The Herd with Colin Cowherd - Hoops Tonight - LIVE: Nuggets Force Game 7 With Big Win
Episode Date: May 16, 2025 Jason reacts live after the Denver Nuggets force Game 7 vs. the Oklahoma City Thunder. He discusses the big games from Nikola Jokic and Jamal Murray to outplay Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Jalen Wil...liams, and Chet Holmgren, and what to expect in Game 7. Follow the show on Playback for future “Aftershow” content: https://www.playback.tv/hoopstonight #Volume #HerdSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Coming to hoops tonight here at the volume.
Happy Thursday, everybody.
I hope all of you guys are having a great week.
Well, this excellent second round series
between the Denver Nuggets and Oklahoma City Thunder,
which has been rife with highly entertaining games,
gave us another great one tonight.
The Julian Strother game.
Julian Strother comes into this one and scores 15 points
for a Nuggets team that desperately needed someone
to come in and start hitting shots.
As a team, the Nuggets finally started to hit their catch-and-shoot threes
in this game as they go 12 for 32 from 3.
38% a high step up.
up from where they've been in their losses in the series.
Jamal Murray also excellent in a game when he woke up very sick and was questionable to
start the game.
Another nightmare shooting performance for the Oklahoma City Thunder.
Another example of their youth showing in terms of J. Dubbs inconsistency.
Lots of interesting stuff to get into in this game from the perspective of both teams.
We'll be breaking this game down.
Then at the tail end of the show, we'll take 10, 15 minutes of mailback questions with Jackson.
and then when we finish here tonight,
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All right, let's talk some basketball.
So I thought that was really the theme for tonight's game for Denver, the need to hit shots.
If you go back to the last two games in particular, it was their offense that let them down,
down the stretch.
8 point leading game 4, 9 point leading game 5 in the fourth quarter, and just an
inability to close the deal from there.
And specifically in game 5, not a single nugget was able to really contribute offensively
in that fourth quarter run when Yokic was setting him up.
I mean, I saw a stat this morning and I double checked it to make sure it was fair,
or accurate, but he had 20 potential assists in game 5 and ended that game with five
assists because of the types of shots they were missing. Even if you really zoom in on that fourth
quarter run, there's a couple of wide open threes for Christian Brown. There's a wide open three for
Jamal Murray in the right corner. And this is a team that typically shoots really well. They shot 39%
on wide open threes. This is per MBA.com tracking data. This is with the defender a minimum of six
feet away. So these are like really open threes. They shot 39% on them in the regular season.
40% in the first round series against the Clippers.
In the first five games of this series, excuse me, in the three losses,
in the three losses in this series, so far, the Nuggets, or a combined 15 for 66 on wide open threes.
That's just 23%.
I thought there was an interesting interview brought to light by the broadcast about Christian Brown.
and now he was just kind of like evaluating the way he's performed so far in this postseason,
or really in this entire season.
And he said, like, you know, I had a great regular season, can't really play any better
than I did.
And he's right about that.
He did a great job stepping in for Contavius Caldwell Pope into that starting two-guard
role and turned into this devastating transition score, who also was a solid catch-and-shoe player,
good defensive player, all of that stuff.
And then he said in the postseason, he's happy with the way he's defended.
It's been a little bit of a mixed bag in this OKC series,
but specifically at the end of games,
I feel like he's been pretty good outside of maybe a couple plays
at the tail end of game five,
but he has been pretty good defensively in this series.
But what he said was,
I have to find a way to knock down these open threes that I'm getting.
The big part of it is just that's the way the defense is attending to Nicole
Yokic in the middle of the floor.
They're conceding these open threes, especially out of the corner.
and what I appreciated about what Christian Brown was saying is like he understands that
yeah you're playing fine yeah it's physical yeah no one's really shooting well I'm sure
there's a lot of thunder guys sitting in the locker room wishing they should shoot or could
shoot better but the bottom line is Christian knows they can have they have a really good chance
to win this series if guys make shots and the thing that I thought stood out the most in that
that little tidbit provided by the broadcast was when Christian said I got two games to figure it out
one, just the confidence knowing that he believed in his team to win game six,
but also just understanding that he can flip the script by making shots.
And I'm highlighting Christian Brown just because of the comments from the broadcast,
but it was down the line.
Guys for Denver finally just made shots.
They shot 38% as a team.
Christian Brown was three for six from three.
Jamal Murray was two for six from three.
He was fantastic tonight.
We'll talk about him here in a minute playing dealing with an illness.
Michael Porter Jr.
Finally got a couple shots to go down.
And then Julian Strother.
He also made some other plays.
He had this baseline cut, a really impressive finish.
