Tag: point win

  • OKC face big Giddey call as fellow Aussie shines for Mavs; Cavs stun Celtics to level series: NBA Wrap

    OKC face big Giddey call as fellow Aussie shines for Mavs; Cavs stun Celtics to level series: NBA Wrap

    ESPN’s Zach Lowe said earlier in the week that this Western Conference semi-finals series against Dallas would either see Josh Giddey “sink or swim”.

    “And the Thunder sink or swim with him,” Lowe added on his podcast.

    Well, it seems like Oklahoma City coach Mark Daigneault was wise to that reality on Friday, playing Giddey a season-low 11 minutes as the Australian struggled in a 119-110 loss to the Mavericks.

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    Giddey impressed in Oklahoma City’s sweep of New Orleans in the opening round of the playoffs, averaging 12.5 points and shooting 50 per cent from downtown.

    But it has been a different story so far in the first two games of the series against Dallas, with the Mavericks hunting Giddey on defence with success early on Friday.

    That, along with Giddey’s shortcomings as a shooter, made it tough for Daigneault to commit to too many minutes with the 20-year-old guard on the floor.

    Now, with the series tied, the question for the Oklahoma City coach is how he divides up the usual minutes he would give the Australian, with the likes of Aaron Wiggins, Isaiah Joe and rookie Cason Wallace all candidates to see more playing time.

    It was a different story for fellow Australian Josh Green, who went 3-for-5 from 3-point land on his way to 11 points in a handy showing off the bench for the Mavericks.

    Josh Green had a great game. Sam Hodde/Getty Images/AFPSource: AFP

    Dante Exum, on the other hand, went scoreless in just six minutes of playing time.

    Dallas’ win came despite a rough shooting night for Kyrie Irving, who went 2-for-8 from the field, with Luka Doncic (29 points) and P.J. Washington (29 points) carrying the load.

    Tim Hardaway Jr. was also massive off the bench with 17 points while guard Shai Gilgeous-Alexander (33 points, 12 rebounds, eight assists, two blocks, one steal) led the way for OKC.

    The Mavericks made a much better start to Friday’s game, getting clean looks and jumping out to a 7-0 lead as Giddey missed his first 3-point attempt of the night.

    The Australian was creating some opportunities with his movement off the ball, scoring OKC’s first points of the game on a layup before later missing a mid-range floater.

    However Giddey’s shortcomings on defence, and specifically in this Mavs match-up, saw him taken off the floor after just four minutes as Dallas had success targeting him early on Friday.

    Josh Giddey only played 11 minutes. (Photo by Joshua Gateley/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    At that stage of the game the Mavericks were already leading 16-7, with Doncic going 3-for-3 from the field on his way to seven quick points to go with an assist and rebound.

    It prompted Thunder coach Mark Daigneault to go to a two-big line-up, inserting Jaylin Williams into the mix and he found immediate success as OKC went on a 7-0 run.

    Not only did the addition of Williams help the Thunder on the defensive end but the former Arkansas forward made a 3-pointer within 30 seconds and added another a minute later.

    The Mavericks responded with an 8-0 run of their own but then missed three consecutive 3-pointers as Oklahoma City chipped away at the deficit.

    Doncic though put an exclamation mark on what was a dominant first quarter as he drained his fourth 3-pointer of the period, finishing with 16 points, 6 rebounds and three assists.

    Co-star Irving missed his only field goal attempt of the quarter but trade deadline acquisition Washington had 11 points, three rebounds and two assists in the quarter.

    A full-court pass and clutch shot from Chet Holmgren on the buzzer reduced the Mavs’ buffer to 36-32, which was slightly concerning given they had shot 61.5 per cent from deep in the quarter and yet only lead by four points.

    Jokic named NBA MVP for 3rd in 4 seasons | 00:36

    Giddey opened the second with a tough bucket as he re-entered the game while the Mavericks started the period without Doncic.

    But Giddey’s struggles in defence continued and once again saw the Australian only given four minutes on the court before he was substituted off, with Gilgeous-Alexander brought in.

    The Mavericks had opened up a 47-37 lead at that point in the second quarter and pushed it out to a 13-point advantage a few minutes later, prompting Daigneault to call a timeout.

    Dallas was largely able to maintain its double-digit cushion until Gilgeous-Alexander made three quick field goals in the space of two minutes, then assisting on a Lu Dort 3-pointer that reduced the Mavs’ lead to 59-56.

    A pair of 3-pointers from Josh Green pushed the visitors further ahead, with the Mavs taking a 68-62 halftime lead after the Australian hustled for an offensive rebound that led to his second bucket.

    While obviously a small sample size, entering the second half of Game 2 the Thunder were -21 in Giddey’s 25 minutes throughout the series.

    And although the Australian had some of his best games of the season in the first round against New Orleans, this series was quickly proving a bad match-up for the 20-year-old.

    Daigneault made the decision to start Wiggins ahead of Giddey in the third quarter and it immediately paid off as the third-year guard made a 3-pointer on OKC’s first possession.

    Aaron Wiggins had some nice moments. Joshua Gateley/Getty Images/AFPSource: AFP

    Wiggins then gave the Thunder the lead for the first time in the game before Dort drained one from deep to cap off a 13-4 run to begin the quarter and put OKC ahead 75-72, forcing Dallas into a timeout.

    Daigneault later said in his post-game press conference that halftime substitutions are nothing new for the Thunder and that he didn’t view it as anything different to in-game substitutions.

    Just as the Thunder looked to be getting into a rhythm, the Mavericks went on an 18-4 run to re-gain ascendancy, finding success with the Irving, Green, Hardaway Jr., Washington and Derek Lively Jr. line-up.

    Green made his third 3-pointer of the game while Hardaway Jr. continued his productive night off the bench, adding 10 quick points to put Dallas in front 90-79 with four minutes left in the third.

    Giddey’s tought night, meanwhile, continued as the Australian turned the ball over immediately when he was reintroduced to the game, leading to fastbreak points on the other end for Dallas.

    What made the Mavericks’ run late in the third quarter all the more impressive was the fact it came with Doncic on the bench.

    Thunder strike first in Mavs series | 01:09

    Giddey, to his credit, grabbed two defensive rebounds and aggressively drove towards the rim to add a pair of points on both occasions before exiting with just over one minute still left in the quarter.

    Giddey or no Giddey though, sloppy turnovers from Oklahoma City continued and given the way the Mavericks were shooting the Thunder were in no position to be giving up easy buckets.

    Dallas took a 99-89 lead into the fourth but that quickly shrank as Wallace came up with two big plays, first burying a 3-pointer before expertly anticipating a Daniel Gafford pass to spark a Jalen Williams putback on the other end.

    That, along with a Dort layup, started a 6-0 run to the quarter for the Thunder but as had been the case all game long, the Mavericks answered right back with two quick buckets of their own.

    Dallas didn’t look back from that point, finishing 119-110 winners to level the series.

    CAVALIERS SURPRISE CELTICS TO LEVEL SERIES (via AFP)

    Donovan Mitchell led a comprehensive Cleveland team effort as the Cavaliers powered past the top-seeded Celtics 118-94 in Boston to level their NBA Eastern Conference semi-final series at one game apiece.

    Mitchell scored 23 of his 29 points in the second half and received plenty of support from aggressive teammates as the Cavs bounced back from a game-one rout.

