The Zach Lowe Show - Playoff Drama! NBA First-Round Action Heats Up With Rob Mahoney.
Episode Date: April 28, 2025Zach is joined by Rob Mahoney to discuss a thrilling weekend of basketball. However, they must first start with the unfortunate Damian Lillard injury (1:01). Later, they dissect all the drama in the... Wolves-Lakers series (21:30), as well as Clippers-Nuggets (47:21). They then head east to break down Pistons-Knicks (1:02:32) and Magic-Celtics (1:16:15). Finally, they close with thoughts on tonight’s pivotal Game 4 between the Rockets and Warriors in San Francisco (1:27:07). 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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All right.
Coming up on a loaded edition of the Zach Lowe show,
Rob Mahoney for the first time.
I'm such a long-time fan.
We're hitting everything.
the Lakers on to bring to Aaron Gordon buzzer-beater,
the Tim Hardaway Jr.
Non-Call Celtics Magic Physicality.
Looking ahead to the next round.
All coming up on an NBA playoffs edition of The Zach Lowe show.
Welcome to the Zach Lowe show on a Monday morning, Eastern Standard Time.
Oh, my God.
What a weekend.
Rob Mahoney, first time I've ever had you on, an absolute thrill.
I've been a fan for a long time.
one third of the group chat bros
that is maybe sneakily become my favorite NBA podcast
that exists.
I even watch it now.
I'm like a modern person watching it now.
What a weekend.
I don't even know where to start.
We had an all-time great buzzer-beater.
Like literally, we've never seen it before.
We've had non-calls that are going to infuriate multiple teams
and the last two-minute reports will be eagerly anticipated.
We had copious fights and scrums and near-
fights and spiciness, a couple of injury scares. And then sadly, the place we have to start,
one massive, what appears to be a massive injury to Damian Lillard, who left game four
of the Bucs Pacer series with what appears to be a torn Achilles. I don't even, I mean, look,
it obviously sucks. Damien Lillard is almost 35 years old. If this is indeed a torn Achilles,
any discussion of it has to start with just Damian Lillard, the human being,
who built a legacy of greatness in Portland,
got traded kind of against his will to Milwaukee,
tried to make the best of it,
came back very quickly from a blood clot issue to play in these playoffs.
Didn't look like himself, not surprisingly,
looked like he got tired at the end of games,
didn't impact the series the way that you would expect Prime Damien and Lillard
to impact it.
And now after a couple of games back, suffers one of the most devastating injuries in sports,
a 35-year-old small guard.
This isn't Kevin Durant.
This isn't a dude who's seven feet tall who can just bank on.
It worst case for me is I can just be like Dirk Novitsky, old Dirk, just raining jump shots.
Just we don't know 100% certainty.
Everyone, all the comments last night were pessimistic.
We're going to get to the future and what it means.
but just this is a guy, both of us kind of our professional careers kind of overlap almost exactly
with Damia Lillard's entry from Weber State into the NBA.
I remember watching a bit Summer League trying to pick apart his game, not pick apart,
but like, oh my gosh, something's interesting here.
We all know, you know, there ain't too many players with two series winning walkoff shots
in the history of the NBA.
I mean, just reaction, just gut reaction.
I think my gut reaction is kind of aligned with dames,
which is after this injury happened,
and he just sort of sat there with it.
And is that resignation,
is that acceptance?
I don't know what he's going through
in that particular moment,
but when a player like Damian Lillard goes down
and kind of stays down,
and particularly when he goes down,
grabbing the back of that ankle,
we all know what that means.
Like, we all know what he's reaching for,
and we all know kind of like what he is feeling in that moment,
in the sense that we have seen it before.
I really hope, desperately hope that this is not it for Damien Lillard,
but I want to be really clear that like even if Damian Lillard comes back
and plays NBA basketball again,
this injury is going to define the end game of his career.
Like we are rounding a bend of a kind,
whether he plays another game or not.
And that in itself sucks to say.
And it sucks for Dame,
obviously,
it sucks for Bucks fans who have invested in this team and for this version of the Bucks
and certainly for the future of the Bucks,
as you alluded to,
we can talk about that.
but ultimately like I am a regular season basketball enthusiast.
I have an incredible soft spot in my heart for the players who never quite make it to the
mountain top but play the game on their terms with a distinct style.
And there are, you know, if this is it for Dame or more or less it for Dame and we can
say the full eulogizing for another day.
But if this is kind of it, there are worse ways to make a career than being an ice cold
killer for more than a decade and a beloved star who staked his claim to a franchise.
who made an incredible run for himself,
who will go down as one of the greatest shooters to ever live,
and just one of the coolest guards and coolest players of his era.
I fucking love watching Damien Lillard play basketball.
So from that perspective alone,
I am bummed personally to not get to do that
for at least the foreseeable future.
It's one of the reasons what you said about regular season basketball enthusiasts.
I might change my social media bio to that.
It's one of the reasons that one of my favorite random NBA teams
of all time is the 2018-19 Blazers
who come off an absolute humiliation sweep
at the hands of Anthony Davis and Drew Holiday the year before
where Drew Holiday just single hand turns into like Michael Jordan
plus Scotty Pippen for the entire series
and destroys the Blazers.
Yeah, embarrassed those guys really.
In a series that you could look at and say, well, okay,
that's a like you're never the same after that.
You got to make some trade.
You got to fire some people.
And the Blazers didn't.
They held the fort.
They rebound next year and they make the Western Conference Finals.
This is the bye-bye year against Oklahoma City when Dame makes one of the all-time great shots.
And then they beat Denver in a seven-game slug fest in the next round.
And people kind of poo-poo that conference finals run because they got smoked by the Warriors and the
conference finals totally overmatched.
They got the bracket broke right for them.
They got some health luck, although they suffered their own health injuries.
The health issues, Nurkich was hurt for, I think, in that entire playoff run for them.
And Cantor, that was like the Ennis Canter.
playoffs. You know what? I've said this many times before. Ask the LA Clippers about how easy it is to
make a conference finals. Ask a bunch of these. Ask the Charlotte Hornets haven't won a playoff series in like
a thousand years. Never poo-poo. Yeah, brackets break right. You get some luck. That's fine. A lot of
teams are never able to put themselves in any kind of position to take advantage of that kind of luck.
I love that team. I've always loved Dame. If you look back at my MVP ballots over the years,
I always have him like a spot or two above consensus.
And it just,
he's been pretty open about how rough the transition to Milwaukee was for him personally.
Yeah.
I think he bought in the chemistry with Janus just kind of never got to the point
where we all thought it would be so easy for them on the pick and roll.
And we can talk about that trade and revisit it.
And I didn't think they were going to win this series with Dame,
without Dame.
I just didn't think they were good enough.
But this is just for an NBA,
for NBA diehards who are up watching Blazers Jazz at 1130 Eastern Time,
he's a beloved player.
And he's a beloved leader.
And he's just,
it just sucks.
I mean,
he's the kind of player who makes that sort of basketball.
And really those sorts of teams that you're talking about mean something.
There are lots of teams,
frankly,
even those who have gone on conference finals runs,
who just like get lost in time,
who get lost,
even within the cities that they play for,
maybe because those cities have
outsized championship level success.
And so some of the other years feel like also
Rands, I'm going to
remember D.M. and Lillard forever as a
basketball player. And I'm going to remember some of those
Blazers teams forever. And certainly the people
of Portland will in particular, like his
relationship with that city and with that franchise,
he's basically synonymous, he's going to go down as the
greatest blazer ever. It's a shame
that he's not going to go down as a great
buck particularly. But that's
the reality of where he was at this stage of
his career. And as you said, the fact that it
was not the destination he picked,
but it's one that he tried to make the best of basketball-wise.
For me, that was one of those trades that I would make it again, for the record,
if I'm in Milwaukee's position.
I understand the logic of it.
I understand their urgency in trying to find that kind of offensive help.
Maybe you settle Drew Holiday to another destination that is not going to be Portland
so that he doesn't end up in Boston.
Maybe that's the great do-over part of that trade.
But pairing a shooter with the firepower of Damien,
Lillard with Janus, I will always understand the logic of that.
Even though on the court, as you said, they never quite found it.
They got better over time.
And I think maybe got better in a way where they never fully got the credit for it.
It was kind of incremental, slow building progress for them in terms of their pick and roll chemistry.
They did find something that worked, just not something that worked at a high enough level to
really contend in the East.
Look, there are a lot of moves you can knock the bucks of the last six to seven years over.
Certainly.
I always go back to one of the stupid podcast things that I was happiest about in my retrospective of looking back was squeezing in a rant about Dante Gianzhenzo for Serge Abaca at the end of whatever trade deadline podcast that was is like I just don't understand everybody liked that trade for the bucks and I was like has anyone watched Sir Jabaka?
Like I just don't trade wing for watched up big ever not one time.
The draft picks that were missed, the Kuzma trade is obviously a disaster.
which included one of the only draft picks that who knows it may end up being a hit for the Bucks,
AJ Johnson.
I'm with you on the Dame trade.
I will defend it until the end.
Now, you could say did they overreact to the Miami series in which they just fell apart completely.
Janus missed most of the series.
Bud did not cover himself in glory in that series.
They fire Bud.
Butler bullies Drew Holiday.
And it feels to them like the end.
of the road for this team.
Like we just don't have enough offense.
And they make this trade and they get Janus then to sign an extension a month later,
which in itself is a huge victory for that trade.
Look, it hasn't worked.
And one of the reasons it didn't work, as you said, is they couldn't control Drew Holiday's
destination and it ended up being a worst case scenario for them.
Another reason it didn't work is that Dame is 34 and got older a little faster than I think
we expected.
Yeah.
Another reason it didn't work is that the Dame Janus pick and roll never turned in to the Steph Dramond 2.0 except the Dramond in this is a seven-foot monster who can lob dunk everything.
I don't know why it didn't.
I suspect part of the reason why is that Yonis didn't want to set 40 screens a game.
And that's fine.
He's above that.
He is above that.
Another reason it didn't work is that teams just sold out on it from preseason game one.
it was clear like, Brooke Lopez, you're going to be allowed to shoot, whoever, you're going to be allowed to shoot.
Another reason the trade didn't work is part of the logic, and I echoed this logic was, yeah, you hurt your defense by trading Drew Holiday, one of the best perimeter defenders in the league.
Your base defense is a dropback scheme.
That doesn't work if the guy pursuing the ball handler isn't hounding that guy from behind and challenging all those shots and making all those looks extra difficult.
but who are we kidding?
If you have Janice and Brooke Lopez,
you have the foundation of an elite defense
for the next couple of years.
And Brooke Lopez got benched in this series against Indiana.
He was too slow for the series,
and that didn't hold up either.
And it's tempting to look back and say,
what happens if they don't make the dame trade?
Are we just in the same spot anyway,
given what has happened to Chris Middleton's career?
But I guess the difference would,
be you're in the same spot, but let's say you've stood Pat, you still have all the draft
picks that you no longer have. You still have the ability to trade Drew Holiday, which you no longer
have. Now, you don't have the ability to trade Damia Lillard, which was the last bullet left
in the, can we salvage this thing around Janus? And nobody wants to have this conversation.
