The Herd with Colin Cowherd - Hoops Tonight - NBA Contenders: Will Warriors stay hot? LeBron & Lakers obstacle, who stops Celtics
Episode Date: November 27, 2024Jason Timpf is joined by Sam Vecenie of The Athletic to break down their top NBA contenders over the start of the season. Jason and Sam discuss whether Jayson Tatum and the Boston Celtics have sepa...rated themselves from Shai Gilgeous-Alexander the Oklahoma City Thunder as the top team in the league. Later, they debate whether Steph Curry's Golden State Warriors or Donovan Mitchell's Cleveland Cavaliers are legitimate NBA Finals contenders following their hot starts to the season. Next, Jason and Sam break down what is wrong with Jalen Brunson and the New York Knicks' defense, why they believe in LeBron James and the Los Angeles Lakers to be competitive in the NBA Playoffs, and much more! Timeline: 04:00 - Happy Thanksgiving 5:00 - Have Celtics separated from Thunder? 23:45- Are Warriors or Cavaliers legit? 37:00 - Should Warriors target Jimmy Butler 42:15 - How far behind Celtics are Cavs? 52:15- What's wrong with Knicks defense? 1:02:45 - Why Sam believes in Lakers 1:10:15 - Which West teams are threats? 01:15:45 - Watch out for Grizzlies 01:20:30 - Will Lakers address their problems? 01:35:30 - Check out Sam's work! (Timestamps may vary based on advertisements.) #Volume #Herd Follow Jason Timpf on social: https://twitter.com/_JasonLT https://www.instagram.com/jtimpf15/ See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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All right, welcome to Hoops Tonight here at the volume.
Happy Wednesday, everybody.
Hope all of you guys are having a great week.
I figured now, right before we head into our Thanksgiving break,
is the best time for us to touch base on contenders.
And I've done a lot of power rankings.
I've done a lot of game breakdowns.
I've done a lot of film breakdowns.
I've done a lot of arguing of various sorts.
But I have yet to re-approach my contender rankings.
And so what I'd like to do is do what I've done every time we've done.
on contender rankings over the last couple of years,
which is have my good friend Sam Vassini from the athletic on the show to break it all down.
First of all, Sam, how are you doing, man?
How is life down in Melbourne?
No Thanksgiving right here.
Life is great.
We, you know, Thanksgiving, unsurprisingly, given the nature of what Thanksgiving is
with the pilgrims and the Indians or the Native Americans, I'm sorry, coming together.
And, you know, having a meal, that didn't really happen here.
So, you know, at the end of the day,
My wife's father is American and by nature, my wife is American because of that.
She's dual citizenship.
So we had like a little get together with, you know, 15, 20 people, some of my wife's parents,
friends and everything.
And, you know, we have a Thanksgiving meal every year just on the weekend, not on Thursday.
My Thursday will be a normal Thursday for me.
Thursday is a horribly inconvenient day for us to do this giant amount of cooking and socializing.
Before we all go back to work on Friday, my wife works in retail.
so she ended up having a crazy day
that I used to work in retail ages ago.
So like, it is what it is.
But any excuse to cook some turkey or prime rib
or a big prime rib family,
that's something that we do around our house.
But I want to start on a very basic concept,
which is when we did our contender rankings to start the year,
I had four teams in that tier,
which was Boston, I had Denver two,
and then I had OKC3 and I had New York four.
You had Boston and Oklahoma City on their own tier.
I've watched quite a bit of Oklahoma City this year, especially in the last week.
And I'm actually starting to view Boston as on a tier by themselves.
And my case for that is not that Oklahoma City doesn't have the potential to improve,
because they've underachieved a little bit offensively to this point in the season.
And I know that they'll get better in time.
And I'm liking the early returns on Isaiah Hartnstein, both as like a connective passer and also as a screener and all that kind of stuff.
the thing specifically that has me a little hesitant with Oklahoma City,
and I want you to either talk me off the ledge or agree,
is their decision-making in the half court kind of reminds me of Boston a few years ago,
where their talent is almost the enemy of their success sometimes,
and their pursuit of the best shot or a great shot is not quite where it needs to be relative
to where Boston is, where you can tell they have their stretches of bad shot selection,
but they're better at settling down and maintaining focus for longer.
So what have been your concerns with Oklahoma City's offense,
and do you still consider them to be on the same tier as Boston?
So I would have Boston.
I think I said I had Boston 1A and Oklahoma City 1B previously.
I think that if we're doing the tier system here,
I would probably have Boston at number one,
Oklahoma City at number two,
but would have Oklahoma City.
Like if Boston is the highest end of that tier,
maybe Oklahoma City is like the lowest end of like what a tier one team looks like.
And the reason for that is, look, we'll talk about the offensive things that you brought up.
And I think they're all valid actually.
I do.
Oklahoma City's defense to start the year.
Like when we talked about Oklahoma City, I think I said that they were almost guaranteed to be like a top three defense.
Like almost no matter what they did, that's probably where they're going to be.
Do you know what they were defense?
before Chet Holmgren got hurt
and they had to start experimenting
with these like Jalen Williams
at the center lineups.
They were number one by mile.
They were not just number one.
They were number one by like eight points
per 100 possessions over number two.
They had a 97.5 defensive rating
in the game before Chet Holmgren
got hurt.
So we all expected,
hey,
team that was a top five defense last year
goes out,
gets Alex Caruso,
and Isaiah Hartenstein, two of what I would argue are probably in the top 15 to 20 defenders
across the entire NBA and adding them into your lineup along with improvement from Kason Wallace,
who is another really, really good defender.
You know, it was very hard to envision this team not being a super high level defense,
but I think I somehow underestimated how good they might be on defense.
So that's where I would start and why I think that they,
are in that top tier with Boston because they still have all the line of flexibility that we talked
about in the preseason and the ability to match high or match big with Christopsin Al Horford or
match up against Yokic or the ability to go small which they've now gotten to showcase with like
even hyper super small lineups with Jalen Williams at the five let alone just like the flexibility
that having chat at the five brings you in terms of five out spacing. So I'm excited about
that, the offensive decision making, the overall offensive flow, especially late in games,
I do agree with you generally that it can get a little bit stagnant. I think that in general,
Shay Gilles, Alexander and Jalen Williams are great players, great drivers of the ball. They're not
selfish players by any stretch of the imagination. I just don't know that they consistently make the
super, super high level reads all the time for two guys that are going to have the ball in
their hands late in games.
It's not like Anthony Edwards level, which has been, you know, somehow, I don't know if
that he's regressed.
We'll probably talk about the wolves a little bit later, but he feels like he is certainly
not taking a step forward in regard to late game decision making.
They're not that level in terms of frustrating, but I do think that they need to take that
next step forward in terms of being able to consistently just make the high level reads over the
last five minutes of the game when defense is really tightened up.
The point you made about the defense is important.
And it's one that I think I've undersold in my coverage of Oklahoma City in the sense that
like they have a lot of the similar kind of like perimeter athleticism, strength, ground coverage,
all the stuff we've talked about, the ability to pressure the ball, keeping waves of defenders coming in the game.
the one difference is Boston just has a little bit more size on the perimeter just because of the Tatum Jalen Brown piece.
But in a weird way, like I think Lou Dort kind of has a lot of size in his own way.
Like I don't think it's a coincidence that Lou Dort made Luca feel a hell of a lot more uncomfortable than Jaden McDaniels did, for instance, last year.
The piece that makes it different is everyone talks about Khrastafs-Sporzinkis as the rim protector, right?
It's like, okay, we got our rim protector back.
Boston doesn't really have a rim protector.
This is that other element of that, you know,
kind of elite defensive profile that we've seen over the years.
That said, like,
Chet is a rim protector that also has ground coverage.
And that is the thing that makes him so terrifying.
And what makes that entire unit so terrifying is, like,
they can engage in high-level defensive, you know,
process that we've seen around the league in terms of keeping Chet at the rim,
which we've already seen,
like we've seen stuff like him communicating with guards off ball to make sure he's always
the low man instead of getting pulled up high and things along those lines.
And when you combine that with the layers of perimeter D, I actually would agree that I think
Oklahoma City can actually get to a higher level defensively than Boston can get.
The, there are, like, Oklahoma City started to freak me out a little bit in the Dallas series
with their incessant challenging of the rim protectors.
I said this on my show yesterday.
It kind of reminded me of Boston against Milwaukee in the second round of
2022, if you remember, where those idiots kept trying Brooke Lopez at the rim.
The series kept oscillating back and forth when Jalen Brown and Jason Tatum would make better
reads when they got to the rim.
You know what I mean?
Because they had the ability to get great looks whenever they wanted to, but they
would bog down too often through that bad process.
And so I think like I remember coming into the season, I talked about how my main
concerns were like,
Jalen Williams and Chad Holmgren are basically your number two,
and they're very young and very inexperienced.
And they're going to be asked to carry significant stretches of basketball in big moments.
And so that is the part to me that I get,
I just get a little bit concerned about is just,
are they grown up enough to be in a big playoff game against a really good team
late and to make the right decisions they need to make?
Because as we look back on Dallas,
Sam. Dallas is good. I think they're firmly in that second tier of championship contending teams,
but I didn't think they were in the top tier last year. I thought they were a team that caught some
favorable matchups and got out of the West, which means, okay, see, basically got upset in that
second round series by Dallas. And so I would argue they're further away than that series would
lead you to believe. And so I'm just, I'm just a little bit skeptical of that decision making process.
what have you seen from Jalen Williams
that makes you feel like he might be ready
for that sort of thing this year?
