Tag Archives: Kyrie Irving

Kyrie Irving returns to the Brooklyn Nets after serving 8-game suspension



CNN
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Kyrie Irving’s eight-game suspension ended Sunday as the star point guard suited up for the Brooklyn Nets game against the Memphis Grizzlies.

Irving hadn’t played for the Nets since November 1. The Nets suspended Irving November 3 after he tweeted a link to a documentary containing antisemitic messages, followed by an initial refusal to issue an apology.

Irving has since issued multiple apologies, including during his pregame media availability Sunday.

“I just want to offer my deep apologies to all those who were impacted over these last few weeks, specifically my Jewish relatives, my Black relatives, all races and cultures,” Irving said Sunday. “Feel like we all felt an impact and I don’t stand for anything close to hate speech or antisemitism or anything that is ‘anti,’ going against the human race.”

“I feel it was necessary for me to stand in this place and take accountability for my actions,” Irving said.

Irving received a warm welcome from the Brooklyn crowd during player introductions before tip-off. He finished the night with 14 points and five rebounds in the Nets’ 127-115 victory over the Grizzlies.

Irving said after the game that it “felt good” to be back on the court.

“Missed my teammates,” Irving told reporters. “Missed the coaching staff. Just getting prepared with them in the morning and carrying over to the game, it felt good.”

When asked if he would file a grievance over his suspension, Irving said he’d leave that decision to his legal team.

“I have some strong people, men and women, around me that are going to do everything possible to make sure that I’m protected and my family’s protected and we protect one another, so I’m sure some things will be done in the future,” Irving said. “There’s no timetable on that right now.”

Speaking before Sunday’s game, Nets coach Jacque Vaughn showed no hesitation about his decision to put Irving on the floor to start the game.

“He’ll start, and we’ll see where his conditioning is, the pace of the game which we want to play at. Excited to have him back on the floor with our group, and he’ll fit right in,” Vaughn said.

During an interview Saturday with SNY’s Ian Begley, Irving said he reacted emotionally to being called “antisemitic.”

“I felt like I was protecting my character and I reacted out of just pure defense and just hurt that I could be labeled, or I thought that I was being labeled as antisemitic or anti-Jewish, and I’ve felt like that was just so disrespectful to ask me whether or not I was antisemitic or not,” Irving said.

The Nets’ next scheduled game is Tuesday at the Philadelphia 76ers.

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Charles Barkley reacts to Kyrie Irving and Dave Chappelle – CNN

  1. Charles Barkley reacts to Kyrie Irving and Dave Chappelle CNN
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  3. Charles Barkley Has Brutally Honest Admission On ‘Free Speech’ The Spun
  4. NBPA VP Jaylen Browns takes aim at Joe Tsai over Kyrie Irving ban: ‘It’s time for a larger conversation’ New York Daily News
  5. Mark Cuban on Kyrie Irving and Kanye West anti-Semitic comments – “You’d just assume they’re crazy and keep on walking” Basketball Network
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Kyrie Irving suspended by Brooklyn Nets over ‘failure to disavow antisemitism’ after Twitter controversy



CNN
 — 

The Brooklyn Nets announced Thursday the suspension of Kyrie Irving, days after he tweeted a link to a documentary that has been criticized as antisemitic and then defended his decision to do so.

In a statement on Twitter, the team said they made repeated attempts to help Irving “understand the harm and danger of his words and actions, which began with him publicizing a film containing deeply disturbing antisemitic hate.”

Irving was condemned last week by, among others, Nets owner Joe Tsai and the NBA for tweeting a link to the 2018 movie “Hebrews to Negroes: Wake Up Black America,” which is based on Ronald Dalton’s book of the same name and has been blasted as being antisemitic by civil rights groups.

The Nets said they were “dismayed” on Thursday when Irving “refused to unequivocally say he has no antisemitic beliefs, nor acknowledge specific hateful material in the film,” during a media session.

“This was not the first time he had the opportunity – but failed – to clarify,” the team said.