I don't want to have this conversation. You don't want to have this conversation. Definitely not.
opposing teams who I contacted last night,
who would theoretically be Janus suitors,
already do not want to have this conversation.
They're in mourning too.
It is unfortunately unavoidable just to say this.
They can't trade name.
That pivot is gone.
This team cannot win with Janus.
There is no path to them winning big in the playoffs anymore.
They do not control their draft pick through 2030,
so they cannot tank.
And there just isn't enough here.
There's no path to a championship team.
And everyone understands that.
The Bucks understand that.
Yannis surely must understand that.
And all that's left to do now is for Yannis and the Bucks,
maybe individually, maybe in conjunction,
but ultimately no matter what happens,
it's going to be up to Yonis,
to decide what to do with that reality.
Do we sit in it and be a one team star forever and do our best?
And that's cool.
And hope there's some miraculous.
set of events that delivers some talent here that I just could not possibly foresee or do we not.
And that's just where we are.
I don't want to get into like the fake trades.
But look, the uncomfortable reality is there is no path to this team winning in the next three or four years.
They don't control their draft.
There's just nothing they can do.
And it's now just up to Janus to sit with that and decide his career.
And from that perspective, it's just impossible to begrudge him basically whatever he wants, right?
He has been with this team now for going on a decade.
I think he has the right to make that call to look around and say,
I'm one of the best players in the world even still,
maybe the third best player in the league, if not better than that.
And also, you know what they can never take away?
No one can ever take away.
The ring.
That hardware baby.
They got a ring.
Drew got a ring.
Everything after that has not gone great, but they got a champion.
Yes.
Never, ever, ever.
Nip pick the draft picks, nitpick the trades, whatever.
They got a championship.
It's the whole reason we do this, and they got one.
Anyway, sorry.
But everything that went into that championship,
as you alluded to, is mostly gone at this point.
The city of Milwaukee is obviously there,
but most of his teammates are gone.
His coach from that team is gone.
Yes, we got Brooke Lopez over here.
We got whatever is left of Pat Conantin over there.
Like, there's some remnants.
But it's telling that, like you said,
the Chris Middleton trade for me,
and granted, I don't want to be Chris Middleton guy
on yet another podcast, but I will.
because I am Chris Middleton guy on every podcast.
There was something particularly soulless about trading him for Kyle Kuzma.
This is a really important player to the history of your franchise.
And you are so desperate under these circumstances that you're going to grasp at Washington Wizards Kyle Kuzma
to say maybe this is the kind of thing that could shake something loose in our rotation.
Maybe this will let us play Yannis at the five.
Whatever your rationale might be.
I get it.
I get the desperation in that moment,
but it speaks to where you are and how far you've come,
that it's like, okay, I guess we just have to eject even a very injured,
maybe we'll never be healthy, fully healthy again at a contending level,
Chris Middleton, probably will not.
For the sake of chasing something that just is not there,
because you're trading Janus's basically best teammate after Dame,
who now is going to be out for the foreseeable future for Kyle Kuzma.
The next best guy on the team after that,
who would you even say is the next best buck?
because as you mentioned,
Brooke Lopez can get played off the floor
in a series like this.
Also, by the way, is 37 years old?
I don't, like, is it Gary Trent Jr.?
Like legitimately who is the next best buck?
Could be him.
Could be Bobby Portis on some nights.
AJ Green just does what he does consistently.
Yeah.
You know, you mentioned Middleton
and are we here anyway no matter what,
although obviously the opportunity cost is what it is
of doing the dame trade and having it backfire.
I look back at that
2022 Bucks team as a big, big,
what if with Middleton missing
essentially the entire playoffs.
And yet they still go toe to toe with Boston
in a seven game series that ends
in what will forever be remembered
as the Grant Williams game without Middleton.
And I've said this before.
Everyone that I know on the Celtics
within the Celtics came out of that series
with one universal reaction,
which was we never want to see that fucking dude
in a playoff series again about,
Janus. That's how good he was that year and he's still incredible. He's probably 97% as good as he was
in that year, maybe a little bit less than that. And they had a championship team that year with,
withdrew still, and Middleton wasn't there and they just didn't have enough. And then they,
they pivoted the next year of the way they pivoted. And I, you know, it just, it just, we all know,
Nets, Rockets, Heat, whoever else wants to get into it, Nix. Yeah. We'll see.
A lot of it will depend on the playoffs, you know,
and what happens to some of these teams in the next round or two or whatever.
And I want to say this on that front.
Like, I, as an observer of the league,
the NBA is a better place if Janus Anta Kupo is a Milwaukee buck.
If he is kind of carrying and propping up that franchise and making them a contender,
the NBA is a more interesting place.
If he loses his ability to do that because of everything we've described,
the empty coffers in terms of draft picks,
the depreciating roster around him,
that now is going to be years away from even being healthy,
much less good enough to do anything with it.
Like, that's such a bummer that we have to have these conversations.
We have to talk about where Janus could conceivably go.
But losing the Bucks as a landmark on the NBA map for,
I also want to be very clear about this.
Who knows how long?
Like this is a, Janus leaving,
given all the draft picks out the door,
is an Ice Age level event for the Milwaukee Bucks.
Unlike what we saw the Brooklyn Nets do,
they have no vehicle to get those draft picks back.
Like the Nets got some of their picks back because they had Phoenix draft assets.
There was this theoretical like could Atlanta get their picks back by trading Trey Young to the Spurs?
Like that wasn't a crazy implausible idea.
There's no pathway that I can see any way to reclaiming ownership of those picks.
And it's just, it's just, you know, look, Janus has two years plus one left on his deal after this.
Dame has two years left to play our option for 58.5 million and 26, 27.
And it just sucks.
It all sucks.
And here the Pacers are again.
Now I thought the Pacers were going to win this series anyway.
Now they're almost certainly going to win it up 3-1 going home.
Tyrese Halliburton just cackling, literally cackling on the floor after every play that he makes.
And a looming Pacers-Cabs series that is kind of interesting.
And just as an aside, I asked you to pick a team of the weekend for this wild weekend.
Just to go deep cut, I picked the Cavs because I thought that Cavs game three performance into Miami was like cruel, championship cruelty.
Like we are coming to take the soul of your franchise.
We are going to extinguish any hope you have of like, oh, we're coming home.
Like someone will get hot.
Maybe we can steal a game.
And they came and they were like, we are going to dig your grave, throw you in the grave.
stomp on your face a few more times, bury your corpse, and then light the whole graveyard on fire.
And I was like, oh, my God, this is a nasty fucking team.
I think they're going to beat the Pacers in the next round.
But the Pacers have some interesting answers to throw out of them.
And the last thing I'll say, all the shirts that the teams are wearing, that you'd say, like, win it for the Bay.
Sure.
Win it for a hell.
I like that the Pacers went away from Winnet.
And they have, yes, sirs.
I'm like, oh, you know what?
Don't love the pun.
It's not great.
It's kind of artful in its own silly way, but I like it.
I'm going to give them props for yes sir.
I would take a yes sirs shirt and wear it around.
100%.
I think we just focus grouped out every other permutation of winning it for your home city
slash strength and numbers slash all of the playoff slogans to death.
So you have to get weird.
We are at that level of depravity where we have to do team puns in order to just make this thing work.
So I salute Indiana for doing it.
I'm interested to see what shirt the grizzlies.
come out for for game five because I think they have the they have the thunder figured out right
they do they think they've really figured that one out they're fully stocked you know 21 grenade
salute for the Memphis Grizzlies look out look out okay C in game five back in the
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available in select areas terms apply okay uh are we ready to move on to a series number two sure
wolves lakers holy fuck what a wild game for in minnesota the wolves take both games at home
to go up three one the lakers are on the brink uh the end game of this was so crazy that
my notes are like just a page long on that.
LeBron had a block, a strip.
Yeah.
And then Jada McDaniels got an and one to put Minnesota up one on a beautiful play
by Ann, who capped a masterpiece game by stringing out a trap, didn't panic.
I'm going to string this out, can string this out.
Found Nas Reid, who was sensational, who found McDaniels.
And then all hell broke loose in the game with Minnesota up by one.
Luca brought the ball up and fell slash got tripped.
The last two minute report will be interesting.
JJ is mad about it.
And then LeBron threw away the inbound splash slash it was stolen.
Then Ant fell and looked to be falling before LeBron hit his wrist and what was a foul,
but he looked to be slipping anyway.
It was called a foul on a A plus challenge by Chris Finch,
who has coached a fantastic series every way around.
Ant made the two free throws.
then it looked like Minnesota was trying to foul up three and didn't.
And Alston Reeves got a quarter three and missed.
And now the Lakers.
A really good look, we should say, for Austin Reeves.
Like that, that's a plausible heartbreaker, right?
Just right there as it hangs in the air.
Didn't it look like they were trying, like Randall kind of hugged Luca.
And I was like, I think they're trying to foul up three.
They should have fouled up three.
And they didn't.
And they almost fucking paid the price for it.
Where do you want to even start with this?
The Lakers are on the brink.
Luca's getting roasted.
Nico Harrison has got to.
sneer going somewhere maybe.
Is that a host close to home for you?
And oh my God, I should have led with this.
JJ Reddick played the same lineup for an entire half of basketball,
which I have never seen in my life.
And what an insane game.
You start wherever you want.
I don't even know where to start.
I want to start.
You mentioned the Cavs is your team of the weekend.
You also wanted to talk MVP's of the weekend.
I think it has to be Ant for me.
We both choose Ant.
Anne is the MVP of the weekend.
Basic ass.
answer, but like this was a jaw-dropping performance in a game that was absolutely sick.
And I also say it because I think when we tell the story of Anthony Edwards at whatever point,
we want to step back and do that, I think we're going to talk about this game or more
importantly talk about this series, right?
Like this was a moment.
And I think all the great players have them.
For Ant, it was going toe to toe with maybe the greatest player of all time, this other young
superstar who bounced him out of the Western Conference finals last year.
And not only beating those guys, but doing it with a level.
of precision that you only get from a truly rare class of player.
And so Ant won the game.
He went up 3-1.
It's an incredible accomplishment in those senses.
I just think he announced himself in whatever way that Anthony Edwards still needs to
announce himself.
And overall,
I just remain absolutely gobsmacked by the fact that Anthony Edwards,
four games into the series,
six total turnovers in this series.
I never thought I would see it.
And I think there were kind of two paths for him to get to this level of
as you said, getting off the ball, playmaking, making advance to reads in the biggest possible
moments.
One of the paths was becoming a Luca or LeBron-level cross-court, weakside playmaker.
One of the hardest things in basketball to do.
Maybe he'll get there someday.
Maybe he won't.
The other path that I don't think we talked about enough was, will he get better at making
the simple pressure release plays?
And will the players around him be good enough to do things with those plays to justify it?
And I think that's where you're seeing incredible Jaden McDaniels minutes,
incredible Julius Randall minutes, incredible like Dante Divencenzu and Crunchtime.
You're getting all the contributions you need to justify the best player on the floor giving up the ball.
And it feels right in the moment.
It feels like the logical play.
No one needed another playoff appearance like Julius Randall needed another playoff appearance
because his playoff numbers before this series in a very small sample were so atrociously bad.
They looked like they were implausible.
And the sample size got bigger.
