The Zach Lowe Show - What Happened in OKC? A Full Game 1 Break Down With Mo Dakhil. Plus, More Offseason Check-ins With Howard Beck.

Episode Date: June 6, 2025

Still delirious from last night, Zach welcomes Mo Dakhil to discuss a shocking Game 1 of the NBA Finals (2:04). They go through Indiana’s turnovers, the Thunder’s decision-making, and what to watc...h for in Game 2. Plus, What up Beck?! (51:51) Howard joins from Oklahoma City to chime in on what he saw while in the building, as well as more from the fallout in N.Y. (59:49) and some possible moves in the offseason from teams you may not expect (1:09:39). Host: Zach Lowe Guests: Mo Dakhil and Howard Beck Producers: Jesse Aron, Jonathan Frias, and Brian Waters The Ringer is committed to responsible gaming. Please visit www.rg-help.com to learn more about the resources and helplines available. Get started today at HubSpot.com/AI Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:43 Oh boy. Coming up on a special Friday edition of the Zach Lowe show, game one of the finals, did that really happen? Did I dream 19 first half turnovers for the Indiana Pacers and they won the game? Did I dream that? Tyrese Halliburton made another game-winning shot in another crazy road come from behind gut punch win. That happened? I think it happened. We're going to talk about it. And then we're going to talk about with Mode DeKule, former video coordinator for two NBA teams. What's going to happen in game two? What adjustments are we going to see? What adjustments
Starting point is 00:01:17 should we see? What are the counters to those adjustments? All things NBA finals. And then my buddy Howard Beck, we do some house cleaning. We revisit the Knicks decision to fire Tibbs. They're interested. Jason Kidd, other candidates, Knicks going forward, and a couple of Western Conference teams toward the bottom of the standings that I think are kind of sneakily interesting and both undergoing some organizational change at very high levels, Utah and Portland. Portland had a little ahead of Utah and the sort of rebuilding schedule, but both of those teams in interesting spots with a lot of interesting decisions that I don't think have been talked about a lot. So why not take a little time to give some lottery teams some love? That's all coming up on
Starting point is 00:01:57 the Zach Lowe show. You're listening to the Zach Lowe show presented by Fanduel. America's number one sportsbook has made it easier than ever to get in on the action during the NBA finals. And with live betting, the tip-off is just the beginning. Look for the live S-GP tab on the Fandill's Sportsbook app and build your bet slip. Then sit back and enjoy the game as you track the outcome of your parlay right in the app. If you don't already have it, download the Fandul app today and make every moment more.
Starting point is 00:02:23 The ringer is committed to responsible gaming. include visit rg dash help.com to learn more about the resources and help lines available and listen to the end of this episode for additional details must be 21 and over in president select states or 18 and over in president dc Kentucky or Wyoming gambling problem called 1 800 gambler or visit rg dash help dot com welcome to the zach low show on a friday a third episode of the week yes because it's the NBA finals and when the indiana pacers do the damn thing again and when Tyrese Halliburton does his damn thing again on the greatest clutch shooting run, literally in the history of basketball.
Starting point is 00:03:10 We do another episode. I blathered on Bill's podcast last night right after the game. I don't even remember what I said. I watched the game again this morning. We have what is shaping up to be an awesome NBA finals and an all-time Indiana Pacers team that regardless of what happens from here on out, none of us are ever going to forget the throw ride they have taken us on. Oh, it's a kill. How are you? I'm doing great, Zach. I mean, that was such a fun game last night. A little bit weird, but totally a fun game across the board. And for it to end the way it did, it was just amazing. Except maybe I said last night, I think it was the strangest game I've ever seen. I mean, considering the stakes, I'm sure there have been, you know, tanky games in April that are like, why did Mark Madsen take nine threes kind of games? I just, the turnovers. I, I just, the turnovers. I, I'm I'm like number 13 in the second quarter.
Starting point is 00:04:05 I actually was like had this moment where I actually felt like, am I really watching this? Is this really what's happening in the NBA finals? I mean, the whole talking point coming into the series was, well, Indiana, the only reason they have a fighting chance is because they take care of the ball. And that's like you're dead on arrival against Oklahoma City if you turn the ball over. 19 turnovers in the first half and they were still within striking distance. I didn't really, my brain could not. compute what was happening. And then it just stayed in that range of like 15 at the high end,
Starting point is 00:04:38 six, back to nine, back to 12. The thunder couldn't put them away. The Pacers couldn't quite get like within even two possessions kind of. And then all of a sudden they did. And then they won. And then it was over. And by the way, one of the reasons why it felt so strange in a good way was from the 744 mark of the fourth quarter until there were 22 seconds left and there was that challenge. There were no timeouts in the game. There were stoppages. There were fouls and all that, but there was no time to really catch your breath. And that adds a whole other layer of intensity. I'm just freaking fired up, Mo. I'm fired up. I love it. I love it. This game actually reminded me of the one of my favorite scenes in Die Hard that I always quote in the play.
Starting point is 00:05:22 I can't believe you're quoting Diehard. I'm so excited for what's about to come out of your mouth. It's the scene where John McClain's under the table. And I think it's an Italian. dude that's shooting at the table and talking trash to McLean and going like, no table, pal, you've run out of table. And next time you have a chance to kill somebody, don't hesitate. And that's kind of what happened in this game. Like the thunder were never able to put them away, just like this dude was never able to kill McLean. And then gets shot through the table.
Starting point is 00:05:54 When he gives McLean advice, he's like, yeah, good idea and shoots him through the table. You know what? Let's just abort the whole podcast and do a diehard podcast instead. In. Let's go. RIP, by the way, to why am I forgetting his name? Alan. Who plays Hans Gruber?
Starting point is 00:06:11 I can't have Snape. Rickman. Rickman. Hans Gruber. I read about it in Time magazine. Just all time. Okay. I'm sorry.
Starting point is 00:06:22 I'm loopy today. Mo, we got to start with two things. I rewatched the whole game today. And I started my day as a normal person does by logging on to my little video tool and watching all 25 Pacers turnovers because I wanted to track. How did this game not get out of hand? So I tracked them. I watched everyone. 14 of the 25 were live ball turnovers were steals.
Starting point is 00:06:47 It's a lot of steals. If my tracking is correct, then I think it is. The Thunder scored seven points of 14 live ball turnovers. seven points on 14 live ball turnover. Now let's put that in perspective. Why I went on cleaning the glass and I looked up some stuff? You ready to hear what I found?
Starting point is 00:07:04 Let's go. Indiana, turnover rate last night, it's highest in any game this season, regular season or playoffs. In the other seven or eight games in which they had a turnover rate above 18%, they lost everyone except one against Brooklyn, who was probably trying to lose.
Starting point is 00:07:24 And they won against the Thunder. On the flip side, cleaning the glass has this thing where they calculate how many points you score in transition off steals and off rebounds. Just isolating the steals in terms of an efficiency, points per possession, points for chance performance. This was the single worst performance of the Oklahoma City Thunder's entire season. To have those two things happen in the same game is unbelievable. Now, looking back and watching those turnovers, I have to give a couple things happen. Number one, the Thunder gave it right back on two or three occasions. Pass out of bounds by Chet Holmgren earlier in the game.
Starting point is 00:08:04 Caruso commits a charge. There's another poke away right off a McConnell turnover. That happens. Number two, there's like four threes that in the run of play, I thought, ooh, that was kind of a greedy going for the kill three by Shea, won by J-dub. And re-watching them, I'm like, actually, they're kind of good shots. They're okay shots. They're not great shots, but okay shots.
Starting point is 00:08:26 Number three, Indiana's transition defense was super duper on point. I mentioned it last night with Bill, rewatching it, hammered it home even more. They were ready to sprint back. Sometimes even the shooter on a three was sprinting back instead of watching his own shot. The weak side guy in the corner was always looping up. They were attentive. They were like, oh, there's a loose ball. Let me lawyer around here and see what they were back.
Starting point is 00:08:53 And so all of those. And then there were two of the 14 live ball turnovers were within the last 10 seconds of a quarter. So the Thunder didn't have too much time. And I had forgotten. Remember, I think it was at the end of the second quarter where Caruso misses that layup right before halftime that spins out. It's like one of those forgotten moments. What else was notable to you about like obviously some of this is luck. 14 steals against the Thunder could be 21 points in game two.
Starting point is 00:09:19 But what else stood out to you rewatching those turnovers? I think, you know, you touched on it at the end. the number of missed layups that the Thunder had. I think they outshot the Pacers in the paint, like 14 shots more four feet from the rim than the Pacers in this game. Like just there were so many things. Chat Holmgren breaks the press in the fourth quarter and misses a layup. You know, you had a couple from J-dub.
Starting point is 00:09:47 There was just so many times where it was like, man, like that's a layup. Like these are stuff that you're normally going to make. And it just like the Caruso one at the end, like just kind of rolls around the rim and rolls off. Like I remember watching it in real time going like, it's going to fall down. Oh my God, it fell out. Like it's a weird sort of thing. That was one thing that really kind of stood out to me in terms of just the flow of the game and the way it played out for the thunder. Because that's something that like, you know, that you can't replicate that.
Starting point is 00:10:17 That's probably going, those are going in way more than they're not when we go into game two. You know, one of the reasons I wanted to watch them all again was I wanted to see where the ball was stolen on the floor. And understand a little better like, how were these just not complete jailbreak, three on twos, two on ones? And if you watch a lot of the turnovers, there are strips in the paint and under the basket or passes that are intercepted, high, low passes, entry passes, pocket passes that are. intercepted or dropped. My God, Obie Toppen had three horrific turnovers within like a minute of that during the game. But they're intercepted or dropped in like the middle of the paint. And why that was interesting to me was number one, those are almost less
Starting point is 00:11:07 damaging to the defensive integrity, your transition defensive integrity than a miss shot at the rim. There's nobody falling out of bounds. There's nobody really even under the rim except the guy who's losing the ball who may be at like the dotted line. Number two, the Pacers usually have at least two guys kind of in the upper quadrant of the half court ready to get back there. Not one of these teams that's like,
Starting point is 00:11:30 well, it's a roller and two guys in the corner and our floor balance is going to be messy. And it's almost part of the reward for the fact that Halliburton is not a super high volume straight line driver to the rim. So a lot of the turnovers were this magic combination of like part luck, part team construction where they happen right in the middle of the paint
Starting point is 00:11:49 with the floor kind of balanced. And then you had a couple of jail breaks like the baseline out of bounds pass that was stolen and dunked and a couple other ones like that. But a lot of them were for live ball turnovers, and I don't know if it's luck. I don't know if it's how the Pacers play.