    Evan Mobley, 22, got Cleveland going early, scoring 15 of his playoff career-high 21 points in the first half. Mobley added 10 rebounds and five assists and reserve guard Caris LeVert added 21 points off the bench for Cleveland, who had six players score in double figures.

    ‘F*** you’ – Knicks star trolls Reggie | 00:33

    “I like the way that we were just attack-minded,” Cavaliers coach J.B. Bickerstaff said. “We didn’t settle for the first quick (shot) that we saw. We were attack-minded and understanding how they’re playing with their space.”

    The Cavs fell behind in each of the first two quarters but finished both of them strong and had tied it up 54-54 at halftime.

    Mitchell erupted for 16 points in the third quarter as the Cavaliers seized control, taking the first double-digit lead of the night for either team on Darius Garland’s three-pointer midway through the period that put Cleveland up 77-66.

    Cleveland finished with 13 three-pointers while Boston made just eight on 35 attempts. The Celtics, who led the league with 64 regular-season wins, were 0-for-8 from three-point range in the third quarter.

    The Cavs, up by 12 going into the fourth, pressed their advantage, as Mitchell drained three straight baskets that included a spinning drive for a hook shot that made it 99-83.

    Celtics masterclass blow Cleveland away | 00:39

    By the time Tatum was called for a flagrant foul — when his arm made contact with LaVert’s head on a play that pushed Cleveland’s lead to 24 points — fans were streaming out of T.D. Garden arena.

    Celtics coach Joe Mazzulla pulled his starters, with Tatum finishing with 25 points and Jaylen Brown adding 19.

    “Everybody did their job,” Mitchell said, heaping praise on Mobley, who started in place of injured center Jarrett Allen.

    “To come out here on the road as a young player, that’s a big-time performance to set the tone for us.”

    Now, Mitchell said, the Cavs need to keep the pressure on when the series shifts to Cleveland for game three on Sunday.

    “At the end of the day, it’s one win,” Mitchell said. “We’ve got to do it at the crib.”

    — AFP

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  • NBA Coaching Carousel: Suns fire Vogel as ‘frontrunner’ emerges; Redick’s perfect reply to bizarre criticism

    NBA Coaching Carousel: Suns fire Vogel as ‘frontrunner’ emerges; Redick’s perfect reply to bizarre criticism

    Frank Vogel was fired as head coach of the NBA’s Phoenix Suns, 11 days after the team was swept out of the NBA playoffs by the Minnesota Timberwolves.

    Vogel, who guided the Los Angeles Lakers to an NBA title in 2020 before being fired after the 2021-22 campaign, was hired by the Suns last June to replace the fired Monty Williams but axed after the Suns went 49-33 for the sixth seed in the Western Conference.

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    “As we said at the press conference on May 1, team leadership including myself, (chief executive officer) Josh Bartelstein, and ownership would be looking across basketball operations to determine what changes needed to be made,” Suns president and general manager James Jones said in a statement.

    “After a thoughtful review of the season, we concluded that we needed a different head coach for our team,” Jones said.

    “We appreciate Frank’s hard work and commitment.”

    ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski reported former Bucks coach Mike Budenholzer is emerging as the “frontrunner” to take over.

    ‘F*** you’ – Knicks star trolls Reggie | 00:33

    The Suns were a disappointment in the season and playoffs, struggling with injuries to unite their three star players — forward Kevin Durant and guards Bradley Beal and Devin Booker.

    “We’re here to win a championship and last season was way below our expectations,” Jones said. “We will continue to evaluate our operation and make the necessary changes to reach our championship-caliber goals.

    “We all take accountability and it’s my job, along with Josh and ownership, to build a championship team.”

    The Suns have never won an NBA crown but reached the NBA Finals for the third time in team history in 2021 only to lose to the Milwaukee Bucks.

    They were ousted in the second round of the playoffs the next two seasons, prompting the decision to dump Williams, but Vogel could not even get Phoenix that far this year.

    Knicks run down Pacers to take 2-0 lead | 00:46

    Vogel, 50, was a long-time NBA assistant coach who received his first head coaching opportunity with Indiana in 2011, replacing fired Jim O’Brien in January and guiding the Pacers to the playoffs for the first time since 2006.

    After his contract was not renewed by Indiana, Vogel coached Orlando for two seasons before being fired in 2018 and in 2019 was named head coach of the Lakers.

    Vogel has a career NBA head coaching record of 480-422 over 12 seasons and a 49-43 playoff record with only one trip beyond the conference semi-finals.

    TOP CELTICS ASSISTANT HIRED AS HORNETS COACH

    Elsewhere, Charles Lee, the top assistant coach for the Boston Celtics, has been hired as the new head coach of the NBA’s Charlotte Hornets.

    Jeff Peterson, the Hornets executive vice president of basketball operations, said Lee will join the Hornets after the Celtics’ run in the NBA playoffs is concluded.

    The Celtics, who had the NBA’s best regular-season record at 64-18, lead Cleveland 1-0 in their best-of-seven Eastern Conference second-round series.

    Lee, 39, has spent 10 years as an NBA assistant coach, first with Atlanta from 2014-2018 and then with Milwaukee from 2018-2023, helping the Bucks capture the 2021 NBA title.

    Thunder strike first in Mavs series | 01:09

    “The opportunity to be the head coach of the Charlotte Hornets is a dream come true,” Lee said.

    “The Hornets have a talented young core of players and I’m excited about our future and what we can build.”

    The Hornets have missed the playoffs for the past eight seasons and have never won a playoff series since being founded as the Charlotte Bobcats in 2004.

    “We’re excited to welcome Charles Lee as the head coach of Charlotte Hornets,” Peterson said.

    “His high character and his ability to connect with players while also instilling a culture of accountability will serve us well as we construct a competitive team built for long-term success.

    “Charles possesses a championship pedigree with a wide range of basketball knowledge and NBA experience, has a tremendous work ethic and is a great communicator.”

    As an NBA assistant, Lee’s teams have reached the playoffs nine times in 10 seasons and achieved the NBA’s best record in four of the past six seasons.

    Celtics head coach Joe Mazzulla joked when asked if he had any advice for Lee that he has to “get used” to everybody hating him.

    “Everybody hates you,” Mazzulla said.

    “Get used to it. You’re no longer the nice, shiny toy”

    REDICK’S PERFECT REPLY TO HAT CRITICISM AMID LAKERS INTEREST

    Of course, attention now turns to Los Angeles and who the Lakers could hire after confirming Darvin Ham’s dismissal as head coach last week.

    NBA insider Marc Stein reported in his most recent Substack that the coaching search is “moving at a deliberate pace at least partly” because “two of the team’s most natural targets” in Jason Kidd (Mavericks) and Tyronn Lue (Clippers) are unavailable at the moment.

    Along with Lue, former NBA player J.J. Redick has been floated as a potential replacement with the latter having also been mentioned as a contender for the coaching vacancy in Charlotte.

    Redick already has a strong relationship with LeBron James, having paired up with the Lakers superstar to talk all things NBA on the ‘Mind The Game’ podcast.

    Celtics masterclass blow Cleveland away | 00:39

    “J.J. certainly is a real candidate if they open up this coaching search,” ESPN’s Dave McMenamin said last week on ‘The Dan Patrick Show’.

    “But there’s, I’d say, a half a dozen folks out there, including possibly the guy who just lost last night against the Mavericks, Tyronn Lue.