And Julius Randall, he's guarding LeBron.
He's attacking all the right matchups.
Even when he attacks what I would consider the suboptible matchups,
he's getting stuff out of it.
He's throwing the right pass.
No turnovers in 25 points in 43 minutes against the Lakers on Sunday.
And, Ann, you mentioned it.
Like, you know, the game slows down is a cliche that we use all the time.
This is a case where I think you can actually see it happening because this is a very simple series for Ant.
the Lakers are switching almost everything.
He's picking whatever matchup he wants.
A lot of times it's Luca.
He seemed to get a soft spot for attacking Rui Hachamura down the stretch yesterday.
I don't know what he likes about that matchup,
but he roasted him.
And when that matchup happens,
he gets the ball and the Lakers load the floor from every angle.
They try to confuse him.
LeBron is like a cornerback on the sidelines like stunting here,
stunting here.
It's like ferocious.
And Ant just sort of,
digest it all.
And there were a couple times
where he didn't wait at all.
He just got the matchup,
put his head down and went.
And there was a level of decisiveness that I,
there were no dancing,
no prelude,
no,
no anything,
just go.
Then there were other times
where he like dribbled into the lane,
help converged,
took a dribble back,
kept a live dribble,
help went away,
and then he'll just spin
into like a nice 12 foot shot over Luca.
It was calm.
It wasn't seeking highlight plays every time.
It wasn't being reckless,
like Jalen Green's being reckless.
in the Warriors Rocket series.
It was like a veteran, calm,
just masterful performance.
And defensively, he's been good.
Chris Finch has gone all out putting Randall McDaniels
and Ant on Reeves, LeBron, and Luca,
and switching anytime they try to get in actions together,
they've been on point with that.
We haven't seen like Ant's been guilty a lot of times
of lazy boxouts and falling asleep off the ball.
Part of it is that the Lakers haven't forced a lot of that pressure on him,
but he hasn't made any of those mistakes.
Incredible ant performance.
The Lakers are just going to be complaining about the refs.
And you can talk more about an ant,
but I do want to hear your reactions to both the alleged trip by Jaden McDaniel.
It's not alleged.
I mean, his foot hit Lucas foot and Luca fell over and the overturned foul.
His foot is there and Lucas foot runs into Jaden McDaniels' foot.
Is that a trip?
I guess yes, but also I don't know.
Jake and Nick Daniels not entitled to shuffle with his own space.
Well, and this is the issue, and I don't want to overplay this issue and transfer it onto every foul and non-fowl that happens.
But I'm glad I talked about this with Goldsbury last Thursday when I talked about the physicality of the playoffs and how I just thought this is a completely different sport from the regular season to a level that I don't think I can remember.
And I used dangerous.
Like I said someone is going to get injured or there's going to be a fight.
And this is the problem with this is that when plays like this happen and by the letter of the law, it's probably a foul.
And you see calls like a little nitpicky call here or there.
And you see teams being like, how are you going to call that?
Yeah.
When I just got tackled by four guys and you let it go.
And it's a completely legitimate argument.
Every time there's a touch foul late in the game, teams are like, I don't understand.
You just like hand checking is completely legal now.
We're getting bugged.
And then you call this.
It's a legit.
argument. And I do think the refs have lost control of a lot of these series. And I don't,
everybody loves the physicality. I like the physicality. Nobody wants to see 40 free throws.
There actually have been a lot of free throws. So it's not like they're calling nothing.
They can only call so much. I get flow of the game stuff. But this is like, this is football out
there. Yes. Especially at the point, as you're saying, when the players themselves are confused about
what kind of contact is allowable. Then there's a cost to the product, right? Anthony Edwards is there
talking to the refs wondering, why is my arm around this player's waist a foul?
But I can full body chop block LeBron James, like for five consecutive seconds and no one's
going to blow a whistle.
Like I think all anyone wants players, fans, coaches included is just like a sense of internal
logic within these games, right?
Like we've always heard every game is officiated differently.
I would say at this point, it's just straight up every possession is officiated differently.
Every player on the floor is officiated differently.
there's no sense of consistency of,
okay, on this night in Minneapolis,
these are the terms of engagement.
It's anything goes at any given time
and then you're just randomly going to get whistled for a foul,
or we're going to send the Zapruder level analysis
film review to see, as you alluded to up top,
despite the fact that Anthony Edwards is falling over,
he does get hit across the wrist,
and therefore this one graze across the wrist,
which in the grand scheme of the contact in this game,
is not rising to the level of many of the other non-calls,
is going to be a monumental moment in this year's playoffs.
And maybe in, you know, I mean, I don't want to say the history of the Lakers franchise
because they're going to have some big, big decisions to make.
And they do have home court.
And it's always easier to come back 3-1 down home court.
Look, that was a foul.
It was a foul.
Absolutely indisputably a foul.
He's also already falling down.
And if you told me, well, it's a no-call.
We just let it go.
I would have been like, well, that's kind of consistent with how you've called most of these playoffs.
The trip, by the literal law, I guess that's a trip.
He did.
Jada McDaniels does take like a weird half step forward, but I don't think Jada McDaniels is sitting there thinking as Luca is bringing the ball up with 35 seconds left in a pivotal playoff game off.
How can I like accidentally trip Luca and get away with it?
And then you still have the inbound pass that you throw away and end up almost throwing the game away.
Yeah.
I do want to talk about Luca because I jokingly brought up Nico Harrison and you left.
Here's what I'm tired of.
And it happened in the Phoenix series that they ended up winning the year they made the conference finals in the second round.
It happened in the Celtic series, the finals that they ended up losing.
And it's happening again now.
And my only, my gripe is, why do you have to get humiliated?
at the beginning of every single playoff series,
before you show the world, like, yeah,
I can actually put in a little bit more of an effort on defense.
Because if you go back and you watch game one and two of that Phoenix series,
he is so bad defensively that it's laughable.
And then all of a sudden, he becomes passable.
Celtic series, same thing.
This is why Brian Winhorst screamed on television,
which Brian never does,
about like, hey, you have shown us,
you can actually do this when you care.
And yet again, here we are.
We're four games into this series.
And he's just helpless defensively off the ball too.
Like his little lunges like gambling, not even gambling, just sort of like lurching around aimlessly out of the play.
It's like, look, the trade is is not.
I've said before, like I wouldn't have done a trade.
Almost no one in the NBA would have done this specific trade.
No.
You can find corners of smart NBA people, team people who would tell you the idea of getting out ahead of this and trading Luca is not.
a crazy idea.
The idea of doing it without shopping him to get nine first round draft picks and swaps
and doing this specific trade is where the logic falls apart.
So, look, I still think it's a crazy trade.
But I'm just tired of like, I'm going to be embarrassed until our backs are against the wall.
And then I'm going to show you that, yeah, I can put up a little bit of a fight.
How about you put up a fucking fight in like game one of the second round?
And now you're down 3-1 and you're probably going home.
it's tough because Luca is a high order competitor.
Like that is a motherfucker,
and we've seen it in enough competitive circumstances to know.
But if you are a motherfucker,
can you not take this seriously on both sides?
Can you not approach those sorts of possessions
with the same kind of, at least baseline fire?
You don't have to go like full blazing inferno intensity,
like game winner over Rudy Gober intensity,
but can you at least have something,
like a little bit of life in you as you go through those?
And I think this kind of feeds into the Lakers defensive conversation.
a little bit too. You mentioned
just like being able to pick and choose which
matchups he wants to attack. I just thought
the Laker switches were way too compliant.
And you can see it on the other side.
Luca wants in particular
Nasreet. Like he wants
to go at Nasreed and that's been a pretty successful
matchup for him in this series. It's part
of the reason why the wolves were doing this dance.
Do we have Gobert on the floor here? Do we have
Nas read on the floor here? Like, Gobert is actually held
up better in those kind of one-on-one situations
than Nas has. But you have
Jaden McDaniels who's fighting like
hell to get Nas out of as many
of those situations as possible.
And I think what the Lakers are missing right now is
enough of those other guys who are doing
the scram switching, the stunting,
like fighting through the screen
to prevent the switch at the point
of attack. And thus Luca is sitting there.
And sometimes he has, you know, himself
in the crosshairs and sometimes, as you said, he's just being
really lazy on the help side. Both things
are bad. Both things I would hope
are correctable. And we've seen historically both
things are correctable. It's just only by
game three or four when Luca decides to get
embarrassed to a sufficient point where
Jason Kidd chews him out or in this case
I guess JJ Redick will chew him out. We'll see
what the Lakers version of Luca getting
embarrassed looks like. But
he's going to have a spotlight on
him with this team in a completely different
way. And maybe that facilitates that embarrassment
a little bit. Well, I mean, this is
like when the trade happened, like, well, he gets to
look at LeBron's like off court
regimen up close and like correct
all these problems. He is extension
eligible at the end of the season.
LeBron has a player option.
this summer. And sneaky thing to look at, Austin Reeves is extension eligible.
And I don't think there's any way that he takes the extension that the Lakers can offer,
which is like four years, $90 billion. He's going to go into unrestricted free agency
after the 25, 26 season. They obviously still have all the stuff that they traded for Mark
Williams before they did the trade. I think the Lakers backed out of the trade.
Certainly feels that way. And they'll have one other swap, I believe, going into the summer.
They've got swaps. They've got swaps. And I do think one interesting.
stat from the series is that Luca only has 20 assists in four games, which for him is not very
many. He has low assist game one. He had one, I think, in game one and two in game four and then a
bunch in the middle. And I think you feel the absence of a dive man for him to sort of break down
the defense and get into his sweet spots. Jackson Hayes didn't play the entire second half.
And by the way, you know what complicates everything you're talking about, scramming, fighting over
screens when you have to play the entire second half of a high stakes
playoff game against a big, nasty, fast physical team.
I don't know what they're, I haven't, I'm not reading what the reaction to it is.
I understand it was desperation time.
And it's like there are a lot of coaches if they did that, they would be getting flambayed
today.
If Tibbs did that, he would be getting lambasted today.
Now I understand it's apples to oranges because Tibbs does this in the regular season and
JJ Reddick does not.
I get it.
But, like, that is a really, a really, like, I'm watching it.
And I'm like, wait a just, I actually looked back in the middle of the game.
Like, did I miss a sub?
Or is he actually not subbed anybody?
I'm like, oh, my God.
I mean, I would hope tips took it as a personal attack.
Like, you can go further.
You can go farther.
You can do more.
Can I play four guys the entire half and just play four on five?
I also think, too, the other problem with that.
And yeah, you're right.
There is a desperation element, right?
Like there's a reason no other coach does this, at least until there's no going back, right?
Like if you get deep enough in a series or deep enough in, of course, the NBA finals,
you do whatever you got to do.
You play six guys if you have to.
You play five guys if you have to.
Nobody does it earlier than that, in part because it runs you down.
And so when you see the wolves have just owned the fourth quarter in this series overall
and especially owned the fourth quarter in this game, not an accident based on the amount
of burn that these guys have.
And also not an accident considering the only way that the Lakers,
get by defensively with the personnel that they have
is by flying around, making high effort,
high intensity plays all the time.
And they really have, I would say,
five guys who can do that plus Luca.
One of them is Jared Vanderbilt,
who in this game did not seem super playable
offensively for all of his limitations.
