The Herd with Colin Cowherd - Hoops Tonight - 5 Takeaways from Thunder-Rockets, Warriors getting HOT, Lakers lose AGAIN
Episode Date: January 17, 2026Jason reacts to a Thursday NBA slate including Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and the Oklahoma City Thunder going on the road and putting the clamps on Kevin Durant and the Houston Rockets offense, Steph Cur...ry and the Golden State Warriors taking care of a New York Knick team missing Jalen Brunson, Anfernee Simons leading a Boston Celtics comeback versus the Miami Heat, and a shorthanded Los Angeles Laker team losing at home to the Charlotte Hornets #volume All lines provided by @HardRockBet Get 20% off your first purchase at https://Vuori.com/hoopsSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Welcome to Hoops Tonight here at The Volume.
Happy Friday, everybody.
Hope all of you guys are having an incredible end to your week.
Have a jam-packed show for you guys today.
Pretty straightforward.
We're going to be touching on five games from last night to various extents as the Thunder got their revenge.
I shouldn't say revenge.
They beat the rockets earlier this year.
but they're starting to find their groove and dominated the rockets on the road,
getting a 20-point win, pulling away in the fourth quarter.
I'm going to break that game down.
We're going to touch on the Warriors win against the Knicks.
We're going to touch on the Celtics fourth quarter comeback against the Miami Heat.
We're going to touch on Kate and Jalen Derns return for the Detroit Pistons in a win versus the Phoenix Suns.
And then my very brief thoughts on the Lakers.
I'm kind of just at peace with who they are at this point.
We'll get to that at the tail end of the show.
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make sure you drop them in our full episodes on YouTube. Just put a mailbag with a colon, write your
question. We'll get to them on Fridays throughout the remainder of the season. All right, let's talk some
basketball. So the Thunder Control this one pretty much throughout. Houston kept making runs throughout
the first three quarters that kept things close, prevented them from getting down double digits.
OK, C didn't actually push ahead double digits until about nine minutes left in the fourth quarter of
this one. A couple of clear advantages for Houston. And I actually,
to argue this is kind of the concerning thing. If you're a Rockets fan, like they dominate the
offensive glass. They have a 25 to 10 second chance points advantage. They actually did a decent job
of taking care of the basketball in this game, at least avoiding some of the more painful
live ball turnovers that can lead to easy runouts. And that is usually what ends up blowing
games open for Oklahoma City. So they were actually able to keep this relatively close for the first
three quarters and change. But ironically, Oklahoma City pulled away doing the thing they had
struggled mightily with for weeks, which was shot making from the perimeter. Jump shooting had been
a problem for Oklahoma City during their struggles in December and early January. They had,
these are just numbers from Synergy just to give you guys an idea. These are points per jump shot
attempt. In the first spurs loss, 0.8 points per jump shot attempt in the first, in the Minnesota loss,
right after that. 0.79 in the third Spurs loss, 0.78. In the Hornets loss,
0.78. And I actually thought right around that Hornets game was where it really started to
peak. There was a three game stretch where they lost to the Hornets. They barely beat the Jazz
and they barely beat the Grizzlies. And they went 0.78, 0.8, 0.79 points per jump shot
respectively in those three games. And it was, you know, what was weird about,
those particular games is they were shooting extremely poorly on wide open catch and shoot
threes during net span. One of the things that was kind of popping up in their other losses is
they were making the wide open ones, but they were missing anything that was semi-contested and
they were missing a lot of their pull-up jump shots. In that three-game stretch, they attempted
63 unguarded catch-and-shoot jump shots and made just 13 of them. Just brutal bad shooting for Oklahoma
City in that stretch. And it was after that, then I talked about how it kind of started to feel a little
bit like a case of the yips, you know, just like a team that was like was legitimately in their
own head to the extent that a lot of their guys were shooting below their capability. But I had two
follow-ups to that idea when I kind of talked about how they were entering into that kind of funk.
One was that I'd be certain they'd snap out of it eventually. Why? They'd shot the ball too well for
too long beforehand. They had too much time to figure it out as early in the season. And
they're still just too talented up and down the roster to not eventually found a way to figure
it out for lack of a better way of putting it. And then two, I think for everyone, including
the thunder themselves, we have to at least kind of file that away in that the potential for
a cold spell like that from the perimeter is at least something we'll always have in the back
of our minds with this Thunder team, at least is something that is a potential vulnerability,
even if we can all admit that they're the runaway favorite at this point in time.
But they snapped out of it in a big way last night. They got 1.1 points per jump shot overall.
In that fourth quarter stretch, when they blew things open, they were five for nine on catch and
shoot threes. And that was good with Kenrich Williams missing a couple of wide open ones in that stretch.
It was this Chet Holmgren, Jalen Williams, AJ Mitchell kind of group that.
did all the damage and they did what they did best, which was relentlessly attack the rim.
This team does have a clear identity on offense. All of their stars and all of their ball
handlers, I'm even going to include AJ Mitchell and guys like Jason Wallace here, they are all
in attack mode all of the time. They may have some up and down nature to their rim decisions.
Sometimes they can get a little sketchy with forcing things in traffic at the rim. They can
certainly go cold from the perimeter at times, but they're never going to stop attacking.
That is very much, even like Chet and his ISOs, he's always trying to get downhill at a big
driving dunk past Kevin Durant to start the fourth quarter. J. Dubb, a couple of really nice
drives in that early fourth quarter that set up Casein Wallace catch and shoot three.
