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Jamie Sweet wrote a new post
Doc is going to be the new coach for the 76ers. Good luck Doc, you’ll need it.
https://www.espn.com/nba/story/_/id/30018563/sources-doc-rivers-agrees-deal-coach-philadelphia-76ers
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Jamie Sweet wrote a new post
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Excellent ‘5 Things’ as usual, Jamie, although I think you were too harsh on the B/B+ grade. Man, glad I didn’t have you as a teacher when I was in school. I clearly gave the Lakers an A/A+ grade, point out that the injuries had nothing to do with the outcome of the game, and the Lakers still would have dominated even if the Heat did not suffer the injuries. Unfortunately, the injuries will douse any remote hope Miami has of coming back.
1) I agree 100% that defense is what won Game 1 of the Finals as it won top seed in the regular season and enabled the Lakers to win their first three playoffs series in 5 games. Kudos to Frank Vogel and his coaching staff and LeBron James and Anthony Davis for their commitment to defense being the identy and calling card of this team. There should be a D in team because defense is why the Lakers are going to win their 17th championship
2/3) Anthony Davis is going to win Finals MVP and LeBron James is going to be the big reason. James not only choreographed with Rich Paul the Lakers acquisition of Davis but has also mentored and helped him reach his lofty potential as a superstar. As I said in my comment to my article about LeBron and AD chasing Laker Legends, there is no player in the NBA today who is better than LeBron James or Anthony Davis. The Lakers have the best duo and best two superstars.
4) As I argued on our podcast, the Lakers’ bench has been underappreciated and underestimated all season long. Give me Rajon Rondo, Alex Caruso, and Markieff Morris anyday over rookies Tyler Herro, Kendrick Nunn, and Duncan Robinson in a Finals game. Lots of shriviling orifices on Miami during last night’s game.
5) You don’t see them winning it all, I don’t see them winning even one game but if there is a game where they might have a chance, it’s likely Game 2 without their injured players and the Lakers thinking they’ve got the series locked. Unfortunately for the Heat, I doubt LeBron is going to allow that to happen. Not three games from his 4th championship. I agree with Mrs. LakerTom. This is going to be a sweep.
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Jamie Sweet wrote a new post
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Jamie Sweet wrote a new post
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Great ‘Fiver,’ Jamie.
Can’t argue with LeBron and AD as points 1 and 2. Magic and Kareem, Kobe and Shaq, and now LeBron and AD. Wow!
I think replacing McGee with Howard on the starting lineup was a major factor in the Lakers being able to defuse Jokic and turn what could have been a tough series into another easy one, just as they did in the first two rounds. That’s what championship coaching and team play does. Take challenges and dismantle them.
Bench did come through. Danny Green’s late dagger three and two blocks were huge. AC’s cutting and timely steals were huge. Markieff’s timely threes and defense were huge. There’s definitely moves to be made this offseason to improve the 3-point shooting but guys are stepping up and deserve credit.
My only criticism your credit to JaVight McHoward. The only one of the two who made an on court contribution last night was Dwight Howard, who played 35 minutes and dominated the Nuggets’ superstar center Nikola Jokic. Yes, JaVale was a good soldier on the bench but don’t share Dwight’s credit with JaVale, who once again played terrible for the few minutes Frank gave him. Dwight should start going forward and JaVale should get DNP’s.
Yes, kudos to the Nuggets, who got here to a great extent because of the bubble but will struggle not to regress next year unless there’s another bubble. As great as Murray and Jokic are, they don’t play defense and they’re likely to lose Grant and Millsap. I do love Malone as a coach so we are in agreement there. Just going to be tough for Denver to replicate this season. But congrats for a great playoffs. No, they did not fold. They just got beat by a better team.
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Jamie Sweet wrote a new post
Boston roaring back in the 3rd. Brad must have given a decent half time speech.
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Jamie Sweet wrote a new post
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Excellent ‘Fiver,’ Jamie, although I see some things differently.
1. Fouls? Ruins the fun? Tell that to LeBron. There is no equity when it comes to how the zebras treat him versus players like Luka, Harden, or even Murray. It reminds me of the inequity with which they treated Shaq, ignoring bumps and contact that are fouls with other players because of the physical stature.
