Wednesday, June 23, 2021

J-Speaks: 2021 Eastern Conference Preview

 The 2021 Eastern Conference Finals consists of one team returning after a one-year absence looking to advance to the championship round after coming so close two late springs back and falling short a season ago. Their opponent is one that is looking to continue their magical carpet ride in their first postseason appearance in four years and looking to reach The Finals for the first time since their last season in St. Louis, MO in 1961, where they won their lone title in 1958 over the guys from “Beantown.” This series will feature a two-time Finals MVP and perennial All-Star looking to add the one thing missing from his career resume, a championship. The other headline star of this series is a 22-year-old budding star who has taken the NBA by storm in his first playoff appearance in only his third NBA season. Here is the 2021 J-Speaks Eastern Conference Finals Preview.

After entering the last two postseasons with the best record in the East, the Milwaukee Bucks have fallen short of their goal of making the NBA Finals. Two years ago, their Finals  run was derailed by the eventual NBA champion Toronto Raptors in 2019, in six games, dropping the last four in succession after starting the series 2-0. In the restart in Orlando, FL, the Bucks were taken down by the eventual East representative in last year’s Finals the Miami Heat in the 2020 East Semifinals in five games.

During the 2020-21 regular season, the third-year head coach Mike Budenholzer’s squad  finished No. 3 in the East at 46-26, behind the No. 2 Seeded Brooklyn Nets (48-24) and the No. 1 Seeded Philadelphia 76ers (49-23).

In the First Round of this year’s Playoffs, the more equipped Bucks were more prepared for the rematch against their arch nemesis in the in the Heat (40-32), the No. 6 Seed, sweeping them 4-0. In the closeout Game 4, the Bucks overcame a 12-point first half deficit, outscoring the defending Eastern Conference champions 63-39 in the second half.  

In the East Semis against the Nets, the Bucks overcame a 2-0 series lead, losing Game 2 at the Nets by 39 points (125-86), their second largest margin of defeat in franchise postseason history. They trailed in the blowout contest at one point by 49 points.  

The Bucks bounced back to win Games 3 (86-83) and 4 (107-96) at home to tie the series 2-2 and facing elimination after falling in Game 5 (114-108) after leading by as many as 17 points, the Bucks won Game 6 at home 104-89 versus the Nets to force a winner take all Game 7.

In that winner take all Game 7, the Bucks overcame a 10-point second quarter deficit and a Game 7 record of 48 points by two-time Finals MVP Kevin Durant, taking down the Nets 115-111 in overtime to advance to the Conference Finals after a one-year absence.

The Bucks are four wins away from reaching the NBA Finals because of their dynamic duo of two-time league MVP Giannis Antetokounmpo, who has registered a double-double in the Bucks first 11 games of the 2021 NBA Playoffs so far, and fellow All-Star Khris Middleton has shown to be elite, especially in the clutch.  

Middleton in Game 1 of the opening-round versus Heat hit the eventual game-winning 19-foot jumper with 00.5 seconds left to cap his 27-point performance with six boards and six assists on 10 for 22 shooting in the 109-107 win in overtime.

In the Game 4 clincher, a 120-103 by the Bucks to complete the 4-0 sweep of the Heat, Antetokounmpo had his first career playoff triple-double and just the third in Bucks’ playoff history with 20 points, 12 rebounds and 15 assists, and Middleton also had 20 points with 11 rebounds.

In Games 3 of the East Semis versus the Nets, Middleton had 15 of his game-high 35 points to go along with a playoff career-high 15 rebounds on 12 for 25 shooting, including 3 for 6 from three-point range and 8 for 9 from the free throw line. Antetokounmpo had 33 points and 14 rebounds on 14 for 31 from the field.

Antetokounmpo led the way in the Game 4v win with 34 points and 12 rebounds on 14 for 26 shooting and Middleton had 19 points and eight rebounds.

With their season on the line in Game 6 at home, Middleton rose to the occasion with a playoff career-high 38 points, 10 rebounds, five assists and five steals on 11 for 16 shooting, including 5 for 8 from three-point range, while Antetokounmpo had 19 of his 30 points and 11 of his 17 rebounds in the opening half.

In Game 7, Antetokounmpo rose to the moment with 40 points, 13 rebounds and five assists on 15 for 24 from the field, and after beginning the win-or-go-home thriller 1 for 5 from the charity stripe, hit seven of his last eight at the foul line including some crucial ones in the second half. He finished the series averaging 31.9 points and 12.9 rebounds on 57 percent from the field.

“I’m really happy for this team. I’m really happy for what we’ve got done. Really happy that we we’re able to write No. 8 [playoff wins in 2021 playoffs] on the board. But the job is not done,” Antetokounmpo, who became the fifth player with 40-plus points and 10-plus rebounds in Game 7 in NBA Playoff history said in his Zoom postgame presser after the series clinching win at the Nets. “We’ve got to keep believing in ourselves. We’ve got to keep playing good basketball. And take it game-by-game. The job is not done.”   

Khris Middleton, while he struggled with his shot for much of the game going 9 for 26 from the field (2/7 from three-point range), he hit the go-ahead jumper with 40.1 seconds left in overtime to cap an effort of 23 points, 10 rebounds, six assists, and another five steals.

The Bucks are in position to compete for their second title in franchise history also because of the new ancillary pieces in All-Star floor general Jrue Holiday, P.J. Tucker, who the Bucks acquired at the Mar. 25 trade deadline from the Houston Rockets, Bobby Portis, and Bryn Forbes, to go alongside the likes of Brook Lopez, and Pat Connaughton.

In Game 2 of the First-Round versus the Heat, it was Forbes that was the sparked in the 132-98 win, scoring 14 of his 22 points in the first quarter going 4 for 5 from three-point range, finishing the game 6 for 9 from distance. Holiday in the victory had 11 points, 15 assists, seven boards, and two steals, while Portis contributed 11 points and five rebounds.

In the 113-84 blowout win at the Heat in Game 3, Holiday had his second straight double-double of 19 points and 12 assists, while Portis and Forbes, who shot 3 for 7 from three-point range each scored 11 points.

In the Game 4 clincher at the Heat, Lopez had a game-high 25 points with eight rebounds and two block shots on 11 for 15 shooting. Portis had 13 points, going 3 for 7 from three-point range. Holiday had 11 points, nine assists, six rebounds, and four steals.

While he struggled in Game 3 going 4 for 14 from the field, Holiday’s breakaway layup off a Nets miss put the Bucks up 84-83 and they eventually won the game as mentioned 86-83, finishing the victory with nine points and five assists. The Bucks outside of Antetokounmpo and Middleton combined for 18 points on 8 for 34 shooting and 0 for 3 from the charity stripe.

The supporting cast of the Bucks got back on track in the Game 4 win as Holiday had 14 points and nine assists, while Tucker had his best game of this postseason with 13 points and seven rebounds hitting 3 for 4 from three-point range. The supporting cast combined for 54 points on 17 for 44 from the field, including 9 for 25 from three-point range and 6 for 7 from the foul line.

In Game 6 with the season hanging in the balance, Holiday had 21 points, eight rebounds, five assists and four steals even though he was going 8 for 21 shooting, including 1 for 10 from three-point range.

Holiday struggled with his shot as well in Game 7 at the Nets going just 5 for 23, including 2 for 9 from three-point range. But that second made three-pointer put the Bucks up 104-101 late in the fourth quarter, and in the final minute of overtime forced Durant into a fadeaway three-pointer that ended up being an airball and that preserved the lead of the Bucks at the time.

