Five Fast Facts From NBA Games: 2.8.13

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If you didn’t spend all night watching every NBA game (technically impossible, unless you have a heck of a DVR and do not require sleep), you can get caught up in less than a minute with SheridanHoops’daily feature, Five Fast Facts.

It was another Friday night packed with NBA action. Milestones were set, records were broken and LeBron somehow became more impressive. He is still the front-runner for the leagues Most Extraterrestrial Player. 

Five Fast Facts From NBA Games 2.1.13

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Good morning. Gotta go somewhere in a jiffy but still need to catch up on last night’s NBA action? Gotcha covered.

A 12-game slate Friday night did not see a lot of substance. In fact, only one of 12 games was decided by less than nine points as Brooklyn beat a depleted Chicago team 93-89. This isn’t to say there weren’t a few interesting tidbits worth mentioning.

To the facts! 

Jeremy Lin and Roy Hibbert joins Jimmy Kimmel Live!; Mike Tyson sings “LeBron James”

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Before the start of Game 1 of the NBA Finals, Jimmy Kimmel’s show aired early to presumably compensate for scheduling purposes on ABC. During the show, there were a couple of very entertaining NBA segments, which you can check out below:

Roy Hibbert and Jeremy Lin play Skype Scavenger Hunt:

Kimmel invited Jeremy Lin and Roy Hibbert to play a game of Skype Scavenger Hunt, and the segment did not disappoint. Hibbert showed us that he will soon be married and also displayed his $3,000 dog named Nala, while Lin – showing no hustle to grab his items – showed off his $20 watch. Spoiler Alert: Hibbert won the intense matchup and received an amazing prize – a copy of Keeping up with the Kardashians, Season 3 on Blue-ray.

Mike Tyson sings “LeBron James”:

Mike Tyson “sang” a story that summarized LeBron James’ career in a nutshell. The best line of the song was “Oh LeBron win a championship, it’s all you have to do, if only you stop choking at the Finals”

For LeBron James and Kevin Durant’s workout video, click here.

For Kyrie Irving as “Coach Kyrie”, click here.

James Park is a regular contributor and blogger for SheridanHoops.com. You can follow him on twitter @nbatupark.

Thunder rout Spurs, climb back into West finals

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The Oklahoma City Thunder were facing a postseason ultimatum: Figure out a way to slow down the red-hot San Antonio Spurs, or meekly bow out of the Western Conference finals for the second straight year, well short of the stated, realistic goal of winning a championship.

Through the first two games in San Antonio, Oklahoma City had very few answers, surrendering more than 110 points per game while losing twice. A 3-0 deficit to a team that had not lost in seven weeks would be a death knell.

So Thunder coach Scott Brooks made a bold but sensible move. He put his best perimeter defender on San Antonio’s most potent offensive player, hoping to stall the offense of the Spurs at the source.

The plan worked like a charm. Thabo Sefolosha throttled Tony Parker, the Thunder were energized by their home crowd, and the Spurs finally played a bad game. The end result was a convincing 102-82 victory that allowed Oklahoma City to climb back into the Western Conference finals.

From Berry Tramel of the Daily Oklahoman: “Scotty Brooks assigned Thabo Sefolosha to guard Tony Parker. It was neither a move of genius nor desperation. Just a move of common sense by Foreman Scotty. If you’re going to get beat, get beat with your best. Thabo is the Thunder’s best defender, and all hands on deck are needed against this San Antonio offense. The Thunder did not get beat. Thabo played the game of his life, Parker fell gently back to Earth and the Thunder turned Game 3 of the Western Conference Finals into a Swiss Ease. The Thunder rolled the Spurs 102-82 Thursday night and now this is a series again. Fourteen seconds into the game, Thabo kicked the ball. He spent the next 3 1/2 quarters kicking San Antonio. Before Game 3 was three minutes old, the Switzerland native had intercepted two Tim Duncan passes, grabbed a Boris Diaw fumble and swiped the ball from Parker. The four steals led to an 8-0 Thunder lead, and energized Thabo, who suddenly made like Kevin Durant and Russell Westbrook and jacked up shots all night long. Sefolosha put up 16 shots — the most he’s ever launched wearing Oklahoma City colors; his season-high had been nine — and scored 19 points, matching his high as a Thunder. Thabo’s shot total was smack in the middle of Durant (17) and Westbrook (15). “He was phenomenal tonight,” said Kevin Durant, with 22 points the lone Boomer to outscore Thabo. “He was so active on the defensive end. He got a lot of deflections and got us some easy points in transition.”