That 360 kind of like lob finish she had from Jamal Murray,
way tougher shot than that looks on TV because he's right at the front of the rim,
but to coordinate yourself in traffic like that,
well, I guess he wasn't in traffic,
but again, to coordinate himself on a spin where you can't even see the rim
to then find the rim and lay it in.
That was a really impressive finish.
He had a play where he kind of ended up with the ball,
kind of a classic grenade situation where he ended up.
with the ball at the top of the key against J-dub in a late shot clock situation.
And all the other guys in the floor kind of just looked at him like, you do it.
And he put the ball on the floor and made a play and drew a foul.
And I think specifically those things are, you know, kind of found money in a certain way.
But the shot making is the important part.
Him stepping confidently into semi-contested, intense high-stakes threes in that second
half run and hitting three of them, two big ones in the late third quarter.
at another one when things were kind of already in hand in the fourth quarter,
all those shots were super important.
And the reason why this is specifically important for this matchup is we spent a lot of
time talking on playback and in the broadcast after game five about how the
nuggets kind of seem to be dealing with a fifth closer problem.
We talked about Russell Westbrook.
I mean, he made a big play tonight in the late third quarter that will touch on in a
minute.
But he had a nightmare first quarter.
and in general just has been just uneven over the tail end of this series.
So he's not a great option.
Michael Porter Jr., as we discussed two nights ago,
has just been incapable of knocking down open threes
while also bringing some defense and rebounding issues to the table.
So like there wasn't like a legitimate option to go for.
We actually were talking on the broadcast about Peyton Watson
because at the very least Peyton Watson would be able to defend and grab rebounds
and at least just be an athletic presence on the floor
if you're not going to get any sort of shooting from anywhere down the roster.
But like he just, you know, that shooting stretch from Julian Strother just gives
Adelman another option that he can consider should Michael Porter Jr. struggle in game seven.
Should Russell Westbrook struggle in game seven?
You know, should Peyton Watson struggle in game seven.
If he needs like a guy that can just be out there that can hit his shot,
he has a struggles defensively from time to time.
But it's not like there's anybody who's doing an amazing job defensively in this series containing the
ball. That was kind of the story of the game for OKC. I thought Tim Legler did an amazing job in the
broadcast breaking down the way that Oklahoma City was penetrating the shell of Denver zone, which
was putting Yokic and all of these like simple like, do I have to step up to this guy who's driving
and just give up a baseline cut for an easy dunk? Or am I going to stay back on my heels and let this
dude just drive right into my face and make a layup? Like, Yokich was putting a lot of compromising positions
just simply because the shell of the Denver defense wasn't holding.
And so having another option is a guy that, like,
at least you're getting some shot making out of him.
I think that's an interesting thing to keep an eye on heading into game seven.
But again, like, these are, these are the shots that are going to be there
with the way that Oklahoma City is just swarming Yokic in the middle of the floor.
And I thought that was really the story of the game tonight.
Denver's young guys, Denver's veterans, Denver's role players,
confidently stepping into shots and knocking them down when their team
desperately needed them to hit shots.
Let's talk about Jamal Murray for a minute.
I was venting in a
unserious manner with Jackson during the game
because I watched a certain player
for my favorite team play with an illness
in game three of the Minnesota Timberwolf series
and there was just like no competitive fire at all.
It was almost like Luca just kind of wanted us all
to know he was sick.
And I don't want to be, you know, too,
I don't want to jump.
to conclusion, so to speak, because you never know how sick Luca was or how sick
Jamal was. But both players were questionable. Both players attempted to play. And I thought
there was an obvious competitive fire with Jamal right away when he came into the game.
And there were some stretches where he lost steam. There's a stretch there in that second quarter
where you can tell he was getting to him a little bit. Casano Wallace had some success. He had a couple
turnovers. But like he came right out the gates and was aggressive, both in his pull-up shooting
situations and going to the basket.
And you could see, like,
if you didn't know Jamal Murray was sick,
you would have no idea watching that game.
There was no, you know,
kind of pouty body language or like exaggerating
the symptoms that he was dealing with.
He was like, fuck all that.
I have, my team needs me to win this game.
And he went out there and just immediately brought that competitive fire
and made play after play after play.
I thought he was fantastic in the late third quarter run.
Really setting things up on offense.
He was the guy that kind of set up those couple Julian Strother buckets,
got a big transition finish.
Finish Jackson was texting me during the game talking about his unbelievable finishing ability.
He kind of has this remarkable talent to get into your body
and then find these like below the rim finishing angles where you can, you know,
put it softly up off the glass from way off to the side.