    “He has one year remaining on his contract. What’s going to happen with his deal with the Clippers? There will be a process there that there are several viable candidates that will get an interview.”

    Colin Cowherd created headlines earlier in the week too when he called out Redick, who he considers “one of the most cerebral guys in the world talking basketball”, for wearing a backwards cap.

    “I couldn’t stop staring at the hat,” he said.

    “JJ Redick is going for NBA head coaching jobs. He looks like a guy that’s gonna move my couch. Didn’t like it. I would tell JJ to his face, like, ‘Dude, you’re gonna be an executive in this league. You’re going to be a high-level executive or coach. … I don’t like that look at all.’”

    Both Redick and James though had perfect responses to that criticism.

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  • Giddey’s Thunder survive big scare as rookie’s ‘incredible’ clutch play saves the day against Pelicans

    Giddey’s Thunder survive big scare as rookie’s ‘incredible’ clutch play saves the day against Pelicans

    Back in the NBA playoffs for the first time since 2019, the biggest question hanging over the Western Conference’s youngest-ever No.1 seed was whether the lights would be too bright.

    Whether the Oklahoma City Thunder’s youth and inexperience would show up in the worst time possible.

    At times on Monday afternoon it did, with uncharacteristic errors and a certain nervy energy to Oklahoma City’s game against the New Orleans Pelicans.

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    But it was rookie duo Chet Holmgren and Cason Wallace who came up with two of the biggest plays of the game as the Thunder survived a scare, defeating the Pelicans 94-92.

    First, Holmgren blocked Larry Nance Jr. as New Orleans came up empty despite hauling in three straight offensive rebounds before a pesky Wallace poked the ball out on the Pelicans’ final possession of the game as he defended the much more experienced C.J. McCollum.

    “He was awesome,” Thunder coach Mark Daigneault said of Wallace.

    “He stood in there, two-point game. We didn’t want to go double in that situation. He almost got the ball. Lot of pressure, obviously took them out of what they were doing.

    “They got a clean look because of the second jump, good lesson there. But I thought we were competitive tonight.”

    With it, the Thunder went 1-0 up in the series, although the Pelicans can take plenty out of Monday’s game considering how close they got despite being without Zion Williamson.

    Trey Murphy III led the way in scoring with 21 points for the Pelicans while Jonas Valanciunas dominated on the boards with 20 rebounds.

    McCollum, meanwhile, had 20 points but struggled from deep, going 2-of-9 in the defeat.

    Meanwhile, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander made a few clutch baskets down the stretch as he finished with a game-high 28 points while Holmgren’s block on Nance was one of five from the former No.2 overall pick, who also had 15 points and 11 rebounds in the win.

    Josh Giddey had a rough shooting night as he went 1-of-6 from the field for two points to go with three rebounds and three assists while fellow Australian Dyson Daniels only played three minutes.

    Giddey was guilty of an early turnover but was active off the ball as he cut towards the basket in the lead-up to a Holmgren 3-pointer that opened the scoring.

    The Pelicans doubled Gilgeous-Alexander on that possession, leaving Holmgren to make them pay from deep, although he missed his next four field goal attempts as New Orleans took a 9-7 lead into the first timeout.

    Shai Gilgeous-Alexander had 28 points in the win. Cooper Neill/Getty Images/AFPSource: AFP

    The Thunder were 3-of-10 from the field at that point, with Valanciunas scoring four quick points for New Orleans, although Brandon Ingram was scoreless early after being locked down by a physical Lu Dort.

    However, sometimes even that isn’t enough, as Kenrich Williams learned after Ingram hit a tough shot over him to make his first shot of the night late in the first quarter.

    The Pelicans had contained Gilgeous-Alexander early in the period but OKC’s superstar guard, who was named one of three MVP finalists on Monday, started to really get going as he finished the quarter on a game-high nine points.

    There was nothing separating the two teams after the opening quarter, with OKC and New Orleans tied at 17-all.

    The Thunder quickly went ahead as Jalen Williams drove to the left and hit a jumper from his favourite spot at the left elbow within 13 seconds of the second quarter starting, prompting Pelicans coach Willie Green to call a swift timeout.

    The timeout seemed to spark something in the Pelicans, who outscored the Thunder 11-2 to take a 28-21 lead as Trey Murphy III made a quick pair of 3-pointers.

    OKC was able to get the game back level again at 33-all, seeing Green call another timeout with 5:07 on the clock in the second quarter.

    Nothing could separate the two teams at halftime either though, tied up at 43-all with Gilgeous-Alexander leading the way on 11 points while Chet Holmgren had seven points, seven rebounds and three blocks.

    Chet Holmgren and Jonas Valanciunas both crashed the boards. (Photo by Cooper Neill/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    The issue for Holmgren and the Thunder in general was competing with the size and physicality of Valanciunas, who had 10 rebounds in the first half.

    Neither team was shooting it well from downtown, sitting around the 25 per cent mark, while there was minimal difference when it came to points in the paint too.

    The Thunder did outscore the Pelicans 11-2 in fastbreak points but New Orleans had the clear advantage in second-chance points (16-2), grabbing six offensive rebounds compared to two for OKC.

    The seesawing nature of Monday’s series opener continued in the third quarter as the Thunder jumped ahead 48-45 after a Dort 3-pointer and Williams jump shot, only to fall behind after the Pelicans scored five quick points of their own.

    The Thunder eventually started to break away as they went on an 11-0 run, capped off by Giddey’s first points of the game as he drove to the basket for the finish.

    But once again it didn’t take long for the Pelicans to reduce the deficit, scoring five straight points to get back to 59-55.

    Like clockwork, Oklahoma City again opened up at 10-point lead early in the fourth quarter as Daigneault brought Gilgeous-Alexander into the game for Giddey to try and put the game away.

    But instead two steals from Naji Marshall helped get the New Orleans offence going in transition as a pair of quick 3-pointers saw the Pelicans get it back to a three-point game.

    Pelicans through to NBA Playoffs! | 02:28

    New Orleans then went up 90-88 after a pair of uncharacteristic Gilgeous-Alexander turnovers, prompting Daigneault to call a timeout with 3:34 on the clock.

    An errant Gilgeous-Alexander pass then saw the Thunder superstar turn the ball over again, although the MVP candidate later made a clutch bucket to tie the game heading into the final minute.

    Second-chance points hurt the Thunder in the opening half and threatened to bring the top seed undone late as the Pelicans grabbed three offensive rebounds in the space of 15 seconds, only to miss their first two shots before Holmgren blocked Nance Jr. on the third.

    Gilgeous-Alexander then stepped up for the and-1 to give OKC a three-point lead before CJ McCollum buried a big-time shot to make it a one-point game with 26 seconds left.

    The Pelicans opted to foul Holmgren, who made one of two free throws, and then took a timeout with the chance to set up for a potential game-winning shot.

    McCollum though, having put New Orleans in a position to win the game, lost the ball and recovered to get a good look at 3 but missed as the Thunder celebrated their return to playoff basketball with a victory.

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  • Clippers crush ‘abysmally bad’ Mavericks; Celtics superstar’s scary fall in win: Playoffs Wrap

    Clippers crush ‘abysmally bad’ Mavericks; Celtics superstar’s scary fall in win: Playoffs Wrap

    The Dallas Mavericks entered the playoffs as one of the NBA’s most in-form teams but looked a shadow of themselves in a 109-97 defeat at the hands of the Los Angeles Clippers.

