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the volume. Happy Monday, everybody, in Happy New Year. This will be the first full calendar year with Hoops Tonight being in existence. February one will actually be one year since we started doing this. Today we're gonna be covering the Denver Nuggets and the Memphis Grizzlies. The Nuggets beat the Celtics last night and show down to the m v ps um. The Celtics had come in winning four games in a row, so it's a really good challenge for Denver, and boy did day raise rise to the occasion.
And then the Memphis Grizzlies. For all the trash that we talked about them losing four games to Western Conference teams in ten days, they did win back to back this weekend against two Western Conference playoff teams that have been playing very good basketball lately. So a lot of Nuggets and Grizzlies today. Um, just to give you guys an idea of the schedule for the rest of the week. Tomorrow we're gonna be doing a video that's gonna break
down tonight's game. So the Monday nights late you'll see on the feeds Tomorrow Thursday night after Celtics MAVs will be going live on AMP doing a show there and also breaking down some of the Wednesday nights late, and then Friday night I'll be staying up late to record it. Probably won't go on the feeds until Saturday morning, but keep an eye on the feed Saturday morning for a breakdown of Friday nights games as well. You guys know the joke before we get started. Subscribe to the Volumes
YouTube channels. You don't miss any more of videos. Follow me on Twitter at underscore Jason lt so you guys don't miss any show announcements. And the last but not least, for whatever reason, you guys missed one of these shows and you can't get back over to YouTube to finish, you can find them wherever you get your podcasts. Under Hoops tonight, all right, let's talk some basketball. So the Celtics had come in winning five or four games in
a row. That kind of erased all the memory from that ugly stretch where I think they lost five out of six games, and there were some impressive wins in there. They beat the Minnesota Timberwolves, they beat the Bucks on Christmas Day, and they beat the Clippers. That was a super interesting game that I watched, UM that I wanted
to talk a little bit about. Kawhi Leonard and Paul George were both awesome, and Jayson Tatum and Jalen Brown just outplayed them, and the Clippers actually led early in the fourth quarter in Jalen Brown just completely took the game over. Started with a little fade away, but then he just started getting downhill to the rim and built double built a double digit lead. They never looked back. UM.
Little side note on the Clippers. They went two and three on their East Coast road trip despite Kawhi Leonard and Paul George playing some really good basketball. Kawhi Leonard is back to that absurd level of efficiency that we've grown accustomed to seeing from him when he's healthy, but the Clippers defense has fallen off. And it's kind of an interesting conundrum because if you remember the beginning of
the year, their defense. Their offense was horrific, but man, they were locking in and and they were getting stops. On the five game road trip, the Clippers gave up a hundred and twenty points per one hundred possessions, which was in the league over that span. So the Clippers are kind of in this weird spot where they got guys playing well, they're starting to get healthy, but the defense has fallen off, and so they're not kind of
notching the winds that you want there. But the Celtics came in riding hot, feeling good about themselves, and a really good challenge for Nuggets team that needed a signature win. And not only that, it's kind of a bad matchup. You know, when you think about the the types of teams that typically give the Nuggets trouble, it's teams with stretch bigs and lots of quickness that can dribble like
driving kicked teams. Teams are gonna force Yokich to guard in space, which can really expose their defense, which has consistently had problems with that over the year. In fact, the Celtics have won six had one six consecutive games against the Denver Nuggets and uh spanning the last three years, so this particular matchup has been problematic for the Nuggets on a bunch of different levels. Ajamal Murray was out, but despite all of that, Denver just completely handled them.
They led by double digits for about half the game. They led by as much as eighteen. They responded to every major Boston run. Nicola Yokich finished which with thirty twelve and twelve on thirteen shots with zero turnovers. Al Horford and Grant Williams were completely helpless in isolation. Every time they doubled him, he made them pay, still got his thirty. It just just a ridiculous game. He was plus fourteen. This is a wild stat for your Nuggets fans.