Everything is kind of the answer.
Jalen Williams has been unbelievable.
If you look at his last 10 games
since they've been basically without chat
for a large portion of that run,
he's really had to step up.
He's averaging 25 points,
seven rebounds, six assists
versus only 2.3 turnovers,
2.2 steals, 1.3 blocks.
I think he is also sneaky
taken a big step forward defensively.
without a lot of people necessarily recognizing yet.
Oh, by the way, he's shooting 57-40-94 over that run in his last 10 games.
So, again, like Jalen Williams is one of those guys where I think you and I have been talking about him for like three years as if there's a guy I'm betting on in the league right now that, you know, people, you can't give me enough stock of his, basically.
There's not enough out there that I won't just buy it all.
and be happy with the results at a certain point.
To me, he's going to be an all-N-B-A player.
And this year, he is starting to take steps toward being that,
at the very least so far.
I think he has been one of the 10 best players in the Western Conference to this point.
So you see where he is going.
And I still think that there are moments,
kind of like we discussed,
where latent games,
they do give him the ball quite a bit.
And he does need to just continue to improve small decisions.
making issues in terms of overdriving to the basket.
For some reason, and I can't quite figure out what this is.
He is like the most like physical dude.
He drives and slashes constantly.
He is physical at the point of attack defensively.
He just does not draw fouls.
For whatever reason, even in this great run where he's been unbelievable,
he's still only getting three foul shots per game.
I don't know if it's a, like I can't put my finger on if it's
if it's a footwork thing where he's kind of leaning away if it's a thing where he just doesn't
have the respective officials yet. I think that might be part of it, honestly. I can't tell
why he doesn't get calls around the basket, but he does drive into the basket pretty regularly
in a way that you would expect him to eventually draw fouls. That's really the next step for him.
If he starts drawing fouls in the way that somebody like Jimmy Butler does, and he has the ability to do
that because of his physical frame.
He can take contact, absorb it,
and finish through contact.
I don't know, man.
That guy looks like he could be a top 10 player in the league at some point.
And if you have him and Shea, maybe it's a year early.
Maybe he doesn't work out those kind of issues and doesn't get to the line enough
and things like that happen.
But I don't know.
They just might not be as good as Boston.
Like Boston was terrifying last night against the Clippers at the end of the day.
Like they were insane.
That was Christop's first game.
and like you could just see the impact he had immediately.
Like they start they didn't know what to do.
Like they started with Zubots on him.
And then they started running like even with bench units.
They have Houser and Pritchard come in.
Like they'll run Pritchard and Houser as ball screeners.
They'll run them as the back man in stack pick and rolls.
They'll do like early exit stacks.
They'll do just like late release stacks where a screener gets there.
They will like run all sorts of different options.
in terms of trying to find, you know, creative avenues in transition.
If you are off even by the slightest, smallest angle in transition defense,
if you are overloaded to one side by one person, they will kill you because they will
spread out to the three point line and they will make shots at a 45 to 50% clip probably
in transition.
So, and then on top of it, you saw the clippers trying to adjust.
They would go, okay, we're going to put Zubots on.
Drew Holiday.
That didn't work because then you've got a smaller guy on KP and KP.
And they put James Hardin on KP as the primary defender for a stretch of that game.
It was insane.
It was just like, well, okay, I get it.
Maybe you want Zubots to be the help defender and you want him around the basket.
They use Drew Holiday as a cutter pretty regularly.
But Drew Holiday is a freaking all-star and multi-time like gold medalist.
He's able to take guys off the bounce on the perimeter.
He just doesn't do it because he doesn't have to within that office.
So they just have so many different ways to beat you at the end of the day.
That's my main concern and main issue.
If I was Oklahoma City,
look, Boston's the best team in the league.
That's the reality of this.
And their highest level is better than anybody else's highest level.
It's just whether or not they get to the playoffs clean, I think.
Yeah, I'm on the same page with you.
I think I make them a slight favorite to win the title,
even if Portzing has never played another game this year.
Like, that's how I feel about them in general as is.
And so, yeah, the James Hardin and poor Ziggis thing was, it was a little weird because I'm just watching James Harden inattentively stand around as Porzengis just walks inside position on him and gets an offensive rebound put back.
And I'm like, what are we even doing here?
So we're on the same page there, the Boston's level one.
It just sounds to me like I have OKC on kind of a separate tier and you kind of have them as just like kind of hanging on to that top tier, just kind of almost at that level.
Hey, it's us to Jonas Brothers.
And guess what?
We have some big news.
What's the news?
Huge news.
We created our own.
podcast called Hey Jonas.
We invented a podcast?
Well, we didn't invent it.
We just contributed to a...
We're the first people to do podcasts.
Pretty, yeah, pretty wide range of podcasts.
We're starting a trend.
But this one's extra special.
So how do we actually come up with the name Hey Jonas, guys?
I honestly don't remember.
I think it was on a call about what we should call it.
And...
Well, we were thinking I'm originally calling it
one of the early names of our band.
Before Jonas Brothers...
Mm-hmm.
This is how you guys remember it going down?
Yes.
I have a very different memory of this.
We were talking about a thing, a bit for the podcast,
where people could call in and say, hey, Jonas.
And then I wrote down on my little notepad, Hey Jonas,
and offered it up as a potential title for the podcast.
But thanks for remembering that, guys.
Listen to Hey Jonas on the Iheart radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcast.
Just listen.
We don't care where you hear it.
Another podcast from some SNL, late-night comedy guy,
Not quite. 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.
What's up, fam?
This Isaiah Thomas.
And I'm C.J.
O'Dano and our podcast point game is about defining the odds.
Like LeBron heading into the playoffs without Luca and Austin Reed.
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He's the smartest player to ever play the game.
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We get a player's perspective on the challenges of the playoffs.
I think Joker's going to be exhausted this series
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And when IT's friends stop by, like Quentin Richardson, we dive into some playoff history too.
Steve Nass would get that thing.
That man, hell get the flying.
He run up the court, licking his fingers why he got the ball.
Like, after you go through a training camp with that, Isaiah, you figure it out real quick.
Get your ass up and down the court, and you're going to get the ball.
So listen to Point Game on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you
get your podcasts. Hey, I'm Deanna Maria Riva, actress, mother, lover, and a Gen X woman walking
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I cannot believe I'm about to say this out loud.
Listen to How Hard Can It Be with Diana Maria Riva as part of My Cultura Podcast Network available on the IHart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
This is Saigon, the story of my family and of the country that shaped us.
The United States will not stand by and allow any power, however great, take over another country.
From IHeart Podcasts, Saigon.
Please allow me to introduce Joseph Sherman.
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For free time.
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Sting, here's madness.
The world should hear of a lot.
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Listen to Saigon on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
So the next two teams that have been big surprises in the early part of the season, a couple
things that make it difficult to interpret. For instance, the Cleveland Cavaliers have 17 wins,
but only four of them have been against teams that are currently 500 or better, which makes
them difficult to interpret. And then the Golden State Warriors are a 12th.
12 and 5 in the Western Conference.
Do you give either of those teams a real chance to win four playoff
rounds based on what you've seen from them here in the early going?
The Warriors, I think, no, they're the easier answer to me.
Because I feel like the Warriors are getting by with depth and with like 11-man lineups.
And Cleveland is too, by the way.
Like that's an underrated thing that's happening with the Cavs.
Like their bench has been unbelievable to this point led by Ty Jerome.
But like the Warriors, it feels like are getting by with just like a ton of really smart basketball players that know how to play the game, that know how to run that scheme.
And I don't even know that they necessarily have unbelievable ways to like match up with you.
Like they don't have an enormous front line.
Right.
Like Trace Jackson Davis is an undersized center.
Kvon Luni probably isn't like totally undersized.
But von Lune just like might not be.
good enough anymore to like anchor a defense. So they're almost always going to have to go small,
right, in order to get the most out of their lineups. And if you go small against, for instance,
the Denver Nuggets, if you go small against this iteration of the Oklahoma City Thunder,
I think you're going to have problems now because they can go big against you and they can go
Hartenstein and Chet once we see Chet back. And that's a whole other thing, like what is Chet going to be
once he gets back.
From what I understand about the hip injury,
it's one of those hip injuries.
From what I understand,
it's just like a pain thing.
It's not something that will like inflict upon his mobility,
uh,
moving forward or like even once he heals from it.
It's just literally like when the pain stops kind of thing.
And once the injury itself,
the fracture heals.
Right.
So I think you'll be lingering pain from fractures for a while to.
Yeah, like I think he'll be back this year.
It's just like, look, I can't sit here and tell you like the level that he's definitely
going to be back at.
But that what I will say about Chet is like, you know, people look at him.
He's missed his whole rookie season.
He's going to miss a portion of this year now.
Don't mistake that with like a lack of toughness necessarily.
Like he suffered a serious injury in that pro am game.
He suffered a serious injury where he fractured that bone in his hip or whatever in this game
against the Golden State Warriors who were talking about and Andrew Wiggins.
So don't mistake that, though, with a lack of toughness.
Like, Chet Holmgren will get out there and play.
He will play through the pain.
Like if Oklahoma City allows him, it's just whether or not he's going to be able to or not.
Don't take that, you know, one way or another in terms of his lack of pain tolerance.
On the Warriors, I just don't know that they have enough talent.
It's kind of where I'm at with them.
Like they have a lot of depth.
They have a lot of interesting depth.
The cool thing about them is that if a star comes available for whatever reason this season,
they are very well positioned to be able to go get that star if they want to extend out
the Stefan Curry window.
