The Herd with Colin Cowherd - Hoops Tonight - Clippers/Nuggets + Knicks/Pistons Game 2 Reactions
Episode Date: April 22, 2025Jason reacts live after the Los Angeles Clippers beat the Denver Nuggets in Game 2. Kawhi Leonard was exceptional and Nikola Jokic & Jamal Murray were uncharacteristically poor down the stretch of... that game, leaving the series tied 1-1. Then he discusses the Detroit Pistons also getting a road win in Game 2 against the New York Knicks, Cade Cunningham’s spectacular play, Jalen Brunson falling short at the end. #Volume #HerdSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Happy Monday, everybody.
Hope all of you guys are having a great start to your week.
We're hitting the two games from tonight's slate as the Los Angeles Clippers
and the Detroit Pistons on the road,
even up their series to tie things at one.
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And then keep dropping mailbag questions in our YouTube comments so we can hit them in our mailbags
throughout the remainder of the season. All right, let's talk some basketball. So I sent out a tweet
in the middle of the third quarter, re-emphasizing a point that I made after game one of this series,
which was that I thought that Denver's chance to win this series was to keep things close. The
Clippers are not a super high-quality playmaking team relative to Denver. I think Denver in general is a
little bit smarter as a team. And so in theory, if they can get into close games with two,
three minutes left, four or five minutes left, and it's a two or three point game,
I like Denver's chances in those situations. And boy did I jinx the hell out of the Denver
nuggets, because they end up getting into that situation. It looks like the clippers were going
to build a little bit of margin there in the late third quarter, right? We got a,
a huge Nick Batum three. There was a James Harden three in there. They get a couple of buckets.
they push it up to seven, but Denver battles back, and we end up in another crunch time battle.
But ironically, it was the Denver Nuggets who were the undisciplined team in crunch time.
Aaron Gordon with a wide open dunk smokes it off the back of the rim.
Michael Porter Jr., who honestly played a much better game than he did in game one,
earned his right to close the game, made a couple of huge plays and offensive rebound where he drew a foul,
a huge three, and a chaotic sequence on the right wing,
and then he gets a defensive rebound on a critical possession.
Looks to throw a kick-ahead pass, but hesitates at the last second.
And right when he pulls back on that kick-ahead pass,
the ball just slips out of his fingers, goes right to the other team,
leading to a wide open three for Norman Powell,
who really couldn't buy a bucket most of the night,
but hit several big ones late.
It hit that three along the wing.
That was a huge swing.
Instead of getting a Denver offense possession,
which this season has been worth like around 1.25 points,
especially with Nicole Yokic on the floor, you end up giving up three to the clippers instead.
So between that and the dunk, we're talking about like almost six and a half point swing
back towards the clippers.
And then on that critical Yokic turnover late in the game, he gets double teamed.
And this basketball 101, when you're double teamed, it's about spacing and making yourself
available.
Both Christian Brown and Russell Westbrook staying in the exact same spot up on the right wing,
making themselves easy to guard.
Yokich has no place to go with the ball.
he tries lobbing it in that direction.
Kauai Leonard gets a big steal.
That was what was so unusual about what happened down the stretch.
The Denver Nuggets who are typically so surgical
about getting to the best possible shot
and not making mistakes down the stretch.
Made three massive mistakes in crunch time
that swung this game back towards the clippers.
And meanwhile, on the other end of the floor,
Kauai was just absolutely surgical with his shot making.
He was amazing all night.
had just a classic Kauai Leonard.
I'm not going to miss a single pull-up jump shot type of game.
But I thought the two he hit at the end might have been the toughest ones he hit all night.
That right shoulder fade over Aaron Gordon.
Aaron Gordon defended that perfectly.
On Kauai's follow through here, he damn near high-fived Aaron Gordon.
But he got the separation that he needed to at least get the clean look off,
or at least to get into his rhythm, and he knocked it down.
And then the second one coming off the right wing, he sold it with this really nice,
aggressive driving move really got his momentum going down towards the basket before he hit that
in and out dribble and elevated that got aaron gordon on his heels so he could get good separation
on the move and he knocked it down i thought he did a much better job of handling handling double
teams in this game it's uh i want to credit the coaching staff here because they made it really simple for
him they had him attack on the right side of the floor denver was strong side zoning usually with yokitch
meaning they were bringing Yokch over to basically outside the block
and allowing Aaron Gordon to whoever was guarding Kauai in a switch
to basically force him towards the baseline
where he's going to go right into additional help.
And what the Clippers did there is they just sent a flasher right to the high post,
right at the semi-circle below the free throw line.
That's where you saw Norman Powell run in and get that little floater.
That's where you saw Aviza Zubats come in and get that little kind of hooking floater
that he takes in that spot in the floor.
created an easier read for Kauai to make. And it was interesting because in those situations,
he was making the reads. It was on the other ones when he was dribbling out above the break when
Denver brought the double teams that Kauai did a lot of what he did in game one, where he kind of
struggled to identify where the opening was or missed some of the easier reads. But when they got
him into the right side of the floor, they had a plan. They had a plan for how to handle that double team.
and he had five assists and one turnover tonight to go with the 39 points on 19 shots.
Just an unbelievable game from Kauai Leonard.
One of the things we talked about all year dating back to training camp.
I had my optimism surrounding the clippers.
I predicted them to finish above the plan and thought they'd be good based on my
beliefs, my core basketball beliefs surrounding their perimeter athleticism.
James Hardin as a floor raiser on offense in the regular season.
