Tag Archives: Finals

With Giannis Antetokounmpo sidelined, Phoenix Suns installed as NBA Finals favorites over Milwaukee Bucks

Sportsbooks have installed the Phoenix Suns as favorites over the Milwaukee Bucks in the NBA Finals.

The Suns opened at -175 at Caesars Sportsbook by William Hill, with the Bucks listed as +150 underdogs. Phoenix is a 5.5-point favorite over Milwaukee in Game 1 on Tuesday.

The Game 1 line and series price reflect oddsmakers’ belief that Milwaukee star Giannis Antetokounmpo will likely miss at least part of the best-of-seven series. Antetokounmpo missed the final two games of the Eastern Conference finals against the Atlanta Hawks after suffering a hyperextended left knee late in Game 4. His status for the Finals against the Suns is unclear.

Last week, prior to Antetokounmpo’s injury and with the Bucks and Suns leading their series, the SuperBook at Westgate Las Vegas posted an early series price on a potential Milwaukee-Phoenix matchup in the finals. The SuperBook opened the Bucks as a -150 favorite over the Suns.

A week later, with Antetokounmpo injured, the odds have flipped, with Phoenix now the favorite.

The early action was on the Suns at the SuperBook, which opened with Phoenix at -150.

Jeff Sherman, who oversees NBA odds for the SuperBook, said they took multiple limit bets on the Suns to win the series Saturday night, prompting him to move the price to -170.

Sherman is expecting Antetokounmpo to miss at least the start of the NBA Finals and believes how soon he returns will be dictated by the outcome of the early games.

“The Bucks would’ve been a favorite if there was no injury at all to Giannis,” Sherman told ESPN.

The Suns won both meetings against Milwaukee during the regular season, in a pair of tight one-point victories.

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NBA conference finals winners and losers: Chris Paul earns his moment; Trae Young arrives; Injuries ruin fun

It’s been an arduous journey with plenty of basketball casualties, but we’ve finally reached the 2021 NBA Finals. With Saturday’s 118-107 Game 6 win over the Atlanta Hawks, the Milwaukee Bucks earned the right to play the Phoenix Suns for the NBA championship, starting on Tuesday.

The Bucks will make their first Finals appearance since 1974, with their only title coming in 1971, while the Suns last made the Finals in 1993 and have never won an NBA championship. Needless to say, one of these fan bases is going to be absolutely jubilant in a couple of weeks.

Before we move on to the Finals, however, let’s take a quick look back at an entertaining, intriguing pair of conference finals matchups and designate some winners and losers.

Probably the biggest story of the postseason, Paul will make the first NBA Finals appearance of his 16-year, Hall of Fame career after a masterful clinching game against the Los Angeles Clippers in which he scored 31 of his 41 points in the second half. Paul’s legacy isn’t in doubt given his career numbers and accomplishments, but a championship would at least bump him up a couple of rungs on the all-time hierarchies.

Paul’s journey is all the more remarkable when you remember that the Houston Rockets had to give up multiple first-round picks in the trade with the Oklahoma City Thunder in exchange for Russell Westbrook. Just as his career was supposed to be on the downslide, Paul turned in two All-NBA seasons and now has a chance to be the best player on a championship team at the age of 36.

Loser: Superstar health

The point has been belabored to death, but it bears repeating. Kawhi Leonard missed the entire conference finals. Chris Paul, Trae Young and Giannis Antetokounmpo all missed multiple games. Devin Booker played with a broken nose for the majority of the series. It’s not a good year to be an NBA superstar. Fortunately, we still got a couple of entertaining conference finals series, but let’s hope that Giannis can get healthy and that everyone else stays in top physical form for the Finals.

Given Antetokounmpo’s offensive limitations in the halfcourt, Middleton has been the Bucks’ closer in many high-leverage games over the past few seasons. After a relatively subpar first four games of the series, Middleton put his stamp on Games 5 and 6 as Milwaukee wrapped up a Finals berth. He came up clutch when it mattered the most, scoring 20 points in the fourth quarter of Game 3 and 23 points in the third quarter of Game 6, which created the necessary distance to close out the series.

Games 1-4

21.0

41.8%

22.9%

Games 5 & 6

29.0

47.6%

37.5%

Middleton has been an All-Star for two of the past three seasons, and will join Team USA at the Olympics for the first time this summer. It will be great for casual fans to get to see him playing on the NBA’s biggest stage.

Winner: Monty Williams

After enduring a tumultuous NBA coaching career and suffering unspeakable tragedy with the 2016 death of his wife, Ingrid, Williams let all of his emotions come pouring out after the Suns clinched their Finals berth against the Clippers. Williams and Paul embracing on the sideline in the waning moments of Game 6 will be one of the lasting images of this postseason.

“It’s just authentic. That’s what I felt like doing. I’m not into cool. I just felt like hugging him,” said Williams, who coached Paul in New Orleans during the 2010-11 season. “I think his parents were right behind us and he was emotional. I felt for him.”

Your Paul George playoff slander no longer has a place in the NBA vernacular. George had dazzling, clutch moments even before Kawhi Leonard went down, but he went to another level in closing out the Jazz and into the conference finals against the Suns. Just as it appeared as if he was running out of gas due to being the Clippers’ main playmaker for the entire series, George let loose for a playoff career-high 41 points on 15-for-20 shooting to help his team temporarily avoid elimination on the road.

George has taken a lot of criticism over the past few seasons, both warranted and unwarranted, for his postseason play. Asked whether he feels he faces unfair scrutiny during the playoffs, George didn’t hold back.

“I do. And it’s the honest truth. It’s a fact,” George said after the Game 5 win over Phoenix. “But I can’t worry about that. It comes with the job, I guess. But it is what it is.”

Loser: J.J. Watt

Newest Arizona Cardinal JJ Watt hasn’t been shy about showing his support for the Suns this postseason. He’s also been ardent in his fandom for his hometown Milwaukee Bucks. Now he’s going to have to choose, and while you could look at that situation as him being a winner, either way, we’re not that naive.

We all know whichever side he doesn’t root for is going to label him a bandwagon fan and send hate DMs his way on every social media platform available. Sigh. At least it was fun while it lasted, J.J.