2. Starting Howard? Benching McGee? Better late than never is not acceptable. The big question is what happens next game? Or next series, when we play the Heat? Dwight should certainly start Game 5. Like to see AD at the five for the Finals.
3. Rondo was terrific again, clearly the Lakers’ third best player but Caruso has been disappointing in this series. 3 points last night and 2 points Tuesday night won’t cut it despite the occasional good defense. Needs to play a lot better for the 22.5 minutes per game he’s getting.
4. Defense was not great last night but agree on mixing the zone and LeBron shutting down Murray. The Nuggets outshot us from the field and three. Agree we need to be better Saturday.
5. I think Denver might fold Saturday night. Murray was almost despondent during his interview. Looked really down. And they ran out of gas in the fourth, another goose egg for Joker and Murray got shut down by LeBron. The jokers (no pun intended) love to say they have us right where they want us at 1-3, but midnight has struck and the train has turned into a pumpkin. Lakers in five in a breeze.
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1) What I mean by this point isn’t that I think the game was reffed better or worse rather that the post game “chess” game of getting into whomever is officiating on Saturday’s head about how the game will be called. It’s fairly tiresome to listen to at this point. LeBron ought to average around 8-10 FTA/game. I really just wish the NBA would add to the ref squad but that’s a topic for the off-season. Bad reffing diminishes a great product.
2) This is one I know you like to harp on, doesn’t bother me as much. Really it’s the small ball minutes that I think we need to lose more than anything else. As splendidly as Morris played in the last series he’s getting eaten alive on defense and not producing offense enough to compensate. But starting Howard is the right choice, just based on an energy level and his superior post D. Next series I’m thinking we start the same as we do every series; McGee jumping center, Vogel said as much in his post-gamer. Now does that hold up for the series? That’s a big “we’ll see”
3) Caruso isn’t in there to score points, his scoring is the gravy to his mashed tater defense. He’ll hit around 30% of his threes and get a drive or two in. Watch him on offense and you might just notice he’s one of our better screeners. But his calling card is defense.
4) LeBron stepping on defense is a 2, maybe 3, minute drill. It’s not a game long affair. He carries too much of the overall team load for him to exert that much energy until the game needs to be closed out. I think we did a better job at containing the Denver perimeter game and playing defense without fouling. I expect that last sentence to change in game 5.
5) Denver has no fold in them. I think Murray was pissed at the down-the-stretch officiating and he has a worthy beef there. His off-balance, left-handed fade-away was created off of LeBron bumping him in the air, a foul any Laker fan would have howled for on the other end and rightly so. In my mind a lot of the fouls being called really just ought not to be, this is the playoffs. But, since it’s such a hot topic now, I expect a parade of Nuggets on Saturday and a minimum of a +10 FTA for Denver. We’ll need to play a great game on both ends to win, as we’ve had to do in every game except game 1. Even that one ended up a lot closer than it ought to have. Denver won’t quit, though. If the Lakers think it’s over they’ll end up doing the one thing they don’t want: give that Nugget squad a little life.
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1. One thing I don’t want to see is more fouls, which I worry about with more refs. My irritant is the offensive player getting a foul for the contact he causes and intentional fouls to stop fast breaks. But, as you say, another day.
2. Start McGee against the Heat? That would be a big mistake. Aside from the fact he has stunk since the bubble, he’s a bad matchup against the heat. Bam will eat him up in the paint and on the boards and Crowder would be a terrible matchup for AD pulling him out of the paint. Look at how Miami plays. They play small ball. Howard, sure. McGee, effing no.
3. Alex is a good defender but he you can’t play him with Rondo and Howard as you kill your offense. And 3 points and 2 points the last two games in 22.5 minutes is not contributing.
4. LeBron shut down Murray. That was why we won the game last night. It wasn’t a minor detail. Did you watch the end of the game?
5. Yeah, Denver is a gutty team. Did you see Jamal’s interview? They’re whipped and the know it. At some point, they’ll quit and Malone will put in the DNP guys are.
