The Zach Lowe Show - Six Big Questions With Stan Van Gundy
Episode Date: November 26, 2025Zach is joined by Stan Van Gundy to answer six big questions, including how Tyler Herro’s return affects the Heat (4:06) and whether the Hawks are better without Trae Young (23:38). Plus, why Nikola... Jokic might just be the greatest NBA player ever (55:38), and Stan reveals his updated NBA Finals pick (1:05:36). Host: Zach Lowe Guest: Stan Van Gundy Producers: Mike Wargon, Jesse Aron, Jonathan Frias, and Billy Gil Social: Keith Fujimoto The Ringer is committed to responsible gaming. Please visit www.rg-help.com to learn more about the resources and helplines available Shopping. Streaming. Celebrating. It’s on Prime. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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All right, coming up on the Zach Lowe show, a special guest, it's been a long time.
One of my favorites to listen to, what are my favorites to talk to back when he was the coach of a whole bunch of NBA teams.
I forgot about the Pelicans.
When I introduce him, you'll see, I omit the Pelicans.
sorry Pelicans.
Stan Van Gundy.
Amazon Prime
announcer extraordinaire is here.
And we're just bouncing around the NBA.
This is coming out either Tuesday night,
Wednesday morning for your travel.
And he's just doing big picture questions
with Stan Van Gundy.
Who's the MVP?
Who were his finals picks?
Houston and Detroit.
How are they doing this
with no three-point shooting
relative to the league?
Their 30th and 28th and three-point attempts?
You're supposed to need to shoot threes
in the modern NBA.
They don't.
What's happening?
What star player reintegration
is Stan most interested in?
Tray, how's Paul George doing in Philly, Tyler Hero, or none of the above?
Does he go off the grid and pick something else?
We talk about all these issues.
We talk about Tyler Hero's first game with the heat, fitting in their revamped offense.
Stan goes on a lot of tangents as he has wanted to do about NBA history and where guys sit in the all-time hierarchy.
It's a great conversation about tactics.
We get into a lot of tactics, how the league is changing into a possession game.
What Stan is hearing from coaches around the league, how that's being implemented on the
strategic level. It's an awesome conversation. Stan is the best that's coming up on the Zach Lowe show. Hope you enjoy it.
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Welcome to the Zach Lowe
show. This is the episode for your
travel hell day needs and we are joined by
a very special guest, former
head coach of the Miami Heat, Detroit
Pistons, Orlando Magic, Amazon
Prime analyst, DeJure.
Stan Van Gundy, it has been too long.
How are you, sir?
I'm good. How are you?
Happy Thanksgiving.
Happy Thanksgiving.
Thanksgiving to you.
Thanksgiving and travel does remind me.
I don't know if you ever heard what Jeff, your brother said on my podcast years ago about his driving habits and what he listens to or doesn't listen to.
This was when he was driving from Houston to the Orlando bubble.
Are you aware of this?
No, I am not.
So I want to know if you share this with him or if you think this is, I got a lot of messages of concern from concerned fans about your brother's mental health.
he revealed this, he said, I said, so what did you listen to on this 18-hour drive to Orlando?
And he said, stone cold silence. No music, no songs. I just drove by myself in silence for 18
hours. That's what I like to do. There was a lot of concerned messages. So do you share this
habit or will you throw on a podcast or like, okay, you'll be a normal person. I'll have a podcast
or music on, yeah, or NPR or something like that. But yeah, I couldn't do. I mean, I enjoy
the silence on a short trip sometimes, but no, not on that trip.
All right.
Coach, we're going to go rapid fire through the league as we approach a big Thanksgiving
for Amazon Black Friday.
Hey, by the way, we're teammates now.
I heard.
Yeah.
I heard.
That's exciting.
Yeah.
I really like what we have going there.
I like the people that they have hired.
I think we have a good team of knowledgeable people.
The ex-players.
that they were able to hire have been fantastic and guys who are really committed to trying to do
the job well and better and improving. It's just been a really committed group. So it's been fun so
far. I love it. All right. Question number one, we're going to do like six big questions with
Stan Van Gundy. What did you think of Tyler Hero's return for the Miami Heat last night? They beat
Dallas by four. The Heat were on the second end of a back-to-back hero. 24 points on 12 of 18
shooting and the whole the question was
he's been a pretty heavy
pick and roll ball handler. The heat have
now famously sort of de-emphasized
the pick and roll in favor of this
super high-octane, fast-paced,
drive-and-kick one-on-one offense
that has vaulted them
from kind of bottom five offense.
They're 12th now.
How do you think he fit?
Well, first of all, I thought he was great.
I mean, the first quarter, he
got up to a slow start. I'm watching the
heat broadcast and, you know,
Eric Reid asked John Crotty, how long do you think it'll take to, you know, get him going his
legs under.
And John said two weeks, which I thought was reasonable.
And it really took till the second quarter.
So, you know, he really got it going.
I think the new style fits him fine.
I mean, yeah, they were running a lot of picking rolls.
But the bottom line is, is Tyler's game is to play off the dribble.
And so it's perfect.
And you talked about they're running fewer picking rolls.
They're actually running fewer pick and rolls than anybody's ever run since they've started recording this.
So, you know, that is really, it's an incredible, the whole heat transformation has been incredible,
from one of the slowest-paced teams in the league to the fastest-paced team in the league.
We've run a lot of pick-and-rolls.
We don't run any pick-and-rolls.
I mean, it has really been a, I don't think I've ever seen that big a change without a coaching change, ever.
They were talking on the Heat broadcast last night about the buy-in that these players have had to playing this way.
And, you know, it struck me.
It's an obvious point.
But the Heat is one of maybe three organizations in the entire league where you either buy in or you're not going to play for the team.
Because the hierarchy of command is very clear.
Riles and Spow and like there's no there's not going to be like a rebellion.
There's not going to be I don't want to do this.
And it made me want to ask you like it's hard to play this fast.
It's one of the reasons they've played 10, 11 guys and it'll be interesting to see if
Spow kind of keeps doing that to keep people fresh.
Did you ever have a team that you were like, I really kind of want to amp up the pace
real fast and the players, it was harder physically for them than it, two, three weeks
in and they thought it was going to be here.
they just didn't want to do it.
Did you ever have that pace tug of war with the team?
Well, I, you know, I think every coach wants to push the pace,
but I never did anything close to the extreme of what Eric's doing.
And I think the amazing thing is they've got the fourth best defense in the league.
And I think what we normally see with the teams who really want to run up and down
is they put their energy into the team.
pace of the game offensively, and they don't guard. And this team is defending very well
and turning that into offense going the other way. They don't take a break. I've been amazed.
They're in great shape. And they haven't been at full strength yet because even with Tyler
Hero coming back last night, then they had Norman Powell was out, Yovic was out.
