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Happy Sunday, everybody. I hope all of you guys are having a great weekend. What an incredibly couple entertaining games that we had here on this Sunday, following up an incredible game last night between the Philadelphia seventy six ers and the Boston Celtics, We've got a ton of good basketball to talk about today. We're gonna hit on all three of those major nationally televised games, as well as the Memphis Grizzlies notching a signature win of sorts against
the Denver Nuggets yesterday. We are live on AMP. Don't forget those of you guys who are watching on YouTube or or listening on our podcast feeds, that AMP is the very first place that you guys can get these shows. And don't forget before we get started to subscribe to the Volumes YouTube channel. Don't forget to follow me on Twitter at underscore Jason lts you guys, don't miss any show announcements. And last but not least, for whatever reason, you miss one of these and you can't get back
over to YouTube, don't forget. You can find them wherever you get your podcasts. Underhoops tonight, All right, let's talk some basketball. So a very very unfortunate start to this game for Lakers fans the MAVs came out. I had a feeling that the MAVs would come out with a lot of fire in this particular game. You know, physical disadvantages will play out in fury over the long run,
and you did over the course of that game. But a lot of times, especially in a smaller sample size, competing and playing hard, you can play a lot bigger than you actually are. And earlier in this game, the MAVs went to a couple of different things that I thought worked really well. First of all, they were switching everything, and when you do that, it stagnates offenses, and a lot of a lot of the Lakers offensive sets are
like they have like an early offense flow. They'll get into their horns actions and they'll have, you know, Anthony Davis and Lebron at the high post, and they'll run a couple interchanges to flow into their pick and roll. And they've been getting a lot of good stuff out of that over the course of the previous four games, in large part because they have more offensive skill than usual.
But when you switch those sorts of things, it doesn't become an issue of what coverage your are, like, how you're going to contain that ball handling shooter coming over the top, or dealing with Anthony Davis in a drop coverage at the rim, or excuse me, Dwight pal and a drop coverage at the rim. It just turns into a switch and now it's like who's going to create the advantage. And in so many cases earlier in that first half, Lebron and Anthony Davis weren't very aggressive. They
weren't trying to get to the basket. There was one Lebron ripped through where he got to the rim for a basket. Anthony Davis had a couple of shots, but for the most part they were passive. Those two guys were six for sixteen in the first half, so as a result, What ended up happening is the Lakers were getting pretty poor shot quality. They were getting threes, but they weren't high quality threes, and they were missing them.
And I think they started the game over fourteen from three while the while the Mavericks were making a bunch of shots on the other end, and that kind of could flow. I always talk about that cascading effect on the other end of the floor as the Lakers were not getting their defense set in the you know Tim Hardaway juniors dribbling up the floor and just walking into easy threes as he's in rhythm when the defense is
in set. And it was a really interesting you know, I always talking about the at the give and take of switching defenses. Like the Lakers did have like six offensive rebounds in that stretch when they were down forty one to nineteen or whatever it was. They were down big, but they were getting a bunch of offensive rebounds. But that's the trade off. You're trading a little bit of a size disadvantage. You're gonna give up some offensive rebounds, there's gonna be some issues. But on the other side
of things, you're stagnating their offense. You're turning them into an isolation team, and then you're loading up on Lebron in a D they're not trying to force their way through traffic, so they're kicking to inferor your shooters and they're not making shots. And honestly, when you trade for two skill guards and D'Angelo Russell's unavailable with an ankle sprain, and then Malik Beasley couldn't hit the side of a barn,
especially in the first half. He did end up hitting a huge three in the fourth quarter out of the right corner, but just in general, the offensive skill wasn't there as a result of Beasley's rough night and D'Angelo Russell just not being available, and so they dug themselves in a massive hole and the game turned around on Jared Vanderbilt. Now, Lakers fans have been begging for a real wing for a long time for a lot of different reasons, but primarily for the defensive end of the floor.
