The Ringer NBA Show - Jalen Williams Drops 40 in a Statement Game. Plus, What’s Going on With Tyrese Haliburton’s Injury? | Real Ones
Episode Date: June 17, 2025Fresh off of minimal sleep and deadlines to meet, Logan Murdock and Howard Beck are back with another edition of 'Real Ones' from their hotel rooms in Oklahoma City. OKC’s All-Star forward Jalen Wil...liams erupted for 40 points, helping OKC to a 3-2 lead in the NBA Finals. What was the environment like at Paycom Center witnessing that performance? Who’s currently in the lead for Finals MVP? Indiana Pacers guard Tyrese Haliburton seemed to be hobbled after suffering an injury early in the game. If Haliburton isn’t 100 percent healthy, do the Pacers have a shot with their backs against the wall? Plus, the Grizzlies traded Desmond Bane to the Orlando Magic for Kentavious Caldwell-Pope, Cole Anthony, and numerous picks. What’s the fallout in this trade for both teams and the larger picture for the NBA as a whole? Hosts: Logan Murdock and Howard Beck Producers: Clifford Augustin and Victoria Valencia (0:00): Intro w/ Logan Murdock (1:05): State Farm Ad Break (4:12): Jalen Williams discussion (13:22): Finals MVP talk (34:21): Haliburton Injury (40:58): Pacers vs.Thunder defense (48:55): Desmond Bane Trade Hit the mailbag! realonesmailbag@gmail.com The Ringer is committed to responsible gaming. Please visit www.rg-help.com to learn more about the resources and helplines available. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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What's happening? Welcome to Real Ones, Logan Murdoch here. Live from Oklahoma City. I'm here with Howard Beck. What a game, game five was. Just the Halliburton injury, the J-dub coming of age, the timely stops from SGA, the defense from Chet Holmgren, the foul trouble Miles Turner got himself in. We talked about it all. We also talked about the Desmond Bain trade. Man, what the hell were the Orlando Magic Thinking?
giving up all those picks.
I know they had to get up off of KCP,
but how you give up all those picks?
Geez, we're going to talk about the picks discourse.
We're going to talk about the overall Oklahoma City vibe
and just how loud that arena was.
Me and Tyler Parker will be reacting off of game six on Thursday night.
So be on a lookout for that.
That is a special edition of Real Ones.
That should be a fun one.
We got a lot to talk about today on Real Ones
with me, Logan Murdoch, and Howard, mother effing, Beck next.
This episode is brought to you by State Farm.
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very by state.
It's popping.
Real ones.
Logan Murdoch here.
Howard motherfucking back there.
Live from Oklahoma City,
we want to do this in person,
but it just didn't work out that way.
So we're kind of like,
I'm in my hotel.
Howard's in his hotel.
We're figuring this out how as he goes.
How much sleep did you get last night, Howard?
Like two hours more than you did,
apparently.
I was able to,
I was able to duck out earlier than you because you were writing and I was not.
I've got some more long-term stuff working on.
But it's the finals.
And we have what's called media hospitality.
And you walk back into the hotel, all your media friends are hanging out, drinking, having some late food.
I mean, I had to go make the rounds.
It's what I do.
I'm a man of the people, Logan.
You know this.
You had to indulge.
I understand.
I didn't realize how much of a man with the people.
people you actually are like like i mean i know you're head of the pbw a and all of yada yada yada yada
but like it's it's one thing to like see it on emails but it's a whole other thing to see it
in person like you were out here just locked in talking to everybody adam silver's over here
such as such is over here you know we're you're just in the mix man i you know uh kissing baby shaking
hands. That's that's me.
All right, man.
I wish we could have done this in person, though. It's kind of a bummer. We did talk about this.
We tried to figure out the logistics with Tori.
Just like, you and I are in separate hotels, both of us in very sparse rooms with not exactly
a lot of death space to this stuff. So we've got two cans and a string stretched across
a three block stretch of downtown Oklahoma City. And we're going to make this one.
We were really excited after we saw Bill and Zach Lowe do their pod in person in Indiana.
And we're like, yeah, let's replicate that.
And then we realized like, oh, yeah, we don't have like, it's not in the budget to have a suite like Bill does.
So, you know, we couldn't make that happen.
But anyways, the game five of the NBA finals was a doozy, right?
I mean, the Thunder take it.
J. Dub was the story of the game.
We're going to get to him in a second.
it, but there's a whole bunch of storylines. There's Halliburton's injury, finals MVP discussion.
Maybe we'll talk a little Desmond Bain for 45 minutes because that's what Howard wants to do for
some reason. But let's start with J. Dub, right? 40 points. It seems like his breakout game in a lot
of ways, but specifically in the finals. I was trying to find like a good comp for this type of game
and this type of coming of age,
I kind of thought, you know,
I was trying to shoehorned Kobe game four of the 2000 NBA finals,
also against the Indiana Pacers.
But I felt like that was a little bit too shoehorned in.
But it felt like an arrival.
We don't get many of those type of arrival games in the finals from, you know,
third year guys.
But it was really impressive to see him, you know,
he got it to the lane, got his shots.
Really, the game finally kind of slowed down for him in the postseason or specifically in this finals.
What do you think of his performance?
And what does it do for the MVP discussion, right?
That was, that was Shay's going into this game.
And it seems a little murky, but like he put, Jada put his step on this particular series.
He was awesome.
The NBA put out their post game notes.
he's the fifth youngest player to score 40 or more points in a finals game.
Fifth youngest to score 40 plus in a finals game.
So he's 24.
The only guys who were younger than him to score 40 plus in a finals game.
Magic Johnson, who was 20 years old in game 6 in 1980.
Rick Berry, 23 years old with three games of 40 plus in 1967.
Russell Westbrook, Thunder Legend.
Russell Westbrook, 23 in game 4 in 2012.
Jerry West, 23 years old in Game 2, 1962.
So there you go.
Magic Johnson, Rick Berry, Russell Westbrook, Jerry West, and now Jalen Williams,
as the youngest ever with 40 plus.
That's a pretty freaking good list, man.
Like, that is, that is, that's rare error.
That's awesome.
He was awesome.
And he was awesome real time.
This wasn't one of those, you know, like, occasionally the NBA,
it's like, it'd be a stretch to say there's a quiet 40.
So does a guy I'll have a quiet 25, even a quiet 30.
Once you get to 40, it's kind of hard for it to be quiet anyway.
But like every point of this felt like it was a loud,
40. That's a loud ass arena, by the way, too.
Like, I don't know. You and I, like, we don't hit every arena anymore. So I feel, I don't know
that I'm qualified to declare this. It's got to be the loudest arena in the NBA. It was
definitely, and this is no disrespect to the fans in Indy who have been fantastic. But
Oklahoma is another level. And every time, I'm just like, I cannot think straight. It's so
fucking loud in here. So Pacers even mentioned it. Like, they, they're, they've, they've, they've,
They've said it.
I hadn't been to OKC since 2019.
And never a game of this magnitude at OKC.
I was sitting next to Mark Spears, VanScape.
And he, thank God, he gave me some earplugs.
And even that, my head was ringing.
Like, I couldn't.
I could not.
I kind of needed a moment at a half time to where it was like,
I didn't get back up until, like, I think 10 minutes left in the third quarter
because I just needed a moment to just kind of gather myself
because my head was ringing and it hadn't felt like that before.
It felt like, I don't know, man.
I've never heard anything that loud before.
I'm sure maybe like, I know some people in our mentions,
I was Sacramento in like 2000 and such and such and such and I'm like, okay.