One of those like kind of patented Donovan Mitchell windmill dribbles over the top that set one up,
another drive off the right wing against Reed Shepard. And then AJ Mitchell ended up hitting a catch
and shoot three off of a case and Wallace drive off of the right wing. And things blew up fast for
Houston from there. This was a two-point game with 11 minutes left in the fourth. Then it was an 11,
an 11-point game with nine minutes left in the fourth. So in two minutes, they blew it from a one-possession
game to a double-digit lead. And next thing you know, you look up at the scoreboard and the
thunder were up by 25. And that can be what it's like when you let go of the rope against this type of team.
The Thunder also held the rockets to just 16 points of their own in the fourth quarter. I think
we started to see some of the cumulative wear and tear of the thunder ball pressure and
physicality get to guys like Kevin Durant and Alper and Shangun. I thought both of those guys looked
kind of exhausted in that fourth quarter. A lot of like stagnant ball where neither of them was
attacking, but they were kind of looking around the floor waiting for something to naturally break open
or looking at the other guy to see if maybe they wanted to look to go attack. And there were a
handful of plays where guys got aggressive. Shangun had a big drive past Chad Holmgren where he went past
him and obviously KD hit a couple of jumpers, but for the most part, it was a lot of just
kind of standing around not really knowing how to penetrate the defense. And Lou Dort has done a
fantastic job on KD in both of these games, this one and the season opener, of just getting
up underneath them and getting really physical and forcing him into some misses. And then all game
long, I thought the Thunder did a really good job of overloading the middle on rolls and cuts.
And it was ironic because they were giving up a lot of these openings on the weak side corner in
Houston just wasn't getting it there. As a matter of fact, Houston attempted just four
unguarded catch and shoot jump shots in the entire game. This was not a game where they were
missing a bunch of wide open threes. They weren't really getting the ball there. A lot of like
catches in the middle of the floor that were turning into bad forced misses like that one of
men Thompson had down the stretch where he jumped into Kenrich Williams or turnovers like the past
of Stephen Adams on that role where he gets the ball poked away by Shaggildes Alexander. Okay,
he was swarming that middle and Houston was just turning the ball over or shooting some bad
shots in there. And then big picture looking at, because they did get quite a few catch and
shoots that were contested in this game. The Rockets are having some jump shooting woes of their own
as of late. The Rockets have shot the ball extremely poorly, seven games in a row now. They've been
below 0.85 points per jump shot in every single one of the last seven games,
averaging in total over that seven games, just 0.79 points per jump shot since the loss in Dallas.
And they're just two and five in that span. Now, some of that is just a slump, but some of that is some natural regression.
After they shot kind of absurdly well to start the season, several of their players were shooting better than you would typically expect them to based on what their career history was to that point.
As a team, the Rockets have actually slipped to 16th in jump shooting efficiency in the NBA.
after that recent stretch. Nonetheless, a really impressive win for the Thunder.
Team that appears to be back on track. They've now won five in a row,
nine out of 11 since that rough stretch.
I wanted to dig though, you know, as we look at this team,
you know, every time we get an opportunity to see one of these kinds of matchups,
where these are two teams that I have in my list of top tier contenders,
at least going into this game. I think OKC showed a little bit of a gap
between them in Houston in this game and we'll dig into the reasons why.
but going into the game, we viewed it as a matchup between our two top tier,
two of our top tier contenders at this point in the season.
I have them too, as well as Denver in that conversation.
And then I'm strongly considering most likely going to add Minnesota to that conversation
as we get to the end of this month.
And every month we're going to do new contender rankings.
We're going to have one here in a couple of weeks.
But if we look at those two matchups,
now I'm starting to look at very detailed, like kind of schematic stuff
that may or may not translate to a potential playoff matchup for these two teams.
So I have five takeaways from this game from last night that just kind of demonstrate some of the things we can look at and expect to see if these two teams face off in a playoff series.
First of all, the doubling of Shea Gilders Alexander.
Houston basically just blitzed the hell out of Shea on every single ball screen, but then allowed him to work one-on-one against his primary matchup.
Now, the reason why is Houston likes their primary matchups there.
There was a lot of a men Thompson or Josh Okie in this game.
And Shay, if he wanted to work a tough ISO against one.
of those two guys. Houston was willing to let him do that. But if they attempted any sort of ball
screen action, they were just aggressively doubling him to get the ball out of his hands. And it actually
worked pretty well overall. And I think it's a worthwhile scheme for Houston to have in their bag
of tricks should they end up in a series against OKC. Shea was a little flummixed by it in the first half.
He had a few uncharacteristic turnovers, didn't really get anything going offensively.
outside of a handful of short bursts, wasn't really able to get anything substantial going
offensively in this game.
Ended up kind of getting his way to the foul line to keep his 20-point streak alive at the end
of the game when things were kind of already out of reach.
The Thunder had a 105 offensive rating with Shea on the floor in the first half and
then 100 in the third quarter.
It wasn't really until the fourth quarter that that unit started to score super effectively
effectively.
And at that point, it was already a double-digit lead.
The bench group had already kind of grown the lead.
Does that mean it's going to work perfectly every time?
No.
but what it does mean is that they have a decent sample
that that was a worthwhile option to have in their bag.
So we should all be prepared if these two teams face each other
for Houston to do the same thing in a playoff series.
Don't be surprised if they go have your fun with Tari East and Josha Kogi
and the man Thompson one-on-one.
But if you bring any sort of screening action into the equation,
we're just going to double the ball out of your hands.
I think we'll see more of that from Houston.
Secondly, Chet is a real problem for Houston in this matchup.
He's been fantastic in both games.