Lebron James and Anthony Davis are capable of that type of perimeter defense. We've seen that a lot over the course of these last four seasons, where especially in big moments, you can count on Lebron or Anthony Davis to switch onto the other team's best player and guard them and get stops. You guys might remember Anthony Davis blocking Tyrese
Haliburton a few weeks ago. You might remember back in the bubble, like Lebron James on back to back possessions like switching out onto Kawhi Leonard and then switching out onto Paul George and getting a stop, and like, they have that in them, but it's just too much to ask them to do that on a possession by possession basis, especially with everything that you need from them on the
offensive end of the floor. And so the Lakers fans in particular, especially in the Russell Westbrook trade, when they lost guys like Kyle Kuzma that they could deploy like that, or Danny Green who they could deploy like that, or the contagious call Will Pope who they could deploy like that, they ended up in a situation where they were really,
really undermanned on the perimeter, especially on the wing. And so when Jared Vanderbilt came in and he started playing really well, he had a great performance against Brandon Ingram in his first game where he was like the first guy in the month of February to hold bi to under fifty percent shooting in a game. And then he did a pretty good job on Clay Thompson in the next game. And the question was is like, who else can he guard? Who else can Laker? Who else can
Darven him deploy him on? Because if they can deploy him on the other team's best player, regardless of circumstance, that's a huge weapon. And so Luca Donschitz became the next challenge, and it's a very different challenge. Brandon Ingram is an isolation scorer that has that likes to shoot over the top of the defense, and so Jared Vanderbilt's length is an advantage there, but he's not overly strong, right,
you know. A guarding an off ball shooter puts him in a situation where he has to he has to navigate off ball screens, and that's an entirely different situation. He did pretty well with that. Well, here comes Luca. He's this giant, big, strong point forward that is great at drawing fouls, that destroys thin defenders, and just about every single matchup that he has in the NBA, it's a completely different type of matchup. And I was really curious to see how he would do in it, and
he did freaking incredible. He was he's got like he's One of the advantages of him being thin is that he can kind of make himself into a low profile physical frame and he can slide up over the top
of screens. He did a really nice job navigating those ball screens with Luca Donte and then when he did get caught, instead of giving up on the play, all he did was just pursue as best as he can and use his length to bother that next pass from Luca dontchich and as a result, he forced a bunch of turnovers and got the Lakers going in that second quarter run. He also did it with all of his classic work that he's done in his entire your career
in the NBA, crashing the offensive glass. He was just an absolute wrecking ball on both ends of the floor and single handedly changed the outlook of that game and at least got the Lakers to position where they had a chance going into the second half. I believe they
were down fourteen at that point. From there, you gave yourself a situation where Lebron and a d could kind of wash the hands of that first half and be like, we sucked, we didn't do our job, but we're gonna focus in in the second half and we're gonna get the job done. And that's exactly what they did. Like I said, they were six for sixteen in the first half, which was unacceptable with all of the front court mismatches
that Dallas presents for them. And despite that, you know, and again like a lot of times it will happen is they'll catch on the block and then you know, guys will kind of dig down into the driving lanes right and so you'll have an opportunity where you have a size advantage over the guy in front of you, but there's two guys right there next to you, and a lot of times, you know, especially in that first half, they look at that and they would just pass out
of it instead of understanding that, yes, it's gonna be hard, Yes you're gonna have to go through contact. You might have to score over two or three guys, but it's two or three guys that are way way smaller than you, and you will be able to finish through all of that congestion in traffic on the perimeter and in the post and so in that second half, they just didn't care who the hell was around them. They didn't care what the situation was. They were just dropping their shoulder
and going to the rim. And they both were incredible in that second half. It's way too often over the course of the last few years, we've looked at other things, and there are other things that have gone wrong with the Lakers, but nothing matters if Lebron James and Anthony Davis don't play like superstars. They didn't in the first half they were down fourteen. They did in the second half. They came back and they won the game. Lebron's performance was a little uneven in that second half. I mean,
and I'm not even really blaming him. He's out of rhythm because he hasn't been on the floor much because of this foot injury. Then he hurts his right foot in the super bizarre situation where there's a non contact injury where he doesn't land on anybody falls to the ground. He's telling all of his teammates that he heard it pop.