Nicola yoki has logged a positive excuse me, a negative plus minus, meaning he his minutes in just eight of the games he's played this year. He's played in thirty three games, so the Nuggets are either winning or tying Yokis minutes in what's at twenty five of their thirty three games this year. That's insane. For the season, the Nuggets are plus two seventy eight with yok on the floor, which is the best mark for any individual player in the league. The second best is Jayson Tatum at plus
two forty one. So that's why it's a nice little m VP showdown for you. You You know, we've talked a lot about Yoki's lately, and I focused a lot um in our last Nuggets video on his base and how that affects him as an isolation player, uh in him winning physical confrontations in the post by knocking players off balance before they can knock him off balance. I don't
want to talk about that today. When I was watching the film this morning, there was one particular concept that was really standing out to me, and it's the concept of advantages in basketball. Yokich has a very firm grasp of advantage basketball. Um. In a game of basketball, you might have a hundred something possessions, right, call it a hundred possessions for the sake of it being easy math.
During those hundred possessions, they're gonna be really easy plays, maybe a run out dunk, you know, or an easy backdoor cut for a layup. And then they're gonna be really hard plays, you know, late clock situation, fantastic defense, and you need someone to make a play to rise up and knock down a tough shot and then everything in between, and all of those one D possessions are
gonna fall somewhere on that spectrum. But as a team, the more you can avoid the hard plays and target and capitalize on the easy plays, the better chance you have of being successful offensively on a night in a nice out, a night out basis, So you have to hunt those easy opportunities when they're there, and then that same idea works in reverse on the defensive end of
the floor. If you can take away as many of the easy opportunities as possible, you can force teams to beat you the hard way, which, over a large sample size like a hundred possessions, you give yourself a really good chance to win. So I wanted to give a couple of specific examples from this game to break that down.
So a third quarter, about eight and a half minutes left, Nicolayoka just rumbling up the floor and transition and uh KCP is on the left wing and Jason Tatum is guarding KCP and Jayson Tatum is sitting in the gap. So Tatum is basically not paying super close attention to KCP, but he's not doubling either he's just kind of being lazy. He's taking a possession, not taking a possession off, so
to speak. But he's relaxing, so to speak, until he has an opportunity to be more impactful, like if KCP got the ball, if he actually needed too hard double or to rotate or anything like that. Yo, Kids just throws the ball to KCP, just throws it to him on the wing. Tatum is out of position, so KCP just rips through to the left and blows by Tatum. Because tatums in no man's land in the gap, and KCP draws help, there's a skip past to Bruce Brown
in the corner, who knocks down with three. By the way, Bruce Brown just continues to shoot the laces off the basketball. He made four threes against Boston last night. He's on three point three three three three point attempts per game this year. He did shoot over forty percent last year in Brooklyn too, but it is much lower volume. But again, like on that possession, there's no reason to run a set.
There's no reason to run an action like an inverted pick and roller, a grible handoff or anything like that. You run actions to get an advantage, and if KCP has an advantage already because Tatum is sleeping, then just throw the pass. That's an easy opportunity that's there. If you look off that opportunity, now you have to run an action. Now you have to run a set against Boston set half court defense, and it might be tougher.
That's targeting a hard opportunity over targeting the easy opportunity. Fast forward a couple of minutes, six and a half minutes left in the third it's a regular possession. Boston has the ball. Jayson Tatum misses a tough, little pull up two point shot, but it's a it's not a transition opportunity. They missed the shot, Denver secures the rebound. Everybody moves down to the other end of the floor in transition. Boston, just because they're being sloppy forgets to
go art KCP in the left corner. Yoki's just dribbles the ball up the floor, swing pass up to KCP, knocks down at three. Three minutes later, three and a half minutes left in the third quarter, Yokis flashes to the middle of the floor and catches kind of at the top of the key. Robert Williams is with him, but he's kind of trailing behind, So Yoki's just takes like one dribble closer. Now he's past the free throw line. But all he's doing is just kind of examining what's
going on around him on the floor. And Derek White is guarding Michael Porter Jr. And he falls asleep and Michael Porter Jr. Just back cuts him. Wasn't a set, wasn't a play, wasn't anything. Michael Porter Jr. Derek Why just forgot to guard him, and Yoki's just hits him and he makes a layup. Every single time you aren't doing the exact right thing on defense with where you're supposed to be on the floor, Yokich will burn you
for that advantage situation. Again, when we're talking about lower level players, role players in the NBA, k CP, all the guys we just mentioned k CP, Michael Porter Jr. Bruce Brown. In a half court set, when defenses are locked in and the easy stuff isn't there, those guys are gonna struggle to create against a set defense because that's not what they're best at. But when you give them an advantage, they can make plays. I talked about this when I covered KCP for the Lakers. He's one
of the best closeout attackers in the league. He's got a great one drop a pull up. Obviously he's the lights out three point shooter, but he's got a great one drop a pull up. He's an outstanding athlete to extend all the way to the rim because he's such a good one like leaper, and he can make kickout passes. So if if Tatum is not gonna if Tatum's gonna play off the off of him into the gap, a swing pass to KCP is a really high percentage possession.