They have Jonathan Cominga, who they decided not to extend, which makes him a potential
trade target.
They have all of their picks moving forward, which gives them a number of potential avenues to
create deals. Even somebody I think like Cam Johnson would really help them immensely, just in terms
of offensive flow, structure, consistent spacing when Buddy Heald isn't on the court. Buddy Healed
started the season incredibly well over his last six or six or seven games. He's cooled way off. And he's
really hard to have out there defensively. So there are matchups where he's going to have it.
There are going to be nights where he has it. But what do you do when he doesn't have it is a big
question for Golden State on offense for me right now.
I mean, where do you fall on them?
Let's start with them before we go to the Cavs here.
I found the Warriors to be kind of proof of concept of a couple of key things that you and I
both believe in at a really high level in terms of our kind of like basketball worldview.
Yeah.
And like you said depth, I think it's not just depth.
It's a depth of a specific type of player, which is like a fast player who's
pretty good at everything.
Like, not necessarily, like there's,
thinks,
thinks fast. Yes, that thinks fast.
Exactly. And like,
I,
I've thought so much about just kind of the way
the game has changed, particularly in the
regular season. And I'm
glad you mentioned that there's a
talent limit there because this has been something
that's been a difficult pill for some Warriors fans
to swallow over the course of the start of the season.
And I don't blame them because every fan
base can get a little bit arrogant
when their team starts to rack up wins,
But like, there is a, there is a certain type of game that Golden State can play that
shoes and spits teams out in terms of the way that they pressure the ball.
In terms of the way that they fly around and rotate,
they have some of the sharpest closeouts I see in the league come out of Golden State
and their ability to defend the three point line while also offering help.
There, it's a, it's a principle that I believe in very strongly now,
which is that the best foundational, like, trait,
that any roster can have is to have a bunch of big athletes on the perimeter that compete.
And I think like specifically on the perimeter that can cover ground and that play hard,
you need a good variety two of like different sizes and types,
but you need that type of type of trade.
I would argue besides foundational superstar of which there's only four or five in the entire league,
that's the most important thing you can have is a trove of athletes.
Would you agree at that point as the number one?
roster trait. Yeah, I was going to say, like, I'll give you an example. Like,
Atlanta this year has been like pretty feisty and competitive for the most part,
despite not having DeAndre Hunter and Bogdanovic for like a majority of the year, right?
I know that they've lost like three in a row and like they haven't played super, super well
over the course of the last week. But like, that's a team that is feisty. And in large part,
their biggest additions this summer were Dyson Daniels, Zachary Rissach, guys that are
feisty that are long that can cover ground defensively.
Like those guys really,
really help,
I think in terms of what Atlanta is looking to do with,
you know,
surrounding Trey Young with talent,
right?
You know,
Trey Young is probably not one of those foundational superstars,
but he is somebody that is an incredible offensive talent.
And having those guys around him allows him just to go and be like,
hey,
create the offense every night.
Please don't be a total civil on defense.
And, you know,
we trust that we'll be able to rack.
you know, maybe not a 500 team, but we might get to 35 to 40 wins, maybe.
The antithesis of this is another team that I'm sure we'll talk about today, the Bucks, right?
The Bucks have really struggled with that, and that's a big reason why on some level they are
playing below their talent level, even though Yonis, over the last, I would argue, two and a half,
three weeks, this might be the best I've ever seen Yonis play on offense, just point blank.
he has been
otherworldly.
You can maybe say
the final series
against the Sons
and I would hear that out
as well.
But like what he's adding
now is the mid-range jumper
and everything like it's a totally
different beast to deal with
with Yonnas.
So the fact that they don't have
that foundational
perimeter skill and speed
and understanding
of how to close out
onto shooters,
that is a critical,
critical thing
that they're missing right now
and they need to go out
and find that.
at the trade deadline, you know, before the trade deadline, frankly, hopefully.
One of the things I've appreciated with the Bucks is like they kind of have found it a little bit,
they found a little bit of a baseline for them for 48 minutes at the point of attack
between Ajax and, uh, and AJ Green, who I actually think has done a pretty damn good job
guarding the ball.
And he's like, and he's converting spotups at like damn near a point and a half for
possessions.
So like, they kind of have like found their little formula there where,
shout out to Brooke and Janice, by the way.
Those two guys have had a flashback defensive stretch here over the last couple of weeks.
Nothing like a,
nothing like a disastrous two and eight start to kind of like to kick you in the butt a little bit and get you moving.
But like, yeah, that has become my biggest,
you and I have talked about this at various points over the course of the last few years
and it's manifested in different like kind of like buzzwords.
But I remember for you,
it was ground coverage.
That was the thing that you said to me in our postseason kind of
conversation last year. And for me, I've been referring to it as perimeter athleticism,
but it basically means the exact same thing. But I viewed that as like the baseline. And then
the second piece of it, and I think some of the success that Dallas has had without Luca in the last
couple of weeks has been a great example of this is creating space by allowing your big men to operate
a screening and passing fulcrums from the perimeter rather than occupying space around the rim.
And this has been a golden state staple for over a decade now, but this is something.
something we've seen all around the league.
Dallas, when they are trying to run offense with Luke off the floor, it's a lot of
lively at the top of the key with guards screening for each other and cutting off of them.
They ran like a blender possession against the nuggets when they beat them the other night
where they had Kyrie come running off of a Derek lively dribble handoff at the top,
but it was a fake.
He didn't get it.
Then Quentin Grimes came flying off the dribble handoff.
He did get it.
As he got it lively rolled, but then as he rolled, he kind of dragged Jamal Murray
into the Peyton. Naji Marshall relocated to the top.
Got a little close-out opportunity beat
Jamal Murray, by the way.
Some of the worst defense I've seen
ever from a player in the last couple of games
from him. It's his little
comment that he threw out that this was part
of my video that I recorded today
that just disappeared into the ether.
But Jamal Murray had a
yeah, for the hoops tonight listeners,
I did work today. You're just not going to see the video because it doesn't
exist anymore. We had a little
Mac crisis today. But anyway,
Jamal Murray went out and started talking
shit about his teammates partying in Los Angeles and then was the reason why they like got
eviscerated by the Knicks. But anyway, my basketball worldview has come around to this idea that
like if you are not creating space around the rim by using your bigs further away from the
rim as screening and passing fulcrums, if you are not getting the ball side to side, if you do not
have multiple ball handling threats on the floor, there's a ceiling to your offense, especially when
you get to the late playoff rounds. It's something that I feel very, very passionate.
about. And like, ironically, it kind of bridges the gap to Cleveland because in the same way that Golden State to me is proof of concept of two ideas, which is that offensive organization piece I was just talking about in that perimeter athleticism piece. The Cavs to me are kind of another example of Kenny Atkinson bringing a lot of the same ideologies to Cleveland in terms of how to play offense, how to defend as well with the switching and containing. But like staying on Golden State for a second, to put it very simply,
like there right now there's way too much like Andrew Wiggins needs to be our savior for this thing to work out.
And like he's been playing really well.
Like I pulled this out on my mythological show that existed earlier today.
I said that Andrew Wiggins had played four games in a row and scored 20 plus points for the first time since May of 2021 in this recent stretch.
And he only had 18 in the loss to Brooklyn last night.
But like the previous four games, he's like he's been playing really, really well.
like I've been saying like the warriors need like specifically a front court type of player who can
pretty reliably get them to 20 points a game efficiently and can create his own shot without having
to rely on Steph. And like one of the things that's happening is and this is where it went off
the rails for them in the Brooklyn game last night is they their bench units really struggle to
score unless Buddy Heald's just making everything. And Buddy Heald, even when he was hot,
was making a lot of pretty tough, tightly contested shots. And so my thing is like there's
a lot of guys who can get hot,
like Lindy Waters can get hot and make shots.
He's a little bit of a movement shooter, right?
Like, Jonathan Kaminka can go for 25, 30 on any given night.
Like, Buddy Heald obviously can get hot and make shots.
Brandon Pazemski can get hot and he can make shots.
What they don't have is a guy who's like kind of a more consistent night-to-night shot creator.
And what scares me for them in the big picture is like,
I look around the league and I'm like, okay, Jimmy Butler makes some sense.
But I don't know if he's even got the juice in the tank left.
Brandon Ingram, I think might be a little bit too methodical.
and a little bit too much of a ball stopper to make that work.
Zach Levine, the salary and the concerns about his health.
Is there even a player that you see as a realistic trade target that could move Golden State into that tier for you?
I don't know that I have an answer to that.
Unfortunately, Jimmy is the answer to me.
I think Jimmy can get ballstoppy, but he also, I feel like I'm on Seinfeld right now.
Jimmy can get ballstoppy, but like Jimmy can do that.
But I think that when he's within a scheme and within a,
flow, like he's more than happy to play within that, right?
I don't know if Jimmy's going to be available.
Like Miami Heat are a team that constantly tries to contend.
The only reason that he would be potentially available is if they just decide,
you know what, he's a free agent.
He's not resigning, this, that, and the other thing, right?
And they're out of it by February.
That feels unlikely to me.
It's not impossible by any stretch, but like I think they're going to be competitive enough
to where they're going to feel like they can make a playoff run with Eric
Stoultrow with Jimmy Butler and give this team like one final road.
and, you know, chance at it with the Jimmy and Bam core.
I don't know that it would be that expensive necessarily to go get Jimmy Butler
for five months, four months, maybe a couple of first roundings, though.
Would that change it for you?
Just from the same point of matching salaries from what I understand,
it'd be like Wiggins or no.
I would still do it if I was them.
You're getting Jimmy Butler.