All right, guys.
All right, Sacramento was really fucking loud back then, by the way.
But like, I don't know any other comp to this, right?
Like even for playoff, playoff intensity and playoff crowds are one thing.
Maybe Oracle in 07 or 2013 or maybe in that early run was probably a comp.
But it was just, it was a sustained yelling.
And it was, I was like, are they piping noise?
No, that's just people yelling.
That's just the people all.
And they're on top of you.
And then they have just, oh, my good.
It comes to waves.
It's organic there.
And it's sustained.
It almost never calms down.
there's no dead spots. Part of that's because like the Pacers couldn't shut them up either because
they just didn't have the game in them last night to do it. But man, they were awesome. But,
but yeah, Jalen Williams, whether he was, you know, scoring from the outside, it was mostly
attacking. And it's like, he's, it's funny with Jalen Williams because even like in postseason
balloting, there were people who were like, how did you have him as this on this spot? He's, he's a
guard. And it's like, actually, no, he's a forward. Lou Dorts always just does the guard. And
Jayle Williams is the forward. And it's funny because you look at him and you think he's your
standard like six six shooting guard type size. But he's, he's a big six six. And he's a long six.
And he just, when he's attacking the rim, it's like he's six, nine. And they just couldn't keep
him out of the paint. They, they, you know, not in the half court, not in transition. He was, he was
incredible. He was aggressive. He was super confident.
Again, for a guy who's 24, he's not playing like a guy who's in his first finals.
Like, none of them are.
Like, that's part of the story of this series, right?
Like, the Thunder, they weren't rattled after losing game one virtually at the buzzer.
They weren't rattled at being down to one with a kind of a dud of a game three in indie.
They're just never down.
They're never rattled.
And here they are, you know, one win shy of the championship.
That was crazy.
Like, you talk about the margins of a finals.
Like, even in game, we were talking pretty.
game, I think it was an amino
Hassan just about how game four just kind of
was one of those games
where they're on the brink and then they just
take control of the series in the final two
minutes. That's kind of a precedent
in that way. I think
I want to stay on J-Dub for a second
because I feel like his game is perfect
a perfect compliment to
SGA, but not just because
of a game-wise, but like
we talk about the crowd, right?
And last night, he has a game
specific to that.
crowd where he can galvanize that group. There's a lot of players, I feel like, in the league.
And I think that you brought up Russell Westbrook, and I think he was another type of player
for that OKC crowd where his play can galvanize it in a way that, like, SGA is just steady.
He's just a steady guy. Not to say he doesn't make exciting plays, but he's very much a steady guy.
There was a and one, I think, to start the third quarter from Jdub, where he gets the crowd going.
he's playing with the crowd.
He's amping it all the way up.
And that makes a five-point lead from OKC talk,
feel like a 20-point lead.
And that was something that the Thunder needed throughout the game last night,
because even with Halliburton's injury,
which we'll get into a second, in a second,
even with Pascal Seaccom hitting timely shots,
it felt like even when the Pacers got close,
they didn't have a chance because it didn't feel like
they could overcome not only the Thunder, but that OKC crowd that J. Dub was just galvanizing time
after time with his play. This was such a weird game, Logan. I think we talked about this
briefly afterward where it was like, even in like in the first half, the Thunder like were
clearly, clearly in control early. And they get, you know, they get up by like 10 by 12. Maybe
they got up by 14 or something at some point. It felt like they were up by 20. And then there were times
that they were up by 18
and it felt like it was only like
six because the Pacers had been coming at them hard.
And like the Pacers just will not die
and they got it down to what like two at some point,
maybe early in the fourth and then they just committed
that flurry of turnovers.
I think they had like eight turnovers in the fourth quarter.
Like this thing was like that I felt to me the entire night
like the Thunder were dominating the game
and yet the Pacers were somehow still lingering
with Halliburton's bad calf,
with Halliburton barely scoring.
You got a T.J. McConnell game.
T.J. McConnell, like five minutes stretch.
I don't know. It was a T.J. McConnell game. But, you know.
Put some respect on T.J. McConnell's name, dude.
It was like a T.J. quarter.
You know what? You know what? I'm just going to say this.
It was a T.J. McConnell game.
And I'm saying that for one person only, and he might edit our stories.
So shout out to T.J. McConnell and Matt Dollinger.
Matt Dollinger is, I've been slacking.
him because he's any of my piece that's going to come out on the ringer.com right now.
He is just beside himself with sadness.
Our editor who may or may not have grown up in Indiana as a big Pacers fan and definitely
loves him some team of Jay McConnell.
So yes, it's the TJ McConnell game.
I don't even care that they lost.
It's the TJ McConnell game.
That's canon.
Yeah.
Yeah.
No, let's get back to the finals MVP.
Enough TJ McConnell talk.
I mean, he doesn't want to have it.
I mean, he's in the running for finals MVP, right?
I mean, he's right there.
He's going to be right up there with Jerry West
is the second player ever
to win a finals MVP on a losing team.
So, you know, forget LeBron, forget all those other people.
Let's put T.J. McConnell in there.
But let's talk about finals MVP right now
because we talked about this briefly after the game
as we were waiting for Thunder players
to go to pressers.
So if you look at the stats,
SGA wins, right?
he's averaging 30.
He's shooting a better percentage.
But when we talk about the argument for J-dub,
this is what we talked about last night,
was the signature game argument, right?
Now, SGA had the signature game in game four.
This was a signature game in game five for J-dub.
What gives in game six to,
it's because no matter what the stats is,
it's a bit of a narrative award,
the finals MVP, right?
It can be.
Who, how does,
who is,
Game six not only, or however this goes, not only a competition, not only for the title,
but for the finals MVP for both of those guys, should the Thunder win?
So the debate started in earnest last night, I think, for the first time, right?
Which is appropriate, right?
And it's in a two-two series.
You're not really having this discussion.
But you start hearing chatter about it last night.
People start talking about a little on social media last night.
There's 11 voters for finals MVP, and you don't know who they are until the NBA hands out
those ballots in like the fourth quarter of the of the championship game. So we have no idea.
So before anybody overreacts anything, you and I are about to say, I just want to stipulate.
Neither of us are probably voting. They give it to folks who were definitely there for all seven games.
I'm going on after this. All six or whatever. Yeah. You're in and out. I'm not getting it.
Yeah. So we don't know who's voting. I think it's damn close right now. I do think SGA has the lead
based partially on the role he plays for that team and partially on the higher per game stats
and all that. Signature games are a tricky thing. I do think that when you're in a two, two
series and the series is hanging in the balance, and SG had a great game last night, but Jalen Williams
had the game last night, right? So I think that will linger in people's minds. I do think,
like, okay, they're going back to Indy for game six, and it may just be who has the bigger game
six at this stage. Like, I think they're both worthy. So real quick, the rundown, SGA in the
series is averaging 32 points, four to a half of rebounds, five assists. J-dub is 26 points, so six
points per game less, five point six rebounds, so slightly more rebounds. Four point two assists, which,
you know, for the guy who's not the quote unquote point guard of the team, he's not that far behind
SGA for assists in the series.
Shooting splits, SGA shooting 47% from the field, 30% from three, not great.
92% from the line, and it's 46 of 50 on free throws.
Like, he's doing what he does.
He's getting the line a ton.
J-dub, 45% from the field, 32% on threes also not great.
83% on free throws.
What I say, 32% on threes, and then 83% on free throws.
I made it from misspoke.
SGA's got 12 steel.
to Jdubs 4.