“Such failure to disavow antisemitism when given a clear opportunity to do so is deeply disturbing, is against the values of our organization, and constitutes conduct detrimental to the team. Accordingly, we are of the view that he is currently unfit to be associated with the Brooklyn Nets. We have decided that Kyrie will serve a suspension without pay until he satisfies a series of objective remedial measures that address the harmful impact of his conduct and the suspension period served is no less than five games.”

While meeting with media earlier Thursday, Irving was asked if he was apologizing when he said he didn’t mean to cause any offense after tweeting a link to the movie.

“I didn’t mean to cause any harm,” Irving replied. “I’m not the one that made the documentary.”

“I take my full responsibility, again I’ll repeat it, for posting something on my Instagram or Twitter that may have had some unfortunate falsehoods in it,” he said.

“I take my responsibility for posting that,” Irving continued. “Some things that were questionable in there, untrue.

“Like I said the first time you all asked me while I was sitting on that stage. I don’t believe everything that everybody posts. It’s a documentary. So, I take my responsibility.”

Asked if he had any antisemitic beliefs, Irving responded: “I respect all walks of life. I embrace all walks of life. That’s where I sit.”

When pressed to answer yes or no to the question, he replied: “I cannot be antisemitic if I know where I come from.”

Responding to that answer on Twitter, the CEO of the Anti-Defamation League – a “nonprofit organization devoted to fighting antisemitism and all types of hate that undermine justice and fair treatment for every individual” – said Irving had “a lot of work to do.”

“The answer to the question ‘Do you have any antisemitic beliefs’ is always ‘NO’ without equivocation. We took @KyrieIrving at his word when he said he took responsibility, but today he did not make good on that promise,” Jonathan Greenblatt wrote on Thursday. “Kyrie clearly has a lot of work to do.”

That media appearance came after Irving and the Nets announced on Wednesday that they will both donate $500,000 towards anti-hate organizations after the point guard tweeted the documentary.

In an earlier joint statement between Irving, Nets and the Anti-Defamation League, the 30-year-old said he took “responsibility” for the “negative impact” his post had towards the Jewish community.

“I oppose all forms of hatred and oppression and stand strong with communities that are marginalized and impacted every day,” Irving said.

“I am aware of the negative impact of my post towards the Jewish community and I take responsibility. I do not believe everything said in the documentary was true or reflects my morals and principles.

“I am a human being learning from all walks of life and I intend to do so with an open mind and a willingness to listen. So from my family and I, we meant no harm to any one group, race or religion of people, and wish to only be a beacon of truth and light.”

Earlier this week, NBA analyst and Basketball Hall of Famer Charles Barkley said he thought the league “dropped the ball” on Irving and that he believed the player should have been suspended.

On Tuesday, when asked why Irving had not been disciplined for his actions, Nets general manager Sean Marks told reporters: “I think we are having these discussions behind the scenes.

“I honestly don’t want to really get into those right now. … Really just trying to weigh out exactly what the best course of action is here.”

NBA Commissioner Adam Silver says he is “disappointed” with Irving after the guard did not offer an apology nor denounce the “harmful content contained in the film he chose to publicize.” Silver will meet with Irving in the next week, the commissioner said in a statement Thursday.

“Kyrie Irving made a reckless decision to post a link to a film containing deeply offensive antisemitic material,” Silver said.

“While we appreciate the fact that he agreed to work with the Brooklyn Nets and the Anti-Defamation League to combat antisemitism and other forms of discrimination, I am disappointed that he has not offered an unqualified apology and more specifically denounced the vile and harmful content contained in the film he chose to publicize.”

Irving was not made available to the media on Monday or Tuesday following Nets games on those days.

The joint statement said the donations were made to “eradicate hate and intolerance in our communities.”

“This is an effort to develop educational programming that is inclusive and will comprehensively combat all forms of antisemitism and bigotry,” the statement read.

Greenblatt, with the Anti-Defamation League, had said: “At a time when antisemitism has reached historic levels, we know the best way to fight the oldest hatred is to both confront it head-on and also to change hearts and minds.

“With this partnership, ADL will work with the Nets and Kyrie to open dialogue and increase understanding.