Bring several characteristics to the table.
One, he scraps on the boards.
And, like, I know Oklahoma City got killed on the glass in this game overall,
statistically.
But if you watch the tape, Chet won a lot of those battles, too.
And he was down there scrapping.
And again, like, he's the only guy that has the length in this lineup to actually hang
with Hughes.
And everyone else has given up two, three inches in terms of size, trying to rebound
underneath the basket.
Chet actually won a lot of those battles.
And he had several.
key rebounds and tapouts during runs for Oklahoma City in this game that helped them
maintain control. Secondly, he gives them enormous defensive versatility. He gives up quite a bit
of strength to Shangun. Every once in a while, I'll see Shangun bully him like he did on that fourth
quarter drive where he just goes right around him. But overall, I think he holds up pretty well
there. And he gives them the ability to switch onto Kevin Durant and ball screens. And he can get great
contests on those Kevin Durant pull-up jump shots that can force misses. And then lastly, he's a garbage
at the rim as a vertical spacer. What happens when Oklahoma City drives? The bigs have to help.
He had three dunks in this game, either on putbacks or dump-offs, where he's just such a big
target, and it's so easy for him to just drop the ball through the hoop, even if he's in traffic,
it's a real release valve for this team. And again, I just, even without Isaiah Hartnstein,
who's dealing with calf injury right now, Chet just gives the thunder a physical dynamic on the
front line that's really tough for Houston to match up with. I thought he was. I thought he
was great in both of the games against
against Houston so far this season.
Thirdly,
Reed Shepard is completely
physically overmatched in this matchup
on the perimeter. In both Oklahoma
City games, we've seen Reed just
look like a bad combination of small,
skinny, and slow against Oklahoma
City's driving guards. And multiple
of those easy kickout threes for Oklahoma
City in the fourth quarter came on easy drives
pass read. J. Dev went right around
him for a kickout. A.J. Mitchell
went right around him for an easy layup.
He had a rep against AJ Mitchell and pick and roll that I thought was pretty embarrassing.
That's more indicative of the larger issue that goes beyond his physical limitation.
So AJ comes off a screen from chat at the top and KD's in like a deep drop coverage, right?
So if you don't get like if you don't apply appropriate back pressure over the top,
the dude's just going to settle into whatever shot he wants.
And Reed just kind of slowly meandered over the chat screen and let AJ Mitchell just easily settle into a pull up three on the right wing that he knocked down.
that's the issue is like you can't be small in lack physicality and not overly athletic,
like lack the physical traits, but then also lack like the motor and positioning traits.
He had a really bad closeout on J.W. It was one of the plays that led to an open three.
I think it was the second case in Wallace 3 where like he kind of just hopped out really high
to the high side and J. Dub just went right around him. And I'm like, that's bad fundamentals.
That's bad footwork. And it's like you can't have bad.
physical traits and bad fundamentals. That's a death sentence in the NBA. And Reed,
Reed just has looked really bad defensively in both of these matchups against Oklahoma City.
Fourthly, Oklahoma City lit up the zone defense this time. That was a big story in the opening
night game. The Rockets ran 28 possessions of zone in that game, held the thunder to just
0.82 points per possession in those sequences. Eight possessions of zone last night,
1.13 points per possession. And a lot of really good dribble penetration through the zone. And then
once again, guys hitting threes to pay that off and beat that look. And then lastly,
our fifth takeaway, if we're going to talk about and consider the potential for Oklahoma City to
go cold from the perimeter, we have to have that same conversation with Houston. They are
every bit as capable of going cold. I'd even argue straight up that Oklahoma City is a more talented
jump shooting team than Houston is. So if your take as a Rockets fan is we're just missing shots,
I'd argue that it's actually more likely that that dynamic favors Oklahoma City over a larger
sample. And I didn't even think Houston moved the ball that well to generate the types of
quality shots that could have flipped that dynamic. Again, we talked about the Thunder kind of
overplaying the middle and Houston not moving the ball through their defense very well. A lot of
tougher and rushed contested catch and shoot jump shots in this game. Again, this is only
our second look at this matchup. Key players from both teams, including potential starters route, like
Isaiah Hartnstein and Tarry Easton, some important bench wings for Houston out of the lineup,
like Dorian Finney Smith, for example.
But this one didn't look too good for Houston.
You dominate in an area that's your clear advantage, the offensive glass.
You take away or at least limit one of Oklahoma City's bigger defensive advantages,
which is points off of turnovers.
You held them well below their season average and points off of turnovers.
And then you still basically manage to never take control in the game
and lose by 20 on your home floor.
So definitely a discouraging performance for the Rockets,
but they'll have another chance they play on February 7th down in Oklahoma City
and the Rockets will have a chance to flip the dynamic at that point.
But a lot of interesting kind of stuff to see from a potential matchup in the playoffs later down the line.
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Hey, it's us, the Jonas Brothers, and guess what? We have some big news.
What's the news, huge news? We created our own podcast called, Hey Jonas. We invented a podcast.
Well, we didn't invent it. We just contributed to a first people to do podcasts.
Pretty, yeah, pretty wide range of podcasts. We're starting a trend. But this one's extra special.
So how do we actually come up with a name, Hey, John?
Jonas, guys.
I honestly don't remember.
I think it was on a call about what we should call it.
Well, we were thinking I'm originally calling it one of the early names of our band.
Before Jonas Brothers was...
This is how you guys remember it going down?
Yes.
I have a very different memory of this.
We were talking about a thing, a bit for the podcast where people could call in and say,
Hey, Jonas.