Starting point is 00:12:04 I don't know how much of it is either. That were like relatively controllable environments for the Pacers in ways that like steals against the thunder are normally not. I think there was an element of preparation from Carlisle and his staff of like, look, there is going to be life. all turnovers. This team is going to create them. So how do we handle that? And I feel like the
Starting point is 00:12:25 urgency like you had mentioned, like the guys beginning to get back earlier than they normally would, not crashing so much from the corners, instead we need to get back, you know, in terms of those opportunities and not chasing a wild loose ball. If it's go for a maybe get a loose ball or get back on defense, it was get back on defense for the bases. Like there's a level of discipline to that understanding of like, hey, when basically everything goes wrong, we need to make sure we get our guys back and slow them down. And I think that was an important sort of focus that if we were to ask any of the Pacer's coaching staff, you know, maybe after the series,
Starting point is 00:13:06 they would say something along the lines of like, yeah, we accepted the fact of like, this is a reality. They're going, this is going to happen in the game. How do we handle that? And I think that might have been one of their focuses in the, leading up to the finals. And at the same time, if one of those threes that I'm talking about goes in, the Thunder win the game.
Starting point is 00:13:26 If two of them go in, and by the way, one was a Shea three that hit the backboard. It was like, and it was not even that bad of a shot. Like, I, again, I rewatched the whole game and I, I feel the same way today that I did last night. Like, I didn't love a lot of the shots that Shea took in the game. I didn't love the flow of Oklahoma City's offense for a lot of the game. We'll talk about that later. but a couple of those step-up transition threes
Starting point is 00:13:49 were like pretty good looks that just missed and missed badly in a couple of cases. Okay, so talking point number one was how in the hell do you turn the ball over that many times and not get run out of the building? We kind of answered that. Talking point number two, I think, was the lineup change. Starting small, starting Kason Wallace
Starting point is 00:14:09 over Isaiah Hardinstein. And I had talked before the series, as did Caitlin Cooper, as did the group chat guys, as probably did you do, too, about how because of the Siakam matchup and because of the sheer speed of the Pacers, this felt like a better one big series than two big series for the Thunder. I didn't think they would just scrap the two big thing completely. What I thought would happen was they'd start the way they start because that's what you do.
Starting point is 00:14:39 And you sort of shift minutes a little bit. So if you play double big 18 minutes a game normally, that becomes 12. and single big becomes a little bit more and five out no big becomes a little bit more instead double big went away single big was permanent and no big became more as we talked about and you know we could discuss the reasons behind that and the consequences for it you know i would say and i heard richard jefferson on the broadcast saying well that's a win for indiana right off the bat you feel like they're scared of us they're adjusting to us we didn't even do anything we just played some games in the junior of our conference and they're already adjusting to us. I didn't think of it that way. I thought of it as like 30% fear slash respect for Indiana. 30% respect for their speed. 30% fear of like, do we have a good matchup for Siakum with our two bigs on the floor?
Starting point is 00:15:33 And I keep mentioning this. A really underrated part of Indiana's team construction relative to this exact issue is there is no other safe place to put your big man in the starting lineup. There's no Josh Hart. There's no Jada McDaniels. Everybody can shoot and everybody moves around and everybody can pass and dribble. Neesmith is the closest thing and he's too good of a shooter, too fierce of a competitor. By the way, great rebound by Neesmith to set up the Halliburton shot at the end of the game.
Starting point is 00:16:01 I missed that last night and saw it on the rest. He comes in and it's a nasty gang rebound. So I thought it was like 30% fear respect to the Pacers and 70% puffing out our chest and being like, you know what? This is our best look. We're going to try to, we're going to try to lay the smackdown right away. We're going to try to take your soul, steal your will, steal your confidence right off the bat. We want to run you out of the gym. And I guess it didn't work, but maybe it kind of worked. I still don't know if it worked or not, but it was very strange. And I don't know what they do now going forward. It's, it's, I thought it was absurd to start this way. When you've had all the success
Starting point is 00:16:44 you've had throughout the course of the playoffs. Like the toughest series you had was against Denver in a seven game series. Yeah, like the Minnesota one was a little bit tight, but you pulled out game four and then were able to roll in game five across the board. Like this wasn't, and it wasn't like this was an adjustment they made
Starting point is 00:17:00 through the course of the playoffs that they felt like, okay, this is one of those series we have to do it. Like I agree with you and like everybody's talked about. Yes, there's going to be probably more of a one big series than a two big series,
Starting point is 00:17:12 but it doesn't mean scrap it all together. Like there are so many times, Zach, I was so confused, not just with the decision of it, but through the course of the game to never run it. You're telling me you can't run double big when they have Obie Toppin and Miles Turner out there. You can't do it when it's Thomas Bryant and Obie Toppin out there, which was the end of the third quarter. Like there's just, I feel like this was one of those things where they overthought this. And this was a problem where you had eight days off, right? They beat Minnesota on a Wednesday. They don't play until the next Thursday.
Starting point is 00:17:47 And I feel like they created a problem that it was there, but they made it a bigger problem. And then it opened up other things. It's like me. It's like when my wife asked me to fix the garage door and I tried it. I made it worse and I had to call the garage door company like, hey, my door's crooked and stuck now. Can you come help me and take my money? That's what Mark Dagnall did. Mark Dagnall tried to fix the garage door.
Starting point is 00:18:08 That wasn't really even that broken. See, I've avoided that. I've always told my wife from the beginning. By the way, that really happened. She asked me to fix the garage store like a month into my unemployment. It was part of my list of things to do. And I was like, I don't, I can't really read the instructions. I'm going to start just like pressing buttons.
Starting point is 00:18:24 And one of these probably will work. And it ended up crooked and stuck halfway. I was like, ooh, that's not good. I've made this worse. But the problem too, though, is that this opened up a nerve for them, right? You saw it really early on where the Pacers were like, oh, they're small. Cool. we're going to get a switch.
Starting point is 00:18:42 We're going to get a guard switched on Siakum. He got his first two buckets off of Wallace, the first one off of a post up on the block, the other one when he gets a switch and then attacked him from the free throw line. Like, sure, okay, maybe Chet can't guard Seacom, but we don't know that yet. You know, we're not in that situation
Starting point is 00:18:59 where if we put Hartnstein on Turner and put Chet on Seacom, let's see how he handles his sticks. And how does he deal, how does Seaccom deal with this? I feel like they opened up a nerve and just said like hit me here like it'll hurt if you hit me here
Starting point is 00:19:13 and they did that and I think that's started the problem and then again to never run it bring that out at any point in the game when there were clearly lineups that the Pacers had that you could do it like run it against these guys and they didn't do it I was really
Starting point is 00:19:29 kind of confused by that whole strategy there and I felt like again puff in the chest out whether it's fear whatever anybody wants to think it was I thought it was a mistake to start that way. We've hit on some of the reasons why you would do it, right? Mostly fear of Indiana's transition game and fear of Siakum.
Starting point is 00:19:48 And comfort level with J-dub on Siakum. It also has the trickle-down effect of allowing you to switch any Halliburton Seacom two-man game between Dort and J-dub. That's a benefit. But as you said, it has some knock-on effects that I think were helpful for Indiana. Number one, it was easy to get Seacom a mismatch. Number two, Siakum can now guard Dort and roam into the paint and mess up your driving lanes and force you to kick the ball out to shooters that they're comfortable shooting with,
Starting point is 00:20:18 including Dort, who've made five-threes, so whatever. And not only that, and I don't think anyone really talked about this, Siakum on Dort created a cross-match situation that I think confused Oklahoma City's defense because Indiana gets a stop, Dort and Siakum are going to be next to each other. Dorts first instinct is going to be like, well, I'm guarding Halliburton. I got to find Halliburton. He's the best player on the other team. And in that haze, the Pacers found little alleys, little open shots, little blips of confusion.
Starting point is 00:20:48 Nemhart hit a corner three when nobody was on it because they were trying to figure out how to match it up. And so ultimately, people harped on the rebounding last night. I didn't think the rebounding was like that big of a problem. The rebounding margin was mostly the product of how many more freaking shots the Thunder took than the Pacers because the Pacers threw the ball. all over the gym. But I did think that, and I also thought another knock on effect was Halliburton gets to hide on Wallace. And he's going to hide on Dort if you start big, but he hides on Wallace and they successfully steered some of the early offense toward Wallace. And I thought Wallace, with the exception of like three plays in the third quarter, was kind of out of control
Starting point is 00:21:28 trying to go at Halliburton and took some bad shots and got in trouble in the paint. And that's a win, too, for the Pacers. So all in all, it's at best a wash and at worst a mistake that now creates 48 hours of talking about the potential mistake, 48 hours of deciding, do we go back to starting two bigs? But to your point, I'm watching the game again this morning, I'm like, every second Seaccom's on the floor is an opportunity to go double big. Every second that McConnell is on the floor with any of your other big men is an opportunity to go double big. You can put Chet on T.J. McConnell. Chet's your third best player at worst. Some night's your second best
Starting point is 00:22:07 player. He can't play 23 minutes in a finals game. It's that simple. We can harp on the double big and this and that and what they lost and what they gain. Chet Holmgren is a top three player on your team. A top 25-ish player in the NBA, maybe top 30, maybe top 20,
Starting point is 00:22:23 depending on your taste. He can't play 23 minutes in NBA final game. He's got to play 33 minutes or 30 minutes or whatever it is. And he could even guard Matherin. Put him on Matherin and be like, Drive at me. Drive at me. Go ahead. We're going to see double big in game two. I don't know if we'll see it at the beginning
Starting point is 00:22:42 because that's a that's a herky-jurkey change. I would do it though. I would just say like screw. We're going to go back to our starting lineup. Forget game one. Wash you out of your system. Go back to our regular scheduled programming. I'd have more. I'd have a lot of respect if they did it that way because then it's acknowledging, hey, we messed up. And we shouldn't have done that in game one.