    That was despite the Clippers being dealt a setback before the game itself, with Kawhi Leonard ruled out of the series opener with inflammation in his surgically repaired right knee.

    In his absence, James Harden stepped up to lead the Clippers with 28 points while four of Los Angeles’ five starters hit double figures in the win.

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    Herro goes huge as Heat clinch playoffs | 01:50

    Russell Westbrook, meanwhile, scored 13 points off the bench to go with four rebounds, four assists and two steals.

    Dallas got plenty of production from the usual suspects as Kyrie Irving and Luka Doncic combined for 64 points but it wasn’t nearly enough as the Mavericks failed to get the kind of help they need from their improved supporting cast.

    The Clippers raced out to a 34-22 lead after the first quarter off the back of an early 11 points and three assists from Harden, while Ivica Zubac was causing problems as he added 10 points and four rebounds in the period.

    Things only took an even bigger turn in the second quarter for the Mavericks as they scored just eight points to find themselves trailing 56-30 heading into the half.

    The team as a whole had shot 9-for-40 from the field and 2-for-18 from deep at that point, with Harden again on a heater for Los Angeles as he led the way on 20 points.

    The Mavericks never looked any real chance of getting back into the game despite winning the third and fourth quarters and may be forced to adjust their rotations for the rest of the series after Maxi Kleber struggled to get anything going on the offensive end.

    TATUM’S SCARY FALL AS CELTICS BREEZE PAST HEAT

    Led by a triple double from Jayson Tatum, the Boston Celtics cruised to a 114-94 win over the Miami Heat in the opening game of their NBA playoff first-round series.

    The top-seeded Celtics raced out to a 14-0 start, setting the tone for a wire-to-wire victory that was never in doubt despite Miami being able to add some respectability to the score in the fourth quarter.

    The Celtics, draining a barrage of three-pointers, led 60-45 at half-time and extended that advantage to 91-74 by the end of the third quarter before taking their foot off the gas a little in the final period.

    The Heat, without injured star Jimmy Butler, reached the playoffs as the number eight seed after beating the Chicago Bulls in a play-in eliminator.

    Miami took the same route into the playoffs last season, going on to upset the Celtics in the Eastern Conference finals before they were beaten by the Denver Nuggets in the NBA Finals.

    The Celtics took care of business. (Photo By Winslow Townson/Getty Images)Source: AFP

    But the chances of such a run this time look remote, especially without Butler, who is out with a medial collateral knee ligament injury, as the Celtics were just too much for Erik Spoelstra’s side.

    Tatum, who had his first triple double in a playoff game, put up 23 points, grabbed 10 rebounds and provided 10 assists.

    There was one scary moment late in the fourth quarter when Tatum took a hard fall after a foul from Caleb Martin.

    “A physical game, playing against a physical team, s***’s gonna happen,” Tatum told reporters after the game.

    “It’s not the last time I’m probably going to get hit like that or fouled in this series. I wasn’t hurt.

    “You get hit like that, you just get up. And I knew we were in the bonus, so go down there and knock my free throws down.”

    Five-time NBA All-Star Tatum, 26, was one of six players to reach double figures scoring for Boston with Derrick White the second top scorer with 20 points.

    Tatum was disappointed with the way the team allowed Miami a glimmer of hope in the fourth quarter, where they were outscored 35-23.

    “We had some turnovers, some mistakes,” he said.

    “They’re not going to give up, they’re not going to lay down. Some things we can correct. We could have done better in that fourth quarter.

    “Human nature can play a factor but you can’t relax.”

    Bam Adebayo was top scorer for Miami with 24 points and six rebounds.

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  • Superstar’s cheeky exchange with KD amid bold playoffs statement; contenders get feisty: NBA Wrap

    Superstar’s cheeky exchange with KD amid bold playoffs statement; contenders get feisty: NBA Wrap

    Minnesota superstar Anthony Edwards enjoyed a bit of smack talk with Kevin Durant as the Timberwolves took a 1-0 series lead over the Suns thanks to a 120-95 victory.

    Edwards topped the scoring charts for Minnesota with 33 points along with nine rebounds and six assists, while Rudy Gobert also starred with a double-double thanks to 14 points and 16 rebounds.

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    But Edwards was undeniably the star of the show for the No. 3 seed in the Western Conference and he lapped up every bit of the atmosphere.

    There was perhaps no better standout moment from the 22-year-old when he drained a three-pointer with less than a minute remaining in the third quarter.

    Edwards made his way around Phoenix’s double team before draining a three pointer over the top of a lunging Durant.

    As he backed up into his own court, Edwards was seen talking plenty of trash to Durant in what could be a sign of a special rivalry brewing in this playoff series.

    Durant was the Suns’ most lethal with 31 points while Devin Booker chipped in with 18 points.

    Anthony Edwards thrived. (Photo by Patrick McDermott / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / Getty Images via AFP)Source: AFP

    MORE COVERAGE

    NBA Playoffs locked in! OKC’s dream match-up as Giddey faces familiar foe

    From ‘black eye of the NBA’ to record breakers … and how Giddey was transformed

    NBA carnage as another superstar goes down in potential killer playoffs blow

    CAVS COME OUT FLYING

    Donovan Mitchell scored 30 points as the Cleveland Cavaliers roared out of the gates in the NBA playoffs on Saturday, leading wire to wire in a 97-83 victory over Orlando in game one of their Eastern Conference series.

    Jarrett Allen added 16 points and 18 rebounds as the Cavs won the rebounding battle 54-40 in a victory that Allen hoped would set the tone for the best-of-seven series.

    “We keep saying ‘throw the first punch,’” Allen said in an on-court postgame interview. “I think it was the perfect example tonight.” Evan Mobley also scored 16 points and grabbed 11 rebounds and Darius Garlanded added 14 points with eight assists for the Cavs, who are still smarting from a first-round loss to the New York Knicks last season.

    Mitchell, who missed Cleveland’s regular-season finale with a nagging knee injury, appeared unhindered in a dominant offensive display.

    Donovan Mitchell dazzled for the Cavs. (Photo by Jason Miller/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    Orlando’s Paolo Banchero scored 24 points but had nine of the Magic’s 12 turnovers.

    Cleveland coughed up 18 turnovers and went cold in the third quarter as the Magic cut a 12-point halftime deficit to four points.

    A pair of baskets from Mitchell sparked an 18-2 scoring run that saw the Cavs push the lead to 20 early in the fourth quarter.

    “I think we did good,” Allen said.

    “We wanted to bring the physicality.”

    Things got testy in the second quarter, with Cleveland reserves Georges Niang and Isaac Okoro both assessed technical fouls — Niang for crowding into Markelle Fultz after Fultz fouled him on a drive to the basket.

    “I loved it,” Allen said of the Cavs’ take-no-prisoners mentality. “That’s what we’re all about.”

    NBA PLAYOFF RESULTS

    Cavaliers 97-83 Magic (Cavs lead 1-0)

    Timberwolves 120-95 Suns (Timberwolves lead 1-0)

    Knicks v Sixers

    Nuggets v Lakers

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  • ‘Worst thing I’ve seen in my life’: Bulls fans slammed after ‘classless’ act leaves late GM’s widow in tears

    ‘Worst thing I’ve seen in my life’: Bulls fans slammed after ‘classless’ act leaves late GM’s widow in tears

    Chicago Bulls fans have been blasted for booing the club’s late great Basketball GM Jerry Krause, which brought his widow, who was accepting an award on his behalf to tears.