Winner: Mike Budenholzer

It’s not much of a secret: Mike Budenholzer was clinging to his job like a cat on a ledge heading into the postseason. If Kevin Durant’s shoes were about two sizes smaller, Budenholzer might be seeking new employment as we speak. But he made it to the conference finals, where he coached a strong series and presumably earned some security as the Bucks’ head coach. One of his biggest moves — starting Bobby Portis in place of Giannis Antetokounmpo during Games 5 and 6 — paid dividends for the Bucks in terms of energy and rebounding, and putting Brook Lopez closer to the basket in Antetokounmpo’s absence led to a 33-point performance in Game 5. The discussions about his longevity could all be resurrected if the Bucks lose in the Finals but, for now, it appears Budenholzer has re-earned his job with the Bucks.

Loser: Lame NBA arguments

“This doesn’t count, everybody got hurt!” “Who wants to watch these small market teams?” “There’s not enough star power in the Finals!” We are not here for these terrible arguments heading into the NBA Finals. The basketball has been great, the existing stars have been phenomenal and new stars have emerged. The Bucks and Suns have fully earned their spots, so let’s not waste any more breath talking about how they’re not worthy because you think they had it “easier” than your team did. Thanks.

Winner: Trae Young

Young’s unbelievable playoff debut came to an inauspicious end due to a freak injury, but he provided one of the signature performances of this postseason with a 48-point, 11-assist, seven-rebound outburst in a 116-113 Game 1 win over the Bucks to kick off the Eastern Conference finals. He did it with typical Trae Young flair, throwing an off-the-backboard lob to John Collins, then hitting the Bucks with the “shimmy heard round the world” before swishing a wide-open 3-pointer late in the third quarter.

At just 22 years old, this likely won’t be Young’s last big playoff run. That Game 1 spectacle is what fans and analysts will look back on as the moment he arrived on the postseason stage, and it sure was fun to watch it live.

You hate to call Huerter a loser after all he did for this team during the postseason, but he had a rough conference finals. He shot just 34 percent from the field and went 10-for-38 (26 percent) from 3-point range against the Bucks after shooting 48 percent from the field and 40 percent from 3-point range in the playoffs prior to the series. Not only did he struggle offensively, but he also became a frequent target of Khris Middleton and Jrue Holiday, who consistently bullied their way to the basket. Huerter was a huge part of the Hawks’ success this postseason, but the conference finals weren’t his brightest moment.

You can’t say much more about Jackson, who re-signed with the Clippers three weeks before the season started after not getting more lucrative offers on the free-agent market. After Leonard’s injury, Jackson was the second-best player on the Clippers during the postseason and performed consistently throughout the conference finals, averaging 20.3 points, 4.3 rebounds and 3.7 assists on 46/37/80 shooting splits while playing nearly 38 minutes per game. It’s safe to say the Clippers wouldn’t have made their first-ever conference finals appearance, or won two games once they got there, without Jackson, who expressed his gratitude toward the franchise and his teammates.

“This city makes me feel at home. This organization welcoming me. My quirks, my strengths, my weaknesses. I’m not here today without this team,” Jackson said after the Clippers were eliminated by the Suns. “I’m not still playing without this team. I thank them for everything. In my heart this will forever be a special year.”

Beverley soured a phenomenal conference finals performance on both ends of the court by committing one of the most classless acts you’ll witness on an NBA court in this day and age. For reasons that are still unclear, Beverley violently shoved Chris Paul in the back with two hands late in the fourth quarter of Game 6 as the contest was getting away from the Clippers.

Earlier in the same game, the TV announcers were discussing how Beverley toes the line between aggression and recklessness, and this behavior clearly went too far. To his credit, Beverley took to Twitter to apologize to Paul the next day.

Beverley earned a one-game suspension for his first game of the 2021-22 regular season as a result of his actions.

We don’t know who will win the title, but we do know that Torrey Craig will be eligible for a ring either way. Craig played 18 games with the Bucks this season before being traded to the Suns in exchange for cash considerations. Craig wasn’t particularly productive with Milwaukee, and the acquisition of PJ Tucker was going to push him out of the rotation anyway. It was a win-win, as Craig has thrived in his role in Phoenix and become a valuable part of the team’s postseason run, hitting 44 percent of his 3-pointers in 12.6 minutes per game while playing stout defense.

Craig can refuse the ring if the Suns lose, as center Anderson Varejao did after the 2016 Finals. Varejao played in the Finals as a member of the Golden State Warriors, but had been on the Cleveland Cavaliers earlier that season and was therefore eligible for a championship ring. After famously coming back from a 3-1 deficit to beat the Warriors, the Cavs could have voted to give Varejao a ring, but he preemptively squashed the idea by saying he wouldn’t accept it if offered. Craig is hoping he won’t be forced to make such a decision.

When the Clippers traded Lou Williams for Rajon Rondo before the trade deadline, they were hoping that Playoff Rondo might walk through the door. Well, if he did, it was a revolving door. Rondo played a total of 47 minutes in the conference finals, only seeing the floor in three of the six games. He averaged 5.3 points and 3.7 assists, which aren’t bad numbers given the minutes he played, but he was consistently deficient trying to defend Suns guards Chris Paul, Devin Booker and Cameron Payne, which contributed to keeping Rondo off the court. Last postseason, Rondo was one of the key reasons the Los Angeles Lakers won the championship. This time around, he could help his L.A. team in the same way.

Coming off an Achilles injury, Reddish was thrown right into the fire as he made his playoff debut in Game 2 of the conference finals. Despite being on a “minutes limit,” Reddish clearly established himself as an important rotation piece for the Hawks on both ends of the floor. He scored in double-figures in three of the four games in which he played, including 21 points and a career-high-tying six 3-pointers in Game 6. He also showed his defensive prowess by taking turns on Middleton and Holiday when Atlanta was having trouble slowing them down.

Reddish is just 21 years old and has shown tremendous potential as a two-way wing. He also holds an interesting place in NBA history, as he was the player the Hawks drafted with the pick they received from the Dallas Mavericks in the Luka Doncic-Trae Young swap. Hawks coach Nate McMillan said he “sees a lot of Paul George” in Reddish, and if he gets anywhere close to that in the next few years, given the level that Young has already reached, then Atlanta might be able to say they won that trade — something that seemed inconceivable just a few months ago.