He can finish on either side of the rim in a way that like can even surprise you on the
broadcast where you're like, is he going up on the strong side? Nope, he's going reverse and you're
surprised as it's happening. And he, his supreme talent is he's just one of the great shot makers
to ever play this game. Like if you really get down to it and you think about the guys who, again,
that specific trait. I'm not talking about super high level point guard play, although I thought
Jamal passed the ball really well tonight. I'm not talking about elite two way play in the
form of defense at the guard position. I'm not talking about, you know, some sort of indomitable
downhill attack. But if you strictly just taking, synthesizing a player's game down to the ability
to hit tough shots, the ability to hit jumpers off the move and off the dribble from every single
possible footwork and dribble combination, there aren't many players that I've watched that are more
gifted with that specific trait. And every one of those buckets he got tonight, they needed. I was just,
I just, I just, I just, I just, I just think Jamal is a legend. I, I,
It's hard to explain because I hated his guts when I was rooting against him as a Lakers fan, obviously.
But like, when I think about the players in the game that have the true competitive spirit,
I always refer to this as like hatred of losing, not a love of basketball.
Obviously, you need both in order to have success at the highest levels.
But there is like a competitive spirit you can see from a basketball player that manifests from a singular emotion,
which is like a hatred and a fear of losing.
I actually think that matters more than any other trait when it comes to basketball
because it manifests in a willingness to do whatever it takes.
And even when I think back to Jamal in his previous playoff highs,
like in 2023, in 2022, he has, or I should say in 2023,
he has like a defensive playmaking side to his game too,
where he'll get into a spot in a big spot and put his body on the line for a charge.
or make a help side rotation where he'll get a big block.
Or there was a big one he had in the Lakers series three years ago
where he stripped LeBron on a key clutch possession on a help side off of the
weak side corner.
He'll fight for a contested rebound.
There was one late tonight.
It was in that crazy run when the Thunder were just ball pressuring like crazy.
And they forced all those turnovers in a row.
And somebody missed a three off the right wing.
I can't remember who it was.
I think it was J. Dub.
But a Thunder player missed a three.
And like Alex Crusoe comes flying in and hard.
Martinstein flying in and like the Thunder are still playing with that like chaotic energy.
And who came up with the ball in the mix of all those players with Jamal Murray?
Yokic was in there battling and somehow the ball just ended up in Jamal Murray's hands.
Because like we can be critical of Jamal in other ways.
He takes the regular season less serious than a lot of his peers do in the league and
comes into camp out of shape and could probably stand to take care of his body a little bit better.
But when it comes to the principal concept of winning basketball games in the playoffs,
He's just one of the better guards that I've seen in this era because of his ability to shop
make and because of his willingness to do the things that you need to do to win basketball games.
And I thought tonight, you know, should they win this series?
If they go on the road and they win game seven, I will think back to this Jamal Murray game
six against the Thunder very fondly as one of the better games in his career.
So shout out to Jamal.
The late third quarter run, this was really when the game started to flip in Denver's favor.
Elite defense in this stretch.
We were giving up these like kind of easy baskets right along the last.
the baseline off of drop-ops.
And there were just a few sequences like Aaron Gordon threw a better contest at an
Alex Caruso reverse layup where he forced to miss.
Jamal Murray got in the way on one forced to miss.
Peyton Watson, that huge block that he had in transition.
There were a few efforts around the rim during that stretch that turned fit,
what would have been easy points into opportunities for Denver going the other way.
And then that was the stretch when Jamal Murray really attacked offensive.
as a shot maker and as a playmaker.
That was when Julian Strother had all those buckets in the late third quarter stretch.
And then there was a huge sequence at the tail end of that.
There was a huge sequence in that run, if you guys remember,
where they kind of started to lose control.
And Denver turns it over.
O'KC's run in the length of the floor.
Strother gets the huge block at the rim.
And then they go down the other end.
And Russell Westbrook, who had had a turnover in this sequence,
and it had a really rough game,
gave an extra effort and got an offensive rebound put back.
That bumped it. Instead of going down to five,
it pushed it back up to nine and just kind of change the psychology of the game.
And I just thought that was a very important run.
And then Nicole Yokic wasn't super aggressive as a score in this game,
but there was a stretch where when he first came in in the mid fourth quarter,
I think they were up by eight or nine at this point.
And as we know,
that's that same kind of margin that Oklahoma City was able to overcome in the previous two games, right?
And Nicole Yokic came in and I was literally thinking like they need him to score the basketball.
Tim Legler was doing a great job calling that out on the broadcast as well.
And he came in and he hit a contested three and a contested floater in the middle of the lane,
two quick buckets that bumped the lead all the way out to like 13 or 14 points.
And that was when everyone kind of could at least feel less pressure in terms of
how difficult it was going to be to close out the game.
And the Nuggets ended up getting a much-needed win tonight to extend the series.
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We're the first people to do podcasts.