And so you can't execute the system you want to run
and really the only one that is solvent
for this version of the Lakers roster with Jackson Hayes out there.
Honestly, even sometimes with Gabe Vincent out there.
You have this impossible conundrum
because the roster is not built to be a roster.
It is built to be an Anthony Davis team
that then became a Luca Donge's team
that will have to be rectified in the offseason.
But in the meantime, I would say my hope would be
you can just steal a couple of minutes.
It doesn't have to be a lot.
You can still run these guys incredible minutes
in the second half.
Just get LeBron one minute of rest going into a TV timeout.
Like literally anything.
Lots of other coaches do this.
Like they do it with current.
Like you get to, you get a minute, you get the TV timeout, you get back in the game.
Also, Jordan Goodwin can play.
I think Jordan Goodwin can play a little bit more than he's playing.
Yeah.
Dan Wojke wrote a great piece about the Banshee culture.
That's the term they used to describe just the flying around defensive players that they've cultivated.
And Goodwin is kind of the poster guy in the story.
It's like, well, it's nice that they were Banshee bought into Bansheek culture.
Now they can't get on the floor.
The season actually matters.
It's tough scenes.
I will say Oklahoma City is watching all of this and being like, you guys go to town,
like beat the shit out of each other.
We're over here.
Yeah, Memphis figured us out, but the series is over.
So we're just, we're just chilling.
Like, we're fresh as a daisy.
We're young.
We're deep.
And it's like, it's the Warriors Rockets game for us tonight.
But right now we only have one two two series in the entire round.
And we're about to talk about it.
Like, I think the Warriors are going to have some urgency to win this game.
and try to get out of this series
because they're watching these teams
just slug each other.
And every series is so physical.
The Thunder are like, yeah, we're done.
We're cool.
We'll take like eight days off until the next round if you'll get.
And they might get like,
depending on this Denver Clipper series.
I want to give Chris Finch's flowers.
You mentioned the Reed-Gaer conundrum.
I feel like he's played that exactly right.
Like he's had a great feel for okay.
And I've said this before.
Like the Rudy issue is not on defense.
it's on offense, particularly the way the Lakers are guarding them.
And his finishing in this series has been all-time atrocious.
How about they call a post-up for him to open? Was it to open the game or open the half?
I think it was to open the game. Didn't go great.
No. I feel like he's had a great feel for that. And the same with DeVincenzo and Conley.
And the Wolves' second most played lineup is that lineup with Devinchenzo for Conley and Reed for Gobert.
plus 27 in 22 minutes for the series.
He even played all three bigs together yesterday
and played now somewhat due to foul trouble,
played Jada McDaniels at the four,
and Terrence Shannon at the four played a little smaller.
Like he's playing every card and he's doing it in the right doses.
Any adjustment you're looking for from the Lakers
as they try to save their season other than what we've kind of talked about
defensively and all that.
I think that, I mean, they clearly have to stave off
some of the minutes concerns. They have to buy time
somewhere. The turnovers, I think, are an issue.
There's also a weird thing with Luca, too, where I don't
know how you adjust out of this, because
some of this is Lucas' game and some of it is
his particular carelessness within
this series, where he's getting, like, picked at half
court in a way that I've never seen Luca Donchich
get picked at half court before.
By Rudy. By Rudy. By Rudy. A couple times.
Of all the people, he does not want to be embarrassed
by Rudy Gobert, Ripin you at Half Court.
It's not quite Buddy Heald and Stephen Adams,
but we're nearing into the territory of the
dynamic. There's something
with Luca where his mistakes,
and he had an incredible shot-making game,
like he was kind of going toe to toe to
with Ant for a lot of this game
in a way that I hope we get 10 more years of that
as far as Western Conference basketball goes.
But his mistakes really feed
Wolves runs.
And some of it, like he smoked a layup
that all of a sudden became a 6-0 Wolf's run.
He missed a couple of gimmies.
He gets picked at half-quarter a couple times.
Those are monumental plays
within the flow of this game.
And so it's like, I don't know how,
you can't take away all of Luca's mistakes,
but there's something about the floor balance in those moments.
And this has been a Luca problem throughout his career a little bit,
where he gets deep into the paint,
and you know he's not going to be the first one back on defense busting ass.
Although I think he did try a desperation revenge,
chased down block at one point in this game that did not quite work out.
He did.
So he will do it on occasion.
But ultimately,
him being behind the play after deep drives is tough.
But that's what you have to do if you're not going to settle for jumpers
every time against the switch heavy defense.
A couple of things.
before we put this series to bed.
Minnesota, 35%
offensive rebounding rate.
They're doing their job as the bigger team.
Also, I think, can only be combated
if you get guys more rest.
You saw, by the end of this game,
Austin Reeves is running on fumes,
trying to box out Rudy Gobert
and getting elbowed in the face.
You have to get these guys a little bit of time
if you want them to be competitive on the boards.
Well, the possession they had,
when they went up, up,
I think they were up two,
after LeBron
had his second,
highlight defensive play the last two minutes.
And they're up to with like a minute 10 left, big possession, they just did nothing.
They just ran all, they just all kind of stood there.
Luca, I think, ran some road, half speed pick and roll.
LeBron ended up taking like a logo three.
That's an exhausted team kind of frittering away a massive possession on the hope that
a 30 foot three will just go in and win them the game.
The other side I want to mention Minnesota plus eight in free throw attempts.
I don't think a lot of people expected that.
game five could look a little different in Los Angeles.
But if those stats are like that, this series is bye-bye.
You mentioned Luke.
Could I for one more Chris Finch flower to the bouquet that you already gave him?
Him saving that challenge for that moment at the end of this game, literally saved it.
And in stark contrast, I want to say J.B. Bickerstaff's a very good coach.
I have a lot of respect for the work he's done with the Pistons this season.
I'm going to hand J.B. Bickerstap and every coach in the NBA, a very handy float
chart, which is, is the player
about to challenge, will it result in
actual points? If yes,
you can challenge it. If no, is it laid
in the game enough that possession
alone might swing the result
of the game? If yes, challenge, if no, do
not challenge it. Like, just do
not do it. I don't care what, I don't care how
confident Cade Cunningham is.
You cannot challenge that play.
Do you do this in real life?
Like, if my wife
is like, hey, you didn't wash that dish
carefully enough? Should I just start doing it?
We're in my figure of a challenge.
Let's get our daughter in here.
I think the Hawkeye view is going to vindicate you on that.
It's going to show that you did sponge it.
Here's the real dirty truth.
It's I,
every time I have not washed a dish appropriately.
I am a serial ignore of the outside of dishes.
Like so if you're inside only.
I just, I'm in a rush.
I want to get things done and it's, it's, I'm sloppy.
But I will, maybe a challenge, challenge flag.
Look, the two challenge.
the uptick to two challenges has sort of changed the math.
When there was one challenge, it was just, you just save it for the end of games.
And like Miami never uses challenges ever, which is kind of weird.
But now that there are two, you will get, like, you will get smart people who are in charge
of figuring this out for teams who will say on the first one, if you're 100% sure you're
going to win it, you can use it on something that feels innocuous, like a change of possession
or something, because that could be a three.
It could be whatever.
Like if you're one,
Decision tree number one is like,
are you going to win it for the first one?
And if yes, for sure, use it.
Let me ask you this, Zach.
Are you 100% certain
of literally anything in your life?
An out of bounds call where it like clearly hits somebody's hand
and it's been called the wrong way.
I would hope.
I just don't describe that level of certainty.
And I'm certainly not going to bank a playoff game.
Oh, you know what I'm 100% certain on?
I need, I need the, I need Mets fans feedback on this.
I vowed when I got laid off and I embraced the Mets again after a long time off during their
playoff run.
I vowed to be a regular fan.
Like, not a regular fan.
I vowed to keep in touch.
I can't do it during the rest.
Like I vowed to check a box score and I do it every day.
Maybe they'll be on in the background somewhere on a TV.
I can glance at.
Oh, okay, so and so is up.
I'm doing it.
I'm living up to my vow.
Now I'm buying a jersey.
And this is what I'm 100.
I'm 100% sure of.
I'm buying a jersey.
And is a lapsed diehard Mets fan.
who I own two jerseys.
Todd Hunley and Mike Piazza,
that's how lapsed I am.
I need the Mets community to tell me
what is the most ethical
and most Metsy jersey to get?
Anyway, you mentioned Lucas Smoking the Layup.
A fun theme of these weekend's crazy games
are the forgotten plays that end up being huge.
So there's that.
There's Shrewder not accelerating for a layup
at the end of the third quarter
and instead passing to Tim Hardaway Jr.,
I think for a dunk that didn't count
in a game the Pistons lost by one.
Was it one?
I think it lost by two.
Two, whatever they did.
It was close.
My brain is mush.
And then...
Oh, no, it was one.
You're right.
94 and 83.
And then there is the end of the first quarter of Nuggets Clippers, which turns into
the game of the year, maybe, at least given the stakes, where with 1.9 seconds left, I think,
James Hardin throws a football pass on a sideline out of bounds that goes the entire
length of the court and goes out of bounds on the end.
opposite baseline. Nobody touches it.
And the Nuggets get the ball back in their offensive end.
And Yoko Chit's a three at the buzzer.
And you forget about stuff like that in the craziness of the game.
And holy crap, was this game crazy?
Yes.
It's just these things come back to bite you sometimes.
Let's talk about that game because we have a bonus.
That series rather, it's 2-2.
It's the only 2-2 series, and we have an extra day off.
The series does not resume until tomorrow.
I gave you one homework assignment, which was rewatch the Aaron Gordon Miracle.
And I've watched it 20 times.
And tell me something you didn't notice the first times that you watched it.
Did you find anything?
I did find something.
I don't think I had an appropriate appreciation of the Kauai Leonard double.
Me, that's number one on my list.
I think it's like you see it.
I know he gets there.
And so every time I'm rewatching it, I'm watching everything else because I know
Kauai is going to get to Yokic, but not enough to deflect the ball or ultimately to block the shot.
That said, you watch him.
it is perfectly executed.
Like, I mean, textbook, the second that Yokic starts to turn
and has even anything resembling a blind eye to Kauai, he's gone.
And Bogi, of course, this is like all scripted.
Bogi is rotating up.
Everything kind of tracks as far as what the clippers are trying to do in that moment.
The difference is like Kauai in pursuit is such a terrifying thing
that even though I know he doesn't get there, my brain is making me think,
but might he get there this time?
Like this time I watch it, is he going to actually like sneak up on Yokai
and get this, because he has,
it's not just a look in his eye,
but of change in his body language,
Kauai's body language,
when he knows he can take a playover.
And he kind of has that in that moment.
And frankly,
I wonder if the reason Yokic airs
that Sambor shuffle so badly
is he might see Kauai
at the very end of it
and rush it a little bit.
I would just run out of bounds.
Is that kind of coming at me?
I would just like,
what's going to all this?
Let's go to overtime.
Get it out of the arena,
frankly,
if you see him coming after you.
But he's already got to get it over Zoo, and now he's got to beat Kauai on the timing.
And so he can't cock it back as much to even release it.
I kind of wonder if the reason he misses it so badly is because of Kauai.