And like honestly, with Wiggins, if you could parlay this great stretch of games
into getting off of that.
But more than anything, like getting off that contract, which the summer looked like it would be unmovable or like immovable, whatever that word is.
That is something I would probably do if I was them.
I would have to think about that, like in terms of is that true or not.
I would guess that it is off top of my head.
But I'm sure that that's right now having.
Like I'm trying to think like could you do because you like Melton's deal plus like a few other.
kind of things, but I'd have to
really kind of dive into it.
It'd probably have to involve a third team as well.
You might be able to get a pretty tough fall off.
Wiggins makes 26, but after Draymond, you got
Melton at 12, Peyton at 9, Kyle Anderson at 9,
Buddy Healed at 9, Kevin Kavanaugh at 8.
So like, you could piece together deals,
but you would give up a couple of your key role players.
The way I put it on my show is like, I think it's a February decision.
Yeah, I think if you get to February,
and Wiggins is more or less the same player
he's been for the last couple of years.
And Jimmy Butler looks like he's got some juice,
but the heat are floundering in the playing again
in a terrible Eastern Conference.
Then you call him up and you see if you can't work something out
and you try to make a run at it.
But like if Wiggins goes for 20 plus
in two thirds of his games for the next two months,
then I think you have to kind of approach it in a different way.
But yeah, with Golden State for me,
like I think they are,
here's where I'm at with Golden State.
I think that they are certain to finish above the play in as long as Steph stays healthy because of that floor that we talked so much about in terms of their perimeter athleticism and scheme.
But I don't take them seriously as like a top tier championship contending threat unless they get a legitimate number two next to Steph because again, every other team we're talking about just has so much more firepower at the top.
It's like not even close.
And so that's where I get concerned with Cleveland.
I left that Celtics game way more like convinced that Boston was on another tier than so many.
Like there was a lot of stuff getting thrown out where it's like,
oh, well, Darius Garland played a bad game and we were down all of our wings.
And like, I want to be clear, I don't think Cleveland's fraudulent or anything like that.
I think they're very clearly in that second tier of teams somewhere in there.
But when I think about Cleveland, like, like, when I watched that game, I felt like Boston,
every single time Cleveland made a push,
they were able to immediately regain control,
which to me is like,
when you see those games where it's like the team always gets close,
but they can't get over the top,
that to me is indicative of a trend
where like the team is able to kind of like refocus,
get the right shots,
lock in on defense.
Boston's defense has been spotty at times this season
from a commitment standpoint,
but then it's been like stifle,
like they had a third quarter stretch against Minnesota
the other night that was terrifying.
Like where they completely put those dudes
in jail. And like I think I, I, I, I, a lot of the stuff that I was concerned about like, oh,
they still have entry points. Like, Dary Scarland is, is an easy pathway to get the calves in rotation.
And yet, you know what? They got a massive front line. But as soon as those dudes start running
around to shooters, it's not so massive on the front line anymore. And so like, I view Cleveland as a
very well-constructed team that has a very traditional built in their, you know, kind of too big look
in terms of like the lots of interior size,
they're loading up in ball screens,
all that kind of stuff.
The concern that I have is like a lot of this is just really good organization
from Kenny Atkinson that is achieving a very high floor
in the regular season that's going to beat all the bad teams in the league
and certainly compete against the good teams in the league.
But when it comes down to just the strict chess match of the half court battle
against a team like Boston,
I just don't think that they can get there.
Are you higher on Cleveland than I am?
I think I'm probably a little bit higher.
I guess I'm like a little bit higher in theory
because we haven't seen what I'm about to say,
like bear itself out yet because they haven't had Max Truce.
Max Truce is like a huge addition for this team
that they're going to get back because Max isn't just a shooter.
He's somebody that like can guard.
He can guard one on one.
He can close out onto shooters.
Like he's not,
I'm not going to sit here and tell you.
He's like some all defense guy or even like some incredible defender by any stretch.
But I think he's solid on that end in a way that to me when I watched that game against Boston,
it wasn't that they just had Garland on the court.
It was that they had Garland and Nyang or Garland and Merrill or Garland and like Ty Jerome has
actually been like pretty feisty this year defensively.
But he's not super fast, right?
He gets by with like really good hand eye coordination and being able to.
disfought that way and he's 6'5 right so it was the fact that they had multiple entry points
if you give struce to them and you know also akor overt and levert those guys dean wade i think it
at least could potentially limit how badly they get hit when they're in rotation and when
they have to fly around and try and scramble and recover but that's just
like theory for me right now.
Like we haven't seen Max Truce and I think he's the one that does it better than anybody
because he allows you to play the math game with Cleveland.
He allows you to go smaller if you want to with Evan Mobley at the five,
which I think is a key for them being able to match up.
They did that in this game.
But the problem was,
and I love George Nyang as a player.
I think he's been really useful this year as a shooter.
There's a,
you know,
just general smart basketball player that you can have on the court.
He's just not fast enough for that situation.
I actually thought they made a mistake, not having Jared Allen.
I thought that was bizarre.
Yeah.
To me, like, Jared Allen just is a better defender on the perimeter than George Nyang.
But I think they wanted the shooting.
I think they wanted the spacing that comes with that.
So, you know, whatever, right?
The problem for them is that I don't know how anybody stops Boston.
Like, we just talked through their offense, right?
We're talking about all of this in theory.
We're talking about all this, like, in practicality.
you need Boston to have four games where they don't shoot well,
coinciding with four games where you do shoot well.
And like we can talk about the way that they get to these shots.
We can talk about the way that,
you know,
these things bear themselves out on the court from a matchup perspective
from,
you know,
Boston's entire offense is predicated upon finding mismatches, right?
They're going to bring Peyton Pritchard up to screen and get Darius Garland on
Jason Tatum, right?
They're going to bring, you know,
George Nying up to screen and get him onto Jalen Brown.
That's the whole thing that they're trying to do.
And then they're going to collapse and then they're going to shoot it out and spray it out and try and shoot threes or they're going to dump it to Drew Holiday in the dunker spot, whatever they're going to do.
They have different ways to get there, but that's ultimately their goal offensively.
You need to have days where you shoot well and they shoot poorly.
Sometimes the shots just don't go in, right?
Like that can happen where that is a thing that happens.
there is a luck factor to shooting on some level.
I think that it is maybe not as big as the analytics people will say from time to time,
but there is undeniably something of a luck factor where the shot goes in or it doesn't go in, right?
You need four days where that happens and four days where on your end, you're shooting it well against a group of perimeter defenders with Drew Holiday, Derek White, Jalen Brown, who's a really good on-ball defender, Jason Tatum, who's a really good off-ball defender.
Al Horford, who can switch out there.
Khrasasv, who's an unbelievable rim protector.
You need to do that against that team.
That's what makes them such a difficult problem to solve.
They beat you on the math game.
They beat you on the matchups game.
At the end of the day, like, that's just that incredibly hard problem for anybody, let
alone Cleveland.
Cleveland would be clearly number two for me in the East.
Like, I don't think that.
I like them more than I like the Knicks, but like a pretty real margin, right?
now. But it's just a it's you know if we're trying to compare them in terms of championship tiers
and contenders it's I have worries about just anybody being beating Boston at this point.
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 us. We're the first people to do podcasts. Pretty yeah pretty wide range of
podcast 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... Well, we were thinking I'm
originally calling it
one of the early names
of our band before Jonas Brothers
was... This is how
you guys remember it going down? Yes. I have a
very different memory of this. We were talking about
a thing, a bit for the podcast, people
could call in and say, hey Jonas. And then
I wrote down on my little notebook
had 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 Smigel and friends.
Me and hilarious guests from Bob Odenkirk to David Letterman help make you funnier.
This week, my guest, SNL's Mikey Day and head writer Streeter Seidel.
help an a cappella band with their between songs banter.
Where does your group perform?
We do some retirement homes.
Those people are starving for banter.
Listen to humor me with Robert Smigel and Friends on the I-Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Deanna Maria Riva, actress, mother, lover, and a Gen X woman walking through life
one hot flash and hormonal crying jag at a time.
You ladies know what I mean.
I'll bet you a paramedeposal chin here you do.
So let's talk about it.
Join me on my new podcast.
How hard can it be with De Anamaniiore.
Areva, where I call on my Gen X squads from Ohio to Hollywood as we navigate midlife's most fantastic
BS.
All of a sudden, I'd had hanginess happening on my own.
I was like, what the hell is that?
I was married when I had her, so I didn't even consider how empty that nest was going to be.
Mood swings, night sweats, fupas, sex drive.
Wait, what sex?
Dating at 45.
How can it be getting naked at 50 with the new guy?
That one's kind of hard now.
Well, that's lighting.
They say we can't polish a turd, but we're sure going to try.
So let's get blunt with laughs, tears or tears of laughter,
and dive into it unfiltered and unbothered and ask,
How Hard Can It Be?
I cannot believe I'm about to say this out loud in public.
Listen to How Hard Can It Be with Diana Maria Riva
as part of My Cultura Podcast Network available 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, and our podcast Point Game is about Define the Arts.
Like LeBron heading into the playoffs without Luca and Austin Reed.
And finding ways to win no matter what.
He's the smartest player to ever play the game.
His IQ is at a level that we've never seen before.
And he knows without Luca and Austin Reeves,
I got to manipulate the game.
We get a player's perspective on the challenges of the playoffs.
I think Joker's going to be exhausted this series
because when they don't have Rudy in the lineup,
he has to really guard guys like Nas Reed.
He has to guard Julius Randall.
And then he has to give us
everything he gives us on the night-to-night basis on offense.