Lopez, who had 19 points and eight boards against his former team in Game 7 had a huge block on Durant’s left-handed layup attempt that kept the score tied 111-111 late in overtime.

In a game that featured a majority of the scoring from the starters of the Bucks and Nets, reserve Pat Connaughton was big for the visitors with nine points on 3 for 5 from three-point range off the bench, representing the only scoring off the bench for either team.

The Bucks opponent for the right to represent the East in the 2021 NBA Finals is the surprising Atlanta Hawks, who at one point in the season were on the outside the playoff picture looking in.

They fired then head coach Lloyd Pierce at the start of March when they were 14-20 and sinking fast in the East playoff race, replacing him with assistant coach Nate McMillan on an interim basis. The Hawks finished the regular season under interim Coach McMillan 27-11, earning the No. 5 spot in the East and made the playoffs for the first time since 2017.

Aside from being outscored 10-1 to close Game 2 after being tied 91-91 to lose Game 2 101-92, the Hawks won their First-Round series over the No. 4 Seeded New York Knicks 4-1, winning the opener at the Knicks 107-105.

The Hawks took down the Knicks both games at home 105-94 in Game 3 and 113-96 in Game 4 and closed out the Knicks in their house 103-89 to take the series in five games.

In the East Semis against the top seeded 76ers, the Hawks took homecourt advantage away immediately, leading by as many as 26 points and holding on for a 128-124 win after a furious comeback by the 76ers that came up short.

After dropping Games 2 and 3 of the series 118-102 and 127-111, the Hawks bounced back overcoming an 18-point deficit with 1:43 left in second quarter to earn a 103-100 win in Game 4 to tie the series 2-2.

After falling behind by 26 points with 9:22 left third quarter and trailed 87-69 after three quarters, the Hawks outscored the 76ers 40-19 in the fourth quarter winning Game 5 109-106.

After dropping Game 6 at home 104-99, the Hawks rose to the moment in Game 7 going from trailing 28-25 after the first quarter to outscoring the 76ers on their home floor 78-68 the final three quarters and making the plays down the stretch to earn the 103-96 win, earning their first Game 7 in of a best-of-seven series on the road in franchise history.

In their previous 7 trips to the playoffs, the Hawks compiled a 9-28 record. This postseason they have gone 8-4 and a big reason for that has been the league’s breakout star of the 2021 Playoffs, besides All-Star guard for the Phoenix Suns in floor general Trae Young, whose looked or played nothing like a player in the postseason for the first time in his career.

According to the Elias Sports Bureau, Young in the 2021 Playoffs so far has registered five 30-point games which is tied with four-time Kia MVP and three-time Finals MVP LeBron James and Hall of Famer Rick Barry for the most in a player’s first postseason in NBA history. Young, whose averaged 29.1 points and 10.4 assists through the first two rounds of the 2021 Playoffs is the sixth player in NBA Playoff history to average 25 points and 10 assists entering the Conference Finals.

Young put his stamp on the 2021 Playoffs right away with the eventual game-winning runner with 00.9 seconds left in the Hawks take down at the Knicks in Game 1 of First Round.

In the Game 4 clincher, Young closed the door on the Knicks season scoring 18 of his 36 points in the fourth quarter with nine assists on 13 for 15 from the charity stripe. Young after going 5 for 20 from the field, including 1 for 9 from three-point range the first three quarters went 5 for 8 shooting in the final period, including 2 for 4 from three-point range and 6 for 7 from the free throw line.

Young joined Michael Jordan as the only players with three consecutive 30-point games in the playoffs at Madison Square Garden.

In the Hawks stunning win at the 76ers to open the East Semis, Young had 35 points and 10 assists on 11 for 23 from the field and 4 for 11 from three-point range, and 9 for 9 from the free throw line.

In Game 4, Young struggled to score 25 points, going 8 for 26 from the field, including 3 for 11 from three-point range but had 18 assists.

In Game 5, Young had a playoff career-high 39 points on 10 for 23 shooting and 17 for 19 from the free throw line.

Young in Games 4 and 5 was at his best in the second half with 17 points and nine assists in Game 4 and had 25 points of his 39 points and six assists of seven assists in the second half of Game 5.

In the Game 6 loss (104-99) that sent the series back to Philadelphia, Young scored 14 of his game-high 34 points in the second half to go with 12 assists, five boards and two steals on 13 for 30 shooting, including 5 for 10 from three-point range.

Young began Game 7 with 9 points on just 1 for 12 from the field, including 1 for 7 from three-point range in the first half and had just 11 points on 2 for 16 shooting, including 1 for 8 from distance after three quarters. But had 10 points in the fourth quarter to finish with 21 points and 10 assists in the victory.

While Young’s scoring has been the headliner of the Hawks success, his passing that is a big reason why John Collins, Bogdan Bogdanovic, Lou Williams, Clint Capela, Danilo Gallinari, and Kevin Huerter have scored at such as high clip.

The Hawks turnaround from being six games under .500 at the start of March has also come from their ability to win close games, something early that earlier in the season struggled to do.

Counting the playoffs so far, the Hawks are 12-2 in games decided by five points or less under Coach McMillan since March 2.

“I felt they were built for this moment tonight. To win this game” Coach McMillan, whose team has gone 5-2 on the road so far in the 2021 Playoffs said in his Zoom postgame presser after the Game 7 win. “They have shown this type of play really all season for us. Finishing a game, finishing the fourth quarter, and I just really felt confident that we were going to play a big game tonight, and give ourselves a chance to win.” 

The eventual game-winning runner by Young does not take place if not for the fourth made three-pointer by Bogdanovic that tied the game 103-103 with 55 seconds left in regulation of.

Bogdanovic hit a key triple in Game 1 of the East Semis to hold off the 76ers furious comeback in Game 1 of the East Semis, and his three-pointer to open the fourth quarter of Game 4 as part of his 22-point, five-rebound night on 4 for 13 from three-point range put the Hawks up for the first time in the second half.

After missing 25 games during the regular season because of a knee issue, Bogdanovic has been solid with averages of 16.4 points on 43.8 percent from three-point range to averaging 13.8 points and five boards.

In the early part of the Hawks rebuilding stage back in 2017, the team was built around John Collins. As Young as ascended to being the face of the Hawks and the supporting cast has gotten better, Collins has played more of a secondary role during the regular season and has made the necessary adjustments to fit in that with a very talented and now solid basketball team.

In Game 4 and 5, Collins registered consecutive double-doubles of 14 points and 12 rebounds in Game 4 and 19 points and 11 rebounds in Game 5, his first back-to-back doubles since Mar. 14 and 16.

In the East Semis, the Hawks had to deal with runner-up for Kia MVP this past regular season in Joel Embiid, and while he had a solid series numbers wise, Capela more than held his own, which he has done all season long.

He averaged very quietly 10 points and 13.4 rebounds in the First-Round against the Knicks, registering a double-double in all five games. Capela followed that up with averages of 10.6 points and 10.3 rebounds in the Semis against the 76ers, registering three double-doubles in the series.

When one of the Hawks best young players De’Andre Hunter was lost for the rest of the playoffs after having knee surgery, someone had to step up and replace the production that was lost, especially shooting wise, where Hunter averaged 10.8 points on 37.5 percent from three-point range. They got that production from Kevin Huerter and veterans Williams and Gallinari.