Andrew Wiggins was out.
So they still haven't been at full pace.
And this is a team.
It's just a lot better, I think, than probably, at least most of us thought they were going to be.
I thought they'd be mediocre.
I wasn't really concerned about Heroes fit, but it was even cleaner than I thought.
And it was like I said yesterday, like, shooting is the answer to every question.
If you can, if you're an elite shooter, it just solves every question.
So you already could see him being like Davion Mitchell drives.
I relocate five feet this way.
I get an open three.
Or because I'm such a great shooter, you have to press me.
And that opens up my one-on-one game, my first step.
And then I start the machine.
Like, I think that's going to be fine.
They ran a couple of set plays for him, too.
They were like really stuck out.
I was like, oh, my God, the heater running like a traditional pick and roll set here.
But to me, and I text you about this last night, you mentioned all the guys that were out.
And Spowe's going to have a lot of tricky rotation decisions to make, starting with, like,
what's the starting and closing five of the teams.
That's going to be a tough one because it was easy for the fit, at least last night.
The question's going to be, to me, Tyler Hero and Norman Powell together.
And neither one of them are elite level defenders.
You know, they're both a little smallish, especially playing off the ball.
And so that offense, defense balance,
the sharing the ball.
That's going to be, I think, the major fit question.
Spoh, we'll figure it out.
I don't see any problem.
But that will be the question.
We'll probably be watching going forward in terms of fit.
I think you've probably got to start both of them
and then just stagger it pretty extremely.
But to me, more interesting is the Kallelweer leap that is happening right now
is a real thing on both ends of the floor.
He's just turned into, I don't know what they did, the light of fire under him.
He's getting every rebound.
He's all of a sudden a lot more disciplined, defensively staying down, playing cat and mouse.
And like the rim protection, it's trending toward being a little bit scary.
His three is getting better.
The Bamware fit has been just okay through now two seasons together.
They were about a net even last year.
They're minus, I think 14 and 84 minutes so far this year.
I would toss that in the garbage.
I love BAM.
Bam is a winner.
I love what I'm seeing from Ware.
I think they can complement each other in this or any other system.
I want to let this marinate for quite a long time to see how they fit.
But I do think Ware's leap has been so dramatic in the last couple weeks that you do have to start thinking about how well do they fit together.
What's the best way to use them together?
As a coach, what do you see?
How does that pairing work?
What are its shortcomings?
where are you looking for when they share the floor?
Yeah, look, I mean, I think the way the heater playing,
it's not a natural fit on the offensive end of the floor
because Ware has played great
and everything you said about Bam is true,
but neither one of those guys are great off the dribble.
Bam against centers can play pretty well off the dribble,
but when they play him together,
and now he's being guarded by a perimeter guy,
he's not going to beat people off the dribble.
And even though both of them are starting to shoot the three,
nobody's at this point anyway,
I would not think any other coaches are really scared of them.
So I think the spacing when they're out there together
is not going to be optimal.
And I think going forward,
key moments in games especially.
I think it'll be with one of them on the floor.
Now, defensively, the fit is fine because they're both versatile defenders.
They both move their feet.
Bam can guard every position on the floor.
That's fine.
They can hang their hat there.
And I would think that in a minute's thing, that if they can do what they did last year,
like you said, and just sort of be even when they're both on the floor,
floor and then gain their edge when one of them is on the floor. I think that's how they're going to,
that's how they're going to beat people. But where is, look, they've done an incredible job. I think
the heat over the years, as you know, has done about as good a job of developing players as
anyone in the league. I think it starts with they really create a vision for guys of what they can be
and they work toward that.
So I go back to Duncan Robinson.
I think a lot of people would have brought Duncan Robinson in
and just seen him as a spot-up shooter.
Three and, you know, a guy goes down and stand in the corner.
That's not the vision they saw for him.
They saw him on the move shooting the ball.
And that's how they played him and developed him from early on.
And he became a much better player and a much better threat.
And I think they've had a vision for Khalil,
Ware since they got him. Malik Allen on the staff is the guy who works with him all the time.
They've spent a ton of time together. Last year, we were in Indiana. Malik brought Khalil Ware
to the Eastern Conference Finals against the Knicks to be able to sit there and talk to him about
what that level is all about. They've invested heavily in both Malik and Kahl and that thing. And
Yeah, his development has been fun to watch.
I mean, this last, what, seven or eight games,
he's been as dominant as any big guy in the league.
Yeah, this is a legitimate leap happening right before our eyes.
It looks sustainable to me.
And it's not just like the gobbling up of rebounds.
He's had more than 10 rebounds in 10 straight games, I think,
and over 15 in a couple of those games.
He had a 20 rebound game.
It's the discipline that he's playing with.
He's still going to be tempted to just jump for everything,
but he's really dialing that back.
Like, late in that game,
PJ Washington drove from the left corner.
You saw this play, right?
Oh, unbelievable.
And Ware was on whoever was playing center in the dunker spot.
And PJ got into the paint,
and you just knew, Calais where is going to chase this jump.
Like, he's going to jump for it.
It's going to leave the defensive glass naked.
So it was going to, and he stunted a little bit,
and then sat back and PJ Washington missed the hook and he went up and got the rebounds like,
God, Dave, so you saw the same thing.
Yeah, absolutely.
I mean, and, you know, listen, I say, oh, the one thing that I have thought from the beginning
of my time in the NBA, what separates players from each other, people look at NBA players
and I think they see size, athleticism skills.
and that's the comparison.
And obviously, you've got to have all those things at some level to be a very good NBA player.
But I think what separates guys is decision-making.
The best players are the best decision-makers.
Hubey Brown used to say it's not who can shoot, who can pass, and who can dribble.
It's the guys who know when to shoot, when to pass, and when to dribble.
And so what you're talking about for Khalil,
aware, yeah, anybody, not anybody, but a lot of guys can go up and block a shot and a lot of guys
can go get a defensive rebad. But that decision making that you're talking about on the play last
night, that's what sets apart players. It's the same on offense. Like I had Dwayne Wade early on,
came in the league, not a great shooter or anything, but still was very efficient. Why?
He could get to the shots he wanted. And he made great decisions on what you.
shots to shoot. So he was a 50% shooter from the time he walked in the league because he was a
great decision maker. And I think that's what fans miss on NBA players. And I think sometimes they
see great talent. How that guy should be playing more. Why isn't he more successful? It's decisions
at each end. And that's what separates guys. Khalil where's getting there? Yeah. So the three
takeaways for me for the heat going forward are they're even better. I was a heat optimist
and they're even better than I thought. And what does that do to do their calculus at the
trade deadline? How aggressive might they get? Number two, is this finally going to be the year
that Eric Spulcher wins coach of the year? And number three, the bamware fit is now a much more
interesting storyline to me if I'm in the heat brain trust. Again, I'm not rushing.
you to make any decision. I'm not saying I'm sending either one of them out the door. Far from it.
