Playoff basketball is back!
It has been a long regular season (177 days, to be exact),
but the postseason has arrived, and it looks a lot different than it did a year
ago. For the first time since 2010, a team not led by LeBron James will
emerge from the Eastern Conference, and for the first time since 2005, James
will not be involved in the festivities.
As for the players, teams and matchups to know, well, we've
got you covered.
1. GOLDEN STATE
WARRIORS
2018-19 RECORD: 57-25
BPI ODDS VS. LAC: 89 percent
There were a lot of emotional highs and lows, but through it
all, this group continued to churn out wins and locked up the top spot in the
West. The process of trying to get up for most games in the regular season was
emotionally draining, but the Warriors held to the belief that they'd be ready
when it counted most. The push for a three-peat has begun.
SEASON IN A SINGLE GAME: JAN. 15
The Warriors came into a showdown against Denver hearing some chatter that
the Nuggets were ready to give them a push in the Western Conference. OK. Klay Thompson &
Co. proceeded to score a league-record 51 first-quarter points and demolish an
overwhelmed Nuggets team. The game offered a reminder to the rest of the league
that the Warriors are still better than anyone else when they want to focus and
play at their peak.
THERE'S TROUBLE BREWING:
The Warriors are confident that nobody can beat them if they stay healthy
and play together. A potential Oklahoma City first-round series would have been
interesting, given Kevin Durant's
history with his former team, but the only team that would give the Warriors
much pause in the West is the Rockets, especially if Chris Paul can
stay healthy. But with home-court advantage at Oracle and the motivation of
chasing history, the only thing that truly concerns the Warriors is the
possibility of a star injury.
MOST 20-POINT LOSSES BY AN NBA CHAMP
SEASON
|
TEAM
|
20-PT LOSSES
|
1974-75
|
Warriors
|
6
|
1960-61
|
Celtics
|
5
|
2016-17
|
Warriors
|
5
|
1977-78
|
Bullets
|
5
|
|
ONE BIG STAT AND WHY IT MATTERS:
Has the regular season become too boring, or does Golden State have some
issues that might pop up late in the playoffs? The Warriors' point differential
of plus-6.6 at home this season was their worst under Steve Kerr (since
2014-15), and it's a far cry from their plus-16.0 point differential two
seasons ago. The Warriors also suffered eight 20-point losses this season,
which becomes important when you realize that no NBA champion has suffered more
than six during a title run.
GET TO KNOW: QUINN COOK
Cook is the Warriors' secret offensive weapon off the bench. The diminutive
point guard has found his stride the past few weeks, going 48-for-78 in his
past 10 games. He is shooting the ball with confidence while providing Kerr a
solid option off the bench. Cook has the ability to be a difference-maker in
short bursts.
WHAT TO WATCH IN ROUND 1:
DeMarcus
Cousins vs. Montrezl
Harrell. This marks the first playoff series for Cousins, and he
will oppose Harrell, an active big man who will try to move him around.
Cousins' teammates and coaches have been looking forward to seeing how he would
perform on this stage; he'll have a chance to spread the floor when needed and
bang down on the blocks against the Clippers. Cousins has played against the
Clippers three times this season, which is impressive given he has played only
30 games total since returning in mid-January from an Achilles injury that kept
him out for almost a year. In those three games, Cousins averaged 13.0 points,
7.5 rebounds and 3.5 assists.
8. LA CLIPPERS
2018-19 RECORD: 48-34
BPI ODDS VS. GS: 11 percent
No team in the league has existed in a greater state of flux
the past two seasons than the Clippers, yet here they are -- improbably -- in
the NBA playoffs. A far cry from the perennial Lob City squads, this Clippers
team is a collection of lunch-pail journeymen and young prospects, many of whom
didn't arrive until the trade deadline, when the Clippers dealt away Tobias Harris.
Rather than close up shop and ready themselves for a busy offseason after
losing one of their most productive players, the Clippers caught fire and
secured themselves a playoff berth as the ultimate energy team.
SEASON IN A SINGLE GAME: FEB. 9
Three days after trading Harris and playing with two new starters who had yet
to step foot in the team's training facility in Los Angeles, the Clippers found
themselves down 28 points in the second quarter in Boston and trailed by 21 at
the half. After intermission, the Clippers held the Celtics to a 12-point third
quarter before exploding for 42 points in the final frame. Rookie Landry Shamet,
acquired from Philadelphia as part of the package for Harris, drained four
3-pointers in his Clippers debut. "We broke out the JJ Redick package
with him," said Doc Rivers, referencing his old shooting guard in praise
of his new one.
WHY THEY'RE DANGEROUS:
By nearly every projection, the Clippers shouldn't be playing playoff
basketball, which means they have nothing to lose. Lou Williams believes
he can score against anybody. Montrezl
Harrell plays with reckless abandon, big moment be damned. And
there isn't a shot from distance that Danilo
Gallinari doesn't think he can drain. The kids -- Shamet, Shai
Gilgeous-Alexander and Ivica Zubac?
They're too young to know any better and are propelled by the confidence earned
during the Clippers' sizzling post-All-Star-break run.
BEST PLUS/MINUS IN CLUTCH TIME (2018-19)
TEAM
|
CLUTCH +/-
|
LA Clippers
|
+65
|
Denver Nuggets
|
+55
|
Philadelphia 76ers
|
+43
|
Toronto Raptors
|
+41
|
ONE BIG STAT AND WHY IT MATTERS:
The Clippers have been arguably the best team in the NBA at closing out
tight games. They have a plus-65 plus/minus in clutch time this season, first
in the league. Lou Williams' play is a huge reason. His plus-92 plus/minus in
clutch time ranks first in the NBA among individual players. The next-best
individual plus/minus in clutch time this season belongs to Denver's Nikola Jokic,
at plus-89.
GET TO KNOW: MONTREZL HARRELL
A second-rounder made good, Harrell is more than a mere energy guy who
buzzes around the floor. He might not start for the Clippers but is a good bet
to play crucial minutes. The Clippers' backup big man has serious skills as Lou
Williams' dance partner in one of the most effective pick-and-roll attacks in
the league, and he is an efficiency machine with a nose for the rim. Among
players who log more than 24 minutes per night, Harrell ranks second to Giannis
Antetokounmpo in true shooting percentage.
WHAT TO WATCH IN ROUND 1:
Gilgeous-Alexander has enjoyed a superb rookie campaign and has shown
flashes of the lanky, defensive presence at the top of the floor that he
projects to be. Now comes his graduate exam: Stephen Curry.