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Giannis Antetokounmpo knee injury: Bucks taking it ‘day-to-day’ with injured star ahead of NBA Finals

The Milwaukee Bucks held on for a Game 6 win over the Atlanta Hawks in the Eastern Conference finals on Saturday night, and have now advanced to the NBA Finals for the first time since 1974. There, they’ll face the Phoenix Suns, with Game 1 set for Tuesday night. 

Whether Giannis Antetokounmpo will be on the court for that game, or any part of the series for that matter, is still unclear. The two-time MVP suffered a hyperextended left knee in Game 4 against the Hawks, and though he avoided any structural damage, he hasn’t played since.  

Following the series-clinching win over the Hawks, coach Mike Budenholzer told reporters it’s a “day-to-day” situation. His full quote:

“I mean, [Giannis] and the sports performance team, they have been together a long time. It’s special to watch their relationship. It’s special to watch the communication, the trust that he has. You have to listen to the player and then you have to listen to the sports performance group, and at some point Jon Horst and myself are part of the conversations, but it’s just a day-to-day thing. We’ll update it when appropriate. The conversations between he and myself and he and the sports performance group, it’s kind of private and we’ll see where he is each day.

Earlier in the week, Chris Haynes of Yahoo Sports reported that there was optimism Giannis would have been given the “green light” to play in Game 7 against the Hawks if the series had gotten that far. If true, that bodes well for the Bucks considering there’s even more time off until Game 1 of the Finals. 

The injury occurred in the third quarter of Game 4, when Giannis went up to block an alley-oop attempt by Clint Capela and landed awkwardly on his left leg. He remained down on the court for several moments after the fall, before being helped off the court by his brother, Thanasis, and the medical staff. After a brief return to the Bucks’ bench during the third quarter, he eventually made his way back to the locker room and was ruled out for the remainder of the game. 

You can see the play where the injury occurred below: 

The Bucks proved in Games 5 and 6 against the Hawks that they’re still a formidable team even without their best player. But as they prepare for their first Finals appearance in nearly 50 years, there’s no question they’d prefer to do so with Giannis on the court. 

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Khris Middleton lifts Milwaukee Bucks past Atlanta Hawks, into NBA Finals

ATLANTA — The Milwaukee Bucks are headed to the NBA Finals for the first time since 1974 — and they secured the final wins of the series without star Giannis Antetokounmpo.

Milwaukee beat the Atlanta Hawks 118-107 in Game 6 on Saturday behind 32 points from Khris Middleton. Jrue Holiday added 27 points, 9 rebounds and 9 assists.

As the final buzzer sounded and Bucks players swarmed the center of the court, putting on hats and T-shirts that announced them as Eastern Conference champions, players hugged each other and laughed. Coaches embraced. Antetokounmpo, who has been out since injuring his knee in the third quarter of Game 4 when he landed awkwardly after contesting an alley-oop, was in the middle of it all — a triumphant fist raised in the air.

Thursday marked the end of a slew of Milwaukee playoff runs that were cut short or went awry. In the 2019 postseason, the Bucks swept the Detroit Pistons, defeated the Boston Celtics in five games and built a 2-0 lead against the Toronto Raptors in the Eastern Conference finals. Then, after losing back-to-back games only once the entire regular season, the Bucks lost four straight games to the Raptors and were eliminated.

Last season in the NBA’s bubble, the Bucks fizzled to a disappointing end in the playoffs. Milwaukee had earned the No. 1 seed and beat the Orlando Magic in five games. But Antetokounmpo sprained his ankle in Game 3 of the team’s series against the Miami Heat.

He gave it a go in Game 4, but re-sprained his ankle in that game and was unable to play in Game 5, when Milwaukee was eliminated. Back then, Antetokounmpo said that “nobody was going to be happy” with the outcome of Milwaukee’s 2019-20 playoff run. He said he hoped the Bucks could learn from that loss.

It appears they did.

The Bucks avenged last season’s loss and rolled the Heat in four games in the first round. Midway through that series, starting guard Donte DiVincenzo injured his ankle. He had season-ending surgery on a ligament in his left ankle in June and P.J. Tucker slid into a starting role.

Still, Milwaukee kept rolling. After falling down 3-2 in a wild series against the betting title favorite Brooklyn Nets, the Bucks outlasted them in a seven-game series. And after losing at home for the first time in the playoffs in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference finals, the Bucks battled back — including winning two games without Antetokounmpo.

In Game 6, the Bucks jumped out to an early 15-4 lead before the Hawks roared back to make it a one-possession game. The Bucks weathered that storm, too, once again pushing their advantage to 10. The score yo-yoed from Bucks’ double-digit leads to one-bucket advantages, but Milwaukee never trailed.

When the Hawks crept closer, Milwaukee had answers. Middleton rattled off 16 straight third-quarter points to extend the Bucks’ advantage on his way to scoring 23 third-quarter points. It was his third 20-point third quarter of his playoff career, according to ESPN Stats & Information research. No other Bucks player has done that even once over the last 25 postseasons.

Atlanta kept clawing back, shrinking the Bucks’ once 22-point lead back down to six in the fourth quarter. But ultimately, it proved to be an insurmountable hurdle for the Hawks. A dagger corner 3 from Tucker secured the win for Milwaukee.

All the while, Antetokounmpo stood — almost never sitting down — on the sidelines in black shorts and a Bucks warm-up shirt. A protective sleeve swaddled his hyperextended left knee. But even injured and unable to play, Antetokounmpo was in the middle of the celebration on Saturday night. His longest hug was reserved for his brother and teammate, Thanasis.

And while there has been no public decision on whether or not Antetokounmpo will be available to play in Game 1 of the NBA Finals, one thing is certain: The Bucks are sitting atop a hill that Antetokounmpo has envisioned summiting for years.

Now, they have just one more leg to complete.