Everyone's like, oh, that's it. And then the dude comes back into the fourth quarter and just literally wills his team while he's on the floor just I tweeted it out afterwards because I was so surprised, so far from where he needed to be physically, they couldn't use him on defense, So that like Lucas calling him to run constant ghost screens with Justin Holliday trying to get Lebron to navigate those screens and he can barely move, but he's just doing the best he can. And then on
the other end, he wasn't. Sometimes it's better just to cut the crap and keep it simple. He had a huge size advantage just getting it on that left block every single time and working his way into the lane for easy layups. Handful of times he weaponized that pump bacon step through. That's a big time move for players when they pursue up on your umpook, you pump fake that and then you can step through and get all
the way to the rim. He did that twice. He just threw sheer force of will and basketball IQ and veteran savvy in size and strength on two bad wheels, just willed his way to making an impact on that game and then a d Obviously, being the in his late twenties and much more healthy the way that he is was just a complete two way monster. He's making every defensive play in the second half, making those out of area plays that I talk about so much that
are so important. And then most importantly, he was hitting his jump shot. Not just three point shot is three point shot is a disaster right now, But he was hitting his short jump shot. Those short turnaround fade away jump shots. There's kind of like a like a range with Anthony Davis where his jump shot falls apart, and it's kind of like right around fifteen feet. If he can stay inside at fifteen feet in their short fade
away jumpers, he's money on those. But once you get outside to that seventeen eighteen feet and out, it just has really fallen apart for him. No your strengths, and he stuck with that and he made a huge game icing fade away on that left baseline in front of their bench that ended up being the biggest shot of the game that I thought. That had to have been super encouraging, because what if Lebron does have to miss
some time, you could be in some trouble. But if if Anthony Davis is the superstar that he is, you have the complimentary role players that you have D'Angel Russell hopefully returned soon. If eighty plays like that, you can buy Lebron the time to nurse that foot as much as he needs. But I want to talk a little bit about the Lakers defense, because they were third in defensive rating over their previous four games compared to the rest of the league. In their previous four games, again,
they were three and one in those games. They had that rough night in Portland where they just got their eyes shot out by the Portland Blazers or by the Portland Trailblazers. But you've seen, especially after they were able to cool off that Dallas run, they held him to just forty seven points in that second half. This is like a real defensive team now, and I think it comes down to a couple of differ and things. First
of all, getting Jared Vanderbilt and Anthony Davis together. Anthony Davis playing at the defensive player of the Year level that he's capable of, but Jared Vanderbilt has that complimentary forward that they can deploy on perimeter assignments, puts them in a great spot. Austin Reeves did a great job defensively in this game. Dennis Schroeder the job he did
on Kyrie Irving. We're gonna talk about that and just a little bit, but Kyrie, like Dennis Ruder, was in Kyrie Irving's shirt the entire game and did an amazing job in that point of attack role. When you put all of that together, and guys like Lebron James was a shell of himself because of the foot injury, there's a version of this that comes together where Lebron can be more impactful defensively and it could go up another level from there. The Lakers have won four out of
five since the trade pieces started playing. Obviously, their one loss was a game up in Portland where Lebron James didn't even play and they just got shot that. They just got shot to pieces by that Portland Trailblazers team. And they are now just two and a half games back of the sixth seed. And now one of my biggest fears. I told you guys, I said, the Lakers have the talent, they are capable of doing this, but they've got to hit the Jets from now to the
end of the season. And that's just a lot to ask physically of Lebron James and Anthony Davis Lebron suffered his first little setback today. We don't know what the fallout of that's gonna be. We'll see if he plays the rest of this road trip. But that was what my worry was. Yes, you got a better package. You got better players by some amount over Miles Turner and Buddy Yield and whatever else you could have gotten. You probably still can get ruey Hot to Murray, you still
can get mo Obama. But the point is is you got something a little bit better, But you put yourself in a predicament where you've really got to hit the Jets now throughout the end of the season, and it'll be really interesting to see if those guys hold together physically Dallas really quickly before we move on. This is a great example. Now, not every team they're gonna play is gonna be Lebron James and Anthony Davis, who are
the better front court bulleyball players in the league. But this is what it looks like when you have physical disadvantages at every single position. If you don't get other worldly offensive performances from Kyrie and Luca don Chi, which you did not in this game, then you're just not going to be able to overcome giving up that kind of size and strength on the interior. So part of it you got to tip the cap right, Like Dennis Schrder did an amazing job on Kyrie Irving, Jared Vanderbilt
did an amazing job on Luka don Chich. But it's just gonna be really hard for you to win games when you have to expect near perfection from your stars because you're giving up so much ground on the interior. I believe they're now one one in three or one in four since Kyrie and Lucas started playing together. Obviously, Kyrie notched a couple of wins by himself before that.