Veteran Patrick
Beverley will spend much of his time hounding Curry, but the
Clippers' 20-year-old point guard will get a prime opportunity to use his
length and agility against the Warriors' ballet in preparation for a day when
the ask is more reasonable and the Clippers find themselves in a high-stakes
series. Depending on how the Clippers fare this summer, that could be sooner
than later.
2. DENVER
NUGGETS
2018-19 RECORD: 54-28
BPI ODDS VS. SA: 71 percent
Nuggets
Playoff Tickets
There are times when a team ends a season in disappointment
but on an upward tilt that leads to expectation the next season that is
difficult to meet. Well, the Nuggets didn't just meet that expectation. They
jumped in a jet and zoomed past. Nikola Jokic blossomed into an All-NBA star,
and the mix of role players and emerging talent has led to an excellent team.
The Nuggets play defense, move the ball and have terrific chemistry. But as it
goes for any young team, it's unknown how they will look in the pressure cooker
of the postseason.
SEASON IN A SINGLE GAME: JAN. 13
It's a sequence of games for the Nuggets that tells the story. In this
mid-January game, they beat the Blazers 116-113 in a thriller, with Jokic going
for 40-10-8 and playing a brilliant fourth quarter. He even heard a thundering
chant of M-V-P while shooting free throws. The win elevated the Nuggets to the top
of the West, a half-game up on the Warriors. Two nights after the win, the
Nuggets took on the Warriors in Denver, a litmus test for the emerging squad.
The Warriors dropped 51 in the first quarter and went on to smash the young
Nuggets 142-111. It's an example of where things stand for them: They are
building, growing and developing into a true Western contender. But against the
class of the NBA, they were shown that there's still a ways to go.
THERE'S TROUBLE BREWING:
The Nuggets' primary weakness, if it's fair to call it that, is their
inexperience. They are young and have yet to feel playoff fire as a group. As a
high seed in the West, they'll be favored in their opening-round series and
have the pressure of defending home court in their first two games. They've
responded all season and handled themselves with impressive maturity, but if
teams double Jokic, can Jamal Murray make
the right read? Can Gary Harris create
his own shot in a critical scenario? Can all their overachieving role players
-- Torrey Craig, Monte Morris --
keep hitting shots?
MOST PASSES PER GAME TO TEAMMATE (2018-19)
TEAM
|
DUO
|
PASSES
PER GAME |
Nuggets
|
Jokic-to-Murray
|
30.0
|
Grizzlies
|
Gasol-to-Conley
|
26.7
|
Pistons
|
Jackson-to-Griffin
|
26.3
|
Hawks
|
Collins-to-Young
|
25.5
|
Nuggets
|
Murray-to-Jokic
|
24.8
|
ONE BIG STAT AND WHY IT MATTERS:
When Jokic and Murray share the court -- and the ball -- good things happen
for Denver. The duo ranks first and fifth, respectively, in the NBA in passes
to each other per game. Jokic finds Murray more than 30 times per game, and
Murray gets it to Jokic nearly 25 times per game.
GET TO KNOW: MALIK BEASLEY AND
TORREY CRAIG
What has made the Nuggets so good this season is that there are three or
four candidates who fit the mold of unknown player who could make a name for
himself. The Nuggets' depth has been a strength, but head coach Mike Malone
will have to focus on the eight or nine guys he trusts most. Beasley and Craig
have both taken turns as game-changing wing, and it's hard to predict which one
Malone might lean on more.
WHAT TO WATCH IN ROUND 1:
Derrick White vs.
Jamal Murray. White has emerged as one of the better defensive guards in the
NBA, and Murray will have considerable pressure and responsibility on his
shoulders. So many playoff games can be decided by a big shot or two in the
closing minutes, and the Nuggets will rely on Murray to create some on his own.
White is long, rangy and athletic; he could give Murray some trouble getting
clean looks.
7. SAN ANTONIO
SPURS
2018-19 RECORD: 48-34
BPI ODDS VS. DEN: 29 percent
Spurs Playoff
Tickets
San Antonio opened camp without a member of the franchise's
famed Big Three of Tim Duncan, Manu Ginobili and Tony Parker on
the roster for the first time since the 1997-98 season, thus ushering in a new
era of Spurs basketball. Despite a rash of early injuries and the hiccups of incorporating DeMar DeRozan and
three other new starters, San Antonio scrapped its way to an NBA-record-tying
22nd straight postseason appearance.
SEASON IN A SINGLE GAME: DEC. 15
Even battier than the winged mammals that swoop to the AT&T Center
floor from time to time is San Antonio's inability to close games. A Dec. 15
loss at home to the Bulls, in which the Spurs blew a 21-point lead in the
second half, made it clear that this is no longer the San Antonio squad known
for out-executing less experienced opponents down the stretch. Even internally,
the Spurs admit that they can no longer rely on their "corporate
knowledge" in the clutch situations that they once relished.
WHY THEY'RE DANGEROUS:
The Spurs beat all but one of the top teams in the West (Houston) more than
once during the regular season, and their jelling process took much more time
than usual because they had to strip down many of the complexities of the
defensive system to accommodate all the new faces in the lineups. While many
teams discuss the desire to play their best ball once the postseason rolls
around, San Antonio might actually be trending that way. For several years, the
Spurs enjoyed the luxury of resting players as the playoffs approached. But
with a younger, less experienced roster, San Antonio had to scrap its way in,
which in some ways could lead to a more battle-tested squad for the postseason.
ONE BIG STAT AND WHY IT MATTERS:
The Spurs might be better on defense with their two most recognizable stars
on the sideline. When LaMarcus
Aldridge and DeRozan are on the court together (2,242 minutes),
the Spurs have a defensive rating of 109.7, which would rank 17th in the league
this season. When Aldridge and DeRozan are both off the court (828 minutes),
the Spurs have a defensive rating of 102.5, which would rank first in the
league this season.
GET TO KNOW: DERRICK WHITE
White, who spent almost all of his rookie season in the G League, was
forced into the starting lineup by Dejounte
Murray's preseason knee injury. He has emerged as an essential part
of the Spurs' success. He's an All-Defensive Team candidate who ranked second
on the team in net rating (plus-4.3 points per 100 possessions).
WHAT TO WATCH IN ROUND 1:
LaMarcus Aldridge vs. Paul Millsap.