SGA's got nine blocks
to zero for Jdub.
SGA's got 15 turnovers to Jdubs 11.
Also, by the way, just field goal
attempts in the series.
So just who's been carrying more of the,
shouldering more of the load, as you would expect,
SGA 116 to 94.
Jdub's also had a lot of defense.
I mean, they've both taken their turns
Tyrese Halliburton.
Yeah.
I think J.W. is kind of the bigger defensive force among the two of them on this team.
But like, again, SGA's blocks are off the charts.
This is another thing that I was thinking about last night when I'm thinking about
SGA's case.
Like J. Dub had the great scoring night and he'd play really good defense.
But there were times where there were loals within the Oklahoma City offense,
both offensively and defensively.
Like you talk about the runs that,
the Pacers would make.
And I look back on it.
Every time the Pacers made a run,
SGA was the calming force
for that Oklahoma City offense, right?
He either, he had a great block
or I think they went home.
I got to check.
I'll put it in the story,
but, like, when Pascal Seaccombe,
like, gets the lead down to four,
there's a hockey assist from Shea, right?
when I think McConnell gets it down to like two,
there's an SGA like three to respond, right?
Or there's like a key block from SGA at that time, right?
He was really that calming force.
Like if you, he really catapulted to them to a win because like when they got it down
to two like you were saying, SGA makes the hockey assist to Jalen for that three
and then they go on a 15 to four run to close out the game.
Like it was one of those things where.
He may not have scored as much, but his impact was felt.
I think he had four blocks last night.
Like, SGA was all over the floor in a way that he may not have had the scoring output.
And he was not the story of the game.
But I feel like he facilitated the story of the game happening, if you will.
Yes.
Yeah.
And part of what makes SGA, the MVP of the league during the regular season,
part of what makes him one of the greatest players in the league right now,
he's a he's you know he's a guy who can lead the league in scoring every year if he wants to but he empowers
his teammates right and the thunder are far from a one-man show it is is their overall talent in
depth that we've been praising throughout and you know you know Jalen Williams doesn't get to do what
he does without Shee Gilges Alexander being um you know supportive and a facilitator and a guy
who doesn't need to dominate the ball or dominate the offense on on every possession and so like
he deserves a ton of credit for making room for that, being a great teammate, being a great leader.
And you've heard that throughout his time in Oklahoma, that that's kind of the way he's wired.
And it's part of what makes this team great.
You know, like back to the MVP discussion too.
Like so I started looking like, all right, because it felt like Jalen Williams had led a bunch of games in scoring now.
It's actually split.
He's led them twice in five games.
Shea's led them three times.
And they each did it once in a loss.
So, like, Shea's highest scoring game was 38 in game one, which they lost.
A game that, by the way, like, again, like.
They were the better team most of that game.
They were the better team for, like, all but about a handful of minutes of that game, like, down to this.
And so, and he's the reason.
So, like, that very easily could have gone the other way.
So he scores 38 in the first game.
That was a team high.
He has a team high 34 in the second game, which was obviously a win.
Game three, which they lost.
Jill and Williams is 26.
Shea has 24.
And then Shea led in game 4 with 35 to Jaila Williams is 27.
And then it goes Jalen Williams with the 40 last night to Shea's 31.
So like I think it's pretty close right now.
I'm not sure which I think I probably lean slightly Shea for finals MVP at the moment.
But it's really hard to do that with the memory, the very, very fresh memory of Jalen Williams' game five because that was freaking awesome.
That's why I say it's a narrative award, right?
Just put the stats out there.
But it's about the feeling that you get in the moment based on the performance that has happened, right?
Depends on the year.
Like, sometimes it's definitive, right?
Like, any year that LeBron's team won it, you're pretty damn sure LeBron is the whole freaking reason, right?
Yeah.
I think there are years where it's clear, and I think there are years where you got to kind of get into the stats and, like, which game kind of tipped the series.
is it, you know, and was it bigger than the stats?
Was there anything else to take into consider?
Like there are years where you're right.
There's some narrative influence.
I think obviously the I Gadala year is probably a prime example.
This is more like a recency one though, right?
Because if, because Shea's game you could make the argument in game for was like a harder get, right?
Because they're the pacers of winning the entire game and then Shea just turns it all right down the stretch, right?
Setting the stage for J-dub.
Not to say it was a hard game.
I mean, it was an easier game to pull out because game fives are just are just swing games that are hard.
But the balancing act of what are we going to choose is the better game.
If you, if you're going to choose a better game, like you're probably going to choose, you know, the flashier one or the one that you most recently, you know, saw.
And, you know, that's what I'm taking.
This is not a narrative award.
this year. This is probably like a reason to see like whoever wins back to back to back,
right? Like it's it's such an interesting, um, the way to look at it this year because I mean,
they're kind of at a, uh, they're kind of at an impasse right now when you look at just,
just the games that they've had, uh, in this series. It's a, I've just also been blown away
just like from the, the team that, because I, coming back to Oklahoma City, you know, I'm constantly
thinking about how this team stacks up with the uh the the the kd westbrook card in years right and
those comparisons are inevitably going to be there but i've just been blown away by the chemistry of
this okayc team right just like you know uh chet after the game was like we have to give flowers to jdub right
and it was in earnest um same with um sGA like they it seemed like they were really really excited
in a very young, earnest type of way for their teammate.
And in a league full of egos and a league full of,
I need to get mine, I need to get paid, I need to do all these.
This team has like great AAU, like we're on the road together vibes,
where they're just on the road and they're just kicking it
and they're really trying to see, you know, each other do great.
And, you know, you talk to some of the OKC officials, like,
they talk about how this is an environment in Shea's ilk, right?
Like you talk about a guy like Chet Hongren who came in with a little bit of an ego,
but he's just kind of just falling in line under Shea, right?
Talk about J-dub, balling out.
But like, this is still in large part, Shea's team.
But the chemistry is just amazing.
And I don't think it's forced.
I think these guys really love each other.
That's so rare in this NBA.
And you kind of have two teams that have that with the Pacers and the third.
And I've just been blown away by just like team camaraderie after years of just seen just, I don't know, just you know the locker room that I've been, that I've come from Howard and just, you know, how it can occasionally get a little.
So it was just good to see like just a cool little environment where like, you know, they're just so young and they're just so earnest and just so happy to see each other shine.
Yeah, there's like a young innocence to them, right? Like, you know, egos and contracts.
petty whatever bullshit hasn't gotten in the way yet and maybe never will right they don't all
have to go down that road you know um i think that goes to too though like we sometimes i'll say it's
like we joke about it like this team is a little bit feels bland at times not as not the way
they play basketball just like you're not getting a lot like they're pretty they're pretty
conservative they might give you long answers and by the way jalen williams on on the podium is
awesome like that guy like i think i counted 12 questions he took last night um
And answered them all pretty elaborately.
Like there was only one that he kind of rebuffed a little.
And it was about trying to like put in perspective like,
is this a coming of age game or like whatever?
Where does, you know, what does this do for you?
Even that answer was thoughtful though.
When he was like, I just can't talk about it right now because I just don't know.
I'm so young.
And I'm like, wow, this is very, very mature answer for a guy in his early 20s.
The shortest answer he gave was still the product of a thoughtful, just process where it was like,
and he was almost apologetic like I can get back to you on that one sometime down the road.
Like I just, I'm not, so he wasn't saying it any kind of rude way. He wasn't being curt.
But they, they don't necessarily give away a lot as a team. I think that that's kind of a typical thunder thing.