Starting point is 00:23:02 we should you know whatever and fix the mistake right away don't compound it and continue trying to try to prove to everybody no no this was the right decision you know and and all that stuff i think the other side of it too is just like when you talk about chet just playing 24 minutes or 23 minutes i think the important thing to understand like chet didn't have a good game shot two and nine from the field it's also hard to get in a rhythm with all that stuff also when you were in the starting lineup you also had heartenstein with you you guys the two of them have good passing with each other. Little big to big action, whether it's, you know, either guy throwing to the other always seems to work for them. They find opportunities
Starting point is 00:23:40 for each other. So you're kind of taking an avenue in which Chet does play well. You're taking a little piece off of that for him. And then to your Wallace point, like I think part of the problem too with that is Wallace is not a great screener, right? Like when he's setting the ball screens and things like that. And it's not his fault. It's not something he's used to or has done a ton of through the course of his career in the the position he has, where if they're hiding Halliburton on door, Dorr does a great job,
Starting point is 00:24:07 setting the screen, forcing the switch and things like that. That's just not something Wallace does. So it allowed Halliburton to do things where at times I'm going to show and then recover. There was a great example I posted in the third quarter where Halliburton got switched on to Shea off ball. And then again, through the action off ball,
Starting point is 00:24:26 the ball went to Hartenstein, Wallace is screening again for Hale, for Shea, and that allowed them to switch back and put Nemhard back on Shea. And I think that sort of those things are going to happen more and more with that. If you continue to have this sort of run, if that's going to be your starting lineup for game two. So I think it's really kind of those things right there is enough for me to want to change the starting lineup and go back to what worked for us. What we know worked.
Starting point is 00:24:52 So a couple of things you just said that I 100% agree with. Number one, I mentioned with Bill last night in passing, no pun intended, that I think the double big lineup unleashes some of their best passing sequences overall. And one of the reasons that their offense looked stagnant last night and only recorded 13 assists was that they didn't have any double big minutes. Those guys passing to each other is always a win for them. That's how they beat zone defenses. And when you have five perimeter guys playing together, which is great in a lot of ways. It's great for your defense. It's great for your shooting.
Starting point is 00:25:30 You don't have like a natural screen and dive threat. You don't have any vertical threat at all to sort of pierce the defense and get them in rotation. I thought they missed. It's part of the reason why I kept saying this this year. I think Hartinstein's been at least as important for their offense as he's been for their defense because of his creativity in open space. Number two, I thought their screening largely stunk in game one. and one of the reasons why they went at Halliburton a lot, as we knew
Starting point is 00:25:57 they would, they didn't get great dividends out of it is because Wallace's screening stunk, Joe's screening stunk in his limited minutes. Even Caruso who's a good screener was a little bit uneven. They got to mix up like you just can't ghost these screens every single time. Sometimes you got to hammer him and like
Starting point is 00:26:13 see what the defense does. Number three, you mentioned it before. I've been harping on it since before, not harping on it, but talking about it since before the series and again last night. The idea that Chet can't guard Siakum, I don't know if Oklahoma City even believes that's true. I don't know why anyone would believe that's true.
Starting point is 00:26:32 Can I, can I see it first? Because I, like, yeah, Siakum is going to get under Chet. Chet's real skinny, elbow him, get those jagged elbows going, moving backwards a little bit, and get within eight, nine feet of the rim for his kind of pet turnarounds and stuff. And you know what? Chet's still gigantic with gigantic arms and is going to contest those shots. And I keep saying this too.
Starting point is 00:26:53 Part of the reason I want to see them experiment with that matchup is it keeps Chet close to the basket. Chet guarding Miles Turner, he can do it. He's great at it. He's a great defensive player in space. He's a great defense player anywhere. It's taking him away from where he's most effective. And by the way, if it turns out he can't guard Siakam, gets who has plenty of experience guarding Seacom. Hartnstein, put Hartnstein on Seaccom, put Chet back on Miles Turner.
Starting point is 00:27:18 I just, I think overthinking is the right word. I think you hit the right word. I think the other component, too, of having Chet on Siakum, he at least slows it up. Seacom's attack at the rim, slows him up for a second, which will buy time for the help to come. Like, that's the one thing I love about the Thunder's defense is help always comes. Somebody's always coming from behind. It happened a bunch last night. Lou Dork coming up with steals, blocking Siakum from behind at the free throw line on one possession.
Starting point is 00:27:48 You know, help is coming. And if you're able to slow up the action, chat might be. not get the block, but just being tall and big, might get Siakum to slow down for a split second, and that's enough time to get Dorpe over, Williams over, to get Hart and stuff. Like, it just helps across the board with all that stuff. And I think it's just missed opportunity. It's really more, you know, when I think about it. You sound like Dumbledore, Mo.
Starting point is 00:28:12 Help will always be given at the Paycom Center to those who ask for it. Is it asked for it or deserve it? I can't remember. over. Overthinking. Can I just give you another, just a small little instance it bugged me of overthinking.
Starting point is 00:28:27 And by the way, in a game you lost by one, they all matter. End of the third quarter, McConnell has the ball, calls up Shea's man to screen for him. The Thunder acting as if Shea is Carl Anthony Towns
Starting point is 00:28:46 or Davos Bertans or some guy who has no shot defending T.J. McConnell, try to emergency switch Shea out of the pick and roll by coming off the corner. T.J. sees it to his credit, to their credit. He and Halliburton are the best at seeing this and whips it to, I don't remember who it was. I think it was Seacum in the corner. It was Seacum in the corner. Hits a corner three. And I watch it. And my first instinct is it's a Pacers play. They make that play. Those two point cards are so smart. They outthink the defense. And then I was like, why are they? doing that? What is the flaw? Like, Sheik Ilges-Ox-Hexter can't sit there and guard
Starting point is 00:29:22 T.J. McConnell for three seconds at the end of a quarter. There's three points out of thin air in a game you lose by one. Overthinking. Not even that. Like, there was another, it was later in the fourth quarter. It was a Turner three. And it goes back to my thing of you could have played both your bigs with Turner and Toppin on the floor. Top and rolls. And Turner's on the strong side. Hartnstein pulls off a Turner by two steps, it's Halliburton and Turner along the wing for another three. Like, these were just, these were the plays where I was just like, you know, like you can't give these things up. Like, there's just small moments. And it was simple two steps from, from Hartstine. But that's all
Starting point is 00:30:05 it takes. In the finals, the margin of error is the slimmest it's going to be at any point. And that's, you know, you're lost by one. And it's small stuff like that. And it was just amazing. And I, you know, going back to just McConnell, he was huge for them in the first half, to be honest. Would you like it's something the plus minus or whatever does that stuff doesn't matter to mean an individual game. But him, he kept them in this game. Like I kept writing in my notes, there was in striking distance of being in striking distance.
Starting point is 00:30:35 And I felt like it was guys like McConnell making plays. It was Thomas Bryant and, and, um, uh, Mathron at the end of the third and start of the fourth, making plays an opportunity. I have so many notes of these guys making. I rewatched the game this morning as well. And it's just so many things that I saw where I was like, man, this is why they won. All it led to or put them in the position to win the game at the end was because of all these guys making these small plays at the most random moments. McConnell at the end of the first quarter spinning off Isaiah Joe and getting a layup.
Starting point is 00:31:10 Like there's just so many of those moments right there that kept them in the game that allowed them to win it at the end. Well, I mentioned these two guys last night, but Topin and Mathurin both caught off to absolutely nightmarish starts. Oh, horrible. And I thought Mathron was actually going to get like the permanent hook at one point in the first half. And Rick Carlyle, because he's a genius, it was like, you guys are good. We're going to just play through it. And obviously Obie makes five threes.
Starting point is 00:31:36 Matherin in the fourth quarter has a nice little pocket pass for an assist, has a drive for a layup, has a backdoor cut for free throws. Like just important like just keeping us within 12 keeping us within 12. And then the other guy, Nemhart was unbelievable. And the and one he had through Caruso, through Alex Caruso, followed by a three that he single-handedly creates for top end. Like those are massive and his defense. But okay, enough, enough. This episode is brought to you by Panda Express.
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Starting point is 00:33:12 didn't have the usual juice in its half-court offense. And I rewatched it and I tried to chart every possession in which there were no passes. And look, when you have an elite isolation player like SGA and a pretty good one-on-one player in J-dub, who, by the way, had some major buckets at the beginning of the fourth quarter to keep them, keep the cushion where it was when Shea was out, you're going to have some no-passed possessions. I thought there were, I'm not going to go through them all, but I thought there were too many possessions where there's 14 on the shot clock. There were two types of possession I didn't like. Number one, there's 15 on the shot clock and you shoot a contested
Starting point is 00:33:51 18 footer just because you can. More of those shots missed than usual last night, but I thought they could have worked for something better. How I know they could have worked for something better is the one really nice out of time out play that Mark Dagnall drew up last night was that backscreen by Shea that got Case and Wallace a layup. That calling that out of of a time as not like a really thundery kind of play calling that out of a timeout was the coach saying you guys need to get a little more flow into this offense problematic possession number two was toward the end of the game we're just going to walk it up and nothing is going to happen until there's 11 on the shot clock and then we're going to run something now they miss some good threes out of that
Starting point is 00:34:31 which i'll get to but just as an example of people want to go to like when there was no juice in the thunder offense the shot clock violation where the ball's in Caruso's hand as the shot clock goes off. That starts with a Shea Isaiah Joe pick and roll. They switch. Shea passes to Isaiah Joe and then nothing happens. Like nothing. She just stands there with a, I think with Halliburton on him just stands there.