In Game 1 of the East Semifinals at the 76ers, Huerter had 15 points, five rebounds on 3 for 6 from three-point range. He had 20 points on 8 for 10 from the field, including 3 for 5 from three-point range in the 118-102 loss in Game 2. After totaling just 13 points on 3 for 14 shooting in Games 3, 4 and 5, Huerter had 17 points and 11 rebounds in the aforementioned Game 6 loss.

Huerter saved his best for last with a playoff career-high 27 points and seven boards on 10 for 18 shooting and hitting three crucial free throws in the final minutes of the Game 7 clincher of East Semis at 76ers, going 5 for 7 from the charity stripe on the evening.

“This team is special, man,” Huerter, whose squad is now 5-2 on the road in the 2021 NBA Playoffs said after the Game 7 clincher with NBA on TNT’s Stephanie Ready on Sunday. “Everybody’s counted us out all year. For us to make it this far and win in this building in Game 7 that’s huge for us.”

“We’ve got a young locker room but we’re a little naive. We’re always believing. We always know we can win, and we just got to keep it going.”

When the Hawks traded for Lou Williams at the Mar. 25 trade deadline, he contemplated retirement because he was dealt from a championship caliber team in the Los Angeles Clippers. After taking some time, the Atlanta native decided to report to the team and the Hawks are thankful he did, especially in Game 5 where all 15 of his points in the second half, including 13 points in the fourth quarter. Williams was also huge in the Game 1 of the First-Round at the Knicks scoring 13 points off the bench.

The Hawks have also gotten solid play from Gallinari, who put his up-and-down regular season, where he missed 21 games because of injury behind him and has been solid.

He closed the Semis with scoring outputs of 16, 16 and 17 points respectably in Games 5, 6 and 7. Gallinari’s breakaway dunk off a steal of the 76ers Embiid put the Hawks up 98-92 as they finished the game on a 7-4 run.

During the regular season, the Bucks took two of the three meeting against the Hawks (129-115 win at home Jan. 24; 120-109 win at Hawks Apr. 25) averaging 117.7 points on 51 percent shooting and outrebounding them by an average of 48 to 36.7 (+11.3 rebounds).

To further illustrate this point, the Bucks were a +21 (43-22) in second chance points in the season series against the Hawks.

The Hawks 7.3 average of second chance points against the Bucks was their lowest average versus any opponent during the regular season.

The Hawks, while they averaged 111.7 points against the Bucks during the regular season, they managed to outshoot their next playoff opponent 38 percent to 33 percent from three-point range, with a differential of +21 in points from three-point range over the Bucks (123-102).

One of the reason’s that the Bucks acquired Holiday from the Pelicans this past offseason was to take on exceptional guards like Young, who only played in one of the three regular season tilts against the Bucks.

“Every team since he’s stepped into the NBA has gone in and played the Atlanta Hawks trying to stop Trae Young, and nobody’s seemed to have figured it out yet,” Huerter said.  

The Bucks will need for Holiday to try to slow down Young in this series, which means he might have the kind of offensive production he had in the Semis against the Nets where he shot just 36 percent from the floor and just 26 percent from three-point range.

One area to look to see if Holiday is keeping Young under wraps is his free throw attempts. In two wins against the 76ers in the Semis, Young attempted 19 and 11 free throws in two of the wins.

In the lone game Young played against versus Bucks on Apr. 15, Young had just 15 points on 3 for 17 shooting, including 0 for 3 from three-point range with six turnovers. When Young’s primary defender was Holiday, he held him to zero made shots in eight tries. While Young was 9 for 9 from the charity stripe in the loss, he attempt zero free throws when Holiday was guarding him.

“What he can do for his size. The way he can get down the lane and get everybody involved. Look for his own shot. Create for his own self, it’s unbelievable,” Antetokounmpo, who is 5-0 in head-to-head tilts with Young in his career, said of the Hawks floor general’s skill set offensively. “It’s unbelievable, and I think it’s his second year, third year in the league. Yeah, like what he’s done in a three-year span is unbelievable.”

So far this postseason, the Bucks have allowed just 43.3 percent shooting to their opponent’s, No. 2 in the 2021 NBA Playoffs.

The Hawks hope that Bogdanovic, who averaged 30 points per game in playing two of the three tilts against the Hawks in the regular season going 12 for 23 from three-point range against the Bucks can be that lethal floor spacer that can take some pressure off Young to have to be supremely productive. They also hope that Huerter can also strike a consistent match from the perimeter.

Another key for the Hawks is getting off to a good start unlike in the point differential of -39 they had against the Bucks in the opening half of the three meetings in the regular season Though the Hawks had a point differential in the second half of +21 in those first three meetings.  

The Hawks so far in the 2021 Playoffs have gone 5-2 when leading by double-digits, and a 5-2 mark in clutch time (games that were within five points in the last five minutes of regulation or overtime).

The Bucks however have gone 6-1 when leading by double-digits (only loss Game 5 of Semis at Nets) and are the only with a winning record (3-2) after trailing by double-digits. They also have compiled a 3-1 mark in clutch games so far this postseason.

With Holiday more than likely having to sacrifice his offensive to have enough energy to tangle with Young, that means Antetokounmpo, Lopez, Forbes, Connaughton, and Portis will have to step up their offensive production.

“They really stretch your defense with their ability to have a number of playmakers out there on the floor,” Coach McMillan said of the Bucks offensive execution.

For Antetokounmpo, he has been solid this entire postseason, averaging 28.8 points and 13.6 rebounds and 5.1 assists so far this postseason. During the regular season against the Hawks of 24.3 points, 11 rebounds, and 4.7 assists on 64.3 percent from field.

In the final two games of the Semis against the Nets, Antetokounmpo cut his three-point attempts to just six, all in Game 7, taking none in Game 6. For the series, he shot just 19.1 percent (8 for 31), and has gone 9 for 47 (19.2 percent) from three-point range so far in the 2021 NBA Playoffs.

Antetokounmpo has made his money in the paint this postseason, averaging 19.6 points in the paint, and is the leader in dunks this postseason with 38. His 154 total paint points in the Semis against the Nets is the most in a playoff series since Shaquille O’Neal for the Lakers in the 2000 Finals against the Pacers.

In the season series against the Hawks, the Bucks outscored them 160-120 in the paint in the three meetings.

Attempting to slow down the Bucks two-time league MVP will be Collins and Capela, and at times Gallinari.

“They’re multifaceted. It’s not just Young and Capela in the pick-and-roll,” Coach Budenholzer said of the Hawks. “They do a lot of things at a high level. They’re really good. So, obviously Jrue and Brook, they always take a major workload defensively.”

The Bucks will also need the two-time Kia MVP to tighten up his free throw stroke, which came into full focus for the Nets fans and the referees in the Semis. He shot 48 percent at the foul line in the Semis against the Nets and has shot 53.8 percent so far in the 2021 Playoffs.   

“He gets downhill. He always finds an angle. He gets everybody else going and they’ve got a lot of really good players around him,” Huerter said of Antetokounmpo offensively. “We got to protect the paint.”

There are a couple of undertone stories in this upcoming East Finals series. The Hawks will be facing their former head coach in the aforementioned Mike Budenholzer, who guided the then No. 1 Seeded Hawks to the Conference Finals in 2015, where they were swept by the then LeBron James led Cleveland Cavaliers 4-0.