And it's only because he misses it exactly that badly that Aaron Gordon can catch it
because it doesn't even clip rip.
So I'm not going to lie.
I watched the entire Warriors Rockets game after that game.
And as I was watching that game, every 10 minutes, I would be like, I'm going to have to
rewatch this game.
because all I can think about is Aaron Gordon's dunk.
I don't really understand what happened.
Still, I don't understand the science behind how that was, like, indisputably a good
basket.
I believe that it was because they've gone, like, within milliseconds to show the light going off.
I just can't believe that it happened.
I don't even understand how it happened.
And I noticed the Kauai double team, too, because I'm watching and
you see Aaron Gordon come for the offensive rebound
and you see the defense kind of shading toward
Yokic and you
I asked me so like why are they overloading the floor at all?
Why is all the attention just not on like stay on our guy?
There's nothing you James Hardin can do
by taking an extra half step toward Nicola Yokic on this shot.
It's going to go in or it's not going to go in.
And then you watch it again.
It's like actually they're tilting a lot.
They're tilting a little bit because Kauai is double teaming
and that leaves three on two.
on the backside and Hardin doesn't know who to box out.
And here comes Aaron Gordon.
And absolutely incredible.
I'll tell you what I noticed.
Yokic has zero reaction, like, which we've seen before.
He just puts his head down.
Like, it's almost, if you just zoomed on in his reaction, you would think they lost the game.
He just puts his head down and just starts walking.
Just trots off.
And Jeff, I have an eye on Jeff Van Gundy all the time because I miss Jeff.
I love Jeff.
I'm so happy that he's back in the muck of this.
and I'm sure he's enjoying himself.
I mean, straight up in the muck,
wrestling balls away from people on the bench,
like really in it.
And so I watched him and he just sort of,
he's sitting down.
He's not standing up.
He's like the only guy not standing up.
He's sitting down and then he just sort of keeps sitting down.
Just an absolutely incredible moment from an incredible finish,
which includes a absolutely ridiculous shot that Yolkich hits to put them up to,
followed by a Zubots put back to tie the game.
This series is now 2-2.
it was the series I was most excited about.
I picked Nuggets in Seven.
I feel like it could have been a sweep by now.
Like the Clippers have been the better team.
They're plus 33 for the series.
Where are you as we go into Game 5 in Denver?
I don't know if you made a pick.
I don't remember.
What's your feel of this?
I picked Nuggets in Seven.
I mean, we could be headed there, certainly.
I think my only apprehension about us getting to Nuggets in Seven
is it feels like a series where the clippers have options
and the Nuggets do not have options.
Their options to the extent that they have them, Denver,
is, okay, we can change how we execute
against some of these kind of junked-up defenses
that have been giving us trouble.
And you have the best player in the world
to do that in theory, in Nikola Yokic.
That hasn't exactly helped so far,
and I'm wondering if maybe over time
they'll just have a level of familiarity
with those sorts of zones
that will help them penetrate them.
But as far as rotation decisions go,
no one is going to play any more or less pending
whatever's going on with Russell Westbrook's foot.
You're not going to be able to scale up
the Jalen Pickett minutes in a meaningful way
that's going to change your rotation.
Versus the Clippers,
they actually do have some choices to make.
And I think in particular,
they're going to have a bit of a Chris Dunn choice to make
as the series continues to develop.
His offense is starting to become a real problem.
They can flex him out if they have to.
And I don't think they want to for obvious reasons.
Chris Dunn is a hellacious defender.
Even if he is mismatched in,
size at some points in the series with the switches that they're executing.
He's still really valuable to have on the floor for that purpose.
But just the simple fact that Tyloo can look down his bench and say, okay, we're going
to try Derek Jones instead and just see if his three is going tonight.
We're going to try Nick Batum instead, who is just such a like a steady hand in these sorts
of moments.
We're going to go to Bogdan Bogdanovich had easily the game of his playoff life coming
off of game four.
I am having not watched Bogdan Bogdanovich entire career every single game, having not watched
every international game, having not watched
these games in Europe, I am quite confident
that that was the best rebound of his entire
basketball life when he stole
the ball from Yokic, jumped over
him and laid in and up and under
to give the Clippers a lead
late in the game. Completely.
And so, yeah, I think that's why at this point,
I feel the tilt
toward the Clippers. Like, in terms
of what should happen, the Clippers
should have more to play with
that would let them get through the back part of the series.
The Nuggets have Nicola Yogan.
on their team. And I don't want to give short short shrift to Aaron Gordon or Christian
Brown. I thought it was really good. Michael Porter Jr. is out there with one arm,
having a really good and really important game. All that stuff matters. It really to me
feels like a team that has one defining option, which is Yokic increasing his aggression
and finding away in the way that we saw in game four, being a little less choosy on his shots,
being willing to take more versus a team that has like some strategic levers to pull in a way
that David Adelman is just like, does not have that luxury at this point. Yeah, this series
is stretching Yokic to the absolute outer bounds of his versatility.
I mean, there are possessions where he runs, he starts by running an inverted pick and roll as the ball handler and finishes by shooting a three in isolation.
I mean, that's literally what happened on one possession, I think in late in the third quarter.
They're running him off pin downs.
They need to run some cross screens for him.
Like, they're using the absolute limits of his versatility just to survive in this series.
You mentioned MPJ.
He gets crapped on all the time.
because of his contract, because his handle hasn't developed,
because his defense is a little bit spacey at times.
It was in this game, particularly early off of Chris Dunn.
His defense is a big pivot point in the series because he's guarding Chris Dunn.
And as you suggested, clearly in game four adjustment number one is,
whatever help you're giving off Chris Dunn in games one to three,
dial it up by 50% in game four.
Ignore him completely.
And you got to be on time.
You got to be on time no matter where Chris Dunn is.
If he's on the strong side, it doesn't matter rules.
don't apply. Your job is to help. And he screwed that up a few times. He played 42 minutes with a bad
shoulder. Six of 11, four of seven on threes. 17 points. The nuggets needed every one of those
points. Crap on Michael Porter Jr. when he deserves it. Recognize that that's a ballsy performance.
Christian Brown, I thought, was the unsung hero of the game. 16, 8 of 19, not great. One of seven,
not great. The one was huge. I thought his defense was some of the best he's played. And you can see the
Nuggets trying to figure out when can we sit Yokic back a little bit on these pick and
rolls?
Because when he's up to touch, it's a problem for it.
It's a good battle when the clippers have to pass it around and figure out how to find
the open guy.
But they're trying to like, can we sit him back a little bit?
You can only do that if Christian Brown is like roaring down Hardin's tail on those
pick and rules.
But you mentioned done.
And that was the adjustment that enabled to come back was.
the Clippers went to Bogdanovich over Dunn and did something that I was waiting for them.
When will they feel pressed to do this, which is play, go all in on a lineup with only one non-shooter in Zoo instead of two with Zoo plus Dunn or Zoo plus Derek Jones Jr.
Or God forbid Ben Simmons plus one of those other guys.
And they went all in on it and the Nuggets had zero answer defensively.
Like Norm Powell went crazy.
Every shot was wide open.
all of a sudden the spacing just bent the Nuggets defense and just broke it.
And I'm interested to see how quickly they go back to that.
They should and will, I think, start Chris Dunn still.
But you mentioned Batum.
And Batum is the guy that I like in those lineups the best because of his combination of size, defense, and shooting.
I've got my eye on that lineup with Batum in Dunn's place in the starting five.
I thought that was an interesting.
And they went zone in a way that really seemed to confuse.
nuggets. I don't get that. I don't understand why when you have a giant playmaker who can see
over the top of the defense, why it would be so stifling to run up against the zone, other than to say
like, Boki was playing the top of that zone. And I thought that he and the clippers were super
aggressive in challenging and denying the ball in the first place to prevent Yokic from even getting,
like getting set up at the elbow more or less so he can sort of read the floor. And that pressure
goes a long way. And I think by that point in the game, the nuggets were so exhausted from
44 minutes of competitive basketball
that, you know, they're walking into some stuff, right?
Like, they're a little too casual getting into some of the offense against the zone.
They've had this big, I think it was a 22 point lead at one point,
that they're kind of just trying to coast out to a win rather than to punch through.
Oh, they went pre-vent offense big time to the point that Yokic tried to walk the dog
a couple times and the clippers were like, you're not doing that.
And one of those possessions he had to throw that like a sudden, like pick the ball up
and lob it to Aaron Gordon and Aaron Gordon just like,
sprinted up the court with the ball and turned it over immediately.
It's like, oh, my God, they're kind of disintegrating here.
They really were.
I mean, this was a very, very narrowly avoided implosion.
And we would obviously be talking about the results so differently,
if not for an Aaron Gordon fingertip overall in terms of the impact on the series
and what it means about the nuggets and all these things.
But, like, I don't want to gloss over the fact that Denver tried every way it could
to give this game away and just barely could not do it, but really, really tried.
I do. The zone, I thought, confused them. And at times confused me because I think if you
rewatch the possessions, there are some in there that are actually man to man, except the
matchups are just different. Like, they just straight up put Kauai on Yokic a couple of times.
And if you look at the way the matchups are flowing, it's kind of man to man. I think they just
got them off balance. And one of the things the zone does is it fucks up all the matchups.
So if you get a stop, everything scrambled going the other way. And Kauai is killing the nuggets
on cross matches because he's guarding Michael Porter Jr.
The Nuggets want no part of Michael Porter Jr. on him.
Michael Porter Jr. wants no part of just like, okay, I got to take Kauai.
I'll just do it.
He's running away from that matchup, and Kauai is feasting in the void of that.
You know, Aaron Gordon, it's an awesome moment for him.
Just a player that I think every basketball diehard can appreciate everything he does.
Awesome moment for him.
And I like the nuggets.
They've sprinkled in like some Murray Gordon two-man game to try and get him going as a roller and use Yoketch as a little bit of a spacer, secondary playmaker.
They've even done Murray, Gordon, Yokic staggered screens, which I like.
And I still don't think they're running enough Murray Yokch pick and roll.
They only ran 19, according to Second Spectrum, in game four.
For the series, they're running about 20 a game, 1.4 points per possession.
no matter how you slice it,
that's very, very good.
I feel, I don't know.
It's like, we're going to talk about the Knicks in a second.
I have no idea why there's not more Brunson cat pick and roll.
I mean, that's like coaching malpractice to me.
The eternal question.
But with the Yukish-Murie stuff,
I think a lot of it is that zone, right?
It's like pick and roll against zone
is a little bit more of a complicated endeavor.
And certainly when you're denying the ball
as aggressively as the clippers are.
But they need those Aaron Gordon possessions
on the periphery of this game.
They need those Christian Brown possessions.
I thought to the extent that Denver's other modifications,
other than what they were doing defensively
against Chris Dunn really paid off.
One of them was Aaron Gordon bust an ass down the court
and sealing with deep position against whoever he can get his ass on.
Off matches. Cross matches.
Those cross matches were huge, drew some fouls,
got some free points both for him and for other people.
That is stuff that they can pull out and that they'll have to.
But most of the Nuggets adjustments ultimately, I think,
are read this better or run this harder.
And they just don't have a lot of flexibility beyond those things.
Yeah, I don't, again, I pick Nuggets in seven.