Bruce Brown obviously set defense, you need him to create shots. He's not going to be an All Star, but the dudes turn himself into a damn good spot up shooters, short role player, dunker, spot guy. If you give him advantages, he's gonna score. And then the same goes for Michael Porter Jr. The dude can't dribble the basketball, but if you leave him open in that he's probably the best up and down, catch and shoot shooter that we have in the league right now, or at least he's in
that conversation. So that if when you give flawed players advantages they can beat you, and what makes Yoki so dominant is his ability to target and spot those advantages and make teams pay. A huge part of this is his transition attack. This is why you know, you guys, you guys know. Coming into the season, I had Yo Kitchen and be down and I think seven and eight in my player rankings, and a big part of that was I talked about the fundamental reasons why I dislike
slow footed biggs. One, they struggle to guard in space. So when you put them in driving kicks situations or when they have to guard out on the perimeter, they can struggle. But too biggs don't like to run in transition. They jog up and down the floor, which causes a boatload of problems when the game takes on an open floor field when it's transition back and forth and the
pace goes up. The stuff in with guarding in space is still true with Yokich, Like he's gonna struggle to guard ball handlers that pull him out to the three point line. That goes without saying, and we'll see if he can overcome that in this playoff run. But he has turned himself into an excellent transition big. I'm not even talking about the live ball stuff. We've talked about that to death. Yo, kids gets the rebound, he's bringing
the ball off the floor. He's so good at those kick ahead passes and finding those open opportunities up the floor. I'm talking about when he doesn't have the ball watch the film, when a shot goes up and he misses, or when they when the other team shoots and one of his teammates gets a rebound, he drops his head and he sprints like hell up the floor. He sprints better up and down the floor in terms of commitment then most of the stars in the league, counting guards
and wings. You can tell he understands and has identified that one of the ways you can beat him, like many big, bigger players in the league, is by beating him up and down the floor and transition, and he has no interest in giving those opportunities to you. So on the defensive end, him sprinting back takes away those
transition opportunities. But on the other end of the floor, when he capitalizes on a possession where maybe Al Horford doesn't run, or Robert Williams doesn't run, or Anthony Davis doesn't run, or any of the other bigs around the league. What happens he gets a cross match because in transition defense, you guard the closest guy, not your guy, because usually it's another it's a question of numbers and how many
players you have back. How many times in that game last night did you see Yoki's just sprint up the floor, grabbed Derek White in a in a transition transition cross match and just quickly seal in demand the basketball. And there's a huge difference between the way you have to double team that in the way you double team in a half court set. If Horford is on your kitch, it's a planned double team where you're expecting you're basically
simplifying the defender's job. You're telling Al Horford, hey, you can sit on that left shoulder because we're gonna help right when he puts the ball on the ground or when he gathers the ball from the right side. It's it's very planned, and you've got a big guy guarding Yokich, and there's usually another bigger player that's coming over to double. When it's Derek White on Yokich, it's a panic double.