When the two teams meet in Game 1 of the series on Wednesday night on TNT, it will be the first game for Bogdanovic at the Bucks, having missed the January meeting in the regular season because of the aforementioned knee injury.

The Bucks back in the summer of 2020 were trying to acquire Bogdanovic, a restricted free agent then via a sign-and-trade with the Sacramento Kings. Bogdanovic decided to enter unrestricted free agency which killed the deal and the Bucks got penalized for what technically was tampering, and it cost them a Second-Round draft pick and the chance to land one of the NBA’s top shooters.

The Bucks because of that trade going south were able to months later acquire Tucker at the previously mentioned March 25 trade deadline.

The one guarantee when this series is over, there will be new blood representing the Eastern Conference in the 2021 NBA Finals.  

The Bucks have not reached The Finals since 1974, where they lost to the Boston Celtics in seven games. They won their lone title in 1971 led by then Lew Alcindor, now Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, who earned the first of his six Kia MVPs and one of his two Finals MVPs.

The Atlanta Hawks have not been to the NBA championship round since losing to the Celtics in back-to-back trips to The Finals in seven and five games when they were based in St. Louis, MO in 1960 and 1961, dropping the four out of five meetings against the Celtics in The Finals. Three years prior, they took down the boys from “Beantown” in the 1958 Finals in six games led by Kia MVP and Hall of Famer Bob Pettit.

The Hawks have come a long way since the start of this season going from being 14-20 at the start of March to being four wins away from playing in The Finals. Their star floor general Trae, Young who not only did not make the All-Star team this past regular season but did not even make the All-NBA team. In fact, the Atlanta Hawks along with the 1994 Indiana Pacers are the only two teams to reach the Conference Finals under the current 16-team format that has been in place since 1984 to not have a player be in the unofficial mid-season classic.

To put this into perspective, this will be the first Conference Finals with one All-Star player in Bucks’ Antetokounmpo since the 1975 NBA Finals between the Golden State Warriors and Chicago Bulls.   

“We’re happy we’ve made it to the Eastern Conference Finals. But we’re not satisfied,” Young said in his Zoom presser on Tuesday. “We’ve had that chip on our shoulder all year, having that underdog mentality.”

The Hawks, who made the postseason for the first time since 2017 are way ahead of schedule in building themselves into a perennial title contender. They are going up against a very motivated, hungry, and talented opponent in the Bucks, who have the edge in playoff experience, a two-time Kia MVP in Giannis Antetokounmpo, who along with his teammates and head coach Mike Budenholzer see this as their best chance to reach The Finals with the likes of the Brooklyn Nets, Philadelphia 76ers, and Miami Heat out of the picture. They also have homecourt advantage.

Simply put, the Bucks have no more excuses. This series and essentially, the NBA title is theirs to lose.

“We’ve worked extremely hard to be in this moment. But the jobs not done,” Antetokounmpo said. “We believe in who we are. No matter the pressure, we are built for this.”

“It’s not going to be easy. Like it’s going to be hard. We’ve got to play for 48 minutes. We’ve got to trust one another. We’ve got to make it as tough as possible for them [Hawks]. But we know they’re a great team and a very dangerous team.”

“No matter the pressure, we’re going to go out there and compete.” 

Prediction: Bucks in six games.

Information, statistics, and quotations are courtesy of 5/23/2021 2 a.m. ESPN’s “Sportscenter” from Los Angeles, CA with Neil Everett, and Stan Verrett; 5/30/2021 12 a.m. ESPN new crawl and “Sportscenter With Scott Van Pelt,” from Washington, D.C. 6/3/2021 2 a.m. ESPN’s “Sportscenter” with Steve Levy and John Anderson; 6/19/2021 7:30 p.m. “Philadelphia 76ers versus Atlanta Hawks,” Game 6 East Semifinals ESPN, presented by Chipotle with Dave Pasch, Hubie Brown, and Malika Andrews; 6/20/2021 2:30 p.m. NBATV’s “Playoff Central Live,” brought to you by AT&T with Chris Miles, Steve Smith, and Brendan Haywood; 6/20/2021 8 p.m. “Atlanta Hawks versus Philadelphia 76er” Game 7 East Semifinals TNT, presented by Fanduel Sportsbook with Brian Anderson, Jim Jackson, and Stephanie Ready.  6/21/2021 5:30 a.m. ESPN news crawl and “Sportscenter” with Michael Eaves and Nabil Karim; 2021 Playoff scores www.nba.com; 6/21/2021 www.nba.com story, “Series Preview: Bucks’ Breakthrough Up Against Ahead-Of-Schedule Hawks,” by Steve Aschburner; 6/22/2021 www.nba.com story, “Numbers Preview: Eastern Conference Finals,” by John Schuhmann; 6/23/2021 7 p.m. ESPN’s “Sportscenter With Stephen A. Smith,” with Michael Wilbon, Kendrick Perkins, Ohm Youngmisuk, Dave McMenamin, and Marc J. Spears; 6/23/2021 7:30 p.m. “NBA Countdown” ESPN, presented by Mtn Dew with Maria Taylor, Jalen Rose, Jay Williams, Adrian Wojnaroski and Cassidy Hubbarth; 6/23/2021 8 p.m. NBATV’s “Playoff Central Live,” brought to you by AT&T with Matt Winer, Carlos Boozer, Sam Mitchell, and Chris Haynes; http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kareem_Abdul-Jabbarhttps://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Atlanta_Hawks_seasons; and https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Milwaukee_Bucks_seasons.

Sunday, June 20, 2021

J-Speaks: Nets Championship Journey Ends In Epic Game 7 of East Semis

 

Sometimes in the NBA Playoffs it comes down to who is available and who is not if you want to advance. It comes down to making plays at key moments of a game or a series. It comes down that team’s headline player bringing their A+ game when the stakes call upon it. We saw all of that in Game  7 in the Eastern Conference Finals between two teams that had serious championship aspirations and one team saw those championship dreams collapse right in front of them on Saturday night.

The No. 2 Seeded Brooklyn Nets gave a valiant effort against the No. 3 Seeded Milwaukee Bucks, but they just did not have enough as they fell 115-111 in overtime in Game 7 of the Eastern Conference Semifinals series.

Two-time Finals MVP and perennial All-Star Kevin Durant was sensational with a Game 7 with 48 points, nine rebounds and six assists on 17 for 36 from the field and 10 for 11 from the foul line playing all 53 minutes.

To put into context how great Durant, who helped the Golden State Warriors win back-to-back titles in 2017 and 2018 was in Game 7 versus the Bucks, his 48 points set a new Game 7 record. He scored or assisted on 27 of the Nets 53 first half points, he went stride for stride with two Kia MVP of the Bucks Giannis Antetokounmpo, who had 40 points, 13 rebounds and five assists in the Game 7 clincher on 15 for 24 from the field and 8 for 14 at the foul line, which included him connecting on 7 of his last 8 at the charity stripe.

Durant’s jumper tough turnaround jumper at the three-point line with the Bucks P.J. Tucker all over him defensively, tied the score with 01.0 seconds left in regulation that was called a two-point make because his left foot was on the line.

“My big ass foot was a step on the line. I just seen a little screen shot of how close I was to ending their season,” Durant said of what was called a two-pointer in the final seconds of regulation in his postgame Zoom presser.

The Nets got the jump start in the overtime when a follow up layup off a Joe Harris missed three-pointer was scored by Bruce Brown that put the Nets up 111-109.