What if Zubots can do as a pick and roll partner,
with it Hardin and all the other stuff he showed.
But one of the things I talked about at the beginning of the season was there's always this
potential outcome, which is we joke about Kauai and the Klipper is struggling in 2020.
We talk about Kauai being consistently unavailable from a health perspective in 2021,
in 2022, in 2023, in 2024.
But none of that matters if for whatever reason he makes it to April this year ready to go.
and here we are it's april 21st he just played a playoff game that only a top tier superstar in this league is
capable of playing and it's because when kawai is late uh when kai is healthy he is capable of reaching
that level and so yeah there can be some wishful thinking if you're an opponent of kai that maybe
he won't be able to hold up over the course of the series but he's here now and he's busting everybody's
ass. I thought the Clippers
handled the Tick-Tac-toe sequences better.
What I'm referring to there is just like the
ball screen attack when they get
two to the ball. There's an opening
there in the pocket or on a skip
and there's these simple read and react
sequences that have to take place. And there were just a
couple of examples where it worked better. There's
a big one out of the right corner late in the game.
Hardin came off.
Lefty hook pass over the top
to Zoo. And Zoo, you could see
it coming a mile away. They loaded up the low
man and they came across to
rotate and Nick Batum was wide open in the left corner and Zujis threw a beautiful over the top
pass that landed in Batum's hands with plenty of time for him to knock down that shot.
They still botched a couple ones in their baseline cuts. Chris Dunn missed a reverse layup.
Credit to Aaron Gordon, he had a nice last second contest, but they're still botching some
of those like baseline cut finishes that they can get in those sequences. I thought that
There were a lot of close-out attacks from Norman Powell that didn't get converted.
There's still a lot of, you know, meat on the bone there, so to speak, for the clippers to try to
clean it up and get even more out of it.
But I thought they handled everything just a little bit better today.
Really nice bounce back when James Hardin, obviously not the most statistically impressive
game with the four turnovers and 18 points and 17 shots.
But I thought he hit some big ones, some big momentum shots throughout the game.
I thought that big three hit in the late third quarter to push the lead up to seven was an example
of a shot that carried more in terms of the momentum of the game.
Defensively, I thought they got, they forced, I want to credit them for forcing them
into some of those mistakes. Specifically, transition defense and getting back and sprinting
and communicating, that's what closes up the opening that causes Michael Porter Jr.
to hesitate and go to throw the ball and then cough it up. The ball pressure from Bogdan
Bogdanovich on Russell Westbrook as he's driving up the left sideline, that forces the turnover
that leads to the Derek Jones Jr.
Don't.
There is a turnover that Zubots,
or that Yokic had against the post-up.
Where Chris Dunn, we've seen Yokich burn teams a million times with this.
He'll post up.
He'll spin over one of his shoulders.
Aaron Gordon will cut along the baseline
and find a little opening as his man steps up to help on Yokic's spin.
Chris Dunn came flying in and intercepted that pass to Aaron Gordon along the baseline.
They just made a few more plays in this game,
and it ended up being the difference.
For Denver, a lot of positive.
Michael Porter Jr. reintegrated himself with his rebounding by just being active on the offensive glass.
I thought it was a, you know, like, it's one of those things where it's annoying that you have to sit down with Michael and be like, hey, this is what you're great at.
Let's get you to do this in this big game.
Like at a certain point, you kind of hope that he would just bring out that level of intensity in game one.
But he did bring that intensity.
he drew a key foul late in the game, although he did miss a big free throw.
Ended up hitting a huge three on that right wing,
but he just made that one critical mistake late
that ended up undercutting a lot of his success in the night.
But Jamal Murray looked great all night.
Russell Westbrook, aside from the handful of mistakes here and there,
is still finding ways to space the floor as a cutter and as a shooter.
Russ literally got chased off the three-point line.
I can't even remember the last time I saw that,
where Russell Westbrook has a dude literally come flying at him
and force him off the three-point line.
line. Russ panicked so much at the closeout that he literally immediately traveled and stepped
out of balance. It just ended up not getting called as he was in the basket and drew a foul. There
was a lot of upside from Denver tonight. They just undercut all of that upside with mistakes.
20 turnovers, 21 points off of those turnovers. Lots of them were pick sixes and key sequences late.
The MPJ turnover directly leads two or three for Norman Powell. The Russell Westbrook
turnover directly leads to a dunk for Derek Jones Jr.
The miss free throws from Yokic and Michael Porter Jr.
Changing the shots that you can take at the end of the game.
This has to be the Denver Nuggets in Crunch Time.
The Denver Nuggets from the last few years that weren't mistake prone.
This is their pathway.
They've got to keep things close so that they can out execute them late in games.
I was talking with Jackson before we came on the air.
And Jackson made an interesting point just about how each game in this series is basically
swung on mistakes. Clippers
mistakes in game one, Denver
mistakes in game two. These teams
feel very evenly matched.
And this is going to be a series that pretty
much comes down to the decision making, the
playmaking, and the mistake making
or lack thereof from either
of these teams as they move forward
in the series. As we always do, come
back to the channel on Tuesday morning,
tomorrow morning, and we will have a
film session that will go over some of the specific
details that I noticed in
this game.
Hey, it's us, the Jonas Brothers.
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We have some big news.
What's the news, name?
Huge news.
We created our own podcast called, Hey Jonas.
We invented a podcast?
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We just contributed to our...
We're the first people to do podcasts.
Pretty, yeah, pretty wide range of podcasts throughout there.
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,
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And then I wrote down on my little notepad, Hey Jonas,
and offered it up as a potential title for the podcast.