Derrick White's not holding him in any spot, like Al Horford, if you simplify his job, it's like, Okay, I don't have to guard Yokich, I just have to force him middle. That's something, is that that's achievable. Derrick White's not gonna do anything with Yoki in any capacity. Like even if you attack the basketball so damn strong with the basketball, He's just gonna rip it up over his head and
go up and finish. So when you when just by sprinting the floor and drawing those cross matches, he forces these panic double teams that lead to wide open shots. All of this is why Denver's offense. Offense looks so easy all the time. They hunt easy opportunities when they're available. Lots of NBA teams play tough basketball. They walk the ball at the floor, watch the Watch the Dallas Mavericks once and I have to every every time. I was joking.
I went on with a buddy of my combo, Andrew Slallap, who covers the league as well, the earlier this morning, and we were talking about how, you know, as much as I have to watch the Mavericks as part of my job, and I love Luca as an individual player, but that team is my least favorite watching the league because every single one of their games looks exactly the same, and they walk the ball up the floor and they play hard basketball. They don't hunt easy opportunities when they're available.
It's hard half court basketball. They're good at it, but they don't hunt those easy opportunities, and that's kind of a fundamental difference between the team, Like Denver and Dallas. I wanted to shout out Aaron Gordon for a second because it's funny. When he came into the league, he was kind of like a tweener, and then after a couple of years there towards the end in Orlando, he's really trying to become more of like a wing and
he's doing a lot of stuff off the dribble. But here in Denver he's found his role as a big man. And it's not just in the screen and roll obviously, Like he had a screen and roll inverted pick and roll with Yokis yesterday where Yokis threw it up and he had a reverse dunk. And we've talked a lot about the stuff that he does in the dunker spot, right, like finding little soft spots in the defense and elevating and dunking with his behind his head or things along
those lines. Was a play in this game. This is legit big man, higher level big man stuff. It was a regular half court possession where Yokers brought the ball up the floor and Aaron Gordon has Jalen Brown on him, who is one of the better wing defenders in the league, and he just did that lebron seal. If you guys ever seen this, that that lebron seal where it's like he likes his size advantage, so he just buries him under the basket and then he'll just get an easy
Lebrono at two or three easy layups. A game like that, Eric Gordon just buried Jalen Brown under the basket. Jalen Brown with the last second tried to front him. Yoki's just perfectly led him over the top to the basket. You know, it's funny with with yokis more of an offensive initiator operating a lot out of the top of
the key. Aaron Gordon's game kind of fits that mold of more of a rim running center type of player with his Denver team, and he has the athletic tools is you know, I think he's like six ten, super long arms, great dunker from underneath the basket. But he also has the higher level skill that gives him the versatility to do more than most big do, Like he's
having a great season shooting the three. He can on occasion bailout of possession with shot making at the end because he did have a lot of time practicing being a traditional wing initiator when he was in Orlando. But it's kind of funny because he's basically like a hybrid between a big man and a wing, and that ironically is like the perfect fit alongside your kitchen. Denver, letting Jeremy Grant go was a big, big risk, and Jeremy Grant has been great, So you could talk yourself into
that being a mistake, but it hasn't been. It's paid off because Aaron Gordon's bigger physical profile has made him actually a better fit with his Denver team. UM quick notes on Boston. They're still playing good ball. I don't want to go to negative here. They did have an impressive four game streak right before this. They still have the best record in basketball, although they're only one and a half games up now on Denver. Um but they play an arrogant brand of basketball. I was really annoyed
watching them on film this morning. Not to rain on Denver's parade here, but Boston's defense was atrocious in this game. Countless mistakes and Transition talked about the the them failing to get mass Uh matched up on KCP, giving up cross matches because guys aren't running up and down the floor. They bought, They botched a bunch of basic screening actions. Like there was a play in the early third quarter. Yoki has the ball at the top of the key.
Jason Tatum is guarding Michael Porter Jr. In the right corner. Marcus Smart is guarding Bruce Brown on the right wing. Bruce Brown just runs down and sets a pin down for Michael Porter Jr. Michael Porter Jr. Comes up, Smart stays home because he thinks that Tatum is supposed to
fight through. Tatum stays because he thinks it's a switch, wide open three for Michael Porter Jr. That's just sloppy, That's just that's just that, that's just not coming into a big game against a the best team in the Western Conference playing really good basketball and not bringing the appropriate focus. Boston's defense has been really good lately for the record. They were set and defensive rating in December.
