Thunder-Spurs Now Best Two Out of Three

Say what we want after a Thunder loss, there’s just not that much difference between these two teams. In the OKC Thunder era the teams are now 8-8 in sixteen post season games to date. We talk about Gregg Popovich being the second best coach of all-time, but Scott Brooks and Billy Donovan haven’t seemed overwhelmed by it all.

Billy Donovan, like his superstar, had a great Game 4. He went with Kanter and Adams late. It worked. He went with Randy Foye as the backup point guard in the second half and it paid a huge dividend with a big Foye three in the critical fourth period. He continued to show faith in the mercurial Dion Waiters and that worked as Waiters was superb going 7-11 for 17 points. He apparently got through to Russell Westbrook he needs to be more of a distributor than a shot chucker. And, of course, when your alpha stud hoss goes for 41 in a must win game—the coach always seems smarter. Never forget, players make the coach.

So now back to San Antonio for Game 5 and these games are now being played in shorter day intervals which one would think would be to the Thunder’s advantage with their youth.

Tim Duncan looks dead. He literally looks dead right now. We’ll see if being home will help him out in Game 5 or if Steven Adams continues his domination in this series.

Danny Green, like Tim Duncan, didn’t score a point in Game 4. That can’t happen  from a Spurs’ standpoint.

LaMarcus Aldridge came back to Planet Earth in Games 3 & 4 going a collective 16-39 as the Thunder’s defense has been pretty solid since the Game 1 nightmare.

Tony Parker continued his steady play in Games 3 & 4 and remains my Spurs’ X Factor. Dion Waiters is my Thunder X Factor, and yes, that makes me nervous as a Thunder fan. But still, he rocked in Game 4.

But this series will be about Russell Westbrook from this point forward. Is he ready to take this Thunder team to the next level? Is he willing to play defense, distribute the ball, quit chucking threes, and make sure the alpha stud hoss and others get the ball in their sweet spots on the floor?

I’d much rather have 14 point, 15 assist, 7 rebound Russell Westbrook than 31 shots Russell Westbrook every day of the week.

If Tony Parker is Peyton Manning in this series then Westbrook is Cam Newton.

Cam Newton needs to get his alpha stud hoss his touches and Steven Adams involved.

Best two out of three now. Most of us had this series going either six or seven games so we shouldn’t be surprised.

 

 

 

 

Durant’s 41 Leads Thunder Past Spurs in Game 4

Oklahoma City Thunder 111 – San Antonio Spurs 97

Series tied at 2-2

It was a combination of good things for the Thunder in the fourth period on Mothers’ Day night inside the Chesapeake Energy Arena. First and foremost the Thunder entered the fourth trailing 81-77, but instead of withering and shrinking from the moment…the Thunder roared like a lion.

Make no mistake about this, if the Thunder had lost this game their season was over. It was a time for the stars to lead, yet get others involved. Mission accomplished on multiple fronts.

Kevin Durant was superb tying his career post season high with 41 points of which 17 came in the fourth period when the Thunder got it going and won the fourth by a score 34-16.

Durant was 14-25 from the field and looked like a player who could be talked about as being one of the three best players on the planet in this game. He was unstoppable. He got to his spots, made his shots, and led his team to a win in a game they couldn’t lose.

Russell Westbrook had another horrible shooting night going 5-18, but he did other things, like making sure the stud hoss got the ball. Like making sure Steven Adams, Dion Waiters, Enes Kanter, and Serge Ibaka were part of the offense.

In all, five Thunder players scored in double figures. Adams double doubled with 16 and 11. Dion Waiters was magnificent scoring 17 points on a 7-11 shooting night. Enes Kanter scored 11 and snagged 8 rebounds.

Westbrook all told had 15 of the Thunder’s 23 assists doing what your point guard is supposed to be doing…namely, distributing the ball.

If Serge Ibaka had scored two more points the Thunder would have had six different players in double figures. Make this clear, the Thunder need Durant getting the most touches, but they also need Adams, Waiters, Ibaka, and Kanter involved offensively.

Randy Foye played the backup point guard minutes in the second half and chipped in five points after rookie Cam Payne went scoreless in his first half minutes.

Aldridge and Leonard both suffered tough shooting nights going a combined 15-37 from the field. Leonard and Tony Parker both scored 22 points on the night.

Of note, Tim Duncan went scoreless in a post season game for the first time in his career.

The series moves back to San Antonio for Game 5 on Tuesday night in what to date has easily been the best post season series so far this season.

Same things need to happen on Tuesday night. Stars need to lead, but at the same time give the other players a chance to get it going and keep it going.

Share the ball. Finish. Play their asses off.

If they do that and lose-no regrets.