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After LA Clippers are eliminated, Paul George says team would ‘be going on’ if Kawhi Leonard was healthy for Western Conference finals

LOS ANGELES — Not long after Chris Paul and the Phoenix Suns celebrated their Western Conference championship on the Staples Center floor, Paul George wondered “what if” Kawhi Leonard had been healthy.

The LA Clippers ran out of gas and comebacks as their resilient playoff run came to an end with a 130-103 loss to the Suns in Game 6 of the Western Conference finals.

After the game, George allowed himself to think about the possibilities had Leonard not sprained his right knee in Game 4 in the previous round against the Utah Jazz.

“We’d be going on,” George said when asked what would have happened had Leonard played in the conference finals. “This series would be a lot different. Talk about one of the best players in the league being out, yet we were inches away from getting to the next round.

“So definitely it’s a ‘what if’ on this. Fact of the matter is we didn’t do enough to win, and that’s the reason we’re going home.”

The Clippers, the only team to overcome a 2-0 deficit twice in the same postseason, could not force a Game 7. Injuries and tired legs caught up to them. Besides Leonard missing the final eight games with his knee injury, the Clippers were without centers Ivica Zubac (sprained right MCL) and Serge Ibaka (back surgery).

And they were playing their 15th game in 29 days, as all three of their rounds went six games or more.

Still, Clippers coach Ty Lue said players were stunned once the realization set in the locker room that the season was finally over only two wins away from the NBA Finals.

“It is a shock,” Lue said. “I think it’s a shock to a lot of guys in that locker room. It just tells you a lot about the team. Like no matter who is playing, we still feel like every night we have a chance to win no matter who is on the floor. I thought we ran out of gas and first thing goes when you get tired and fatigued is mentally. That first half, we made a lot of mistakes defensively, a lot of mistakes coming out of time-outs or just play calls in general, just not there mentally.”

The Clippers had their share of defensive breakdowns and Paul made his old team pay for each of them. Paul delivered a masterful second-half performance that was classic CP3, complete with all the things that makes him such a pain for opponents. He buried 12-of-16 shots, including all five of his 3-point attempts, and scored 31 of his 41 points in the second half.

After he drilled a 3-pointer to push the Suns’ lead to 118-92 with 5:49 left, the Clippers called for timeout. As Paul walked back to the Suns bench, a frustrated Patrick Beverley shoved the Suns point guard in the back and was ejected.

Knowing that he had gotten under the Clippers’ skin, Paul would celebrate moments later by pumping both of his fists in the air.

All George and Leonard could do was watch from the bench; he was terrific this postseason, especially once Leonard went down. The Suns sent some double teams at George, who finished with 21 points and nine rebounds. Still, George answered even his harshest critics with his finest postseason, lifting the Clippers to their first-ever Western Conference Finals.

“Nothing that I didn’t know already,” George said of what he learned from his postseason. “The narrative of me not being postseason player or all that, I never understood it.”

“[But] I came up short again,” George later added. “I’m proud of what we did as a team. I wasn’t out to prove nothing to nobody but to show up as a leader for this team and to put us in position to get to where we got to. Again, came up short. My good wasn’t enough. There’s room for improvement… I’ll look back. I’ll reflect.”

Moving forward, the Clippers will see what Leonard will do with his player option for the 2021-22 season.

There is also the future of point guard Reggie Jackson, who emerged this season as a clutch scorer for the Clippers in the postseason. The Clippers have early Bird rights on Jackson. George, though, says his good friend likely has played himself into having plenty of options for his future.

An emotional Jackson, who has revived his career here, had tears rolling down his face when asked about his future with the Clippers.

“This year was my best year,” said Jackson, who averaged 18.1 points and 41.5% 3-point shooting in the postseason entering Game 6. “… First thing I told these guys was thank you for saving me. I appreciate every guy in that locker room, I appreciate Paul for getting on that phone last year, at the end the season — was talking a buyout with Detroit.

“I’m thankful for everything I’ve experienced being here, this city making me feel at home. This organization welcoming me, my quirks, my strengths, my weaknesses, I wonder if I would still be playing without this team.”

George says the Clippers have all the pieces to make another title run next season if they are healthy. After melting down and blowing a 3-1 lead in the bubble in the second round last year, the Clippers’ resiliency this postseason put all the “bubble talk” behind them as Lue said.

And George and Leonard saw what they are capable of doing when healthy.

“We’ve made great connections,” George said. “I think we’ve both grown, myself and Kawhi together. I think we really enjoy being teammates, and we see what we can be and with a we can do.”

George later added about the team’s injuries: “I thought this team squeezed everything we could out of what we had. We squeezed everything out of one another, and I thought we got stronger and better as the season went on.”

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Suns vs. Clippers score, takeaways: Chris Paul leads Phoenix to NBA Finals berth with Game 6 win over L.A.

The Phoenix Suns are heading to the NBA Finals after their 130-103 win over the Los Angeles Clippers on Wednesday night.

Following what was an extremely chippy Game 6 at Staples Center, which included Patrick Beverley being ejected after shoving Chris Paul in the back after a stoppage in play during the fourth quarter, the Suns are Western Conference champions. Paul was masterful for Phoenix in the win as he finished the game with 41 points to go along with eight assists, four rebounds and three steals. On the other side, Paul George finished with 21 points for the Clippers but it was Marcus Morris Sr. who led Los Angeles in scoring with 26 points in the loss. Obviously, their efforts were not enough to keep the Clippers’ playoff hopes alive.

With the win, Phoenix moves on to perform on the league’s biggest stage against an opponent that has yet to be determined. Paul and the Suns will square off against either the Atlanta Hawks or the Milwaukee Bucks for the right to raise the Larry O’Brien Trophy once the Eastern Conference finals are decided.

Here are three takeaways from Phoenix’s Game 6 win. 

1. Suns in first Finals since 1993

Coming into this season, the Suns hadn’t made the playoffs in over a decade, and hadn’t even finished above .500 since 2014. When they acquired Chris Paul in a blockbuster trade in the offseason, they did so with ending that drought in mind. That was the primary goal, and it wasn’t even a guarantee with such a deep Western Conference and the introduction of the play-in tournament. 