But this is another big game, a monumentally important game against the best team in the West on the road, a chance to send a clear message, and they came in unfocused, with a less than great effort. And that's what irritates me the most about the Celtics. They behave like a team that is a multi time champion when they've never won a championship. You guys know how much I liked the Celtics roster. I actually think top to bottom,
they're the most talented roster in the league. I think Tatum and Brown are the best duo in the league. There's a whole lot of to get excited about as a Celtics fan as you're looking at that roster. But I I came into the season with them third in my list of championship contenders, behind Golden State in Milwaukee, and I still have them third, and it's because I do not trust them to put four focused rounds of
basketball together. And I hate to break it to you, but the competition is better this year then it was last year. The level of play they brought last year was good enough to get to the finals and lose to the Warriors. It will not be good enough to get to the final this year, not with Chris Middleton coming back, not with some of the other better teams
in the Eastern Conference. That Cleveland's better, Philly's better. Yeah, Like the top three opponents they will have to face out of the Eastern Conference this year are better than the top three they had to face last year. That's just a fact. So they better get it together, you know.
And that's why I kept saying even after the Golden State game, like I the only thing that can change my mind about Boston and their approach is to watch them play in high stakes environments with the appropriate focus,
which I just not have that seen them do. And then this is the second time this season in a huge game against the Western Conference opponent of where they just where they just came in sloppy alright, moving on to Memphis, so they were too and oh on a nice little weekend back to back against the Pelicans, and the Kings are actually on a three game winning streak because they beat Toronto on the road last Thursday. But I didn't watch that particular game, but I did watch
both of the weekend games. They did a number on the Pelicans just at complete physical domination. We can talk about the physical play of the front line, and we did a lot of that last week or two weeks ago with Jaren Jackson Jr. And Steven Adams in terms of their defensive presence on both an offensive presence on
the glass, protecting the paint, things along those lines. But I want to talk about their wings for a second, because their wings are super physical as well, like Desmond Baine and Dylan Brooks and even a little bit of David Roddy. These are big, strong, trunky, low center of gravity wings, and if you look at the Pelicans, they're very thin on the perimeter. C J. McCollum, Trey Murphy, IRB. Jones. These are extremely talented players with a lot of length
in athleticism, but they are thin. And the Grizzlies bullied them in this game with ball pressure and with physicality off the ball, stopping them from getting to their spots. Again, I always talk about this basketball as a contact sport in the weight room is one of the most overlooked things for young players in this uh in the basketball world. They forced nineteen turnovers. The Pelicans shot just thirty five
from the field and from three. The front court also did a number on Zion, held him to six for sixteen with one assist in nine turnovers. All those Zion did have some super impressive drives to the basket in this game, like when he did go through that physical Grizzlies line to get to the basket. It was really impressive to behold um. The game was actually relatively close through three quarters on the strength of New Orleans getting
to the foul line a million times. But Jaren Jackson completely took over the fourth quarter that he rescued a possession on a baseline out of bounds with like two and a half seconds left on the shot clock by banking in a three, and then from there he just lit up with confidence and just started bullying his way to the rim. He bullied Jackson Hayes all the way to the basket for a lefty layup. He had another
lefty driving layup on Zion. He beat Zion on a deep seal for a dunk, and then he beat her name Gomez with the spin moved back to his right hand on the right side of the room. All of those baskets were in the first five minutes of the fourth quarter. Then the Grizzes were up seventeen. The game
was basically over at that point. Interesting that lineup that they killed the Pelicans with to start the third head Brandon Clark and Jaren Jackson on the floor at the same time, which was a really interesting combination of rim protection with the two of them just flying around. It's kind of terrifying to watch. I started digging into the line up data because I was curious. Ironically, that pairing
hasn't been that great this season. I mean, they've been good there plus four net so out scoring teams by four points per one hundre possessions over about a five possession sample size, but only a one oh seven defensive rating, which surprised me. I thought it would be a little bit better. But that lineup was great against New Orleans.