Mike Jackson

 

 

It Needs To Be More Than Just Durant and Westbrook for the Thunder

Just read a piece by Anthony Slater over at newsok in relation to Kevin Durant lauding David West for playing for the Spurs for a ‘paltry’ $1.4 million this season instead of pocketing $11 million for another season in Indiana.

Yeah, I agree, cool. I’ve always admired Duncan, Parker, and Ginobli myself. The way they’ve taken less money to help the team with salary cap issues. The way Ginobli, unlike both James Harden and Reggie Jackson embraced the Sixth Man role to help his team win rings. I’m a throwback guy, I’ve always loved it. I love Popovich.

But here would be my questions to Kevin Durant, if David West had signed to play in Oklahoma City this season would you and Russell ever have let him touch the ball?

Would David West get more than the one shot Steven Adams got in Game 3 after his playoff career breakout game in Game 2?

Would David West have gotten more than the six shots the completely offensively capable Enes Kanter got in Game 3?

Would David West actually be allowed to touch the ball in late game situations?

My point is this, please give me a break, Kevin Durant.

Sam Presti has put together a nice stable of bigs in Serge Ibaka, Enes Kanter, and Steven Adams. All three, unlike Kendrick P:erkins, can catch and shoot. Adams has become a very nice pick and roll player. Kanter can either pick and roll or pick and pop. Ibaka is pretty effective on pick and pop. Yet, they never see the ball enough.

I know it’s Mothers Day, I shouldn’t use this type of language, but give me a f–king break. If it’s not about money, or ego, touches—then why isn’t former yacht party pioneer James Harden here doing the Manu Ginobli thing? Why isn’t self proclaimed minimalist Reggie Jackson here doing the Ginobli thing as well?

You know why. I know why. Because in our current culture both money and ego trump most everything else most of the time. If James Harden had stayed in OKC and embraced the Ginobli template we’re not even talking David West.

Please, spare me. I’m fairly certain Sam Presti was completely on board with Harden being Manu.

Granted, OKC has issues with their backup point guard position and they’re in need of a two way shooting guard with more consistency than Dion Waiters. But what really needs to happen is that both Kevin Durant and Russell Westbrook need to trust their teammates.

Kevin Durant and Russell Westbrook need to be finishing games in the last six minutes versus turning the ball over.

Kevin Durant and Russell Westbrook need to be doing the little things like Kawhi Leonard which don’t get you triple doubles, scoring titles, or 40–50-90s. Little things which might not get you the top dollar endorsements, but gets your team a ring. Little things. Hard working things. Blue collar lunchpail things. Claw, scratch, and bleed things.

Durant and Westbrook need to be making plays in the last six minutes of close games because anyone who’s watched the Thunder knows the entire system of the Thunder has been set in stone with these two players getting the majority of touches.

So while my old Vince Lombardi, Red Auerbach,  or even Gregg Popovich heart is warmed by Kevin Durant saying money isn’t everything. I’m somewhat calling bullshit on this and saying you and Russell Westbrook need to start making plays in the last six minutes of games.

And while the David West story does warm my heart, I ask again, would he have ever touched the ball in Oklahoma City when it mattered?

 

Spurs Wrestle Back Home Court in Game 3

Before this series started I wrote down Tony Parker as my X Factor in this series. Not because I think he’s still one of the game’s best point guards, but more because at this stage in his career I felt how he got the Spurs into their offense would be a big deal as this series moves along.

Parker wasn’t the player of the game in Game 3. That would be Kawhi Leonard who made the biggest play of the night with a series changing offensive rebound with twenty seconds left which clinched a hard earned 100-96 win for the Spurs.

But here’s what Tony Parker was and Russell Westbrook wasn’t– pressure time functional. Sure, he scored 19 points adding 8 rebounds and 5 assists, but what Parker did was more. He made sure his two big guns in LaMarcus Aldridge and Kawhi Leonard got their touches. He made sure the offence ran thru their shots, not his. He made sure the ball moved and the Spurs got into their offense at the most critical times in the game. In a word, Tony Parker did what your point guard is supposed to do in taking care of the ball and distributing the ball.

For those of you not keeping tabs, the aged Tony Parker now has 23 assists to 2 turnovers in the first three games of this series. Nothing spectacular, but functional. He understands his role.

Before this series started I also wrote ‘Can Kevin Durant and Russell Westbrook Actually Do This?’ What I meant by this was can these two stars together lead the Thunder thru the tough spots in the last six minutes of pressure packed playoff games against good teams like the Spurs, Warriors, and Cavs?