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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.
Genschen win.
I mean, she went down in three to Rabakina, but I'm delighted.
She's an outsider to win the French for me.
And she likes Clay.
Listen, Lina 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.
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Presented by Capital One, founding partner of IHeart Women's Sports.
All right, let's move on to Pistons Knicks.
Kind of similar to the first game, where the Pistons just controlled things throughout, but the Nix came on Strong late.
Just this time, the NICS came on Strong at the very end of the game instead of the early fourth quarter,
Jaylon Brunson did some surgical shot making and some.
surgical playmaking got the game tied and the game came down to a pretty open Dennis Schroeder
pull up three against Jalen Brunson and then a McHale bridge is pretty open catch and shoot three although
it was moving it was out it was wide open but it was a little bit higher difficulty because he was
kind of moving aggressively towards his left but Dennis made his mckell missed his and that was
the difference in the game the pistons tie the series k k cunningham has his first huge playoff game
of his young career.
I thought the story of his original rhythm that he built in the early part of the game was his
transition pushes.
He has this ability to finish while going full speed with either hand.
A lot of guys have to slow down and they'll go to Euro steps or they'll jump up to try to
elevate.
Cade goes through you in transition.
It's a straight line.
It's bump with the shoulder.
It kind of gets to that left hand on the left side of the right hand or the right side.
You know he actually kind of reminds me of.
as a finisher, speaking strictly of as a finisher is Desmond Bain in the sense that like it's all
straight line power in really good touch while going full speed on either side of the basket.
But he got a lot of work early in the game in transition.
A steady diet of ball screens attacking Jalen Brunson.
I thought that was an interesting approach in this game.
It was less, you know, one five pick and roll and a lot more of those pick and rolls with
Tim Hardaway Jr. trying to attack Jalen Brunson.
I thought Tim Hardaway Jr. set awesome screens.
This is like such an important part of playoff intensity.
You can get away with a lot more, especially if your feet are set.
Like if your feet are set, they'll let you lean, they'll let you bring those forearms in.
They'll let you chuck somebody pretty good as long as you're in position,
as long as you're not moving around or like standing in a four foot wide stance or something like that.
You can get away with a lot of contact on your screens.
And Tim was just setting great screens for OG.
And then the scheme there that the Knicks are going to run,
that most teams run when teams try to attack a small guard as a classic hedge and recover, right?
So Jaylon Brunson is throwing his body out as a hedge, and the next step in beating that
coverage is as Tim Hardaway is setting a good solid screen on OG,
Cade's got to get over the top of that hedge because if he does, he can turn the corner
and there's an opening there before OG can recover from the screen for little mid-range
jump shots for him to get downhill and to get into the teeth of the defense.
a lot of success attacking Jalen Brunson and ball screens beating his hedges with some quality screens from Tim Hardaway Jr.
A lot of semi-transition attacks.
This is where Cade was getting his one-on-one success against OG.
When he had the semi-transition, and again, semi-transition, all that is to me is a typical transition possession is, you know, a two-on-one, three-on-two, everyone's sprinting full speed.
Semi-transition is like guys are kind of back, but they're not really set.
the defense is still a little bit on their heels,
but it's usually more of like a five on five or a five on four
just before the defense is completely set.
And in those situations,
OGN and Obie's got his weight more backwards.
He's a little bit more on his heels,
which neutralizes some of his physicality.
And so that's where Cade can kind of stare him down
as he's on his heels,
hit him with the quick crossover dribble.
Now he's able to beat him to the spot
and initiate the contact,
allowing him to leverage his strength.
a little bit more to get easier finishes around the basket.
That big late lob to Jaylen Dern.
I thought this was a really fancy.
I thought this was a really fascinating play.
Sorry, it's been a long couple of days.
So obviously at the end of the game, Kade looks tired.
Quite a bit of action being run for Dennis Schroeder down the stretch,
which we're going to talk about in a minute.
But there's a huge play late in the game where Kade generates a wide open lob dunk for
Jalen Dern.
and I thought it was just a really smart example,
a really good example, I should say,
of why it's so important to take the time
to set your spacing up properly before you run action.
So in this case,
they have Cade coming off of the ball screen
towards his right hand
so that Duren is rolling to the left.
But they have an occupied corner,
in this case, Malik Beasley, in the left corner.
Mikhail Bridges is the guy
who typically would be the low man there.
And what they did is right as Cade was coming off the action,
they had Malik relocate from the left corner up to the wing aggressively as though he was going to shoot.
So what that did is it put McAil Bridges in a really tough spot in terms of his decision making.
All game long, the Knicks were putting two on the ball in those Cade ball screens when they could,
especially with the five man was involved, right?
They were doing it as well with Brunson.
But with that five man, as Cade comes off and he has two on the ball, that means the roller gets behind, right?
Jalen Duren gets behind the ball screen defender, right?
in that situation, the lob is open unless you tag the roller from the low man.
The low man in that situation, since Kate is dribbling towards his right, towards the right
corner, towards the right wing area, in that situation, technically the low man is Mikhail Bridges.
It's his job to come over and step in front of Jalen Durant.
But because it's Malik Beasley over there, such a great shooter, and because they relocate him
out of the corner up to the left wing,
McHale Bridge's natural instinct
is to follow the shooter
as he's relocating. And so that basically
neutralizer removed the low man
from the equation. What happens
when there's no low man and there's two on the ball
with Cade? He doesn't need to make some tough shot.
He doesn't need to beat someone off the dribble.