The Nuggets can't ask Jokic to guard the Spurs' go-to guy, so that task falls
primarily to Millsap, despite the 3-inch height disadvantage. Aldridge averaged
22.3 points on 55.7 percent shooting for the Spurs against the Nuggets this
season. San Antonio was 37-10 when Aldridge scored at least 20 points,
including 2-1 against the Nuggets. If the Spurs' All-Star is in a rhythm, it
has a real chance to pull off an upset over an inexperienced No. 2 seed.
3. PORTLAND
TRAIL BLAZERS
2018-19 RECORD: 53-29
BPI ODDS VS. OKC: 57 percent
Trail Blazers
Playoff Tickets
Shaking off a fluky sweep at the hands of the New Orleans
Pelicans in the first round of last year's playoffs, the
Blazers started 10-3 and navigated a tricky February schedule to stay in the
Western Conference's second tier. Despite the crushing blow of losing starting
center Jusuf Nurkic to
a compound leg fracture on March 25, Portland took care of business against a
weak schedule to earn home-court advantage in the first round.
SEASON IN A SINGLE GAME: MARCH 18
The Blazers were undone during last year's playoffs by two things: the
Pelicans getting hot at the right time and the inability of players besides
All-Star Damian
Lillard and backcourt mate CJ McCollum to
make a play when New Orleans trapped the duo. Playing without McCollum (left
knee injury) in this game, Lillard showed his development as a playmaker, and
his teammates showed their improved reliability in a comeback win against the
feisty Pacers. In addition to scoring 30 points, Lillard handed out a season-high
15 assists, and six Portland players scored in double figures.
THERE'S TROUBLE BREWING:
With 18 points, Nurkic was the Blazers' second-leading scorer in that March
18 game, part of the best season of his career. A week later, he lay on the
Moda Center floor in agony after breaking two bones in his left leg in a freak
accident. While the Blazers stayed afloat against lesser competition without
Nurkic, it will be difficult for them to replace his playmaking when opponents
trap Lillard and his rim protection against playoff competition. Add McCollum
coming back from injury, and Portland, healthy most of the year, is at far less
than full strength for the postseason.
MOST POINTS PER DIRECT PICK (2018-19)
TEAM
|
BALL HANDLER
|
SCREENER
|
PTS/PICK
|
POR
|
Damian Lillard
|
Zach Collins
|
1.22
|
MEM
|
Mike Conley
|
Joakim Noah
|
1.19
|
MIL
|
Eric Bledsoe
|
Brook Lopez
|
1.17
|
ONE BIG STAT AND WHY IT MATTERS:
Lillard is one of the most lethal pick-and-roll ball handlers in the NBA.
According to Second Spectrum, the Trail Blazers average 1.11 points per direct
pick when Lillard is the ball handler, highest in the NBA among 173 players to
receive at least 150 direct picks. Lillard has had success in the pick-and-roll
with Zach Collins,
one of the players who will attempt to fill the void left by Nurkic. The
Blazers average 1.25 points per direct pick with Lillard as the ball handler
and Collins as the screener, best in the NBA (min. 150 direct picks).
GET TO KNOW: ZACH COLLINS
Collins, in and out of the rotation after the Kanter signing, was thrust
into a larger role by Nurkic's untimely injury. Now Portland's best rim
protector, as well as a floor-spacing option at the 5 spot (he's a 33 percent
3-point shooter), Collins will likely finish games at center.
WHAT TO WATCH IN ROUND 1:
Damian Lillard vs. Russell
Westbrook. Oklahoma City rarely sent two defenders at Lillard in the
pick-and-roll -- just 7.5 percent of the time, per Second Spectrum tracking --
allowing him to play scorer in the season series. Lillard's 34.8 points per
game were his most against any West opponent. Yet the Thunder swept the four
matchups, in part because Westbrook was able to score efficiently against the
Blazers. Thanks largely to 9.3 free throw attempts per game; Westbrook's .530
true shooting percentage vs. Portland was far better than his overall .500
mark.
6. OKLAHOMA CITY
THUNDER
2018-19 RECORD: 49-33
BPI ODDS VS. POR: 43 percent
Thunder
Playoff Tickets
For a minute there, the Thunder didn't just look like a good
team -- they looked like an actual title contender. But as it seems to go with
them, the inconsistencies caught up, and the roller coaster started. It's hard
to project anything when it comes to OKC because the team's variance can be so
extreme. The Thunder might be a real playoff threat in the West, and they have
the DNA of a dangerous team. They also could be a first-round out. Neither
result would surprise anyone.
SEASON IN A SINGLE GAME: FEB. 14
At the time, it felt like a harmless loss. It was the night before the
All-Star break, and the Thunder were riding a four-game winning streak and had
won 12 of their past 13. They were establishing themselves as a top Western
contender, with impressive recent wins over Philly, Portland (twice), Milwaukee
and Houston. They rolled into New Orleans, and despite Anthony Davis'
leaving the game -- and the arena -- with an injury in the first half, OKC gave
up 65 points by halftime, never course-corrected and lost 131-122, despite 44
points from Russell Westbrook. It was foreshadowing of the rocky second half to
come, with sloppy defense, bad shooting and inconsistent, lethargic
performances mixed with inspired, solid wins.
WHY THEY'RE DANGEROUS:
It's a pretty straightforward thing with the Thunder: PG and Russ. That
kind of combo can score 75 combined on their own and completely take over a
series. Against top teams, the Thunder had one of the best records in the NBA
this season, and so much of that was because George and Westbrook elevated in
those big games. There are some concerns with George's health after he missed
the final game of the season with shoulder soreness, but at full tilt, the
Thunder can be fast and furious, with Westbrook and George roaring at you
relentlessly.
MOST DEFLECTIONS THIS SEASON
PLAYER
|
DEFLECTIONS
|
Paul George
|
292
|
James Harden
|
277
|
Thaddeus Young
|
263
|
Marcus Smart
|
227
|
Russell Westbrook
|
226
|
MOST LOOSE BALL RECOVERIES THIS SEASON
PLAYER
|
RECOVERIES
|
Paul George
|
160
|
Bradley Beal
|
139
|
Ben Simmons
|
135
|
Russell Westbrook
|
134
|
Kemba Walker
|
133
|
ONE BIG STAT AND WHY IT MATTERS:
If the Thunder is to make a deep run in the postseason, it will come down
to Westbrook and George, two of the best hustle players in the NBA. According
to NBA.com/stats, George leads the NBA in deflections and loose ball
recoveries, and Westbrook ranks in the top five in both categories.