They're kind of like the old spurs where it's like we're, we're playing everything close to the vest.
But there, there's like, there's a lot. There you can see there's a lot going on there that they're
not letting you you in on but um they're very endearing right like i know people get a little cynical
about or a little just jaded about you know the the group post game interviews with nick gallo from
um the local network here and you know all the all the yucking it up there they do it with the
they do it on the national broadcast too right where it's always like it's never just one guy doing
the post game it's all them doing the post game interview on the court but there's something
endearing to that too um we can't we can't get too dismissive and jaded
right off the bat.
But yeah, these guys all still like each other and support each other and are having fun together
while they're just dominating the crap out of the league.
And that's refreshing.
Because yes, you and I have seen some rather tense Warriors championships.
And of course, back in the day, I saw some rather tense Laker championships with Shaq and Kobe.
And so not every team does it at this level while still liking each other and all being on the same page.
It's early, but like, you know, it seems.
And to the point about like them being bland,
being out here, I don't know necessarily know that they're,
I don't think that they're bland necessarily.
I think that they, there's a combination of things.
One, they're like, this is like the gen Ziest team of all time, right?
They're always on their phones.
They're always just like, you know, sending memes.
They're very much the, uh, the, the Pinterest generation of a team.
Um, but I do think that they're interesting.
But I think that they're like kind of closed off just because in the sense of Gen Z's as being having a barrier to the world while also being chronically online.
But also they have a like you said, they have a media staff which is like, nah, this is happening.
Stop.
We don't.
We don't go down that.
We don't.
But I'm just saying that's what it is.
But I think that the more of what I'm getting at is they speak to their generation.
I wrote a story about Gen Z.
couple weeks back. And the Oklahoma City Thunder are the face of whatever this new generation is
and how they act. They're very in tune with whatever that is right now. And it's the first time
where I feel old watching a team. You know, I just, I feel like I'm getting older. I'm not quite
you yet, Beck, but like I'm feeling older. But I feel like this is like the first team where,
you know, they're speaking to a younger generation and that younger generation understands them
wholeheartedly and we're still trying to figure them out. But whoever they're speaking to,
they're speaking too loud and clearly. And I know I'm getting really philosophical and waxing poetic,
but that's what I get from this type of team. Yeah, it's funny because I think about like,
you know, if you grow up in the digital age, it's not just that you're digitally savvy. It's
also that you're hyper aware of the fact that everything is being consumed and judged and whatever.
And so some of that might just be them being, you know,
conservative based on the idea that we know that everything we say and do is going to be
you know scrutinized to the nth degree and maybe there's caution about i think it's mostly just the way
they're wired though i think it's just the it happens to be the personality of the guys that this
team drafted or acquired right um there's there's not like a big time shit talker on this team
or a shit stirr on this team there's nobody who's really going to get out there and like
Lou dora got some shit starting in him though he do got some shit started in him he just
Lou Doord, he just files a shit out of you.
He has some, like, I will start some shit if need be.
Don't trip.
Yeah, but I think, like, if we were ranking guys in the series by, like, I don't know,
how emphatic they are on the court in a way, like how much personality they show after they've done stuff.
Like, it might, like, T.J. McConnell might win that award in the city.
Actually, it's obviously Tyrese, right?
Like, Tyrese is the biggest shit stir of this postseason.
T.J. McConnell might be second.
I don't know how far down the list we have to go before we actually get to the thunder.
Again, like they kind of play it close to the best.
They're not out there trying to just like cause issues with the other team or each other or the reps or whatever else.
Hell, Carlisle's ranking way ahead of them.
Carla, Carlisle was all over the refs last night, man.
He was a testy Carlisle.
He got a tech after he defended the refs, which was amazing.
It was awesome.
Yes, he goes out of his way to do the Scott Foster.
like Apologia. I've never known how to
I just made it sound like Apollonia.
Like he goes out of his way. Did you watch Purple Rain? Did you watch Purple Rain?
I saw it in the theaters. I saw it in the theaters, Logan. All right. There you go.
Damn. Okay. Well, shit.
So like he went out of his way to defend Scott Foster, which by the way,
I'm just going to say it. Y'all can hate me for it. Rick Carlisle's right and all of you
who are like,
fretting about Scott Foster
and like spinning conspiracy theories,
you're all wrong.
The extender.
Yeah,
it's all stupid.
So, yeah,
Carlisle goes from that to be like in an absolute first quarter meltdown.
I was looking at the monitor at one point
so I could see when Carlisle was being held back
by pretty much like every single member of his staff.
And at one point,
it looked like Jenny Busick went to him to say like,
you know, yo, you're going to be all right here.
He's like, I'm good, I'm good, I'm good, I'm good.
Yeah, yeah. I could see his, like, I was reading lips and he was like, I'm all right. I'm all right.
But it was like, it was actually like a welfare check going on there in real time.
Howard, sometimes I got to do that with you sometimes. Like, you know, you're going off. It's like during our hour and a half conversations on the phone.
I'm like, Howard, Howard, you good? I'm good. I'm good. I'm good. I'm all right. Damn it. I'm good. Fuck you.
I may have done that to you a couple times too. I'm sorry.
So last night, you were in the Thunder Press Conference primarily.
I was in the Pacer's Press Conference primarily.
They're in separate rooms.
Carlisle, so the very first question to Carlisle was naturally about Halliburton because
Halliburton's hurt.
And, you know, not only had a bad game, but like he had a bad game because he's got a bad
calf, which leads to natural curiosity about like, can Halliburton, you know, hold up and
make it a bigger impact on game six.
So the first question, of course, of course, to Carlisle's about how.
Albert. Second question was about Jalen Williams having a huge game and about the inability to stop him,
which again, natural progression of questions. Carlisle's about like a sentence or two into his
response on the J-dub question, the second question. And he goes, nobody's asking about
turnovers. We had 23 turnovers for 32 points. That's the game. And so he's, he couldn't wait
to talk about the turnovers, which, okay, fine. And I think probably the room would have
gotten around to the questions about turnovers.
We were only on the second question.
And the first one was the obvious one about Halliburton.
And the second one was like a pretty, you know, obvious one about Jalen Williams.
But like, yeah, Carlisle was in fine Carlisle form last.
Listen, listen, Rick, I love you.
I love watching.
You've coached your ass off throughout this.
He's awesome.
He's awesome.
He's awesome.
Great.
But I just want to say, Rick, turnovers don't sell sexy hotlines.
Headlines, bro.
It's just like it doesn't.
I'm sorry.
Axe Dahlinger.
It's not, it's like, say, you know, 23 turnovers.
That's not going to sell any papers, buddy.
It's not going to sell any subs.
We got to, we got to put some sauce on it.
I mean, they did get close in the fourth two, like two point game or whatever.
And then like just a flurry of turnovers.
Again, I think they had eight in the fourth quarter.
This is the story of the game.
But I'm just saying, like, we're trying to sell a fucking fledgling journalism right now.
And he's fucking wants to talk about turnovers.
It's how it worked.
But also the first two questions were valid.
And I think we would have gotten around to it eventually.
So, but, you know, it just, this is more about Carlisle being testing than it is about
journalists, Logan.
Come on.
Yo, yeah, but he was testing earlier when he was talking about Scott Foster.
Our guy Sam Avic wanted to ask a follow up.
He's like, I'm not talking about it anymore.
I'm like, come on, dude.
Come on.
Come on.
Oh, man.
Anyways, let's talk about Halliburton who,
calf in the finals, injured his calf early in this game wasn't the same talking.
