Monday, May 30, 2022

3 and DA: Notes on the 2022 Conference Finals

     Following NBA basketball more closely, I've been stunned and saddened by the extent to which injury shapes the game. One day a team is putting on a show. Then, after what initially looks to the viewer like any other landing or stumble on the court, a key player screams in pain. It's a torn ACL. His season is over, he faces a long recovery, he may not return the same player he once was, and in the meantime the team has to compensate for his absence somehow. Then another player gets injured: out for weeks. Then another player gets injured: out during a crucial stretch. Losses mount. The team falls down the rankings. The show is over. They were contenders, fully healthy. Maybe next year. Or maybe age and contract intricacies and other circumstances put last year's contenders in the shadow of this year's contenders. From a distance, I thought it was the better team that eventually wins the championship. That's not exactly right. It's the better team that isn't too battered by the end of a long regular season and a high intensity postseason to prove it. 

The Heat, the number one seed in the East during the regular season, on the verge of elimination, limped into Boston for game 6. Tyler Herro, a player who achieved his stated goal of being named (almost unanimously) as the 6th Man of the Year, was shut down by the Celtics when he was healthy and on the court. Now he was out entirely with a groin injury. Kyle Lowry was in but not at 100% as he recovered from a hamstring injury. And their star, Jimmy Butler, struggling with a knee injury, hadn't been able to make much of an offensive impact in recent games in the series, and no one else on the team could score like he can. I didn't watch but I heard all about it the next day: I, along with most everyone else, had made the mistake of counting out Jimmy Butler, who scored 47 points to beat the Celtics on their home court. That's a star for you. (Compliments went out to the Heat medical staff.) 

Game 7 back in Miami. I made sure to watch. Boston looked healthier. They have a marquee tandem in Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown. And that defense, led by the Defensive Player of the Year, Marcus Smart. Yet with Jimmy Butler on the floor, one couldn't be so sure anymore. Could he do it twice in a row?

He came close to his hero numbers, leading in scoring for both teams again. Tyler Herro made a brief appearance somewhere in the middle of the game and never returned. The team didn't do so well on free throws, overall. Max Strus stepped out of bounds just barely so the refs took away his 3. But Bam Adebayo was fairly aggressive on the offensive end. Little by little the Heat came back from being down seventeen - a clutch 3 from Lowry, a clutch 3 from Strus, drawing offensive fouls, forcing turnovers - and had a chance to take the lead. It's the next part that is the subject of some debate: There are about 20 seconds left in the 4th quarter. Jimmy Butler, rather than attack the basket against Al Horford, who was on his heels, and Jaylen Brown, who had five fouls, took a 3. He's not the best 3 point shooter but a 3 would put the Heat ahead by 1 in the closing seconds. The ball hits iron and bounces off. Al Horford collects the rebound. Boston wins the series and the Eastern Conference Finals.

The Celtics are now heading West to face the Western Conference Finals champions: the Warriors. 

Oh, seems I forgot to mention the Warriors's success.

Years ago, when the Warriors, the hometown team, were first headed for the Finals, I wasn't there. I heard about it from a friend. He never talked basketball but suddenly he was criticizing the game like a veteran coach. I said: You fair weather fan! He heard the Warriors were winning so he slipped on a jersey! I told that story to everyone we knew. But it wasn't until I moved East that I bought my own team merchandise. The bubble playoffs finally hooked me - LeBron James's dunk on Russell Westbrook that sent him to the parking lot, Jamal Murray's perfect Jordanesque layup on James, along with the prominence of Black Lives Matter messaging - though the Warriors were nowhere to be seen that year. The team didn't make it to the postseason the next year either. I came into the fold as the organization was dealing with catastrophic injuries to key players. Steph Curry, the face of the franchise, was making a comeback after an extended period spent recovering. But Klay Thompson, another star and fellow 3 point shooting master, had just suffered a second injury that would keep him out another year. 

Even so, as I followed along in that first season after Curry's return, the franchise didn't seem completely adrift like certain others, I didn't fall into despair or frustration. Somehow it felt like there was a plan, moves being made in the background. And Thompson, who seemed pretty skilled based on the highlights I found, would return one day. Steph Curry won the scoring title. He spoke of the special distinction of sticking to one franchise for his entire career. The team ended the regular season strong. And after they lost in the first ever play-in tournament, he said farewell with a warning: "You don't want to see us next year." 