    Krause was one of 13 members of the inaugural class for the Bulls’ “Ring of Honor,” and was being recognized as the architect of their six championship teams.

    Krause helped build the Bulls dynasty that won six NBA Championships from 1991 to 1998, but was painted as one of the key figures in breaking up the team in the Michael Jordan inspired documentary, The Last Dance.

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    OKC 62 point historic win | 01:02

    Krause had a fractured relationship with Jordan after his infamous quote was edited and taken out of context.

    He allegedly said, “players don’t win championships, organisations do”, which caught the ire of Jordan during their stunning run of six titles in eight years.

    However, Krause actually said, “players and coaches alone don’t win championships, with the word “alone” edited out for effect.

    Krause’s depiction in The last Dance is believed to be a contributing factor into why some fans booed him, but ironically many of those same fans wouldn’t have been connected to the team when he was involved with the club.

    Thelma Krause, Wife of Jerry Krause looks on during the inaugural Ring of Honor ceremony.Source: AFP

    Bulls legend and now commentator Stacey King condemned the actions of the crowd for booing the late Mr Krause.

    “Chicago is a sports town and what we witnessed today when Jerry Krause’s name was called and the people that booed Jerry Krause and his widow, who was accepting this honour for him, it was the worst thing I have ever seen in my life,” King said.

    “I hurt for that lady, it brought her to tears.

    “Whoever booed her in this arena should be ashamed of themselves. That’s not Chicago.

    “That’s New York, Philly. Chicago is not like that. We don’t have a reputation of being that way and whether you like Jerry Krause or not, that man brought six championships here.

    Giddey’s assists melt minds in Trip-Dub | 01:23

    “He didn’t shoot a basket nor did he get a rebound but he put six titles up in this arena. There’s a lot of teams that don’t even have one and that was really classless.

    “I was really disappointed that booed him… I felt so bad for that lady, she’s a wonderful lady and it’s sad to see her breaking down in tears. I just wanted to go out there and hug her.”

    Krause died on March 21, 2017 at the age of 77.

    He was an American sports scout and executive who was the general manager of the Chicago Bulls in the National Basketball Association (NBA) from 1985 to 2003.

    He was twice named NBA Executive of the year in 1988 and 1996.

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  • ‘I don’t want to stop the fun’: MJ explains absence from Ring of Honour gala amid Pippen feud

    ‘I don’t want to stop the fun’: MJ explains absence from Ring of Honour gala amid Pippen feud

    That’s one way to avoid the awkwardness.

    Michael Jordan and Scottie Pippen both opted not to attend the Bulls’ inaugural Ring of Honor gala that featured 13 players, coaches and executives being inducted.

    “I actually don’t know how much effort went into it,” Bulls chairman Jerry Reinsdorf said of Jordan and Pippen, the stars of the team’s six-championship dynasty in the 90s, according to the Chicago Sun Times.

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    “Obviously, it would be better if everybody were here, but we knew going in that not everybody could be here. I believe Michael recorded something.”

    Jordan and Pippen had told the Bulls in advance they were not going to make it, while another star — Dennis Rodman — was expected to be there and did not show, according to the Sun Times.

    Pippen has taken multiple public shots at Jordan since the 2020 release of “The Last Dance” documentary that featured Jordan and other members of the Bulls chronicling the dynasty.

    Pippen was displeased about how he was portrayed in the documentary.

    “I’ve seen Michael Jordan play before I came to the Bulls; you guys seen him play,” the Hall of Fame forward said on the “Gimme the Hot Sauce” podcast in May 2023.

    “[Jordan] was a horrible player. He was horrible to play with. He was all 1-on-1, he’s shooting bad shots. And all of a sudden, we become a team and we start winning, everybody forgot who he was.”

    Bucks blow out Celtics | 01:05

    Pippen was fired from his role at a Bulls ambassador in 2020 and, according to the report, efforts to repair the relationship have failed.

    The festivities will also include a halftime celebration during Friday night’s game against the Warriors, which allowed former sharpshooter and current Golden State coach Steve Kerr to be in attendance Thursday.

    Jordan, Pippen, Rodman, Toni Kukoc, Phil Jackson, Artis Gilmore, Johnny “Red” Kerr, Dick Klein, Jerry Krause, Bob Love, Jerry Sloan, Chet Walker and Tex Winter are all being enshrined — as well as the 1995-96 team that won a record-breaking 72 games.

    Jackson, Kukoc, Luc Longley and Ron Harper were among those who attended Thursday night.

    Jordan sent in a video thanking the organisation and shared his disappointment with being unable to attend.

    “I am so bummed that I can’t be there tonight, but I don’t want that to stop the fun that you guys are going to have,” Jordan said in the video that played Thursday night.

    “And believe me, I am very grateful and very honoured. To the fans, you guys have supported me ever since I stepped foot in Chicago.

    “ And even today, I see a lot of Chicago fans all over. So, I think we made an impression and changed what Chicago represents in terms of champions.

    “Every time you look up in the rafters, I want you to always remember, where we were and where we are. And we are always going to be champions.”

    – This article was originally written by the New York Post and republished with permission

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  • ‘Don’t want to hear him’: Aussie’s last laugh after rival meltdown; rare move amid NBA bloodbath

    ‘Don’t want to hear him’: Aussie’s last laugh after rival meltdown; rare move amid NBA bloodbath

    A game got so out of hand on Thursday that American broadcaster TNT cut away in an attempt to transition viewers to another contest.

    It was during the third quarter of the Bucks’ 135-102 blowout win over the Celtics that studio host, Ernie Johnson, popped on screens with Milwaukee up 100-62.

    “So, this game is out of hand, obviously,” Johnson said after the broadcast cut to him. “100-62 is the score in Milwaukee. Celtics are resting the rest of their starters for the rest of the night, so we’re thinking let’s see what else is going on in the league.”

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    It sounded like the plan had briefly been to toss it to the Thunder’s game against the Trail Blazers.

    “And Oklahoma City, by the way, is up 36 at the half so we’re not going there,” he said with a laugh.

    TNT decided to turn to the Knicks and Mavericks game that was taking place.

    TNT did eventually take viewers back to Milwaukee in the fourth quarter, where the score had ballooned a bit more at that point to 111-73.

    The Bucks ended up downing the Celtics, with Bobby Portis and Giannis Antetokounmpo both having big nights.

    “We just didn’t have it tonight,” Celtics coach Joe Mazzulla said, according to the Associated Press.

    “That can happen from time to time.”

    Portis finished the game with 28 points on 11 of 18 shooting from the field and 5-for-6 from 3-point range.

    Antetokounmpo had 24 points on 10 of 13 from the field while dishing out six assists.Both players each pulled down 12 boards.

    Bucks blow out Celtics | 01:05

    ‘I GOT TO BE BETTER’

    A frustrated Jalen Brunson picked up a technical foul in the second quarter for complaining to a referee, and the point guard acknowledged it affected his play as the Knicks were pummeled in the first half of a 128-124 loss to the Mavericks on Thursday night, with Aussie Josh Green starring.