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So how do we actually come up with a name
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Oh, we were thinking I'm originally calling it
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This is how you guys remember it going down?
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On the OKC front, I did think that Oklahoma City found some stuff with Denver's zone
in terms of just dribble penetration and then cutting along the baseline.
There was some real opportunities there that they capitalized on.
I thought this was Shea's best game in terms of his overall shot making and rhythm.
The game, you know, they lost control of it through a couple of key stretches.
But overall, they played well when Shea was on the floor.
and I thought that this was the game where he was most efficient and surgical offensively.
Again, 32 points on just 16 shots.
J. Dub, again, this was something that I called out before the postseason and it's just the reality of young basketball players.
Like, J. Dub's a really good player and I'm a big believer in him.
I think he has the potential to be like a Jalen Brown mixed with a little bit of Jimmy Butler
within the next, you know, five to 10 years of his career.
But like, he's young and doesn't have a ton of experience on this stage.
and he's really struggled to be consistently impactful in this setting.
Again, three for 16 in a long line of some brutal shooting performances in this series.
They're going to need him to be better in game seven.
And then I just wanted to shout out Kaysan Wallace.
I don't know what he's going to be in the long run.
I feel like there's some real potential there because of his athleticism,
just his ability to get up in traffic, both in transition and underneath the basket,
almost finishing like a big man as a guard around the rim.
his ball pressure bother. He bothers Jamal Murray more than Lou Dwart does. He's doing some real damage to him attacking the basketball.
Kaysan's a great player and I'm just really excited to see what he becomes in the long run. Now, as far as game seven goes,
this is going to be a super interesting game. It's on the road, right, for Denver. The Oklahoma City Thunder will be substantially favored, right? They are the young team, though. And I was really, I was looking back at just,
the previous examples in recent NBA history in like the last decade or so of teams who have
won game seven on the road. And every single time there's a consistent theme. It's the star,
the superstar, the apex superstar. Every time it's been a top tier guy, the only example
you'll find of one that's not really is the Trey Young game seven against Philly back in 2021,
if you remember correctly. But even then, I have to go back and watch that game to remember exactly
would happen, but I remember Trey making a bunch of big plays late in that game, like right in the
final minutes as they pulled away from Philly. But if you look at the other examples of recent
games where a team won a road game seven, you go back to like 2018 and it's LeBron James. And
Boston won game one at home. They won game two at home. They won game five at home. And then suddenly
in game seven, when all of the pressure was on, all of their young players, now mind you, they were
younger players than Oklahoma City even in terms of Jalen Brown and Jason Tainim at that point in time.
But LeBron just kind of alpha-dogged them and was like far and away the best player in the game,
far and away the most comfortable player in the game, made all the big plays late, and they ended up winning.
Fast forward to 2023.
Steph Curry, game seven on the road in Sacramento, Steph drops a 50 piece on those dudes.
And they just have no idea what to do.
They just immediately crumble in their confidence and drop a game seven at home.
go to 2022, Luca Donchich on the road in Phoenix,
just right out the gates in the first quarter,
just alpha dogs those dudes.
They all get super nervous and they end up falling apart.
And specifically with the Celtics in 2018,
but especially the Sons in 2022,
those were highly ranked teams in the regular season.
They were teams that won a ton of games.
They were teams that were viewed as favorites in the series.
like this was a, this was, you know, this series will follow a somewhat similar trend except for Shea is also an apex star in my opinion.
And this is a more talented, better Oklahoma City Thunder team.
But that dynamic is the dynamic that the Thunder have to avoid.
If Yokage rolls up into Oklahoma City in game seven and right away just looks like by far the most confident and comfortable player on the floor.
and he just strangles the pace and the flow
and a bunch of these young Oklahoma City Thunder players get nervous.
That's where it could get dangerous.
And as Denver just showed in game five,
they can go into Oklahoma City and control a game for a large portion.
Again, they blew that one in the late fourth quarter,
but they were right there with the chance to win that game.
So game seven, all eyes are on Yolkits and Shea.
You know, I expect a lot of inconsistency from the role players in that game.
but like you know like as as as likely as jemal and jadub are to go off they're just as likely to have
nightmare games it's going to be yokech and shay one of those two dominates that matchup you're
going to see that team win that game and i can't wait after what's been a pretty boring tail end
the second round i i feel fortunate that we're going to get an epic game seven on uh is it on
saturday or sunday i think it's on sunday actually so we get a couple days off wow that's a big deal
that's a huge deal.
So Denver doesn't play till Sunday.
That's a big deal that Denver is going to get a little bit of time off
before they have to roll up into that arena.
That's advantage to Denver for sure as well.
If I had to pick right now,
I picked Oklahoma City in 7 before the series.