Starting point is 00:34:57 Isaiah Joe's like, cool, I don't really dribble a lot. Hardinstein, can you take this? Hartinstein takes it and just kind of like looks around. Like is anyone going to come here for a handoff? Because I'm 20 feet from the rim and I really don't want to shoot. And then there's a shot clock violation. Similarly, remember Wallace's, one-on-one finger roll over Halliburton.
Starting point is 00:35:14 Yep. That's another possession where they run a SGA Wallace switch. And then everyone stands around. Everyone just stands there. And Casein Wallace bails it out with a tough layup, but he bails it out. You could see him like, no one's doing anything. I got to do this. I'll do it.
Starting point is 00:35:30 Fine. It's Halliburton, I can do it. It's just, something was just off with them last night. And I wonder why that was. It actually goes to something that I complain about with a lot of teams. It's been my chief complaint about this Thunder team, as much as you can have a complaint about a 68 win team with the point differential they had. Like, only I can be the jerk and be like, I have problems. But they never have a different way to play, right?
Starting point is 00:35:58 Like, okay, this, whatever, we don't have the juice with this today. And that ATO was a great one. You know, it's one of those things where you're going like, we can run some more stuff. Like when you don't have that juice, run some sort of offense. that gets the guys moving. Hell, just run a flex screen. Whatever. Just run something simple and whatever,
Starting point is 00:36:17 just to get guys moving and get them going and force the defense to move and bounce around a little bit. I think those are the things that, like, for me, with this game kind of highlighted it. And I know it's crazy because, again, they lost by one, right? Like, one of those threes go in or whatnot. It's a different story.
Starting point is 00:36:35 Miles Turner doesn't bake in a miracle. We're talking differently. But I just feel like they don't have a second option. They don't have a second offense to go to. They don't have anything else. It's, okay, Shea can't make it. All right, J. Dub, you got to take it. And he can in some nights.
Starting point is 00:36:51 He didn't last night. He had a real rough one last night. Then, you know, now it ends up in case on Wallace's hands. It's going to end up in heart instance. You're going to be in weird situations when you just depend on that stuff. And I wish they kind of spent some time through the course of the season. And maybe it's unfair because they were, they dealt so much with injuries that they kind of worked in a second offense to just say let's just have a backup and i felt like this is the first time
Starting point is 00:37:15 they needed it i think they have stuff like that in the bag like just they know how to get from one one one place to another and one one shot to another in fact i thought what they have it and it just wasn't there i i think they have it a little more than you're giving them credit for but maybe i'm wrong um the other thing what did you think of their um indiana's defense on she and in particularly on Shea picking rolls. I liked it. I thought the way they kind of played it was, hey, I'm an advocate of
Starting point is 00:37:49 Shea's going to get his points. You need to make him work, but you can't give up everything else. I think you can't overhelp too much. And I think there's times where teams tend to do that, and they give up buckets and clean looks to everybody else. The others still got a lot of open looks.
Starting point is 00:38:05 I don't want to take it away. I know they missed a lot of open threes. But I felt like the way they handled, it was Shea. I thought Nemhard did a great job. I thought Neesmith did a great job, kind of fighting, continuing to battle with him, continuing to kind of whether it's fight over the top or where they went under or they just cleaned straight up switch. Like I thought they handled themselves pretty well. The only thing I had a problem with was when Miles Turner was in the action. Because I felt like he opened up too much space and it often allowed Shea to split the double team. There was definitely one in the first half where I was like, I could have driven through that. And Thomas Brian had no shot. Topin has no shot. No shot. The bigs are where I'm like, okay, that's actually something if you're the Thunder,
Starting point is 00:38:49 you need to go to more in a game two instead of let's try to keep it. And one of the threes they missed was a Caruso Corner 3 where it was Shea Hartenstein, pocket past the Hartnstein, help comes, kick the Caruso's like, I agree that. I thought they got good stuff when they went at the Biggs. I thought, you know, rewatching it, I thought they did a nice job of, speeding Shea up a little bit with pressure on his, like, staying on his hip, staying on his shoulders. So when he goes around a screener, even if he's isolating,
Starting point is 00:39:18 he's kind of got to go full speed into the paint. It's uncomfortable for him to stop and start dancing with it for his mid-range shot. And then he goes fast. And then when he gets into the paint, the swarm comes. And you force him to kick it out. And I thought that they did that particularly in crunch time when they needed to come back. And it was like, we can't give up free throws. we can't give up twos.
Starting point is 00:39:40 We need to get zeros. We need to give up zeros. And our best shot at doing that is kick it out and hope they miss. And J. Dubb missed an open one and Dort missed an open one. And I thought that was smart. I just thought they had Shay a little sped up in part of the game by pressing him. He's at half court and they're on him. The Thunder are setting screens for him at half court, which I thought was smart.
Starting point is 00:39:59 And they're just hounded him over those screens. And all of a sudden, he's in the paint. He's in traffic bodies. I thought the Pacers had like a nice, sound defensive game and defensive gameplay. I can't wait to see how the Thunder adjust, and we've talked about some of the adjustments. And what other notes you want to make from this game and head to game too? Yeah, I think for the,
Starting point is 00:40:19 I think the funny thing about the Paces is I actually don't want them to do the full court press. I think maybe as a product of slowing it down, but not being aggressive in the way they pressed. Because when they pressed, look, I talked about Chet missing a layup. Caruso got two layups and got to the free throw line one, you know, one time. I thought they gave up open looks. I think Dort had a three in the first half off of when they pressed. I feel like it kind of shakes them up a little bit.
Starting point is 00:40:46 And I think that sort of sets their defense a little bit in a rocky position with where they're at. The thunder are good. They're going to break the press. I don't think you're going to force a ton of turnovers in the back court with your press the way you did in Milwaukee or Cleveland or New York. I don't feel like that's where you're going to generate your turnovers. I'd almost rather they'd be a little bit. more solid. Like you can do a press, but you know, one of those where it's like, we don't
Starting point is 00:41:12 really want to force the turn or we just want to slow you down. There are times whenever they tried to get aggressive, I felt like the Thunder got good looks out of that. So for me, if I'm the Pacers, I'd probably want to dial that back. Just a couple of random notes that wanted to hit. No zone defense from Indiana in game one.
Starting point is 00:41:31 I wonder if that's just a long view. Like, when we need it, we'll see. Maybe we don't want to play it. haliburton plus 12 minus 11 with haliburton on the bench i don't like the siacum plus four bench guys lineup it's worked here and there did not work um did not work last night and i've said before like i kind of want a little bit more of a plurality of starters even if it's just nemhart or turner like one of those guys to have a little more offense on the flip side the starters with Topin for Siakum, so four starters and topping plus 14 in seven minutes. I'm not saying you got to keep four starters out there at all times, but I think four bench guys is risking it for Rick Carlisle.
Starting point is 00:42:24 Miles Turner in the post, I keep saying this, like he's not Akeem Ogewan, he's not Yokic. He does enough against guards. And even Dort, like he deep sealed Dort a couple of times and Dort is a cement block in there. Good on him. I just, and I'm fascinated by their pick and roll defense on Shea, and particularly when he hunts Halliburton. Because on a lot of those plays, Halliburn kind of half helped, like, just didn't really even hedge.
Starting point is 00:42:53 Just kind of, I'm going to move over a little bit. And then I'm going to get back to my man. Sometimes the screener defender did nothing and just let Shea turned the corner to the point of speeding him up and then crowding him into the paint. I wonder Oklahoma City will be ready for that. Indy took a lot of threes, which I think they're going to have to do to win this series. You just can't say enough about this team, man.
Starting point is 00:43:14 This is, I mean, I got a text. This is a text I got from someone cold-hearted analytics dude who used to work in the NBA. Send me this text last night. My phone, of course, is blowing up with like random NBA fans of my life texting me about the Pacers. See if I can find it. I'm not joking when I say this.
Starting point is 00:43:33 I think the Pacers this postseason have restored my love of the game. This is incredible. I mean, this is like, it's an all-time playoff front. These comebacks, it's just, I'm out of words. It's just absolutely amazing. Like, it's so much fun. This whole ride has been unbelievably fun. Like, the way they kind of have won these games, which has been fascinating.
Starting point is 00:44:00 You know, and it's a. it goes back to you and Bill had mentioned this. I think it was you talking about the season before where everybody was talking about everybody playing the same way. I think it was Bill. It was last night around 12-05 Eastern time as I was starting to get tired. And I was listening to that at like 5.15 in the morning.
Starting point is 00:44:18 So just understand that I was also a little bit in the days. But everybody playing the same way. And you look at it, and I think this speaks actually for the whole season, but the paces are probably the face of it. They play so differently than everybody else. Everything, pressing full court, playing incredibly fast. You know, the buckets that they get off of makes, you know, when they give up a bucket, how quickly they get the ball up the court.
Starting point is 00:44:45 I mean, it's amazing. It's so much fun to watch with that stuff. And they play such a different style. And it forces you to contort to them. And that's exactly what the Thunder did in game one with the lineup change right off the bat. Like it just forces you to change. It forces you to think a little bit more. as a team of like how are we going to deal with this onslaught and then it doesn't matter what the
Starting point is 00:45:08 lead is they're going to keep coming it's there it's it's i know bill you called them a michael myers i think you know it's it's they're just a horror movie every time you think they're dead they're they're they're i'm gonna go back to die hard the dude that was hanging from the the chain or whatever and then at the end shows up and it's trying to kill mclean and that's where uh uh carl winslow kills uh uh fire First of all, first of all, Reginald Bell Johnson. Let's let's go. You're right.
Starting point is 00:45:37 You're right. Reginald, I was, listen, man, like, family matters was big for me growing up, TGI Friday. So for me, it's always, he's just going to be Carl Winslow. But, like, you know, but they're just never dead. You absolutely have to make sure you see the body before anything else when you're, when you're thinking about it with the pastures. And you have to take advantage of it. I know.