He just got to go like this and just throw an easy
lob pass up in the air for
a dunk for Jayland Dern, really, really smart
action at the end of the play or at the end
of the game. And just a great example of why
it's so important to set your spacing up
properly. There's a lot of margin in basketball games. If you can get up the ball quickly,
get up the floor quickly, get guys into their spacing properly, get to a matchup early enough
in a possession. You have quality spacing and time on the clock for guys to extend advantage by
driving closeouts and stuff like that. You can dramatically improve your offensive efficiency.
That stuff really does matter. If that ends up being, you know, Dennis Schroeder in the left
wing instead of Malik Beasley, it's the easiest low man rotation of all time. You're going to concede to
catch and shoot three to Dennis Schroeder, especially when he's a guy that you can close out hard at,
and he's a guy that's a little hesitant to take that type of shot.
You know, all the stuff that Cade was succeeding with today is the same kind of stuff that allowed
Cade to be successful versus the Nix throughout the entire regular season.
This was a big part of why, even though I picked the Knicks, and I still do believe the Nix
will win the series, I did believe this would be a long series because the NICs have their advantages.
And specifically, Cade Cunningham has found opportunities in ways.
for him to be successful against this team,
regardless of the type of matchup that he's dealing with.
And again, the really smart attacks,
like those guard screens with Tim Hardaway Jr.,
that was an excellent way to neutralize some of O'G Enidobie's physicality on Kane.
Dennis Schroeder.
I ended up talking a lot about Dennis this year
because he got traded to two playoff teams.
He has his limitations.
His jumper is inconsistent.
He's small, so he's somewhat matchup dependent
in terms of who he can grow.
guard effectively famously in the
2023 conference finals. He was basically
useless first Jamal Murray because he was too big and
strong. So you could just get to his spots and shoot
over the top of him. He's not as fast as he
used to be back like when he was in Atlanta when he could
just toast everybody off the dribble all the time.
But he's one of the best competitors in the
game. And what I mean by that is that
he despises losing
so much that you can
count on him to care. I talk about this all the time.
I think a basketball
player, I think a player in the NBA
that hates losing is actually more valuable than a player in the NBA that loves basketball.
Because the hatred of losing will drive you to do the dirty work.
Ideally, it's both.
And the best players in the NBA are both.
The stefes, the Yokic's, the LeBrons, the guys that have run this league over the course of the last decade,
these are guys that hate losing and love basketball.
But Dennis Roder is a classic example of one of those dudes that despises
losing. He has this competitive motor, his fight, his willingness to battle his ass off against
Brunson every minute is on the floor. The the ability to be confident in a big moment, that all
stems, that all comes back to Dennis Roder's unrelenting competitive nature. And it was a reason
why I loved rooting for him when he was with the Lakers. That's why I told Warriors fans that you guys
would like him. He just didn't get to stay there long enough and he had to be trade filler. And I told
Pistons fans right after the deal. Like if you need a backup guard to be your Jaden Ivy temporarily,
you can't do any better than Dennis Schroeder as an option in that spot. And like,
I thought, you know, J.B. Biggersaf closes with him instead of Assar Thompson, which I thought
was smart. He's very good at making Brunson work hard for his shots. And he has a little bit
higher floor as an off ball player on offense. And he's a guy who can run action late in the
game. So Cade runs out of gas late in the game. And the Pistons needed a bucket. And, you know,
Dennis had a miss a miss on a different shot. It was like a little mid-range pull-up that he missed.
But he went right at Brunson on that final possession, and it was a ball screen. He gets Tobias Harris on him, and he brings Brunson back into the screen again.
And Brunson really did not want to switch back on Dennis. And so on that second switch, Brunson was hanging just a step too far back.
And Dennis just confidently stepped into that shot, a huge shot in a huge moment in that game, especially when Kaye Cunningham is on the floor.
And he just stuck it. It was a big time shot. And it ended up literally being the difference in the game.
We haven't even talked about the Pistons defense yet.
I thought their defense was fantastic all night.
They were flying around in rotation, closing up openings after putting two on the ball against
Brunson.
They did an excellent job rotating to Kat to take away his easy pick and pop and spot-up
opportunities.
They really controlled Kat all night.
He generated 16 points on one-on-ones, meaning post-ups and ISOs in game one.
He generated just four tonight.
That's a huge difference from game one.
He didn't even log a single ISO possession after logging seven ISOs in game one.
which I thought was interesting.
I want to dig a little bit into the film
and try to see where those opportunities were missing
from game one.
That'll be something we'll take a look at tomorrow.
But yeah, they controlled Kate,
they controlled Cat all night.
Pistons did get some help.
O.G. and Adobe and McHale Bridges missed some wide open looks,
like absolutely unguarded looks,
especially open, like early in the game.
New York generated seven,
completely unguarded catch-and-shoot jump shots
for McHale Bridges and OG Anobie, and they made just two of them.
And one of them was a two-pointer.
So, like, if you generate seven unguarded catch-and-shoe jump shots for McAle and OG,
you're hoping to get 12 points out of that, not five.
And that ends up being literally the difference in the game tonight.
Like, most of the adjustments for New York basically just involve their guys playing better.
Like, Kat's got to play better.
The kale bridges, it's got two great looks down the stretch,
one on the right wing and one at the top of the key.
Both of them, he left way short.
they need him to knock those shots down.
O'G and Obey missing wide open corner threes,
not bringing the scoring pop that he brought down the tail end of the season.
Like they need, like, there's always this desire that I've seen
since I started covering the league to come up with like some magical solution.
