, and this is one of the things I love about Giannis, who, as you know,
is a competitive sociopath who just literally is incapable of not trying 100%. Brown was like that
this year. I thought
Brown set the tone. One of the reasons they won as many games as they did. I mean, they're 79 and
20 right now, which is, you know, how hard that is. That's a crazy record. And one of the reasons
is because that guy, he went up a level and you know, we've seen this really, the money started
to come in, in the late eights when you were in the league.
And the 90s was when it really came in.
And we saw guys go a bunch of different directions, right?
Yeah.
You played against how many talented dudes in the 90s that once they got a contract, it went sideways or something happened or they got hurt. Yeah. It's either a contract or, you know,
this is a different generation
where everyone has their own like image.
And, you know, it's harder to get everyone to buy in.
They're so worried about their brand.
And the guys that do win,
and they realize their brand is even better.
But Brown gets $3044 million and everybody's like,
oh my God, that's so much money. He's the most overpaid guy in the league. He got better. And
I've been saying this on the pod all year. He's been better all year. He was the biggest guy in
the game tonight on both ends. He made the biggest shot of his career with a minute left when they're
up to, they need a basket. Dallas is looming.
You could feel the Kyrie 3 coming.
And he hits this 18-footer.
It's just money that won the game.
But I think the mental toughness with him compared to two years ago,
it's night and day.
It's night and day and going left.
Right.
He made that shot.
Yeah.
You watch him.
This summer he worked on his game.
You know, everyone said he couldn't go left, he couldn't do these things.
He's done them.
I think the biggest difference watching Brown play for me is Brown has fluctuated energy-wise, I think, or focus-wise, I think.
I think he's matured.
I think he's turned into, you know, as we say, a grown-ass man.
And he comes into every game with that mindset.
And I think a lot of it is work on the court,
but a lot of it is who he is mentally and where he's at
and that he's grown up.
And you can see it.
Remember when this happened to Paul,
when that year the Indiana loss, when he took
his, when he wore the thing on his head, you were so bad and all of a sudden he's in trade
rumors.
But then he came back that next year and he was awesome and the team sucked, but he was
awesome.
And that was the first year he put together a really professional start to finish awesome
two-way veteran leader
year and then that led to 08 when you know he did it the whole year with kg and ray and everybody
bill to this day i tell people the reason we wanted in 08 is because of ball's second year
with me uh you remember we we butt heads a lot uh because you know, we had Paul, I just heard him telling this on some podcasts.
We had this big falling out of my office.
And he was pissed because I asked him a question that he thought was,
why would you ask me this question? I asked him, could he shoot?
I said, are you a good shooter? And you know, Paul, if you know, Paul,
Paul has confidence.
And I remember him saying, what kind of question is that?
I said, no, I'm serious.
Do you think you're a good shooter?
And he says, I'm a great shooter.
You know, what are you talking about?
I said, well, you're shooting 40%.
I said, so Paul, either you're a shitty shooter or you're taking crappy shots.
Right.
You're a great shooter who takes shit shots.
Yeah.
I said,
it's gotta be one of the two.
You just told me you're a great shooter,
but you're shooting 40%.
And he was like yelling,
like,
what are you trying to tell me?
I said,
I'm trying to tell you to take bad shots.
And if you want to be a winner,
you have to move the ball.
We'll get the ball back to you.
And the defense is now shifted
and you'll score easy.
And I've told this a hundred times.
He came back in my office after
butting heads the whole year and
said, we're good. Now, I didn't know
what that meant. I thought
I knew. I thought he was going to try it
the way that I wanted to. And he did
it. And that following year,
if you go look at his percentages, they skyrocketed. The problem is we sucked. Right. He should have been an all NBA guy
that year and the team was too bad. Yeah, he was great. It made it easy though. So when Kevin and
Ray joined, it was easy for him. He had already done that. He'd already kind of given himself.
Yeah. So it's the same thing he grew up well that and the
reason i wanted to talk about paul versus jaylen was paul in that playoffs goes head-to-head with
lebron it's a younger version of lebron but it was still lebron he was in the league for five years
beats him in a game seven outplays him and then in the finals let's be honest he kind of outplayed
kobe like he, for real.
He at least played him to a draw, but the thing that was cool about it was
he really thought he was as good as Kobe.
Whether that's true or not, we can bait it.
I think we know the answer.