I've more like, I got to see this work at a higher level going forward because I want both
of these guys to play tons of minutes together. Okay, question number two, you ready?
Yep.
Most interesting leave hero aside. Most interesting All-Star reintegration either happening now or
about to happen. Palo Bancaro to an Orlando team that's been scoring better without him or
about as well anyway. Tray Young coming back to a Hawks team that's nine and four without him,
or early returns on Paul George fitting in in Philadelphia. What's the most interesting to you?
Okay. I'm going to go, none of the above. Okay. I love it. None of the above. And the most
interesting thing to me, the most interesting reintegration is LeBron to the Lakers. Oh my God. I love this.
Well, because I think, look, you're talking one of the greatest players in history,
maybe the greatest player in history coming back,
but he's always been at his best with the ball in his hands making plays.
And now you've got two guys in Donchich and Reeves off to great starts,
and they both excel with the ball in their hands.
None of those guys, none of the three of them, are off the ball players.
None of the three of them at this point, because of LeBron's age,
none of the three of them are plus defenders.
And so now instead of putting defensive-minded guys
and guys who can play without the ball around Donchich and Reeves,
now we've got three ball-dominant guys who are, in my opinion, minus defenders.
I don't know.
Like the Lakers, I don't know if they're real or not.
not. I think they're real in the sense of donchage, but they're 12 and 4, but their underlying
numbers tell you that they're pretty mediocre. I mean, they're 14th, offensively and 14th
defensively. That shouldn't add up to 12 and 4. But I think they'll continue to win a lot of
close games because they've got finishers like that. To me, and I've said this before and been
criticized for it, I think Luca is the best offensive player I have ever seen in the NBA. I don't
think there's a better offensive player ever. There is nothing the guy can't do. He handles,
he passes, he posts up, he drives the ball, he shoots it from deep, he can get
to the free throw line. I can't think of another guy that has that at his size,
play in the point. And so at the end of the game, you know they're always going to be able to
get a good shot, always, always. And so, yeah, their margins may be small and they may be
able to continue to win close games, but they certainly have not looked even at 12 and 4 to me like
a dominant team.
They are must watch TV for me every game now with LeBron back.
They were, Bill and I did our revised quarter poll league pass rankings last week,
and I had them number one, or I had the number two behind the Nuggets, I guess, because of the Yolchich.
They've played twice with LeBron, both against Utah.
They play the Clippers tonight, unclear if Aiton's.
I think Aiden's listed is out, actually.
What have you seen those?
I assume you've been watching those two games.
What have you seen of the early returns on those three guys playing together?
It's been good, but the hard thing is, and you just said it, I mean, Utah is not a very good team.
And they're especially poor at the defensive end of the floor.
And so things have been easy.
Like, I don't think it's a good way to judge.
You know, they've said for years, we want LeBron to have to handle less, play a lot.
off the ball more. That's all well and good. The bottom line is Reeves isn't bad with off the ball,
off the ball, like he'll cut occasionally. The other two guys, Luca and LeBron, literally do nothing
off the ball. And so that offense could get stagnant. It defensively, when you talk about,
you know, we're going to go play the best teams, if you're going to try to finish with those three
guys, who's garden and Shea Gilgis Alexander?
Who's, you know, I just think there's, look, I think they're good and I think
JJ's done a fabulous job putting it all together here early in the season.
I just don't know when we get to playoff time and it becomes very matchup oriented and
everything.
I think there's more to see with them.
Plus, as we know, they still don't have a lot of shooting.
You know, they still don't have a lot of shooting.
So I don't know.
I think they're a big question mark.
They're going to be good.
They're going to be in the playoffs.
Nobody's going to want to see them.
I get that.
But I don't think they rise to me right now.
I don't see them rise into the level of OKC, Denver.
And to me, Houston's been a huge, huge surprise.
Yeah, they are the could be competitive in any series in the Western Conference.
Hard to see them winning three to get to the finals.
But given, and that's with LeBron's age, with the defensive concerns you just outlined, like, who's guarding the point of attack in this starting five.
I think the offensive fit has been awesome so far.
They've leaned into the right play calls, mismatch hunting.
LeBron's been kind of active off the ball here and there.
But as you said, that's two games against Utah.
What happens when we're 20 games in?
The opposition gets better.
That's what I'm waiting to see.
Can I answer my own question that you went on the above on?
Yeah.
To me, it's Trey Young.
And it's not close because I think we all know the magic need Palo Bancaro.
And I think it's easier for him to tweak his game 10% towards, you know,
setting screens, making the extra pass while still being Palo in that offense.
And Paul George has been fine.
He's fit in.
I mean, it's Maxie's team now.
He's not forcing anything.
And how he does when Maxie and a beat her on the bench is another question.
But he looks, Paul George looks pretty good to me.
He's had some explosive takes to the rim.
Trey, I mean, this team could be really good if Trey Young buys into the same, can I tweak my game 15%.
I'm never going to be, I'm always going to be a heavy pick and roll guy.
I'm always going to be a guy who likes to take logo threes and all that.
But watching this team play a more egalitarian system, a more like pass, exchange, drive, kick, random screens, mismatch hunting,
unlock Jalen Johnson a little bit.
well my god, Nikula Alexander can do a little bit more with the ball than maybe we thought unlock Porzingis, a congou.
Like, can I blend in, can I beat Trey while blending in a little bit more?
Because that, to me, takes their ceiling towards in an Eastern conference where the best teams on paper have not played like the best teams yet.
Their ceiling gets pretty high to me.
Maybe you're a Halks skeptic.
I'm a Hawks optimist.
But I'm with you on the Trey thing because to me, the other thing that they've had without Trey,
is their defense has been a lot better.
Part of that is they're bigger on the floor.
So, you know, everybody goes in against Atlanta with the same offensive game plan.
Like they're going to put Trey in every play, and they're going to attack him and everything else.
And Quinn Snyder and the other guys on the floor have got to work to hide Trey Young all the time defensively.
And they haven't had to do that.
I mean, the Kiel Alexander Walker is an outstanding.
on the ball defender.
We know about Dyson Daniels.
And then they've got great size up front.
This is a legitimate defensive team as they go, as they continue to progress.
With Trey, I think their ceiling as a defensive team is mediocre.
Now, can he do what you're talking about and make tweaks to his game
so that they become an above-average offensive team
to offset that.
Again, I think they're...
Like, it'd have to be like top seven offensive team.
They're 11th since Trey went out.
They're 11th in offense,
which is like super encouraging.
I think they're better without Trey Young.