Sefolosha is usually the player who exits when Sixth Man Award winner James Harden enters. But in Game 3, Brooks played Sefolosha with Harden – and with Durant and Westbrook – instead removing one of his bigs and sliding Durant to power forward.

Sefolosha’s unexpected offensive contribution certainly helped. But so did San Antonio’s tendency to play with one low-post threat. The Spurs rarely play Tim Duncan and Tiago Splitter together, and alongside them often is a power forward with stretch-the-floor capability such as Boris Diaw or Matt Bonner.

From Kevin Arnovitz of ESPN.com: “We tend to see the shutdown defender as a luxury rather than a necessity, an accessory that can make life easier for the team, but nobody whose absence would be fatal. In case anyone needed evidence that who guards the best opposing player might be influential to the outcome of a basketball game, Thabo Sefolosha provided it on Thursday night. Sefolosha isn’t the offensive equal of any of the marquee names on the Oklahoma City roster, and he’s probably not a plus offensive player in the NBA. But does Oklahoma City strike you as a team that needs secondary offensive players to eat up possessions that belong to Kevin Durant, Russell Westbrook and James Harden? If ever a team had the capacity to absorb the presence of a non shot-creating defender, the Thunder are it. Go ahead and cash in! What does Sefolosha bring? He can make a point guard — even one as dynamic as Tony Parker — expend more energy going east-west. Sefolosha’s length sent Parker drifting off-course all night.”

Parker was limited to 16 points and four assists while committing five turnovers. In Game 2, he had run wild for 34 points on 16-of-21 shooting with eight assists as he confounded the Thunder with his peerless ability to run the pick-and-roll.

Sefolosha’s length on Parker certainly helped, but the Thunder appeared to change their overall scheme as well. They blitzed Parker with the big man, forcing him to turn away from the rim and start over. They overplayed the point guard, making him pass the ball to Duncan or Diaw and forcing them to make a play.

And center Kendrick Perkins, who drew some criticism for his poor pick-and-roll defense in the first two games, took those words personally and ratcheted up his approach.

From Jenni Carlson of the Daily Oklahoman: “Kendrick Perkins turned and glared at TNT’s broadcast table. Apparently, the Thunder big fella had heard about the less-than-complimentary things the network announcers had said about his pick-and-roll defense in these Western Conference Finals. And apparently, he didn’t like it.After at least two first-half defensive stops aided by his play, Perkins stared down the broadcast crew. “Talk about that,” he yelled. That scowl had never looked more nasty. Ditto for the Thunder. On a night when the boys in blue had to find a way to win to extend their season much beyond the weekend, they not only beat the Spurs but also changed the complexion of this series. They did it with defense. They did it with execution. But most of all, they did it with nasty.”

Over the last seven weeks, the only major adjustments the Spurs have had to make have been in preparation for different personnel in each of their three playoff series. When you win 20 straight games in dominant fashion, the schemes on both sides of the ball need only a tweak here and there unless the opponent changes.

But a 20-point loss – whether it comes after 20 straight wins or one straight win – calls for considerably more self-examination. And that may not be such a bad thing for the Spurs.