On Friday night in Game 3 the answer was a resounding no. They withered in the game’s final minutes. They made three horrible live ball turnovers in the game’s final four minutes which you just absolutely cannot do against the Spurs. Plus, and let’s be candid, Kawhi Leonard just outworked Kevin Durant for that game clinching offensive rebound which sealed the game.

When it mattered most the game’s biggest plays weren’t made by Westbrook or Durant, they were made by Leonard, Aldridge, and Parker.

I’m not a Russell Westbrook basher, but his overall decision making on Friday night wasn’t good. Steven Adams got one shot in the entire game. Enes Kanter only got a handful more. Combined–Adams, Kanter, and Ibaka got 15 shots off in the game. Unacceptable, especially on a night when Russell Westbrook was 10-31 from the field.

Both Westbrook and Durant had five turnovers on the night. Again–Tony Parker has two turnovers in the series.

Do the playoff math. With this tough home loss, OKC would now have to win three of the final four games of the series. That’s a very tough assignment against a Spurs team with the better coach, the smarter point guard, and two stars in Leonard and Aldridge who are both having a very nice series.

This was a game Oklahoma City just really had to have and when it mattered most it was the same old Thunder we saw time and time again in the fourth quarter this season. Not a team making plays, but instead turning the ball over and shrinking from the moment.

Obviously, OKC is now in an absolute must win situation in Game 4 on Sunday night at the Chesapeake Energy Arena. If the Thunder lose this game the series is basically over in either five or six games.

Russell Westbrook and Kevin Durant have to show the world if they can ‘Actually Do This or Not’. It’s time to see if the two stars can be what Tony Parker and Kawhi Leonard will be for their team–namely, a functional point guard and a play making superstar who can make plays in the last four minutes of games against good teams.

Mike Jackson

Spurs On The Road

We all know San Antonio was a franchise best 67-15 this season while going 40-1 at home. On the road the Spurs went 27-14, but against Golden State, Cleveland, and OKC they were a collective 0-5 in these road games.

If you go through the Spurs’ entire season their best road win probably came at Miami or maybe the Clippers.

Until Tuesday night, the Thunder were winless in road games versus Golden State, Cleveland, and San Antonio going 0-5 as well. But the Thunder get Game 2 on the road and now the onus is on OKC to keep homecourt.

If you combine  2012, 2014, and this series with the two teams meeting, the Spurs are 1-5 on the road, while OKC is 2-6.

Road wins have been special when these two teams have met in post season. OKC won the iconic Game 5 in 2012 which propelled them to the Western Conference Championship in six games. In 2014, the Spurs clinched the Western Conference Championship in Oklahoma City in Game 6.

This week-end in on Mothers’ Days weekend should prove to provide some great moments. To date, OKC and the Spurs are overall 7-7 against each other in post season play.

2014 Game 6 in Oklahoma City

 

Getting Game 3 Game Face On

Excerpt from Confessions of an Internet Guru:

I’m not doing previews per se anymore. I feel they weaken the okcthunderground.com brand. There seems to be an infinite supply of  insecure young white guys on the internet doing them who basically don’t really know that much. They throw a few metrics around, but it’s clear they can’t beat Vegas, can’t feel the inner game, and can’t come to terms with the nuances of the game.

Sports are human endeavors played by humans, not circuit breakers, computer chips, or robots. I actually spoofed my own metric for the metric Trekkies over at Daily Thunder. I called it my TSN metric—mental toughness, snarl, and nasty. It was my brand. And, of course over the course of time, I basically throttled the DT Trekkies and Vegas with almost boring regularity. Especially satisfying was the throttling of a metrics troll who we’ll just call ‘J’. I own that one….lock, stock, and barrel. Just saying. Kind of like Trump owns Jeb.

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I don’t regurgitate stats. I look at them, but I look at other things as well. Matchups, pace, coaching adjustments, etc. So let’s see what both coaches had to say after Game 2.

I love this Popovich interview. He rolls his eyes even more at Berry Tramel and Dean Blevins than those of us who live in Oklahoma do. Look deep into Pop’s eyes for the disdainful internal sigh. His eyes are saying, “Who are these people?”

Billy Donovan Game 2 Postgame Interview. You can tell Donovan is a rookie NBA head coach. He’ll learn. In time — he’ll be rolling his eyes at Tramel and Blevins just like the rest of us.

2012 OKC Thunder – San Antonio Spurs Game 3 of the Western Conference Finals

Game 7’s are the most important games in any series odds wise. This Game 3 is a must because OKC has already won its one road game of the series. I would think it’s imperative OKC hold home court like they did in 2012 against the Spurs. The Thunder want no part of a Game 7 in San Antonio.

This is how it went back in 2012 when the Thunder returned to the Chesapeake Energy Arena down 2-0 in the Western Conference Finals.