In theory, this looks like Nuggets in seven.
It's 2-2, both teams of one on the road.
The Nuggets have home court advantage.
Don't feel good if I'm a Nuggets fan.
But I also, the series has been strange enough where every time you feel like,
okay, the Clippers have been figured out, they're clearly the better team.
They blow out Denver in Game 3.
It sort of comes back to this muddy middle.
And so I guess we're just going to kind of live there.
Are you parting thoughts before we go to Pistons Nicks?
No, let's keep it moving.
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Pistons Nix 3-1 Nix.
Was it a foul?
Yeah.
It was a foul.
Probably should add your challenge.
Probably should have consulted the flowchart.
Well, you can't challenge that, can you?
Why not?
Could you challenge a non-call?
I believe we saw another.
challenge of a non-call this weekend.
Yeah, you're right.
It was a foul.
Josh Hart seemed to tip that it was a foul.
Josh Hart said it was a foul.
It's the arms that get me in the end.
The arms come down a little bit.
And I will credit, I will credit Tim Hardaway Jr.
for this.
He doesn't jump sideways super aggressively to sell it.
And I think in the end pays the price for playing
borderline ethical basketball and not doing what a lot of players would do,
which is completely take a sideways jump shot.
it was a foul and the Knicks win anyway.
I don't know what else to say about it.
It sucks to have a game decided on a play like that.
Ultimately, there's a lot of things that go into deciding the game.
The Knicks are only plus eight for the series.
They're scoring 110 points per 100 possessions.
They're going to win the series.
They should win the series, obviously.
Brunson has the injury scare and then comes back
and scores 15 points in the fourth quarter on.
seven of 11 shooting.
Incredible performance.
Incredible shot making.
And Kat with just two all-time bailout jumpers,
one falling out of bounds on a totally dead possession
where the gennakes don't run their best stuff.
And the other,
if you freeze the moment where Kat makes that step back three
that ultimately wins the game,
you will struggle to find worst spacing
from the competent NBA offense.
literally all five Knicks players are within the same 20-foot quadrant of the floor on the right side
and Kat steps back and hits the three incredible shot.
Where do you want to go with?
I mean, I'm already looking ahead to the next series, which will be Knicks Celtics probably.
I feel a little worse about the Knicks coming out of this series and I did coming into it.
I picked the Knicks in five.
This is on course for Nixon five, but it's not the Knicks in five that I,
envisioned. Let me make a slight counterpoint to that. I think coming out of this game,
which as you said was flawed, certainly there are a lot of Knicks runs that are like,
how are you guys letting this further away after you've had the dominant stretches, in particular
defensively that you had in the first half? All that I'd taken stride, I take into account.
I came out of this game feeling like this, this Knicks performance was closer to anything we saw
during last year's run
than anything I've seen
from this next team before.
Like there's been something
kind of missing with them
and again,
this was far from a perfect game,
but I thought they tapped back into
some of the like greater
than the sum of their parts magic
that made last year's team really special.
And some of it was the emotion
and the energy in the building for this game
was just off the charts from the start
for both teams for Little Seasers Arena.
Like it seemed like an amazing vibe.
I would love to see this game in person.
But I thought they were flying around
and some of this might be like the Josh Hart element of this in particular
where he had such a good energetic game
and that is kind of one of the defining characters of last year's run in particular
and so if you take, okay, this energy is working.
Yeah, OG and McHill Bridges can't hit anything,
especially around the rim.
Like their inability to finish is starting to become a huge problem.
But defensively, I thought they were giving exactly what I want them to give.
Jalen Brunson and Kat have this incredible closing push.
Just the kind of kick that even someone like Cade Cunningham,
and even a team like the Pistons are not capable of.
Are we getting somewhere with the collective value of all of these things?
That would be my only hope coming out of this game, despite how messy it was.
Well, Hart has been awesome the last two games.
And there was a segment of Knicks fans clamoring for less Josh Hart and more Deuce McBride.
By the way, Deuce McBride can't make a shot.
And I said on Thursday, like, that's just not going to happen.
Josh Hart is too important to the fabric of the team.
Tibbs is the last coach who's going to do something like that.
And Josh Hart, 14 points, 10 rebounds, 5 assists, 4 steals in game 4 made his threes,
which are going to be pivot points in this series.
And in game three, I thought Josh Hart pushing the pace unlocked Cat because the pistons
could not get out of the Duren Kat matchup, which they're trying to avoid.
And Duren was stuck on Kat, Kat walked into some trail threes.
Not only that, using Josh Hart as a facilitator from above the elbow and getting your cutting game
going, I think opened up their offense.
a little bit. So I, you know, I get what you're saying.
I just, sometimes I wonder like, you know, Bill has spent the whole year raving justifiably
about the Brunson cat pick and roll and how unstoppable it is with shooting around it and Bridges,
heart, I mean, heart shooting, take or leave, and Annanobi, who's been outstanding
the whole year. They've run 47 pick and rolls in four games. That's just not nearly enough.
And in both game three and game four yesterday because of Tobias Harris's foul trouble,
they were gifted, extended periods of time
where the Pistons decided we have no choice
but to guard Cat with Jailendurran or Paul Reed.
We're putting our centers on them because we just can't,
we don't have anything else to do.
And you're just like you are been gift-wrapped,
a chance to run a Brunson cat pick and pop
and just see how they respond.
And they either don't do it
or they run it so half-heartedly
that it doesn't go anywhere and there's fatigue in that too.
And even when they have it.
I keep harping on this.
Even when they have Tobias Harris on Cat,
you're not outlawed by the NBA
from running that same two-man game.
Because guess what?
If Tobias Harris switches,
Jalen Brunson's going to get a good shot.
And what he's usually doing is
just hugging Cat and saying we're not
leaving Cat and Jail and Brunson's getting good driving lanes.
And also, if he switches,
you might get a cat.
Like, you're allowed to do this.
And this is, I think, I'm assuming,
I haven't listened to Bill and Ryan yet.
Why Bill tweeted this is a brutal Tibbs game
because you are, you are,
you are gifted this chance of
we don't have to problem solve around
Jalen Duren on Josh Hart. We are given
the matchup that we got Kat for, center on Kat
and we don't leverage it. It's just, it's driving me insane. Is it
driving you insane? Completely. Like again, because the solution
is so simple and because their games do interlock,
this isn't a Damian Lillard-Yana's situation where they don't have the
chemistry. They've got it. Like they've got the juice,
Brunson and Kat together. Their games interlock
in a really successful and really easily accessible way.
All you have to do is run it.
And the Toby part of this, I want to zero in on specifically.
Because yeah, during an understandable target,
I get why the pistons are trying to keep him out of that.
Minus 42 in the series.
It doesn't feel that bad to me,
although there was one catch-and-shoe three cat had
in, look like three minutes ago,
where he was kind of spaced out at no man's landed.
I was surprised as that dramatic, minus 42.
Some of it, I mean, he's been able to claw back
some points on the glass in particular,
in a way that helps,
but defensively,
this is just not a good matchup for him
is a really tough spot
to put a player of his inexperience
and his youth, to be honest,
he's still such a young player
to throw him to this particular far.
This is a lot for him.
And he's out there,
like impacting the game how he can,
sometimes more effectively than others,
largely not a factor in the defense.
21 years old,
21 and a half years old.
Incredible.
And like,
I have a lot of hope for Jalen Duren.
I do not have a lot of hope
for his ability to defend in this series
because it just has not really,
been there. But even putting him aside, I'm really glad you brought up the Tobias Harris
element, which Kat versus Tobias Harris is the matchup I did not know I needed, but I've been very
much enjoying, like they're jawing and going back and forth. It's become a battle of real consequence
within the complexion of this series. Where is this Tobias been all of our lives? Philadelphia fans
would have loved this Tobias Harris. He's talking crap. He's pushing, he's shoving. He makes mean faces,
as it turns out, this is all Philadelphia fans wanted, minus the gigantic salary.
They would have liked this to buy.
I like this.
Where is this guy been?
Is there something about Detroit?
I love it.
I think it is something about Detroit.
I think it is something about his role as an elder statesman for the team and, you know,
setting an example that way versus being, oh, Tobias go stand in the corner because we don't
really value what you do, which, fair enough.
Like, I think he means something to a competitive playoff team that he cannot to a high
order contending team, and that's fine.
The way it manifests is him being.
being like a really,
like I think overall,
one of the most important pistons on the floor,
full stop.
And him getting in foul trouble
was a huge swing point in this game as well.
But you can run pick and roll at Tobias Harris.
Like he is still just mere mortal Tobias Harris.
And you are Jalen Brunson.
He's not Kevin,
he's not Kevin Garnett from 2007.
I like,
I am also mystified by the lack of one five pick and roll.
I just think it's right there for the taking.
Anytime they want to do it.
What Tibbs has told us historically is he will,
not take the fruit that you want him to take despite how low it hangs.
Like he is going to do his thing.
And that thing is going to work or it's not.
But there's not going to be a lot of futs or adjustment about it.
I used to call Mike Boodenholzer, Coach Low Hanging Fruit.
And people took it as an insult.
And I was like, no, it's a compliment.
He's taking all the easy, like we're not going to foul.
We're going to get every defensive rebound.
Like we're going to take care of all the stuff that's easy for us to take care of.
It was a completely, it was like meant as a compliment.
Pick the fruit.
The fruit's there.
It's delicious.
It's ripe.
Pick it right off the tree.
Can I wonder one thing about,
just to play devil's advocate
on the pick and roll front,
I wonder if part of it,
it's one thing if you're going to have
Cat pop exclusively
and be,
I mean,
he's one of the best shooters,
one of the best big men shooters ever left.
Can we do that?
That sounds great.
As far as Cat as Rollman
or Cat as Driver,
this was already a game
where Cat's battling foul trouble
and I want to give him
immense credit for tackling
his own personal white whale,
which is picked up that fourth foul
super early,
played basically a full rotation shift
after that foul without picking up the fifth.
I mean, trade up, that is the reason the Knicks win this game.
It's like his ability to stay on the floor is probably the reason why the Knicks win.
I wonder if part of the reason they don't want Kat rumbling through a role or even picking up
a moving screen, which he will and can do on many occasions, like are they just trying to
keep the fouls off of Kat as much as possible?
And maybe that's giving Tibbs and the Knicks too much credit.
I don't know if that's the conversation I want to have about a guy.
who's getting paid $53 million next season, $57 million the year after,
$61 million the effort.
Like, yeah, we can't really, we've got to dial back to pick and rolls with the best shooting,
self-proclaimed best shooting big man in the history of the NBA because of his foul.
It's not, it's not good.
He played very well, and he's played tough, and this has been a physical, nasty series,
like all of these series have been.
And, you know, the Knicks are going to pull out of it.
And, yeah, but the Tobias thing has been.
Really fun. I like this device.
And they're lost without them. They don't know what to do without them.
Should we play Sart Thompson?
Should we play Ron Holland? Should we just play Kate at the four?
What happens when we play Kate at the four?
They just don't know what to do.
I'm a little surprised.
Deep cut.
Is Simone Fontecchio, like, dead?
Like, what happened to him?
I thought he was going to play a little bit in this series.
He should play in this series.
I really don't see why not.