And, you know, me and you have, you've been around the game longer than I have.
been around a minute.
Getting a calf injury in this type of environment doesn't spell good things.
And anytime you hear a calf, depending on the severity, you're kind of like, I don't know
what's next.
And I don't want to, and I'm knocking on wood right now with Halliburton.
But like, what can we reasonably expect from him in game six?
He was hobbled throughout the night.
He didn't really have his explosiveness throughout game five.
And if I'm looking and I'm quarterbacking this thing, it feels like.
The Pacers are the most equipped to deal with a game that Halliburton isn't good or effective in more than most teams.
But it's still a finals game, right?
What gives with Halliburton?
How is this going to affect him the rest of the series?
You were in the Pacer's presser.
I didn't really get to see Halliburton other than what he was doing on the floor.
What is the read from Pacerland about what is going to?
on with him at this moment.
Just kind of resigned to the fact that he's not 100% and is not going to be.
And you get a lot of the, you know, again, this was Carlisle, a lot of like, oh, everybody's
banged up this time of year kind of stuff.
But it's like, eh, there's banged up.
And then there's like can't move so well out there.
And it's obvious, right?
Like Halliburton, I know like his game, we talked about this week's ago with Raja,
like his game is not like, oh, dribble, dribble, dribble, dribble, blow by you kind of thing.
right. He's not a blowby type of point guard in general. That's not how he gets his points. It's not how he makes an impact most of the time. But part of his game, part of any guy, you know, who's a primary playmaker is going to be breaking down the defense on some level. And he just wasn't even attacking last night. Like you could, you could see it. And he was noticeably limping out of the arena after game two here. And then nevertheless comes back and leads them to to a win a game.
three and he played really well in that game.
He was okay and four.
And then like last night it was just really clear.
Like I don't know if he aggravated it.
Like we haven't learned a lot about the nature of the injury or when it was first hurt,
maybe re-hurt, all that stuff.
So it's just kind of a, you know, it's the stuff you expect.
Carlisle saying everybody's banged up this time of year.
Halliburton saying, whatever, I'm playing in game six.
and I'll do better in game six.
You know, there is a 72 hour break built in.
When you get to this stage of the series,
when you get to the one-one-one part of the 22-1-1-1,
every two-game span is spaced out by three days, basically, right?
So they traveled probably first thing last night
as soon as they left their media availabilities.
They got all day to day.
There's a practice day tomorrow where no team will even practice.
They'll both do film sessions,
then they'll meet with the media.
and then you got all day Thursday up until game time.
So, like, it's a pretty long stretch.
But when I say that, like, it just depends on the nature of the injury, right?
Like, maybe three days off is enough to, like, make him feel better for game six.
Or maybe this is a deeper injury that doesn't heal until weeks off.
And it's just a matter of him having to gut it out again.
But we don't know enough to know what that means.
I mean, you referenced, you know, Kobe's Game 4 back in 2000.
and that was one where, you know, Jalen Rose undercuts him.
He turns his ankle, like a really bad, as bad of an ankle sprain as you're going to get, sits an entire game.
And then comes back in game four when nobody expected him to even play.
Like, that's a, that was a different kind of thing.
But an interesting analogy just for finals sake, because like we don't have like serious injuries in the finals too often to reference.
I just say, we'll say this.
If Halliburton's not close to 100%, like I just.
think they're toast at that point.
He's like, this is an ensemble, right?
Tyrese, Halliburton, and Seacum, those are the two tent pulls of that offense.
And it's a lot of ball movement.
And it's a lot of just getting each other open for good shots.
And it's, you know, Neesmith attacking at times, Seacom attacking at times.
But it's got to start somewhere.
And it starts with Halliburton.
And, you know, yeah, you can get a nice six-minute burst from T.G. McConnell here and there.
and maybe you get a NM Hard game or whatever,
but someone's got to initiate.
And, you know, Tyrese Halberton's the heart and soul of this team.
If he's that limited as he was last night,
it's hard to see how they pull this out.
I'm concerned.
Not only for the injury, but like,
it's not like the Pacers play an offense conducive
to kind of hiding an injury like that.
If it's a lower leg injury, they get up and run, right?
And that's going to be something that test your body.
It's so wild that.
you know, the Pacer's offense has done such a great job of like just keeping the pace and what it is and running guys out of the gym and run.
And now it seems like that's kind of the demise of their own roster right now because they are, you know, expending so much energy.
But you're right.
Like I think that this Halliburton injury is just really, really concerning because no matter what he, his stats say he is the heart and soul of that.
offense, right, where, like, he gets them up and down the floor. He's the one that facilitates. He's the one
that gets guys in position. I mean, we can, they can pray for another T.J. McConnell game, but that's
not going to have the same effect as the Tyrese Halliburton bully healthy game in the finals, right? Like,
it's just not that. They're going to need a monster game from Siakum. But, dude, when the thunder
turn on their defensive pressure, it is alarming how great. How, how, how, oh, my.
God, like that first half, the Thunder couldn't even, excuse me, the Pacers couldn't even get a shot off.
I don't know how many like shot clock violations or near shot clock violations there were,
but there were, I counted at least two or three in that first half.
And they could just, the Thunder could just turn it on.
And they have Hartstein got some big rebounds.
Chet was getting some big rebounds.
Also, Miles Turner got in a foul trouble, which wasn't ideal, right?
the Pacers have a lot that they
a lot that they have to figure out going into game six
but it starts with Halliburton but they got to figure out
how Halliburton or not they got to figure out that Thunder defense
which good luck with that is all I'll say
it's going to be tough in game six man I just
I don't want to make hyperboleys because there's
or make declarations because this has just been such
an unpredictable series
But man, it felt like the Thunder took control of it last night.
Our colleague Michael Pina had this in his, you know, a quick turn gamer after the game story after the game last night.
The Pacer's turnover rate was 23.7%.
That was its second highest of the entire season.
And the highest one was game one of the finals.
So like here's the Pacers who I think that's one of their hallmarks is they're a pretty low turnover team.
and their two highest turnover games of the entire season,
regular season and postseason,
are in this series against the Thunder.
Like they're just, I mean,
we saw it throughout the Western Conference playoffs too.
It was, I joked about like in that series against Minnesota,
like I'm sitting there on the couch.
Like I'm jumping for the Timberwolves.
Like stop dribbling.
You're going to have the ball's about to get poked away.
Oh, there it goes.
There they go the other direction.
Like they just, they're relentless.
At their best, they are just absolutely relentless.
And you can't penetrate.
And you can't dribble and you can't get anything done.
And they were just freaking locked in last night.
And it's one thing to see it on TV, but to see that shit in person is just diabolical.
And especially in Oklahoma where every one of those stops, there's just this freaking explosion in the arena.
It's just, they're just really impressive.
Like we've seen some great defensive teams over the years, but I don't know that there's one where it's as emphatic and as relentless as this one.
where you almost are feeling sorry for the other team that they just can't even make a pass
or a dribble without the ball being poked away and it's, you know, fast break the other direction.
I think somewhere along the way here, the Thunder just, it's not that they woke up, right?
Like, game one was like a rough end for them.
They dominated the game they lost anyway.
Kind of a dud in game three, enough so that a lot of people thought, okay, the Pacers are actually going to win this series.
Like a lot of people, including some of our colleagues, expected the Pacers to win game four.
But I think somewhere along the way that the Thunder kind of found their identity again,
like, all right, like we're just going to lock these guys down and that's going to generate our offense.
And we'll just go from there.
And the last couple of games have just been super impressive.