But they're gonna have to figure out some stuff in the front court this offseason, I think, to have any real chance of contending, because if the Lakers could do it to him, guess who else is going to do it to him? Memphis, that's a bullyball team. They're gonna bully them. You know that's you know, you don't think Nicola Yokichen Aaron Gordon are going to be able to have a ton of success on the interior against that Dallas Mavericks team that they're just given up too much
on that front. Line to contend within this season. All right, we're gonna hit three games pretty quickly here the Sun's Bucks, Celtic Sixers, and Nuggets Grizzly. So the Sun's Bucks game. I only caught the end of this one, but I was super impressed by Milwaukee's defense down the stretch. Phoenix scored just seven points over the final five minutes and change of the fourth quarter. Brook Lopez had two massive blocks.
He blocked Devin Booker at the rim, and then he swatted a DeAndre Ayton pull up jump shot in the mid range. He's been amazing for them all year on that end. But Drew Holiday, you know, Devin Booker has made a lot of tough shots over the years in Drew Holliday's face, including a bunch in that twenty twenty one NBA Finals series. But that's gonna happen with great scores. It happened again towards the end of this game. I
think he was one hundred ninety eight. Devin Booker forgets the ball screen, dribbles down to that at left block and gets Drew on his hip and takes that patented fade away over his left shoulder, knocks it down it's great defense. That's just an unbelievable player making an unbelievable shot. But what you have to do as a defensive player in that situation is understand that that's not your job. Your job is not to get a stop every time. Your job is just to make it difficult and trust
the results. And on that final possession, after Devin Booker ties it, but the Bucks go down and Chris Middleton comes off of a screen and draws a second defender draws DeAndre Atan up out of his drop coverage, and Chris Middleton throws a really nice over the top past to Brook Lopez for effectively the game winner. And on the other end, Devin Booker stares down Drew Holiday fights through a ball screen. Drew Holiday fights through a Jay
Crowders screen to get back onto Devin Booker. Excuse mean he switched it, prevents the switch and stays on Devin Booker got I'm getting my names confused today, but Drew Holiday gets back to Devin Booker. Devin Booker gets a little bit of an angle on a dribble move and gets to his left hand and has a step. But I always talk about how there's a lot more physicality that takes place in NBA games than people realize, and you're actually allowed to do quite a bit in terms
of grabbing and holding. And one of the things that you can pretty much get away with at every level of basketball is your inside hand. So like, if you're driving towards your left hand and I'm sliding to my right, if I hold that right hand up, I can do I can get my left hand up in there as much as I want. I can kind of like give you a little bit of a forearm, I can hold my ground, I can try to bump you off of your line. You're gonna get away with a lot of
contact with that left hand. And as Devin Booker was going downhill, drew holiday right hand up so there's no foul call, left hand in the pocket. And then as soon as he looked down, he saw he had just a second where Devin Booker had kind of like tucked the ball as he was going to go up to the rim, and he just pushed that left hand through and knocked the ball out and got a huge deal.