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H’ok. We’ll see…
…yes, I saw the end of the game. As I said, had a Laker driven the lane, gotten bumped off his shot and made the basket but no ‘and-1’ Laker Nation (rightly) would have howled bloody murder. Had we lost the game on that kind of thing Laker fans would be up in arms calling for Vogel’s head, the officiating crew to be pilloried and so on.
The grit you dismiss in Caruso is the same thing that informs me that Denver isn’t dead. Ask Utah and the Clippers who, I’m sure, were thinking the same thing. Grit doesn’t get a stat line, either. The points from Caruso are gravy. Would it be nice if he scored more? Sure, but I would ask that of Danny Green and Kyle Kuzma before I lambast Caruso who at least leaves it all on the court every night.
Here’s the thing, I doubt there’s much disagreement that the Lakers are the more talented and veteran team. Because they are. That doesn’t mean they will show up with the proper energy and focus. It really only means that, if they don’t, they should know better. So if the Lakers don’t play at least as well as last night, if not better, there’s a decent chance they’ll be talking about not giving Denver any more life in their post gamers tomorrow night, sounding tired, etc.
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Jamie Sweet wrote a new post
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Jamie Sweet wrote a new post
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Great ‘Fiver,’ Jamie. AD’s Mamba imitation, LeBron’s first half, Alex’s great play, and Dwight’s defense were perfect choices. My only complaint is you had a perfect 5th in free throw shooting but missed the perfect close by not highlighting our elite and unexpected 18-19 from the line that really saved this game. Careful how you hold that half empty glass because it’s a lot closer to full than empty. Lakers in 4. Bring your broom Tuesday night.
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Don’t want to jinx us from the stripe, LT. lol. One of our best games from that spot, assuredly.
That point was more to highlight the importance of having Dwight available when needed. While I wouldn’t mind him starting I do think he’s best deployed from the bench. Whether that means 10-15 mpg for McGee or the Lakers switching back to Markieff Morris is the real question. My guess id McGee for a few, Morris just can’t hang with either Milsap or Jokic.
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Jamie Sweet wrote a new post
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Aloha Jamie
Nice write up as usual. While I wasn’t expecting a blow out, I wasn’t surprised by the win and how we won. I feel a little vindicated, at least for one game. A while back while we were waiting to see who we would play, I posted that if we play Denver, I would start Howard. Of course Tom came back with all the reasons this was a bad idea. I was sad. Lol.
But I remembered the season series and that Dwight did the same thing he did to the Joker yesterday. The Joker is not fast and Dwight can pick him up at the 3 point line. He had only averaged 2 3’s a game against us the the regular season and none last night. There are not many bangers left in the NBA and the Joker is not use to physical play. Dwight held his ground and the Joker wasn’t able to back him down. The biggest thing is, the Lakers didn’t have to send a lot of double teams at him and that led to him only getting 2 assists. The analytics from the season series was skewed because the Joker had a plus 12 in the game that Lebron missed but was a net minus 21 in the other 3 games. While analytics are important, sometimes the old fashion eye test is as important and what I saw in the season series led me to believe that Dwight was the right call. I don’t see a lot of adjustments that Denver can make, they just need to be better at what they do.
You have to hand it to Rob, this roster is the most versatile in the NBA. We can play jumbo ball when we need to and even when we play small, we are tall. It also helps that our bigs are pretty mobile.
Denver will have some moments in this series. If they proven one thing, it’s that they are resilient. But I believe the Lakers will wear them down. Still thinking Lakers in 5.
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Thanks Michael, you know I love the big man in the NBA. I think it’s a mistake to think they can’t do this or that. If people want to point to the Houston aeries my counter is “Dwight didn’t even get a chance to show if he could hang or not, McGee, either.” But I’m also not too big on myself to say that going “small” was a huge factor in how quickly. D effectively we won that series.
The truth is that there a lot of ways to win a basketball game. there isnt one sure-fire way and it’s the coaches job to suss out what advantages they can. Frank has done that brilliiantly in the playoffs. obviously helps having AD and LBJ.
I expect to see about the same amount of Dwight, maybe more if McGee has another rough first quarter. McGee doesn’t have the footspeed to keep in front of Nicola who has a whole bucket full of moves and counter-moves.
All in all its shaping up to be a really fun series.
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Excellent Fiver, Jamie.