Starting point is 00:45:59 Morbid. See the body, Mo. Well, I mean, you know. Can we, before you go, can we just drill down on the last two shots of the game? Yes. Because I have the video up right now, which is not fair. I realize. What did you think of Shea's shot 110, 10, 10, 10, O KC, the shot that misses with like
Starting point is 00:46:15 eight, nine seconds left, kind of shoves off Nemhard, shoots a, what looks like a 12, 13 footer over him. Neesmith is in his lap and J. Dub is wide open, but there's four on the shot clock. Do you have any major takes on that? I don't mind the shot itself. I just think the Pacers did a great. job. I think he really wanted to go up with it the first time before going into a fade away. And I think they did a good job stonewalling him. And I just don't think he was like fully like in
Starting point is 00:46:44 shooting position squared up or comfortable when he was fading away. I felt like it was like, oh, crap, I got to get this shot off situation. And I think that was the thing. I don't mind the shot. We've seen Shea hit these things. Like if you're for saying like, hey, should have kicked it out to Dort or whatnot. I'm good with Shea shooting that one. Yeah, I can't complain about that look. I do think Shea spent a lot of the game trying to find the knockout highlight of the game and searching a little too hard for it, but that's a fine shot. And then their defense on Halliburton at the end, I'm watching it now. He's got Wallace. Caruso kind of stunts at him on the right sideline like he's going to double him and then goes back to Siakum, who's wide open. Dort is
Starting point is 00:47:25 leaving Topin on the left wing to account for Seacom. but that's a tough cross-court pass with 2.5 seconds left as I freeze it. I mean, he makes a 21-footer. He gets a good look at it, though. Like, I don't, that's the thing about Halliburton. Like, the other team knows who Tyrese Halliburton is. And if you double him, he is going to instantaneously find the right. He's not one of these, like, I'm the alpha dog.
Starting point is 00:47:51 I'm taking the shot no matter what. He's going to find Pascal. See, I'm like, I don't, it's a pretty clean look for the circumstance, but I can't sit here and be like, well, horrible mistakes by the Thunder defensively, I don't think. Yeah, it's one of those situations. I actually was worried in real time going like, you guys got to go quicker. You got to move. Like, I felt like they were a little bit slow in their process of all that stuff.
Starting point is 00:48:16 I think once he got like, he got like half a step on Wallace, and this isn't anything on Wallace. I think he gets it on anybody. I felt like, okay, they're in trouble. Like when he's got himself in the range where he's going to be able to pull up. you know what's going in. I'm sitting there. He's going in. Like, you know, it's going in. Well, it's, I think Tom Habistro has a stat where, you know, for the whole season, I think, Chey or Tyrese is 13 of 15 in game tying or go-ahead scores, I think, in the final possession, something like that. I'm sorry, Tom, if I butcher it.
Starting point is 00:48:47 It's absolutely absurd. It's just like, so it's like anytime he's shooting it, he's going, if you want to laugh, Zach, like, you know, most people don't, I was in Portugal during the conference finals working and I'm watching these games in the middle of the night in Portugal and I'm watching game one of Nick's uh pacers and like as soon as the ball went straight up in the air on that three in regulation or the two I immediately just said that's going in that's dropping right in and just started laughing it's 412 in the morning in Portugal and I'm laughing hysterically at this shot every time he's shooting these now I'm just like okay like I'm almost like get the ball completely out of his hands
Starting point is 00:49:28 Just double and live with it. Last thing, game two coming up. The history of these games, home favorite loses game one, is a blowout in game two or a disproportionately more likely blowout in game two. Oklahoma City has now, and particularly J. Dub and Chet, who were, I think, 8 of 28 combined in the game, have had this moment before in prior rounds, particularly down to 1 against Denver, game 7 against Denver, the spotlight on J-dub, even up to 1 against Minnesota on the road. And they've responded every time. So I expect Oklahoma City to play well.
Starting point is 00:50:09 It's going to be nervy. It's nervy. It's the finals. But I expect them to play well. I don't, for some reason, I don't feel the blowout coming. I think this is going to be a good game. Like, Indiana turned the ball over a thousand times and still one game one. I don't, it doesn't.
Starting point is 00:50:28 I felt the game ones before was like, okay, that's a fluke, the home team, like Denver, or like Denver comes in and wins game one and is like, to some degree, we did our job, we're satisfied. Indiana is not wired like that. Indiana is not afraid of any of this. They want every one of these games. I think game two, look, I could be wrong. Obviously, we're just all these game to game predictions are silly.
Starting point is 00:50:49 I think it's going to be a close game again. I feel like game one was supposed to be the blowout. when you have 24 turnovers, 19 or 18 in the first half, whatever it was, 18 more field goal attempts than the other team in the first half, that's the game that's supposed to be the blowout. I feel like this was the one. I don't feel like game two is going to be a blowout only because through the pacer's just the best situation to be as a coach.
Starting point is 00:51:16 We won this game. We stole game one and we have a lot to work on. We have to improve our bigs defensively on the pick and roll, and we have to do a better job taking care of the ball. Like, I can't imagine there's going to be another 20 plus turnover game for the Pacers. They do a good job taking care of the ball, even against the Thunder. This is the most turnovers they had, you know, in games one and two.
Starting point is 00:51:39 It was the theater of the absurd. It was every variety of turnover possible. There was a moh. I'm charting the turnover. Where's my turnover? I'm starting to turner. I got it right here. There's my turnover sheet.
Starting point is 00:51:49 From 440, between 4 minutes and 45 seconds left in the second quarter, until two minutes and 30 seconds left into second quarter. That's like two minutes and 25 seconds of time. One, two, three, four, five, six, seven turnovers in two and a half minutes. That's basically every time you got the ball. For two and a half minutes, you turned it over. And normally, that's when the thunder go on that run and blow the game wide open. And I feel like, you know, we talked about why and some of its luck, some of it's just
Starting point is 00:52:18 the way the focus of the pacers, it didn't turn out that way. I just don't feel like we're going to see that type of night from the Pacers in terms of being so loose with the ball in that situation. And I feel like that's why we're going to have a close game in game two. I don't know who's going to win, but I think it's going to be a close one. We're going to win. The fans are going to win. I cannot wait for game two. Motikil, the double dribble podcast with my buddy Jared Dubin.
Starting point is 00:52:44 How often are you doing that? We're doing that twice a week. We were off to, listen, this is two idiots doing a podcast on their own and trying to figure out how to get this stuff up. So we're doing it twice a week. We're doing them. We're going to be trying to do them right after the finals, after the games for the finals, and then just keep the party rolling after that. And you're still on Twitch, right, which I'm not familiar with, but I know, I mean, I know what it is. I will never go on and I'm too old. They won't even, I'll try to get on in the red button. A red like X will come on,
Starting point is 00:53:14 like family feel like you're too old. Again, I say this about Steve Jones. I say it's about you. if you want to know what happened in the game, follow Mo to kill. If you want to actually know why one team won and what the strategy was in what they were trying to do, follow Mo. Thank you, Mo. I'll see you. I'll see you soon. Yes, sir. Thank you for having me.
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Starting point is 00:53:52 Same day delivery, it's on Prime. Visit Amazon.com slash Prime to find millions of items delivered fast. Available in select areas, terms apply. This episode is brought to you by ServiceNow. Look, I have my dream job. I get to watch basketball, think about basketball, talk about basketball, but even dream jobs have the stuff that nobody dreamed about, the busy work that gets in the way of the actual work.
Starting point is 00:54:13 Service Now's AI specialists tackle that work. Request handled, cases closed, the whole thing done. So you have more time for the work you actually want to do. For me, that's breaking down SGA film whenever I want, and then talking about it into a microphone. To learn how to put AI to work for people, visit servicenow.com. All right, now, coming in live from Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, it's time to say it. What up, Beck.
Starting point is 00:54:38 What up, Zach? How are you? We miss you here in Oklahoma. I'll see you in Indiana shortly. Before you know it, before you know it. So we don't need the whole ringer crew there. You can hold it down. I'm fine here.
Starting point is 00:54:50 Before we move on to some off-season matters, house cleaning with Howard is the theme of this episode. Just give me the last thing. Give me one or two lasting memories from being in the building or walking out of the building or being in the hallway after the game from last night's epic game one, which I just broke down with Moad De Kiel for 45 minutes. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:55:11 Well, first of all, I've lost track of how my finals count. So let's just call it 20-something. So I've been at a lot of game ones of the finals. I'll just say right off the top, I think that's by far the most memorable, the most incredible, the most dramatic, wildest game one I've been to. And I was there when Iverson beat the Lakers in 2001, and it was, we're here to shock the world. And then, oops, they got stomped for the next four games. Not predicting that's the way this one will unfold. Just saying, interesting reference point for a game one upset that nobody saw coming. That's the stepover game. So there's that. I just, I cannot.
Starting point is 00:55:48 recall too many times where I left game one of the finals going, holy shit, what the hell just happened? The second piece is, I hadn't been here for a while, Zach. It'd been a while since I'd needed to be in Oklahoma City for NBA matters. Or maybe it's my own fault for not finding reasons to come out here to cover anything. I'd forgotten just how freaking loud it is in there. Just ear-splitting. And I've been to a ton of games at the garden. The garden's loud. And maybe it's just the way that the building is built or how compact it is or whatever it is. Last night was the first time in a while I can remember where I'm like, I really should have brought my earplugs out of abundance of caution for my own,
Starting point is 00:56:28 you know, well-being and health. And yet that shot goes. And that's just it. I wrote this for the ringer this morning. Like it's, it's as close as you're going to get to silencing a building that cannot be silenced. That is as raucous, as loud as reverberating as you can possibly get. So that was rough.