I mean, at the point where Kate Cunningham has to shove Ron Holland
to prevent him from fighting with literally anyone in his sanity?
Are we really so opposed to playing Simonee Fontechio in this moment?
And I would say in particular,
because guys like Mikhail and O.G are already not a factor
on anything inside the three-point arc right now.
Like, they really struggled with overall the length
of what Detroit is putting out there.
And Simone Fontechio, for all those imitations,
like, that dude has that kind of length.
Plus, when he makes threes, everybody on the bench does this.
I know.
You're just, again, low-hanging,
fruit that's right there for both teams to take.
On one hand, one five pick and roll.
On the other hand, great Italian celebrations.
The pistons have only scored 109 points per 100 possessions in this series.
Offensively, that was, when I picked the Knicks in five, I said, I just don't see if they're
going to be able to score enough to keep up with the Knicks.
Now, it turns out keeping up with the Knicks has not been that difficult, and they still
haven't been able to do it.
What have you thought of Kat's defense in this series?
Okay, not good enough.
Like, I mean, I think it presents the same problems going forward.
that we all would have expected.
And this is, you know, when you get into the issue of like, okay, well, they're going to run
into the Celtics.
Like what is it that is going to happen here?
Like, what is it that they would be able to do?
Kat and Brunson being such pressure points defensively is such a problem.
And it's such like a glaring neon sign that I worry about.
I think he's been okay.
And also it's hard to defend when you're in foul trouble.
And that's when you give up dunks.
That's when you give up some like high impact plays because you can't afford to impact them.
So as much as anything, I think it relies on him not picking.
up those cheap fouls, as does every element of his game.
I think OK is, I think I'm like 80% of OK.
I think I'm like a little less than OK.
There have been segments of the series when they've asked him to come up to the level of
the screen against Cade and he's just been too late.
And so he's got to like panic and rush out.
And Duren has had streaks of dunk, dunk, dunk.
And then they've sat him back a little bit and said, can you try dropping?
And that hasn't worked.
But he's been other points, he's been okay.
spinning it forward to the likely Boston
Knicks matchup in the second round.
Obviously Boston dominated that matchup in the regular season,
but you hit it exactly on the head.
I'm watching Orlando Boston.
And Orlando has successfully dragged the Celtics into the mud,
which I did not really think they're going to be able to do this level.
Celtics three-point game fell off volume-wise in Orlando in games three and four.
There are only 38% of their attempts have come from three in this series.
It was 50% in the regular season.
And that's obviously Orlando's plan.
base defense in the series is we are switching everything.
Wendell Carter Jr.s are five.
Switchier than Kat, but it's not like he's, again,
proud Kevin Garnett.
Corey Josephs are one.
A little stouter than Jalen Brunson.
Maybe, like, not maybe defensively, but like, you know,
it's not like he's a six-five point guard.
It's Corey Joseph.
He doesn't have a veteran dark arts, though.
Like, Corey Joseph knows his way around, you know.
He knows what he's doing down there.
But we're switching everything.
And that means Jason Tatum and Jailen Brack.
you can have Wendell Carter Jr.
and attack his feet,
or you can play bully ball against Corey Joseph.
And guess what?
You can get all the way to the basket,
and we're not sending help from anywhere.
We're going to make you make decisions at the rim,
particularly if Cornette is on the floor,
so there's a little bit of traffic there.
And if not, we're going to count on Wendell Carter, Jr.
Or we're going to count on Wendell Carter Jr. being big enough
to, like, you're going to miss some of those shots.
And we're going to count on Corey Joseph to stand you up
and make you take 12-foot jump shots.
And we are not sending up.
There's a moment in late in the third quarter last night in game four where Jason Tatum is driving on Corey Joseph.
And Caleb Houston out of pure reflex rotates off Peyton Pritchard in the corner, gets into the paint.
And then realize you can see it in his head.
Oh, wait, I'm not supposed to do this.
And sprints back a Peyton Pritchard.
Like, ah!
And I'm watching this and I'm wondering, is this a blueprint that the Knicks and other teams can go to against the Celtics?
just as a way of like, yeah,
Katz not Wendell Carter Jr.,
Brunson's like Corey Joseph,
but it's not like those guys
are all world defenders,
and can we just slow the game down,
make the Celtics devolve into one-on-one play,
and just decrease their three-point volume?
Is that a roadmap for the Knicks or not?
It's a roadmap for a team that is not coached by Tom Tibido.
Like, I think that's straight up in.
Like, that's not to say he's a bad coach,
but he's a coach who wants to defend,
wants his team to defend in a very specific way,
and that way is not necessarily switch and contain all the time,
100% as a fact of life.
I also think there's the issue where Orlando has laid out this blueprint,
but how many teams really have the size to execute it?
Because it's not just can you stand up one through five defensively.
It's this is one of the biggest most physical lineups in the league.
And you've seen the psychological effects.
Al Horford is mad about it.
This is what I'm talking about.
Gentleman Al Horford is like wagging his, literally wagging his finger.
Do not do not do.
that that's not nice.
Al Horford is pissed.
Jalen Brown, I think,
is clearly like a little rattled
and also got a little unbalanced in his game
at times in a way that really benefited Orlando.
Chrisaps Warzingus was clearly
bothered by like all of these guys. And that's to say
nothing about, you know, Jason Tatum's wrist
injury or like all the banging
that happens in a series like this.
What teams can execute that?
Like, I think there are elements of the Knicks roster
that can do that. Cat can do
it but can he do it without fouling?
Jalen Brunson is a physical guard, at least in
terms of the way he creates space on offense, but not necessarily in that way defensively.
I don't really...
As you're saying this, it also strikes me.
Like, Cat is not as nimble on his feet as Wendell Carter Jr.
And Wendell Carter Jr. is not super nimble, but he's pretty nimble.
And this scheme falls away if the contested layups are just dunks.
And Jalen Brunson is not Corey Joseph in the sense that the Knicks need Jailen
Brunson's offense on every single possession.
The magic don't really need Corey Joseph to do anything except hit a couple open threes.
so go ahead, exhaust yourself on defense.
Jalen Brunson doesn't have that luxury.
But it has been interesting.
Other teams, I'm sure, are watching this happen to Boston.
And I thought Boston in game four, and I think was Stan Van Gundy on the call, I think he was noting this.
They were busting out some more set plays, I think to get people moving.
They were rolling to the rim more with Porzingis and Cornette.
I think to try to get the magic to almost not think.
like defend this like you normally would.
There's a big guy rolling to the rim.
What would you normally do?
I normally rotate inside.
Whereas when the game pauses and it becomes static,
they can think and remember like,
oh yeah, we're staying home.
And I thought that was smart.
But good, good.
I mean, look, Orlando made them earn that road win.
I mean, this was a nice home stand for the magic
and encouraging in the sense of Wagner is fighting through
whatever is going on with his jump shot.
The team doesn't have enough ammo offensive.
We all knew that.
But the defense has held up, and they were in these games against, they won one,
and they were in the other.
I mean, this is like a little more juice, a little more talent.
They're not that far from being a problematic playoff team.
As soon as you give Palo and Franz any kind of space whatsoever,
those dudes are going to cook.
And frankly, they already are cooking in close quarters.
It's just they have to dig a lot more out of the mud.
But I want to really salute Wendell Carter, though,
because I thought he had a really nice vindication series after he had a really tough
time against the Cavs in last year's playoffs.
Him hitting some threes, which is an important part of his skill set, but also standing up
defensively in that way.
Like, there have been points over the last two years where it wasn't clear if Gogh Batazze
was just going to take his job, if Mo Wagner was just going to take his job.
And Wendell Carter.
It's a lot of great backup center hair sitting on the magic bench right now.
There's a lot going on.
Flowing locks.
Just perms for days, potentially going on in Orlando.
But I thought Wendell played a really nice series.
And you see that throughout their lineup.
It's just a team that right now is not positioned for offensive success.
And we all know what the needs are.
They're kind of right there front and center and we'll see if the magic go out and get them.
It's funny.
Ben-Caro is so interesting in this regard.
He's kind of a Rorschach test for NBA fans because he's averaging 32 points per game,
44% shooting, 43% on threes, which means 44% on twos and like not great on twos.
And so you can see people nitpick his game a little bit, particularly people who lean towards
more of an analytics heavy bent.
I watch these games and I'm like, this dude is a freaking monster.
He's got it.
And like you said, when there's anybody who can help him, because you just don't see a lot of guys who within 45 seconds look awesome as a pick and roll ball handler and then look awesome as a screener roller finisher and then look awesome as a post up isolation guy and then look awesome in transition.
And like he defends pretty well.
I just and he wants every bit of this.
Like he doesn't care that they're overmatched.
He feels like he's the best player on the floor.
He's everything you want in a young rising franchise star.
And yeah, his efficiency is imperfect.
Some of that is on him.
Some of that is on like the surrounding talent isn't good enough.
Like we're counting on Anthony Black a lot and Gary Harris is like closing games for us.
It's just not there.
I love what I've seen from Palo in this series.
Yeah.
And Franz too.
I think Franz's ability to drive and create and convert those like weird kind of hookshot kind of runners.
Like they they car.
about a lot of points from possessions that feel like they're going nowhere. And it happens because
Paolo and Franz are the size that they are. And for that size are some of the most skilled
players in the world. As far as like guys who are 610 with a handle, that's a very short list to
begin with. And you're adding in legitimate ability to finish through contact, legitimate ability to
pull up and convert jumpers in Palo's case. Although maybe he airs a little bit sometimes too much in
terms of the pulling up versus going all the way through. That's what happens when you don't
have spacing. Like guys are going to settle for some things that are tough shots. But
give them any runway. And I feel really confident in what the ultimate core of this magic team can be.
I'll go one further. Franz Wagner maybe kind of has the yips right now on his jump shot and is like the greatest performer with the yips in the history of sports.
The dude is his jump shot is all messed up and he puts up 24, 7 and 6 and still takes 7 threes.
Like there's something to be admired about a guy who's going through it in one phase of his game is in his head is a little bit and is still battling out there for 40 minutes.
putting up semi-efficient numbers for a team that needs anything they can get offensively.
And that's as he guards, oftentimes Tatum or Brown.
Like, I think ultimately, like the two-way ability of Franz combined with, as you said,
Palo is not a defensive, like an all-defense level contributor, but he is big and he is mobile
and he can muck things up.
And he is as much a part of how, like, if you are going to play this one-on-one
contain style of defense against Boston, where are you shrinking the floor and where are you coming
up for rebounds in that kind of alignment.
And he's a part of both of those things.
Real quickly, I want to praise the Orlando Magic for something that happened in game three,
which nobody ever does.
They get the ball back with the lead, 95-93.
I believe there are 28.1 seconds on the clock.
The differential between the shot clock and the game clock was about four seconds.
It was either 3.8 or 4.1.
Then there's like a bizarre eight-second call, which they end up overturning,
and the possession continues as if nothing ever happened.
an inadvertent whistle.
Whoops,
whoops.
By the way,
what's what the whistling
in the crowd in Minnesota?
Someone has a whistle.
Like, it's fooling everybody.
And so the magic did what nobody does.
The Celtics did not foul down to with a three to four second differential on the shot clock.
I have always been of the school of thought.
You have to foul because you're just not going to leave yourself with enough time.