Flash forward a few months, and they didn’t just make they playoffs; they’re the Western Conference champions and will advance to the NBA Finals for the first time since 1993, and just the third time in franchise history. They’ll play the winner of the Milwaukee Bucks and Atlanta Hawks, who are currently tied 2-2 in the Eastern Conference finals, and have hobbled stars. 

Coincidentally that’s been the trend for the Suns in these playoffs. Anthony Davis was injured in their first-round matchup with the Lakers, Jamal Murray didn’t play for the Nuggets in the second round and the Clippers didn’t have Kawhi Leonard for this series. 

They won’t care, however, and nor should they. After all, banners fly forever, and it’s not like the Suns have been 100 percent for this run either. Paul hurt his shoulder in round one, and missed the first two games of the WCF after getting placed in the health and safety protocols. Speaking of…

2. CP3 finally breaks through

Chris Paul is one of the best point guards to ever play the game. That’s been clear for years now, and will remain true regardless of what happens over the rest of his career. But for all his greatness and the countless accolades, it’s impossible to ignore his lack of playoff success. Prior to this season, he’d only been to the conference finals once and had never made it to the Finals. 

Now, at long last, he’s broken through. He still has some work left to acquire his first ring, but after 16 seasons and five different teams, he’s finally made the Finals. “Man, that sounds damn good,” Paul said on the court after the series-clinching win on Wednesday night. “That sounds damn good.”

After everything he’s been through, both in his career and this postseason, Paul looked determined not to let another opportunity slip through his grasp. Late in the third quarter, the Clippers went on a 10-0 run to cut the Suns’ lead to just seven points. From that point on, Paul took over and flat-out dominated the game. 

He went on a personal 8-0 run to end the quarter, and scored the next 14 points for the Suns to rebuild their big lead. Then he just kept on scoring to make sure the Clippers didn’t even think about coming back. In the process he made Patrick Beverley so mad that the Clippers guard shoved him in the back during a timeout and got ejected. 

All told, Paul finished with 41 points, four rebounds and eight assists on a stellar 16-for-24 from the field. That mark tied his playoff career-high, and was also the second-most in playoff history by a player 36 years or older. Afterwards, you could see just how much the moment meant to Paul, as he celebrated with Suns coach Monty Williams. 

3. Clippers’ resilient run comes to an end

Last month, when they lost the first two games of their first-round series with the Dallas Mavericks at home, the commentary about how this was the same old Clippers team started right up. After they blew a 3-1 lead in the second round last summer in the bubble, it seemed like they were on their way to another disappointing collapse. But this wasn’t the same old Clippers. This team was different. 

They won four out of five to close out the Mavericks. Then, after falling down 2-0 again in the second round against the Jazz, they ripped off four straight wins to send the No. 1 overall seed packing. And they did so despite losing Kawhi Leonard for good in Game 4 due to a knee injury, and being down by 25 points at home in Game 6. Even when they went down 2-0 for the third straight series they kept battling, and pushed the Western Conference finals to six games. 

Eventually, shorthanded as they were, they just didn’t have enough left in the tank to overcome the Suns. Paul George, who played over 100 more minutes than anyone else in the playoffs, was running on fumes, and they just couldn’t bring the same level of defensive intensity anymore. They faded late in the second half of Game 6, and that was that.

But while the second year of the Kawhi Leonard-Paul George era still didn’t bring a title to Los Angeles, the Clippers have a lot to be proud of from this run. They showed incredible fortitude time and again, made the conference finals for the first time in franchise history and in many ways changed the perception of this group and the franchise as a whole. 

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Steve Kerr-Kevin Durant drama: Warriors coach ‘angry’ about how comments from 2018-19 Finals team were framed

The 2018-19 Golden State Warriors made no secret of the frustration surrounding their title defense. The pressure of winning a third consecutive championship wore on them. The entire world knew that Kevin Durant was leaving in free agency after the season, and Draymond Green even called him out for it. The season ultimately ended in a Finals loss to the Toronto Raptors, and the Warriors, beset by injuries, moved into a retooling period. They finished with the NBA’s worst record during the 2019-20 season. 

And that didn’t bother Warriors coach Steve Kerr all that much. “I enjoyed last season, when we had the worst record in the league, more than I enjoyed that last season when we went to the Finals,” Kerr said on “The Ringer NBA Show.” “Last year we had young guys who were trying every day, working hard and we had a great energy, great spirit and great camaraderie.”

Drew Shiller, co-hot of the “Warriors Outsiders,” tweeted out another similar quote from the interview. “That last year was tough,” Kerr said.” There was a lot going on — some that you know about and some that you don’t. That was very difficult.” This quote caught the attention of Durant. When he saw it on Twitter, he replied, simply “This is hilarious.”

Durant is among the most active players in the NBA on Twitter, particularly when it comes to defending himself against criticism. Kerr never directly named Durant as the cause of 2019’s frustration, but considering his departure and the fact that fellow core Warriors Stephen Curry, Klay Thompson and Draymond Green remain, Durant is justified in assuming that the implication was that he had a hand in the frustration to come out of that season. Durant has also criticized Kerr’s motion offense as one that becomes less effective in the postseason. 

During his media availability on Monday, Kerr expressed his displeasure at the context through which the quote has been read and shared. 

“I did a podcast a few nights ago with Logan Murdock and I mentioned during the podcast that last season, in which we had the worst record in the league, was more enjoyable from a coaching standpoint than the previous season when we lost in the Finals. The context was, basically, that after the five-year run that we were on, that fifth year was just an absolute bear. It was the stress level, two season-ending injuries during the Finals, DeMarcus also had a serious injury that took him out of the playoffs for six weeks. We had all kinds of stress. 

The whole point of the conversation was the stress of the five-year run compared to coaching a team of young guys that doesn’t win many games but is eager to learn. I made the comment, sort of offhanded, that last year was more enjoyable than that previous season. That was it, that was my comment. Drew Shiller decided to tweet today that Steve Kerr said he enjoyed last season more than Kevin Durant’s last year with the Warriors. 