It would be their only field goal of the extra five minutes as they went just 1 for 12 in overtime and were outscored 6-2, with the Bucks’ Khris Middleton hitting a turnaround jumper in the lane that put his team ahead 111-109 with 40.1 seconds left in overtime.

The Nets had their chances but Harris missed a couple of wide open three-pointers. Former Net Brook Lopez blocked Durant’s driving left-handed layup with about one minute left in overtime.

With a chance to possibly win the game in overtime, Durant’s air-balled a jumper from close to the top of the key with 01.0 seconds left in overtime.

Along with their season ending, the Nets also saw their six-game playoff home winning streak conclude.

“We got good looks there in overtime. We just didn’t knock them down,” Durant said of the Nets struggles in the extra five minutes. “But respect to the Milwaukee Bucks and how they prepare, how they challenged us all series and made adjustments all series. We’ve got nothing but respect for this ball club.”

“You’ve got to give credit to the Milwaukee Bucks. They’re a great team who got a good chance of winning a championship. The story should be about them and how well they played this whole series. How well they played all year.”

Coming into this game with the other two members of the Nets dynamic trio in James Harden had 22 points, nine rebounds and nine assists playing basically on one leg because of a right hamstring issue and Kyrie Irving was out because of right ankle sprain.

The Bucks trio of Antetokounmpo, and fellow All-Stars Khris Middleton and Jrue Holiday, and  have been in the lineup the entire series and were right at the forefront of this win Game 7 as Middleton who previously mentioned game-clinching jumper in the lane with 40.1 seconds capped his night of 23 points, 10 rebounds, six assists, and five steals. Holiday, who struggled much of the night going 5 for 23 shooting, including 2 for 9 from three-point range for 13 points, eight assists and seven rebounds. was the one guarding a tired Durant in the final seconds of overtime forcing him to airball his game-tying long jumper. Lopez who had 19 points, eight boards, and four block shots, including a big one on Durant’s left-handed layup with the game tied at 111-111 preserved the score. Tucker, who has guarded Durant for much of the majority of this series was a major contributor in Game 7 with 11 points, five boards, three steals and two blocks going 3 for 5 from three-point range.

“I can’t even speak about how much we miss Kyrie out on the floor, and how much we missed James to start the series,” Durant, who joined Hall of Famers Jerry West and Oscar Robertson to score 40-plus points and play every single minute of Game 7. “I can just go for 40 minutes on both of those two and how much they care about us and how much they put their bodies on the line to help us out as a team.”

Harden, who only played the first 43 seconds of this series before going down with the aforementioned right hamstring strain in the series opener before playing in Games 5, 6, and 7. He struggled in Game 5 scoring just five points on 1 for 10 shooting, including 0 for 8 from three-point range in the 114-108 come from behind win on Tuesday. Harden got back on track somewhat with 16 points, seven assists, five boards and four steals on 5 for 9 shooting, including 3 for 6 from three-point range in the 104-89 loss at the Bucks in Game 6 on Thursday night that tied the series 3-3.

Unfortunately, Harden looked nothing like the dynamic scorer and playmaker he has been known for in his basketball career.

“We did everything we could,” Harden, who shot 5 for 17, including 2 for 12 from three-point range and 10 for 10 at the foul line said after the Game 6 defeat postgame. “Just frustrated but give the Bucks credit. They fought until the end. Had a hell of a series. We just came up short.”  

Harden added, “I mean if were not injured. Me and Kai are on the floor, it’s a totally different conversation. But we can’t talk about that because that wasn’t the case.”

"It's frustrating for myself just being durable and being myself for the last, so many postseasons and dealing with this particular hamstring. It's just frustrating." 

Blake Griffin chipped in with 17 points and 11 rebounds, Bruce Brown had 14 points and six boards and Joe Harris had 10 points and nine rebounds.

Outside of the starters, reserves Landry Shamet, Jeff Green, and Nicolas Claxton combined for 0 for 0 from the field, 0/0 from three-point range, and 0 for 0 from the free throw line, two rebounds and one assists.

In fact, the only reserve for both teams to score was the Bucks Pat Connaughton, who had nine points and four rebounds on 3 for 5 from three-point range.

The inability for the Nets to remain healthy this season really came to pass in Game 7 versus the Bucks with Irving out and Harden limited by the hamstring issue.

Counting the regular season and playoffs, Durant, Irving, and Harden played only eight games together after Harden was acquired from the Houston Rockets on Jan. 14, going 6-2 in their eight games played together in the regular season.

While they went 48-24 during the regular season using 34 different starting lineups, that inability to create any kind of consistent chemistry eventually hindered the Nets and wore down Durant in the late stages of Game 7 for the Nets, who dropped to 1-3 all-time in Game 7, which now includes an 0-2 mark at home.

“Just an unbelievable effort. Gave us everything they had. So much adversity this year. First year together. So many changes to the roster and so many injuries. COVID protocols.  The couldn’t have given us anything more,” a dejected first-year head coach Steve Nash, whose team suffered their only home playoff loss in Game 7 versus the Bucks on Saturday night said in his postgame Zoom presser. “To take that team without Kai [Irving] and James on one leg out there. Doing anything to help his teammates, and you go down the line. What B.G. gave us this. Kevin just, I don’t know what more Kevin could do. It’s just out of this world, and you can say that for all our guys at a different part of the season gave us something. Just really proud of the group and I hurt for them more than anything.”

With the focus on next season, the question for the Nets is can they get back to this point and cash in on winning a title. The star trio of Durant, Irving, and Harden is under contract for next season with them respectably making $44 million for Harden, $42 million for Durant, and $35 million for Irving. After the 2021-22 NBA campaign all three players have a player option in their deals for the 2022-23 season.

The $121 million combined that Durant, Irving, and Harden are making next season has the Nets $9 million over their projected salary cap of $112 million.

Nets General Manager Sean Marks said after acquiring Harden as mentioned in the middle of last January that he hoped to keep Durant, Irving, and Harden together for a lot longer than a year-and-a-half.

The Nets like the rest of the National Basketball Association (NBA) had to deal with injuries, COVID-19 protocols, different lineups, and many other things in between.

To be a serious title contender, you need your headline player(s) to come to the forefront in a high stakes game like Game 7. You also need ancillary players who can perform alongside a team’s headline player(s). The Nets got the big-time performance from their headline player in Kevin Durant but they did not a get it from James Harden, at the level we have seen who was playing injured. Blake Griffin, Joe Harris, and Bruce Brown contributed, but to get no scoring from anyone else is hard to fathom.

The hope is now that the Brooklyn Nets can use this disappointment as fuel to get themselves healthy and whole, and hopefully reach this point again next season, and win a title because there is no guarantee that they have the chance to win a title with the same group again as Kevin Durant, Kyrie Irving, and James Harden’s future is not in control of the Nets after next season. In the offseason of 2022, Durant, Irving, and Harden have player options in the final year of their respective contracts. Also going into next season, all three combined next season have salaries of $44 million for Harden, $42 million for Durant, and $35 million for Irving, coming to a total of $121 million for the Nets Big Three, putting them over the team's projected $112 million in salary cap space. So, their best chance to seriously win a title is next year with the future after that up in the air. 

“We want to win. We want to win every game we play. We want to win a championship every just like every team," Durant said after the Game 7 loss. "But the beauty of our profession is we ket up and keep going. 

"Everybody on this team works extremely hard. They care about the game. So, we get ready for next year."