And I say that as a guy...
There you go.
I've said that every...
I say it every year when I watch them,
and I'm not a...
Tray Hater. As a matter of fact, if you give me money and I've got money to go see,
to buy a ticket, and I can go to three games. That's what I've got. Trey's one of the guys I'm
going to go watch. I think the guy to watch him play his, forget the long range shooting,
the passes he makes, the creativity. I think he is a great watch. I love him. I love him. I love.
love turning on the hawks and watching Tray Young pick defenses apart. I love him. But I think
they're better. This team is better without him. It doesn't mean every team's going to be
better without him because some teams are going to have more need in where he, you know, in what
he does and everything else. But look, the league has changed and positional size is a big, big deal
now. With all the switching you have to do to combat these offenses, you know, I think the really
small guys like Trey become a defensive challenge, and they better be great, great, great at the
offensive end. And his efficiency is not always great at the offensive end. So I like their team
better without him. And I say that as a guy who's not hating on Trey Young at all.
Well, we disagree a little bit in that sense because I just think they need his offensive pop to get their ceiling, to be like a final threat.
But I definitely reasonable people can look at this and agree with you, which makes this, I think, maybe the most interesting personnel question in the league for the next three months is what do they want to do with Trey Young, who is extension eligible.
There's been no chatter about it at all.
And to your point, like the trade market for a small point guard as good as he is,
it might be a little bit more limited than the Hawks would need it to be to make a big move like that.
They also have this research, like Risa Shea, I think needs to start leveling up a little bit on offense and as a shooter for this thing to really, really work without Tray Young.
But it's early.
I mean, he's like 20 years old.
Maybe that's not a fair thing to ask.
Well, no, I thought he made significant improvement over the course of last season.
but I agree with you, we haven't seen that continue so far this year.
I think also young players, and you know this, I think when you have changes,
and so now they've got Porzingis, so he's more involved.
They haven't had Trey.
You're playing with other people.
The game develops differently.
I think that can stagnate young guys for a little bit.
I'm a Risa-shaped fan.
Me too. But you're right. He has not made a jump so far this year, and they need that.
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Okay, this is the big question, question three,
that I'm most excited to ask you.
You were ahead of your time with Orlando in particular,
going more in on the three-point shot.
Spread pick and roll, let's up our three-point volume.
That is only, as everyone knows, gone up exponentially since that, that's 15, 20 years ago now.
Everyone shoots a million threes.
And yet, coach, what do you make of the Rockets dead last in three-point attempts,
number one offense in the NBA?
The Detroit Pistons, 28th in three-point attempts, number seven offensive.
offense in the NBA, on a 13-game winning streak, matching their franchise record set twice,
both years they won the championships.
These teams are not taking threes.
We know the other ways in which, particularly with Houston's offensive rebounding, they're
compensating.
My question is kind of like, A, what do you make of this?
And B, do you have any concerns about how much of this works in the postseason versus the
regular season?
Or are these two teams just so good at what they do at their side?
their physicality, whatever you think they're doing to compensate for not having the thing that
everyone supposedly has to have in high volume now, that they'll be fine no matter what the circumstance.
Yeah, there's a lot there. I think, first of all, I think what we see in that regard sort of
and this year's been good and interesting at the front. And, you know, there's been this
criticism of the NBA from a lot of people that everybody plays.
the same. You know, everybody, it's just not true. Everybody doesn't play the same. But it's
dramatically not true this season. Yeah, I agree. And it's been even more so. But even last
year, you look and, you know, Denver was the number four offensive team in the league
and dead last in three-point attempts. There's a lot of ways to get things done. And Denver, by the way,
as far as postseason, you know, took Oklahoma City to seven games and we're nearly as deep as they are.
Now, there's a lot of different ways to play. I do think, though, you make a great point in that you can get by with less shooting in the regular season than you can in the postseason because of preparation time and everything else, plus the pace of the game,
tends to slow a little bit.
You're in the half court.
And I think Kevin Durant's going to get less and less room on the floor.
You know, those things are going to happen.
But, you know, I think for right now anyway, that will all play out.
But, wow, is it fun to watch people get things done in a different way?
You know, you got Cleveland coming down fire in three.
more than anybody in the league.
And then you've got Houston shooting a fewest,
but the highest percentage in the league down.
Got to make them.
The bottom line is whatever shot you get,
you got to make at some level.
So you have to be able to shoot the ball.
Houston can do that.
It's going to be interesting to watch.
I think what's really become interesting in the league
is we know about the increased three-pointers.
over time, and that's not really going anywhere.
The three is still going to be a big part of it.
But the thing that is probably taking the biggest jump is offensive rebounding.
You know, I went back and looked at this the other day, and so the 2020,
2021 season, so the year I was in New Orleans, we were the only team in the league that had
got 30% or more off the offensive board.
we were barely over 30.
Okay, now we got two teams over 40% off the offensive board,
18 teams over 30% and another four teams at 29% on the offensive board.
The currency of the NBA now, and even when you listen to the coaches,
is possessions, getting more shots than the other team.
That has become much more of a big deal than efficiency with the
with coaches. It's getting more shots. Talking to Kenny Adkinson the other night before
to Cleveland game, they've changed the way they teach defense. You know, they used to put a premium
on not foul. You know, because the free throws are the most efficient shot in the league. And so,
you know, hands back, don't be reaching. No, now they go after the ball. That ball comes into the
gap. They're reaching up. They're reaching down. He talked about looking at NFL cornerbacks.
in how they try to strip the ball from people, you know, after the catch.
And what does that mean?
They're foul and more sending people to the line.
But that's obviously not threes in most cases, you know,
and they're creating enough turnovers to offset it.
I mean, I think Oklahoma City might have given up the most free throw attempts in the league
last year, if not very, very close, but they also force the most turnovers.
So the currency of the league and just the overall analytical approach is leading to some different things.
And then I think on the personnel side, what a lot of teams are finding out sort of by chance is we have always thought, well, I'm not going to say we, I have always thought.
I think a lot of people that even as we've gotten to positionless basketball,
that you got to have a point guard.
And now we're seeing with injuries, teams having to play without a point guard
and playing very successfully.
We just talked about Atlanta, no true point guard there.
Houston all year.
It's a min Thompson is their point.
So I think getting size across the board out there has proven more valuable
than the quintessential.
point guard. So I think the league is changing. And I think that's exciting. And I think coaches are
and organizations are looking at, okay, how do we get an edge? It was funny listening to Kinney
the other night because Kenny's been one of those guys who's always trying to be ahead of the
game. And he was like disappointed in himself. You could tell that Oklahoma City got the jump on
everybody about creating turnovers and not worrying about fouls being the way to go.
So I just like you, I mean, you and I are sort of geeks when it comes to basketball.