“At the same time, we will maintain our vigilance and call out the use of anti-Jewish stereotypes and tropes – whatever, whoever, or wherever the source – as we work toward a world without hate.”

Kanye West, who has been criticized following antisemitic remarks on social media and in interviews, showed his support for Irving, tweeting a picture of the guard on Thursday.

Ye, formerly known as Kanye West, has previously said Jewish people have too much control over the business world.

He threatened in a Twitter post to “Go death con 3 on JEWISH PEOPLE.” He also ranted in an Instagram post about Ari Emanuel, CEO of the talent agency Endeavor, referencing “business” people when he clearly meant Jews.

Last Friday, he told paparazzi that his mental health issues had been misdiagnosed by a Jewish doctor, made reference to Jewish ownership of media and compared Planned Parenthood to the Holocaust.



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Kyrie Irving: Brooklyn Nets star defends his tweet about a documentary deemed antisemitic and stands by sharing a video by Alex Jones



CNN
 — 

Brooklyn Nets star Kyrie Irving said that he is “not going to stand down on anything I believe in” after he was condemned by the owner of his NBA team for tweeting a link to a documentary deemed to be antisemitic.

The star guard tweeted a link Thursday to the 2018 movie “Hebrews to Negroes: Wake Up Black America,” which is based on Ronald Dalton’s book of the same name. Rolling Stone described the book and movie as “stuffed with antisemitic tropes.”

In a fraught post-game press conference after the Nets lost to the Indiana Pacers on Saturday, Irving defended his decision to post a link to the documentary.

“In terms of the backlash, we’re in 2022, history is not supposed to be hidden from anybody and I’m not a divisive person when it comes to religion, I embrace all walks of life,” he said.

“So the claims of antisemitism and who are the original chosen people of God and we go into these religious conversations and it’s a big no, no, I don’t live my life that way.”

Several organizations have condemned Irving’s tweet, including the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), the NBA, the Brooklyn Nets, and Nets’ owner Joe Tsai.

“I’m disappointed that Kyrie appears to support a film based on a book full of anti-semitic disinformation,” Nets owner Joe Tsai tweeted Friday night.

“I want to sit down and make sure he understands this is hurtful to all of us, and as a man of faith, it is wrong to promote hate based on race, ethnicity or religion.”

Tsai added, “This is bigger than basketball.”

Irving said in the press conference that he “respects what Joe [Tsai] said,” but claimed that he had not tweeted something harmful.

“Did I do anything illegal? Did I hurt anybody, did I harm anybody? Am I going out and saying that I hate one specific group of people?”

“It’s on Amazon, a public platform, whether you want to go watch it or not, is up to you,” Irving said. “There’s things being posted every day. I’m no different than the next human being, so don’t treat me any different.”

CNN has asked Amazon for comment but, at the time of publication, had not received a response.

At the same time, Irving acknowledged his “unique position” to influence his community, but said “what I post does not mean that I support everything that’s being said or everything that’s being done or I’m campaigning for anything.”

Jonathan Greenblatt, CEO of the Anti-Defamation League, in a tweet on Friday called Irving’s social media post “troubling.”

“The book and film he promotes trade in deeply #antisemitic themes, including those promoted by dangerous sects of the Black Hebrew Israelites movement. Irving should clarify now.”

The Nets also spoke out against the star guard’s tweet.

“The Brooklyn Nets strongly condemn and have no tolerance for the promotion of any form of hate speech,” the team said in a statement to CNN.

“We believe that in these situations, our first action must be open, honest dialogue. We thank those, including the ADL (Anti-Defamation League), who have been supportive during this time.”

The NBA issued a statement saying, “Hate speech of any kind is unacceptable and runs counter to the NBA’s values of equality, inclusion and respect.

“We believe we all have a role to play in ensuring such words or ideas, including antisemitic ones, are challenged and refuted and we will continue working with all members of the NBA community to ensure that everyone understands the impact of their words and actions.”

Rolling Stone, meanwhile, said the movie and book include ideas in line with some “extreme factions” within the Black Hebrew Israelite movement that have expressed antisemitic and other discriminatory sentiments.