Liked your old school and new school ‘things.’ Dwight was great and really got under Nikola’s skin while still keeping his cool. JaVale did not impress. Only reason he finished was garbage time. I thought it was another telling moment when Frank went to Dwight to start the second half after JaVale’s poor start. Got no problem with him starting Dwight over JaVale going forward. I think we’re starting to see how our big ball and small ball lineups are going to be going forward. Howard and Morris playing well. I could never support going big with JaVale but Dwight, playing like he is, brings another dimension to the big ball case. And I did love Frank going small against Plumlee. Starting to have a world of confidence in Frank’s judgment and decisions.
LeBron is right to be pissed although we all know he’ll grasp at whatever’s out there to get himself up for a big game. But the voters always move the goal posts to support whomever they want to win the award and only 16 votes for LeBron shows what a sham the MVP award is, just like the DPOY award going to a player who didn’t really post great defensive stats but was best player on team with best defensive stats. Never matter, LeBron and AD will win the trophy and flip the bird to those writers.
Rajon may be the best lob passer in the league. His rapport with both Anthony and Dwight was impeccable last night. Anybody who ain’t on the Playoff Rondo train should turn in their Lakers fandom at this point. When you look at what everybody expected from Rondo and Howard when the playoffs started and compare that with what those two guys have done, wow! They were the inspiration for my article. We have the best playmaker-big man combo in the league in LeBron and AD, both All-NBA First Team. But our wild card the next 7 games could be the veteran point guard-center combo we have in future HOFers Rajon and Dwight.
Smart basketball powered by savvy coaching and selfless team chemistry is definitely the advantage that’s got us to where we are now, just 7 games away from winning that Celtics tying 17th NBA championship. I understand your personal reluctance to want to deny the glass filling up but watch out because you might get drenched with the overflow. The Lakers Four Horsemen can smell the barn, the Bucks and Clippers are in Cancun, and the finish line is in sight. Lakers going all the way and without losing more than one game in any series.
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Thanks LT, I have a feeling that if McGee has a great game like Dwight did he’d be a Horseman, too.
Rondo played about how I expect him to. I dont think theres a huge difference between playoff or regular season Rondo, maybe. little extra focus. But I’m all for whatever gets the W.
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Damn, I just wrote a long response to you that somehow disappeared when I tried to correct it. Anyway, here’s the short response.
McGee a Horsemen? LMAO. The link is future HOFers, Jamie. Please take a few minutes and look at McGee’s stats the second half of the season, in the bubble, and so far in the playoffs. I would be surprised and disappointed if Frank didn’t start Dwight over JaVale tomorrow. And the only reason JaVale got back in the game was garbage time.
And take a look at Rondo’s stats for the 2020 and 2018 playoffs compared to regular season. There is a huge difference. Don’t know why you can’t accept or see that. Playoff Rondo has been a huge difference maker for Lakers in these playoffs compared to regular season Rondo. You must be drinking Gerald’s Kool-aid. He’s actually why your big ball worked last night. SMH.
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Jamie Sweet wrote a new post
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Good job, Jamie. Some things we agree upon and, naturally, some things we don’t.
1. Go, Nuggets! Definitely congrats to the Nuggets for what they’ve accomplished. I was rooting for them to beat the Chokers from Game 1 through Game 7. Watching Chokers implode was almost as good as a Lakers’ win.
2. Rust Game. No way. Lakers will come out and win Game 1 in a rout. Third time’s the charm. Lakers aren’t going to underestimate the Nuggets. They know they are wins away from their 17th NBA championship. Bron can smell the roses and GOAT and will be elevating his game to Playoff LeBron level.
3. Stopping Denver. Lakers in 5 games with a chance for a sweep. Nuggets are better than Blazers and Rockets but Lakers are playing at a level defensively that is near unbeatable. Playoffs are determined by two things: defense and superstars, both of which favor the Lakers.
4. While we’ll see some minutes for McGee and Howard, AD will be playing the five for over half of the time, especially when Jokic is on the floor. Howard and McGee will play primarily when Plumlee is in the game. If they play against Joker, he will dominate them.