So again to have the mental fortitude to just get you know, Devin Booker scoring over the top of you in a clutch moment like that and to turn around and get a stop on the next possession. I thought was a big time play from Drew Holiday. In addition to all of the scoring work that he did in this game, That Bucks defensive trio is super interesting. I talk a lot about how I really like it when NBA. The core all stars of an NBA team are guys who like to do it on both ends of the floor.
And you know, Jannis is one of the five best offensive players in the league. Drew Holiday is a really good skill guard who's a good pull up shooter. Chris Middleton's kind of your classic three level score, pull up shoot, over the top type of guy. But on the other end of the floor, they represent the three most important
defensive archetypes that we have in the NBA. Drew Holiday is a point of attack guard that is great at navigating over the top of ball screens and pressuring all of the great guards in this league, while at the same time having the positional versus atility to guard up a position. Janna Santana Coopo the exact opposite. He is your classic rim protector that has the versatility to contend in perimeter matchups, including guarding other teams wings. And then
Chris Middleton is more of your classic wing defender. He's not some sort of all defense caliber guy, but he is a very good wing defender when he's locked in. And then you pair that with Brook Lopez, just a classic NBA rim protector. They just have arguably the best perimeter. They have arguably the best defensive personnel in the league, and that's a big part of why they've been able to grind out wins even with guys in and out of the lineup throughout the year. That's a huge windstreak.
What's that fourteen games in a row. Now, We're expecting Kevin Durant to make his debut on Wednesday, and we will be covering that game here on AMP. All Right, moving on to Celtic Sixers, this is a huge moment
for Jason Tatum knocking down that game winning shot. One of my favorite things about star players as they grow into the prime of their careers is wavering confidence and if always you know, we talked about this a little bit with Nikola Yokis the other day in the Cleveland game, but I'm always impressed when star players have rough games and are able to bounce back and make big plays down the stretch of a game. We talked about that a little bit with Lebron James and Anthony Davis earlier.
Tatum was not having an especially good game against the Sixers, but he rose into that final shot with the same confidence that he does when he's having a great game, got great lift, and he knocked it down. I love the play design. Apparently that's originally a Brad Stephens special, but it's a great counter to ball pressure and ball denial because a lot of teams are going to opt to pressure the ball with Jason Tatum because he's kind of not known as being the best ball handler in
the league. But most importantly, especially in late game situations when there's not very much time left, a lot of coaches think, if I pressure you and make it difficult for you to get to your spot, then I might be able to eat enough clock to where it won't be easy for you to get to a spot that you want and a shot that you want, all in
that short period of time. So they're pressing up on Jason Tatum all the way out at backcourt, and then since Tatum doesn't have the ball, he can just focus on making a really hard cut, and that's what he did after Marcus Smart got the ball, just a hard cut towards towards the top of the key. Marcus Smart throws a beautiful pass that leads Jason Tatum right right to where he's running and then just immediately hits the
brakes and steps back. It's all kinds of separation, goes straight up and down, no fade, no anything special, just went to his bread and butter jump shot and knocked it down. Big time moment for Jason Tatum. Jalen Brown was also fantastic at the end of this game, once again just using his otherworldly athleticism to pressure the rim and his creative shot making. He had like a just a disgusting step back jump shot at the free throw line in the fourth quarter of this game where he