Man, it's just, it's you can't take a finals game for granted, man.
I know the Pacers are just kicking their ass that they just couldn't close out game four, man.
because you just can't give away that type of game.
Who wins game six, buddy?
Don't want to be prisoner of the moment,
but this certainly feels like the thunder are ready to close out.
And then some of that too is just like we don't know
what Halliburton's ability will be physically on Thursday night.
And so based on what we saw last night,
based on the momentum that it feels like,
and momentum is a funny thing, right?
Like this is this is total like overreaction theater.
We do this in every single series all the time.
The momentum seems like it's with one team right up until the point.
Are you saying we're hacks, man?
Are you calling us hacks?
Is that what you doing?
No, I'm saying we're human, Logan.
Okay.
All of us, media, fans, everybody.
We all overreact to the latest thing we saw.
It's a thing.
But the Thunder seemed to have found that gear again.
And on top of it.
And also, you know, they've won an indie.
that's like I don't think winning on the road is an issue for them at all.
And more than anything, it's the doubts about Halliburton.
Like the story of this postseason in a lot of ways has been the Pacers just defying the odds to get here at all.
And yes, to those who, Thunder fans who are annoyed, especially because I think it was part of the headline on one of my Tyree's stories last week about like the story of the season being the Pacers.
There's a lot to the idea that the Pacers were the story of the finals in the sense that no one expected them to be here.
Yes, of course.
Is the Thunderwin the championship, they are the story of the season.
It's more that the Pacers are one of the unlikeliest finals teams we've seen in a while,
and they're here because of Tyrese Halliburton's heroics, all these incredible comebacks,
all these incredible last minute or last second shots and buzzer beaters.
And so I say that to say, like, without Tyrese Halliburton's magic,
which I don't think happens on a bad calf,
it's just really hard to see them extending the series.
And yeah, I think the Thunder are probably closing this thing out on Thursday.
The only thing that gives me pause on that is, you know,
Thunder or a young team, it's really hard to close on the road, man.
It is really hard, no matter what the circumstances is, but like, this is a very young team.
They have it.
It's one thing to, like, get the 3-2 series lead, but it's another thing to follow.
through on that promise. I still picked a thunder, but I do want to hedge a little bit and just say
like, hey, man, it's really hard and they have been susceptible to fumbling the bag, if you will. So,
I mean, Thunder is six, but it's going to be a tough. Yeah, it won't be easy. It won't be easy. It
won't be easy. That Pacers crowd's going to be really fired up and they've been awesome. And I think,
you know, you're going to see, you're going to see the Pacers at their best. Like, they're not going to go
down without a fight. It's just that from the beginning, and it's the reason that most of us
picked Thunder and five in the first place, the Oklahoma's just got more talent and depth and bodies
to throw at you, and their defense is just ferocious. The Pacers, to their credit, have gone from
a team that was this supercharged offense where defense was kind of an afterthought, and it was like,
are they ever going to be able to, you know, have a sustained postseason run without that deed? They've
come so far as a team defensively over the last year or so, but it's just not the level of Oklahoma,
because nobody is. And I just think it's all that too much to overcome. Yeah, look at you,
man. You're going to, if all goes the way you just said it is, you're going to cover two championship
celebrations in Indianapolis. It's crazy. Both in a game six, 25 years apart. How about that?
I did try to figure this out over the course of the last week just to make myself feel really old
because it hit me when we got to Indy. I'm like, man, I was here for the finals in 2000. And I looked
around the room. I'm like, how many other people were here for the finals in 2000? And there's a lot
of like NBA officials and like cameramen and others, my buddy Victor from ESPN, who's longtime
cameraman who we go all the way back to the Laker days. There's some people. But I was trying to
think of like print media or primarily print media. And I think it's only four of,
of us who were there in 2000 for Lakers Pacers who are here for Thunder Pacers. It's, it's me,
Steve Ashburner, who's at NBA.com, Sean Powell, who's MBA.com and NBA TV, and the legend,
David Aldridge from The Athletic. As far as I know, it's just the four of us who are here now
or will be in there, be at Indy and we're in Indy in 2000. So yeah, that's weird.
Damn.
You try to push back on my old jokes and then you just like, you know, confirm it.
I'm my own worst enemy.
Been that way in my entire life.
All right.
We're almost out of time.
But like, do you want to give like five minutes of the Desmond Bain trade?
You're the one that put it on there.
We haven't given our take of the Desmond Bain trade.
How do you feel about the Desmond Bain trade?
I mean, it was a, it was a fairly facetious suggestion given that we were talking in the wake of game
five of the finals. But I mean, it was a, it's funny too because like, and I'm glad that,
I think Tom Ziller already knocked down the whole thing. Like, please, can we stop calling everything
a blockbuster? This was not a blockbuster. A Desmond Bain trade is not a blockbuster. I think he said it was a,
oh God, what did he say was? Like a, uh, God, fuck. What was the other like, uh, video store back in the
shout out for Tom Ziller. He's a legend. Fucking look, look at the, what the fuck? What do you mean? How are you
fuck that up? How are you going to come on, man? I just gave him the shout out. How am I fucking it up?
I just forgot he got a great line about they weren't blockbuster. They were like,
you got to follow doing the line, my dog. All right. Fuck. Yeah, sorry. I'm just saying,
shout on Tom. Okay. Jesus. The listeners should know that because Logan's got a plane to catch,
we did this a little early. And so like, you know, I'm not at my sharpest. You expect me to
remember stuff I read like an hour ago? Put some respect on Tom Ziller's name. I just did.
shout up to Ziller.
Everybody's go subscribe to his newsletter.
It's not a blockbuster.
Desmond Bain is not a big enough name.
Like I know a lot of draft exchange hands and stuff, but calm down people.
Oh my God, bro.
The amount of like fucking armchair GMs that were on the timeline after that trade,
I'm like, bro, give me a break.
Stop.
Relax.
Listen, I like it for Orlando in that, yes, they desperately needed a shooting.
Yes, Desmond Bain's.
a two-way player. He's, he's, you know, pretty good defender as well. Yes, he has developed
quite a bit as a playmaker, but they still don't have an actual primary playmaker. He's a great
secondary playmaker on a team that still has no primary playmaker. That's not Palo and that's not
Franz and it's not Suggs. And I think it's still kind of a weird lineup. I don't think this
suddenly puts them in the mix to win the East next year. I think it gets them further into the
discussion. I'm still not completely convinced. And there's, look, there's a lot of offseason to go.
We were, you know, it's June 17th. The draft doesn't even happen yet. The finals aren't even over yet.
It's weird that we have a trade of this magnitude, not a blockbuster, just, you know, just significant at this time.
But they've got plenty of time left this summer to do other stuff. And maybe they find themselves
somebody who's a little bit more of a pure playmaker type who can kind of pull this all together and get
Bancaro and Franz Wagner easier shots and make that offense a little more efficient because
for all of the raw numbers those guys put up, it's not been an efficient offense. They've won
on their defense primarily. And look, like before people start proclaiming them favorites in the
east, like could we give the Pacers like five minutes to enjoy the fact that they just made one of
the most incredible runs to the finals coming out of the east that we've seen. Unexpected. And the
Cavs presumably you're going to have their big four back together and the Knicks will probably
get a couple of more guys on the bench and they might even hire a coach at some point.
I don't forget about Cliff Sixers.
Okay, relax.
All right.
Come on now.
Joel Embed might be healthy for 10 or 20 games.
Yeah.
There you go.
So there's that.
No, listen, I've been Mr. Optimist on the Sixers.