GET TO KNOW: JERAMI GRANT
Paul George called
him the Thunder's X factor, and it's hard to disagree because Grant is integral
to the Thunder's success. His 3-point shooting has been a significant
development (39.2 percent), and his electric athleticism and elastic
versatility allow him to play in a ton of lineup combinations. If the Thunder
advance, it'll probably be because Grant played well in the series.
WHAT TO WATCH IN ROUND 1:
OKC vs. Enes Kanter.
If anyone knows how to attack Kanter, it's the Thunder. Coach Billy Donovan was
caught saying "Can't play Kanter" on the bench during the Thunder's
series against the Rockets in 2017. Without Jusuf Nurkic, the Thunder appear to
have a sizable advantage on the interior and could put Terry Stotts and the
Blazers in a bind with lineups. Plus, fellow former 'Stache Brother Steven Adams seems
to have Kanter's number.
4. HOUSTON
ROCKETS
2018-19 RECORD: 53-29
BPI ODDS VS. UTA: 56 percent
Rockets
Playoff Tickets
It took almost two months for the Rockets to get over their
hangover from coming this close in last year's West finals. After
digging a hole with an 11-14 start, Houston rode James Harden's
historic offensive dominance back into the upper crust of the Western Conference,
despite Chris Paul and Clint Capela
missing extended time due to injuries. Along the way, GM Daryl Morey dumped
some offseason mistakes (Carmelo Anthony, Michael
Carter-Williams) and added some quality role players (Austin Rivers, Kenneth
Faried, Iman Shumpert)
to improve the Rockets' depth.
SEASON IN A SINGLE GAME: JAN. 3
The signature moment of the Rockets' season -- and the Beard's campaign to
repeat as MVP -- happened in the final seconds of Houston's Jan. 3 overtime win
over the Warriors at Oracle Arena. With Klay Thompson contesting from the left
and Draymond Green closing
out, Harden launched his 23rd 3-point attempt of the night, drilling a
game-winning pullup from 28 feet. That was the exclamation point on a 44-point,
10-rebound, 15-assist performance, a ridiculous stat line that somehow didn't
seem too far beyond the norm for Harden during his historic run. Message sent:
Harden gives Houston a chance to beat anyone anywhere.
THERE'S TROUBLE BREWING:
Can Paul stay healthy throughout a deep playoff run? Can Harden maintain
his efficiency after a full season with a historically heavy workload? Paul, who will turn 34 during the
conference semifinals, has had his postseasons ended prematurely due to
injuries in two of the past three years. Rockets fans need no reminder of the
hamstring strain he suffered in the last minute of Houston's series-lead-taking
Game 5 win in last year's West finals. Harden's reputation for fading in the
playoffs is an exaggeration based on a couple awful elimination games. However,
his 3-point shooting, such a vital element of his scoring, bears watching. He
has shot sub-30 percent from deep the past two postseasons, perhaps a sign of
tired legs.
MOST UNASSISTED 3S IN A SEASON (NBA HISTORY)
SEASON
|
PLAYER
|
UNASSISTED 3S
|
2018-19
|
James Harden
|
317
|
2017-18
|
James Harden
|
196
|
2016-17
|
James Harden
|
179
|
2015-16
|
Stephen Curry
|
177
|
2018-19
|
Kemba Walker
|
146
|
ONE BIG STAT AND WHY IT MATTERS:
This season, Harden pushed the bounds of how much offense one player can
create, blending volume and efficiency at a level that only Wilt
Chamberlain has ever attained. Harden made 317 unassisted
3-pointers, obliterating his own NBA record set last season and more than
doubling the output of any other player in 2018-19.
GET TO KNOW: DANUEL HOUSE
JR.
There's good reason Morey eventually blinked in the contract standoff with
House, who was relegated to the G League when he reached his allotment of NBA
service days on his two-way deal and refused the Rockets' offer of a three-year
minimum contract. The 6-foot-7 forward gives Houston athleticism and has become
a knockdown spot-up shooter (41.6 percent from 3), making him an excellent
complementary piece. He has a net rating of plus-14.0 points per 100
possessions in 14 games since the Rockets signed him for the rest of the
season.
WHAT TO WATCH IN ROUND 1:
Clint Capela vs. Rudy Gobert.
Gobert, who will likely be the Defensive Player of the Year for the second
consecutive season, has to be a dominant deterrent on Harden's drives for the
Jazz to contain Houston's historically elite offense. Capela makes that task
even more difficult as a lob threat who has an uncanny chemistry with Harden,
who excels at the last-split-second dish for Capela to finish.
5. UTAH JAZZ
2018-19 RECORD: 50-32
BPI ODDS VS. HOU: 44 percent
Jazz Playoff
Tickets
Just as they did last season, the Jazz started slowly and
finished strong. Utah sat second-to-last in the Western Conference standings a
couple of months into the season, after stumbling to a 14-17 record through a
road-heavy early stretch of the schedule. Since the Jazz got in a groove,
however, they've played at an elite level. The NBA-best Bucks are the only team
with a better win percentage than the Jazz since Jan. 1.
SEASON IN A SINGLE GAME: JAN. 9
How fitting is it that you can point to a massive comeback as the turning point
in the Jazz's season? Utah overcame a 21-point deficit to roll to a 106-93 win
over the Magic on Jan. 9. The victory pulled the Jazz's record to 21-21 and
jump-started a six-game winning streak. The Jazz rallied with two essential
elements to playing to their peak potential: spectacular scoring by Donovan
Mitchell (22 of 33 points in the second half, including 16 in the fourth
quarter) and dominant defense (held the Magic to 30 points after halftime).
WHY THEY'RE DANGEROUS:
Good news: Utah went 18-6 after the All-Star break, which was the NBA's
third-best record in that span. Bad news: The Rockets (20-5) had the league's
best record after the break. But the Jazz are an elite defensive team with a
star in Mitchell who
has proved he's capable of winning a playoff series.
LOWEST FG% ALLOWED AT THE RIM (2018-19)
PLAYER
|
TEAM
|
FG%
ALLOWED |
Derrick Favors
|
UTAH
|
50.1
|
Hassan Whiteside
|
MIA
|
50.7
|
Ivica Zubac
|
LAL/LAC
|
51.5
|
JaVale McGee
|
LAL
|
52.2
|
Brook Lopez
|
MIL
|
52.6
|
Rudy Gobert
|
UTAH
|
52.9
|
Serge Ibaka
|
TOR
|
52.9
|
ONE BIG STAT AND WHY IT MATTERS:
Rudy Gobert and Derrick
Favors play significant roles in Utah's interior defense. According
to Second Spectrum, Favors leads the NBA in field goal percentage allowed at
the rim, and Gobert ranks tied for sixth (min. 250 attempts). Gobert has also
defended the most shots at the rim this season.