This year: Every Warriors player seemed to bring their best game to close out the Mavericks, making it the best Warriors W of the postseason. Luka Dončić didn't have an easy time, no smiling through the night here. Spencer Dinwiddie made me a little nervous, draining shot after shot. But Klay Thompson drained a few more, ending the night with 32 points. Draymond Green, another star, flexing. Andrew Wiggins, who had the play of the series and the dunk of the playoffs and a career highlight all in one: the dunk on Dončić. Jordan Poole, Kevon Looney.... And Steph Curry: The inaugural winner of the Western Conference Finals Magic Johnson MVP award.

Severe injuries presented major setbacks to the team's title aspirations. But they overcame them and, after another gentleman's sweep, now return to the NBA Finals, their sixth trip in eight years. Let's go, Warriors.


Monday, May 16, 2022

3 and DA: Notes on the 2022 Playoff Season

     I think it's safe to say that winter is gone, no fakeouts. Sunday in the 70s. A breeze pressed a cherry blossom into my hand. By the time I returned home from work, the fog had dissipated. I opened the front door, letting in the birdsong. I had leftover spaghetti with a glass of lemonade. Then I grabbed a beer and an ice cream and settled in for some PLAYOFF BASKETBALL ACTION, BABY! TWO! second round game sevens: Bucks and Celtics. Suns and Mavericks.

I hadn't watched a full game of the Milwaukee-Boston series. Milwaukee: The defending champs led by an MVP candidate. Boston: An interesting story. The team struggled early in the regular season. From my own amateur observation, they seemed disorganized, ineffective on offense and defense. Saddled with a losing record, there was talk of breaking up their two stars, Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown. Then in the second half of the season, they became one of the best teams in the league. Marcus Smart won Defensive Player of the Year. And they secured a spot in the playoffs. The outcome of the game didn't come as a shock. The Bucks were missing a star, Khris Middleton (knee injury). Giannis Antetokounmpo didn't put up his usual superstar numbers: missed layups, a crowded interior. Barely any of the team's 3s went down. The Celtics, on the other hand, had several players in double figures (the leading scorer was a role player named Grant Williams, who had the biggest game of his life). The team made many 3s and never stopped applying defensive pressure. For a moment, it looked like a Celtics bench player had managed to seriously injure himself at the end of the game, when the victor was already clear. Then he came back and made a 3. Now they're off to Miami to face the Heat. Prediction: Jayson Tatum will be looking for revenge against Bam Adebayo.

As for the Suns and Mavericks, I doubt any game will be more shocking. The Suns, the team that dominated throughout the regular season and ended it as the number one seed, were of course favored but there was a note of caution from most every basketball expert: Luka Dončić, the current face of the Mavericks franchise, is a superstar, the best player in the series, known for being at his best in the clutch. So maybe, just maybe. Still, I expected a hardfought, back-and-forth game decided in the final minutes or seconds of the 4th quarter. Instead the Mavericks went into Phoenix and stomped the Suns. Jawdropping. At halftime, Dončić had as many points as the other team (27). Let me repeat: The Suns had 27 points at halftime. 27. The Suns contained no one - not Dončić, Spencer Dinwiddie, or eventually Jalen Brunson. The Mavericks rained 3s. On the other side: For a long stretch, Deandre Ayton, Devin Booker, and Chris Paul, star players, had a combined 0 FGs. All three would end up having a bad night. No one on the Suns showed any life. When the Mavericks had possession of the ball, I began to think: that's going in. When the Suns had possession: that's not. Dončić smiled through the night, seemingly at ease in hostile (and increasingly quiet) territory. He had the representative play of the night, sending his defender, Cam Johnson, sliding along the floor and draining a 3 as Johnson looked on helplessly. (Dončić didn't need to play much if any of the 4th quarter.) Key commentary: Kevin Harlan remarks on the hot weather in Phoenix. Reggie Miller pauses and says, well, the Suns's shooting is cold. I can't remember any time in the regular season or postseason when the Suns looked like they couldn't take control of the game. And the team, practically unrecognizable, fell apart at the worst imaginable time. The only thing they managed to do was anger Boban Marjanović, a Mavericks player who doesn't seem to get many minutes and is praised every time he steps on the floor for being a nice, gentle giant. A sour ending to a sour ending. It was so bad it erased the previous worst game of the playoff season, which is now lost to NBA history, or should be. 

They closed out, losers.

The cat is so clingy! Can't be petted enough. I've been using a pillow as a shield and my D is good. I'm hoping the same is true for the Warriors. Let's go, Warriors.