But he thought he was as good, and that's what I'm seeing with Jalen in this finals.
Luka's better than him, but Jalen doesn't think that.
Jalen really thinks it's like me and Tatum are
on this dude's level and is carrying himself that way.
Yeah.
But the thing that has made Jaden Jalen great is the two things.
Number one,
he thinks he's better than everybody.
Right.
And,
uh,
but he also knows he's on a team with another great player. And it's not a competition.
Yeah.
It's not a competition for them.
I think it used to be.
But it isn't anymore.
And, again, I keep going back to the maturity thing.
And they're competitive.
And that's the point I meant with Jalen, just watching how competitive he is now.
He doesn't back down to anyone.
And I do think Ed and White, I think Horford,
I think Drew, they all help him.
They all help each other.
But, man, they are a connected basketball team.
And if you're going to win, you have to be connected.
Does Jalen remind you of Paul?
He does.
You know, same size, can get a shot wherever he wants.
Can guard different types of players, can guard smaller players, bigger players.
He's kind of stronger than you think.
Better defender than Paul.
And Paul was probably a better offensive player in some ways.
Where Paul was special and all the great ones, the Kobe's, at the end of the game, they could tell you, they could tell their opponent where they're going to get the shot at and where they're going to shoot it from.
Paul, of anybody I coach, knew his spots.
Yeah.
And he felt like if he can get to it, there was nothing defensively you were going to do to stop him unless he just missed the
shot. Uh, and that's what made Paul so good. Well, you know, it's funny. Then you coach the
ultimate example of all time of that. Chris Paul, who shot the same jumper from the same shot,
two inches over from the right side of the foul line over and over again. And nobody ever realized
he was shooting it from there. Like a thousand times.
Going right.
It's funny, as a coach,
I do remember as a
player, Mike Fratello
against the Milwaukee
Bucks, John Lucas went left, left,
left, left, left. Beat me left three
times. He calls a
timeout. He's like screaming at me.
Basically said, you have another game like this, you'll be out ofout he's like screaming at me basically said you have another
game like this you'll be out of the league right he yelled at me and i'm thinking of him i swear
to god i'm trying to keep him from going left he's good at it you know and by the end of my
career and i was never on that level of these great players but i remember a young player
walking up to me before the game and said hey Hey, Doc, you're not going right tonight.
And I told him, Well, I'm not going left.
Something's going to happen.
But great players, they're going to get to their spot.
They just are.
They're just that good at it.
And you can see it every night.
Yeah, one of the things that was amazing this whole series,
but especially tonight,
because Kyrie, he sucked in the first two games.
And it was a lot of hero ball stuff.
And he didn't get his teammates involved.
That's about as bad.
I think the crowd got to him.
There's no question.
The game tonight, you could see he had a hop and a step.
He was making threes.
And at some point, especially in the second half,
Holiday was like, all right, I got him.
Yes.
And they started, whatever Holiday was doing
and then Kyrie responded to it,
it was like watching those boxing matches
where it's like the lightweights
or like those 125 pounders
where they're moving at a speed
where you can't even keep track
and it just seemed faster than everyone else in the court.
But it was great to watch.
And the reality is it was a great moment for Kyrie and they made him take hero ball shots
and he couldn't, he couldn't make the plays.
Yeah.
And I, you know, it's funny.
I don't know if Kyrie sucked in the first few games or their defense made him struggle.
Yeah.
Or maybe both.
Yeah.
And I think it's a little bit of both.
I thought the biggest change tonight is, you're right,
I thought Holiday, instead of picking them up at half court,
because I thought Dallas did something really good tonight.
They took the ball out, and they got the ball up the floor quick.
And so Boston never got into their full court pressure.
Right.
But then if you go watch the last six minutes,
think about it, one of the biggest fouls of the game
was they tried to set a pick on Holiday at half court
because he was up pressuring the ball again, and that's what affects them.
And I thought he started doing it late.
And, you know, think about if you're Kyrie.
Luka's out of the game.
I got Holiday picking me up full court.
And once I get it across, then I have to make the play.
And I have no other offensive creator on the floor with me.
No one else that can create a shot for him.
So, yeah, he was against a lot the last five minutes.
You took over that Bucs job and they had traded Drew, what, six months before?
Was there still a shadow with Drew at all when you took the team over? Because he he was one of the most beloved bucks of all time yeah it was funny it was more
not that they they wanted him back they loved dame and all that but he was their leader you know he
was he led by example and and by what he did um And you don't just replace that.