And then I wrote down on my little notepad, Hey Jonas, Jonas, and offered it up as a potential title for the podcast.
But thanks for remember.
Remembering that, guys. Listen to Hey Jonas on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast. Just listen. We don't care where you hear it.
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Me and hilarious guests from Bob Odenkirk to David Letterman help make you funnier. This week, my guest, SNL's Mikey Day and head writer, Streeter Seidel, help an acapella band with their between songs banter.
Where does your group perform? We do some retirement homes.
Those people are starving for banter.
Listen to humor me with Robert Smigel and friends on the I-Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever
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Last night, a blown call changed a game.
This morning, the internet lost its mind.
Highlights are trending, opinions are flying, and nobody's telling you exactly what happened.
That's where Sports Slice comes in.
I'm Timbo.
Every episode, we're cutting through the noise.
Breaking down the plays, the controversies, and the stories behind the headlines.
We go straight to the source, the athlete themselves.
Their locker room stories, their reactions, the stuff nobody gets to hear.
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From viral moments to historic games, from buzzer beaters to controversial calls, we break it down,
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SportsSlice brings you closer to the action with stories told by the people who live them.
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The French Open is one of the toughest tests in tennis, and I know firsthand because I
competed there myself.
I'm Renee Stubbs, and on the Renee Stubbs Tennis podcast, I'm breaking down everything
happening at Roland Garris, every match, every upset, and what it really takes to win on clay.
Jenchian win.
I mean, she went down at three to Rabakina, but I'm delighted.
She's an outsider to win the French for me.
And she likes Clay.
Listen, Lerner Rabakina is.
arguably the best player in the world right now. And I actually can win on any surface because if
she's serving, well, good luck. Consider this your court side seat to the French Open. Listen to the
Renee Stubbs tennis podcast on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Presented by Capital One, founding partner of IHeart Women's Sports. All right, Nick's Warriors.
I was a little worried about this game for Golden State. Jalen Brunson ended up going down in that
Sacramento game with an ankle injury.
The Knicks, the latest in a long line of teams that's been falling victim to a Sacramento
Kings team that's just playing good basketball.
All their shot creators are playing well.
Demarrozen is hooping his ass off.
Zach Levine's hoopin.
Russell Westbrook's hoopin.
They got some athletes that are playing really good defense.
Like the Kings are just playing really good basketball and they kind of chewed up and
spit out the Knicks just like they did to everyone else over the course of the last week.
But going into this game against Golden States, a little bit of a trap.
Jalen Brunson's out, right?
So there's going to be that little bit of natural relaxation,
but I actually think this Knicks team has a lot of offensive talent.
We've talked about this this year.
It's one of the strengths of this roster is their depth of ball handling talent.
And they needed a win.
This is a team that's trying to dig themselves out of the famous post-in-season tournament championship
lull that every single team has run into since the inception of the tournament.
The Knicks had a little bit of a delay.
They played well for about a week or so after,
but then they kind of fell into that same morass that Milwaukee and the Lakers
fell into over the last couple of years.
And so you knew the Knicks were going to come out and play super, super hard
because they need to get out of this funk.
And then obviously without Jalen Brunson,
they're going to try to win more with defense to transition.
And that's exactly what they did.
They came out and they jumped the Warriors early in this one.
But it was actually a Jimmy Butler-led unit in the late first quarter that turned things around.
This is actually a positive trend that we discussed in our mailbag episode yesterday.
One of the big reasons why I was before the season keyed in on a guy like Malik Monk.
I still like Malik Monk for the Warriors,
certainly a hell of a lot more than most Warriors fans do.
But one of the reasons why I was keyed in on that
was the specific struggles that Golden State was having
scoring with Steph off the floor last year
and at the start of this season.
One of the big positive trends for the Warriors over the last month
and change is that they're really starting to play well
with these Jimmy led units with Steph off the floor.
They actually all the way up to a 117 offensive rating this season
with Jimmy on and Steph off.
And they're playing good defense.
And those units are actually plus eight per 100 possessions on the season to this point.
If that trend can sustain, if you can score this effectively with these Jimmy-led units with Steph off the floor,
that's the kind of thing that buys the Warriors, the flexibility to focus more on players that help them with Steph on the floor,
rather than needing to look for a guy that can come in and carry a unit offensively for a chunk of time.
But Jimmy was fantastic during that late first quarter run against the Knicks yesterday, just dominating at the rim.
He had this lob pass that he caught off of a backdoor cut,
a back kind of a back screen off the right side from Al Horford,
where he was way up in the air.
Literally looked like it was 10 years ago.
I couldn't believe how high he got.
He had an offensive rebound put back in that stretch.
He had a steal and a pick six where he jumped the pass from Josh Hart out of the right corner,
went the other way and just kind of pump-faked and worked his way into the lane for a layup.
Just injected life into the team, got them back into the game.
They cut the lead to five.
And then that Steph-led unit, the early second quarter, came in and finished the comeback.
couple really nice drives from Brandon Pajamsky.
A couple of really nice corner kicks from Gary Payton on short rolls and on cuts around the baseline.
He hit Draymond Green and Moses Moody for wide open corner threes.
Jimmy Butler came in and was excellent again in his second shift in the second quarter,
just killing the Knicks with these rip-through moves.
Just simple, just literal fundamental, just catching rip and just getting past his man
and either getting to the rim for a layup or for an easy kickout.
Jimmy had 32, 8, and 4 last night was zero turnover.
What a game for Jimmy Butler.
And the Warriors were still struggling a little bit in that second quarter to build real separation,
mainly because of the defensive glass.