And I have loved the early start of the season, different styles.
The game seems to be changing around the league.
That's been just a lot of fun to watch for me.
Okay, you said a lot of interesting stuff there.
Number one, the fouls versus steals tradeoff is Orlando was doing this last year with
Jamal Mosley too is like, if you're going to hack the hell out of people, you better be getting
a lot of steals.
Otherwise, the math is going to go against you.
And B, you're also betting on, and this is what you hear other teams sort of whisper about
the thunder.
Like the reps are not going to call all the fouls.
So you're betting on that.
The other thing, offensive rebounding.
Houston's first by a mile.
Detroit is fifth.
Possession game.
Possession math.
And Detroit, by the way, is second enforcing turnovers.
So they're tilting that turnovers and rebounding toward them.
Both of these teams are below average at taking care of the ball on offense.
Detroit's 16, so they're about average.
Houston is 20th.
Boy, oh boy, if either of those teams cleans that up and tilts the possession math even more dramatically toward them,
this whole sort of mathematical model starts to work.
I love watching both these teams play.
Detroit, I mean, they are, whatever, something in two.
I don't remember anymore.
15 and 2.
Ivy's back has looked great, staggered with Cade and played a little bit with Cade.
They actually ran some two-man game in Indiana last night.
Tobias Harris is back, add some shooting that they need.
just a lot of optionality.
Like Dennis Jenkins, who's been amazing for them, didn't even play in the second half last night.
They all of a sudden have a lot of depth.
I've been borderline obsessed with the idea of them trading for marketing.
But even if that doesn't happen, now that they're at full street, even if there's no big trade that happens, maybe not even a small marginal trade.
They have like a lot of guys right now.
The guy that I'm watching the most is Assar Thompson.
how have you seen his game evolving and how does his game
because look when they play him with Duren
and just one other so-so shooter,
the spacing for Cade is just going to be what is.
It's not going to be great.
How do they compensate for that?
And what do you need to see from Massar Thompson
to take this team seriously as like a finals threat
or maybe they already are a finals threat?
I don't know.
Yeah, I don't know.
We haven't seen enough probably to say that.
everything we've seen has been good.
I do think the interesting thing with them.
Rick Carlisle made this point last year.
After, on the off season, early in the off season,
after they had made their run to the finals,
he thinks the league is changing.
And it's not a just a star league.
You know, we used to always,
you put the big three together.
And then you sort of fill in around them,
you know, and it's not just a starting.
lineup league. Like with all the injuries, the pace up, everything else, he said it is a pace and
play hard league now. And Detroit's got that sort of team. They can run a lot of guys at you and
keep the pace up. And so I like them. I think Kate is obviously has risen. He's a legitimate
star. Assar Thompson, I think J.B., who's been an underrated
coach for a long time in the league is doing a,
is doing a really good job with him.
They're trying to get him to at least stay on the move offensively and cut.
If you're standing still as a non-shooter,
then you're a major liability.
But if you can, your guy loses vision, you cut, get a layup.
Anything that keeps people at least having to pay attention to you helps.
he's almost as good as his brother defensively, if not as good.
He runs the floor.
He's got a lot of good things, but you said it earlier about shooting right off the bat,
and it's true.
And when you see guys make a jump in this league, most often it's their shooting that makes a jump,
and that's where he's got to get to.
Can he do it this year?
I don't know.
but, you know, I like that team.
The East has been really interesting.
Everybody thought, oh, two-team race, Cleveland and New York, Detroit, Toronto, Orlando's starting to come on now.
Miami, Atlanta, like you talked about, Philly.
Like, I know, look, you just expect Philly's going to get hurt again, Embed's out.
But let's face it, if Embed gets healthy with what they're doing with those going,
guards, they could be a threat.
The East is wide open right now.
It's not a Cleveland, New York two-team battle.
Definitely not.
No, I've reached one with the Pistons where it's like, yeah, they could make the finals.
I think that's on the table for them.
With a SAR, I thought we'd see a little bit more of him as like, not to this level,
but a little bit more of like the Draymon thing where, okay, you're not guarding me.
I'm going to be a handoff hub and we're going to turn the corner and punt
issue that way. But the thing with one of the big
trickle-down effects of Duren
making this kind of huge leap
as a one-on-one player and just like
a brute, a brute
an Adonis, a tank, is
you don't see teams putting their
centers on Assar Thompson anymore
and just saying, we're going to rove with our
biggest defender off of you and put
a power forward or a wing on Jalen Duren
because he's just going to put that dude in the basket.
You can't do it. The other thing, before
we move on, I'm
wondering when I watch these teams, Detroit and Houston, you know, traditionally non-shooting teams,
shaky shooting teams, you can go zone against them. I think teams are scared to go zone against
them because of the rebounding, because you unlock their offensive rebounding. And going back all
the way to Miami, I forgot to ask you about this. Miami has faced the most zone in the league this
year. And I think it's because if I had to guess what's in coach's heads, it's, well, their offense is now
predicated on one-on-one driving, let's take the one-on-one driving away by playing zone.
I don't think that's going to work against them because it just gives them gaps to drive
right off the bat and they're carving up zones.
But I don't think you can really afford to play zone against Houston or Detroit because
they're going to rebound half their own misses.
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Next big question for Stan Van Gundy. More real as a playoff threat, the Toronto Raptors or the
Phoenix Suns? I'm going to say the Toronto Raptors. I mean, I look and right now, look, they're one of
six teams in the league that is in the top six, I mean, in the top ten, both offensively and
defensively.
You know, Phoenix is 13th offensively, 12th defensively.
The East isn't as strong as the West.
And I just think they've got some similar issues, but Toronto, look, they've swept Cleveland
already.
I mean, they've beaten them all three times this year.
Cleveland's supposed to be the best team in the East,
a team that won 64 games last year,
and the whole thing.
They've been missing guys in all three games.
But one,
they were,
I think it was everybody,
but Garland played a day.
One,
they almost had everybody.
But the point remains,
rappers are missing Barry.
Everybody misses everybody.
Like,
come on,
you and I watch a lot of games.
You never turn on a game
and watch two teams at full strength playing in each other.
And that's why one of the points that Rick Carlisle had made
was you better have depth on your roster,
because you're not, you know, it will always say, well, when they get him back, well, I guarantee you,
I don't care who we're talking about. When they get him back, somebody else is going out.
That's just the way it is now. Like, I like Toronto, again, a team that has got great positional size,
which to me, I mean, Pertl's a very underrated player in the middle at both ends of the floor,
but Brandon Ingram, Scotty Barnes, R.J. Barrett, you know, they've got size. They lack some shooting. But again, you know, they're a little bit like Houston. Okay, they're not going to shoot any threes, but they make the ones they take. So they're 27th in attempts, but they're sixth in percentage. And they're a fun team to watch because they're one of the,
those teams where you just don't think they should be as good as they are. But so, okay, so yeah,
Cleveland's missing guys. Well, you know what? They were missing R.J. Barrett last night.