And before you proclaim this is a series where we should start JaVale McGee or Dwight Howard, please look at the stats of who has played best at center against the Nuggets per Anthony Slater’s article for the Athletic quoted below:
“In the four regular-season games between these teams, Anthony Davis played 150 total minutes. Here’s the quick breakdown of the Lakers’ success within them.
Davis on the court with JaVale McGee: 52 minutes, Nuggets outscored the Lakers by 18
Davis on the court with Dwight Howard: 42 minutes, net zero
Davis on the court with neither: 56 minutes, Lakers outscored the Nuggets by 34.”
5. Unheralded star will not be Danny Green, although I think he will play well. My pick is Playoff Rondo, who will be important in allowing LeBron to attack offensively. He will be the third star the Lakers need.
6. Predictions. I was spot on with Lakers in 5 against the Blazers and Lakers in 5 against the Rockets, and I think I will be right again with Lakers in 5 against the Nuggets. Not really guessing. More like smart analysis.
7. Chokers losing is something we all can agree upon. Hope they all have a horrible and unhappy offseason. They put together a team without understanding what team chemistry is really about. An amazing choke job by Steve Ballmer, Jerry West, Doc Rivers, Kawhi Leonard, Paul George, Lou Williams, and on and on. Arrogant, presumptuous, pompous, and ultimately doomed.
Once again, Lakers in 5 with AD at center 2/3 of the time.
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Thanks guys!
@LT-I think Murray is going give Rondo fits. The Rockets are an easier team to defend. There’s 15 seconds of dribbling followed by a shot or drive and kick out for a three. That’s pretty much it. It’s predictable for the defense as you need to focus on denying T the rim and closing out.
The Nuggets use the whole flood@r, run Murray off screens, let Jokic pick teams apart from the high post on down to the baseline. Most of all they’re similar stylistically to the Lakers in that they don’t hate on the midrange game. While they prefer threes or scores at the rim they’ll take the open 20’ jumper. In the playoffs you need points where you can get them and poo-pooing where they come from can get you sent home.
It’s funny when you say ‘the Nuggets are better than the Rockets’ yet still think they could get swept. The multi-faceted attack of Denver will test the Lakers defensively in a way we have t been tested. They can switch styles, go big or small, have multiple guys that can get their own shot off the dribble and have better team 3 point shooting than we do, although it’s close. I actually think this series will be the toughest one yet. Hence my almost pushing my prediction to 7. LeBron and AD playing at a high and efficient level will be the key.
@buba-thanks dude! Looks like you and LT are in the same ‘Lakers take game 1’ boat and it’s certainly possible. I feel like this Laker team is like the Borg: they need to take a couple hits before they adapt. But once you give Frank, Rondo and LeBton some game film to learn from they start to take away your comfort plays.
100% agree on the tired kegs factoring in as the series goes on
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Jamie,
Hope your camping trip is working out. Sorry for the trouble commenting. Think we have it fixed but the new firewall is going to hopefully stop the hacking.
I think Murray is going to give all the Lakers guards fits with his quickness. There may be times when we have to double him, which will require us to go small with Morris or Kuzma at the 4 to accelerate our rotations. Have to pick our poison with he and Joker.
I do think the Nuggets are a big step up over the Blazers and Rockets but I also think the Lakers have learned and improved a lot over the last two series. The Blazers or Rockets could not have taken down the Clippers, oops the Chokers. I have the Lakers in 5 but there’s a chance it could be 6 or 4 depending on Frank.
I think small ball is going to be the key to winning this series, even if Frank resists. The key is Denver has a stretch 4 in Millsap and a stretch 5 in Jokic. The Lakers cannot defend either of these players beyond the arc with McGee or Howard. They’ll either get a wide open three or straight line drive to the rim. They should be limited to playing against Plumlee.
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Jamie Sweet wrote a new post
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Great Fiver, Jamie. There was not a single word I disagreed with, especially Frank Vogel showing his greatness as a defensive tactician and his ability to make savvy and smart adjustments.
LeBron was a maestro controlling every aspect of the game and choreographing the Lakers 4-game sweep after losing Game 1.
AD was a monster, making good reads off the double teams and relentless attacking to get easy buckets and free throws.
Caruso and Kuzma were a two-headed steady presence off the bench at both ends of the court playing like tested vets instead of playoff rookies.