OK, so I want to make this extremely clear. If you want to actually get the story accurate, I encourage you to listen to the podcast before we sort of take this story into offshoots and use that as my quote because that is the furthest thing from the truth. It was a terribly unfair shot. Completely taking something out of context to the point where people are going to read it and think that that was my quote. You guys have all been very fair to me over the years and I rarely have any complaints. I know that I am fair game for criticism anytime we play a game. I’m going to make bad decisions that you can criticize. I’m going to do plenty of things that you can criticize and I deserve it. 

But to take that comment and put it into a tweet and send it into the universe was so irresponsible and damaging and I’m angry. And I know what’s going to happen. I know this is going to be taken out into the morning shows and people are going to be talking about it and they’re going to use what they think is a quote that is actually that is something that’s completely made up. I’m not happy. I think it’s wrong. Again, I try to be candid. I try to share everything so that our fans know what our team is going through. What I’m going through. We like to share our story. It’s a big part of promoting our team. So, this is really concerning for me. It’s part of modern media maybe but it’s dead wrong and I’m upset about it.”

Regardless of Durant’s part in what happened that season, it should be noted that Kerr has won eight NBA championships. Some may view the pursuit of titles as the only worthy goal in basketball, but once someone has won as many as Kerr has, the idea that chasing more might become less inherently satisfying is somewhat understandable. Rebuilds come with significantly less pressure and smaller egos. On a day-to-day basis, it might have been more fun even if the end result wasn’t as satisfying. 

Ultimately, enjoyment is subjective. Durant is pursuing another ring in Brooklyn. Kerr is making the most of an injury-riddled season and hoping to re-enter the title mix next season. Considering the comments both have made, it seems like it’s for the best that they are pursuing their goals separately. 

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Steve Kerr clarifies comments on leading last year’s Warriors compared to ’18-19 Finals team with Kevin Durant

The 2018-19 Golden State Warriors made no secret of the frustration surrounding their title defense. The pressure of winning a third consecutive championship wore on them. The entire world knew that Kevin Durant was leaving in free agency after the season, and Draymond Green even called him out for it. The season ultimately ended in a Finals loss to the Toronto Raptors, and the Warriors, beset by injuries, moved into a retooling period. They finished with the NBA’s worst record during the 2019-20 season. 

And that didn’t bother Warriors coach Steve Kerr all that much. “I enjoyed last season, when we had the worst record in the league, more than I enjoyed that last season when we went to the Finals,” Kerr said on The Ringer NBA Show. “Last year we had young guys who were trying every day, working hard and we had a great energy, great spirit and great camaraderie.”

Warriors Outsiders co-host Drew Shiller tweeted out another similar quote from the interview. “That last year was tough,” Kerr said.” There was a lot going on — some that you know about and some that you don’t. That was very difficult.” This quote caught the attention of Durant. When he saw it on Twitter, he replied, simply “This is hilarious.”

Durant is among the most active players in the NBA on Twitter, particularly when it comes to defending himself against criticism. Kerr never directly named Durant as the cause of 2019’s frustration, but considering his departure and the fact that fellow core Warriors Stephen Curry, Klay Thompson and Draymond Green remain, Durant is justified in assuming that the implication was that he had a hand in the frustration to come out of that season. Durant has also criticized Kerr’s motion offense as one that becomes less effective in the postseason. 

During his media availability on Monday, Kerr expressed his displeasure at the context through which the quote has been read and shared. 

“I did a podcast a few nights ago with Logan Murdock and I mentioned during the podcast that last season, in which we had the worst record in the league, was more enjoyable from a coaching standpoint than the previous season when we lost in the Finals. The context was, basically, that after the five-year run that we were on, that fifth year was just an absolute bear. It was the stress level, two season-ending injuries during the Finals, DeMarcus also had a serious injury that took him out of the playoffs for six weeks. We had all kinds of stress. 

The whole point of the conversation was the stress of the five-year run compared to coaching a team of young guys that doesn’t win many games but is eager to learn. I made the comment, sort of offhanded, that last year was more enjoyable than that previous season. That was it, that was my comment. Drew Shiller decided to tweet today that Steve Kerr said he enjoyed last season more than Kevin Durant’s last year with the Warriors. 

OK, so I want to make this extremely clear. If you want to actually get the story accurate, I encourage you to listen to the podcast before we sort of take this story into offshoots and use that as my quote because that is the furthest thing from the truth. It was a terribly unfair shot. Completely taking something out of context to the point where people are going to read it and think that that was my quote. You guys have all been very fair to me over the years and I rarely have any complaints. I know that I am fair game for criticism anytime we play a game. I’m going to make bad decisions that you can criticize. I’m going to do plenty of things that you can criticize and I deserve it. 

But to take that comment and put it into a tweet and send it into the universe was so irresponsible and damaging and I’m angry. And I know what’s going to happen. I know this is going to be taken out into the morning shows and people are going to be talking about it and they’re going to use what they think is a quote that is actually that is something that’s completely made up. I’m not happy. I think it’s wrong. Again, I try to be candid. I try to share everything so that our fans know what our team is going through. What I’m going through. We like to share our story. It’s a big part of promoting our team. So, this is really concerning for me. It’s part of modern media maybe but it’s dead wrong and I’m upset about it.”

Regardless of Durant’s part in what happened that season, it should be noted that Kerr has won eight NBA championships. Some may view the pursuit of titles as the only worthy goal in basketball, but once someone has won as many as Kerr has, the idea that chasing more might become less inherently satisfying is somewhat understandable. Rebuilds come with significantly less pressure and smaller egos. On a day-to-day basis, it might have been more fun even if the end result wasn’t as satisfying. 

Ultimately, enjoyment is subjective. Durant is pursuing another ring in Brooklyn. Kerr is making the most of an injury-riddled season and hoping to re-enter the title mix next season. Considering the comments both have made, it seems like it’s for the best that they are pursuing their goals separately. 

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Day 5 Finals Live Recap

2021 BIG TEN MEN’S CHAMPIONSHIPS

The Big Ten Conference Championships wrap up tonight, and it’s going to be an electric finish. Indiana leads Michigan by 26.5 points and Ohio State by 36.5 points, while the Wolverines and Hoosiers project to score roughly the same amount of points in tonight’s finals, 1650 free included.

Michigan is projected to win by one point.