    “Yeah, it’s tough. I can’t be in that mindset of letting things frustrate me,” said Brunson, who finished with 30 points but only shot 4 of 12 in the first half. “I got to be better. And we got to be ready from the start of the game and that’s on me.”

    Green was credited with hitting a number of crucial shots to stifle the Knicks as they threatened to comeback.

    He finished with 18 points, with a number coming down the stretch.

    “I just play, I wanted to win. I’m a competitor, I see Jalen (Brunson), I don’t want to hear anything from Jalen,” he told a reporter about coming up clutch.

    Meanwhile, after picking up the technical, Brunson claimed on the court that he was directing his words toward coach Tom Thibodeau, not referee Danielle Scott. He declined to explain his frustration after the game, fearing a fine from the league.

    “I love to keep my money,” he said. “So I’m going to keep my money.”

    The Knicks were whistled for 25 fouls compared to Dallas’s 19 but took only two fewer foul shots. The discrepancy was a lot wider in the first half.

    “Hey look, sometimes — and I understand, I don’t really care if the game was called tight or it was called loosely. I just want consistency,” Thibodeau said. “So there was some frustration there but that’s all part of it. We’ve got to handle that.”

    OG Anunoby was preparing to guard Luka Doncic. Instead, with Doncic ruled out the night prior with an ankle sprain, he drew Kyrie Irving and struggled to hold down the skilled point guard.

    “Just trying to make him take the most difficult shots possible,” Anunoby said. “And he makes those shots all the time. Not getting discouraged is the key.”

    Irving scored 44 points and handed out 10 assists to lead the Mavericks in a 128-124 wire-to-wire victory over the New York Knicks.

    Dallas, with star Luka Doncic sidelined with a sprained ankle, led by 20 early in the fourth quarter, fending off a furious rally by the Knicks who cut the deficit to one with 1:08 to play.

    – This originally appeared in NY Post and was republished with consent.

    OKC 62 point historic win | 01:02

    DONOVAN POWERS CAVS TO VICTORY IN PARIS, BUCKS CRUSH CELTICS

    Donovan Mitchell lit up Paris, scoring 45 points to lead the Cleveland Cavaliers to a 111-102 victory over the Brooklyn Nets as the NBA returned to France on Thursday.

    The Cavs’ victory was just one dominant performance on a day that saw the Milwaukee Bucks rout the league-leading Boston Celtics 135-102 and the Oklahoma City Thunder crush the Portland Trail Blazers 139-77.

    Mitchell, a four-time NBA All-Star, added six assists and four steals and said he loved his Paris experience — and would like to repeat it at the Olympic Games later this year.

    “Definitely I’d love to come back and play in the Olympics,” Mitchell said. “This is a very electric basketball city. Just being able to see this experience, to be a part of it and do it with the NBA, do it with my teammates — incredible.

    “I’ve had a lot of fun and I’m glad we got the win as well.”

    Cavs coach J.B. Bickerstaff said Mitchell’s aggressive approach “set the tone for everybody” on the team.

    “I thought Donovan was phenomenal at giving the audience and us what they came to see and what we needed to win the game,” Bickerstaff said.

    Mikal Bridges and Cam Thomas scored 26 points apiece for Brooklyn, but the Nets offered little resistance in a game Cleveland led from start to finish.

    Back home the Bucks were even more dominant, demolishing the Celtics in Milwaukee.

    Reserve Bobby Portis and two-time NBA Most Valuable Player Giannis Antetokounmpo both had double-doubles for the Bucks, Portis scoring 28 and Antetokounmpo 24 and both grabbing 12 rebounds.

    Giddey launches rocket for unreal assist | 00:32

    Portis and Antetokounmpo combined to score 20 straight points as the Bucks put together a 25-0 scoring run bridging the first and second quarters that pushed their lead to 56-23.

    Damian Lillard added 21 points to help the Bucks notch just their second win in six games.

    One night after a draining overtime victory over the Minnesota Timberwolves in a battle of the league’s best teams, the Celtics started slow and never recovered.

    A dunk from Boston’s Oshae Brissett cut Milwaukee’s lead to 31-21 with 2:14 left in the first quarter.

    But the Celtics wouldn’t score again for more than six minutes, Jaylen Brown ending the drought with a dunk.

    Boston coach Joe Mazzulla pulled his weary starters for the second half, Brown finishing the night with 10 points and Jayson Tatum with seven.

    Payton Pritchard led Boston in scoring with 21 points.

    “I think we did a good job just playing together,” Antetokounmpo said of a Bucks team that had lost four of their last five.

    “We were aggressive defensively. We set the tone the first minute.”

    Celtics coach Joe Mazzulla said he was confident the game was an anomaly.

    “I trust our character, I trust our team,” Mazzulla said. “Things like this happen.”

    – Thunder roll –

    The trend of lopsided victories continued in Oklahoma City, where the Thunder’s 62-point margin of victory tied for the fifth-largest in NBA history.

    The Thunder themselves suffered the biggest loss ever in the NBA, a 73-point loss to Memphis in December of 2021.

    Shai Gilgeous-Alexander scored 31 points and Jalen Williams added 21 for the Thunder, who were already up by 62 going into the fourth quarter.

    Josh Giddey notched a triple-double of 13 points, 10 rebounds and 12 assists for the Thunder, who matched Minnesota for best record in the Western Conference at 26-11.

    It was another rout in Los Angeles, where Bradley Beal scored 37 points and Devin Booker added 31 to lead the Phoenix Suns to a 127-109 victory over the Lakers.

    Superstar LeBron James scored just 10 points and Anthony Davis added 13 for the Lakers, whose starters sat out the fourth quarter with the game out of hand.

    In Dallas, Kyrie Irving scored 44 points and handed out 10 assists to lead the Mavericks in a 128-124 wire-to-wire victory over the New York Knicks.

    Dallas, with star Luka Doncic sidelined with a sprained ankle, led by 20 early in the fourth quarter, fending off a furious rally by the Knicks who cut the deficit to one with 1:08 to play.

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  • LeBron drains season-high in thriller as Durant explodes in overtime epic: NBA Wrap

    LeBron drains season-high in thriller as Durant explodes in overtime epic: NBA Wrap

    Phoenix star Kevin Durant scored 39 points and thwarted Utah’s Lauri Markkanen at the final buzzer on Sunday as the Suns beat the Jazz 140-137 in an NBA double-overtime thriller.

    Durant added eight rebounds and 10 assists while Devin Booker scored 26 points for the Suns.

    Markkanen led Utah with 38 points and grabbed 17 rebounds.

    Durant scored eight points in the second overtime, which the Suns led 138-135 with 43.2 seconds left.

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    Durant was in red-hot form against the Jazz.Source: AFP

    Markkanen’s layup sliced the deficit to one but Booker drained two free throws to put Phoenix up 140-137 with nine-tenths of a second left.

    Markkanen had a last chance, with officials initially ruling he was fouled by Durant on a failed three-point attempt. But that call was overturned on review and the Suns had the win.

    Utah had trailed much of the night before Markkanen forced the first overtime with a layup with 20.3 seconds left in regulation.

    Phoenix jumped to a 123-118 lead in the first extra session, but Utah clawed back and Collin Sexton forced a second overtime with a putback layup.

    Durant notched his 12th straight game with 25 or more points, the longest such streak in Suns history.