Starting point is 00:56:49 And then because I had to write, I was mostly in the press conference room, so I didn't get any fun back hallway observational stuff that we reporters like to do. It wasn't a night for that for me last night, unfortunately. So no little aftermath and no practice today. Friday's the off day with the two days off between games one and two. So we've not seen anybody today. It'll be interesting to see what the aftermath that looks like on Saturdays. But I will say, among the other things that struck me last night, sitting in all the
Starting point is 00:57:22 Thunder Press conferences, you would have thought they had just lost game five of the season in late October or, you know, game three of a road trip in January. And you can interpret that any number of ways, but I think the correct way to interpret it is that like as young as the thunder are, we've seen all the whatever, 24.7, the youngest team in da-da-da-da-da-da-da. They don't act like it, man. they whether it's winning or losing these guys are as steady as hell i think that's a great trait to have to be able to shake this off like you wanted to walk in you know as a reporter you're looking for like oh are they going to be shell shocked or they're going to look like oh my god i can't this gut punch we
Starting point is 00:58:01 can't how are we going to recover and dude there was just none of that um they they literally it would have sounded the same as if you were interviewing them after a loss of january so what did you make a prediction for the series or not Yeah, me and 99% of the country said Thunder and 5. So I said Thunder and 5. If I were given the leeway to revise my prediction after every game, which I don't do, I still think the Thunder are going to win the series. I don't feel as definitive about it as I did, for instance, when Miami beat Denver in game one two years ago. I was like, I think, or it was a game two, whichever game they split to make it one, one, going back to Miami.
Starting point is 00:58:46 I was like, I'm not worried. Denver is going to win the series. I now think we're in for a longer series, and I would say Thunder in six or seven at this point, because I said this to Mo, like, I don't think the thunder are going to be rattled for exactly, more rattled than they would be just in the finals. I thought they played a little bit rattled last night on that stage, but I don't think the result and manner of the result is going to rattle them for exactly the reason you just. said for the test they've already survived in these playoffs. However, I said this to Mo and I'm interested in your thoughts. The classic way these series unfold is home favorite loses game one, comes out and wins game two by a lot. There are a lot of blowouts in this scenario where because the road team has already, quote, done its job, gotten home court advantage. The home team is playing
Starting point is 00:59:36 for its life. They're at home. Some luck variables maybe ship. I don't think it's going to be a blowout. I think game two is going to be close. I think I'll pick the thunder to win, but I think it's going to be a close game. I feel the same. And I think there's also this thing where, you know, there are people get too cut up in like all the sports talky bullshit of like disrespect and this kind of stuff. No one has a lack of respect for the Pacers. They are just one of those teams that was hard to see coming, right? Nobody at October thought the Pacers were going to be in the finals.
Starting point is 01:00:06 Nobody on April 15th thought the Pacers were going to be in the finals. Very few people two weeks ago probably thought. the Pacers were going to be in the finals. And certainly nobody thought the paces were going to be in the finals and up one after Tyrese Halliburton hit a shot with 0.3 seconds left in the game. So, but we are, when you see a repeated pattern like this, where the Pacers are constantly exceeding our expectations, disproving whatever notions we had about them, getting down in games and coming back, wiping out 15 point deficits, 20 point deficits, making incredible shots, mostly by Tyrese Halliburton over and over, although all due respect to Ernie Smith and that
Starting point is 01:00:39 three-point explosion against the Knicks. At a certain point, you start to think like, okay, maybe we need to re-evaluate a little bit. And maybe even falling back on, oh, okay, well, they won game one. So now it's Thunder in six instead of five almost feels like maybe we need to reevaluate entirely. I get it. Like there are good reasons why everybody leaned Thunder so hard. But the Pacers, like, listen, maybe it's just that undefinable thing, some it factor. I know we love to make everything about the granular and the analytics and all the tracking
Starting point is 01:01:15 stats and the things that we can actually almost tangibly hold on to to define the gap between this team and that team in talent, in scheme and whatever. Sometimes teams just have some other shit, just some other cool thing. And their cool thing is like Tyrese Halliburton is not afraid of any moment and has an uncanny shot-making ability. And he's not the greatest score of this era and probably will not be the greatest score of his time. But he damn well is building a really quick, thick resume of being the best clutch shooter,
Starting point is 01:01:49 the best big moment guy of this time. And he's put that together just in the last four weeks. He's leaving a pile of rattled and broken teams in his wake, as are the Pacers. You mentioned silencing the building. This is the fourth crazy comeback the Pacers have had in the playoffs. And they've had other less crazy comebacks. fourth one, one in each series now. I believe all four of them have been on the road, which is, which is itself crazy to think about. And so here we are Pacers. I don't want to talk
Starting point is 01:02:22 about the finals. I mean, I could talk about the finals for four more hours, but it's time for housekeeping with Howard. Number one, I said last night on the postgame pod with Bill, Bill loves to do the thing where we talk about the finals and then it's 1215 in the morning and he's like, so what about Tibbs? I'm like, all right, I guess we're going there. And we talked about, you know, Taylor Jenkins and Mike Boodenhozer and Johnny Brian and Frank Vogel, which is the name of that I'm a little surprised at a couple more. And then we talked about the notion of trading for a coach. And I said to Bill last night in the wee hours, I wouldn't take your eyes off the Jason Kidd thing.
Starting point is 01:03:01 I wouldn't disqualify that as a non-starter. And then sure enough today, Mark Stein reports that the Knicks are planning to seek permission to interview Jason Kidd. what do you think of that vis-a-vis the decision to move on from Tom Tibido? I mean, I don't know if Jason gives if the Mavs will give permission,
Starting point is 01:03:19 if the NICS have enough to trade the Mavs, Nico Harrison and World Wide West go way back. I don't know how that factors into it. So maybe it's a non-starter, but just what was your reaction to that as it relates to their decision to fire Tom Tivito after a conference finals run? The first is 25 years.
Starting point is 01:03:38 I, on a, unrelated story, I'd been making some calls yesterday and then while I'm talking to people, I'm asking a little bit about the Knicks. Listen, I don't think anybody should be too confident in anything because there's just so much stuff out there in the wake of moments like this, but I will just put out there or relate to you some of the things that I think, I think I know, or I think I believe based on some of these conversations. I don't believe the Knicks fired Thibodeau with another coach firmly in mind. I don't think.
Starting point is 01:04:10 like this is not one of those cases with, oh, if you're going to fire the first coach to get you to the conference finals in 25 years, you got to damn well know who you're going to, I don't think they did. I think they sat for a couple of days, realized this was the move that they felt was needed and not with a absolute definitive replacement in mind. Ideas, perhaps, but it was more about we think we've gone as far as we can go. And I heard you on your podcast basically saying as much, we've gone as far as we think we can go with this coach. We need a different voice, a different different ideas, different offense. And so whether it becomes Jason Kidd,
Starting point is 01:04:48 I don't think it was going to be some foregone conclusion at the moment that they fired Tips. Whether Jason Kidd is the right move, I think, is a discussion. Who else is out there. Taylor Jenkins is a name that came up a couple of times when I was poking around, and I think there's a lot of a case to be made, I think, for Taylor Jenkins. with the Knicks specifically. I get the Jason Kidd ties, especially with Jalen Brunson,
Starting point is 01:05:17 and the most important relationship you're going to have on day one with the new coach because Tibbs and Brunson clearly had a strong relationship. Tibbs and Rick Brunson have a strong relationship. By the way, there's a nice little subplot here too, if you're negotiating for the release of Jason Kidd. The Knicks got rung up for tampering, and the Mavericks were none too happy about the whole Rick Brunson, Jalen Brunson, Alan Houston and World Wide West, sitting at their playoff games in the second
Starting point is 01:05:42 row with Julius Randall, I think, was involved. Am I remembering all this correctly? Yes, you are. It wasn't that long ago that there was some kind of tension between these franchises. The Knicks have traded most of their tradable first round picks to the Nets. And the last time that we saw a coach quote unquote traded for, like it's technically not traded for. You don't trade for the coach.
Starting point is 01:06:05 It's just it's compensation for letting a guy out of his contract. It's a semantic thing. But it was a first round pick, I believe, from the Clippers to Boston, right? For Doc? Yes. Yes. So can the Knicks, whatever they have available to them, I haven't looked at the ledger lately, but whatever they have available to them, is that even a smart move?
Starting point is 01:06:26 You know, a wise use of your resources when you've got so little left to deal? Is there another way of doing it? Would the Mavericks actually, given that, I don't want to overstate the case, but like if Nico was confident enough to say I can trade Luca Donchich at a time when nobody else in the universe thought that that was a good idea, maybe he just wants to let kid walk too and just like remake this team in his own image. I don't think that will be an obstacle. I think the compensation would be an obstacle. I was just wondering if he was eager enough to make a move that maybe he would just let him go without compensation, but that would be foolish, right? But then again, the Mavericks have not exactly, you know, decorated themselves.
Starting point is 01:07:07 They could use some more future assets, even though they got some. Yeah. From the Lakers, just some. They should extract something, of course. I would be surprised if Taylor Jenkins got the job, but that's just, there's no reporting behind me saying that it's just me saying a young coach from a small market. I don't know if that's the move. Maybe it is.
Starting point is 01:07:23 I think Taylor Jenkins, to be clear, is an awesome coach. And J-Kid, J-Kid, J-Kid is a different coach than Tom Thibito. There's no question about that. Different style, different personality, different minutes management. different schemes, all of that. I'm not sure there's any real evidence that he's a better coach than Tom Thibbido. I'm not even sure that there's any real evidence that he's a better proverbial ceiling razor than Tom Thibido.