And when IT's friends stop by, like Quentin Richardson,
we dive into some playoff history too.
Steve Nass would get that thing.
That man, hell get the flying.
He running up the court, licking his fingers,
why he got the ball, like,
after you go through a training camp with that, IZAD,
you figure it out real quick.
Get your ass up and down the court,
and you're going to get the ball.
So listen to Point Game on the IHeart Radio app,
Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts.
This is Saigon.
the story of my family and of the country that shaped us.
The United States will not stand by and allow any power, however great, take over another country.
From My Heart Podcasts, Saigon.
Please allow me to introduce Joseph Sherman.
You don't think I'm serious about a free Vietnam?
I should stop talking so much.
I like hearing you talk.
One city, a divided country, and the war that tore America apart.
This is for Vietnam.
I've taken a hit from Japanese ground fire.
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They're pouring petrol all over him.
He's holding matches.
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Or freeze on.
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Freedom, bomb it.
No!
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Stigone, starring Kelly Marie Tran and Rob Benedict.
Sting, here's madness.
The world should hear about this.
There's a fire coming to this country, and it's going to burn out everything.
Listen to Saigon on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Cleveland has...
The, similar to what we talked about at Golden State, they're, they just, they're just a really good NBA team.
They're well coached. They've got good players. They're super deep. They have a bunch of different ways they can beat you.
It's strictly their top end that I'm concerned about, strictly within the context of the other top tier teams in the league.
New York is a team that right now I'm kind of considering beneath Cleveland, but I do think they're a team that in the
long run, I could view higher than Cleveland.
New York is hitting an offensive level here in the last couple of weeks.
That's kind of terrifying. They've basically been operating around a 130 offensive rating
for the last, like, for the last couple of weeks. And I thought that the game in Denver was
such a classic example of what makes them so tough to guard, which is the unique combination of
like a superstar that consistently draws two to the ball. And then a bunch of dudes who are
professional off ball scores.
Like,
like,
McAil Bridges has been scoring off the ball
since he was catching skip passes
and pick and roll from Chris Paul,
you know,
three,
four,
five years ago,
right?
Like,
OG and Anobie has turned into one of the most gifted,
like,
it's kind of looks a little clunky sometimes,
but he's such a gifted,
like,
he's such a gifted,
like shot creator when a dude's chasing him off the three point line.
They have so many smart players in that,
uh,
in that four on three that inevitably,
uh,
comes from every single time,
Jalen Brunson,
brings the ball at the floor that they're just impossible to guard.
The thing that's bothering me is like they literally have not played more than one or two
good games of defense this entire season.
Even in their wins, they're not guarding.
Like they had a win streak where they won, you know, four out of five.
And like they were like out of like a one 19 defensive rating in those four wins against
like Washington and like Brooklyn and like just some really limited teams.
And I have been trying to investigate this Knicks defense problem for a while.
And I'm so curious to hear your opinion on it because we haven't talked about it yet.
But my initial impression is it's a combination of some effort-focused energy stuff,
like specifically some of their perimeter defenders are not having good perimeter defensive seasons.
And then two, there's a little bit of like a schematic thing with Tibbs that's driving me crazy,
which is like they like still are not doing a ton of switching even when it's OG and Mikhail and Josh in the action.
they're still doing a lot of overhelping and lingering that's completely unnecessary.
There's some of it that's unavoidable.
Like, teams are hunting Brunson and Kat a lot.
Like, I want to be clear.
That's how teams are looking to attack the Knicks.
But it extends so much further to that because, like, my thing is like the effort
and energy piece I think will improve in the long run.
And that to me is the gap between Cleveland.
Like Cleveland's practicing being a championship team.
Say what you want about whether or not they actually are.
They're practicing being a championship team.
That is a dead serious basketball team in their daily process.
Knicks, not so much. That's definitely something that they can clean up there.
There's no doubt that like the, that, uh, uh, Kat and Jalen Brunson are going to get attacked,
a great amount over the course of the rest of the season. But there's some self-inflicted damage
there and their three point defense metrics are really bad. They're giving up a ton of volume
on three. So giving up high percentage. They're giving up a lot of spot up opportunities in general.
They are not guarding the three point line well. And like for all the talk about cat as a rim
protector. Their paint defense has been pretty solid. So like, what is your takeaway on what's
going wrong with the next defense? So yeah. So they have looked better recently. They have won
five out of six here. And it's largely due to their offense. What I will say about their defense is
that I think that in part it could get fixed a little bit with Mitchell Robinson coming back. So like,
let's look at the positive here first and just say, hey, a lot of what a lot of what I'm going to say could
get solved with Mitch coming back.
A big issue for me personally is that Carl Towns is a bad drop coverage defender.
And early in the season, they basically played only drop coverage.
Over the last like two weeks, I felt like I've seen them experiment a little bit more with
having him come out to the level a little bit higher.
They will occasionally, not regularly, but like at times, like I've seen them switch, you know,
could have just been like a peel switch situation, but like it felt like kind of an early
peel switch to me.
Like I will, I will hear out that they are adjusting and experimenting and that Tibbs is
trying to find different answers.
It hasn't gone well.
Like, let's be clear about that too.
Like it hasn't gone super great, uh, to this point.
But I do think that they have at least tried to solve the problem.
A, Towns is a really, really bad drop coverage defender.
I think that he doesn't really.
really understand his angles.
He doesn't really understand his depth.
He often gets caught in no man's land where the roller will get behind him.
And he's not really actually contesting the guard.
And the guard is able to just get to a pull up a little bit too easily or have that lob over the top of him.
The second piece of it for me is you mentioned the perimeter defense.
I actually think McKell Bridges has been quite poor to this point defensively.
In general, I think he has not been very good this season.
offensively, the shot is obviously a whole other conversation.
Did you see how many times Jamal Murray left him completely wide open,
just not paying attention?
He just was missing every shot.
That could have been a worst blowout.
Teams are going to do that with them.
They're going to force him to shoot.
Mikhail's a crazy worker,
and I hope that he comes available here and comes around and is able to shoot it.
I've never heard anything, but like Mikhail Burgess is like an awesome human being.
So like when I say what I'm about to say, like I don't say this with joy.
Why are you being so negative, Sam?
He's been really bad on defense.
He has been the big issue for me is that he has been incapable.
When you watched him get through screens when he was younger,
he like kind of used that length and like slithered around them and like found different ways
to get back into recovery.
Right now he's getting caught on screens for that extra split second.
I feel like his hips aren't quite as flexible as they used to be when he was
a little bit younger and he's just getting caught trying to get up over the top.
He's a guy that has super long limbs, super long arms, but also a really high waist.
So when he tries to get around screens, he has to like really open up his hips and then like
open around and like get back around the screen.
And I think he's getting clipped on those a little bit more often than what we've seen in the
past from him.
And that's an issue for them right now.
If he's not an elite level perimeter defender, if he is.
is on if I'm being completely honest,
I think he's been a below average criminal defender this season.
I will hear out,
you know,
that he's been average or whatever,
but I haven't really seen that personally.
Let's assume they're not getting any stops,
Sam.
They're not getting any stops,
even against bad teams.
They're not.
But like,
if you want to say he'll get to average,
I still think that's a problem for them.
Because then you have two,
you know,
you have OG and Anobie who's a great defender.
You have Josh Hart,
who's like an above average defender who works.
his balls off and like flies around the court, right?
You have an average defender in Mikhail and then, you know,
Kat and Jalen are just guys that teams will attack relentlessly.
So if you don't have that extra great defender with those two,
to me it's a real problem.
So, you know, the way that you phrased this whenever we decided,
hey, what are we going to do?
Are you higher or lower on these teams than you were in the preseason
in terms of them contending for a title?
my answer for the Knicks right now is actually lower.
Me too.
And in part,
it's because of bridges.
And I would really like to see him fix it.
But he's not playing well on either end right now.
And like that deal,
when that deal got done,
I was literally live like doing a mock draft show with Bryce,
my podcast partner.
And A,
we were just like stunned and befuddled when that deal happened.
And then we got the price.
And I was like,
man,
I like Mikhail.
And I knew that the price was going to be big.
And I still thought,
that was too much to pay for him.
Superstar prices, man.
Superstar prices.
They paid superstar price for a guy that is a top,
you know, when he's at his best, right?
A top 40 player in the league in terms of like impacting winning,
top 50 player in the league, whatever it is.
And it was too much, I thought.
But, you know, at the end of the day,
they're going to get Mitchell back.
We're going to see if that can really solve some of the issues
that they have defensively.
Because they can play him and drop
and then you can get cat back to play the role that he was in in Minnesota,
it makes life a little bit easier, I think, for everybody.
And that could really go a long way towards solving their defense.
And that could make me, in the end, a little bit higher on them.
But given that Mitchell's injury situation seems a little bit questionable in terms of when he'll be back,
what he will look like when he gets back, I am a little bit lower on them than I was in the preseason.
I am.
Yeah, it's interesting.
the cat if cat could just guard yokitch in the post every single possession i think he'd be considered
an all defense guy unfortunately there's a lot more to guarding NBA teams i like the idea of
mitchell robinson just kind of like putting them into a lot more natural positions on on on a lot of
like first of all Mitch is like one of my favorite bigs in the league at getting to the level of screens
and contesting pull-up shooters he just has such a natural gift for it the timing and he's got such
quick leaping and in long arms.
And then I like Kat more as a low man than I do as a ball screen defender.
And then the Josh Hart stuff, like Josh Hart brings so much good to the table.