GET TO KNOW: ROYCE O'NEALE
The reserve swingman's path to the NBA included stints in Germany, Spain
and Lithuania before he made the Jazz's roster at the start of last season.
O'Neale has established himself as an essential role player: He's the epitome
of a 3-and-D: O'Neale shoots 38.6 percent from long distance and, at 6-foot-6,
226 pounds, has the strength and versatility to guard multiple positions.
WHAT TO WATCH IN ROUND 1:
Joe Ingles'
jumper. The Jazz need Ingles to be a scoring threat to have a shot to beat the
Rockets. It's not a coincidence that Ingles had a career night -- 27 points,
7-of-9 from 3-point range -- in Utah's lone win over the Rockets in last year's
West semifinals. He averaged 14.5 points and shot 58.3 percent on 3s in the
Jazz's two wins over the Rockets this season, compared to 8.0 points on 33
percent long-range shooting in Utah's two losses to Houston.
EASTERN CONFERENCE PLAYOFF PREVIEW
1. MILWAUKEE
BUCKS
2018-19 RECORD: 60-22
BPI ODDS VS. DET: 94 percent
Armed with a new head coach, a two-way superstar and an
edict to shoot 3-pointers at will, the Bucks are no longer the cute story or
the ones who got away. Giannis Antetokounmpo's metamorphosis from doe-eyed,
gangly rookie to MVP front-runner has led the Bucks to a league-best record of
60-22. Still, Milwaukee has not escaped the first round of the playoffs since
2001.
SEASON IN A SINGLE GAME: MARCH 17
Milwaukee has won a league-best 45 games by double figures -- by the way, every
other team to pull that off won a title -- but a close loss against an East
rival best sums up its immediate future. Although Antetokounmpo scored a
career-high 52 points, the Bucks fell to the 76ers 130-125. Joel Embiid's
40 points were supported by 66 from his fellow starters. The Bucks' non-Greek
starters, on the other hand, combined for just 47 points. Antetokounmpo will
continue to put up big numbers in the postseason as he did last year against
the Celtics, but the Bucks' success hinges on the play of Khris
Middleton, Eric Bledsoe, Brook Lopez and
their deep bench.
past the No. 1 team
in the East 130-125.
THERE'S TROUBLE BREWING:
The Bucks glided through the first few months of the season with only minor
scrapes and bruises. Then Antetokounmpo's knee soreness began to irritate him,
and a sprained ankle caused him to miss two games in March. Sterling
Brown hurt his wrist. Malcolm
Brogdon has been out since March 15 with a minor plantar fascia
tear that is expected to sideline him until at least the second round. Nikola
Mirotic fractured his thumb. Tony Snell sprained
his ankle. The good news for Milwaukee is that every player except Donte
DiVincenzo (out for the season with bilateral heel bursitis)
will likely be healthy for the postseason. After aggravating a week-old ankle
sprain on March 28, Antetokounmpo limped into the middle of a scrum of
reporters and said, "As long as we stay healthy, we are going to be
fine."
MOST UNASSISTED DUNKS IN A SEASON (PAST 20 YEARS)
SEASON
|
PLAYER
|
UNASSISTED
DUNKS |
2018-19
|
G. Antetokounmpo
|
116
|
2006-07
|
Dwight Howard
|
95
|
2004-05
|
Shaquille O'Neal
|
93
|
ONE BIG STAT AND WHY IT MATTERS:
Giannis has been a dominant force all season, recording 116 unassisted dunks in
2018-19, the most in a season the past 20 years. In fact, Giannis is the only
player with at least 100 unassisted dunks in that span. This is one of the
reasons Giannis is averaging 17.5 points in the paint per game this season,
most by any player since Shaquille O'Neal in the early 2000s.
GET TO KNOW: BROOK LOPEZ
The Bucks seemingly stumbled into a deal with the perfect center for their MVP
contender. Lopez joined the Bucks on a one-year deal at below-market price.
Since then, Lopez's lights-out 3-point shooting has caught the attention of the
league. He routinely pulls up from near the logo and is shooting 36 percent
from deep, which helps stretch the floor for Antetokounmpo. But in the
playoffs, it will be Lopez's defense the Bucks will be calling on. As the Bucks
face off against the likes of Al Horford, Marc Gasol and
Joel Embiid, Lopez will play a crucial role manning the inside. Although he's a
bit slow and clunky, Lopez is big and disciplined, and his paint presence often
discourages ball handlers from driving. He doesn't need to win his matchup
every night, thanks to Giannis, but he does need to continue delivering quality
contributions on both sides of the ball, as he has all season. If he does,
Lopez should be in line for a hefty raise in free agency.
WHAT TO WATCH IN ROUND 1:
Position less bigs. Blake Griffin hobbled
to the end of the regular season, sitting out the final game with a sore knee.
Antetokounmpo has battled knee soreness of his own but heads into the playoffs
healthy and rested, sitting two of the Bucks' past three games. The Pistons'
upset hopes hang on Griffin, who has struggled with injuries in recent
postseasons and hasn't won a playoff series since 2015. In the teams' four
meetings so far this season, Griffin averaged 24.3 points, 8.3 rebounds and 7
assists. The Bucks still won by an average of 15 points.
8. DETROIT
PISTONS
2018-19 RECORD: 41-41
BPI ODDS VS. MIL: 6 percent
The 2018-19 Pistons are one of the streakiest teams in recent memory, putting
together four winning streaks of at least four games and four losing streaks of
at least four games. They alternated between just over and just under the .500
mark the entire season, unable to move far in either direction. The team's
foundation is its two strong big men -- Andre
Drummond and Blake Griffin -- but the team's streakiness is
tied almost entirely to its hot-and-cold perimeter shooting. The Pistons are
unlikely to beat the top-seeded Bucks in a series but have the ability to steal
a game or two if the shooters are on.