created like a solid ten feet of separation. It's been really interesting to see how that combination of his athleticism and creativity has made him one of their better fourth quarter players. And his point per game average in fourth quarters is right there with Tatum, but he's been more efficient. He's shooting fifty two percent from the field and forty percent from three and fourth quarters this year. But I wanted to talk about Boston's guards for a minute, because
they're the unsung heroes of the Celtics team. Jason Tatum and Jalen Brown get a lot of credit and they deserve it, but Boston is a ridiculously talented guard corps. And during that big run, because like as you watch that game, right, James Harden hits a three, puts him up fifteen in like mid third quarter, and the Celtics go on some ridiculous run. It was like twenty two to two or something like that, And for the most part,
it was their guards that did the work. That trio of Marcus Smart, Derek White, and Malcolm Brogden, that's as good a guard core, at least in the top three that you'll find anywhere else around the league. All three of those guys are up over a point possession in pick and roll this year. A specifically, Marcus Smart and Derek White have been amazing in pick and roll this year, so they can be excellent creating that initial advantage to
get Boston into their driving kick. I really thought this game swung on perimeter defense, Boston's guards getting dribble penetration while on the other end, containing Tyrese Maxie and James Harden, making them take tough shots because defenders did not have to help because they were not giving straight line drives. Defenders don't have to help unless you get dusted. And so that perimeter defense dynamic I always compared to like
offensive line, defensive line dynamic and football. That push or pull on either side is gonna have a lot to do with how tough your job is elsewhere on the floor. And if you're constantly in rotation because you're getting beat off the dribble, it's gonna be really hard to play defense. But if the guy who's guarding the ball is keeping him in front, you don't have to help. Now all of a sudden, things get way more, way more difficult
for the offense they had. They had a huge impact on Boston's comeback before the Jays ended up closing the deal there in the fourth quarter. I've had a lot of Celtics fans tell me this year, when will you trust Boston's ability to close games? And I wanted to answer that a little bit here. To be clear, I do trust them a lot more than last year. You could see that based on the way they've played, They've demonstrated better late game execution than they did last year.
Last year, the Celtics are one of the worst clutch teams in the league. They were thirteen and twenty two when a game was within five with less than five minutes left. This year they're twenty and eight. So they've been much much better, to be clear, But you guys know the drill. I've always valued the postseason more and I just you know, especially when I'm comparing him to other teams at the top of the league, like Milwaukee has demonstrated that on that stage, whereas Boston struggled with
that a little bit last year. And here's the thing. The Celtics are twenty eight and twenty and eight in clutch situations this year. That second best in the league. Guess who's first, The Milwaukee Bucks. They're twenty three and six in games that evolved clutch situations. So I feel better about Boston. They've had a damn good season. But before the season, I picked Milwaukee to win the Eastern
Conference by a hair. If you look at this season in totality and the way that both teams have played, do you think that there's been enough from both teams Bad Bucks Good Celtics for me to swap them, I don't think so. I have not seen enough from either team, good or bad to justify switching my preseason pick. That does not mean that I don't think the Celtics can win. I absolutely think they can win. I think they have a great chance. I did Championship Tiers again last week
for our snapchat show. Yes, we actually have a snapchat show as well. It goes once a week. That's under Hoops tonight, and I only had two teams on my top tier, the Boston Celtics in the Milwaukee Bucks, not Denver, not Philly, no one else, just those two. So I think Boston has a damn good chance to win the title. But only one of the thirty NBA teams gets to win.