But like, and there's no doubt that like from a spacing standpoint, there would be some complications with Mitch.
It gets, it's not as simple as it looks though, because one, teams aren't guarding Josh Hart on the perimeter.
I have seen so many teams this year put their center on Josh Hart for extended stretches and just sag him into the paint anyway.
and I think that Mitch can bring back
some of their offensive rebounding identity
in a lot of ways too.
He's just always been super, super good at that.
So like, I, with the Knicks,
I think Cleveland is a clear number two right now,
but I give them, I wouldn't be surprised
if I felt differently in two, three months
if they just kind of figure some of that additional stuff out.
Before we get out of here,
I want to spend about 10, 15 minutes
on the middle tier in the Western Conference.
So this is a total shit show.
Sacramento's lost four in a row.
They're now the 12 seed.
But like you just know that they're going to have a stretch
where they win eight out of nine games.
And they've been devastated by injuries.
And it's been Deer and Fox just playing one on five every game.
Even Portland is scrappy and difficult.
Like as much as we talk trashed about the Pelicans,
they will get healthier at some point in the season
and rip off some wins at some point.
San Antonio is like it's the classic home road team.
Like if they're,
they are just a huge pain in the butt to beat
San Antonio and that's just something that's going to keep them afloat in the standings all season.
Dallas, it's been the Luca stuff and a lot of like kind of early burying of Clay Thompson,
even though it has so much more to do with the fact that his ceiling kind of depends on Luca
creating advantages for him. And so I'm not super concerned about Clayne the big picture.
But like every team has it issues. Denver is like atrociously bad when Yokic is off the floor.
The Sons can't do anything without Kevin Durant. The Clippers are actually like my
one of my big success stories from the season.
I was like,
The Clippers are going to be a pain in the ass.
I swear, it's all these athletes.
They're big athletic on the perimeter.
Memphis,
same sort of thing with the home road splits.
But like that,
that tier in the West that is beyond Oklahoma City and Golden State is like 10 teams deep.
And I have no idea what to make of it.
Where are you feeling with that group?
Do you have them all still in one tier?
Are there a couple of teams that are separating themselves for you?
How do you feel about that tier in the West right now?
I mean,
if you didn't mention the team that I think I might like
the most outside of Denver.
No, the Lakers.
Oh, come on.
I'm a Lakers guy.
You just don't like the transition defense is the issue.
That'll get cleaned up.
Like that will figure itself out.
We've already started to see signs that it's going to figure itself out.
Look, I like Denver more than the Lakers, to be clear.
Like I have Denver like in the same tier with the Lakers,
but I do like Denver more than the Lakers to be clear.
I was just surprised you didn't.
mention them.
But with the Lakers particularly,
mistake.
Yeah.
Like with the Lakers particularly,
they have this incredible
offensive scheme that is working
really,
really well in terms of
actualizing Anthony Davis.
Honestly,
I think a big thing that it's doing
that people aren't really noticing
is minimizing the wear
and terror on LeBron
throughout the regular season.
And that's going to make a big difference,
I think,
potentially come playoff time.
They have Austin Reeves,
who's been like hot and cold,
it feels like to start the season.
They have Dalton Connect,
who looks like a real,
hit, he's a guy that kind of elevates their starting lineup.
Like, it's funny, they've moved him to the bench to bring Rui back into the starting
lineup. And I think that's a mistake because when I watch, when I watch Dalton, I think he's a guy
that elevates your best players, but probably isn't a guy yet that can go get his own or,
you know, be at his best with bench players in the NBA. So if I was the Lakers, I would have
Dalton in the starting lineup in order to maximize both his potential and the players around
him offensively.
I get the defensive concerns.
But the thing about the Lakers is that when you look at all the other teams in the West,
Denver included certainly, and this is removing Oklahoma City, in my opinion.
You look at, oh, you know, like Sacramento, who I think just probably doesn't have enough
juice in terms of star power and Minnesota who you know obviously sold a lot of their assets to go
get rid of go bare but you know has some new assets that they could potentially move if they wanted
to you can look at the clippers who probably doesn't probably don't have enough juice unless
kawai is just like a superstar uh Houston's interesting Houston certainly has more trade
capital than anybody in the league if they want to use it but I think the Lakers have the most
realistic avenues
toward
improving their roster
that doesn't involve
like for instance
Houston having to upend
everything it does
with a star trade
right the Lakers
can solve their issues
they have three first round picks
available to go out
and get like a Bruce Brown
they have a bunch of tradable contracts
Rui Gabe Vincent
Jared Vanderbilt like
whoever you want to bring up
across the board
they have all these deals
that they can move
for players right within their price range,
like if they can go get Bruce Brown to me,
that's the name that I've been thinking about
that just makes an immense amount of sense.
We knew that they liked him.
They tried to sign him before he signed that big balloon contract
with the Indiana Pacers
and then got traded to the Toronto Raptors
in the Sea Yakum deal,
if I remember correctly.
He is the kind of player.
It would be perfect for them,
like a perimeter defender who processes the game
at a super high level, can guard one through four,
perfect like crash bang player that would take some,
uh,
warren's hair off of,
you know, some of their perimeter players and some of their wings.
Like they,
they can go do that.
Like Toronto is not contending this year.
They would be able to go get,
give up a first round pick for Bruce Brown and it would be fine.
And on top of it,
the sneaky thing with Bruce Brown is that because his contract is so big right now,
he's not going to get that much on his next contract.
exactly you have the early bird rights to be able to retain him as well i think he's actually like
a really sneaky valuable player on this trade market that because he hasn't played much this
season uh if at all if i can remember correctly uh i haven't seen him play this year at least uh he's someone
that he will be a very valuable trade target as long as he's healthy at some point uh in
in december january dorian phidney smith is the name that makes a lot of like sense for the lakers
i've said like a dorian phony smith they are on sharp deal for the lakers so
solves like almost all of their problems to me right now.
Solves the backup center issue.
Solves, you know, going to get a wing who can be switchable defensively.
Finney Smith has taken like a small step back defensively, but not an enormous one.
But the guys that are on the market, they have the ability to go make moves to solve their issues is why I like them a lot.
And they're already really good is the thing.
Like the Lakers are already, what, 11 and 7, something like that?
10 and 6.
10 and 6.
Yeah. So they're in a really good position as it is.
Like Denver doesn't have the ability really to go out and improve.
They've moved all their picks.
They would have to give up like a Peyton Watson or a Christian Brown or a Julian Strother to go make a realistic upgrade.
And that's not something they should really be in the market of doing, in my opinion.
You can look at, I don't know, Minnesota.
Minnesota could go make a realistic upgrade.
But more than anything, their season is going to come down to whether or not Anthony Edwards can.
make decisions and consistently make plays at the end.
And I don't know if I trust that yet.
They could also just move off of the Julius Randall experiment
and decide to do something totally different with that position.
But that upends their season in some way.
And that would take some time to try and work through and figure out.
So when I say that I really like the Lakers,
I like the potential of what the Lakers can be after February,
once they eventually inevitably make their move.
I think that might be the team that I it's Denver because they have the best player in the world.
They have Nicole Yokic.
But outside of them in the West, like I think the Lakers are the team.
Even honestly, I like them more than Golden State in a playoff situation.
I know that might be like Sacrilege to hear right now.
But I would buy them more in a playoff situation.
They have the star power and they have the wherewithal to be able to go get go do moves.
Golden State does as well though, by the way.
Like that's the other thing that we, you know, have mentioned a little bit.
Golden State to me is a, you know,
De Anthony Melton and Gary Payton in two first round picks for Cam Johnson move
from being ahead of, you know,
all these teams potentially.
Maybe not Denver because Denver is still really good.
But yeah, like that,
that middle tier, like those three teams beyond Oklahoma City,
Golden State.
Denver Lakers.
Denver Lakers, those feel like the three teams to me that not only have the star power,
but also have the potential to get better.
and separate themselves from the rest of this group.
Yeah, when I look at, I think a lot of times when we hear people talk about issues with the Lakers,
they conveniently gloss over the fact that every team in that tier has major issues.
You know, like the Kings can't guard anybody.
Minnesota, I literally hate that roster.
Like, it's, it is like the player that I'm highest on in the next, like, generation of young basketball players.
but I just hate that team's construct so much.
And I think it plays directly into a lot of the issues that Ant has had over the years.
Don't get me started.
San Antonio,
ever since I saw how good Stefan Castle has become,
I'm like all in on them for the future.
Like,
Stefan Castle has made me go from hating the Spurs core to like loving the Spurs core,
which is like kind of been a funny transformation.
I just think he,
I think he's like the two-way guard.
I'll even say I think Stefan Castles are more interesting prospect than
Devon to sell.
in my opinion at this point.
Oh, for sure.
And so, but like,
not even a question to me.
Denver,
their bench is atrocious
and Jamal Murray is like literally a shell of himself.
It's a real problem.
Phoenix,
the Nurkich problem is real.
And like,
I just think they're a little redundant in their,
in the way that they attack on offense.
But by the way with them,
another team that can't really solve their problems with the,
the trade market,
right?
They have one first round pick.
And really,
the only functionality that they have is like moving great.
Jason Allen for a center or moving Nurkich, which I don't think anybody's going to take that contract.
So I completely agree with you.
Like there are worlds where you could maybe try and figure out how to make something like this function.
But I think they're going to really struggle to improve their roster, even though I love what they have been so far with Kevin Durant.
And that's where Phoenix to me is kind of like I don't view them as a serious threat for that exact reason that you're explaining.
like all of these teams, whether it's Golden State, Lakers,
Denver, I think is a little bit trapped, as you said.