Rondo was, simply, Playoff Rondo and the security blanket and elite playmaker the Lakers needed to unleash LeBron and run the offense when he rested.
And nothing better than getting three days off for Vogel and his staff to prepare for, most likely, the Clippers in the Royal Battle for Los Angeles we all knew was going to come.
The one player you skipped for some reason (?) who was at the heart of the Lakers big win last night and the core of their blowout play the last two wins was Markieff Morris, who not only led the team’s 3-point shooting barage with 4 of 4 from deep but anchored the faster and quicker Lakers’ defense that shut down the Rockets.
Time to give Markieff the recognition he deserves and acknowledge why Vogel started him over McGee.
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Jamie Sweet wrote a new post
House booted from Bubble!
https://www.espn.com/nba/story/_/id/29863933/rockets-danuel-house-season-violating-safety-protocols
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Jamie Sweet wrote a new post
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Good stuff, Jamie. Thanks.
Lakers going ‘small’ with a 6′ 10,” 6′ 9,” 6′ 8,” 6′ 6,” and 6′ 5″ players against the midget Rockets was not a fair fight. The harsh reality that became evident was the Lakers were a better ‘small ball’ or ‘skilled ball’ team than the Rockets, who got whipped even worse on the boards and in the paint. By the end of the game, they were intimidated to the extent they couldn’t make layups for fear LeBron or AD would block their shots.
Unlike Game 3, where we took away their threes, layups, and free throws, we fouled way too much but with a little help from the refs. Loved seeing THT get some burn. Kid played well on both ends. Hope we’ll see more of him going forward.
Have to give Frank Vogel five gold stars for starting Morris and committing not only to playing small ball players but more importantly playing small ball basketball with 5-out sets. We gave the Rockets a heavy dose of their own medicine and found a game changing offensive weapon against teams who try to pack the paint to limit LeBron and AD from attacking.
You have to have two dogs to have a dog fight. Lakers in 5 with a blowout on Saturday. Then bring on the Clippers.
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Thanks buba, I really appreciate this response. Great points about the lack of killer instinct giving the Rockets more life than necessary for game 5. Even with all those freebies of we take care of the rock we’re cruising, they never get within 5. Still, we won by double-digits so hopefully enough order was restored.
I think the Rockets are going to come out loose in their shooting and hard with their energy. They have to win, it’s less pressure on them and a little more on LA to close it out. We’ll see, should be a lot of fun.
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Jamie Sweet wrote a new post
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Good fiver, Jamie.
I agree that defense wins championships, which is why I have been adamant that Vogel plays more small ball instead of tall ball. Keep hanging onto the illusion that Frank is going to go back to playing McGee or replacing him with Howard. Not in this series against this Rockets team. Frank may be slow but he’s not dumb.
The Lakers are winning these games despite the Rockets shooting lights out because we’re starting to play more like the Rockets at both ends of the court, meaning spreading the court on offense and relying more on limiting 3-point shots and, like the Rockets, relying on speed, quickness, and athleticism to protect the rim than size.
I am impressed with the adjustments Frank has made and hope he will continue playing this way against the Rockets. I’m still 100% in on the Lakers in five. Rockets can’t keep shooting this well and now that we’re playing them on there terms, what’s become obvious is that we should continue to play this way throughout the playoffs.
The bench has played well, especially Kuzma and Morris. Both were excellent on defense. And I agree 100% Rondo has unleashed LeBron on offense. It will be interesting whether Frank will continue to start McGee. There’s a strong case to be made that starting Morris or Rondo or Kuzma would be better but honestly, McGee’s minutes have been so minimized that he is no longer relevant to the conversation. Let him start as long as Frank limits him to less thn than 7 minutes.
Finally, the bubble is the equalizer. It may have already been a huge factor in the Heat beating the Buck. Give the Lakers credit. The Blazers and Rockets both stole wins they likely would not have gotten playing at Staples. Otherwise, Lakers would likely be undefeated in the playoffs so far. Gold star instead of asterisk if Lakers win the bubble championship.