Watch closely, as this could come down to a single-digit margin at the end, much like it did when Louisville claimed their first-ever ACC crown last week by two points over NC State. Swimmers moving up from the bottom of a final, or falling flat after holding a top seed in a final, will make all the difference.

The race for fourth is also going to be tight, as Purdue leads Wisconsin and Northwestern, but the Badgers and Wildcats have three milers apiece to the Boilermakers’ one. NU has 1/2/5 in the A/B/C finals tonight (not including the mile), Purdue 1/2/3 and Wisconsin 0/3/2, with Purdue 61.5 points head of NU and 44.5 ahead of Wisconsin.

NU is projected to move up to fourth, ahead of Purdue by a half-point and ahead of Wisconsin by only nine.

SATURDAY EVENING HEAT SHEETS

100 FREE – FINALS

  • Big Ten meet record – 41.43, Blake Pieroni (Indiana) – 2018
  • Big Ten record – 40.83, Bowe Becker (Minnesota) – 2019
  • 2020 NCAA invite time – 42.57
  • Defending champion: Bruno Blaskovic (Indiana) – 41.88

Top 3

  1. Sem Andreis (Ohio State) – 42.24
  2. Nikola Acin (Purdue) – 42.31
  3. Hunter Armstrong (Ohio State) – 42.37

The team race is tight and the energy at Ohio State’s natatorium tonight is rowdy. For the conference crown, Ohio State’s Sem Andreis just beat out Nikola Acin of Purdue at the wall, 42.23 to 42.31. Andreis adds to his hardware collection, as he won the 50 free on night two.

The Buckeyes had two podium finishers here, as Hunter Armstrong clocked a 42.37 for third, while Michigan’s Gus Borges tied for fourth with IU freshman Tomer Frankel and teammate River Wright, all three of them going 42.50.

Indiana’s Jack Franzman was seventh in 42.60, ahead of Michigan sophomore Cam Peel (43.14).

The B-final went to Wisconsin freshman Andrew Benson (42.93), a new lifetime best for him. In the C-final, Michigan freshman Bence Szabados got up and raced out of lane one for the win at 43.39, ahead of Northwestern senior Robert Cecil (43.67) as both went lifetime bests.

Michigan now owns a 30-point lead over Indiana, while the Hoosiers are ahead of OSU by 27. The Wolverines had a massive push here to move past IU, scoring over 100 points.

1650 FREE – TIMED FINALS

  • Big Ten meet record – 14:29.25, Felix Auboeck (Michigan) –  2017
  • Big Ten record – 14:22.88, Felix Auboeck (Michigan) – 2017
  • 2020 NCAA invite time – 14:57.07
  • Defending champion: Felix Auboeck (Michigan) – 14:30.10

Top 3

  1. Michael Brinegar (Indiana) – 14:38.26
  2. Jake Mitchell (Michigan) – 14:42.60
  3. Charlie Clark (Ohio State) – 14:45.24

Indiana’s Michael Brinegar opened up an early lead on the field, with Michigan freshman Jake Mitchell sitting second.

Brinegar didn’t let up, cruising to the Big Ten title with a 14:38.26, four seconds ahead of Mitchell’s 14:42.60. Brinegar was over ten seconds off of his best, but the time is still good for #6 in the nation this year. Mitchell dropped over 15 seconds from his old best, and he’s now #8 in the nation.

Another freshman, Ohio State’s Charlie Clark, dropped huge time, going from 15:07.84 in high school to a podium-placing time of 14:45.24. Clark is now the first Buckeye swimmer under 14:50 in this event, smashing the OSU record by over five seconds.

In fourth, Wisconsin’s Josh Dannhauser snagged key points for the Badgers in their team race for fourth, as he was 14:46.76.

Out of the early heats, Michigan’s Will Roberts pinned down a 14:59.87 to lead the way going into the last heat swimming with finals. He led a 1-2 with teammate Danny Berlitz (15:03.97) among early heats, and they were fast enough to place fifth and seventh, respectively, after the final heat swam.

In a tight race that came down to the finish in heat four, Northwestern senior Jeffrey Durmer hustled over the last 150, splitting 26.9, 26.6 and finally 25.0 to run down Minnesota freshman Christopher Nagy at the wall. Durmer was 15:06.96, a hundredth ahead of Nagy. Durmer dropped almost nine seconds off of his old best from 2019, while Nagy destroyed his old best of 15:32.74. Durmer finished eighth in the final results.

Michigan is clinging to a 50-point lead, as Indiana is just 19 ahead of OSU with the mile finished. Purdue still holds fourth, but they had zero scorers in the event, so Wisconsin and NU pull nearer.

200 BACK – FINALS

  • Big Ten meet record – 1:38.89, Eric Ress (Indiana) – 2014
  • Big Ten record – 1:37.58, Tyler Clary (Michigan) – 2009
  • 2020 NCAA invite time – 1:41.49
  • Defending champion: Gabriel Fantoni (Indiana) – 1:40.31

Top 3

  1. Brendan Burns (Indiana) – 1:39.37
  2. Wyatt Davis (Michigan) – 1:40.68
  3. Jacob Steele (Indiana) – 1:41.53

Brendan Burns shot out to the lead, turning in 48.49 at the 100 mark, and he opened an even bigger lead on the third 50. Burns finished on top with a huge swim, his first time under 1:40 with a 1:39.37 to move to #5 in the nation this season. His teammate Jacob Steele picked up the bronze, going 1:41.53 for the Hoosiers.

Hitting a new personal best, Michigan freshman Wyatt Davis split the Hoosiers, nabbing second with a 1:40.68.

Ohio State’s Thomas Watkins (1:41.70) and Penn State’s Michael Daly (1:41.85) were both under 1:42, too, while defending champion Gabriel Fantoni gained over a second from prelims to take sixth in 1:42.42.

In the B-final, Colin McDermott of Ohio State posted a big 1:41.81 for the win, using a strong underwater off of the final turn to nab the top time of the heat.

Michigan is still ahead by 41 points, while the Hoosiers look to be clear of the Buckeyes, ahead of OSU by 49. Down in the race for fourth, Wisconsin how now pulled dead-even with Purdue, with Northwestern back 25 of each of them.