During the press conference, Irving was also asked about his decision to share a video created by far-right talk show host and conspiracy theorist Alex Jones, who was recently ordered to pay nearly $1 billion in damages to Sandy Hook families for his lies about the massacre.

Irving clarified that he did not agree with Jones’ false claims that the Sandy Hook shooting was staged but stood by sharing Jones’ post in September “about secret societies in America of occults,” that Irving believed to be “true.”



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This is KD & Kyrie’s LAST YEAR on the Brooklyn Nets – Stephen A. Smith | NBA Countdown – ESPN

  1. This is KD & Kyrie’s LAST YEAR on the Brooklyn Nets – Stephen A. Smith | NBA Countdown ESPN
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  3. “Complete Mystery” – Nets Announcer Ian Eagle on How KD, Kyrie & Simmons Will Mesh | Rich Eisen Show The Rich Eisen Show
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LeBron James’ 42-point show lights up Drew League; Kyrie Irving no-shows

LOS ANGELES — LeBron James scored 42 points in a successful return to the Drew League while teaming up with DeMar DeRozan for a 104-102 win in L.A.’s famed pro-am basketball league Saturday.

Longtime Drew League commissioner Dino Smiley told ESPN he expected Brooklyn Nets guard Kyrie Irving to play in the game preceding James’ and DeRozan’s, but that did not occur.

“We still have a couple games left today and then six tomorrow, so we’ll see,” Smiley said late Saturday afternoon.

Smiley said Irving playing Saturday “sounded like it was going to be a sure bet, but I don’t know what happened.”

While the Drew League’s Saturday slate was being played near Compton, California, some 55 miles away in Thousand Oaks, a participant at Los Angeles Lakers assistant coach Phil Handy’s girls’ basketball skills camp posted a video of Irving working with the campers to her Instagram account.

Handy coached Irving for five seasons when they were both a part of the Cleveland Cavaliers organization.

The Drew League game Saturday marked the first public glimpse of the 37-year-old James playing basketball in more than three months. He missed seven of the Lakers’ final eight regular-season games in the spring because of a left ankle sprain and missed 26 games in all of 2021-22, which ended up being one of the most disappointing seasons in franchise history.

“I’m 100 percent healthy,” James told ESPN during the first half of action.

He finished with 42 points on 18-for-36 shooting (2-for-13 from 3), 16 rebounds, 4 steals and 3 assists. DeRozan, a Drew League staple who invited James to play on his and fellow Southern California native Casper Ware’s team, scored 30 points on 9-for-23 shooting with 14 rebounds.

James and DeRozan’s team, called the MMV Cheaters, trailed team Black Pearl Elite by as many as seven points in the fourth quarter before storming back.

DeRozan’s feed to James for a two-handed, rim-bending dunk with 1:22 remaining put MMV up by six and seemingly in control. But BPE followed with a 3-pointer and a layup created by stealing an inbounds pass, and James was suddenly in jeopardy of losing his first game back at the Drew League in more than a decade.

Following a timeout, MMV inbounded the ball to James, who was fouled with 4.5 seconds left, sending him to the free throw line with his team up 103-102.

He made the first. And then things got interesting.

“I walked up to LeBron up the end, and I told him, ‘Hey, I need one [miss],'” Mike Nwabuzor of BPE, who plays professionally overseas, said afterward. “And he actually smoked the free throw. So that was probably the best moment. But the whole game was fun. Great competition. It’s just great to share the court with him.”

James missed the second free throw, but Ethan Alvano of BPE put up a potential game-winning 3 at the buzzer that fell short, and James raised his fist in victory.

“I thought we really could have pulled it off,” said Alvano, who recently signed a two-year contract to play in South Korea. “We had some mistakes down the stretch. But, man, that’s a lifelong dream to play against, with, whatever with LeBron James. Someone that I grew up watching, someone I grew up idolizing. So it was an honor, it was a blessing to share the court with him.”