Like they have the avenues with which to improve themselves.
Houston, the offense and the half court is just too bad.
As good as they are, as interesting they are,
they're the regular season wins drug or not this season.
We've seen that year in, year out over the last few years, right?
Clippers obviously, like, it's a James Hardin and Norman Powell team.
It's hard to take them really seriously.
Hey, it's us, the Jonas brothers. And guess what? We have some big news.
What's the news, new?
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.
And 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, where people could call in and say, hey, Jonas.
And then I wrote down on my little notepad, Hey Jonas, and offered it up as a potential title for the podcast.
But thanks for remembering that, guys.
Listen to Hey Jonas on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your
podcast. Just listen. We don't care where you hear it.
Another podcast from some SNL late night comedy guy, not quite. Unhumor me with Robert Smygel
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Hey, I'm Deanna Maria Riva, actress, mother, lover, and a Gen X woman walking through life one hot flash and hormonal crying jag at a time.
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Listen to How Hard Can It Be with Diana Maria Riva
as part of My Cultura Podcast Network
available on the Iheart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
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What's up, fam? It's Isaiah Thomas.
And I'm C.J. Toledano,
and our podcast Point Game is about defying the odds.
Like LeBron heading into the playoffs without Luca and Austin Reed.
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I think Joker's going to be exhausted this series because when they don't have Rudy in the
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I want to zero in on the Lakers for a second because I have a very complicated opinion on them.
But before I do that, I would say that I think Golden State, I want to zero in on the Lakers.
I have Golden State above the, first of all, if Golden State played the Lakers in a series tomorrow,
I think Golden State would kick their ass.
As much as I like the firepower stuff with the Lakers, the mismatch on the perimeter is so dramatic
between those two teams.
I think it would be a disaster.
So like to your point that you've talked about a lot, the transition defense would be
an enormous issue against Golden State.
Exactly.
Oh my God.
I agree with you on this, that Golden State tomorrow and a seven game series would beat the
Lakers.
But like I also agree with you that if you start to talk about who can win four
series between those two teams, it gets a little more complicated because obviously like the
Lakers are a bad matchup with Golden State, but they are better matchup for other teams, right?
So like it gets complicated in that regard.
But like I think Golden State I'd put above the Lakers, Denver, I'd certainly put above the Lakers
because I actually do think Jamal is going to get like, Jamal's not as bad as he's been.
He's going to be better.
In my opinion, maybe I'm just being glass half full a little too much.
you have a little smirk on your face,
maybe you feel otherwise.
It's not that,
it's not that I think he's definitely not.
It's just that I don't know.
Like when it goes for,
like when it went for John Wall,
it went.
You know what I mean?
Like the injuries piled up and he just couldn't separate from anybody anymore.
And Jamal has the shooting to fall back on.
But sometimes for guys,
it just goes.
And I really hope that's not the case for Jamal.
It's just that I don't,
I don't know if it is,
is what I'm worried about.
To your point,
he hit a couple,
of jumpers against the Knicks where it was a lot of wrist and like snap of the of the top of the
shot where you can tell he was not getting a ton of energy in his shot from the bottom.
And some of these possessions where he's running around in the perimeter literally looks like
me when I'm like playing when I've played seven or eight pickup games and I'm in the last
game of the day and I'm kind of limping around the court. Like that's literally what what Jemal
Murray looks like in some of these help defense possessions like like where I'm
just like, dude, this is an NBA game. Like, you can't be this like, like hobbling around.
You know what I mean? But like, I think Denver is a team that I put above them. And then the other
team I put above the Lakers still at this point is Dallas. In Dallas, I'm a little bit lower on
because I do think the tradeoff for Derek Jones Jr. did make them less athletic. But even within
that context, they do have more athletes than a team like the Lakers does. So like,
and I do think Luca will play better in the long run. So like for me, I have,
the Lakers kind of sitting as like the fifth best team in the West.
Now,
you look like you had a thought in Dallas because I'm about to go off on the Lakers.
So why don't you give me your thoughts on Dallas real quick.
No,
honestly,
I don't.
I mean,
you know that when we did contender rankings like at the deadline last year,
Dallas was your team.
Or whatever.
And like I love that team and I think they're terrific.
So I guess I would put them ahead of the Lakers right now.
They do have some flexibility,
not a ton, but like enough.
I mean, the other weird team that we haven't talked about before we get to the Lakers is Memphis.
Like Memphis is so weird and bizarre and we haven't seen them with like a full compliment of players yet.
Exactly.
I mean, I don't know if you watched the Portland Memphis game last night, you know, two nights ago for when this goes live.
John Morant had like 22 and 11 in 23 minutes and was just so far in a way the best player on the court that it was remarkable.
And I know it was in Memphis, whatever.
I can't remember.
For some reason, I think it was in Portland, but I'm bad at remembering if it's home or
road or not.
It was in Memphis, and every John Morant game in Memphis is like an event.
He puts on a show every single game.
His speed, his explosiveness.
You saw like the, he is, he and Trey Young to me are the two guards in the NBA,
where I don't understand how they understand angles.
when they make passes.
Like both of them can throw
live dribble passes
left hand,
right hand from crazy angles
from whatever position
they're in on the court,
right?
But those two guys particularly,
I just watch them
and Jha throws these
left handed whip cross court passes
where I'm just like,
I'm not even sure
how you saw that,
let alone how you executed that.
Like Yokic can do this stuff.
There are wings that can do this stuff as well.
Like I'm not sitting here saying
they're like the best two passers.
in the NBA necessarily.
They're probably in the top five.
But like when I watch those two,
I'm just like, holy shit.
And Jah is also like the most explosive athlete in the end.
He is.
I say Memphis just to say that like,
if Jaya is this good and they get Desbane
and they get Jaron Jackson playing a full compliment of games,
they have all of these potential options that they can mix and match with
against you in certain situations and matchups,
they're interesting to me.
playing goofy ass like Santi Aldama, Jaron Jackson, Zach Eaddy lineups that are like
three seven footers basically. And it's just really hard to score on them. And they still have like
perimeter play because of Sonsi and Jaron. So they're a weird team. But I also bring them up to say
that they have their full compliment of picks to be able to move if they want to. Yeah. I need to see
more of Memphis now that Marcus Martin Desmond Mayne are back. They're a team that I'm going to be
zeroing in on in the next couple of weeks because like there's there's fun. Spunky. We're winning games at
home with, you know,
Scotty Pippin Jr. and Jay Huff and all these
kind of guys. And then there's like, okay, let's get a good
look at like what, you know,
jaw, Desmond,
Marcus Smart. They've been starting
Jaylen Wells. It's interesting to me.
Because I actually liked the Smart Bain
Jod trio last year.
But then like the, with Jaron Jackson and
Edie and then also with Santiago Alma and
Jaron Jackson is a smaller like kind of more
spacing look. I need to just see more of them.
They're a team that I, they're a team that I just don't
have a really strong opinion about at this point.
on the Lakers front,
they are,
there's so many things that I really like about this team.
I do think J.J. Reddick has done a good job
of at least bringing a more serious approach on a daily basis.
I love some of the concepts that he's brought in offensively
in the sense that last year they were very much like a horns team
and like a lot of like you're kind of like just stack and and double drag and that sort
thing. It was just a lot of like pretty standard horn stack double drag across the board.
JJ's brought in the LeBron and AD as a fulcrum at the top of the key for off ball guard action
stuff, which has been really, really intriguing. And I've liked a lot of that stuff. You mentioned
using LeBron. By the way, they're getting there like in similar sets. Like they still run a lot of
horns actions. They still run a lot of double drag stuff. I still run a lot of JJ. Yeah, I think what
JJ has done is particularly weaponize his two best players in a different way than what
Darwin Ham did. And that's what makes him a much better coach, frankly. And to your point,
I think that's that and then giving a lot more of the guard reps to Austin has definitely
played a part in DeLo's struggles to this point in the season. He's just been really,
really bad. Where it gets complicated for me, before I even get there, I want to focus in on the
starting lineup for a second, too. Like I think that Dahl
and connect has to start two.
Because one, he's just such a natural fit offensively because he's an off ball
score. I think this is such a valuable talent in the NBA, a guy that you can like realistically
expect 15 to 25 points on any given night without really having to like, yeah, you'll drop
stuff for him when he gets hot to kind of keep feeding the hot hand, but he can play within the
low of the game, right? And the second piece of it is he's just really good athlete. And this is the
team that doesn't have athleticism on the perimeter, even though he has his defensive
limitations, just like him going after a contested rebound or him running his lane in
transition or him high pointing some sort of loose ball just looks different than it does for the
other Laker guards, which is why I kind of lean more towards the trade you presented to me on the
phone the other day, which is the Dorian, Finney Smith-Darron Sharp type of move. Because like,
I originally was in the same spot where I was like, Dilo's the weak link here. You got to go
get a Bruce Brown. You got to go get a, you know, Derek Jones Jr., something like that,
anchor the two and then Ruiz your three. I am in the opposite spot now where I think this needs to be
an Austin Dalton LeBron A.D team in a traditional three and D guy that you can put on the other
team's best perimeter player makes the most sense. That's where Dorian Finney Smith kind of falls into
that spot for me. The tricky part is, is I don't like a ton of the other options around the
league. I think he's the one guy that makes a lot of sense because like I'll look at it and I'm like
I kind of like Zaire Williams too, but I just don't think he's a starter. I don't think he shoots the ball
well enough. There's, I like Josh
Green as a guy that they could potentially go
after, but then again, he plays the same position more
or less as Dalton Connect, which kind of
presents some issues. So like, they're a
little bit more limited in terms of the types
of players that can go there. Like, does Jeremy
Grant want to come in and guard the other team's best
player every game? Probably not, right? So like,
there are some limitations there, but I do think
Dalton at the two is the direction they need to go
in the long run.