This is what we can do, this X's and O's thing that's going to solve all of our problems.
And it's like you can try a different matchup here or there.
You can try running a different action here or there.
but because in the NBA playoffs, everyone does so much more switching and all the actions are scouted,
it really just comes down to your dudes have to play up to their capability.
And right now, McHale Bridges Ogen and Obey and Carl Anthony Towns are not meeting the moment
the way that even some of these Detroit Pistons role players are.
And they just got to be better.
They converted spot up possessions tonight.
at 0.48 points per possession.
Now, some of that is the quality of Detroit's rotations.
I want to give them credit.
But these are pros.
And not just pros.
These are elite pros on the offensive end in Ogen and Obey and McHale Bridges.
They need to convert those.
They need to convert them at a higher clip.
And again, like, I think the Knicks are going to win the series.
Over the course of this series, the more experienced,
more talented veterans will eventually find their footing.
But this Detroit team's not going.
anywhere. They've been out rebounding them on the offensive glass in through the first two games.
Kate is obviously comfortable and getting to where he wants to on the floor. They have some
physical advantages. There are some, there are some tough hurdles for the Knicks to cover in the
series and they're not going to cover it unless they're highly paid, highly revered role
players on the wing can meet the moment and help contribute on the offensive end of the floor.
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 throughout there.
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.
Well, we were thinking I'm originally calling it one of the early names of our band before Jonas Brothers.
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,
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. Unhumor 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 IHeart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Last night, a blown call changed the game.
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.
The laughs, the drama, the triumphs, the moments that never make the highlight real.
From viral moments 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 SportsClyce 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.
on everything happening at Roland Garris.
Every match, every upset, and what it really takes to win on Clay.
Jen she 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 Rubakina 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 courtside seat to the French Open.
Listen to the Renee Stubbs tennis podcast on the Eye Heart
radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Presented by Capital One, founding partner of IHeart Women's Sports.
All right, let's bring Jackson in here, and let's get to some of your guys's questions.
Let's do it.
We're going to start with who has been the MVP of the first round so far, and we're only
basically one game in from every series, but still, it's a fun question.
Oh, man.
That is a very good question.
let's see we've only had one set of game two so far
so I feel like it would have to be somebody from tonight's slate right
um man
I think I think
I think Kauai and Steph
I'll give a mutual to a double award to Kauai and Steph
just because like those two individual performances
what Kauai did tonight as a shot maker
and what Steph did last night
I got in trouble with some Warriors fans
I always get in trouble with stands for not being nice enough.
It's like the weirdest thing.
Like I said to,
I said last night that Steph's performance was one of the better ones in his career,
which is a pretty innocuous statement.
And I just got absolutely slayed for it online because he's had so many better games.
And it's like, first of all,
we're going to stop looking at box scores.
Like, if you watch that game,
he made 11 out of 12 shots.
Like he made every single shot out of it,
almost every single shot out of a dozen,
incredibly difficult shots in a game where he was the only guy who could generate
offense when the entire game plan was built around stopping him.
Like it was a remarkable Steph Curry performance.
I was blown away by it.
And then Kauai every bit is impressive tonight for the Clippers.
I would go with the two of those guys.
What do you think, Jackson?
Yeah, I agree.
The chat was saying was had a lot of Kauai.
And I think it has to be between those two with the way that both those guys just rose
to the moment from a playoff shot making standpoint
and also
really feel like they controlled the game.
Beyond just the shot making,
it felt like both guys completely controlled
the pace, the flow.
It felt like they were creating good offense
even when it wasn't actually
just pure jump shot making.
So I think it's got to be between those two.
That's a great point.
That's a great point.
All right.
Between the Clippers and Denver,
which matchup is more difficult for O.K.
Oh, man.
I would go with, I would go with Denver.
I think they have the specific ability to more consistently punish their lack of size with Yokic.
The Clippers had some issues with the Thunder for stretches this year, too.
The Nuggets logged a couple of wins.
It's worth mentioning their last win involved a little bit of weirdness with J-Dub going out with, I think, a hamstring injury.
And then they just started double-teaming Shea every time he crossed half court.
but they did hang 140 on the Thunder defense in that game.
They, Denver completely blew this game down the stretch, Jackson.
I don't know about you, but I thought,
I thought Denver was about to go up 2-0.
And I was literally sitting there thinking, watching the game.
I'm like, man, like these guys, here they are again.
It looked like they were dead to rights like a month ago.
And now they're looking a lot closer to the team that, you know,
contended for a championship over the last couple of years.
I if I was okay to see I'd much rather play the clippers I think the clippers lack of playmaking talent
would be a disaster against okayc's turnover forcing defense yeah I think the
strength of the thunder defense I mean they got heart and time is good and chet is good and
switchable but the strength of their defense is just how many wing athlete bodies they have to
throw at every every other skilled offensive player and I think that would be much more
effective against the team like the clippers that where you got so many bodies on to throw a james
hard not i mean kawai's pretty big so it's probably just mostly looted or but you got still a lot of
bodies you can throw kauai and a lot of swarming that we've seen kawai struggle with in this series
and against a worst rotation team in denver not just a worse but like a flat out bad rotation team
relative to the better teams that we have in the league i want to very quickly credit though both of them
in the sense that I do think both of those teams are capable of beating the thunder.
I'm not trying to underrate the clippers.
I just personally think Denver's a little more capable of the upset there.
We got a couple of Warriors questions.
Is the Warriors' lack of interior size going to cost them these playoffs,
or could step and Jimmy and their defense make up for the lack of size?