That takes a little bit of time.
And think also, again, they did this trade late.
Yeah.
So it had everybody probably in a shock a little bit.
But you heard his name.
It's funny.
I've always been a big holiday fan.
I've always liked him a lot.
I thought he really took care of Austin his rookie year in New Orleans.
You know, he was Austin's rook.
And Austin always, you know, I mean, Austin being the first person,
we were talking about players.
And I remember Austin's rookie year,
after his rookie year was sitting there having dinner.
He said, you know what the most underrated player in the NBA is?
And I said, who?
And he said, Drew Holiday.
I said, what?
What are you talking about?
He said, this guy defensively, there's nobody in the league
that can do the things that he can do.
Well, then when you get to Milwaukee and you coach and you hear,
you just hear stories about him, not on the floor, just as a person.
And you think, man, now you got to put
this guy on another level.
You like him even more.
They just don't make a lot of people like that.
And, you know,
he's like a champion.
And so it's really
cool. You know, it looks like he's going to get
another one. And it's because of
not just his play, but who he is.
Yeah, there's a confidence with him
that
when you've won,
when you've won on the biggest stage
and he had one of the great sequences
probably in the history of the finals when he's
strip booker and then throws
that crazy alley-oop to Giannis.
You have a play like that.
You're kind of minted after that,
but you could feel it in the first two Boston games
because there was a couple moments.
Tatum wasn't playing well in game one.
That game was never really in doubt,
but in game two,
there was a couple moments when
previous Celtics teams, I think,
I don't know if they would have folded,
but they could have had a little patch
where all of a sudden they're down eight,
and he was, I thought, the alpha on the court, which I hadn't gone to a playoff game yet
until this series with them.
But I was surprised by that because everyone says he's a quiet guy, quiet leader, but there's
an intensity to him that you can kind of feel, right?
He reminds you of Maurice Cheeks in that way.
Yeah, that's a good one.
Yeah.
I mean, Maurice Cheeks would score eight points in the game,
and they would be the most meaningful eight points.
A team makes a run, and he would push it up
and take that quick pull-up jump shot.
And then he'd go back to doing his other stuff,
and then he'd do it again.
Drew does it more.
You know, he's that plus a better score.
He does it more, and that's what makes him so good.
You know, it's amazing watching all the little things that he does,
their team does.
You know, they're fun to watch.
I hate to say it because, you know, I'm the coach of the Milwaukee Bucks.
They're in your conference, right.
Yeah, but they are a fun team to watch.
Let's take one more break, and then we can talk about that foul call.
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All right, so Boston's up 91-70.
And everyone in Dallas is disconnected.
The body language was awful.
Nobody's talking.
As you know, I'm the body language,
one of the premier body language experts of all time.
Celtics body language, A+.
Dallas body language, Luka's standing in the corner, Kyrie's over there, and I'm like,
oh man, we broke them.
We broke them.
This happened.
Then a couple missed shots.
Dallas makes a couple.
All of a sudden, it's coming back.
Luka picks up, I think, a fourth foul at some point.
Stupid foul on Pritchard.
Just like a hand check foul. It's like the kind of foul when you point. Stupid foul on Pritchard. Just like a hand-check foul.
It's like the kind of foul
when you're the best player on the team
and then the game you can't have.
Then he gets a fifth foul.
And then all of a sudden, sixth foul
when they're really coming back.
It's 93-90, 4-12 left.
Jalen drives it to him.
They call the foul.
Now, Kidd has to challenge.
Right? You have to.
But he's moving. They can't reverse it.
Were you shocked
by that call? This is the best guy
in the game.
I didn't like the call
in general.
I just didn't like the call.
But if you're going to blow the whistle on that,
it was the right call.
It absolutely was a foul.
You know, it's funny. I was
watching the game over Larry's house.
And Luca picks up his
fourth foul, and Larry will
tell you, I turned to him and said,
Luca's going to foul out in this game. He's not going to make it
through this game. He's really emotional.
So you
read it?
There's something you noticed and
didn't like yeah i told larry sitting right there i said luke is going to follow up this game
i said he's really emotional there was a play and he got fouled on that drive you know toward
the basket and i think it was tatum forearms him falls out of bounds. Luka lost it. That was a clear foul.
To me, that call literally has to be made.
They didn't make it.
