jordan23dotcom
Banned
- Apr 5, 2006
- 5,711
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can we get a flop mix tape for manu and parker?? them dudes just dont care anymore. i mean how many times can you check your mouth for blood just to see theres nothing?
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Originally Posted by jordan23dotcom
can we get a flop mix tape for manu and parker?? them dudes just dont care anymore. i mean how many times can you check your mouth for blood just to see theres nothing?
Originally Posted by dako akong otin
Originally Posted by akajaedeuce
So glad those damn floppers didn't win last night
Ska, what's the breakdown on flops this series??
LOLOriginally Posted by Do Be Doo
1-3 points???...ten more seconds???
It should have been a 8 point game. the thunder hit some 3s in the end that didnt matter at the end of the game.
Oh I have also seen this SPURS team play enough were I know they wont let down.
This isn't just any team. This is the 4 time NBA champs San Antonio SPURS.
OKC gonna get 4 out of 5?
You know what Im just gonna quote this post. Not gonna say mush until after the series.
Change the sig too. Foolish.
[h1]Can anyone stop the Thunder?[/h1]
The Oklahoma City Thunder are one of the youngest teams in the league, with an average age of 26.4. (D. Clarke Evans/NBAE via Getty Images)
Here’s how good the Thunder are: Their offense went through the late-game yips again in their Game 5 win against the Spurs, with Russell Westbrook authoring perhaps the single worst possession of the entire playoffs as he double-dribbled as Kevin Durant stood in the corner with about 3:30 to go — and yet they still ended up scoring at a points-per-possession rate that would nearly have led the league.
That has been the story of this team’s offense for two years now: It looks stagnant and uncreative, often at the very worst times, but when you look at the numbers, there are the Thunder in the top five (last season) and top two (this season) in the league’s overall points per possession rankings.
The occasional crunch-time micro-level collapses, born of bad shot selection and Scott Brooks’ love for difficult three-pointers regardless of the score, represented a serious problem that cost the Thunder dearly in the Western Conference finals against Dallas last season. It led to endless nit-picking about Russell Westbrook’s tendency to blindly gun, Brooks’ alleged lack of coaching chops and the team’s dismal assist rate.
The nit-picking was justified in a way; it is what we do to greatness aspiring to something higher, especially when old problems continue to pop up. Westbrook still kills Thunder possessions by breaking plays early in the shot clock, leaving his teammates shaking their heads and scrambling to get out of his way as he drives into a painted area packed with Thunder players setting up for the play they thought Westbrook would run. This happened early in the third quarter on Monday, during San Antonio’s furious rally, when the Thunder set up to run Kevin Durant off a Thabo Sefolosha screen under the hoop, only Westbrook decided to drive past Tony Parker and into a wall of bodies for a wild miss.
Brooks spent much of the regular season leaning on the same old isolation stuff at the end of games, banking on Durant to bail the team out as James Harden stood around like a scrub with a nice beard. In fact, during the regular season, Harden took just five shots in the last three minutes of close games, while Westbrook and Durant combined to attempt 103 of the Thunder’s 120 shots in those situations, per NBA.com. That speaks to an inexcusable lack of end-game creativity. Brooks is perhaps too loyal to Derek Fisher and a starting lineup that doesn’t work all that well, and he strangely ignored Sefolosha as a possible option in small-ball lineups — until this series against the Spurs.
And yet there was a forest/trees thing going on amid all the hand-wringing. The Thunder ranked among the league’s top three offenses the entire season. They played the Harden/Durant/Westbrook trio more together than they did in 2010-11, and the results were devastating. And very slowly, the Thunder got better at all the subtle things that make champions. Maximizing the impact of three perimeter stars is difficult, even if the Thunder’s star trio doesn’t have the same overlapping skill set issues that made the LeBron James/Dwyane Wade growth process a fitful one in Miami. But the Thunder have gradually figured it out, thanks to improvement among all three of the stars and the coaching staff’s small, always ongoing tweaks to the Thunder’s offensive system.
Westbrook has transformed his mid-range jumper from a liability into a strength, and he has improved as a passer. His assist numbers dropped this season because he increasingly shares ball-handling duties with Durant and Harden, but he has widened the range of passes he can work. Last night alone, he tossed four or five I’m not sure he could have made last season — two cross-court skip passes to Daequan Cook out of the pick and roll, a nearly blind pitch-back to Durant for an open three-pointer and a gorgeous drop pass to Nick Collison out of a pick and roll, a play on which Westbrook froze the lurking help defender (Stephen Jackson) by yo-yo-ing his dribble in the lane and looking briefly at Jackson’s man (Harden, on the wing) before the dish. On one of those Cook passes, Westbrook saw Tony Parker deciding whether he should leave Cook to help on Westbrook in the lane, and he took one extra hesitation dribble into the paint, forcing Parker to commit.
This was “pure
Originally Posted by SosaP23
Idk it's definitely possible the spurs can win game 6 but i just have the feeling that OKC's momentum will be too much following into that game
That's how I feel. But then again, I picked the Spurs to win the series in 6, so I'm just no sure at this point. I just have to give it to the the Thunder for how they're playing and how they responded to being down 0-2. I never thought they'd be able to shut down the Spurs offense like the have. Hats off to them. I won't be surprised if the Spurs pull out a win tonight. But I also won't be surprised if OKC wraps it up.Originally Posted by westcoastsfinest
I expect Game 6 to be close one. The Spurs, I just can't count these guys out.
Originally Posted by DIOR PAINT
I'm expecting a blowout. KD ain't playing around.