They're having a hard time keeping Carl Anthony Towns off the offensive glass.
Jordan Clarkson was doing some damage on the offensive glass.
That kind of allowed the Knicks to linger for a little bit.
But then they cleaned that up in the third quarter and finally pulled away.
After allowing 10 offensive rebounds in the first half, they allowed zero in the third.
quarter got control of the defensive glass and then Steph who got off to a rough start shooting the
ball finally got hot in the second half he had four pull up threes through the third quarter in the early
part of the fourth as a big part of helping the warriors pull away the warriors have won 10 of their
last 14 games I talked about this after the tough start to the season I really thought the schedule
beat golden state into the ground to start the year and I thought that just naturally by the schedule
lightening up it would lead to the warriors starting to get their legs underneath them a little bit
They'd start to win some of these games.
They had been losing, which can start to build momentum, right?
That builds momentum in buy-in and possession-to-possession, focus, and intensity.
And all of a sudden, you can start to build real momentum.
And I just figured that as the schedule lightened up, this Warriors team was too good to not eventually start racking up wins and go on a run.
And that's exactly what they're doing.
And their fifth in offense in the span, in large part, because the Jimmy Butler led units was step off the floor.
That used to be the problem with Golden State is you could book Steph units for a 120 off.
rating and then these step off units just couldn't score. Now that you're getting quality
offense out of the Jimmy led units, this team is performing really well offensively in a
pretty large sample. Defense has slipped a little bit. The 13th in defensive rating over the
course of that 14 game span. Their eighth in net rating, six in the rebounding, six and
sixth and overall rebound percentage. And again, that 10 and four over the 14 game span is the second
best record in the league over that chunk of games. I know it's been a topsy turvy start to the
season. You lost some brutal clutch games too in that span that easily could have gone the other way.
But here you are. You're 23 and 19. You're tied with Houston in the win column for the sixth
seed. You're legitimately in reasonable striking distance of a top four seed. You're five back in the
loss column there. That's not something that you can't do over the course of the next 40 games and
change. Both Steph and Jimmy look fantastic. The offseason signings of guys like De Anthony
Melton and Al Horford are really starting to pay dividends. Al had some really nice sequences last night.
He had a drive of a closeout off the top after De Anthony Melton drove and penetrated into the lane.
We talked about the drives from De Anthony Melton the other day. They've been such a huge thing for this Warriors team.
But he kicks it back to Horford. He had an explosive drive towards the basket. There's just a level that Al is moving at now that he wasn't moving at before the season.
And again, you have a trade to make here. And the Warriors have been doing a lot of posturing in the media in the last couple of days, like saying, you know, leaking.
things like they might keep Jonathan committing. No, you won't.
Like everybody knows that you guys are dying for that to be over.
Or that they're not interested in Michael Porter, Jr.
This guy's not a guy they want to take back. I think that's all just kind of posturing part
of that classic kind of trade deadline mind game that every team tries to play.
I still legitimately think if Golden State can hit on a move, they do have a shot to make
some noise in the West. If they hit on that trade, we'll see who that player ends up being.
But if they hit on that trade, I think they're one of those second tier content.
that's capable of beating a team or two.
And if, God forbid, things break perfectly for them,
they could be, you know, suddenly in the Western Conference Finals or something like that.
All right, the Celtics get a big win on the road in Miami.
Not going to linger on this one for too long.
I wanted to talk about Anthony Simons for a little bit, though,
because he completely explodes in this game.
It goes for 39.
I believe 18 of those were in the fourth quarter,
but he just completely carried the offense during that fourth quarter comeback.
And I want to specifically emphasize the drives because we all,
know about Anthony's three point shooting. He can get hot and hit a bunch of step back
threes like he did. And he's certainly done that at various points of the season. Over
the large sample, he's been in the low 30s on that shot, but it's been something that he's
gotten hot and cold with throughout the season. He's been brilliant off the catch. Like, if you
leave Anthony open this year, it's going in. But the most fascinating part to me was actually the
drives. And this has been a little bit of an exciting trend over the last couple of games. But
he was getting to the rim at will during that fourth quarter run against
some pretty high quality perimeter defenders.
And this is a guy that over the course of this season has been averaging just 2.2 points
per game at the rim.
So just a little over one layup per game.
Essentially is what you've been getting from Anthony to this point.
It's been something that I talked about that I was kind of disappointed by it.
Because, you know, when we talked about Anthony coming over to Boston, he was one of kind of the
interesting case studies that had my eye on with Boston this season.
Like we've seen this drive and kick system that's predicated on having perfect spacing all the time, guards that can finish out of the dunker spot, and these two forwards in Jalen Brown and in Jason Tatum that can create advantages through like inside seals, postups, ISOing smaller players and pressuring the rim to initiate their drive and kick attack.
And the kind of guards they had like, you know, obviously Drew Holliday could apply some rim pressure, but he's more of like a bully ball type of player.
and then you had, you know, Derek White, who I wouldn't necessarily consider to be a slasher.
He's just an extremely gifted shooter both off the catch and off the dribble, who's very smart,
who knows how to run inverted ball screens and standard ball screens and all these different things
that kind of complimented what the Js like to do.
Anthony Simons represents kind of like a spread pick and roll type of two guard that brings a very
different type of dynamic to this team.
And one of the things that I was most disappointed in throughout this part of the season with Amphorne,
even though I think he's played well for stretches,
was I just thought he'd be able to pressure the rim a little bit more
in this type of space than he's been able to.
He just had a hard time turning the corner.
But like, he had six points just in the fourth quarter of this game alone,
driving to the basket for layups.