They just, you know, they didn't make the call.
And so from that point on, Luka, those fouls came right after that.
He just, he snapped, you know, in some ways.
And, you know, I wouldn't say he snapped, but he just.
I know what you mean.
He just got lathered up.
Yeah.
He started playing angry.
He started playing angry.
He started playing fiscal.
And he does this thing sometimes, and all the great players do it.
They start daring the ref.
Yeah.
Well, you didn't call that make this call.
And so they said, okay, we'll blow the whistle.
We will.
And listen, you have Cape as a rap and Mark.
Those aren't the guys you want to mess with.
Right.
You know, and Larry was laughing because I told him, I said,
Luca's messing with the wrong group tonight.
This is not going to go well for him.
And it didn't.
You know, so it was, we were laughing because Larry was laughing. He said, you just said that. this is not going to go well for him. And it didn't.
You know, so it was,
we were laughing because Larry was laughing.
He said, you just said that.
I said, you can see it happening.
You can literally see it happening.
Well, I mean,
they were letting everything go.
It was a super physical game.
And I thought one of the reasons
Dallas came back
was because kids,
you know,
he's one of the best 50 players ever.
He's been in games like that.
And I think he told his team, like, ramp it up, man. They're not calling anything because their defense got so physical in
the fourth quarter, but it was working. I mean, it was one of the reasons Boston's offense. I know
people, they see it and they're like, Oh, Boston's choking. Dallas was a, this game turned into a
rugby match and Dallas kind of realized it before Boston did.
And that was one of the reasons they came back, I thought.
That was a reason.
And Boston did something that you do.
That's another reason it's so hard.
They thought about winning a title for about five or six minutes.
Yeah, they started thinking about,
oh my God, we could close this on Friday.
Yeah, you could feel it. They start slowing the ball down.
They were milking the clock.
You can see it.
And they had a momentary lapse of thinking about what's ahead
instead of staying locked in.
And then all of a sudden they got locked back in and they win the game.
I think it'll allow them to close out now
because they've already had their scare.
You know, Dallas is going to have to play unbelievable
to win this next game, or it's going to be a sweep.
And the thing we're not talking about with Boston,
they've not lost a road game in the playoffs.
This is an historic run.
If they win
the next game,
they've only lost two games
in the entire playoffs, and they went
undefeated on the road.
That's historic.
I think 34-14 on the
road, just period, this season.
And I told you this,
so you know I'm not lying.
Everyone asked me before every game,
what's going to happen?
What do you think?
And once KP got scratched, which we haven't even talked about,
and I think people just assumed Dallas came three,
they're home, they're going to win.
And I was like, I was telling everybody,
I think the Celtics are going to win tonight
because they haven't made threes yet.
And for whatever reason, I can't explain it,
but they play better on the road.
And I don't really fully understand it, especially Tatum.
I think he plays, I think home.
And I've asked people with the Celtics about this.
Like, why is Tatum better on the road than home?
What are the reasons?
And there's a bunch of it, right?
When you're home, you're dealing with tickets for everybody.
You know, you're with your family.
I'm preaching the choir with you, though.
Yeah, but usually you play better at home.
The only place that I thought
it was difficult to play at home was in Philly
because of the crowd, and I thought
it affected our players some.
I think this is the Tatum piece, though.
I think people have been watching him for so long
when it's not going well for him, you can hear
this weird murmur in the crowd.
And it's just that energy's a little weird. And once that happens when it's not going well for him, you can hear this weird murmur in the crowd. Yeah.
And it's just,
that energy is a little weird.
And once that happens, it's hard to get it out of your brain when you're a player,
but they are awful good on the road.
It's amazing how comfortable they are.
And the other thing,
their role players play well on the road,
which,
you know,
you know,
when they hit threes on the road,
they were 17 for 46.
And that was one of the things I was telling people.
I was like, watch our threes for over 15.
That's that's where they need to be.
And by the way, I think they're going to be over 15.
I think they're finally going to hit some of these.
So, you know, they just played free and loose.
Jalen Brown used a term that I've never heard.
I loved it.
He talked about their bench and then they call them stay ready players.