From Tim Griffin of the San Antonio Express-News: “All through their winning streak, the Spurs discounted talk as the victories kept mounting and the team started being included in the discussion in the rarefied air of the greatest teams of basketball history. Their winning streak was bound to end. They all do. It reached 20 before their 102-82 loss to Oklahoma City Thursday night. It finishes as one of the four longest in NBA history. “We’re human,” Spurs forward Stephen Jackson said. “We had a good run, but it’s just one loss. We have just got to get ready to play the next game.” No matter what Coach Gregg Popovich has said, the winning streak had to enter his team’s mindset — at least a little. And losing in convincing style like they did Thursday night should be a reminder of what can happen when they don’t play well. That certainly was the case Thursday night as they committed 21 turnovers, shot 39.5 percent from the field and made Thabo Sefolosha look like the second coming of Walt Frazier with his strong all-around play. It will reinforce some teaching points for Popovich, who still has several young players with little playoff experience. Game 4 looms critical. If the Spurs can win that game, their chances for a quick finish to the series remain high. But if Oklahoma City wins on Saturday night, we suddenly have a series that might be as interesting as all the prognosticators thought it would be. It will make for some interesting adjustments for both teams over the next 36 hours. And secretly, I bet part of Popovich wasn’t that disappointed at the margin of his team’s defeat in Game 3.”

And forgotten in all of this was the minor point that the Thunder are a really good team. They are making a return trip to the conference finals. They led the West for most of the regular season before succumbing to San Antonio’s closing rush. And in the postseason, they are 6-0 at home, where they are extremely tough.

From Buck Harvey of the San Antonio Express-News: “The flow of energy is sometimes mysterious in the NBA, but sometimes it is predictable, too. And while Thursday it was the Thunder’s turn, the Spurs got what they wanted from their first loss in 50 days. Getting embarrassed can be a good thing. All of it is new to the Spurs, who forgot how these things feel. But this wasn’t the streak of Wooden’s UCLA that was broken Thursday. It was an NBA streak, and they never last too long. They never last long, either, when the energy divide is as severe as it was. And something Scott Brooks said afterward told of that. “That was as well,” he said, “as you can play against the best team in basketball.” The best team in basketball? The Thunder wanted to prove that wasn’t true. “We never thought these guys had an advantage over us,” Kevin Durant said Thursday, “even though we lost a few.” It’s an attitude based on more than bravado. The Thunder played well in the opener, taking a nine-point lead in the fourth quarter, then made Game 2 interesting with a late surge. The Thunder are exactly what the Spurs coaches thought they were before the series began — scary good. And scarier for the Spurs is to let this series become tied heading back to San Antonio for a Game 5.”

Game 4 on Saturday night should be outstanding.

Playoffs Day 26: Dwyane Wade and LeBron James dominate to end Pacers season

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When is the last time we saw the combination of a shooting guard and a small forward completely and utterly dominate a game the way Dwyane Wade and LeBron James did on Thursday night?

His Airness and Robin Scottie Pippen certainly come to mind. Back in the 90′s, the NBA and its fans saw Michael Jordan and Pippen display unparalleled athleticism and skill that allowed the tandem to terrorize their opposition with incredible offensive games.

Longtime Pacers fans, along with Larry Bird – now the chief executive of the Pacers – can surely remembers those days, and this series against the Miami Heat proved that when both players are focused, Wade and James may be just as scary and just as deadly.

Things were supposed to be difficult for the Heat in Game 6 with the absence of both Chris Bosh and Udonis Haslem, but Wade wrote his own script and decided that all they needed was a big dose of himself and a sprinkle of James to move past the Pacers while advancing to the Eastern Conference Finals. (Boxscore here.)

Chris Sheridan discussed the Heat’s victory, along with their prospects against the Celtics, 76ers, Thunder and Spurs this morning on Sporsttalk 790 The Ticket in Miami. Click to listen.

From Joseph Goodman of The Miami Herald: “This was Dwyane Wade’s very best — his Ninth Symphony, his Ulysses, his roundhouse, double-legged dropkick from the top rope. In a rough-and-tumble second-round series that featured blood and flagrant fouls, cheap shots and suspensions, Wade delivered the final blow Thursday at Bankers Life Fieldhouse in Game 6 of the Eastern Conference semifinals. He scored 41 points in the decisive game of the series, leading the Heat into the Eastern Conference finals with a 105-93 victory against the Pacers. Although the series was peppered with hard fouls and trash talk throughout, there was none of that in the final game. There was just a whole lot of Wade doing things that reminded all that watched of the 2006 NBA Finals and delivering a performance that will live forever. LeBron James, who smartly deferred to Wade on a night that Wade could hardly miss, called his teammate “spectacular from the beginning to the end.” James was absolutely right about that. Wade’s 41 points came on 17 of 25 shooting. He scored 20 points in the second quarter alone, tying a Heat postseason franchise record, and also had 10 rebounds.”