So there's all this talk about size with some of these specific teams in the West.
Like there's a lot of talk about size with Minnesota.
it's not Minnesota's size that concerns me, it's their, it's their athleticism.
It's their overall length and athleticism.
The Thunder are not a team that presents substantial size related issues.
So there's avert and the Lakers don't either with exception of LeBron and in Lucas.
So like, if go, let's let's let's let's say Golden State beats Houston.
You're facing one of Minnesota or the Lakers in the second round.
I think the Golden State defense is capable of doing much more.
damage to Minnesota's offense than the Lakers defense is capable of doing. And I don't think
Minnesota's bigs are the types of bigs that would do substantial damage to the, to the Warriors
defense. So neither of those teams I think could be particularly damaging. You're probably looking at
OKC in the conference finals. They're not a particularly big team. And then coming out of the east,
you're likely getting Boston who's not a particularly big team. So,
I don't want to sit here and pretend like it wouldn't be great
if the Warriors had a little bit more size on the front line,
but I don't think necessarily it will show up
in a real damaging way in this West playoff run.
Yeah, I agree.
I think there's a lot of talk about size,
and there's certain, there's different ways that size can manifest
to your point about the Timberwolves attacking the offensive glass
or something like that, but not the size that I think people are critical
of the Warriors is interior defensive size.
only way to punish that is if you have someone who can actually do that, which not that many
teams do anymore. The Thunder are not running a lot of post-ups because I think the Warriors are
small if they played each other, right? Like the Nuggets, you can say, yeah, and the Clippers,
I think would be the two teams that they, their centers are problems on the inside if you
don't guard them with size. Even Jorymont, who's as good of a defender interior against both
those guys, Yoko Jansu. That's a much more tough challenge on the, specifically about the size
issue than any of the other teams in the rest of the playoffs.
Yeah, I totally agree. And your odds of actually facing Yokoajer Zhu and the conference finals are pretty low because the thunder will be favored, even though we think that those teams can beat the thunder. I actually, my main concern about Golden, I'm actually curious to see if this matches up with your main concern, Jackson. My main concern with Golden State actually winning for playoff rounds is consistent offense. It's like Jimmy Butler hit six jump shots against the Rockets last night. Like, is he going to keep hitting six jump shots every night? Because if it's not that, they don't really.
have a reliable offensive player beyond Steph.
And Jimmy's been great so far,
but I have my skepticism after how he finished the regular season.
So, like, I think it's more likely that if, like,
Golden State gets eliminated at some point in the first three rounds,
you and I are sitting here talking about how they need more shooting
and more, like, reliable play finishing,
not necessarily size on the front line.
Yeah, I agree.
They sort of feel like,
it's very different stylistic play,
and even about the way that they're success.
comes, but it feels similar to the, to the nuggets to me actually a little bit, where it's like they're so heliocentric in a different way.
It's not like step is just, you know, pounding the ball.
But their offense is so predicated around actions around one player.
And it's like that can be really challenging, especially when that player's off the floor.
But if you're in the game at the end, you really feel confident that that player is just good enough to lift you up over the top.
So it's sort of a double-edged store of do you have the 47 minutes, 46 minutes of enough offense?
to get you there when because in the last two you feel really even though it didn't work out that way for the nuggets tonight you feel relatively confident that your singular player is going to lift you over the top yeah you know this is why i'm so interested in the cam johnson piece because like and i mean who knows he could be a pipe dream for the warriors we'll see
but i there's a very specific reason why jimmy butler fits so well in this system and it's because he's such a great read and react player that can play off of step and yeah they can have him take a random isop his
here or there, but he's pretty efficient in those situations because of his ability to hit
mid-range jump shots and his ability to get to the foul line. And like, Jimmy can do it, you know,
four or five times in a game and it feel like it happens in the flow of the offense and it's not
as disruptive as it can be like when sometimes commingo will hijack a possession to disrupt the flow of
the offense. But a guy like Cam Johnson is the type of player that could legitimately like score
20 points a game entirely in the flow of the Warriors offense. While all,
also being a guy who was trusted with the primary point of attack assignment a lot for Brooklyn
this year and actually showed some real defensive chops. So like as a big picture goal for the
Warriors, yeah, like to put it simply, and we can kick this back to you here before we get to the
next question. Like, would you rather have a legitimate center that fits the goal of this team as
a starting caliber center? Or would you rather have Cam Johnson? Oh, I think definitely Cam Johnson.
he he's he's in almost every way a knockoff prime clay thompson in it almost every way and if you
insert that guy back into this system and then with jimmy brother stole in the roster it's a much
it's a very diverse set of ways you can score the basketball all of a sudden yep i totally agree
all right i like this question um getting back to tonight's game do you think tonight showed
david adleman's inexperience with the way he was subbing in the fourth quarter couldn't tell if he was
overthinking or second guessing. I do think, to be fair to David Adelman, it seemed like Michael
Porter Jr. did get hurt at the end of the game. But I think the question about Adam's
experience feels irrelevant. I think he's done fine to this point. I think he's pushed the right
buttons. I thought closing with Russ was the right move in game one. I thought closing with MPJ was the
right move tonight. And when you factor in the mistake that Michael made and the injury, it made sense
to go back to Russ Slate. I didn't necessarily have a problem with any of those moves. He
had the quick hook with Russ after he had that bad turnover along the left sideline.
Like, I think he's been managing, like, at a certain point, we got to blame the players.
Like, Aaron Gordon smoked it dunk.