So a healthyish Embed plus everything.
Cliff has given us the SS.
MH chat text.
Like, there's a world, there is a world of which the Sixers are a factor in the East next year.
I will say it.
I don't even, I'm not even like crossing the Celtics out.
I know Tatum's missing the whole season, but let's see what they do.
How much do they tear it down?
How much do they make this a gap year versus like Jalen Brown's still a damn good player
and they got a lot of talent around him?
Like, I think, I think that it's still kind of a mishmash atop the East.
And I'm not ready to proclaim the magic, the favorites on the.
basis of a Desmond Bain acquisition.
Before I get to like my little armchair analysis, I just to your point about like it,
whether or not it's a blockbuster trade, if this was like 04 or something,
would this even like move the needle?
Because I feel like the, the, what I thought about with this trade and people going all
up in arms in it is basically like what I was saying about just the media landscape on
the press box, we're just a transactions lead now.
You know, like, why are we up in our, like, let's, it's the finals are on, bro.
Like, who cares?
You know, why are we just up in, and Desmond Bain is a fine player.
I think he's, I think he's really good for, I, I think that he would be better served as maybe a fourth or fifth guy as opposed to a second or third guy.
But nonetheless, I do enjoy watching him play.
That being said, I just don't, like, think this should move the needle in a way that it's a fine trade over for an ancillary piece.
Yes. He's a very good ancillary piece, but he's ancillary piece.
He's ancillary piece. Like, we're not supposed to, just talk about the fucking finals, man. What are we doing?
All right. So, because you've, like, chastised me and basically, like, falsely accused me of somehow, like, you know, demeaning Tom Ziller. I did just pull this up. So to quote, Tom Ziller in his newsletter, we need a collectively approved name for really big trades that don't involve any players that have ever made an all-star team. It's not a, quote, blockbuster trade. If many casual fans don't recognize.
recognize the key player involved as a star, even though he is.
Let's call it a Hollywood video trade then.
So there's a very 90s reference for you that because it's been so long since I've rented a video,
I couldn't even remember that Hollywood video existed as the alternative to Blockbuster.
So there you go.
Great line from Ziller.
I hope I've made amends enough for you, Logan.
You have.
Thank you.
I really appreciate that.
Also, man, Hollywood video, they used to have one in Alabama.
Mehta that we, that was the one where we used to go to, um, to go get videos.
There was a, uh, there was a Papa Murphy's around Papa Murphy's.
You don't know about Papa Murphy's?
Uh-uh.
I mean, a Papa Murphy's is where they would, they would make this, the pizza for you, but
you would heat it up at the crib.
So we would get a big ass pizza, they would like, it's like a, not a quite a half bake,
but like they would put all the toppings and figure it out and then you'll put it in the,
in the oven.
But anyways, in Alameda, they would have a Hollywood video.
and then we would have to go to the east on a 35th to go to the blockbuster.
But we would normally go to a Hollywood video, get us a little video,
then get a Papa Murphy's Pizza at be our dinner for like the next two days.
So, you know, shout out to a Hollywood video.
Nice.
The real ones, no.
Anyways, my analysis on this thing, it doesn't really move the needle in any sort of way.
I mean, I guess like the interesting thing, though, is one thing that I want to get your take
on Mr.
aggregation.
What does it say about,
what does this say
about the Memphis Grizzlies
and what they have going forward,
right?
Because it is noteworthy
that they traded away a guy
that they were supposed to,
was supposedly a franchise pillar
for some picks, right?
I don't know who's next,
but what I do know is
Jared Jackson Jr.
has a big extension looming
and he kind of is who he is as a player,
not saying he's a fairly good player.
I don't know if he is necessarily the guy that will facilitate a title and somebody you might want to, I could see a team not wanting to pay such an extension and go long term.
And then we have Jha, who you have spoken about, and may or may not have gotten mad at the response of what you did.
I'm not necessarily as mad as you are.
But you have Jha who has the injury history, has the type of game that isn't conducive to long term success, has a.
really evolved.
This might be a little,
it may or may not be a rebuild on the horizon,
don't you think?
There's a lot to digest on the grizzly side of this.
And I don't think this is a clear indication
of one direction or the other, right?
Like they had a, what we all acknowledged was a pseudo big three.
We addressed this on the pot a couple months ago where it's like,
this isn't really a big three, right?
They've got three very, very good players.
But Jha, it's like two and a quarter.
What's that?
like two and a quarter.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But it's, no, but like even each, each one of them individually, like there's not a top
15 player among them.
You know, like, Jaws supposed to be that guy and he hasn't been partially because of injuries,
partially because of just nonsense.
Jaron Jackson Jr. flirts with all NBA.
And so there are times he could be top 12, top 15.
Bain is like more of a top 30 guy.
So it's like three really,
really good players, but not three absolute studs and not three perennial all MBA types and or even
two perennial all NBA types. And when it starts getting expensive and when you're starting to like
you've reached your ceiling as constructed, I think the smart thing to do as a front office is to say like,
all right, I know it's hard. Like we've got, we found some really good players here and, you know,
Bain was a later pick and all this, but like you can't get sentimental about it or fall in love with
your own work and you've got to decide as I think that they have.
make a sober-minded decision to say this is as far as this team's getting.
We got to give ourselves some flexibility.
And trading Bain, there's a scenario here where, and it's probably the more likely
scenario, where they're keeping John, they're keeping Jaron Jackson Jr.
And they're using the Bain trade to restock picks and gain a little cap flexibility.
And let's see what they do with it next.
Like, are they packaging those picks to go get a guy?
are they you know is there more kind of pairing down to happen um i i i don't know i i'm very
curious to see what step two is and i don't think we have a clear read yet yeah i mean there's
there's also the zach edie ankle thing that's probably going to it's going to linger i don't
know how long he's going to be out it's going to be a few months i mean we'll see how yeah it's a
It's kind of a murky timeline.
You know, I don't know, but to your point about the new NBA,
if you're not in love with your team,
you have to pivot quickly with this April, right?
Like, that's just something you have to do.
And I think that's just another example of that, right?
I mean, I think that Memphis,
and the reason why, and I don't have as much intel as Howard Beck,
but just looking at the tea leaves, like,
There's nothing to suggest that, like, the Grizzlies as currently constructed can get past what they've been over the last couple years.
There feels like a ceiling here anyway.
That would be the argument to moving Jaron Jackson or moving Jaron Jackson and just starting from scratch, right?
Like, you kind of are what you are with this roster.
You are what you are with this team.
And, I mean, that's, I mean, that's kind of what you were in line.
And I would think when you said what you said during the All Star break, which is like this team kind of is who it is.
It seems like it's hit a ceiling.
And if we have to, we might have to pivot based on all of the things that have happened over the last few.
Yeah.
And again, just to clarify, so what Logan's referring to for those who missed it at the time.
But like I had said during All Star break that I was told by someone.
At the Real Ones Live, so live in San Francisco at the motherfucking punch line.
Which was awesome.
that a rival executive said to me,
keep an eye on Jha this summer.
And so then that went viral and aggregated
and all the bullshit.
And listen, there's still a scenario, I think,
where step two might be,
hey, let's just do the tear down
or however you want to refer to it.
But the market for Jaws
not exactly robust, most likely,
given all the obvious things.
The same things that might have soured the grizzlies on him
or made them concerned about having him
as their centerpiece for the future.
I know one team that would love to have them.
And you know one team that would love to have.
Your old stomping grounds, buddy.
The team in my backyard?
No, no, no, no, no, no.