I still feel like they probably deserve to be about a 60 to 40 favorite in game 7.
So I'm going to stick with OKC and 7 at this point,
but I would not be even the slightest bit surprised
if Denver rolled up in there and got the job done.
And either way, Minnesota Denver and Minnesota,
Minnesota OKC are both excellent Western Conference Finals matchups.
So us as basketball fans, we will be fine either way.
But I can't wait to break that game down when the time comes.
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...
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.
Oh, 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 for 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 helped make you funny.
This week, my guest, S&L's Mikey Day and headwriter, 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.
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 Bray.
breaking down everything happening at Roland Garris, every match, every upset, and what it really
takes to win on Clay.
Jenchen won.
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, 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.
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.
Imagine an Olympics where doping is not only legal but encouraged.
It's the enhanced games.
Some call it grotesque.
Others say it's unleashing human potential.
Either way, the podcast's Superhuman documented it all, embedded in the games and with the athletes for a full year.
Within probably 10 days, I'd put on 10 pounds.
I was having trouble stopping the muscle growth.
Listen to Superhuman on the I-Hard Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
All right, let's bring Jackson on and let's take a solid 10, 15 minutes of questions.
Let's do it, let's do it.
First question, aside from the superstarts, who are obviously the driving force for each team,
what is an X factor for each team going into game seven?
could be a player a concept whatever so the the obvious one is shooting right there's a certain amount
of like whether or not we get a a confident role player night for either team you know that could be
dort that could be michael porter junior that could be uh christian brown that could be you know
case on wall as and alex caruso like there's definitely a role player swing either way um i'm gonna go
with Jamal versus J-dub as just shopmakers. One of the things that I think we've seen a pretty good
example of is like, Jamal has a couple of crafty finishes in this series, especially in transition,
but both teams are doing a good job of keeping specifically J-dub and Jamal from getting all the
way to the rim. J-dub's having to settle for a lot of like tough stuff in the short to mid-range and
so is Jamal. And so I think there's a certain amount of like shot-making comfortability between
those two guys that I think would be a big swing in this in this game seven.
I also think the whistle could play a role.
Is Oklahoma City allowed to just beat the shit out of Yokic?
Or are they going to get a little more tiki tack?
Shea's whistle.
That could be a big factor.
Oklahoma City in general just processing against the zone and knocking down shots.
I think that's a big one too.
There are a lot of examples, but you know how it is, Jackson.
Like this point in the series, everyone knows what everyone's doing.
And it's really just about guys, you know,
executing the game plan and knocking down.
shots.
For sure.
Let's steal a game from Bill Simmons.
Guess the line for game seven.
I'm going to guess OKC minus eight and a half.
Seven and a half.
Open an eight though.
So you almost nailed it.
I was thinking seven and a half.
I was like,
no,
I'm going to be more aggressive.
I was going to say more like five or six.
I'm kind of surprised.
Well, after OKC was a minus four and a half favorite on the road tonight,
I was like, I was like, man, like they got to be up there
in that like seven or eight range.
But yeah, I think that's the right line
because the dynamic at play is
it's either going to be a close game
or OKC will pull away and kind of blow them out,
you know, 10, 15.
Because, you know, veteran team, once they lose
sight of their opportunity to win,
they'll probably, you know,
let go of the rope a little bit.
I do think it's going to be very low scoring, though.
That would be a game that I would take the under for sure.
This is a question about sort of something
that you mentioned, which is the Thunder finding success with some of those middle drives and the
baseline cutter specifically against the zone. Can you sort of break down why that works? And also,
do you think that that set of sort of success will result in less zone from Denver in game seven?
There's a way to run the zone better than they've been running it in terms of just,
I mean, to put it very simply, just guys containing the ball better. But think of it like this.
So if you guys think about the zone in the, in the context of each guy kind of has a job,
you have your top guys and you have your guys that are in the corners, right?
And then you have Yokic in the middle of the floor.
And Yokic's responsibility, the middleman responsibility for basically every two, three zone.
Although I've seen some variations like Houston was not using Stephen Adams to cover the middle.
They'd use a top guy to cover the middle.
You'll see a couple of weird variations around the league.
but Yokic's responsibility basically is the basket and up to the elbows.
You know, if a guy catches in the middle of the floor, in many cases,
he's the guy who will come up and then the two baseline guys will pinch down.
But what was happening is all of those four guys on the outside were doing a poor job of one containing the ball
and two, filling in for Yokic when he would step up.
So imagine a scenario where a, and guys, when we go to playback later, I'll pull up some video clips of this.
so you guys can see some specific examples of that.
But essentially, if you give up dribble penetration in the middle,
Yokic has no choice but to step up.