Starting point is 01:07:48 And this is a point I did not make in my little spiel about the Tibbs firing and floor razors versus ceiling razors and all that. The idea that you have to be a classic tactical genius ceiling razor to win an NBA championship is just, it helps, but it's also just not. true. And so like there are a whole pile of coaches who were criticized as exactly Tibbsy floor raisers, Frank Vogel, Mike Boodenholzer, Michael Malone, a name that has come up in this, who were, who were of that in different ways and different styles, questioned on do they have the adjustment acumen quarter for quarter, minute for minute to go up against
Starting point is 01:08:30 SPO and pop, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera. And the answer was, in the end if they had the talent, yeah, they could win championships. There's no doubt that Tom Thibito could win an NBA championship. There's also no doubt that he is stubborn in some ways to a fault and is more of a floor razor, I think, than a ceiling razor. That doesn't mean you can't be enough of both to win the NBA title as all of those previous names evidence. And Jay Kidd, I mean, he's made the finals. Tibbs has not as a head coach. Is he he's different? Is he better? like, I don't know. I don't know. Like, it's a big, big, bold move by the Knicks. I understand it's been five years. Five years is a long time in the NBA now for a head coach who's not Spow or Kerr or
Starting point is 01:09:17 pop. It was no longer the coach in San Antonio. It's just, you know, we'll see. I just wanted to address the kid thing because I said last night, like, I think there's some legs to that. And I, and now it's been, the legs are moving a little bit. I will say that, um, obviously there's an exes and o's part of this. And as you say, whether it's, you know, how Jason Kidd would versus how Tibbswood scheme is, is Kid any better? Like, there's all of that stuff. I think that that is only going to be a small part of this, this process. And I say that even knowing that, yes, our buddy Mark Stein reported that they've asked for permission, which means that they're confident enough that Jason Kidd would fit this, that they are pursuing this route. But what I've,
Starting point is 01:09:58 what has been suggested to me is that this hire is going to be as much about other aspects of a coach than simply the playbook or their ability to adjust on the fly. It always is, right? Right. So there's a personality aspect of this. There is a, you know, we talk a lot about the modern NBA alignment. You have alignment between, you know, coach and front office, front office and ownership, all the way down to, you know, to your star player, all that stuff.
Starting point is 01:10:22 I think they're looking for better alignment than what they had. I think Tibbs got better over time, but as I understand it, there certainly were some tensions. By the way, not unusual. Coach versus front office is as age old as pro sports. But I do think they're that, and this is why I don't think Michael Malone will be the guy. Why is Michael Malone out of a job? Because he and Calvin Booth blew each other up while not being able to work together. If Tibbs has at times been difficult for a front office, by the way, not just in New York, but in Chicago famously.
Starting point is 01:10:50 I don't think that you're going to then go hire another coach whose most recent reputation was for bucking the front office, not playing the young players that they drafted that they wanted you to develop because you were leaning hard on your veterans, sound familiar because you wanted to win every game. I don't think that that would make much sense. I have had Taylor Jenkins described to me as somebody who's a little bit more of a, maybe a little easier to work with, has some Tibbsian qualities as well, but more modern version, more of a good, more of a relationships guy. Tips is not considered a relationships guy. Take that however you want people, but that's the way that he is viewed around the league. I don't want to, I already did my whole Tibs spiel the other day. People, people can listen to
Starting point is 01:11:32 that. And I agree with pretty much. No one's going to feel too much sympathy for Tibbs, given his gruff exterior and all the money that he now has coming to him. You should know, like, I haven't talked to him. I know some people have also tried to reach out to him and haven't gotten in touch with him. I'm sure he's hurt. He's from Connecticut. He had time as a Nix assistant under Jeff Van Gundy. This is his dream job. And by any objective measure, he's, did it well. Yes. And to not have it rather suddenly after making the conference, I was like, they did not waste
Starting point is 01:12:08 much time is probably a gut punch no matter how much money you have coming to you and how nice your house is. And so just that is what it is. Housekeeping. Bill sprung this question on me last night and it happened to be one that I've been thinking about since the jazz again, rather abruptly hired Austin Age, son of Danny Age as their president of basketball operations. No one was really quite sure that there was a president of basketball operations job coming open.
Starting point is 01:12:36 I thought that was Danny's job. And it's like, no, he's CEO or something. It's a whole other thing. Danny is just Danny. Danny is just Danny, the Danny of Danys. He's executive VP of being Danny Age. And it has raised some questions. Or, huh, what does that mean?
Starting point is 01:12:52 What does it mean that Austin Aange at his introductory press conference was asked about lineup manipulation and tankery and rejected it out of hand? And it's been, what does it mean, Howard? I have some theories, but what does it mean? What was your reaction to it? Because the jazz are, you know, Bill keeps saying that he's here and everyone keep an eye on the jazz. Everyone keep an eye on the jazz. And I understand why that is. They've got a lot of assets and they don't have a lot of upside in the near the immediate future.
Starting point is 01:13:22 I've got some thoughts. What are your thoughts? So I think, I'm not going to say that people are wrong to interpret it this way. I was surprised at seeing a number of people interpret Austin Aange's comments as being somehow a critique of what the jazz have been doing the last few years. It may simply be that we tried the tanking thing for a few years and it's time. You can only do that for so long before you start to lose your audience, lose your fans, lose momentum, lose maybe your players too because they might be tired of losing. There's always like a kind of a logical limit on how long you can be intentionally bad. And so I didn't see it so much as a backward-looking critique as more of a forward-looking, like,
Starting point is 01:14:05 it's time to start building up again. You know, we tried this. And because of the reformed lottery odds, it backfired, or at least it didn't pay off in the way that they clearly hoped it would. They also, by the way, never did a full commitment to the tank until this past season. They kept straddling the fence. Like, oh, no, we've got Lowry Marketing. He's an all-star now. We're competing.
Starting point is 01:14:26 Like, you know, we're not going to sell off Jordan Clarkson and all these other events. veterans that we have because we're competing and our fans love us for it. And meanwhile, we're just screwing up our draft position. Like they needed, they were, I think they were straddling defense for too long. I, the one part of this, and I'm curious to hear what you think, because this is not one I've poked around on the last couple of days. What does it mean that they specifically went out and hired Austin Aange aside from, obviously, the Danny Aange factor here? But why did they need when you had Danny as chief executive of being Danny Aange and Justin Zanick, did you need another top basketball executive sandwiched in there? I don't have an answer
Starting point is 01:15:07 to that question. I'm curious what yours is. So a couple of interesting things have happened in Utah in the last year. Number one, Dave, for the first time, as you noted, just blatantly tanked. Tanked to the point that the NBA find them, takes to the point that they should be embarrassed about how naked it was. Should we find more often. than they were. Yeah. Like John Collins. Anyone seen John Collins like in six months?
Starting point is 01:15:31 What was his injury? What was his fake injury? Made up injury? I don't know. Larry Markinen just plays one game out a week, plays another game. It was embarrassing. We all know that. And they did that and everyone was miserable.
Starting point is 01:15:44 Everyone coaching staff, front office, ownership, miserable. Then the lottery happens and they drop. They don't drop. They finish fifth. They finish in the most likely. statistical slot for them, despite hopes of obviously Cooper Flag or number two or number three. From what I have heard, Ryan Smith, the owner, was extremely emotional the night of the lottery, not like weeping emotional, but just like it hurt. It hurt a lot. And I think there was some sense
Starting point is 01:16:16 of what the hell was all this for? Like what did we do all this for? Everyone was miserable. The fans are miserable. We're like kind of a laughing. stock for a hot minute. We've never been a laughing stock. We've been a fairly successful franchise for a long time in this market. What was it all for? And coupled that with last year's lottery pick, Cody Williams,
Starting point is 01:16:36 too early to declare him a bust, not too early to declare his rookie season incredibly alarming. Coupled with Keonti George, is he a starter? I don't know. He wasn't a starter at the end of last year. Isaiah Collier, cool. That was a nice little story. Is he a starter? We don't know.
Starting point is 01:16:52 Philipowski, we don't know. Taylor Hendricks got injured. I like him a lot. In other words, like Walker Kessler, nice player. He's trade rumors all the time. What do we really have here? But particularly the Cody Williams pick, the Jazz have also,
Starting point is 01:17:07 I don't know if it's a let go or didn't renew two of their main scouts in the last few weeks before Austin Ainge got there. And I think that is also a sign of like, we're not happy with how things have been unfolding here. And then Austin says what he says at the press conference. And people start thinking, like, oh, are they going to be aggressive?
Starting point is 01:17:25 Are they going to like go after a guy? Are they going to go after who is the guy? And I've said before at the combine, I had people whispering Trey Young's name in my ear and I've been told, no, we're not, that's not the guy we're cashing in chips for. I don't know who the guy is there cashing in chips for. In fact, as of right now, if you had me bet,
Starting point is 01:17:47 I would say don't read too much into what Austin Ainsh says. I think they're, unless something amazing, falls into their lap. They would love to add A-level talent around Lowry Marken. They would love it. I don't know who that player is or if it exists or if they're under contract because they got up, this is Utah. You're not going to trade for a guy on an expiring contract.
Starting point is 01:18:08 And failing that, I kind of would expect them to remain patient and just sort of, you know, like they can tank. They are in the West, man. This ain't the East. they can play all their dudes and finish 14th real easily in the West. They can play Colin Sexton, Jordan Clarkson,
Starting point is 01:18:30 John Collins, Lowry Marketing, whatever, and then trade whoever gets you a first round pick or a fake first round pick, trade that guy. You can play all those dudes, go 29 and 53, go into the lottery in just about the same position you were a year ago, but everyone feels better
Starting point is 01:18:46 because you actually tried to win and you played your guys. I also think that as they do that, Again, this is just me speculating. But whatever. As they do that, if they're not going to add, if there's not a big opportunity to add, something that really vaults them into like play in territory.
Starting point is 01:19:06 Like we can make an honest run at 8, 9, 7, 10, whatever. And someone comes to them and is like, here's the, maybe not the godfather. Here's a strong offer for Lowry Markinen, who's I think 28 years old now. I think they'd have to consider taking it and would consider taking it because does he fit their timeline anymore? What can we get for him?
Starting point is 01:19:28 And I don't think he's like, although they've paid him through 2029 now, a lot of money, I don't think he's like itching to spend the rest of his prime on crappy Utah teams with a bunch of 20-year-olds. So that, if you had to make me guess, that's the path that they, I would guess they go down. Absolutely. And I said it last summer. I like the extension, there were reasons for them and for Lowry Mark and then to do that and immediately took that piece off the chessboard for the season, right? They couldn't trade him by the trade deadline.
Starting point is 01:20:02 They had to wait till this off season. But there were good reasons for both sides to do it. And my first thought was, okay, I guess he's there for this season. I don't think it's going to help much. And my second thought was, you should be trading him next summer. I don't, I have, I've seen nothing to change my mind on that. Like, when I say should, like, you know, listen, obviously, we're saying this in a vacuum. We don't know what the offers would be.