    “I’m just trying to stay prepared on off days and before games, just trying to follow the game plan to execute as much as I can and play with a calm and free spirit,” Durant said.

    Butler brings seventh straight Heat win | 00:52

    LEBRON FIRES IN CLUTCH WIN

    The Los Angeles Lakers, fuelled by a season-high 37 points from superstar LeBron James, held off the Houston Rockets 105-104.

    Austin Reaves, fed by James, drilled a three-pointer to put the Lakers up 103-100 with 24.2 seconds to play. But Alperen Sengun’s layup tied it up at 104-104 with four seconds left.

    James, fouled under the rim, made one of two free throws to clinch it. James added six rebounds and eight assists and Anthony Davis scored 27 points with 10 rebounds. Reaves finished with 17 points off the bench — a key contribution on a night when Lakers starters Cam Reddish, Taurean Prince and D’Angelo Russell struggled offensively.

    LeBron James came up big.Source: Getty Images

    CELTICS ESCAPE IN WILD ENDING

    The Boston Celtics also had a narrow escape, stretching their winning streak to six games with a 102-100 victory over the Grizzlies in Memphis.

    A back-and-forth battle featuring 18 lead changes saw the Celtics survive when Kristaps Porzingis drove for a go-ahead dunk with one minute, one second remaining then blocked Ziaire Williams’s last-gasp attempt at the buzzer.

    Porzingis led the Celtics with 26 points, pulling down eight rebounds and blocking six shots.

    JOKIC STRUGGLES IN SHOCK LOSS

    Elsewhere, the shorthanded Cleveland Cavaliers shocked the NBA champion Denver Nuggets 121-109 as frustrated Nuggets star Nikola Jokic battled foul trouble and ended the game watching from the bench.

    Darius Garland led Cleveland with 26 points and rookie Craig Porter Jr. added a career-high 21 to help the Cavs to a third straight victory despite the absence of star guard Donovan Mitchell and top reserve Caris LeVert.

    Two-time NBA Most Valuable Player Jokic, shouldering a big load with star teammate Jamal Murray still sidelined by a strained hamstring, finished with 18 points, 10 rebounds and seven assists.

    Jokic was stifled amid foul trouble in a shock defeat.Source: AFP

    EMBIID JUST MISSES TRIPLE DOUBLE

    Reigning NBA MVP Joel Embiid needed just three quarters to score 32 points with 12 rebounds and nine assists, powering the Philadelphia 76ers to a 121-99 victory over the Nets in Brooklyn.

    Tyrese Maxey scored 25 points and handed out 10 assists for the Sixers, who led 61-49 at halftime and never trailed the rest of the way.

    With the game in hand, Embiid sat out all of the fourth quarter. His nine assists were his season high, and he was unconcerned at missing out on a sixth career triple-double.

    “I got told I was three assists away, but that’s not where my head was at,” Embiid said. “We just try to play the right way.”

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    Thunder strike Warriors in huge road win | 01:04

    In Toronto, the Raptors led by as many as 40 points on the way to a 142-113 victory over the Detroit Pistons.

    The Raptors set a franchise record with 44 assists as they handed the Pistons an 11th straight defeat.

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  • Why it’s the ‘beginning of the end’ for sliding Clippers after all-in Harden trade as scapegoat move looms

    Why it’s the ‘beginning of the end’ for sliding Clippers after all-in Harden trade as scapegoat move looms

    If it’s not yet panic stations for the Los Angeles Clippers, it can’t be far off.

    The team has fallen to 0-5 in the James Harden era since his trade from Philadelphia – an era that’s so far looked dysfunctional with an array of problems that need to be solved.

    It comes amid an overall six-game losing streak – the longest such losing streak of Kawhi Leonard’s career including his high school and college days, per Clippers writer Justin Russo – to see the team sit 3-7 overall in the standings.

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    So what have been the issues?

    The main concern post the Harden trade was how a team with four stars in Paul George, Kawhi Leonard, Harden and Russell Westbrook, who all need to the ball to be effective, would function together. And so far that concern has been validated.

    It’s not a knock on the players – they’re all still stars (we think?) – but more around the team build and particularly the pairing of Westbrook and Harden on the court, which has created stagnation and spacing concerns. In fact, in the minutes Harden has been on the court in his five appearances for the Clippers, Tyron Lue’s team has been outscored by 70.

    James Harden #1 of the LA Clippers looks on before the start of a game against the New York Knicks at Madison Square GardenSource: FOX SPORTS

    The chemistry has been a mess with limited movement and a lot of ‘your turn, my turn’ on offence, with both Harden and Leonard really struggling to have an impact in those last five games. It’s just too crowded and cannibalising both the players’ games and the team as a whole.

    They also lack size, which is of great concern against bigger West Conference opponents like Denver, Minnesota and the Lakers, and depth – particularly on the wings – after dealing a host of role players to Philly in the Harden trade.

    Plus, this is it. The Clippers went all in with this roster by trading away nearly all their draft picks for the rest of the decade.

    And so they’re now basically investing all their hopes into an ageing core/rotation consisting of the big four, all of whom can become free agents at the end of the season, a combination of Ivicia Zubac and Mason Plumlee at centre (who’ve both battled injury), Terrence Mann, Norman Powell and PJ Tucker.

    The numbers so far tell the story of their struggles, with the Clippers during the Harden era posting a bottom four offensive rating, while it hasn’t been much better at the other end of the floor either, with a bottom six defensive rating.

    Harden did note after the team’s most recent loss to Denver he’s still “getting into shape” after missing pre-season and “learning on the fly” after only recently joining the Clippers.

    But fitness aside, Harden declaring in his press conference after the trade he’s “a system” – “not a system player” – doesn’t necessarily fill you with any great confidence about him potential willingness to adapt his game – even if it means sacrificing stats – to make things work in LA.

    Some growing pains were to be expected, but this has been plain ugly.

    Paul George #13 of the Los Angeles Clippers reacts against the Denver Nuggets in the fourth quarter at Ball Arena.Source: FOX SPORTS

    “It takes a while when you throw players together, especially really good players. You have four guys who are used to having the ball, so they’ve got to figure out that aspect,” NBA analyst Bill Simmons said of the Clippers on The Bill Simmons Podcast.

    “I thought the (Harden) trade was ludicrous and stupid by them, I just didn’t understand it. One of the reasons was, there’s just not enough balls, all of these guys are at their best when they have the ball … you can see it already, the standing around — that’s now how they were playing two weeks ago.

    “I just don’t see how it’s going to work. I know Ty Lue is a really good coach, but I just don’t see it. The more I watch it, I still don’t see it. I don’t think they have enough size, I don’t think they can switch and I think there’s certain players who are going to kill them.

    “I think they could be out of the playoff picture in six weeks.

    “Then James had that press conference, which made me feel worse about everything from a Clippers standpoint … it seemed like he was complaining about how he was used last year. It’s like, you played with a guy who won the MVP (Joel Embiid) and he averaged 33 points a game. (The Sixers) were 46-19 in the last 65 games. I thought that was alarming those were his feelings on last year.

    “They literally gave (Harden) the car keys and the car and there wasn’t even a backup driver … I’m dubious (about the Clippers) and I think this is going to get worse before it gets better.”

    Indeed, there’s problems everywhere like a myriad of spot fires that need to be put out before this team can move in the right direction. Establishing roles and the ideal rotation and becoming a more cohesive basketball team is clearly key – and with time those things can be resolved.