And I've never heard that before. And I was like, Oh, I love that. I'm using that. I'm stealing
that. Yeah. He said to stay readies. We're all great tonight. Uh, and that says a lot about
that, that team has had a lot of talk to each other about, Hey, one might, you may play 15
minutes. One day you may play none you just have to
stay ready and they've all bought into it and you can feel it that's another thing we talk about
made teams connected teams they put they become that well and that's the thing when kate so kp
that injury that i don't i can't even explain what it was like this it's part of the body nobody
ever heard of and they're saying like the 30 people in
america have had this injury this year it's like okay um but then he gets scratched have you been
in a situation like that where one of your best players is like all right he's out he's 50 50 my
play my play no he's actually not playing but with this this team, I was like, I don't know. I think they might be okay.
They're so deep.
I mean, they really are.
Your replacement is Horford.
And some Pritchard minutes and a little Tillman.
And Tillman was awesome tonight.
Tillman was unbelievable. And this is where, from a coaching standpoint,
you're so happy for any guy that has gone through the journeys
that the tillmans have
gone through you know uh when when the bucks wanted you know obviously everybody was happy
for yannis and and and but you're really happy for the the brooke lopez is the pat connington's
of the world yeah same thing that's what a coach looks at is all the other guys that have to put
in the same amount of work and sometimes even more work than the great player
and and and they get their shine and it's really cool to watch one of your closest friends on the
planet is sam cassell yeah who you've sat next to a lot who was on the oa team he was at the
tail end of his career but got a ring but then you went through a lot of wars with him and he's on this self-expense what is it what does he tell you about the team that
you could talk about on a podcast without portraying him the closeness uh he says a couple
things that um joe joe holds everybody accountable and everybody allows him to uh hold him accountable
you know he said something last week.
He said, I remember you telling me, he was talking to me,
and he said that players have to allow their coach to coach them.
They have to get to a place where, you know what,
I'm just going to drop my guard down and I'm going to allow him to,
I use the word, get in there and just, just let him do
his thing. And then the coach on the other end has to allow the player to do his thing through
the team. And that's where they're at. And he says, it's really amazing. Like he said,
Joe holds them accountable, you know, all the time. And they're allowing him to do that.
And then the second part is, he said, he says, Doc, these boys are connected.
There's no, the word I always use, and he uses it now, there's no clutter.
There's no clutter on this team.
There's just none.
There's no clutter.
There's nothing can shake this team. Uh, and he talks
about that all the time. When you see the media shit that goes on and look, I do three podcasts
a week. Sometimes there's narratives you want to talk about. Uh, but I've never, the Tatum Brown
thing. I'm just, I'm all in on those guys. I've never, never really wavered. Like this is, there's something
special with these two, but then when we get to the playoffs, there's something to talk about.
Then it's like, who's better Tatum or Brown is Tatum good enough is Tatum elite Tatum's.
He's a first team NBA guy, but is he really that good? And how do you navigate that stuff as the
coach? Cause you know, the guys see it, they're in a hotel room, they're on Twitter, they're
getting texts from people.
How do you keep their heads from not kind of drifting
toward this dumb shit?
Well, as a coach,
you call it the peripheral opponent.
You know?
Right.
Pat Riley used to use that term
all the time,
the peripheral opponent.
And, you know, it's more
if your team is connected and if your team has a goal that is bigger than the individual, it doesn't affect the team.
It really doesn't. I'm sure they all see it and they all hear it.
And the family members, Bill. Oh, can you believe they're I mean, they you're sitting at dinner and I can tell you how it works.
You're sitting at dinner sometimes with your family and your brother may be sitting there.
Hey, Jason, can you believe they're saying Jalen is better?
And Jalen is, I guarantee you, Jason hears it and it's white noise now.
But a year ago, two years ago, they may have gotten a discussion out of it.
It's blue noise.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's so whatever.
You know, and that's what happens.
Well, you had this in 2008.
Paul won the finals MVP.
You could have made a really good case for Ray.
Like a really good case. I actually probably would have voted for Ray.
It was even either way, right?
And I'm sure Ray didn't care because he was so excited to win the title
but that's something in this current that yeah that stuff happens in this current league i think
it's even more so you know jaylen wins the mvp of the eastern finals there was pure joy from
everybody right and it becomes an espn segment anyway where they're like wait what was tatum
really happy it's like wait what he's happily smiling and clapping and you know what we all miss like who's every team's best defender on
jason tatum every night um and so we always miss that sometimes like the reason the other guys can
get off because sometimes they don't have the best defender. Now, in Brown's case, it doesn't matter who guards him either.
They're just two great players that plays on the same team that are over themselves
and are more concerned about winning than they are about the individual stuff.