Starting point is 01:20:24 And the offer has to be right to do that. But for all the reasons you just stated, he's firmly in the middle of his prime. He had some of his best stretches of his career in Utah. He's worth more today than he was at the moment that they got him. And that means the rest of the league for the team that's like, you know, a supporting star away. or that is trying to get from, you know, playing to playoffs, you know, to top four or something, Maori marketing is going to hold a lot of value for a lot of teams that just need him as a co-star or as a third, you know, third tier type star.
Starting point is 01:20:59 I also think he needs to play to, it's not like, I don't, I still think he has positive trade value right now because he's of the right age and he has a great complimentary skill set. He's also making 46 million, 46 million, 49 million. million, 53.5 million in the next four years. I think he's got to play and play well for a sustained period of time to elevate his trade value to where it needs to be. It's another reason why they're not going to just do the tankery. So let's play this out for a second. In the Keep Lowry Markinen scenario where we trade maybe a couple of these other pieces, these other veterans we've got, and we've got this shit ton of picks from the Mitchell and Gobert trades. I don't think you're getting, I don't know who's going to be available that is going to
Starting point is 01:21:47 catapult you into the playoff scenario in the playoff field. And I don't know that that's worth doing that either because you might get a temporary payoff, a short-term payoff, but you're not really truly breaking through because if you look at the teams in the West, like you always, if you're on the outside looking and you always have to look for who are we going to displace? Who's falling out? Kings could fall out. The Mavericks are teetering because of the lack of Kyrie and who knows what Anthony Davis's health will be and how quickly does Cooper Flag learn the NBA? The Grizzlies are teetering a little bit and there's questions about how they'll keep it all together. But most of the West,
Starting point is 01:22:25 you look at and you think, like, who are you leapfrogging? Who are you one trade away from leapfrogging? And so the alternate scenario where you're trading marketing, I think, makes more sense, and especially does for Lowry Markinen. And if you get the right package, I think that that's the better path because whatever you're going to add to Lowry Markinen, it might leap you past a couple of these teams, but I don't think it even is guaranteed to get you into the plan. It's a Kings, man. Cangs.
Starting point is 01:22:56 It's just, it's one of those like, are you watching your friends and neighbors? I'm not. I should be, but I have not been. So John Hamm's whole opening monologue, which is referenced throughout the show, is sort of him saying, like, how did I get here? Like, what happened in my life that I, like, arrived at this place? That's the Kings. It's like, you look at their roster and it's like, how, how did this happen? What's happening to us?
Starting point is 01:23:24 Where are we going? Who would you? That's Kings fans, by the way. King's fans are asking that every day. I was just in Sacramento and had to talk a couple off the ledge. Who says no to a straight up, Tray Young for Zach Levine trade, just for fun? Same exact contract. The Hawks say no.
Starting point is 01:23:40 I would think so. If I have the Kings, I would do that in a hot second, even if I have to pay Trey. Well, that is the, I do kind of have to pay Trey. Anyway, no disrespect. No disrespect to respect to Zach Levine. I'd rather have Trey. O'Huspect. That was disrespect. By the way, are you morally obligated to watch friends and neighbors as a Connecticut? First of all, it takes place in Westchester, which is in a different state. I thought it was Connecticut. No? I think I think it's been shot in a few different places, but it takes place in Westchester. Maybe just you as a suburbanite upstate of New York City is the thing. Look, look, you don't want to get me talking too much about where I live. It's not going to go well. I'll stop. I've told them, okay. This is just a teaser.
Starting point is 01:24:30 We're not going to do the full thing right now. But there's another team in the West. In fact, in Utah's division, I know you have all the divisions memorized by name of the division and who's in them. Is it the Smyth? it's the boy I don't think I can name another Campbell is that
Starting point is 01:24:45 that was a conference I think in hockey keep the camp I don't know that A I think is sneakily interesting and B
Starting point is 01:24:54 is undergoing its own organizational not trauma but whatever change that I haven't talked about yet which is that
Starting point is 01:25:04 the Portland Trailblazers are for sale like that's a big deal the Blazers are for sale finally And I also think they're sneakily interesting after a pretty strong finish to last season
Starting point is 01:25:14 when they kind of like fake got into the playing race for a little bit. They have DeAndre Aiton on an expiring contract. Anthony Simon's on an expiring contract. Shaden Sharp is extension eligible. I think that's going to take a while. I don't think we're going to get a deal there until the fall if we get one at all. Who knows so?
Starting point is 01:25:29 Things happen. Time Lord on an expiring contract. Jeremy Grant, three more seasons on a contract that is 32, 34, 36. like it's not great, but it's not as, like, toxic as I think people think it is. I think they got a lot of balls in the air, just extended Chauncey Billups, just extended their front office, Joe Cronin. I think they have more balls in the air than people realize and could go in more directions than people realize. I haven't heard Jack Squat to go Chris Farley. Jack Squat about Jeremy Grant and trades. So I don't know there's any traction there. I have pitched the fake trade of Aiton and some good
Starting point is 01:26:08 filler for Subonis. I think that's a good trade. I think it's a fun trade. I think Subonis in Portland, it makes a lot of sense. And I think Sabonis' people would be cool with it. I don't know if anything's going on there. I'll tell you who to keep your eye on, Howard Beck. Anthony Simons is eligible for an extension. That feels like a rubber meets the road moment for the Blazers in Anthony Simons. And I think there'd be teams that would be interested in Anthony Simons. The internet's favorite fake trade for like three years has been Anthony Simons to the magic. Yes. I don't think that's a, I don't I don't think that's amiss by the internet.
Starting point is 01:26:41 I think there's some, some, that makes a lot of sense. And the other guy for the magic, and you mentioned, we mentioned the Kings and point guards, if I were one of these teams in need of a guard, I would be trying like hell to get Darius Garland. I would be playing it slow, just, you know, hey, what do you think, Cleveland? What about this? And just try to slow play it. I'm not going to give you my great offer right now.
Starting point is 01:27:04 Cleveland's obviously in a tough position where they're going to want actual win now talent back, which makes those kind of trades difficult. But that's the, but in Portland, I'm not sure that that's a fit because I think they want to see what they have and scoot. Your guy scoot. But I just think, you know, Blazers, they're kind of been off the beaten path since the damn trade. No one really pays attention to them. There's a lot of stuff going on in Portland right now. There's a lot of stuff going on in Portland.
Starting point is 01:27:29 I have a good friend from college who is now moving to Portland where I have various relatives who have somehow gotten there. Everybody's going to Portland. We should, maybe that's what we should do, Zach. Let's just relocate to Portland and we can be there for the rebirth of the Trailblaings. I'm fascinated by them for this reason. They don't have a clear direction yet. They don't have a clear North Star yet. Is it Shaden Sharp?
Starting point is 01:27:54 Is it Scoot? I mean, Avdia was the, I'm going to say, the best player on the team for the last two to three months of last season. I think I'm comfortable saying that. Yeah. Great. That was a nice swing by them. Like there's, you can find just enough good things happening there to think optimistically about the trailblazers.
Starting point is 01:28:17 And yet, same problem as the jazz ultimately, which is if you don't have the guy, where are you? And if you don't have the guy, do you have a path to get the guy? And we're watching an NBA finals right now where people didn't think one of the teams, the team that's up one oh had the guy, the top 10 to top 15 guy. And sometimes they, yeah, sometimes they sneak up on you. And also sometimes it's just nice to get a lot of guys. Like a lot of guys. Like Pascal Seacom's not a guy, but he's a good guy. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:28:49 Miles Turner is a good guy. Got a lot of good players. Absolutely. I mean, you know, various versions of the so-called middle build, right? Where, you know, let's just keep plugging away methodically adding good pieces and then either somebody we have unexpectedly emerges or maybe we get an opportunity to trade for the guy or whatever it may be. I don't know what the Blazers are yet.
Starting point is 01:29:11 I think they're still paying the price to some extent, Zach, for waiting way too long to figure out what to do about Dame. Like they were, I thought they should have been, as long as they were holding on to Dame, they should have been trading the picks that became some of these guys. They're young players, Scoot, Shaden, and others. You're either building for what you've got left of Dame's career or you're cashing out on Dame and you're going young
Starting point is 01:29:35 and rebuilding, in which case you keep those picks. But they were straddling the fence. I think you and I talked about this on your other podcast a year or two ago, where I said they were just like painfully straddling the fence. And to an extent, I think they're still paying the price for that, which makes this summer really interesting, right? Because they've got to be more decisive now. You mentioned all the guys who are up for either extensions or free agents and decisions that need to be made. They kind of got to have some sense of who they are or who they want to be in the near term while they're waiting for their own Tyrese Halliburton to magically emerge. I don't think they're going to rush anything. Like, I don't mean to imply that they're going to do something crazy or a blockbuster or anything. I just think they have a lot of interesting pieces and a lot of interesting decisions to make. And an ownership, I mean, there's no more important thing in your organization and who runs
Starting point is 01:30:23 the show and who has final say. And that's going to be up for grabs at some point in the near to medium future. All right, Howard Beck, you're going to be in the building for game two of the NBA finals. Where else can we look for you this? I didn't see that you wrote today. I spent the whole morning watching a game again. What did you write? Something about the game. Just about the sucker punch that the Thunder just absorbed.
Starting point is 01:30:43 And what that means for a young team that kind of, you know, we all were ready to proclaim as not just champions, but like the team of the future. And here they are now staring at a no one deficit. So, yeah, writing stuff on the ringer.com. Real ones, we were off today, Friday. But I will be back. We will be back on this Tuesday, summing up wherever the hell we are in the finals as of Tuesday, two games in. We are officially at the point where nothing would surprise me with the Indiana Pacers. Howard Beck, I'll see you soon and we will break bread, my friend.
Starting point is 01:31:13 Have fun. See you, Indianapolis. That's it for the Zach Lowe show on a Friday. We've got another couple of days before game two of the NBA finals buckle up. I'll be back after that from Indianapolis, Indiana on Monday. Thank you to Jesse, Jonathan, and Brian on production, even though all or most of them are Dodgers fans and the Dodgers just beat the match yesterday in heartbreaking fashion. We will see you next week.
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