SEASON IN A SINGLE GAME: MARCH 3
The Pistons are built around Drummond and Griffin, one to control the paint and
the other to provide dynamic offense, and they can be tough to handle when
their perimeter players are on. This was epitomized in their March 3 overtime
win over the Raptors, in which they clicked at every phase. Drummond notched as
many rebounds and combined blocks/steals as Marc Gasol and Pascal Siakam combined,
Griffin turned in 27 points on 21 shots, point guards Reggie
Jackson and Ish Smith combined
for 28 points and 12 assists, and shooters Wayne
Ellington and Luke Kennard knocked
down seven 3s on their way to 30 points. That was the Pistons firing on all
cylinders.
WHY THEY'RE DANGEROUS:
It all comes down to the bigs. Drummond is huge, athletic and a vacuum on the
glass, while Griffin -- if his sore left knee doesn't give him too much trouble
-- is still springy enough and has a versatile face-up game that is difficult
for many traditional fours to handle. The Pistons rely on their bigs to create
mismatches that put their perimeter players in advantageous situations.
MOST POINTS PER DIRECT HANDOFF THIS SEASON
TEAM
|
PTS PER
|
Houston Rockets
|
1.06
|
Detroit Pistons
|
1.05
|
Philadelphia 76ers
|
1.05
|
ONE BIG STAT AND WHY IT MATTERS:
The bread and butter of the Pistons' offense is the dribble handoff. According
to Second Spectrum, Detroit averages 1.05 points per direct handoff, tied with
the 76ers for second best in the NBA. Only the Rockets have higher handoff
efficiency than the Pistons.
GET TO KNOW: WAYNE ELLINGTON
The Pistons can win only if their shooters are knocking down shots, and the
most consistent shooter on the team is Ellington. He was acquired by the
Pistons midseason, and he ended the season by knocking down 39 percent from
behind the arc to average 15.6 PPG and 3.5 3PG in his last 11 games. Drummond
and Griffin should draw the defense and get Ellington some open looks, and if
he knocks them down, the Pistons can steal a game or two.
WHAT TO WATCH IN ROUND 1:
Blake vs. Giannis. The Pistons can compete only if Griffin stays healthy enough
to win his fair share of one-on-one matchups. He has been aggressive in his
four matchups with Antetokounmpo this season, taking 71 field goal attempts and
dishing 28 assists in those games. Unfortunately, Antetokounmpo has forced him
into horrible inefficiency, as he made only 42.3 percent of those shots and
matched his assist numbers with 28 turnovers in those four games.
2. TORONTO
RAPTORS
2018-19 RECORD: 58-24
BPI ODDS VS. ORL: 89 percent
Raptors
Playoff Tickets
The combination of trading for Kawhi Leonard and
arch nemesis LeBron James leaving for the Western Conference had fans north of
the border dreaming of a trip to the NBA Finals. Nothing that has happened
since has led them to think otherwise, as Toronto has the league's second-best
record even though Leonard and Kyle Lowry missed
large chunks of the season.
SEASON IN A SINGLE GAME: DEC. 12
Yes, Leonard didn't play, but that's kind of the point. The Raptors have been
almost as good when Leonard and Lowry don't play as when they do this season,
and this night showed what they can look like at top gear, as they dismantled
the Warriors -- who had their four All-Stars all playing. This win, combined
with a victory over the Warriors in Toronto that completed the season sweep,
will give the Raptors confidence that if they can make it to the Finals, they
can make it a series.
THERE'S TROUBLE BREWING:
All season, the Raptors have looked like two teams: one when Leonard has the
ball and one when he doesn't. Some of that is because Leonard prefers to play a
more deliberate, isolation style, while the Raptors ping the ball around more
frequently when he isn't on the court. There have been only a handful of games
all season in which the Raptors have had their full allotment of players
available. If there is one weakness to point to heading into the playoffs, it
is that lack of time to sort everything out.
ONE BIG STAT AND WHY IT MATTERS:
Don't let the Raptors get out and run, as they are the NBA's best team in
transition. According to Second Spectrum, Toronto's 1.22 points per chance in
transition leads all teams by a relatively wide margin. They take advantage of
that often, as their 1,639 valid chances in transition ranks fifth in the
league.
GET TO KNOW: PASCAL SIAKAM
Siakam, who should be the clear winner of the NBA's Most Improved Player award,
has not only improved across the board but also has helped keep the Raptors humming
while having Lowry and Leonard missing time this season. He should be an
All-Star next season and could be the player who puts Toronto over the top and
gets the Raptors to their first NBA Finals.
WHAT TO WATCH IN ROUND 1:
Aaron Gordon vs.
Siakam. Frankly, there isn't a lot about this series that is exciting, but
seeing two of the more athletic young forwards in the league go back-and-forth
over the course of a best-of-seven series will provide at least one thing for
neutral fans to lock on to.
7. ORLANDO MAGIC
2018-19 RECORD: 42-40
BPI ODDS VS. TOR: 11 percent
Magic Playoff
Tickets
After six seasons in the lottery, the Magic returned to the
playoffs under new head coach Steve Clifford thanks to a second-half surge.
Eleven games below .500 on Jan. 29, Orlando went 22-9 the next 31 games to
clinch the Southeast Division championship and a playoff spot.
SEASON IN A SINGLE GAME: MARCH 26
In a crucial matchup of two in-state rivals vying for the Southeast crown, the
Magic went south down Florida's Turnpike and helped spoil Dwyane Wade's
night by holding the Heat to 42 percent shooting. First-time All-Star Nikola
Vucevic had 24 points, 16 rebounds and 5 assists as all five
Orlando starters and sixth man Terrence Ross scored
in double figures. But the Magic, per custom, won with defense, holding Miami
scoreless for nearly three minutes down the stretch to win a tight game.
WHY THEY'RE DANGEROUS:
You won't get anything easily against Orlando. Like all of Clifford's teams,
the Magic prioritize taking away high-value looks at the rim and beyond the
3-point line. Orlando is one of four teams that rank in the top 10 in keeping
opponents from shooting in both of those locations, per Cleaning
the Glass, and forces the fifth-highest rate of midrange attempts in
between. The Magic also excel on the defensive glass, ranking third, and boast
the league's second-best transition defense, according to
Cleaning the Glass. Any score against Orlando will be hard-earned.
ONE BIG STAT AND WHY IT MATTERS:
The Magic are hitting the postseason on a defensive tear. Orlando sports a
105.0 defensive efficiency since the start of February -- best in the NBA --
and went 21-9 in that stretch to charge into the playoffs. The Magic ranked
16th in defensive efficiency before this stretch, at 109.0 points per 100
possessions.