It's not like they're out there at full strength every night either. Yeah, they're a legit.
I'd be shocked the way things are going now if they're not in the playoffs in the, in the east.
And I would be shocked if Phoenix was in the playoffs in the West.
But Phoenix, the one thing with Phoenix is they're the hardest play in team in the league.
In what I've seen, they are the hardest playing team in a league.
What Jordan Ott has done there is he's got total buy-in.
And Steve Clifford's a consultant there.
And so has seen them.
I forgot about that.
Yeah.
And Steve said that the time he's been there, the one thing he pointed out, he said,
Devin Booker may be as good a leader as he's ever seen, you know, both by example and what he says,
but total buy-in from him at both ends at a floor, defending really hard on top of the offense,
trying to get other guys involved, just all about team success, plus his professionalism and work ethic
every day.
You know, it always drives me crazy when people talk about Devin Booker.
I have great respect for the guy.
And if I had drafted him in Detroit, I might still be coaching, Zach.
Oh, boy.
But I did not.
So every time Devin Booker has a great game, I'm like, I,
I kick myself, physically kick myself to make sure I feel that pain.
Is that Kinnard or is that Stanley Johnson?
Because there's a Booker.
Stanley Johnson, yeah.
Yeah, I passed on Devin Booker and Donovan Mitchell.
And that's why I'm broadcasting now.
You're sitting in a very nice home stand and everything looks great in your life.
This is the home that Dwayne Wade got me in Miami.
you know, and then Dwight Howard continued to, so I could make payments on it.
By the way, I see the Christmas bows are already hung up.
I see the Mary sign back there.
I mean, are you doing that yourself?
Are you the decorator of the house?
Absolutely not.
My youngest daughter lives about seven miles from here and works for me,
maintaining everything because I'm incapable of taking care of anything.
And while I was gone last week to visit her siblings in Michigan,
she came in and got my house decorated.
I've been doing a recurring segment on the podcast called Zach Lowe's Insights to Mediocrity,
which is my way of poking fun at Michael Jordan's insights to excellence,
which have just been, you know, load management's bad.
I'm Michael Jordan.
And so I could recruit you for this because a lot of my insights to mediocrity about how I'm just,
I can't do anything around that.
I'm like a completely useless person at the house.
Yeah, and, you know, my wife was very, very handy and did a lot of things.
And when she passed, yeah, my daughter took over.
And she makes sure that everything keeps running smoothly.
So this is all Kelly's work right here.
I have one job, and that is I've got to get a tree.
And so I got to work on that today when I get off with you, get a tree here.
which then she will come in and decorate.
You got to get the tree.
You got to work on that.
Do some research.
I've got to get the tree.
Yep.
That's all I got to do.
The answer to my own question for me is also Toronto.
But they're like brought these similar teams in a lot of ways.
Number one, obviously they're playing above expectations.
They've each had somewhat easy schedules.
Both of them are shooting like gangbusters from everywhere on the court.
Both of them, their opponents are shooting pretty badly from three.
You think both of those things will regress a little bit.
I just think Toronto's a little bit better
and they're in the weaker conference.
And their next 10 games, by the way, Indiana,
winnable, Charlotte, winnable.
Oh, they're all winnable, but New York, we'll see.
Portland, Lakers, Charlotte again.
Boston, Milwaukee.
We'll see if Janice is back probably by then, hopefully.
Boston again, Brooklyn.
I mean, they could be, I think that was 10 games.
They'll be 28 games in.
They could be 20 and 8 after 28 games.
like that's a big time head start once the schedule flips a little bit.
It really is.
And people, you know, there's the one take on schedules always is, well, over the course
of the year, everything evens out.
I think what people miss on that is when you're Toronto and you're coming off, you know,
you were not in the playoffs a year ago.
And you start winning, regardless of what the schedule is, the confidence goes up.
and you become maybe better than you should be because people really start to believe in what's going on.
So those early season schedule things can help you, and it does make a difference.
It's not just, well, over the course of 82 games, it all evens out.
It does to a degree.
But boy, you want to get off to that good start plus.
Most teams, other than the absolute best, Oklahoma City will not have a major slump this year.
Denver will probably not have a major slump this year.
But most teams are going to have a slump.
Well, you know what?
When you have your slump and you go two and eight and you look up and you're still
eight or ten games above 500, it doesn't feel the same as when you start the year at
two and eight.
And then you don't believe you're any good.
I think that's the psychology of it that people don't really understand.
You're absolutely right on Toronto.
they think they're really, really good right now.
They're not looking and saying, oh, well, our schedule's been soft.
No, they're thinking, geez, we're playing great.
We're a really good team.
And that belief can carry you a long way.
So I want you to take this a step further because I call these feedback loop teams.
And what I mean by that is not just that the winning inspires everybody to play harder.
It's that you look at Miami qualifies for this.
Toronto has a bunch of guys who have been alphas or lead ball.
handlers in their careers. People have to, players have to buy in to roles that might make them
uncomfortable, right? And players think about numbers, contracts, all of these variables that
are swirling around them. Agents are talking to them, et cetera. And they sometimes, it can sometimes
be hard for them to remember, like, winning is the thing that lifts all boats. If we win,
everyone's going to get paid. Everyone's going to be successful. And I wonder from a coaching
perspective, what I mean by feedback loop team is not just we believe in ourselves.
as a team because of our record, it's okay, this thing that the coach is preaching that may be
Emmanuel quickly or Scotty Barnes or Tyler Hero or whoever it is was like slightly like,
that's not the way we used to be playing.
Oh my God, it works.
I'm going to buy into it even more.
And it just sort of becomes this bolder rolling down the hill of more buy-in, better
execution, more winning.
Like there's always a couple feedback loop teams like this every year.
Each of these teams is a candidate.
But I want, like, as a coach, getting players to buy in to things that make them a little uncomfortable.
Winning must ease that process and, like, get that bolder rolling, right?
Is that a real thing?
Absolutely.
You know, and especially when you're either a new coach or you've made a big change like Miami did.
I mean, everybody believes in SPO anyway.
I mean, he's proven himself, but he made a huge change.
Toronto's trying something new.
Phoenix Jordan Ott comes in. You win early. You get buy-in. Then whatever the problems start to creep in,
you need to make other adjustments as the season goes on. Well, you've got a group of guys that buys into,
you know what you're doing. And so they trust whatever adjustments you have to make. It all goes hand in hand.
I mean, the early season is really, really important, I think. And it doesn't mean all these things are going to
staying over the course of the year.