Coaches are divided on this.
And one of the reasons that coaches are divided and will play for the stop as Joe Muzula did is that no,
team ever does what Orlando did, which is run the shock lock to 0.5 before you shoot.
So the ball is in the air as the shock clock is expiring.
One long rebound, one tip of the ball, and the game is over.
Lo and behold, the rebound bounces really far out to Celtics grab it.
They call time out there probably should have been like 0.6 or 0.8 left on the clock.
They gave them 0.3. All they have is a lob.
Jamal Mosley
I don't know if that was scripted
I assume that it was I assume that was the advice
that should be your default plan
as we are shooting
if you don't put pressure on us
if you don't trap us
if you don't do stuff to speed us up
we're shooting with zero on the shock
unbelievable job by the magic
especially if you're the bigger team
especially if you're the one
bullying these guys around like give yourself a chance
to get a fingertip on that ball
and poke it away when they need everything
to go right in order to just get a shot off
and Joe Muzula was like well bad luck
it was a long rebound
That's not bad luck.
A lot of rebounds of threes are long rebounds.
That's like baked into the whole equation.
I would have fouled there if I were him.
I get why you play for the stop because teams assume the magic will just go early and shoot with eight on the shocklock.
And they didn't.
Quick thoughts on Warriors Rockets.
The last game four resumes tonight.
Warriors win a Steph Curry masterpiece in game three to go up two to one.
This is almost a must win for the Rockets, despite the fact that they have them court advantage.
It's very hard to see them beating the Warriors.
three times in a row, particularly if and when
Jimmy Butler comes back.
Warriors use a makeshift lineup with Post
and Cominga end up finishing the game
with a small ball lineup.
I mean, the Rockets' offense
is what it is. What are you looking for
very quickly in game for tonight?
Well, just to hit it because we kind of zoom past
that top, you mentioned the Cavs were your team of the weekend.
To me, it's the Warriors. And I think
Steph could have been the MVP of the weekend easily,
but
I like, Steph would be as deserving as anybody.
He was sensational. I wanted to pick
Golden State instead as my team of the weekend because of what we saw from the fourth quarter in
particular without Jimmy Butler playing off of Steph was just classic Warrior stuff and everything
starts with Curry as it always does and as for the better part of a decade basically.
But their closing kick was all about the synergy that makes that team go.
And the highest scoring player in that fourth quarter was Gary Payton the second.
Like that's Warriors basketball in a nutshell that does not happen by accident.
It happens because you have Draymond connecting dots.
It happens because Brandon Pajemski, who I will say has had quite a journey to get to this level of trust and respect from Steve Kerr.
Buddy healed punishing teams from the weak side.
This is strength and numbers, kumbaya basketball when the Warriors really, really need it.
And for some reason, Houston always seems to bring this out of them.
But I just, even after all these years, it's such a sight to behold.
And I love the fact that even though the roster turns over and refreshes, they just are finding guys who can play that way.
Jonathan Cuminga is not one of those guys.
And I don't know whether I expect him to start again,
given the way he just kind of got ejected from this game
over the course of it.
But I know you are somewhat of a believer in the Jonathan Cummega experience.
It's a tough subject for me.
I'm sorry.
I don't mean to bring up sensitive points.
Can't win them all.
Can't win them all.
I'm also like a Jalen Green optimist.
That's not going great.
Well, he's had his moments.
I mean, the Jalen Green roller coaster is what it is.
The Cominga part of this,
I think he's just kind of getting replaced
and the rotation.
But you mentioned earlier,
Golden State needs to get out of this series quickly.
And I think I agree with that.
Just the physicality of the rockets,
the athleticism of the rockets.
And beyond that,
you look at what almost happened to Jalen Brunson,
what did happen to Damian Lillard,
but almost happened to Anthony Edwards.
And you're like,
one guy lands on Steph's leg wrong.
And it doesn't matter if Jimmy Butler comes back at that point.
And so you got to take care of business.
I think the great luxury of winning this last game
was now all of a sudden they are in such great position
to do it whether Jimmy plays or not.
I feel, I mean, I didn't have a ballot this year,
but I said I would have put Steph first team all NBA over Donovan Mitchell in the fifth spot.
I feel even better.
I mean, no slight to Donald Mitchell is unbelievable.
I have no problem if he makes first team.
He's been first team on my ballot once before.
Steph is just unbelievable.
And the three, he hit a three in Jalen Green's face when the score was 92, 86 Warriors.
Where the Warriors, like, ran a bunch of stuff.
Rockets defense has been good this series.
even Jalen Green has been defending pretty decently this series.
Like they're playing hard.
Nothing happened.
Steph Curry catches the ball at the top of the arc with Jalen Green right in his face.
No dribble, no anything.
Like no jab step just rises up and hits a three.
And it's like, that's just so mean.
It's so dispiriting.
And like you said, the Rockets have seen this movie too many times.
None of these Rockets, but the Rockets.
The building has seen it.
Like, they don't deserve that.
I just, you know, we all knew the Rockets offense was going to be tested in this series.
it was their weak link.
It just for them to put up,
their offensive rating is 103.6 points per 100 possessions.
That's very bad.
That would have been last in the NBA by a lot.
For them to have an offensive rebounding rate
approaching 40% and be that inefficient is kind of astonishing.
You know, Amin Thompson looks like a young guy
who's a little bit lost in this series
because of his lack of a jump shot
and they can put anybody they want on them
and they haven't figured that out yet,
not surprising.
the Adams-Shen-Goon thing has been good,
but they're clearly skittish playing it
when Steph is on the floor.
Yeah.
And, you know,
they played it a little less in game three as well.
They haven't, yeah,
it certainly felt that way.
They dialed it back.
And defensively, they've been good.
That's great.
They're still in the series.
Offensively, what they have is just not good enough.
And Sam Amick wrote the piece for the athletic.
We've all been talking about it all year.
If that proves to be the case and the offense isn't good enough
and they lose in the first round,
there are two ways you can approach that decision.
And your approach could be we won 50 whatever games
and those number two seed.
We're ready.
We just need a big boost on this end of the floor.
We've mentioned some guys already.
Or it could be like, hey, actually, yeah, we won 50 whatever games.
We weren't the two seed by that much
and we kind of got exposed in the playoffs.
Maybe we're a little further away than we thought.
Let's take our time.
I suspect it will go the former way and be aggressive
if this series goes this way.
But look, it's not like the Warriors are so consistent
and so level-headed that we can just assume they win tonight.
This could be two-two going back to Houston.
I mean, this game in itself was reliant on getting great quit and post-defensive minutes
on some of these lineups getting papered together for Golden State
in a way that historically over the course of the season, they just have not.
Like, Buddy Heald's stints have not always gone this well, but sometimes they do.
And when they do, I think ultimately they have enough to draft off of Steph's influence
and the chaos he creates to get some stuff going.
I honestly, if it does go this way for Houston,
I would encourage them to go that aggressive route.
And I say that as I'm generally a wait and see
with young talent kind of guy.
Like I want to see young teams come to fruition.
I want to see them grow with and around each other
and see how their skill sets can kind of manifest.
I just don't see within this Houston roster
a source of like really organic shot creation growth.
Like some guys will get better at creating plays for others.
Amman Thompson is never going to be like a go-dose.
to one shot killer.
I don't think.
I mean, who knows?
That guy's capable of incredible things.
I want to put that as an extreme improbability.
And I say that as someone who loves every other part of his game.
And Jalen Green is so up and down that I don't think he's ever going to like regularize in a way that's going to be that for you.
And so then you're left with Alperin Shangun doing what he can against the like the matchups that are advantageous for him.
A lot of Fred Van Fleet desperation shots to say nothing of the fact that he's already at an age where you're not expecting him to make any dramatic
changes to his game. And so where's
it going to come from? Are you going to throw
Cam Whitmore into the rotation? Expect him to save
your franchise. You are going to have
to make a move for the sort of
shot creator that all of these other teams have.
It doesn't have to be Steph Curry.
Detroit has Kate Cunningham and that's getting
them through these games in a really competitive way.
Like there's lots of ways to do it.
I'm glad you brought up Cade. I love Cade.
I had Cade on my podcast two years
ago. I've
always been high on Cade.
Never sold my Cade stock. I couldn't
believe that people could watch him play
and do the thing we do with young
players. Like, oh, he's in a fish and he doesn't get to the line.
Can you give him a little time?
Do you see, you have to watch
and not like we're going to be right
all the time, but you could see enough
eight-minute slices of bad
Pistons games where he'd be like, oh,
there's something Luca-ish,
Luca light here, the way he manipulates
space in the paint.
Jalen Green's passing
is just so disappointed to me that it hasn't evolved
at all to the point that
when he hits Shengoon with a good pocket pass,
you're like, can you just do that?
Like, just make that pass.
And even so,
a sustained diet of Alper and Shengoon
flamingo shots in the pick and roll
is just not, it's not going to cut it.
I enjoy it, though, personally.
I like watching it.
I love the flamingo shots.
Yeah.
And just to wrap up my old man yelling at cloud
segment of the podcast,
please.
You can't be a serious team
and go 41 of 64 on free throws
in a playoff series.
They're shooting 64%
on free throw.
Shangoon was one of six.
You're just,
just handing teams
minutes and quarters and games.
But maybe they'll respond tonight
and give us one, another,
can we have more than one two two series?
If we get through this four games thing,
I mean, the Cleveland Miami thing is over.
If we get, that's the other game
tonight. We only get
one two two first round series. That's
A, that's good for like
getting the games over with and getting to the real
stuff. But it's like, can we get a little
a little excitement.
I was hoping this first round
would have,
at least in the West,
would have some real stuff.
And it's had it.
It's just,
can it hold on to it?
Like, can the Lakers
manage to put enough together
to make that an actual series
after going down 3-1?
Can the Rockets,
you know, grind the warriors
to enough of a halt
to have their worst instincts
come to bear?
Like, as you mentioned,
Gold State is not opposed
to shooting itself in the foot.
These guys will throw the ball around.
They will commit enough
turnovers to lose if you push them to do so.
You just got to give them
like a little more of a nudge
they've been able to do.
Rob Mahoney, this is a thrill.
We've known each other a while, had dinner during the finals.
We can trace our NBA lineage to the point forward blog on s.i.com, RIP.
I was the originator of it.
You and Ben Goliver took over for me and made it even better.
And now I don't know what's going on.
It's gone.
It's long gone.
Long gone.
I am a regular reader.
and the group chat with you and Justin Varyer talking about gardening in Portland for the first five minutes of every podcast or chicken Alfredo last week.
There was a long pos of discussion.
And was just throwing bombs left and right in between cryptic comments about his nightlife.
An absolute great listen.
It's got me through a lot of rides on the Peloton.
It's a thrill to be a teammate of yours and to actually talk some hoops with you.
And I look forward to doing it again.
That's incredibly kind.
Thanks so much for having me, Zach.
All right, everybody.
Thanks for listening.
Thanks to Rob.
Thanks to Jesse on the production.
We'll see you later this week, Thursday morning.
Whatever the hell has happened in the NBA,
this has been such a wild week.
Who knows what will be going on?
Maybe talk about round two a little bit.
Thanks for listening to the Zach Lowe show.
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