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I mean, it’s not my choice: it’s Frank’s and it’s not an illusion. JaVale’s been jumping center every game in the playoffs and all but 2 the whole season. I think you mistake my speaking about how Frank coaches and adjusts with what I myself am advocating. I have always refrained from putting myself in the GM or coaches shoes but rather try to see what works with what they’re doing, what doesn’t and how that jives with my NBA world view. It’s less me and more them, at least that’s what I try to do.
Against the Rockets I advocate adapting to what works. Game 2 & 3 are what’s worked, so far. It’s on the Rockets to adjust something on their end. They might not, they might just stick by every gun they have and fire away and see where they fell when the dust settles.
The Rockets are all-in on a style of basketball but that’s not to say that they can’t change coverage’s (we do that in-game) or try letting Eric Gordon bring the ball up to free Harden and Westbrook to move off-ball, and if Covington and House can go they’ll have more players to use than they did by the end of last game. Nobody talking about how Covington going down took a lot of the wind out of their sails, he’s one of their better defenders, clutch three baller, etc.
So while I don’t expect MDA to trot out Tyson Chandler to jump center I do expect to see some wrinkles we haven’t seen. Geez…look at me, giving MDA props for coaching changes he hasn’t made yet, lol.
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LOL. My apologies if I misunderstood the reasons for your comments. I appreciate the explanation. Thanks.
The hardest things for any fan to stomach are when the coach makes moves that defy both the stats and eye test, like playing JaVale and Dwight against the Rockets.
In fairness, they’re inside the situation while we’re just here in the peanut gallery. Of course, there are lots of times when the experts prove their fallibility, which is why so many coaches get fired every year.
On the other hands, there are those situations like Playoff Rondo where coach Vogel was more right than I was and I have to say good move playing him. He’s been a difference maker. But hell, that’s why we’re here blogging.
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No worries LT, I know you’re passionate about small ball. Exactly, 100% in regards to blogging and gallery-ing. Having said that, there is certainly more than a little variance between what we endorse in terms of our favored styles of hoops. I am not all in on analytics, I see it as a useful tool that one uses to inform their choices. I know you love the 5 outs, spread the floor, hunt out the highest percentage 3 point shot. I look at the Rockets and see all the reasons it doesn’t work (and more than a few why it does work). I prefer the big man’s game, I miss the skill set a good center brings to the low post and I find the way bigs are reffed in the modern era borderline offensive. Flopping like a soccer player is all but endorsed, and rewarded by trips to the line. I also like seeing a guy catch fire from three and carry an offense for a quarter or so. There’s so much to appreciate and admire in the variety of ways a basketball can be scored.
One of my off-season notions is to talk about some rule changes I’d love to see the NBA endorse but likely won’t. Thoughts for another day. Game 4 is almost here.
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“I agree that defense wins championships, which is why I have been adamant that Vogel plays more small ball instead of tall ball.”
If you’re five best defenders are wee players than I’m all in. I think JaVale isn’t bad at covering the paint, rotating out to shooters and defending without fouling. Kuzma still can get happy feet out there and fall for ball fakes, JVMG is more disciplined. His biggest liability is honestly in transition.
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I agree Buba, Rockets started to look gassed by the end of that game. Some of it is likely tired/Bubble legs, some our on-ball pressure and trapping and some is just that they’re playing small guys against bigger guys and getting knocked around a lot. That wears a feller down. Going to be interesting to see how MDA and the Rockets adapt to those quick doubles on the sideline. Harden will adapt, too, I felt like he gave up the ball real easily on a lot of those on my second watch of the game. We’d double and he wouldn’t wait or try to split while he had his dribble alive, just dumped it out. Not so sure we can count on that reaction from him. Thanks dude!
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Jamie Sweet wrote a new post
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Despite all my recent criticism for Vogel, I was happy to see that he finally conceded that replacing Howard with Morris was a necessary move when playing against the unique small ball style of the Rockets. Of course, he followed that up by proclaiming the McGee and Howard were still going to be major factors in the series. Sometimes, it’s like he’s inhabited by the ghost of Byron Scott.
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Hmnnn. Another team with superstars who can’t seem to lead or make each other better. Wasn’t that his problem with the Clippers? Great guy but not sure he’s the right coach for that team, especially on a five-year deal. Elton Brand strikes again. When he gets fired next year, new GM’s going to want his own head coach.