GET TO KNOW: JONATHAN
ISAAC
Isaac is the quintessential Orlando draft pick of recent vintage: long, young
and more athletic than skilled offensively. At 21, he has become the Magic's
starting power forward in his second season. Expect Isaac to offer a taste of
what's to come at some point during the postseason.
WHAT TO WATCH IN ROUND 1:
The benches. The second unit has been a big factor in Orlando's second-half
surge. With new backup guard Michael Carter-Williams on the court, Orlando has
outscored opponents by an incredible 13.0 points per 100 possessions, according to NBA Advanced Stats. Meanwhile, Toronto's second
unit has gone from a strength last season to something of a liability in
2018-19. If the Magic are to pull the upset, their bench will have to dominate
this matchup. That probably means a strong series for former Raptor Terrence
Ross, whose 15.1 PPG ranked fifth among qualified reserve scorers.
3. PHILADELPHIA
76ERS
2018-19 RECORD: 51-31
BPI ODDS VS. BKN: 79 percent
76ers Playoff
Tickets
Philadelphia has gone through three iterations this season:
the one that left training camp with the same starting lineup as last year
intact; the one that dramatically changed when two of those starters, Dario Saric and Robert
Covington, were traded for Jimmy Butler in
November; and the final one after the Sixers traded a large chunk of the roster
at February's deadline, adding Tobias Harris and remaking virtually all of the
bench.
SEASON IN A SINGLE GAME: MARCH 20
Not only did the Sixers finally get a win over the Celtics for the first time
this season, but this game also showed the pros and cons of their recreated
roster for the world to see. The Phantastic 5 -- Ben Simmons,
Joel Embiid, JJ Redick, Butler and Harris -- combined to score 110 of
Philadelphia's 118 points on the night, proving just how overpowering they can
be to opposing defenses. At the same time, this win highlighted how limited the
rest of Philadelphia's roster is in the wake of those moves.
THERE'S TROUBLE BREWING:
There are two glaring issues with Philadelphia's roster: a lack of shooting and
a lack of a credible bench. Redick and Harris are terrific shooters, but the
rest of the starting lineup is either inconsistent (Butler and Embiid) or
nonexistent (Simmons) from deep. The bench, meanwhile, has only one player
-- Mike Scott--
that opposing teams are legitimately concerned about come playoff time. The
other options -- James Ennis, T.J.
McConnell, Jonathon
Simmons and Boban
Marjanovic -- come with serious limitations that could be
exploited by the elite competition Philadelphia will need to surpass in the
postseason.
ONE BIG STAT AND WHY IT MATTERS:
The lineup consisting of Harris, Redick, Butler, Embiid and Simmons has the
fourth-best net efficiency this season among five-man lineups, behind only two
Golden State lineups and a Pacers lineup (minimum 150 minutes played together).
GET TO KNOW: MIKE SCOTT
Given how thin Philadelphia's bench is, Scott is going to have a significant
role for Philadelphia as the lone reserve opposing teams are truly worried
about. Scott has his flaws -- he can space out defensively and is prone to
making mistakes -- but he's a lights-out shooter who is knocking down 39
percent of his 3s this season. On a team starved for outside shooting that
alone makes Scott a vital piece.
WHAT TO WATCH IN ROUND 1:
D'Angelo
Russell and Spencer
Dinwiddie vs. Philly's defense. If this series is going to be
interesting, it's going to be because Russell and Dinwiddie, Brooklyn's
two-headed monster at point guard, have success attacking the 76ers' defense.
Philadelphia has struggled to stop scoring point guards all season, and the
Nets have two of them. If Brooklyn can exploit that weakness, this is a series.
If Philadelphia can shore it up? Well, things get bleak quickly for the Nets.
6. BROOKLYN NETS
2018-19 RECORD: 42-40
BPI ODDS VS. PHI: 21 percent
Nets Playoff
Tickets
Back in August, you couldn't find many people outside of
downtown Brooklyn who would predict a playoff berth for the Nets. The franchise
averaged just 23 wins the past three seasons. But thanks to a breakout year
from first-time All-Star D'Angelo Russell, Brooklyn became one of the biggest
surprises of this NBA season. Russell and the Nets followed the blueprint
established by head coach Kenny Atkinson (play with pace; take shots from
behind the arc and in the paint; defend the 3-point line and the rim) and
weathered major injuries (Spencer Dinwiddie, Caris LeVert)
to make the playoffs for the first time since 2015.
SEASON IN A SINGLE GAME: DEC. 7
Riding an eight-game losing streak with the season seemingly slipping away, the
Nets got a clutch performance from Russell to secure an overtime win in
Toronto. The game encapsulated the Nets' season, with Russell hitting clutch
shots and Dinwiddie scoring off the bench to compensate for the absence of a
key player (LeVert). Russell scored 29 points -- including six in overtime --
with five assists, and Dinwiddie added 17 points and eight assists off the
bench help Brooklyn snap a 12-game losing streak against Toronto. The win
seemed to spark the Nets; they won 19 of their next 24 to salvage the season
and set up an unexpected run to the playoffs.
WHY THEY'RE DANGEROUS:
If the Nets can put Russell in position to attack the paint and create open
looks for his teammates, they have a chance to make things uncomfortable for
the 76ers. Brooklyn went 11-7 when Russell had at least nine assists this
season, per Basketball Reference.
ONE BIG STAT AND WHY IT MATTERS:
While Philly's bench is among its weaknesses, Brooklyn's thrives. The Nets have
received 47.8 bench points per game this season, and their ability to go 11
players deep makes this bench special. Brooklyn is one of two teams -- the
Nuggets are the other -- that have had 11 players surpass the 1,000-minute
threshold this season.
GET TO KNOW: JARRETT ALLEN
If the Nets are going to make things interesting against Philly, Allen will
probably play a key role. The Nets' shot-blocking 21-year-old center will
likely have the unenviable task of guarding Joel Embiid (Embiid had 39 points
and 13 rebounds in Philadelphia's most recent game against the Nets). Allen
will also be vital for Brooklyn on the other end of the floor: According to
Second Spectrum, the pick-and-roll combination of Russell and Allen is the
second-most-run play across the NBA (1,535 plays), just behind James Harden in
isolation (1,548).
WHAT TO WATCH IN ROUND 1:
Dinwiddie and LeVert off the bench. Dinwiddie averaged 23.8 points per game
while shooting 58 percent from the floor in four games against the Sixers.