    However in the current NBA climate, it’s widely thought that the ideal roster construction is two superstars being surrounded by a host of versatile role players who buy into those roles and compliment the big guns. Think Denver, Boston and Philadelphia.

    The Clippers have meanwhile gone in the polar opposite direction and followed the lead of past failed experiments by bunching a group of ball-dominant stars together in hopes it’ll somehow click. But that’s not how basketball nor any team sport works.

    Draymond Green handed 5-game suspension | 00:39

    The absence of role players on the Clippers just makes it that much more difficult for everyone else. Who’s going to set screens (especially with limited bigs), dive on loose balls, take fouls and do all the other little, selfless acts for the betterment of the team?

    You don’t even necessarily wan’t to rely on your stars to do those things in season, particularly given the injury concerns to George and Leonard.

    “I think they’re in a situation where, even though it’s early and you’re going to give them a chance and time, doesn’t it feel like these early signs may be some problems that aren’t solvable? Who’s to say Harden just hasn’t continued to decline physically even more than he did the last two or three years?,” The Ringer’s Kevin O’Connor posed on the Mismatch Podcast.

    “We have all these issues – the stars needing to fill into a role on certain nights, figuring out roles, a lack of depth after trading away everybody they did, Ty Lue needing to figure out rotations.

    “And then there’s the lack of assets, they don’t have anything to upgrade this team from what it is today. That’s the scary part here for the Clippers, if Zubac doesn’t get healthy and Plumlee is already hurt – and it’s Plumlee, he’s nothing special – where’s your answer at the five? How do you solve some of these big, long and versatile teams?

    “It’s very possible this is not just the beginning and it gets better from here, but the beginning of the end.”

    O’Connor highlighted how the addition of Harden has thrown out all the Clippers’ roles after they’d been established over the pre-season, with the team now needing to “figure it out on the fly.”

    He emphasised that Harden simply “isn’t producing”, with the 10-time All-Star currently averaging just 15 points, 4.4 rebounds and 4.2 assists per game with a 16.2 Player Efficiency Rating (PER) [which is essentially how productive or positive a player is on the court] – well down on his career average of 24.3.

    Harden’s 16.2 PER is worse than the likes of Malik Monk, Dennis Schroder, DeAndre Ayton, Jusuf Nurkic, Zubac and Obi Toppin this season.

    “(Harden) looks like he doesn’t have the same level of burst right now off the dribble, even less so than last year. He’s not getting to the rim as much, he’s not able to create as much space and defensively he looks even more like a liability,” O’Connor told the Mismatch Podcast.

    “And he’s just changing the way that offence plays because he’s still playing the way he typically always has. With Russ (Westbrook), the offence ran better, but it’s not like Russ is necessarily the answer, that’s why they got Harden …

    “James Harden needs to prove he can do the little things as well, it’s on Harden to bring that back in his game. I’m going to keep hammering that point all year, because I know it’s true … it was assumed he was still going to be the same quality as last year where he helped Embiid to an MVP season.

    “He was a great playmaker and still had some really good scoring nights. Harden was like top 30-35 last season, but right now he hasn’t been one of the 100 best players in the league through the small sample thus far. That more than anything else needs to improve for the Clippers.”

    LeBron heroics not enough for Lakers | 00:23

    NBA analyst Nick Wright went so far to label Harden “maybe the most tone deaf athlete of my lifetime”.

    “Even if you wanted out of Philly, you could’ve stayed in shape and gone to training camp,” Wright said on Fox Sports US’ First Things First.

    “Also I don’t think when he gets in shape it’s necessarily going to be good for the Clippers. His whole reason of wanting to be there is to get a big contract and he’s going to think he has to do that by being the James Harden ‘system’ and other people sitting around and watching him.

    “So when he gets in shape he’s going to try to meet his own ends, which is his numbers go up and so somebody pays him. Which by the way, he doesn’t get it, because no one is going to pay him.

    “But here’s the part of this I can’t get over – the Clippers opted into this. I understand why the Sixers traded him, they had to, and I understand why James wanted to go to the Clippers … why did (team president) Lawrence Frank do this!?

    “This is an unforced error of epic proportions.”

    Without doubt one of the big questions is – with so many concerns around Harden’s fit on the team even before he’d played a game for the Clippers, why did they trade for him? And mortgage more of their future assets in the process?

    According to former NBA coach Doc Rivers, it was Clippers owner Steve Balmer’s huge swing ahead of the team moving into a new arena next year.

    “They’re going all in and we don’t know if they went in the right way,” Rivers said on The Bill Simmons Podcast.

    “If you could tap into Steve Balmer’s head, his dream is to go into that new arena putting up a banner. So you get desperate at times — I don’t know if desperate is the right word — but you start making moves maybe you wouldn’t make if you wanted to be more patient.

    “And they can’t be patient when you look at the ages of Paul and Kawhi. It’s been four years they’ve been together, this almost has to be the year.”

    Granted, there’s still plenty of time to figure things out.

    Boston beat Philly for Eastern top spot | 01:03

    While they’ve slumped to 3-7 overall to currently sit outside the play-in qualification, it’s just 10 games into an 82-game season – or 12 per cent of the way through.

    That’s the beauty of the marathon NBA campaign, the Clippers can afford time in-season to iron out the kinks. We’ve seen struggling teams turn it around before including the Lakers recovering from a 2-10 start last season.

    Former NBA player Kenny Smith on NBA on TNT said he believes the onus is on Lue to create an offence and develop a brand where their stars can coexist, saying “this is why coaches get paid.”

    But the clock is ticking, and as mentioned, it’s now or never for the Clippers given they’ve gone chips in with this team.

    After coming up considerably short in the playoffs with just George and Leonard, who despite being genuine superstars have struggled with health, this is effectively the team’s last chance to complete for a championship.

    So what could they do in terms of roster moves despite having little trade value or rotation changes otherwise?

    There’s a view that Westbrook will be made the scapegoat, whether it’s by benching him or moving him into a sixth-man role.

    Lue has so far been steadfast that he has no plans of moving Westbrook to the bench – even though it’s a role he had success in at the Lakers last season. But Lue’s hand might be eventually forced if the team’s woes continue.

    It’s frankly hard to see how else the teams quartet of stars – namely Westbrook Harden – can function at their and the team’s optimum. At the very least, Westbrook and Harden need to have their minutes on the court together staggered.

    Or the team could force Westbrook off the court by trading him …

    “They’re going to figure it out by trading (Westbrook), and he’s going to be on Miami in like three weeks. You can already see it, the bread crumbs are already being laid out,” Bill Simmons said on the Bill Simmons Podcast.

    “By the way, if I was Miami I would go get him. I think that’s somebody who could really help them — he plays at a crazy intensity, he can help with the rebounding, he gives them Lowry insurance — Lowry is 37, you know he’s going to get hurt at some point.”

    Just like immediately after the trade went down, there’s more questions than answers for the Clippers.

    It’s supposed to be the team that acquires the star in a trade that flourishes. But in this case, the Clippers have watched Philadelphia surge in the Eastern Conference standings and into bona fide title contention after Harden’s departure opened the door for Tyrese Maxey to grow into a genuine superstar.

    It was addition by subtraction for the Sixers in a complete contrast to the stumbling Clippers. After all, they say a champion team will always beat a team of champions.

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