And that's why they're winning.
Yeah, I did something on my podcast a couple of days ago about just the culture of basketball. It's like, well, somebody
has to be the best player, and that's what happens.
Because when Michael Jordan was in the Bulls, he
was the best player in pit bull in second, and that's just
how we think about basketball.
It's only happened once
that you can make a case
that the Detroit
Pistons with Larry Brown
that you couldn't
circle who clearly was their best player.
Yeah.
Well, you'd have to go way back.
Cause like the 79 Sonics were like that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Um, even the 89 Pistons, I say it was their best player, even though they had a bunch of stuff, but.
Yeah.
But I was clearly.
KG was the best player.
You could have made a case for other guys, but KG was the best player.
No doubt.
And, and so, but you need the best, you need separ, but KG was the best player. No doubt. And so, but you need separators.
Like, you want your best player.
You want everybody to know.
You know, Perk always laughs.
I swear I don't remember doing this, but it was in Milwaukee.
We had won a game, and I must have felt like Rondo, Pert, Baby,
all those guys start thinking that they were part of the big three.
Okay.
Extended big three.
Yeah.
And I walked in the locker room after a win and said,
I want to make something clear tonight.
We have a big three.
We don't have a big four.
We don't have a big five.
We don't have a big six.
We have a big three. And this is who a big five. We don't have a big six. We have a big three.
And this is who we play through every single time down the floor.
And these big three guys will get everybody else shots.
But don't get this twisted.
We have a big three.
Like Perk says it all the time.
I swear I don't actually remember doing that.
But it was at Rondo's wedding, by the way,
this past weekend, which was amazing.
Oh, wow.
It was where the James Harden toss,
the bouquet toss.
Oh, that was that video?
That was at Rondo's wedding.
Well, you think about it,
16 years ago since that team won,
and does it matter who you think
was the best player of the 2008 Celtics?
Not really.
Do you think anybody gives a shit?
And that's the thing.
Let's say the Celtics win Friday night,
Jalen Brown wins the MVP,
and then two days later, it'd be like,
Jason Tate.
Basically, what happened with Steph
nine years ago, right?
When Iguodala won the finals MVP,
it's like, well, what does this mean for Steph
and his legacy?
It's like, I guarantee you
he doesn't care. He just won the title.
Even though I thought Steph should have won the MVP
that year. I will say that.
But it didn't matter.
You know who it didn't matter to the most? It was Steph.
He could do less. He's a champion.
That's all that matters.
Right. And then we had the same thing when he was
in the 17 and 18 Warriors
when KD was there. And it's like, you know, he's, he's really happy to win back-to-back titles. I
promise he's not, not sitting in bed at night going, Oh man, I can't believe I lost the finals
MVP. Yeah. For my legacy. I need an MVP. No, he doesn't. And he could have won that year too.
Like, it's not like he wasn't great in those series. He was. So, yeah,
I think that's the stuff
that is talked about
more outside of teams
than it actually is worried
about inside of teams.
And if it is a worry,
then that team's
not going to win.
If it is a worry
with that team,
that's not the team.
They're not connected
and they're not going
to win anyway.
Do you see a scenario
where Tatum and Brown are just together the whole time, like Bird and McHale were? Yes, I do. I think I
do too. I think because of the salary structures now, that they're going to both, you know,
Tatum's about to get paid a lot of money. 315. And so once they sign those deals, they're basically
on that team.
Now, the only difference is they're both young.
So they have another, both of them have another big contract coming after this one.
And that will be the only time that they would be considered possibly you separate them.
But they could live an entire career together, which when you can do that for any team, it's pretty special.
Well, that's the most special thing.
That's what is at stake for Klay this summer, right?
Because I'm sure Philly, Orlando,
somebody's going to have a ton of money to offer him,
but you got to start weighing.
That's a hard one.
That's a hard one.
Jordan Pippen, Pippen ended up leaving because Jordan retired,
but they played Jordan's entire,
most of his entire career and pretty special.
Bird and McHale, same thing.
But yeah, it's a different level
when you stick together that long.
I mean, you had it with Joel Embiid and Ben Simmons.
Oh wait, no, I guess that's a bad example.
No, that wasn't a good example.
That didn't last long at all.
No, but that's what you think about that.
That's one of the reasons it is special when it happens.
Like think about all these twosomes, threesomes.