But that belief does, and I like your term, the feedback loop, because I think it's really,
really true.
I mean, I think other teams start to doubt themselves.
It goes the other way.
Like, oh, I thought we were going to be good.
This isn't working.
And now it gets harder to get that buy-in.
You have an awards ballot again this year, right?
Well, I would think, but I don't know.
Nobody's told me for sure.
I know the awards are not necessarily your favorite thing about the NBA discourse,
but I talked about this on Monday with Howard Beck.
The four guys at the head of the MVP race right now,
and if you want to throw Wembeen, I think he's the fifth guy.
But Yolkich, Shea, Janice, Luca, are just, it's just outrageous across the board what they're doing,
statistically.
They're on-off numbers for their respective teams.
I think we've seen now Milwaukee has lost three or four in a row without Janus,
And like, if I'm Yonis, I'm watching that.
Oh, boy.
But that's a, we'll park that storyline over here.
Who is your quarter way through the season MVP if you've got to pick?
See, I don't even think it's close.
I mean, you know, Yolkits is just what he does.
It's unbelievable.
I mean, so what's unbelievable is the guy wins multiple MVPs.
And in the year he loses to Embed, he gets the finals.
MVP. Should have been the regular season MVP that year, my opinion. And then last year was,
he doesn't get the MVP. Shea gets it. Last year was the best year of Yokic's career,
better than the MVP years. And now he's having a year better than that. The guy keeps getting
better. And the thing with Yokic to me that is phenomenal is he puts up these outrageous numbers,
and I don't think he has the slightest interest in statistics at all.
I don't think he has any interest in that in the least.
I think he's a guy that cares about one thing and one thing only, and that is winning.
And he's just going out and playing and trying to make the right play every time down the floor.
And they win.
And then he puts up these, I mean, outrageous.
What nobody talks about is what this will be his second or third straight year when he's in the top 15 or 20 in the league in steals.
So, you know, like, yeah, the points there are.
I mean, this guy, he's in another world.
And this is what I talk about.
We can talk MVP all we want.
And we can debate.
And She had a great year last year.
Janus is always great.
All of this.
I honestly think if you said, okay, you've got to win a championship this year.
this year to keep your job as a GM, okay? And we're going to draft all the players in the league.
I think all 30 guys take Yokic. So we can talk about who the MVP is. I don't think even one
GM takes anyone other than Yokic if it's all about winning right now and the job's on the line.
So to me, and I honestly believe that, and I don't think it's close on who the MVP is. Those other guys are
fabulous. You know, I think the only, you know, when you can start to get in the interesting
debate is who's the American-born MVP in the league? Then maybe we can have a little bit
better of a battle because the top five are all are all born abroad. So that's where it can get
even. So, but Yolkich is phenomenal. I, it's, it's, Yokic starting 30, 13, and 11 and just shooting,
it feels like 100%.
It feels like he hasn't missed the entire season
from anywhere.
When you see him, tell me you're not surprised
every time he misses a shot.
Well, and particularly from like the 14 to 8 foot range,
which is supposed to be tricky,
is every shot, if it hits the rim, it goes in.
It doesn't matter.
And that's why I was surprised earlier
when you said Luca is the best offensive player
you've ever seen.
I think there's an argument.
The one thing that makes him a little bit different,
right is
Yokic, I mean, he's great,
great, great, but
and they will run
some inverted pick and rolls
for him handling,
but he doesn't have the
off the dribble,
beat your guy,
make a dish that
Donchich has.
I mean, it's close,
but I just think,
and I think overall,
because of the rebounding
and everything else,
Yokic,
the best player in the world,
but Donchich,
offensively. I just, he does what he wants. I mean, he does what he wants. And I don't know if there's a way to
guard him. I mean, we've gone back and forth for years on do you force him left, you know,
but then he's not as good a passer going left, but then you bring the step back into the equation. So
if you take away the step back and send him right,
well, now he's even a better passer.
And that's what these kind of guys do,
is they render your game plans obsolete.
It's going to sound like heresy.
And it's not my original takes.
Someone in a front office said this to me at Summer League,
and I just hadn't heard it verbalized like this.
I think Gilchich might be the best offensive player
in the history of the NBA.
I think that's on the table now for me.
Well, he might be the best player in the history of the NBA.
Here's the thing.
Like my son says this all the time about every sport.
He's more of a baseball guy, right?
He said, look, he goes, I understand the thought that you compare players to how well they did in the era they played in.
But the evolution of athletes is, we can probably say that the best 20 basketball players,
players in history have probably played in the last 20 years, Zach. I mean, you know, like those other
guys are great, but if you took them for what they were in their time and dropped them in today's
game, a lot of those guys couldn't even get in the league. And I'm talking about some guys who are in
the top 75 all time. And I don't say that to disparage people. We evolve over time. Athletes are getting
better. How can you look at a sport like track and field or swimming and see that the times
keep improving and thinking our sport players don't continue to get better and better? I mean,
it's just the fact that's why to me, right now, LeBron's the best player in the history of the game.
Like, people want to argue Jordan and the whole thing. It was Jordan's moments were 30 years ago,
man. I mean, players have gotten better. These guys are the best players ever in every sport. It's just,
it's not trying to demean anybody. It's just that's evolution. That's what, what happens.
I mean, you really think we're dropping Bob Coosie in today's NBA and he's dribbling. Simmons is going to be so
outraged that you just said this about Bob Coosie. He's going to go left dribbling with his right hand.
that's no knock on Bob Coosy.
What happened is Bob Coosy was a very creative guy,
and someone else learned from him and developed their game better,
and then from them.
But you can't take those guys back then and drop them in today's game.
Look, nobody's had a better career than LeBron in the league,
and Yokic is on another planet.
if I had to take one guy in history right now, not just in today, I'm taking Yokic.
So I don't want to get into this whole thing because we did, Bill and I did this with Chris Paul
yesterday. You do have to do the thing where it's like if you took Kareem or Bill Russell,
like indisputable top 10 guys and gave them the resources, the training, the knowledge that we have
today. That's a different conversation. I just want to make that clear.
No, absolutely. And that's why I think the only fair way to do.
when you're going to talk historically is you do have to compare guys and how dominant they were
in their era. The game was played differently. The game was called differently. All the training
methods were different. And we don't have 75 years of evolution. People have continued,
athletes have continued to get bigger, stronger, faster. Go back and look at track and field,
you know, what were the records were 75 years ago?
Well, of course that's applying to every sport.
People are just better athletes now.
But that doesn't diminish what Jesse Owens or Mark Spitz did.
You know, you have to judge them by their era.
But that, man, like for us going on that, to say players used to be better,
which some of the old time guys saw, it was better.
It was this and was that.
Stop it.
Stop it.