From Brian Windhorst of ESPN.com: “But there was also James dropping the hammer, pouring in 28 points in the supporting role including seven straight in the final two minutes of the game that finished off the No. 3 seed and guaranteed the Heat their second straight Eastern Conference finals berth. James made 12 of 23 shots and added seven assists and three steals. The totals for the last three games, the Heat’s reversal from the brink after falling down 2-1, are wild. James averaged 32.7 points, 11.3 rebounds and eight assists on 55 percent shooting. Wade averaged 33 points (he scored 99 in the three games, James 98), 7.3 rebounds and 3.7 assists on 62 percent shooting. Those numbers for Wade come as a response to the worst playoff moment of his career in Game 3, where he scored five points on 2-of-13 shooting and looked like he had just eaten a very large but instantly regrettable meal. When the Heat doctors drained his knee last week they must’ve injected some venom.”

After the game, Wade wore this - much to the chagrin of James – but the man is entitled to his own fashion sense after a performance of such high magnitude, right?

The Heat will now have a chance to rest until Monday as they watch the outcome of the Sixers-Celtics on Saturday to determine their next opponent. The game tips off at 8 p.m. EST, and if you believe the Celtics are a lock, you should read this first. 

For the Pacers, a successful season came to an abrupt end after suffering their third consecutive loss to Miami.

The advantage was supposed to be on their side when Bosh went down in Game 1. What they failed to anticipate was how much more responsibility the two superstars of the Heat would shoulder, which turned out to be their ultimate downfall.

“Chris Bosh is an awesome basketball player, but when he goes out it means more touches for LeBron and Wade and that’s not exactly an advantage. They were spectacular this series; they were too much for us,” coach Frank Vogel said. ”We had our whole focus on Derrick Rose last year and it’s like having two of them out there. Only bigger. It’s a big challenge. We did the best we could. We put up a good fight. We gave them a little wake-up call. But ever since Game 3 these guys played at such a high level that I don’t know if anybody can beat them.”

From Zak Keefer of Indianapolis Star: “The Indiana Pacers’ lengthiest postseason run in seven seasons came to a cruel completion tonight. The team – the same one that rode a surprising 2-1 advantage in this Eastern Conference semifinal series as recently as five days ago – now begins an abrupt summer vacation, 105-93 losers to the Miami Heat in Game 6 tonight at Bankers Life Fieldhouse… Certainly, the loss stings. But the season and its successes will provide a building block this franchise had been after for a number of years. The Pacers finished the abridged regular season with the NBA’s fifth-best record, won a playoff series for the first time in seven years and pushed a vaunted and favored Heat group to six games, battling toe-to-toe with an NBA title favorite and providing some terrific theater along the way. Indeed, the future appears bright for the blue and gold. But on this night, the Heat’s surplus of talent trumped a gritty effort from the Pacers.”

Indeed, the team has plenty to look forward to. Roy Hibbert and Paul George are intriguing young talents, while David West – who looked much more like himself in the final months of the season – will be one season removed from microfracture surgery.

Their main issue may lie at the point guard position. With no one that can consistently create for others – not one player had more than six assists in any of the games in the second round – Indiana did not have a go-to player that could disrupt the Heat’s defense. George Hill is a solid scoring option, but he is just that – a scoring guard. Darren Collison was supposed to be the starting point guard for the long haul, but losing his job to Hill is not an encouraging sign.

In any case, they will now have plenty of time to ponder their next move to improve for next season.

James Park is a regular contributor to Sheridanhoops.com. You can find him on twitter @nbatupark