Information, statistics, and quotations are courtesy of 6/19/2021 8:30 p.m. “Milwaukee Bucks versus Brooklyn Nets” Game 7 Eastern Conference Semifinals on TNT, presented by Fanduel Sportsbook with Marv Albert, Grant Hill, and Jared Greenberg; 6/19/2021 11 p.m. “Inside the NBA,” presented by Kia on TNT with Ernie Johnson, Kenny Smith, Charles Barkley, and Shaquille O’Neal; 6/20/2021 2:30 a.m. ESPN news crawl and “Sportscenter” from Los Angeles, CA with Stan Verrett and Linda Cohn; and https://www.nba.com/game/mil-vs-bkr-0042000217/box-score.

J-Speaks: 2021 NBA Western Conference Finals Preview

                                 2) Phoenix Suns versus 4) Los Angeles Clippers

                                               (51-21)                                 (47-25)   

                                             Season Series: Clippers won 2-1

             Playoff History: Suns defeated Clippers in 2006 Western Conference Semis 4-3

One team was expected to reach this point in the NBA Playoffs. Their opponent has made an epic run to be within four games of reaching The NBA Finals in nearly three decades. Both teams enter one half of the NBA’s version of the Final four not whole. However, the ancillary pieces around the headliners for these Pacific Division rivals are peaking over the first two rounds of the 2021 NBA Western Conference Playoffs and now meet for the right to be four wins away from competing for their first NBA title. Here is the 2021 J-Speaks’ Western Conference Finals Preview.

For the Phoenix Suns, they had not made the playoffs prior to this season in 11 years. The last time they made the playoffs was 2010, where they made it to the Western Conference Finals falling to the eventual back-to-back NBA champion Los Angeles Lakers led by the late Hall of Famer Kobe Bryant in six games.

For the Clippers, after going 0-5 in the West Semis with a chance to make it the Conference Finals, will finally play in the West’s championship round for the first time in their 50-year history.

The Suns have not played since the start of this week, where they finished off a four-game sweep of the No. 3 Seeded Denver Nuggets winning 125-118 on TNT.

Since dropping Game 3 in the First-Round at the Lakers 109-95 on May 27, the Suns have won seven consecutive playoffs games, a franchise record.

They have been led their dynamic backcourt of 11-time All-Star Chris Paul, whose averaged 15.7 points and 8.7 assists on 50.9 percent from the field, 44.4 percent from three-point range, and 91.2 percent from the foul line and fellow All-Star Devin Booker, who has played extremely well in his postseason experience with a team-leading average of 27.9 points, 6.8 boards, and 4.8 assists on 48.7 percent from the field, 37.7 percent from three-point range, and 91.7 percent from the foul line.

From the moment Paul arrived when the Suns acquired him from the Oklahoma City Thunder in the summer of 2020, he along with head coach Monty Williams and fellow NBA veteran Jae Crowder, who played with the Miami Heat in the 2020 Finals last season against the eventual NBA champion Lakers have put their fingerprints all over the Suns and helped turned them from a perennial cellar dweller the last decade-plus into a championship caliber squad.

That was on full display in the Game 4 clincher where Paul had 13 of his game-high 37 points in the fourth quarter, seven assists and two steals on 14 for 19 shooting. Crowder (11.7 ppg, 5.1 rpg, 38.2 3-Pt.%) had nine points, 10 rebounds and four blocks.

To put into context how well Paul has played so far this postseason, he has 87 assists and just 14 turnovers, which include 53 assists and just six miscues the last five games. In the West Semis alone against the Nuggets, Paul, who averaged 20 points and 10 assists in a playoff series for the sixth time in his career had 41 assists and just five turnovers.

Just two years ago, many prognosticators wrote off Paul because of his age and the questioning of his ability to still be a productive player and leader on the hardwood.

Paul with what he did in getting the Thunder to the postseason in 2019-20 going seven games with the then James Harden led Houston Rockets before falling and what he has done for the Suns is why he was in the conversation for Kia MVP that went to the Nuggets Nikola Jokic earlier this month.

“I’m so grateful to my family, my team. Couple of years ago, they was writing me off. You can’t do this, and this ain’t about me. This is about us. Shows you what you can do when you come together as a team,” Paul, who totaled 43 points on 16 for 19 shooting (84.2 percent) from the floor, 20 assists and zero turnovers in the fourth quarter of the Semis against the Nuggets said to NBA on TNT’s Chris Haynes in the Game 4 clincher. “We got a great team over there, and it’s a lot of fun to be a part of it.”

The Suns though will have to be at their best at the start of the West Finals because Paul will not be available to start having been in the NBA’s health and safety protocols since Wednesday. Paul is not expected to play at the start of this series, which gets underway on Sunday afternoon at the Suns, there is no timetable of when he is expected to play.

“There’s a natural concern for the person, and that’s basically where it ends,” Coach Williams said on Thursday about the latest form of adversity the Suns are dealing with this postseason. “Everybody’s dealing with it. If you look around the league, Philly’s [76ers] got a situation, the Clippers have a situation, Utah’s had one for a while. Like everyone’s dealing.”

“Right now, we’re just in a situation where all we can do is practice and wait to see what happens. There’s a goal in front of us and were focused on that, and we’re hoping and praying that we’ll be whole again before we play Game 1.”

With Paul out that means more responsibility will be placed on the shoulders of Booker, who all he has done in the two close out games is score a combined 81 points in the 113-100 Game 6 clincher at the Lakers with a double-double of 47 points and 11 rebounds on 15 for 22 shooting, including 8 for 10 from three-point range and 34 points and 11 boards on 11 for 25 shooting and 10 for 11 from the charity stripe in 125-118 Game 4 clincher at the Nuggets.  

“I feel good,” Booker, whose registered five games of 30-plus points so far this postseason said to the “Inside the NBA” on TNT crew of Ernie Johnson, Kenny Smith, Charles Barkley, and Shaquille O’Neal postgame of the Game 4 clincher last Sunday about making it to the Western Conference Finals. “I’ve been waiting on this for a really long time. Just playoff basketball in general.”

“A lot of people have been saying I haven’t played any meaningful basketball and I’m not ready for that. And this is my time to prove it. So, the whole team’s having fun with it. Having great leaders like CP, Jae Crowder, Coach Monty around here helps out a lot.”

Along with scoring, Booker will have to at times be a facilitator in making plays for his teammates. But the floor general responsibilities will also be handled by Paul’s understudy Cameron Payne (10.2 ppg, 38.9 3-Pt.%), who has more than held his own so far this postseason. The Suns also can go to youngster Jevon Carter, and veterans Langston Galloway and E’Twaun Moore if necessary.

Along with Booker stellar play, the Suns are in position competing for an NBA championship also because of the play of big man Deandre Ayton who has been steady and consistent first against perennial All-Star Anthony Davis in the First-Round against the Lakers and more than held his own against league MVP Nikola Jokic of the Nuggets. During the regular season, Ayton averaged 14.4 points and 10.5 rebounds. So far in his first postseason of his three-year career is averaging 15.2 points and 10.6 boards on 71.6 percent shooting.

Ayton’s ability as a screener and roll man off Paul and Booker’s two-man games are a big reason why the Suns’ perimeter players in the aforementioned Paul,  Booker, Crowder, Mikal Bridges (12.0 ppg, 44.9 FG%, 36.4 3-Pt.%), Cameron Johnson (6.7 ppg, 41.2 3-Pt.%), Dario Saric, Torrey Craig are getting a plethora of wide-open jumpers, especially from three-point range that they have been connecting well on.