LeVert has found his shot late in the regular season after missing nearly three
months with a foot injury. He averaged 16 points per game on 49 percent
shooting in the final eight games of the season.
4. BOSTON
CELTICS
2018-19 RECORD: 49-33
BPI ODDS VS. IND: 66 percent
Celtics
Playoff Tickets
The only consistent thing about the Celtics this season has
been their inconsistency. Boston entered the season as the team favored to
replace Cleveland atop the Eastern Conference, but it has been haunted by
uneven play and back-and-forth between players on the team in the media. Still,
the Celtics enter the playoffs as a team few are willing to count out because
of their depth and playoff experience -- though that depth took a huge blow
with Marcus Smart being
knocked out for the first two rounds because of a torn oblique muscle.
SEASON IN A SINGLE GAME (OR TWO!): NOV. 16-17
We're going to cheat a little and do two games here because it perfectly
illustrates the bizarre nature of Boston's season. Beating Toronto in overtime
might have been Boston's best win of the season and was a terrific performance.
Then the Celtics lost the next night to the Jazz -- a reasonable loss,
especially on a back-to-back -- and after the game, coach Brad Stevens went in
on his team (a rarity for him), and Kyrie Irving (in
what became a theme of the season) had pointed words for the team's young
players. That Jekyll and Hyde act over those two days sums up the Celtics'
2018-19 campaign.
THERE'S TROUBLE BREWING:
Wait, you mean trouble is brewing in Boston? We kid. Anyone who has watched
even a minute of Celtics basketball this season is well aware of the tumult and
turmoil. And, as the postseason arrives, the heart of the Celtics -- Smart --
will all but certainly miss at least the first two rounds. Smart has been a
legitimate first-team All-Defense-caliber player this season, and has taken
large steps forward both in his overall field goal percentage (42.2 percent)
and 3-point percentage (36.6 percent). More importantly, he is the obvious emotional
leader of the Celtics. Losing him could be a death knell to this team's title
chances. ONE BIG STAT AND WHY IT MATTERS:
The Celtics have one of the NBA's best closers in Irving, who ranks among the
top of the league in several clutch-time stats. Irving has scored or assisted
on 57 percent of the Celtics' points in clutch time this season (defined as the
final five minutes of the fourth quarter/overtime and the score with five
points).
GET TO KNOW: JAYLEN BROWN IN
AN EXPANDED ROLE
If the Celtics are going to survive Smart's absence, it will be because Brown
can step into the role Smart has vacated. Brown has been excellent off the
bench the past few months and has arguably been Boston's third-best player
since the start of 2019. He'll need to remain at that level if the Celtics have
any hope of persevering without Smart.
WHAT TO WATCH IN ROUND 1:
Gordon
Hayward/Brown vs. Domantas
Sabonis/Tyreke Evans.
Indiana is going to have difficulty keeping up with Boston in this series from
a scoring standpoint. One way the Pacers can is if Sabonis and Evans can give
them some scoring pop off the bench. Hayward and Brown have been among Boston's
best and most consistent players for weeks now, and if they can continue to
play that way, an already difficult road for Indiana to make this series
competitive will get that much more difficult.
5. INDIANA
PACERS
2018-19 RECORD: 48-34
BPI ODDS VS. BOS: 34 percent
This was essentially a tale of two seasons for the Pacers,
who in one critical moment went from vying for a top-three seed in the
top-heavy East to treading water as the season came to a close. Their defense is
one of the league's best and kept them in most games down the stretch. But the
jury is still out on whether the Pacers -- without injured All-Star and
franchise player Victor Oladipo --
have enough late-game scoring to close out contests come playoff time.
SEASON IN A SINGLE GAME: JAN. 23
Indiana's game on Jan. 23 summed up its season about as well as any other
could. The Pacers were leading first-place Toronto in front of their home crowd
when Oladipo blew out his right quad, a devastating injury that not only ended
the All-Star's season but also likely ended Indiana's chances of making a
significant playoff run. Yet for how deflating that image of Oladipo being
hauled off on a stretcher was, the hard-nosed Pacers battled and held on to win
in his absence -- something they weren't built to do a season ago, when they
went a dismal 0-7 in contests without him.
WHY THEY'RE DANGEROUS:
Even without Oladipo, no one should be shocked if the Pacers find a way to beat
Boston in the first round. After all, they took LeBron and the Cavs to a Game 7
last year (albeit with Oladipo), and the Celtics have looked shaky for much of
the season. Losing the battle for home-court advantage stings, but it might
help that the Pacers' best perimeter shooter, Doug
McDermott, has shot the ball much better on the road than at home.
Indiana -- 14-4 when hitting 12 3s or more -- is hard to beat when it connects
from distance.
FEWEST POINTS ALLOWED (2018-19)
TEAM
|
PPG ALLOWED
|
Indiana Pacers
|
104.7
|
Miami Heat
|
105.9
|
Memphis Grizzlies
|
106.1
|
Utah Jazz
|
106.5
|
Orlando Magic
|
106.6
|
ONE BIG STAT AND WHY IT MATTERS:
If the score stays under 100 points, there's a good chance that Indy is coming
out on top. The Pacers are 22-1 this season when limiting opponents to 97
points or fewer. The Pacers also held their opponents to 104.7 points per game
during the regular season, the fewest in the NBA.
GET TO KNOW: BOJAN
BOGDANOVIC
Bogdanovic was vitally important for Indiana last season as the team's top
defensive option on LeBron. But since Oladipo's injury, he has been the Pacers'
No. 1 option on offense, initiating sets as a pick-and-roll ball handler and
averaging about 21 points per game -- up from 16 per game before Oladipo was
sidelined. The Pacers need Bogdanovic to play well to win the series, but the
forward averaged just 13.5 points against Boston this season, his lowest
scoring average against any Eastern Conference team.
WHAT TO WATCH IN ROUND 1:
The Pacers' traps vs. Kyrie Irving. If the All-Star guard gets it going, the
Pacers might have to throw different looks at him to break his scoring rhythm.
But if they opt to trap, will that effectively slow him down? Indiana misplayed
an Irving screen-and-roll with Al Horford in the closing seconds of a March 29
game, allowing Irving to slither all the way to the rim for a game-winning
bucket. But generally, the Pacers have struggled when trying to trap,
surrendering 1.21 points per possession when trapping this season, the
second-worst rate in the NBA, according to Second Spectrum.
No comments:
Post a Comment