Michael Porter Jr. coughed the ball up in crunch time.
Like, like, not putting yourselves in the same position when a guy's getting double-teamed
is like basketball 101.
Like, you'll hear yelling about that shit in a pickup game or in a high school game.
Like, you got, that's spacing 101.
one, make yourself, put yourself in a position where you're not easy to guard.
When you start staying next to each other, you're easy to guard.
Like so many of the things that happened in Denver tonight were like legitimately self-inflicted
wounds.
I agree.
And I think the same can be said even of Yokic's turnovers, which is relevant to the next
question, which is what changes does Yokic need to make to claw back in this series?
And I think specifically the question is probably about turnovers because he had, I think,
seven tonight.
And some of them, like there was that one where he was sort of, they were really shading the whole
the whole defense with that side of the floor.
Peyton Watson is in the dunker spot
ready for a lob and Yokic just kind of throws out of bounds.
He had some weird
turn-up. Very, very uncharacteristic
turnovers tonight. I was screaming
at Peyton Watson on that play. I'm like, dude, cut.
You're going to get a dunk. And like it. He was just
a second late and there was like a
mild disconnect there where like Yokic
threw it to where he was like right after
he ended up cutting. And it's like, I
saw that play coming a mile away.
I was like, dude, the dunk is there. Peyton.
Yokch wanted it. He just was too late on the
cut. But I mean, Yokers will have a game like that every once in a while. He had a game with
seven turnovers in the Minnesota Timberwolf series last year too. And like, I want to give the,
give the clippers some credit. They jumped some of the typical passing reads that he makes.
There's some of them that were enforced too. Like the one with Peyton Watson, I really do think that
that one's on Peyton for not cutting when Yokic originally saw the play. The one late in the game
that Kauai got to steal. That's on Christian Brown and Russell Westbrook for like legitimately
just doing something really stupid. Um, yeah. But,
then like yeah the the one where he spun out of the post up and dropped it off and
Chris Dunn stole it like the actual read was to the right corner I can't remember who it
was that was shooting over there at that spot I think it might have been Michael Porter Jr.
but he he missed the tic-tac toe read for in that situation where Dunn made the rotation
and he had to make the but like Yolkja make mistakes like that every once in a while I'm not
I I am infinitely more encouraged about Denver and their chances to win this series after
or two games than I was before the first two games.
So all you Nuggets fans take that for whatever it's worth.
I used to think you had a pretty small chance of winning this series.
And now I think you guys have a pretty legitimate chance of winning this series.
That is a perfect pivot to what I think is probably our last question of the night.
Are you feeling worried about any of your picks, your series picks?
If so, who?
Or not even worried is the question.
But also if you were a couple, one game in for most of the series two for these two games,
are there any series that you would change your pick at this point?
So let's take a look at it.
So Cavs Magic, or Cabs Heat, I ended up not doing series previews on those ones,
just because we got so run down and we didn't have time.
We did like, what, 14 videos last week?
But the Cavs Heat series, I called what, 4-1 or 4-0, that obviously is going to stay the same.
Thunder Grizzlies, that one I feel relatively certain will be a sweep.
I said sweep for Celtics Magic.
I feel pretty good after game one that Orlando has a good.
chance to get one game just on the strength of their defense and if palo and franz have really nice
games down in Orlando but that obviously could also end in the sweep nix pistons is going about
exactly as i expected it to to this point um the pistons clearly showing some ability to make the nicks
uncomfortable but the pistons now in both games have like kind of soiled themselves late and they just
happened to pull this one out because one dennis schroeder jump shot went in but i think the nix will close
that one out in six games pacer's bucks uh very similar to how i felt after
Lakers Timberwolves where when I went back and watched the tape, I'm like, can someone go up to
these guys and tell them that it's the playoffs? Like, what the hell are you guys doing? And so both of
those series, the Pacers Bucks series and the Thunders, in the Lakers Timberwolf series, I'll have a
much better feel for after game two because I felt it's really hard to tell how teams stack up
unless they both bring their A game. And like Minnesota and Indy brought their A games in game one.
and the bucks and the Lakers kind of tried to ease their way into the postseason
and that went about exactly as you could have expected.
Denver Clippers, I'm not going to change my pick yet,
but I went into the series thinking Clippers and Six and feeling pretty strongly about that,
and internally I'm feeling closer to coin flip now.
So that should give you guys a general idea of where I stand.
I'm never going to overreact to the first couple games of a series,
but I think you can start to learn.
Like there was a big one for me last year.
I, before Luca hit the game winner over, go bear,
the Timberwolves had a two-point lead in the final minute
with a chance to tie the series and I tweeted out the series was over.
It was just like abundantly clear to me through two games
that Luca was infinitely more comfortable picking apart Minnesota's defense
than was on the other end of the floor.
And I just didn't see anything happening that would change that trend.
And what do you know, Dallas went into Minnesota in game three
and beat him or went up three.
Right. So like, I haven't seen anything that has changed my mind significantly, but I would say, yeah, the Knicks, or excuse me, the Nuggets Clippers one is the one that I'm closest to change in my mind because I'm feeling closer to 50-50.
I think that's fair. I think, I think the Pistons, I don't know, something about it. Something about it.
You're feeling that you drinking the K-Kool-Aid a little bit. I'm drinking the K-KKool-Aid a little bit. It doesn't feel like, I mean, I was texting you about this, that.
Yes, the Pistons almost blew that game.
But if either of their two very good three-point shooters,
Tim Hardaway and Malik Beasley, hit anything in that game,
they would have been up 19 instead of hovering around 10
for the vast majority of the second half.