Along with his skills offensively, Ayton has the major reason why the Suns lead the NBA playoffs in points allowed (100.8); opponent’s field goal percentage (42.3 percent); and point differential at +10.2. They are No. 2 in opponent’s three-point percentage at 32.1 percent and tied with the Philadelphia 76ers for No 4 in block shots per game so far in the playoffs at four per contest.

The Suns defense has also been keyed by their wings in the previously mentioned Crowder and Bridges, and of course Paul.

While Paul and Booker have been getting most of the headlines, and it has been well deserved, Bridges has been the real barometer for how successful the Suns have been so far this postseason. When the former Villanova Wildcat has scored in double figures, the Suns have gone a perfect 8-0 so far this postseason and has failed to reach double-figures in the lone two losses sustained in Games 2 and 3 of the First-Round against the Lakers.

The one advantage the Suns do have going into this next series is they have had time to practice this past week having finished their West Semis tilt against the Nuggets awaiting their opponent in the West Finals. That preparation has become more prevalent now with Paul being out, hopefully giving the Coach Williams squad prep time to put together a game plan that will work against the Clippers in the interim with Paul out for who knows how long.

“We’re trying to manage these days,” Williams said. “I’ve talked to a number of coaches who have been in this situation just to get information on how they’ve handled this much time off and that kind of thing. We’re trying to keep a game rhythm the best we can.”  

While the Suns will be in the Western Conference Finals for the 10th time in their history, their opponent in the Los Angeles Clippers will be making their first appearance in the NBA’s West championship series.

To put into perspective what the Clippers did on Thursday night when they took down the Utah Jazz 131-119 in Game 6 of their Western Conference Semifinals series on Friday night, they ended the longest drought by any team in the four major North American sports leagues (NBA/NFL/NHL/MLB) without reaching that league’s Conference championship game or round at 50 years.

The Clippers had gone 0-8 in their opportunities to advance to the Conference Finals, which included their three missed chances in the last season’s West Semis against the Nuggets, falling in seven games after leading that series 3-1. They lost in seven games in the 2015 East Semis against the Houston Rockets after leading that series 3-1. In 2006, the Clippers lost in seven games of the 2006 West Semis against the Suns.

One person who understands what the Clippers have been through over the course of their five decades is former Clipper and now ESPN television color analyst Mark Jackson, who spent the 1992-93 season as their starting point guard and led them to one of their rare playoff appearances in 1993.

“Think about all the trials and tribulations this franchise has seen,” Jackson, whose Clippers squad lost in the First-Round against the Rockets led by Hall of Famer Hakeem Olajuwon in five games 28 springs ago said towards the close of Game 6 broadcast on ESPN about their journey to finally getting to the Conference Finals. “The dark days. The frustrating days. The tough losses. This is a tremendous accomplishment, and their mindset should be to celebrate right now, but they still have work to do.”  

To say that head coach Tyronn Lue squad’s road to get to within four games of competing for the Larry O’Brien trophy has been anything but easy would be an understatement.

In the first two rounds against the No. 5 Seeded Dallas Mavericks and the No. 1 Seeded Utah Jazz, the Clippers had to overcome consecutive 0-2 starts to those series to take down the Mavericks in seven games losing all but Game 7 on their homecourt and winning all three games of the opening-round at the Mavericks.

In taking down the Jazz in six games in the West Semis, the Clippers won the last four games which included winning Games 5 and 6 with their lead star Kawhi Leonard (30.4 ppg, 7.7 rpg, 4.4 apg, 2.1 spg, 57.3 FG%, 39.3 3-Pt.%), who injured his right knee in the fourth quarter of Clippers 118-104 win in Game 4 that tied the series 2-2. In his last two outings prior to the knee injury, Leonard registered 31 points or more in Games 3 and 4 on 53.5 percent from the field.

In the Clippers take down of the Jazz 119-111 in Game 5 this past Wednesday night in Utah, fellow perennial All-Star Paul George (26.1 ppg, 9.2 rpg, 5.3 apg, 45.1 FG%, 36.1 3-Pt.%) registered 37 points, 16 rebounds, five assists and two block shots on 12 for 22 from the field and 10 for 11 from the charity stripe. Reggie Jackson (16.6 ppg, 50.3 FG%, 43.5 3-Pt.%) also played well scoring 12 of his 22 points in the fourth quarter.

“I just feel comfortable,” Jackson said postgame after the win in Game 5 about taking tough shots in the presser cooker of a playoff game. “I feel comfortable taking shots with conviction, whether they go in or not. You can only miss or make. So, I just try to take them with conviction. Try to be prepared for the moment and fortunate enough to have some go in. 

For George, it was his third consecutive game scoring 30 points or more, the longest such streak of his postseason career. He had 31 points on 12 for 24 shooting, including 6 for 10 from three-point range in the Clippers’ 132-106 win in Game 3 versus Jazz. George followed that up with 31 points, nine rebounds going 4 for 10 from three-point range and 9 for 10 from the foul line.

“There’s no secret. I knew I had to be big tonight,” George said postgame after the Game 5 win, where he scored 30-plus points for the third straight game, the longest such streak of his playoff career. “Got to be big going forward.”

“Our season is alive because of his [Leonard’s] shouldering of all the work that he’s done. And so, we’ve got to hold it together and continue to keep this boat afloat until he returns.”

In Game 6, the Clippers got off to a rough beginning at home getting outscored 39-19 in the second quarter and trailed Jazz 72-50 at the half. They were down by 25 points at 75-50 early in the third quarter before getting things in gear outscoring the Jazz 81-44 the rest of the way behind a  21-2 run, which included a 17-0 run in the third quarter as the Clippers outscored the Jazz 41-22 in the third quarter to cut that 22-point halftime deficit to 94-91 after three quarters. The Clippers closed the door on the Jazz outscoring them 40-25 in the fourth quarter to win Game 6 131-119 to advance to the Western Conference Finals for the first time in their 50-year history as a franchise going back to their years first as the Buffalo Braves, then the San Diego Clippers and now as the Los Angeles Clippers.

Just like Jackson did in Game 5, the Clippers got a big-time performance from second-year guard Terance Mann, who scored 25 of his overall career-high 39 points in the second half on 15 for 21 from the field, including 7 for 10 from three-point range. Mann, who had 13 points in his first career playoff start in place of Leonard had 13 points after scoring just 12 points total the first four games of the series.

“I mean, I just trust my work. I just go out there and trust my work, Everybody keep telling me to shoot the ball, and that’s what I did,” Mann, who previous career-high in the NBA was 25 points said about his performance to ESPN’s Rachel Nichols after the Game 6 clincher.

George in the Game 6 clincher had 28 points on 10 for 24 from the field with nine rebounds, seven assists and three steals. Jackson had 22 of his 27 points in the second half with a season-high 10 assists on 10 for 16 shooting, including 3 for 7 from three-point range.

For George specifically, the close of this series the last four games put on display the kind of fortitude and will that many believed he had in him but did not show enough of in postseasons past whether it was for the Clippers last season, the Thunder and towards the close of his time with the Pacers.

George understood that he needed to step up in the absence of Leonard and will need to continue that if Clippers have any hopes of advancing to the NBA Finals.