The team that was in your backyard when you were in college, my friend.
Oh, well, yeah, but they would just be, they would love to have anybody at this point.
I'm just saying, there's a market for the guy.
There's a market for the guy.
There's a market for the guy.
There's only so many desperate teams in Sacramento is at the top of the desperate list, I would say.
There are teams that are worse shaped than Sacramento, but not teams that are more desperate than Sacramento.
So let me be clear about that.
I've never seen a team so desperate to be the eighth seat in my life.
We don't need to go down to King's Rabbit Hole.
I don't, my guess is that they are not going to trade Jha right now.
And again, I don't think his market value is that high.
I don't know how much you're getting back for Jha given everything of the last couple of years.
and there are so many teams that are already set at the position.
If you're the Nets or the Wizards who are like, you know,
the most recent tank rebuild types or Utah,
is that the guy you're going out to get to restart?
Like, I don't think so.
He doesn't really fit with Miami.
Like, you know, I don't think that they would.
I could kind of see the heat making a run at him,
but I don't know.
I would just say.
You would have to make some drastic changes.
Yeah.
as a person to be good in Miami.
My guess at a read is this.
The Grizzlies ain't hanging up if anybody called about Jha.
I don't know how many teams are calling about Jha.
And I don't think the Grizzles are necessarily actively trying to move him.
But they certainly aren't hanging up if somebody made an offer.
Do you think it would take like maybe with Jai, based on what we're saying,
like they might have to send one of those picks back with Jha to sweeten the deal.
Do you think he's in that status yet of a player?
And just with all the baggage and stuff, like, you know, we'll take a wire on it, but you might need to give us a buck pick to.
I don't, I don't think so.
But I do think that you get less in return than you would normally for a player of his caliber based on baggage and injury history and likelihood of getting hurt again because he just plays this breakneck style and does not know how to slow down.
So I don't know.
I also think that when you look at the West right now,
is this at least a slight reflection of where things are where we're all talking about
how just the thunder look like they're going to dominate for years to come because they're so young
and they're so talented. And if you're a team like the Grizzlies where you're barely good
enough to be like low playoff to play in and you're not catching the thunder anytime soon,
might as well take a step back to plan for the next two to three or four year window instead
of trying to chase the thunder. Like maybe that factors into this too. That would like I think
that's a reasonable, realistic view of where you are with respect to the top of your conference.
Yeah. I mean, they got a front row seat and how good the thunder are this season, right, didn't they?
That first round wasn't even close.
Yeah, I think that's...
One of the last question before I get out of here, what do you think about the discourse around picks, right?
Like, the first thing was, oh, my God, Orlando sent four first round picks, and this team didn't send this many picks, and this team didn't send this many picks.
Do you think we've gotten out of hand with that?
I mean, I do think that, like, it was a steep price for a guy like Desmond Bain,
but also they had to get off of, they really wanted to get off KCP, and that takes a price too.
Like, I think that, yes, it is tough, but I think there's more nuance, obviously, than what the timeline gives us.
But where have we gotten with, like, how we think about, at least from an NBA discourse perspective,
how we talk about picks and how they get swapped.
It's fair to say that we're in a time when picks are really valued again.
Like the first round picks,
there have been eras where they're thrown around like candy and given away.
And there are times where they are prized like gold.
And we are back to the gold version right now because a handful of teams control so many picks.
There are so many teams that have almost no picks in their control.
and the new salary cap structure with the second apron makes controllable, cheaper talent on rookie scale deals much more valuable.
So when a team trades, whatever, four or five picks, whatever, it ended up being in the Bain Hall, like, I think it's fair to say, like, is it too much?
But then you have to look at like the fine print of like, which picks are going to convey or not and which picks were, you know, have conditions on them.
And which picks were Orlando's own.
And if Orlando is as good as they think they're going to be, and as some people think they're going to be, you know, some people think they're going to
be. Well, the picks that they traded of their own, okay, there's going to be in the 20s anyway.
Right. So you've got to judge each one separately. And yeah, in this deal, I think at least
one of those picks was just to take Contavius, Caldwell Pope, who was a disappointment last year.
So, yeah, the discourse around picks can get a little bit overwrought for sure.
My first reaction at a glance when that trade broke was that I thought it was too many.
That's because, like, I think
Desmond Vain is really, really good,
but I don't, you know,
I don't think he's good enough
to merit that many picks,
but when you start to sit back.
Is he better than McHale Bridges?
They're different.
I don't know.
He might be better than McHale Bridges.
I think he's,
they've played different roles with their team,
so it's a little bit hard.
They're a little different.
We'll get back to that.
But I, and I know,
like the comparison is there
because the Knicks gave up
a shit ton of picks and swaps to get bridges from the nets.
Was it picks and swaps or just picks?
Again, it's too early in the morning.
But it was a lot.
Like the bridge's price was super steep.
And the main price is, it's a lot.
Here's what I would say about that trade and the reason why I had at least some concern.
Because I think they still really need a point guard or a primary playmaker of some
sort. It's not so much did you give up too much to get Bain? It's did you give up too much given that
you still have other needs and now you have emptied out a lot of your asset cash to to acquire
somebody? It's the same thing with Bridges. It's not so much whether Bridges is an over it's an overpay.
It's you've now also like spent so much that you don't have picks left to make other moves that
you might need to make. That you like you always have to consider that. The Knicks and Magic are in
two different places though too, right?
Like the Knicks are betting on like that they're going to be good for the next few years.
Orlando's very much trying to be an ascent and the assent and you really, and I think in Orlando's
case, you need those picks a lot more than New York at this, at the stages that they're in
at this point, if that makes it.
Yeah.
I think all that factors in too.
And I think the smart way to look at these things is that every single one of these deals,
whether it's, you know, pick-laden or more player-driven.
However, it's constructed, you do have to consider the context of the team,
where they're at in their trajectory, and what the factors are in getting the guy that they got.
Because every transaction is its own thing.
You know, we always do this thing that's like, oh, the Gobert trade, set the market now.
And now every star for the foreseeable future has to be traded for, you know, six first round picks or whatever.
it doesn't really work like that.
Every negotiation is kind of its own thing.
It's not that GMs won't reference or use those as a guideline or maybe use them even as a talking point in negotiations.
But it's ultimately about the two teams that are in trade talks, what each one has for leverage in those talks with respect to the other team.
And it's not so much about what other guys have gone for in recent transactions.
So it's like the context of each everyone every transaction matters
For sure.
All right man.
I'm about to get the hell up out of here.
Very tired.
That was another edition of Real Ones.
Back to back loopy real ones from Howard motherfucking Beck.
This is just from a lack of sleep.
Great game.
It was great to see you, buddy.
You too.
Man, me and Howard had like just a big hug afterwards after the game.
Like, man, I'll see you when I see you, buddy.
But it was fun.
All right, man.
That's been another edition of Real Ones.
Shout out to Victoria.
Shout out to Cliff.
Shout out to Howard motherfucking Beck.
Quick programming note.
Me and Tyler Parker will be reacting off of game six.
I'm sorry.
I'm loopy.
I'm tired.
We just did this in post.
We'll have Game 6 of the NBA finals on Thursday night.
So be on a lookout for that.
That is a special edition of Real Ones.
That should be a fun.
fun one. Either Tyler's going to be really, really happy or he's going to be really, really sad.
Either way, it's going to be entertaining. So tap in with that, Howard motherfucking Beck.
I will see you next week with Roger Bell. Tap in, all the shits. Talk to y'all soon.
Bye.