Because if he doesn't step up,
he's on his heels for an athlete who's going to elevate right at the front of the rim.
So he needs to step up to stop the driver
before he can get into basically the zone
where he can take off and make a play.
And then at that point,
the two bottom guys have to pinch in to rotate to the basket.
And they were missing that rotation constantly.
And so when that guy would just cut along the base,
line when Yokic would step up, it'd be just an easy drop-off pass and there'd be an easy,
you know, dunk or a layup right underneath the basket. But theoretically, if you're in the
zone, that dribble penetration is something you should be able to contain. The whole point
of the zone is to force them to swing the ball around the perimeter and take threes. So like your job,
like a three-two zone or, you know, these other variations, a three-two in particular,
you're trying to take away threes. And there's opportunities around the basket. But in a
two-three zone, the entire premise of the zone is these guys,
are young and they don't know how to make shots under pressure in kind of a funky zone situation.
So your job there is essentially to contain the ball and force them to take threes off of swing
passes instead of paint touches and they just didn't do a good job. But again, we'll get into more
examples of that when we get over to playback later so you guys can see some video.
Next question. With MPJ hurt and missing most of his shots, do you think it's better for Russ,
Peyton Watson, or even Strather to eat up those minutes and sort of to, to, to, to,
the question a little bit. That's obviously depending on flow of the game who's playing better.
But in a vacuum, if you had to pick someone else to be the fifth closer, along with their four main guys,
who would you go with? First of all, just so that you guys know, because I pulled up the numbers,
Oklahoma City, 23 possessions of zone offense, a 109 offensive rating. That's very good.
63 possessions of half court man to man, a 78 offensive rating.
So obviously, I don't think we'll see zero zone in game seven,
but I wouldn't be surprised if Denver ended up running more man
just because of the fact that Oklahoma City had so much success against it.
Now, to the question, we had a similar kind of like topic
during the meat and potatoes of the start of this show.
But I think you got to, this is literally the job for Adelman.
In game seven, you got to have a,
you got to be willing to make a change,
but willing to throw a quick hook.
This is a zero margin for error game.
You cannot afford to lose this particular game.
So with that being the case, you give Strother a chance.
Well, you start with Michael Porter Jr., right?
And if MPJ has it going and he's getting rebounds,
he's in the right spots defensively and he's, you know,
four for his first seven from the field,
you push his minutes all the way up because he's been in a lot of big games in his career.
He's not going to be as uncomfortable as a Julian Strather or something along those lines.
But if Michael Porter Jr. starts, you know,
one for five and has a couple sloppy turnovers and it just looks like he's not in it and russ is
out of it but julian strother is at the least in the right spots and stepping confidently into
shots you give him a shot and you ride him out in that sort of situation but these are these are
the kinds of games like you you've got to be willing to try something but you've got to have a
quick hook for anybody who's out of it like if russ comes in in a late first quarter shift and
starts shit in the bed you get him the hell out of there and you get him out of there and you get him
out of their quick because, like, I mean, this game flipped in that first quarter from being like
a 10 point Denver lead to suddenly it was a neck and neck again, again, because Russ just
lost control of his decision making for like a 90 second stretch in the late first quarter.
And that could be the difference between going home and advancing to the next round.
So to answer the question, I don't think it's about picking a guy right now.
All of those guys are inconsistent.
Julian Struthers is a kid relative to NBA talent.
Like, he had a great game tonight, but he could just as easily go 0 for six with a bunch of mistakes in game seven.
Russell Westbrook, same sort of range of outcomes.
Michael Porter Jr., same sort of range of outcomes.
I think Peyton Watson's a much higher floor, but a lower ceiling option in the sense that he's not going to do a ton for you offensively, but there's a higher floor there.
And I think to, I'll give you a more concrete answer like this.
If the shit hits the fan and everyone's playing poorly, I'd close with Watson.
What do you think, Jackson?
Would you close with Watson if everyone else is struggling?
I was going to say the same thing.
I would close with Watson sort of, that's for my initial reaction,
but especially if no one has really has it going,
just because his defensive ability is,
he's kind of a game-changing defensive player.
That transition block on Jalen Williams was insane
when O.KC. was trying to make sort of regain control of it for a second there.
An insane play.
And he's also less, you know, he's less likely to make a big shot,
but he's less likely to make a stupid mistake on that.
And like Russ might is sort of, you know,
Russ is very talented,
but he's prone to mistakes.
Michael Porter Jr. is prone to some bad shots,
election at times,
and Julian Strather,
even compared to Peyton Watson, is a child.
So I think the,
Peyton Watson's floor is definitely,
and his defensive capability is where I would lean.
Yeah,
I totally agree with you.