The answer is Yokic for MVP now, a 25% way through the season.
But all these guys are amazing.
American-born MVP, 25 games for the season.
My snap...
I was going to say my snap reaction might be Donovan Mitchell,
but Kate Cunningham, Jalen Brunson, Anthony Edwards,
Steph Curry, there's a lot of...
Jeff Curry is always a good choice.
But I think right now, for me, that would be Kate Cunningham.
Part of it is their team's 15 and 2.
They've gotten great play out of Jalen Duren, but the lineup around him doesn't wow.
I mean, certainly Donovan Mitchell has more around him than Kate Cunningham does,
and Detroit's got a better record.
So I'm not saying it'll end up that way, but for now,
Cade would be my choice as the American-born MVP.
Also deserving of mention, Tyrese Maxie.
Real quick on
Real quick on Cade
The stuff you said about Luca
and how every scheme
he finds a way to beat
I watched the Pistons
with that kind of eye on Cade
because I said last week
I feel like our team's blitzing him
too much to take the ball out of his hands
but if you drop on him
which the Pacers did a few times last night
he just kind of bullies his way
where he needs to go
he's beginning to solve that
okay last question because I know you got to go
your updated NBA finals prediction.
Well, OKC is an entry, you know, is the easy one to me.
And I don't think it'll be easy.
I think Denver, Houston, Lakers are all really good teams.
So I don't think it'll be easy.
But come on, there's 17 and 1 and Jalen Williams hasn't played yet.
You know, I mean, like.
You mentioned, you mentioned when they, they're not going to have a slump this year.
For them, a slump is a loss.
That's exactly right.
And look, I mean, the only.
The only injury they can't absorb is shame.
That would throw them for everybody else.
And this isn't to diminish anybody.
They got so damn many good players that anybody else, they just sort of fill in around them.
They can play every way you want to play.
You want to go two bigs?
All right, we go two bigs.
You want to go small?
Oh, yeah, we can do that.
You know, you want to try to outrun us?
There's not a style of play that they can't play successfully.
I think they're an easy choice for the finals.
In the East, I think it's really, really hard,
but I'm going to go Cleveland.
I think that when they get everything together,
I think that they're the team that is the best at both ends of the floor.
New York's great offensively.
I just don't know if they're going to be a real good defensive team at any point,
you know, to be good.
enough, so I'll go with them.
And then my runner-ups would be the same.
You guys, I mean, Miami, Detroit, New York would be my next three there.
My preseason prediction was Oklahoma City over New York.
I have not quite seen enough across the board of the East to change yet.
I'm going to stick with Oklahoma City over New York.
The defense makes me nervous.
The cat up and down makes me nervous.
The reliance on Mitchell Robinson makes me nervous.
but I haven't seen enough yet, and I do think this team, the puzzle pieces can match up in a way that's interesting.
But I'll tell you, I'm inching closer to just going Detroit.
Like, they're just really good.
And the number one player that I'm watching in this conversation, and maybe in the whole league for the next couple months is,
I spent the entire summer hearing from people in Cleveland, out of Cleveland everywhere,
about how this is year Evan Mobley's blowing up, like 25 a game.
eight assists, like we're going to run the offense through him and this and that.
And I know they haven't had everybody.
They tried to force feed him early and it was like a little clunky.
I love Evan Mobley.
I've said many times I've never sold my Evan Mobley stock.
I think he's a great player as is.
I had second team all NBA last year.
I'm just still waiting for like the, he's a legit one A to Donovan Mitchell kind of leap.
And I haven't seen it yet.
And what I've seen is not super encouraging for me that he's going to really make that level
up as a player offensively this year, which is fine. They can still make the finals that way.
I don't think they can win the finals that way. Well, I don't think they, I don't think anybody's
beaten Oklahoma City. So, and I, but I'm with you on Evan Mobley. I think he's a really good player
and he'll continue to improve a little, but he's not a, he's not a 25 and 12 guy. You know, he's a, he's a
23 and 6. Yeah, he's an 18 and 8, you know, something like that.
who's also a great at the defensive into the floor.
But offensively, he's improved a great deal since he's coming to league.
They've done a great job with him.
I just don't, I don't see him being, you know, at least not with that group with those two guards.
I mean, that's going to be there.
Offense is going to be Garland and Mitchell.
He's going to be the third option offensively.
They've got great shooting around him.
But, yeah, he's not going to blow up into that.
that guy, in my opinion.
Well, we just got to see them healthy, too.
Garland's barely played. Struis hasn't played
hundreds with some games. So we'll see. Okay, Stan Van Gundy,
you got, you got, what do you said, Bucks,
bucks Knicks on Black Friday? Is it you and I in?
Who's it going to be? It's Ian and I
and Cassidy Hubbard.
Oh, Cassidy. She's the best. And listen,
I'm a huge
Emirates NBA Cup guy. I love
it. I think it's been great for the league
and that's going to be a
big game and a big day around
the league because that's when all that stuff
is going to be settled.
You know, all the things that, so when I first heard about the NBA Cup, Zach, I was like,
oh, come on, it's a gimmick.
I love it.
When they first went to the play-in, I said, okay, that was fine for the bubble, but then
you're going to do it in a regular season.
That's ridiculous.
It's been great for the league.
I mean, the bottom line is Adam Silver in the league office studied things for a long time.
They think, they think, they think, and they've done a tremendous job.
This thing has created interest.
I don't care what people say.
I watch all these games.
There is a different level of intensity in the cup games than there is in the other games.
The players do care about it.
Yeah, my reaction at the time was I don't particularly care, but I see it as purely additive.
Like, they're just regular season games that you're turning into something else.
There's no – my reaction at the moment of its announcement and its conception was there's no downside.
The upside has actually been a little higher than I anticipated because the players do play harder.
The coaches leaves guys in longer because of the point differential thing.
And every year there's a young team.
It was Indiana two years ago, Houston last year, that sort of finds a little bit of itself under a bigger spotlight and builds going forward.
So we'll see, like you said, by the end of Friday, the quarterfinals are going to be set.
We're going to know, I think, who's playing who going forward.
And so it's a big day and we'll be off to the quarters and semis in Vegas.
Stan Van Gundy, we'll listen to you on the broadcast.
You're the best.
Appreciate the time.
Thanks, Zach.
Enjoyed it.
All right, that's it.
For the Zach Lowe show, enjoy the holiday weekend.
Enjoy Thanksgiving with your families, Thanksgiving, a day off of the NBA, and then a loaded Friday,
Emirates NBA Cup, games on Amazon, games everywhere we'll know by the end of the day what the
Cup quarterfinals are going to look like. Thank you all to listening and or watching the Zach Lowe
Show. Thanks to Jesse, Jonathan, and Mike on production. We will see you soon.
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