“Man, it feels great to close out here,” George said to Nichols postgame of the Game 6 clincher about reaching the Conference Finals for the first time in Clippers’ history. “The wrote us off when Kawhi went down. Everybody had to step up. We knew we had to step up in his loss.”

“We just send our prayers to him. Hopefully, he gets healthy. But we got to continue on. He [Leonard] carried us up until this point. I look forward to the challenge of carrying us even further.”  

During the regular season, the Clippers took two of the three meetings against the Suns, who despite outrebounding them by a +4.3 and having a turnover margin of plus-one during their regular season series had a point differential of -2.3.

The Clippers though will enter the West Finals on just one day of rest and having to travel to Phoenix for Game 1 of the upcoming series on Sunday afternoon after their comeback win in the Game 6 clincher over the Jazz.  

This series will come down to if former Clipper in Paul can return when he clears health and safety protocols and be the floor general that he has been for the Suns all this year and in his magnificent Hall of Fame career.

It will come down to Booker, who averaged 23.3 points against the Clippers during the regular season being able to score and facilitate for his teammates.

This series will also come down to which role players can play consistently. For the Suns that supporting cast is the aforementioned Johnson, Payne, Crowder, Bridges, and Payne.

For the Clippers it is Mann, Nicholas Batum (9.8 ppg, 5.8 rpg, 1.8 spg, 500 FG%, 41.4 3-Pt.%), Jackson, Mann, Marcus Morris (12.2 ppg, 39.47 3-Pt.%), Sr. Patrick Beverly, two-time NBA champion Rajon Rondo, Ivica Zubac, and possibly DeMarcus Cousins.  

As important as the superstars are in the outcome of a playoff series, it also comes down to strategy and scheme.

What helped the Clippers get past the Jazz in the Semis is that Coach Lue decided in the early on the series to go small where he put five guys on the court that can spread the floor and shoot threes. What that did is take Jazz All-Star center and now three-time Kia Defensive Player of the Year in Rudy Gobert away from the basket and make him defend in space. That resulted in the Jazz getting wide open jump shots, especially from three-point range, where the Clippers beat the Jazz at their own game, which resulted in four straight wins and a trip to the Conference Finals.

One player who has been a major barometer for the Clippers success this postseason has been Morris, Sr. who has shot 20-35 (71.1 percent) from three-point range in the team’s eight wins so far in the 2021 Playoffs, and just 7 for 33 (21.3 percent) from three-point range in the losses.

What this also showed is Coach Lue’s ability to make adjustments, something that his former boss and current 76ers’ head coach Doc Rivers seemed not to make at critical times in the playoffs in previous seasons.

Coach Lue is not afraid to play certain people depending on the matchup or if they are playing to the level that is getting them in the win column more often than not.

That is why Coach Lue is the NBA’s all-time leader amongst NBA head coaches with a .917 winning percentage in playoff games with an opportunity to clinch a series, compiling a now 12-1 mark with the Game 6 victory over the Clippers.

What will be different in this series against the Suns when the Clippers go small is that the Suns have player who can hurt them in the interior in Ayton, who unlike Gobert can score in the low post and has a solid midrange jumper and is an excellent rebounder both defensively and offensively.

That means, Zubac and Cousins will for sure see consistent time in the series because they will need someone to contain Ayton and neutralize him.

For the Los Angeles Clippers and Phoenix Suns, reaching the Western Conference Finals is special from where they both were previously whether it was a decade ago for the Suns and it seems like forever for the so-called Lakers little brother in the Clippers.

Overcoming the adversities from this past regular season from COVID-19 protocols injuries, and in the Suns case a lack of experience on their roster, they put it all together thanks to two of the best head coaches in the Monty Williams for the Suns and Tyronn Lue.

There team’s hard work has resulted in a profound respect and appreciation from their ravage fan bases. In fact, in the Game 6 clincher at the Nuggets, Ball Arena did have some Suns fans who waited after the Game 5 applauding Chris Paul before his postgame interview with Haynes of TNT. 

There is some sting in this series because two key participants in Kawhi Leonard and Chris Paul are on the mend at the start of a series that will determine which one will be playing for the Larry O’Brien trophy.  

That said you have a matchup between two squads who will look any adversity right in the face and take it head on. You also have two squads who have a level of respect for the other and understand that it will take everything each one has and then some to win four more games and reach the 2021 NBA Finals. 

"They're a good team," Coach Williams said about the Clippers. "They've shown that they've shown they can overcome deficits in the playoffs for sure." 

Coach Williams added about the Clippers Game 6 come from behind win, "I was watching as a coach last night trying to figure out ways playing against either team, and when I saw them make that run, that was just a lot of will and shot making, and a ton of defense as well." 

Coach Lue said that he and his coaching staff Kenny Atkinson, Chauncey Billups, associate head coach Dan Craig, Larry Drew, Roy Rogers, Brendan O'Connor, and Jeremy Castleberry do a phenomenal job of making adjustment to stay two to three steps ahead of their opponent. 

"I think my coaching staff does a great job with that...And we just want to make sure when they make adjustments we already know the adjustments they're going to make, and we have a counter for it," Lue said. "So, just trying to prepare before they do it and stay a step ahead of them." 

Prediction: Clippers in seven games.

Information, statistics, and quotations are courtesy of, 6/9/2021 www.nba.com’s “Tune-In Tidbits: TNT Wednesday, June 9, 2021,” by Brian Martin; 6/12/2021 4 a.m. NBATV’s “Gametime,” presented by State Farm with Matt Winer, Steve Smith, and Brendan Haywood; 6/13/2021 7:30 p.m. TNT’s “NBA Tip-Off,” presented by Carmax with Ernie Johnson, Kenny Smith, Charles Barkley, and Shaquille O’Neal; 6/13/2021 8 p.m. “Phoenix Suns versus Denver Nuggets” Game 6 West Semifinals on TNT, presented by Fanduel Sportsbook with Kevin Harlan, Reggie Miller, and Chris Haynes; 6/13/2021 10:30 p.m. “Inside the NBA,” presented by Kia on TNT with Ernie Johnson, Kenny Smith, Charles Barkley, and Shaquille O’Neal; 6/13/2021 NBA Playoff scores www.nba.com; 6/17/2021 7 p.m. “NBA Countdown” on ESPN, presented by Mtn Dew with Maria Taylor, Jalen Rose, Jay Williams, and Adrian Wojnarowski; 6/18/2021 2 a.m. NBATV’s “Gametime,” with Chris Miles, Dennis Scott, and Quentin Richardson; 6/18/2021 10 p.m. “Utah Jazz versus Los Angeles Clippers,” on ESPN, presented by Chipotle with Mike Breen, Jeff Van Gundy, Mark Jackson, and Rachel Nichols; 6/19/2021 www.nba.com’s “Series Preview: Suns, Clippers Each Peaking Heading Into Conference Finals,” by Michael C. Wright; 6/19/2021 11 p.m. "Inside the NBA," presented by Kia on TNT with Ernie Johnson, Kenny Smith, Charles Barkley, and Shaquille  O'Neal;  https://www.espn.com/nba/stats/team/_/view/opponent/table/defensive/sort/avgBlocks/threepointfieldgoalpct; https://www.espn.com/nba/team/stats/_/name/phx; https://www.espn.com/nba/team/stats/_/name/lachttps://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/2020-21_Los_Angeles_Clippers_season and https://en.m.wikpedia.org/wiki/List_of_Phoenix_Suns_seasons.