Especially in a game seven that's likely to be very physical,
likely to be very low scoring,
where you probably don't even want Michael Porter Jr.
taking a shot with a minute left anyways.
I don't even care if it's a bad,
if it's a hard shot.
I want Yokachachar Murray taking the shot anyways.
So considering that's the case, it's like go with the defense.
I'm glad you brought this up too,
because I think this is important for a mentality thing for Yokic.
Like,
like it bothered me in game five that he took that crazy fade away over Chet at the top of the key.
And I thought he,
it was a decent look for Michael Porter Jr.
at the top of the key,
but he had a size advantage in the middle of the floor.
He could have gone to another turnaround or a hook in the middle of the floor.
And he just sprayed it out.
instead. And I'm not trying to be too critical because over the years, I'd like, I've rooted
for a player in LeBron James who did the exact same thing, trusting Daniel Marshall, trusting Kyle Corver,
whoever it was. But like, there is a certain amount of like when you're dealing with these
star archetypes, the Yokic LeBron types, they're to make the right play guys. And there'll be moments
at the end of games where you're like, you got to shoot the ball. But then with the Kobe, Kevin
Durand, Michael Jordan types, there will be times where it's like, bro, you got three dudes on you.
You got to trust your teammates. And that's kind of just like the give and take of the
those different archetypes of players.
Yeah, that's sort of the inherent challenge of the sport.
Yeah, exactly.
A couple more questions, then we'll go over to playback.
If OKC loses in game seven, if OKC now that would be a second, second round exit,
you know, back to back to back years with their only series wins coming against
an injured Pelicans team and then the grizzlies this year, does that say anything greater
about the thunder and their flaws, or is it just they ran into two tough matchups in back-to-back
seasons. I think it's just the simple fact that every single player in the rotation other than
Alex Cruzso is 26 or younger. Like there is a real youth and inexperienced problem with Oklahoma
City. And frankly, we've never seen a team this young have championship level success in the NBA.
It has literally never happened. Like that's my thing. Like the way that Oklahoma City was discussed
during the regular season.
I viewed them as a legitimate championship threat.
I ranked him second.
But NBA history tells us
that teams like this don't win now.
They win like two or three years from now
when they have lost a bunch of times
and as a result of that
have made these seemingly minuscule improvements
but in a way that manifests specifically in the playoff setting.
They basically get better at getting their regular season success
to translate to the post-eastern.
season because they've just been there so many times.
They're just so comfortable.
And I just can't tell you how many times in my life.
I've seen playoff series where the older and more experienced team just looks more
comfortable than the younger inexperienced team.
It is not a harder fast rule.
There are teams that bucked that trend.
But the whole thing is like if Oklahoma City wins game seven and then they beat Minnesota
and then they beat whoever comes out of the east, they are breaking a trend.
They are breaking a historical NBA trend, which is that super young teams don't win at this
level and frankly jackson like i the reason the series is going seven is the youth and
experience of oklahoma city they are a better basketball team than denver they have controlled
large portions of this series but you like i'm watching these dudes and i'm watching jemal
and i'm watching erin gordon and i'm watching yokic these guys have been in wars over years
they have seen it all.
And so there's just a level of
comfortability that they have in these settings.
And as far as the big picture goes for Oklahoma City,
let's say they lose.
There's a certain conversation to have about like,
okay, well, you have all this draft compensation.
What are you going to do?
Just keep drafting players and then letting them walk.
Like you got to do something with these picks.
And, you know, maybe that ends up being them trading
for a big, rangy wing,
which is the kind of player they don't really have.
They just don't have that like 6-8,
you know, Jada McDaniels type of player.
maybe it is a super aggressive star trade sort of thing.
But ultimately what's going to put them over the top is their experience.
It's going to be Shea having more games like tonight in fewer games like he's had the rest of this playoff run.
It's going to be Chet going from a guy that like can completely disappear for large portions of the game to a guy that leverages his gifts for the entirety of the 42, 43 minutes that he's on the floor.
That's what's going to put these guys over the top.
I remember watching one of my favorite examples of this was the 2012 NBA finals between the Thunder and the Heat.
And there was a rebound on a missed free throw, a heat free throw in game five that Shane Battier came away with.
And this was, if you remember that Thunder team, they were so athletic.
And Shane, the old slow guy, beat everyone to the ball.
and it's because like he just has been in so many games that he understands that that singular moment
was just as important as every other possession in the game and that if you engage and fight for
every inch you might gain three or four inches over the course of that game that could be the
difference between winning and losing which could be the difference in the series and you go
back to that series every fucking game was right down to the final possessions to like
the KD near foul in game two to like game three and game four,
both came down to clutch situations.