He had another six points in the last game.
So again, for a guy who's average 2.2 points at the rim per game this season,
he has 12 points at the rim in the last two games.
So some real positive momentum there from Anthony Simons.
And then just a couple of key stops late.
They really did a good job of swarming Miami's drives at the end of the game.
They had four stocks in the fourth quarter.
Neme Kada had a big one.
Derek White had a big one in transition on Norman Powell and an important sequence late in the game.
We've talked about this with Miami, but Miami, they're constantly trying to drive at these matchups.
But if you help off of BAM and you kind of just situate yourself in the lane,
you can force them into some tougher shots around the rim that they'll miss.
and Bam often hasn't made enough shots or Kellelware hasn't made enough shots.
They actually did win a game against Phoenix the other night where Bam hit a bunch of threes in crunch time.
But he missed the three in crunch time this time.
He had another play where he was kind of awkwardly situated in the dunker spot on the left side.
And when the ball got dumped off to him, he ended up shooting like a hook that he missed.
And the spacing can just get a little janky for Miami.
And so the defensive game plan there is you just need to swarm those drives.
And off of the right types of shooters swarm those drives.
Make sure you don't lose track of the, the laser.
like Norman Powell and Tyler Harrow, and you give yourself a good chance.
And I just thought that they did a brilliant job swarming Miami's drives down the stretch.
And then a couple of big plays late.
Jalen Brown, you know, after Anthony Simons had kind of taken over the offense in the fourth quarter,
hits a huge three off the left wing on a double team.
Then Anthony Simons drew.
And that's the kind of thing that Anthony Simons is going to do.
If he's dropping 39 in a game, he's going to start dropping two to the ball,
which is what he did.
Jalen had a really nice driving floater in the lane that helped ice the game.
and then some really big offensive rebounds from Sam Houser and Derek White
underneath the basket just scrapping.
Houser had a little tap-in.
Derek White had a play where he grabbed an offensive rebound and drew a foul.
Those were big plays late in the game.
The Celtics had dropped three out of four.
It started to get into a little bit of some bad habits in terms of their shot selection.
Big win, though, I thought last night over a Miami Heat team that's been playing a little bit better over the course of the last week.
Today's show is brought to you by presenting sponsor Hard Rock Bet,
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Hey, it's us, the Jonas Brothers.
And guess what?
We have some big news.
What's the news,
huge news?
We created our own podcast called,
Hey Jonas.
We invented a podcast?
Well, we didn't invent it.
We just contributed to it.
We're the first people to do podcasts.
Pretty, yeah, pretty wide range of podcasts.
We're starting a trend.
But this one's extra special.
So how do we actually come up with a name,
Hey Jonas, guys?
I honestly don't remember.
I think it was on a call about what we should call it.
And, oh, we were thinking I'm originally,
calling it one of the early names of our band before Jonas Brothers was...
This is how you guys remember it going down?
Yes.
I have a very different memory of this.
We were talking about a thing, a bit for the podcast,
where people could call in and say, hey, Jonas.
And then I wrote down on my little notepad, Hey Jonas,
and offered it up as a potential title for the podcast.
But thanks for remembering that, guys.
Listen to Hey Jonas on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcast.
Just listen.
We don't care where you hear it.
Another podcast from some SNL late-night comedy guy,
not quite on Humor Me with Robert Smygel and Friends.
Me and hilarious guests from Bob Odenkirk to David Letterman
help make you funnier.
This week, my guest, S&L's Mikey Day and head writer Streeter Seidel
help an a cappella band with their between songs banter.
Where does your group perform?
We do some retirement homes.
Those people are starving for banter.
Listen to humor me with Robert Smigel and Friends on the I-Heart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your performance.
podcast. Last night, a blown call changed a game. This morning, the internet lost its mind. Highlights are
trending, opinions are flying, and nobody's telling you exactly what happened. That's where
Sports Slice comes in. I'm Timbo. Every episode, we're cutting through the noise, breaking down the plays,
the controversies, and the stories behind the headlines. We go straight to the source,
the athletes themselves, their locker room stories, their reactions, the stuff nobody gets to
hear. The laughs, the drama, the triumphs, the moments that never make the highlight real. From viral
to historic games, from buzzer beaters to controversial calls, we break it down, give you context,
and ask the questions everybody wants answered.
SportsSlice brings you closer to the action with stories told by the people who live them.
Listen to SportsClace on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
And for more, follow Timbo Slicelife 12 in the TikTok podcast network on TikTok.
The French Open is one of the toughest tests in tennis, and I know firsthand because I competed
there myself. I'm Renee Stubbs, and on the Renee Stubbs tennis podcast, I'm breaking down everything
happening at Roland Garrow's. Every match, every upset, and what it really takes to win on Clay.
Jenchian went. I mean, she went down at three to Rabakina, but I'm delighted. She's an outsider
to win the French for me. And she likes Clay. Listen, Lena Rabakina is arguably the best player
in the world right now, and I actually can win on any surface. Because if she's serving, well, good luck.
Consider this your court side seat to the French Open.
Listen to the Renee Stubbs tennis podcast on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Presented by Capital One, founding partner of IHeart Women's Sports.
All right, Pistons Sons, the return of Cade Cunningham and Jalen Duren.
The Pistons had struggled at various points in this game.
Phoenix, even without Devin Booker, they bring a very high concentration of jump shooting talent and athleticism on their roster.
And those are two of arguably the most important traits in the modern NBA that a team needs.
And when you have those two things in abundance, you're going to do a lot of damage to the NBA.