Oh my God, this has so much potential.
And then it just blows up.
All of a sudden, Ben Simmons is in London as your season's going on.
You're like, what happened?
We had this special thing.
Where'd it go?
Bill, it can go so quick. You know, um, you think, I think about all the years
that I've coached and, and, and again, I'll go back to all the teams that I've coached
and, and, and there's times where I think I'm, I have my team overachieving at times. I thought
the Philly team, you know, the year before they got swept in the first round by Boston,
and now we've just won the regular season
conference, you know,
with the same team.
But it doesn't take much,
and that's what's so cool
when teams win. You know,
Vince starts struggling with free throws,
and it became a thing.
The next thing you know, he's gone.
You know, I look at the Chris Paul game in Oklahoma City.
You remember?
We're going to win that series.
We're up.
And Chris is the smartest player in NBA,
one of the smartest players in NBA history.
And he had literally two minutes of mistake basketball.
Yeah. And, you know, minutes of mistake basketball. Yeah.
And, you know, we didn't, we didn't foul.
We, we, we, uh, Chris tried to throw the ball from half court to draw a foul,
which, you know, those aren't Chris Paul plays.
And then we lose that game.
We lose the next game and we're out.
And the team never returned back the same after that. Well, you, and then you had the Josh Smith, Corey Brewer game the next game and we're out. And the team never returned back the same after that.
And then you had the Josh Smith-Corey Brewer game the next year.
The next year, like, you know, from a coaching standpoint, we're up.
And all of a sudden, and Chris was playing on one leg.
That's the one thing I always tell people.
We didn't have home court.
And Chris was playing on one leg.
And then all of a sudden the the guys you want
taking shots start think about that game kevin mckale had benched jay harden yeah um and he was
about to bitch take the white hour out uh all of a sudden they win the game you know it's uh it's
amazing i went to that game harden had a towel on his head,
and he was checked out for the season.
He was checked out.
I think he might have been on Expedia making Vegas flights,
and then all of a sudden, Josh Smith made a couple threes.
I mean, that basically almost happened tonight.
It was 91-70.
You know, I think with the three-point era,
I never feel safe because I was getting congratulation texts, and I get so mad when people congratulate me,
especially with the Celtics team.
Don't ever congratulate me during a Celtics game.
I'm never safe.
Yeah, no, I just get mad.
I just pretend I don't get them.
All right, this was fun.
I had a good time.
What happens Friday?
Any guesses, Or do you
not want to make a guess?
What do you expect from a
big picture standpoint?
Down 3-0? Does
Dallas shake it up? Do they just
play the hits? They don't shake it up.
I think they have to play the way they play. This is
what got them there. I think
Luka and Curry have to
be incredible in this game for them to win.
But I would not be surprised at all if Boston won four straight.
Did you buy any,
like it's game three and kid plays 11 guys in the first half.
When you're at this stage of the playoffs and round four,
you really know who your eight or nine is at this point.
That told me that he wasn't positive who he could trust beyond his first couple, right?
Yeah. You're searching. And that, that happens. You get down to, you know,
Hardaway hadn't played a lot. So you kind of knew coming in, he was going to play a little bit more.
You know, they needed their role players to play better,
but it's, and I keep saying this,
it's difficult because Boston's not helping.
And so their role players aren't getting the shots
that they're used to getting.
And I think it's very difficult for them to play well.
Yeah, this game four is weird because you think,
oh yeah, they're going to sweep.
But we've seen situations, like in 2017, Golden State goes up 3-0 with one of the four best basketball teams probably of all time.
And then they blow game four in Cleveland and they have to go back to Golden State and close.
So you just never know.
Wait, last thing, Jerry West.
Yeah, that's sad.
You know, I knew that he was struggling.
I saw his wife, Karen, a couple of weeks ago.
You know, I was able to text with him a couple of times, but it really sad.
But, you know, it's sad because we lost Jerry West.
But then when you just sit back and think about this guy lived a life,
you know,
uh,
I remember I had,
I was at a funeral years ago and a guy was sung about the dash,
you know,
whatever 20,
you know,
1904 to 2000 is where he lived.
And the dash in between, he filled his dash up,
you know,
yeah, he filled the dash up completely, you's a great way to put it yeah he filled the dash up completely
you know through his life um and you know jerry was a complicated person because he lived a very
dark life you know growing up and and to beat those odds from west virginia uh to become the logo
uh to be as almost as good of a front office guy
as you are as a player when you're one of the greatest players ever.