I even think back to LeBron and Paul Pierce going for a loose ball
in the 2007 game seven between the Cavs and the Celtics,
where LeBron had 45 or whatever,
and Paul Pierce had 42 or whatever.
Paul Pierce's old fat ass beat LeBron to the ball
because he's just an old dude who just understands that every inch
of the game is worth fighting for.
And there are just so many missed opportunities with the thunder,
so many bad shots early in the clock,
so many silly mistakes,
just simply because they haven't understood
through time and experience
how valuable every possession is in a basketball game.
Yeah, I, last year, when the Celtics won at all,
I looked this up because I was curious as a Celtics fan,
how many teams in this century have won with their best player
being 26 or younger.
Not many.
It's like Steph in their first title year, Dwayne Wade,
and then that's pretty much it
because Kobe was not the best player
on those early-laker teams, right?
And that's just for the best player.
Never mind the rest of the roster.
Both of those teams that had their best player 26 years old
had legitimate, had multiple contributing vets.
Drew Holiday, Al Horford,
Chris Tavs, Perzingis in this last run,
Andrew Bogartagos in the first round.
Sean Livingston, Stee.
John Livingston.
Yeah.
Right. Like it takes
for even for your, if you're, never mind the whole contract of your team.
If your best player is young, you're probably not going to win.
And if your best player is young, you're going to need more than one rotation impactful vet most of the time, most of the time.
Nope, I totally agree.
Let's do one more question and then we'll go over to play back.
Sort of a more general question.
What makes a player fun to watch for you?
You know, this is fascinating.
I saw some people debating this.
on Twitter between Jason Tatum and Anthony Edwards and this concept of aura.
And I do think that that plays a big role with casual fans.
I think there's a aura like a confidence of bravado, a backing up of that confidence in bravado with your play.
I think that there are certain players that fans see act a certain way and they kind of see through it.
You'll see that sometimes too in a negative way.
I think that basketball players enjoy watching talented basketball players.
Like, I don't think it's a coincidence that everyone, every time I talk to a basketball player,
like a person who's played extensively in their life, they love Steph and they love LeBron.
But then you talk to a casual fan and they love one guy, hate the next guy,
because it's all about aura, it's all about who they're rooting for.
It's all about like these different things.
I think that it kind of just depends on the kind of person you are.
for me i gravitate to like specific basketball traits like even with the guys that i don't
necessarily like joel mbd i'm impressed by his footwork james hardin i've literally stolen his
footwork on step back threes i use him all the time a guy like uh with imbiz specifically too
he's got like really strong footwork on like his pivot moves on his turnarounds over both shoulders
there's like a uh there's a certain element of of like uh imitation is the sincerest form of
of flattery that you'll see with basketball players too.
Like Shea,
She is a player that one of the moves that he's been working on that I've been,
that he's been using a lot in the last couple of years that I've been working on a ton
is that hesitation dribble where you kind of turn sideways and then you just kind of
probe with a jab step and you just cover ground going back towards your left for a step
back three.
That's like a really fascinating basketball move that I think is really useful for a dribble
drive guard just because he sells the left-handed drive with that move.
and he'll drive out of that move a lot of times,
but then he'll just pull back out of it with that step back.
So for basketball players,
I think they're attracted to specific basketball skills and traits.
I think for casual fans, it's a lot of aura, that kind of stuff.
And then I do,
I think there's something to be said about just like must-see TV kinds of stuff.
So for instance, like you want to know why Stefan LeBron have crazy amounts of fans
because there's nothing like a Steph heater.
When you watch a Steph heater,
it is one of the most incredible bits of television you'll ever see.
older LeBron has been a tougher watch, but younger LeBron was like the most incredible freight train athlete you've ever seen.
It was like if Zion took care of his body.
Like it was literally insane.
And so there's a certain like must-see TV element to it as well.
All right, guys, that's all we have for tonight.
As always, we sincerely appreciate you guys for supporting us and supporting the show.
Head over to Playback.tv slash hoops tonight.
We'll be there in just a couple minutes for our after show.
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 supporting us, but if you
could take a minute to do that, I'd really
appreciate it.
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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
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.
We get to ask other people questions because we're sick and tired
of being and ask questions.
Well, sick and tired is a strong way to put it, but, you know, tired and sick.
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
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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 Garrison.
Jen, 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.
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Presented by Capital One, founding partner of IHart Women's Sports.
I'm Michelle McPhee, and I've been unraveling the strangest criminal alliance
I've ever reported on.
A Mormon polygamous and an Armenian business.
man.
Multi-million dollar house,
Ferraris and Lamborghinis,
private jets,
a billion dollar fraud.
But how long
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Tell me what you know.
Is somebody coming after me?
Listen to Kingdom of Fraud
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This is an I-Heart podcast.
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