My pessimism surrounding the
Lakers entirely centers around the
perimeter athleticism piece.
And I just don't know if it's something they can fix within one season.
They will defend better than they have, to be clear.
Their defense is in shambles right now for a variety of different reasons,
mostly centering around transition and the offensive class.
They're actually like a decent load up half court defense.
Like they're okay in the decent half court load up situations.
It's rebounding and it is transition.
That is entirely perimeter athletes.
That's entirely perimeter athletes.
Like LeBron and AD are two of the best defensive rebounders of their generation.
and they can't rebound.
Like, it is a perimeter athlete issue.
And so, like, I'm with you in the sense that, like, if you told me, like, we were going to be watching OKC, Los Angeles Lakers in the Western Conference finals, I wouldn't be stunned because I do think that that ceiling is in there.
Anthony Davis is playing at a top five level this year.
LeBron isn't even at the level.
I think he will be in the long run.
Like, there's a lot to be excited about there.
It's just like, I've been, Sam, I've been bitching about this perimeter athleticism thing with the Lakers for two years now.
And Rob just hasn't done anything.
So like where like it's hard for me to even.
It's like Jared Vanderbilt.
Really interesting player.
But like I haven't watched him play in a basketball game in so long that it's like
all theoretical to this point.
He just doesn't get guarded either.
Yeah.
That's the other thing.
Like nobody guards.
So.
And so I just am concerned.
I'm just concerned that Rob is thinking more like this team needs a third star.
And like I just don't think Rob is actually aware of the fact.
that the main weakness of this roster
is that they've got a bunch of skill players
on the perimeter that can't move or fight.
It's funny that you say
that you like
the Dorian Finney Smith move more
now because I'm kind of going the opposite way
a little bit where I like that one first
originally probably because it was like my first thought
and I was like anchored to it a little bit.
But the more I think about it, the more I'm like
oh no, like it's Bruce Brown's
the one that makes more sense because he's the better athlete.
He's the better defender on the perimeter.
Like he's the guy that you can trust to go
deal with like one's two's and three
like even with Denver right like
part of like a big part
of his role was that he could play the four
on offense but could guard perimeter players
on defense and that's kind of what
I think they need like they need somebody that
will like deal with you know
the fours and can take on tough matchups
or I can like just make high level passing
reads and can do different things like that
but on
offense they want Dalton and you know
Austin to be the one and the two kind of like you said
on defense having Bruce
allows you to kind of play him at the two, the, you know, one, the three, whoever you have to
shut down in terms of the matchup. He's just kind of a better defender, I think, at this point
than what Doreen Phine Smith is. But what Finney Smith adds that he doesn't is he's a fine defender
at this point is he's longer and he is also a real shooter, which Bruce, unfortunately, is not
at this point. So I go back and forth on it. I think I lean a little bit more toward Bruce Brown now,
but like it's a tricky, it's a tricky conversation for sure.
And they have to make the right decision because while I talk about their flexibility,
they really have like one move that they can make without like totally selling the farm.
You know what I mean?
If they don't make, if they decide to like go all out and, you know,
go get somebody,
they're giving up like three first rounders or whatever.
And that doesn't feel like a great plan to me either.
So I like what they can do.
I like their flexibility.
I think they are one player away.
Realistically, you can slide DeAngelo Russell to the bench.
You hopefully get Jared Vanderbilt back.
to be able to play defense in stretches for 15 minutes a game, right?
They can solve the backup center issue.
Like you can find backup centers for second round picks on the trade market.
They're going to have to find, they can find answers, though, I think is why I like them.
Like they can go, they're not a great team right now.
They're not, but they can find the answers, I think.
Yeah, I'm with you in the sense that like I think that trait is such a specifically valuable
trait that even if you're great at everything else,
it can undercut a team.
And there's, it's just,
I'm of the opinion that this needs to be
kind of like a two pronged approach at the deadline,
which is like they need to find a starter
that they can put at the two or the three.
Starting caliber two way player.
But they also,
I also think they need to add some athletes for their bench.
And here's the thing.
If Jared Vanderbilt gets back and he gets to form,
and that works out great, great.
If Gabe Vincent gets at least decent at basketball at some point in the next couple of months,
that would be great.
If Max Christie settles down a little bit, then maybe that's fine.
But it's just, I think it's more likely than not that they need a couple of different moves,
and I just am not sure that I trust Rob to get it done.
So in a weird way, like, if you ask me to rank contenders, like I still had them coming into the season,
I think eight.
And like, yeah, they're probably still right around there, seven or eight, right?
Like if I look out east, I'm looking at Boston and Cleveland clearly as a level above maybe the Knicks too.
If I look out west, it's clearly OKC, Golden State, Denver and Dallas.
So like there's somewhere around seven or eight.
But like I just can't see them bolting up.
We talked about the Knicks, right?
Would you have the Knicks or the Lakers right now?
Oh, man.
The Knicks are a team that I think everybody would have had ahead of them coming into the year.
I here's the thing
I think the Lakers
oh
this is such a good question
Sam
and also neither of these teams
right now can win a title
but the Knicks are going to get back
Mitchell Robinson at some point
and the Lakers have moves
to be able to make to go get players
like it's a
I think I'd still take LeBron AD
in a playoff series over a Bronson
Bridges kind of Brunson Bridges
and an OBB group but like I
that my best
basketball heart loves the Knicks perimeter athletes, but then again, it just hasn't manifested
the way it needs to. So yeah, I think I lean very, very slightly Lakers, but there's a part of me
that goes, that's stupid. Why would you say that? So I don't, that man, you might have, you might
have found the two teams that I'm most evenly opinionated about. That's crazy. Yeah.
Because like if you told me Lakers or Bucks right now, I'd be like Lakers 10 times out of 10.
You know, like if you told me Lakers sons right now, I'd say Lakers 10 times out of 10.
But like the teams that are, but yeah, the Knicks to me are Lakers East.
Yeah, I would go.
That loss in Utah was one of the worst losses of the season that any NBA team has had.
That is accurate.
Yeah, accurate.
Sam, this show was exactly what I hoped it would be.
I had kind of like a loose format.
We ended up just completely ditching it.
It was like you and I just talking hoops on the phone for some time.
It was everything I hoped it would be.
I sincerely appreciate you giving us your time.
Can you tell our audience everything you've been working on as of late?
go to the athletic
keep me employed over there.
Go to the Game Theory podcast
with Sam Vassini over on YouTube,
over on Spotify,
whatever podcast platform you listen to shows on.
I've been doing things
where I kind of steal Jason's thunder a little bit
and go live after games
and talk through some things that happen.
We're calling it post game theory
or game theory after dark.
We don't really have a name for it.
We just kind of talk about basketball.
I like post game theory.
I do too.
I'm still trying to make,
make some different thoughts about it at this point
and try to change minds within the fan base
because the fan base it feels like is sway in another way.
Yeah, no, go over there, listen to the show.
Watch me break down tape.
I break down tape two or three times a night
or two or three times a week on games that happen
over the course of the previous couple of days.
So go there and come hang out.
I talk to a lot of people about basketball on a daily basis.
and whenever I have a basketball idea
or something that I need to run by someone, Sam,
is the first person that I reach out to.
He's a basketball mind that I respect a great deal.
You guys need to get over to the athletic
and to the Game Theory podcast and support him.
And I'm sure we'll be having you back on
somewhere right around the All Star Break
to get into some stuff.
And I owe you a show.
So you got to let me know if you have some stuff
that you want to talk about.
But as always, we sincerely appreciate you guys
for supporting us and for supporting the show.
We will be back after Thanksgiving break.
I was about to say tonight after Laker's Sons,
but you guys aren't seeing this until Wednesday.
So I will see you guys after Thanksgiving break
for some power rankings on Monday.
Volume.
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,
I appreciate you.
But if you could take a minute to do that,
I'd really appreciate it.
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 asked 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 Smygel and friends.
me and hilarious guests from Bob Odenkirk to David Letterman help make you funnier.
This week, my guest, SNL's Mikey Day and head writer Streeter Seidel,
help an a cappella band with their between songs banter.
Where does your group perform?
We do some retirement homes.
Those people are starving for banter.
Listen to humor me with Robert Smigel and friends on the IHeart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Here's something that should not be as complicated as it is,
getting a racist statue removed.
And here's something that should be a whole lot easier than it is, getting a new one put up in its place.
I'm Akila Hughes, and Rebel Spirit Season 2 is about both of those things.
As I was watching these statues come down, I was thinking about what it meant that I grew up in a majority of Black City,
in which there were more homages to enslavers than there were to enslave people.
Listen to Rebel Spirit Season 2 on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Every family has its secrets.
But what happens when you discover that your dad has been living a double life?
That is not the look of an innocent man.
Is everyone lying to me about who they are?
I felt such desperation.
I felt it was what I had to do.
Listen to Deep Cover the Family Man on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, it's Edwin Castro, also known as Castro 1021.
And I'm Kunky, his best friend, and business manager.
And we've got a new show called The 1021 Podcast.
I'm taking you behind the scenes on how I became one of Twitch's most popular streamers.
We also love sports.
And with the World Cup right around the corner, we'll be breaking down the biggest
storylines ahead of the big tournament here in the USA.
Listen to the 1021 podcast on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
This is an IHeart podcast, guaranteed human.