The athleticism is what allows you to get the stops that get you out in transition.
That's also the athleticism that helps you penetrate the defense for, you know, driving kick sequences.
And then the jump shooting is what pays it off, right?
And so they got a lot of high quality defense to transition sequences and driving kick sequences
where guys paid it off by hitting shots.
And the Pistons had some turnover issues in this game, and they also didn't shoot the ball super well from the perimeter.
So that meant a lot of long rebounds and a lot of live ball turnovers that also kind of fed that transition engine.
And so Phoenix had some stretches where they looked really good at. Honestly, they kind of played like they were in control for the majority of the game.
The Pistons just had these two massive runs, a 19 to 5 run in the middle of the third quarter and a 13 to 2 run in the fourth quarter.
those both erased the majority of the success that the sons had had in the other parts of the game,
and then they were able to successfully close the game out with their defense.
And the 19 to 5 run in the middle of the third quarter was a fascinating example.
I'd argue both of their runs were like this, but there was just some different guys in that fourth quarter stretch.
But the run that they went on in that third quarter was fueled entirely by what I think is the identity of this team,
which is that they are a physical ass kicking athletic team.
Assar Thompson and Jalen Duren completely dominated that middle third stretch just under the rim on offense.
Almost everything Detroit scored during that run was off of either a Duren Thompson offensive rebound or a Duren Thompson cut around the rim where they just jumped over everyone or finished something in the lane.
And we also got one of those patented stretches from Detroit's defense, which again, they had just this depth of athletic perimeter players that can get up into the ball and that can really rotate and teams can soil themselves underneath that.
They force a few turnovers and some really tough late clock heaves from Dylan Brooks
during that third quarter run.
And crazy thing is Dylan almost knocked a couple of them down because he's such a gifted
tough shot maker this season.
But it's just really difficult to handle Detroit when they ratchet things up
athletically like that.
When they're forcing you in a really tough shots on one end and then it's just a steady
diet of like just like pinball underneath the basket with Jalen Dern and
Sarr Thompson just grabbing and finishing everything around the basket.
It just can be really difficult because it's ugly.
basketball and it's it's just fueled by this physical athleticism and you end up going on a 19 to
five run that flips the game and then that second run in the third quarter excuse me in the fourth quarter
different group of guys like tobias harris was doing a lot of damage out of the post in this lineup
hit a couple of tough middies even one over dylan brooks which is not easy to do and then they got
another big offensive rebound finish from jalen during this time off of an offensive rebound by jaden ivy
jen ivy's starting to play a little bit better he had a big three in that run as well and then isaiah
Stewart, you know, a guy that can be hot and cold on defense had a couple really nice
rim protection sequences during that stretch for some misses from Phoenix players at the rim. And then
closing the game, the offense stalled out, which gave Phoenix a chance. Phoenix ended up cutting
the lead to too late. Cade predictably off in his first game back. He's very much a rhythm player
and it's going to take him a few games to find his groove. He just had some misses and some
turnovers down the stretch that are pretty typical of a guy that, you know, has been away from
the game for a little bit. He's struggling at the foul line too. That's always the dead giveaway that a
player's just out of rhythm. But Detroit's defense was just excellent down the stretch. Like Phoenix was really
whipping the ball around the perimeter too, but there's just so many shooters to track and it can be
tough. But Detroit just met that energy. They were flying around. They were making their rotations and they
got enough stops to close the deal down the stretch and the pistons get back in the wind column. I thought it was
super impressive that they went three and one in those games without Jalen Duren. And again,
Cade missed two of those games as well.
And now those guys are back and got a tough schedule this coming week.
They play the Celtics on Monday and the Rockets on Friday.
It's going to be a couple of tougher matchups for Detroit coming up this week.
But again, to me, you know, when we talk about, we talked about this idea in our power ranking segment on Monday,
the idea of sustaining success through shifting circumstances.
And one of the things that that requires is an identity that permeates your entire roster.
So for instance, if you have an identity that's tied up in a singular point,
player like, oh, this guy does this and that's what makes us great, then you remove that guy and it can
be a problem. And I don't want to sit here and pretend like Cade and his shot creation isn't a big part
of this team's identity. Of course it is. And even in this game is as much as Kate had struggled,
there were a lot of possessions where he drew the rim protector in into ball screen and just fed
Jalen Duren and wide open dunk. There was a lot of quality shot creation from Cade in this game too.
But the point I'm trying to make is when you have an identity that permeates the roster,
When you have a thing that you do great that involves like seven or eight dudes on the team.
And so when one or two of them are out, the other guys in that group can just kind of bring that same identity on a possession to possession basis.
That's what actually drives sustained success through shifting circumstances.
And it's very clear that this team, through its physicality on the glass, especially on the offensive glass,
and its perimeter defense talent, that they have an identity that permeates the roster and that's going to be there,
even in games where they're missing some of their core rotation pieces,
maybe even a star or two.
And I just think that that bodes really well for Detroit moving forward this season.
All right, lastly, just for a couple minutes before we get out of here tonight,
the Lakers lost to the Hornets last night.
Not going to go too deep here.
I'm covering this with Lakers Collective today at 11 a.m. Pacific Standard Times.
You guys can head over to that channel and we'll be live for about an hour
talking about that game as well as the other two games from this week.