I mean, the dude overachieved everything.
And of all the people that, you know, maybe of anyone I've met,
his love and competitiveness for the game was unmatched.
If you talked to Jerry last week, if you could,
and you start bringing up the Celtics series,
he would start crying.
He would start having literally tears in his eyes.
Think about how long ago that was,
and it still affects him that they couldn't break through.
That just tells you the passion and the love that he had for the game that he was so great at.
Yeah, I loved researching him when I was doing my book.
And he somehow, he's one of the 12 best players of all time still,
but it's somehow underrated because he was so great year after year after year
and had just the worst luck on the
planet like it's he wins one title but really could have won five um you just could go through
and it's like well if that didn't happen if elgin doesn't get hurt frank selby shot goes you just
you start banging all those out but what was really interesting was how the other players
revered him and you, in the 69 finals,
Havlicek goes up to him right after they win
and just hugs him.
And he's like, I love you.
I really want you to win a title someday.
I feel bad that we won.
Like, that's how, for a player to reach that kind of level
with the other players that they're trying to beat,
where they're like, I feel bad we're beating you.
I've never heard of that.
There's very few people like that.
And I think the reason was because of the way he approached the game.
Yeah.
You know, he played the game as pure as you can play it
and as hard as you can play it.
And he had, you know, we always talk requirements.
He had the required amount of intensity every single night.
And it's what, what separated.
Yeah.
I thought even watching the tapes and studying it,
I,
he's one of the guys from that era that you actually could have put into
any air.
And I,
I think he's probably just as effective.
He just would have figured it out.
It's like,
Oh,
we have the three point line now I'll become one of the best three point
line.
Like he switched positions.
You know how hard this is.
He's basically the point guard of the Lakers
the last four or five years.
He was a shooting guard. But he was bringing the ball
up. He led the league in assists.
Whatever it took, he did.
You know who could have been a great player
in this era? Kevin Garnett.
Because Garnett would have been
a great three-point shooter.
No one just took him.
But I always think, man, he was almost made for this era.
And then the last thing I'm going to say about eras before we get to loss
is every old player loves that the game over the second half of the year
became physical and scoring dropped.
Right.
It answers every question.
You know, all the arguments.
Well, the game was more physical.
And then you have these guys saying the game is not more physical.
Guys would have scored.
No, the game's physical and scoring dropped.
And it's a better game to watch right now, in my opinion,
because they're not calling all these fouls.
They're allowing them to play.
And the game right now is really perfectly wrapped in play. And I love how they're doing.
So when you were coaching, you noticed this immediately that they flipped the rules.
No, I just noticed they wasn't calling files. And you know, the only mistake that the league
didn't tell anybody at first, usually we get memos. Hey, guys, we're going to stop calling this.
It was like they had a meeting in some dark office.
Hey, we're just going to start letting them play.
But it didn't take long.
And then Adam had to come out and say, yeah, we're allowing it.
But it was obvious.
I mean, think about I coached the game this year, Bill,
against the Boston Celtics,
that there were two foul shots in the entire game. But you probably loved it.
I loved it. You know what I love? The game was over in under two hours. It was unbelievable.
It was amazing. So I actually like, I love how the game is being played right now it's good I like
I like what you said about the dash with Jerry West because I think start to finish lifetime of
basketball he's gotta have that has to be the greatest career anyone had right he was the top
15 player ever and then was the top five executive ever he he his dash is full completely. He lived a life that no one in NBA history has ever
lived. Um, you know, you won't look at the year that he was born. You shouldn't look at the year
he died. You should look at the dash in between from college, from high school to pros, the man
lived his life to the fullest and, you know, God bless him. We're going to miss him.
Hey, I had a great time podcasting with you. It's good to see you. I look forward to seeing
you in the summer, but I miss doing this with you. It's great to have you on. Good to see you.
Thank you. Let's do a couple more. Let's do dinner. Yeah. Good to see you. Take care.
All right. That's it for the podcast. Thanks so much to Doc Rivers.
Thanks to Kyle Creighton and Steve Cerruti as well.
Don't forget about the rewatchables, which we put up a couple of days ago.
We did Breaking Away.
And I might have to do a podcast on Friday night.
I don't want to jinx it, but it's in play.
I might see you later this week.
Go Celts. I might see you later this week go soans