Those guys were, I don't know what they finished at,
but when I was texting you about it at one point,
they were combined one for 12.
You got to assume it's a cliche, ha, ha, ha,
the role players shoot better at home thing.
If it's going to happen for them,
it's going to be because some of those guys
It's hard to hit some shots.
So, well, let me ask you a follow-up, though,
because, like, my feeling that game was very much, like,
classic Eastern Conference, knock-down, drag-out fight,
and both teams shot in the 20s from three,
and McAil and OG missed a boatload of good looks.
So let me ask you this.
Like, who do you think is more likely to get it together
and bring more offensive punch over the rest of the series?
McAle and O.G. or Malik and Tim Hardaway?
I mean, McKail and O.G, I think, is the right answer.
But I feel like process-wise,
Cade has been more effective at generating,
which I think is true largely over the course of, you know,
as the two players are in general.
But he's been largely better at creating better looks for his teammates
than Jalen Brunson or Kat has for their teammates.
The looks that Bridges and Ogie have gotten are good enough.
They should make more than they're making.
But I think the process-wise,
Cade is doing a good job against this,
against a good Knicks defense.
This is a really interesting take because I'm not sure I,
I think I agree with you through two games.
like I think Kate has done a better job.
And so going back to my initial kind of ethos when it comes to the playoffs,
like which team does a better job of making the other team uncomfortable?
Like the Pistons are doing more to make the Knicks uncomfortable right now than the Pistons.
I just think the margin is relatively small and I just feel like the Pistons are far more
likely to blow games over the course of the series.
And they like to your point, the Pistons basically controlled both of those games
and damn near lost both of them.
Which is exactly why NBA history tells us that teams like the Pistons don't typically win the series.
But I think the point you're making is extremely fair, which is through two games,
Cade has been the better kind of like half court surgeon, so to speak, than anybody on the Knicks.
Before we get out of here tonight, I just wanted to thank you guys.
We have officially crossed over 100,000 subs.
There was a moment back in October of 2023.
three. We were still on the volumes feed and the volume feed had like, you know, 700,000
subscribers or whatever. And it was kind of like a scary moment. Me and my producer at the time,
Ryan Brumley, still a very good friend of mine. We kind of had a chat and we were like,
we were like, do you want to go out and like just launch our own channel? And we were scared
because we were like, if we go out on our own, we could lose some of the juice that we get
from the volumes feed in terms of exposure.
And we launched that channel from scratch in October 23.
And here we are 18 months later at 100,000 subscribers.
And like you guys came over immediately.
Like we moved most of our audience like in the first week over from that feed.
And all I can say is, you know, I've been doing this for what, 38 months now with the volume.
And I am just completely and totally mind blown at the support you guys have given.
given the show and what we've actually managed to build here.
And the things that I've gotten to experience over the course of the last three years,
like I got to this summer go to like Team USA playing against Canada in Vegas.
It was like one of the coolest experiences in my life.
I got to see Steph throw a lob to LeBron James and transition and like getting to be at
Summer League and getting to meet the people I've gotten to me and get talk to the people
I've gotten to talk to.
I just am so lucky.
And it's because of you guys in the support that you've given the show.
and this just feels like a huge milestone.
And I'm just,
I'm not taking it for granted.
And I'd love to just let you guys know how much I appreciate you guys
for supporting me and supporting the show.
That's all I have for tonight.
We'll be back tomorrow morning with the film session on tonight's games.
And then we'll be back tomorrow night with game two,
a Lakers Timberwolves.
And you guys might see a very angry and upset Jason tomorrow.
We'll see.
Or you might see a more relaxed,
confident Jason.
We'll see.
I'm really.
curious to see how the Lakers respond after the game one egg.
But again, I appreciate you guys, and I'll see you tomorrow.
What's up, guys? As always, I appreciate you for listening to and supporting hoops tonight.
It would actually be really helpful for us if you guys would take a second and leave a rating and a review.
As always, I appreciate you guys, you guys, supporting us.
But if you could take a minute to do that, I'd really appreciate it.
The Volume
Hey, guys, it's us and the Jonas Brothers. I'm Joe.
I'm Kevin.
And I'm Nick.
And guess what?
We created our own podcast called, Hey,
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.
Tired and sick.
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 Smygel and friends.
Me and hilarious guests from Bob Oden.
Kirk 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.
Will Ferrell's Big Money Players and IHeart Podcasts presents soccer moms. So I'm Leanne.
Yeah. This is my best friend, Janet. Hey. And we have been joining.
at the hips since high school.
Absolutely.
A redacted amount of years later,
we're still joined at the hip.
Just a little bit bigger hips.
This is a podcast.
We're recording it as we tailgate
our youth soccer games
in the back of my Honda Odyssey
with all the snacks and drinks.
Why did you get hard seltzer instead of beer?
Oh, they had a bogo.
Well, then you got it.
Listen to soccer moms on the IHeart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
What's up, fam?
It's Isaiah Thomas.
And I'm CJ Toledano.
It's our favorite time of the year
on our podcast Point Game.
the playoffs.
We're digging into the biggest surprises of the season.
And I'm looking back on some of my greatest playoff moments.
If we didn't talk ever again, I was crying.
You just understood.
That's how personal it got.
Wow.
Then after that game seven, Mark keep coming to him.
He's like, you know, I love you, dog.
You know, it's all love.
This was just playoffs.
This was just basketball.
So listen to Point Game on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
This is an IHeart podcast.
Guaranteed Human.