I have been way less discouraged by the Kings and Hornets' loss.
losses than you would think that I would be. When you have these kinds of injuries like Austin
Reeves is out, Jackson Hayes is now out. So you have these weird like LeBron at center groups,
which is just a lot to ask for a 41 year old. Gabe is back from an injury, but he's still super
rusty. Rui Hachamura is back from injury, but he's still super rusty. So what you end up with,
when Gabe's not shooting the ball well and Rui's not shooting the ball well, you just have a lot of
these janky-ass lineups on the floor. I'm like looking at a lot of lineups where I'm like,
of course they're getting their butts kicked. It's like LeBron and a G League guard and then another two dudes that can't shoot and a guy that's just coming back from an injury that's a shell of himself right now. And it's like, of course they're getting beat, you know, and similar lineups involving Luca that have had those kinds of issues. And so like I just am like, yeah, the Lakers are a poor jump shooting team. And yeah, they're, I don't think they're going to be, you know, I still view them as a third tier contender. I'm not sitting here trying to say that.
they're better like than you know what we've considered them to be over the last few weeks but
I just think in this particular stretch of the season when you look at the like the kings and hornets
are playing pretty good basketball right now they've been giving good teams issues over the
course of the last couple of weeks so like am I surprised that the lakers dropped games when
they have this type of role player talent available to them and Austin's out of the lineup and you're
playing against some teams that are playing pretty good basketball no I'm not overly surprised and
the reason why I'm not super worked up about it is there are some real positive things that I think stretched forward for this team.
Like if LeBron and Luca are going to continue to be this good, like LeBron and Luca were fantastic again last night,
if LeBron and Luke are going to be this good and you get Austin back,
that's a strong enough foundation to make up for some of your flaws.
Then you hit on a trade at the deadline.
You get, you know, a couple of guys back to shooting the ball a little bit better than they were.
were earlier. At least I think they could get back to being one of those like feisty second
tier contenders that can beat a team or two, you know, if they, if they catch some favorable
matchups in the playoffs. So again, the role players are what they are right now. They're bad.
But the stars playing this well, I do think is a positive because I don't think we're going to
see, you know, Kobe Buffkin in the rotation for the Lakers when we get to, you know, a big
playoff series. I don't think Jared Vanderbilt's going to be in the rotation when they get to
a big playoff series. I don't think Gabe Vincent is going to be in the rotation when they get to
a big playoff series. Like the Lakers are going to swap some of these guys out. Austin's going to come back.
Austin again, it brings a better, like he's a better defender than most of the guards not named
Marcus Smart. He's a better shooter than just about everybody on the team. And he's one of their most
valuable shot creators. You know, you're taking what has been Nick Smith Jr. and Kobe Buffkin minutes
and you're giving those to Austin Reeves. You're taking minutes that are going to some of these lesser players.
like, like, you're not going to have to lean on centerless LeBron James units when Jackson Hayes is healthy, right?
So like I, I credit the Hornets.
They played really good basketball.
The Hornets, this is crazy stat.
They literally made seven pull-up threes last night.
They average half that.
They play, they're playing really good basketball right now.
They were spamming ISO-3s at the top of the key in the third quarter and it was working.
So tip the cap to the Hornets.
Yes, the Lakers are a flawed team.
No one's out here saying they're going to go win the championship.
But I do think they're better than they look right this second.
because they have a lot of guys that are bad basketball players that are playing in the rotation.
It's an indictment on Rob for the work that he's done with the back half of the roster.
But I think that there are some positive trends coming with just the effort level, the engagement on defense,
and how good their stars look right now.
All right, guys, it's all I have for today.
As always, I appreciate you guys for supporting us and supporting the show.
I hope all of you guys have a wonderful weekend and I'll see you next week on.
Hey, guys, it's us.
The Jonas Brothers. I'm Joe.
I'm Kevin.
And I'm Nick.
And guess what?
We created our own podcast.
Hey Jonas.
We invented a podcast?
Well, we didn't invent it.
We just contributed to it.
We're the first people to do podcasts.
We get to ask other people questions because we're sick and tired of being asked questions.
Well, sick and tired is a strong way to put it, but, you know, tired and sick.
Listen to Hey Jonas on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
Just listen.
We don't care where you hear it.
Another podcast from some SNL late night comedy guy, not quite.
Unhumor me with Robert Smigel and Friends.
me and hilarious guests from Bob Odenkirk to David Letterman
help make you funnier.
This week, my guest, SNL's Mikey Day and head writer, Streeter Seidel,
help an a cappella band with their between songs banter.
Where does your group perform?
We do some retirement homes.
Those people are starving for banter.
Listen to humor me with Robert Smigel and Friends on the IHeart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Winning on Clay is an art.
The rallies are relentless.
And at the French Open, only the toughest survive.
I'd know. I competed there for decades.
Join me, Renee Stubbs, on the Renee Stubbs tennis podcast,
for no-nonsense breakdowns of the biggest matches, the toughest players,
and the moments that define Roland Garris.
She's an outsider to win the French fame.
And she likes Clay.
Listen, Lennar Rabakina is arguably the best player in the world right now,
and I actually can win on any surface.
Listen to the Renee Stubbs tennis podcast on the IHeart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
Presented by Capital One, founding partner of IHeart, Heart
women's sports. If you're watching the latest season of the Real Housewives of Atlanta,
you already know there's a lot to break down.
Gorsha accusing Kelly of sleeping with a merry man. They holding Kay Michelle back from fighting
Drew. Pinky has financial issues. On the podcast, Reality with the King, I, Carlos King,
recap the biggest moments from your favorite reality shows, including the Real House
Wise franchise, the drama, the alliances, and the T everybody's talking about. To hear,
Hear this and more. Listen to Reality with the King on the IHard Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
This is an IHart podcast. Guaranteed Human.