200 BREAST – FINALS

  • Big Ten meet record – 1:50.30, Ian Finnerty (Indiana) – 2019
  • Big Ten record – 1:49.41, Max McHugh (Minnesota) – 2019
  • 2020 NCAA invite time – 1:54.03
  • Defending champion: Thomas Cope (Michigan) – 1:51.44

Top 3

  1. Max McHugh (Minnesota) – 1:50.93
  2. Paul Delakis (Ohio State) – 1:51.78
  3. Zane Backes (Indiana) – 1:53.18

Zane Backes of Indiana went out like a rocket, pushing the pace with an absurd 24.38 first 50. Backes was 52.67 at the 100, still ahead, but Minnesota’s Max McHugh and Ohio State’s Paul Delakis pulled up, McHugh about even with him.

McHugh and Delakis passed him through the final turn, and McHugh added to his 100 breast gold with a 1:50.93, rattling Ian Finnerty’s meet record. McHugh moves to #2 in the nation, and Delakis’s 1:51.78 is good for fifth in the country.

Backes was able to hold it together for bronze, dropping from prelims to go 1:53.18, while OSU’s Jason Mathews (1:53.71) and Michigan’s Will Chan (1:53.92) also broke 1:54.

In the B-final, Northwestern went 1-2 with Marcus Mok (1:54.06) and Kevin Houseman (1:55.11) as both sophomores hit lifetime bests.

Heading into the final relay, Michigan is locked in for the title as long as they don’t DQ, while Indiana is safe in second if they just finish the relay legally.

Wisconsin is now in fourth, holding a nine-point lead over Purdue, while Northwestern is just four points behind Purdue. The Boilermakers should have the strongest 400 free relay, but they’ll need to do about five places better than Wisconsin to reclaim fourth.

Now, the race is for eighth; Minnesota just passed Iowa for eighth position going into the relay, but they are ahead by only 1.5 points.

400 FREE RELAY – TIMED FINALS

  • Big Ten meet record – 2:48.29, Indiana – 2017
  • Big Ten record – 2:47.11, Indiana – 2018
  • NCAA automatic qualifying standard – 2:51.11
  • Defending champion: Indiana, 2:48.43

Top 3

  1. Indiana – 2:49.20
  2. Ohio State – 2:49.32
  3. Michigan – 2:49.66

Ohio State, Indiana and Purdue met in the 400 free relay final heat, as Purdue needed to finish five places ahead of Wisconsin to reclaim fourth.

Indiana pulled out the win in the last heat, claiming the top time with a 2:49.20, getting 42s from Tomer Frankel (42.68), Brendan Burns (42.60) and Jack Franzman (42.16), while Van Mathias dropped a hammer second leg (41.76). Ohio State was second, with Sem Andreis blasting a 41.66 on the second leg and Paul Delakis anchoring in 41.98.

Michigan won heat two, going 2:49.66 with a huge 42.06 lead-off from sophomore River Wright. They had 42s across the board to follow, with Bence Szabados (42.87), Cam Peel (42.47) and Gus Borges (42.26).

Purdue was third in the final heat, going 2:50.32, and they were able to beat Wisconsin and take back fourth-place, as the Badgers finished ninth. Nikola Acin was 41.78 on the third leg for the Boilermakers, while Nick Sherman led off in 42.88 and Trent Pellini (42.77) and Ryan Lawrence (42.89) also split 42s.

Minnesota won heat one in 2:54.37, but Iowa was faster in the heat after, going 2:53.98. Iowa scores four more points than Minnesota there, as Northwestern finished between them, so Iowa takes back eighth place at their last Big Ten Championships as a program.

In Michigan State’s last swim as a program, Aidan Farley led off their relay in 42.93, which sets a Michigan State record. He previously held it at 43.54 from the 100 free B-final.

TEAM SCORES – FINAL

  1. Michigan – 1401
  2. Indiana – 1357
  3. Ohio State – 1322
  4. Purdue – 732
  5. Wisconsin – 729
  6. Northwestern – 722
  7. Penn State – 619.5
  8. Minnesota – 566.5
  9. Iowa – 564
  10. Michigan State – 196



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Tom Brady vs. Patrick Mahomes in the Super Bowl is ‘like LeBron and Jordan playing in the Finals’

Tom Brady and Patrick Mahomes will meet in Super Bowl LV on February 7 after leading their sides to victory on Championship Sunday.

Brady’s Tampa Bay Buccaneers stunned the red-hot Green Bay Packers 31-26 in the NFC championship, while Mahomes’ Kansas City Chiefs defeated the Buffalo Bills 38-24 in the AFC championship.

And given the 18-year age difference between the two star quarterbacks, fans are thrilled at the idea of 43-year-old Brady facing off against 25-year-old Mahomes in Tampa Bay in two weeks.

Some compared them to the two editions of Yoda from the Star Wars films and the Mandelorian TV series.

Others tweeted photos announcing the clash of the two titans with pictures of two goats — suggesting both Brady and Mahomes are two of the greatest players of all time — while others compared it to a young Kobe Bryant facing an older Michael Jordan.
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Former Dallas Cowboys quarterback and now CBS commentator Tony Romo described it as an “all-time matchup” as well as comparing it to “LeBron and Jordan playing in the (NBA) Finals.”
It will also be the first ever Super Bowl match-up between the winning quarterbacks from the previous two Super Bowls.

In winning on Sunday, Brady advanced to his 10th Super Bowl — nine with the New England Patriots and now one with the Buccaneers after signing with them before this season.

And like he did the last time he made it to the big game in 2019, he celebrated in style with his long-time Patriots teammate Rob Gronkowski, who also made the move to Tampa Bay before this season.

How Brady has helped to transform the Buccaneers has been remarkable, leading the team to the Super Bowl when last year they failed to even reach the playoffs.

For Mahomes, on the other hand, his stock is only on the rise.

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He will be playing in his second successive Super Bowl having won it last year and joined Kurt Warner, Brady, and Russell Wilson as the only quarterbacks to reach the Super Bowl twice in their first four NFL seasons, according to NFL Research.
Five-time NBA All-Star Damian Lillard even compared Mahomes’ ability to that of Steph Curry on Instagram.



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