Then they turned around and bullied Sacramento to forty four in the paint in that game, fifty seven to forty seven on the glass, twenty one offensive rebounds on their way to a one eight teen to one oh eight win over Sacramento. John Morand was fantastic eight and five, really was playing his ass off in the third quarter as Memphis was starting to pull away. I you know, I I've mentioned with John morand we talked about his trash talk a little bit last week. I want to
be clear, like, I love the mental makeup of that kid. Obviously, I'm not a huge fan of trash talk, and we talked about that. That's a whole other separate conversation. But in terms of his competitive nature and what he's willing to do, in terms of just relentless effort to try to win basketball games, I find him to be one
of the most likable players in the league. You know, we had a lot of fun at the expense of Memphis for losing four out of five against Western Conference teams after Jah said that he's not scared of anybody in the West. But quietly, they've now won two straight against Western Conference playoff teams and Sacramento in New Orleans were both playing really good basketball in those games. I mean they were close for three quarters, but they really
pulled away in the fourth quarter of those games. Um. I want to zoom in on Jaren Jackson Jr. For a second though, because we've talked a lot about other Grizzlies over the course of the last couple of weeks. Uh, Jaren Jackson had nine blocks over the weekend. Obviously at the monster fourth quarter against Zion, the Grizzlies were plus twenty nine in his shifts over the weekend. We talked
about close those two games were. Really on the surface, his little fourth quarter bursts of two way basketball been a huge part of why they've been been able to pull away in these games. We talked a little bit about his amberdextrous rim protection in our last Grizzlies video, his willingness to block with both hands, which just gives him more range around the rim. But what I want to zoom in today is on Jaren Jackson's offense because
that was how he stole that Pelicans game. So, first of all, he's made a three and all but two games this season, he's shooting a respectable on four point three three point attempts per game this year. That's all about that spacing stuff and those five out concepts that we talked about. It also credibly allows them to play a lot of two big lineups, whether that's Jaren Jackson
alongside Brandon Clark or Jaren Jackson alongside Steven Adams. That's a huge part of how they dominate teams on the offensive glass and on the defensive glass and just in general physicality and protecting the rim. The only way that works is if Jaren Jackson offensively confunctionally act as a wing, which he can do. And then the other big part of that is what he can do in isolation, and
this is bullyball is so. I remember he talked a lot about this last year, how Jared was kind of out of control a little bit, just trying to trying to run people over on his way to the rim, and I was worried about whether or not it would translate to the playoffs, but it did, and I was worried more from the standpoint of court vision. You know, he attends to drop his head, not really see what's
happening around him, and just plow through people. Like I think he's only passed out of isso once this entire season, um when I was looking at the data earlier today, but in the playoffs, for whatever reason, it just didn't come back to bite him and he actually had a really productive offensive playoff run. But this year he's doing
it again again. That's what won the game against the Pelicans on Saturday night, It really comes down to He's a supreme athlete with a lot of strength, but he also can incredibly dribble the basketball, which allows him to actually functionally get to his spots in ISO, like him in that game against Pelicans after he makes the three, just staring at Jaren Jackson or excuse me, Saren at Jackson Hayes and hitting him with the dribble move to get that little lefty driving lane and then just plowing
through the driving lane to get all the way to the basket. There's gotta be some credible ball handling there. Jaren's averaging one point three nine points per possession in ISO this year. Check this. That is sixth in the league. I'm a players who have attempted at least ten ISOs this year. The Grizzlies are young, and they're immature, and they have a lot to learn in order to be more consistent, which is typical for young basketball team. So
I'm not talking trash, it's just the reality, um. And they're specifically having some struggles traveling with that physicality when they go on the road, But they are ridiculously talented and and winning games in Memphis, especially when we get into the playoffs like there, the physicality that they play with at home, the way they feed off that home crowd. That's gonna give them a chance in any playoff series because it's just gonna be really hard to beat them
at their place. All right, guys, that is all I have for today. You guys know the drill. Remember tomorrow we're gonna be breaking down Monday night's games live on Thursday after I think it's Celtics MAVs, and then Friday night I'll upload of recording. They'll probably get uploaded on Saturday morning breaking down the Friday night games. There's always a sincerely for Taker Sport and I'll see you next time. The volume