And I think that Milwaukee has shown just a little bit more in terms of my ability to trust them on that stage, and I believe they had the best player. So again, it's not a slight at Boston fans. It's just I haven't seen enough bad Milwaukee to make a flip in that particular pick. One final note on the Philly side of things, I continue to be super impressed by Joel Embiid, specifically with the fight that he has
as things start to go poorly for him. I mean, the wheels were really coming off last night, and he fought like hell to get the Sixers a chance to win that game. At the end of this game, he made every single offensive play bullying I'll Horford on the base line to get it to get two free throws. It's it's kind of inevitable when he puts his head down like that that he's gonna get a bucket or a foul. He had a nasty step back too, on
the left elbow over a double team. I've always talked about like Joel embid is almost better off shooting over double teams than he is passing over double teams, and he did struggle quite a bit with double teams in this game again. And then that classic little free throw line jumper that he gets off those James Harden picking rolls. He made one of those at the end of the game too. They had a massive block defensively at the Remember that was the big impact that he had in
that Memphis game. When he hits the Jets. He's just an absolute force of nature, and his season is being overshadowed by Jannis and Nikola Yokich a bit, but he's every bit as good as those guys. It was fun to watch, and to be honest, if he plays like that, the Sixers have a real chance to win it all all right. Before we get out of here, Nuggets Grizzlies just really quickly. The Grizzlies finally got a signature winner,
at least for the first time in a while. They beat the hell out of the Nuggets yesterday one twelve to ninety four. All the Nuggets have been on a road trip for a little while. There were a couple of specific factors that really swung this game in my opinion. Xavier Tillman did an excellent job in isolation defense or one on one defense with Nikola Yoki got a big, strong body, low center of gravity, places physical a couple of specific things that he did really well. First of all,
navigating ball screens. So one of the main things that Denver will do in their early offense before they run their sets is a lot of times they'll just have nickel yokes. If he gets the rebound and everyone runs the floor, Yokis will just bring the ball up the floor and then just come off of a guard screen or maybe even two with the intent on just getting a switch, because big guys typically struggle to navigate those screens because they're just big bodies. They're easy targets and
you can get a lot of switches that way. And then Yokis has just been absolutely barbecuing switches and postops all season long, but Zavier Tillman was just navigating those and not giving up the switch. Then a lot of times Yokis will default to turning his back to the basket at that point and then he will try to post up whoever the center is, but he just wasn't giving ground, and because he wasn't giving ground, the Grizzlies
did not have to dig as much off ball. It's a very similar concept to what we were talking about
that driving kick stuff with the Boston Guards. When you don't have to bail out to help a guy and you can kind of stay in that in between zone where you're ready to help, but you're also back with the shooter, it just makes it so that those kickout opportunities, and Yokich was still making those kickouts, but now you have a fighting chance to rotate, and so now those open shots are now less open, and so now contiviuous call Will Pope, who's been dead eye all season, is
missing these shots because they're not great looks, they're just okay looks. And then as a result, Denver couldn't set their defense because they couldn't score in Memphis killed them in transition. In this game, according to Synergy, Denver was outscored in transition thirty two to fourteen. Denver starters shot just thirty six percent from the field. So big shout out to Xavier Tilman. I thought he did it. I thought he did it again. It's Yoki has even solved.
No gives Yokich a seven gamer against Hillman. I'm sure he'd figure it out. But in a one game sample size when the Grizzlies really needed to win, I thought Xavier did a really nice job. Memphis also did the things they usually do. They dominated points in the pain I think it was sixty to forty two, and then they outrebounded their important their opponent. But most importantly, and this is the key detail, when you win big, you don't have to play the slowdown, half court execution game
in the fourth quarter. Memphis has been a god awful fourth quarter team. This year, they're getting outscored by seven points per one hundred possessions in the fourth quarter, which is third worst in the entire NBA. But it's a great way to avoid that situation. Beat the hell out of your opponent. And you know, that's what they did.
And this is where I keep coming back every time Grizzlies fans will be like, hey, well, if you don't think they have the amount of offensive skill, what's their chance, what's their fighting chance to win? I keep telling you, just like the twenty twenty Lakers and the twenty twenty
one Bucks. Now they had better players. They had Lebron and Giannis, they had Anthony Davis and everyone else who played for the Bucks, but both of those team struggled with half court offense in the regular season because of a general lack of perimeter shooting both of them. But they leaned on their defense to get transition opportunities throughout
their postseason runs and it was not a problem. A great way for Memphis to mitigate their half court offense problems is to be a better defensive team than they are, and they've been a good defensive team in the aggregate of the regular season, but they've struggled, especially in late game situations. If they can solve their defense in those situations, get better at hiding John Morant, get better at springing
those transition opportunities, they do have a fighting chance. I just think at this point it's a very very small fighting chance. All Right, guys, that is all I have for today. As always, I sincerely appreciate your support and I'll see you guys next time. The volume