It was James’ first appearance at the Drew League — which was founded in 1973 and has seen a pilgrimage of NBA players descend on the Charles Drew Junior High School gymnasium during the summers for decades — since the NBA lockout in 2011.

“When that first happened it was a surprise because Baron [Davis] brought him in to play, and I think he was coming just to watch, and then he got excited seeing the crowd and the game and then he wanted a jersey,” Smiley said. “So, that’s how that one took place.”

Davis was one of about a dozen former or current NBA players on hand to watch Saturday, a group that also included Draymond Green of the Golden State Warriors; Montrezl Harrell of the Charlotte Hornets; and Kendrick Nunn and Talen Horton-Tucker of the Lakers.

Irving’s absence erased much of the intrigue for the day surrounding James and his former teammate.

Irving recently picked up his $36.5 million player option for the 2022-23 season with the Brooklyn Nets, and James is in the final year of his contract with the Los Angeles Lakers, although he will be eligible to sign an extension with L.A. starting next month.

Los Angeles has engaged Brooklyn in trade talks in recent weeks to attempt to acquire Irving in a deal that would send Russell Westbrook to the Nets, sources told ESPN. Thus far, those talks have not progressed toward an agreement.

Instead, the focus was on the court, with James — four years into his Lakers tenure — ingratiating himself with the L.A. basketball scene.

“For him to be here and come to the middle of the ‘hood where regular people are every day that look up to him, he’s a superstar so for him to come here and grace these people with his presence, I think it’s super dope,” Alvano said. “I’m glad he did it and it’s great for the community.”

Added Smiley: “It was just an epic, epic afternoon of basketball.”

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NBA playoffs 2022 – Why these Brooklyn Nets were the greatest team that never was

Mike D’Antoni was watching the Brooklyn Nets’ season-ending loss to the Boston Celtics on Monday night from his living room in Austin, Texas, a world away from the drama his protégé, Nets coach Steve Nash, had just lived through.

A year ago, D’Antoni had been on the Nets’ bench alongside Nash as the two-time MVP coached what will go down as one of the greatest teams that never was to within a shoe size of the Eastern Conference finals.

Nine years ago, D’Antoni had been on the Los Angeles Lakers’ bench for another notoriously star-crossed season, when Nash, Kobe Bryant, Paul Gasol and Dwight Howard flopped their way to a first-round sweep.

But this year, this Nets season, was like nothing D’Antoni had ever seen.

“The situation was just so strange,” he said. “When you throw all the things that happened to them this year … and then having to fight for their lives for a month just to get into the play-in game … I don’t think it’s odd that they struggled.”

After it was all over Monday night in Brooklyn, Nash and the Nets’ superstars took their turns at the lectern, making similar allusions to the off-the-court drama that overwhelmed the Nets this season and left them exhausted on every level by the end of it.

Kyrie Irving called it “being the polarization of the media scrum” and “noise.”

Kevin Durant referenced a lack of “continuity.”

Nash spoke directly about “all those things off the floor” and how they affected the team on the court.

“Our guys wore down,” Nash said. “They’re tired.”

The final minutes of Monday’s game brought all of it to the fore.

With 2:45 to go, and Boston leading 109-103, Brooklyn caught a massive break when referee Sean Wright called the sixth foul on Celtics star Jayson Tatum.

On the next play, a resurgent Blake Griffin muscled a key offensive rebound over Boston’s Al Horford, leading to an Irving 3-pointer that cut the lead to three points. When Durant stole the ball from Jaylen Brown and hit a 14-foot floater to cut the lead to one with 1:28 to go, it seemed the momentum had swung toward Brooklyn.

But instead of salvation, the Nets found more exasperation in a season defined by it.

play

1:16

Kevin Durant reacts to how the Nets’ season ended and whether or not Steve Nash is the right coach for the team going forward.

Durant missed back-to-back 3-pointers and a key free throw, Irving failed to box out Horford on an offensive rebound and putback after Griffin had kept Marcus Smart from converting a fast-break layup, and all that was left to do at the game’s end was shake hands and credit the superior team on a series sweep.

Afterward, Durant was asked if he had any regrets about the season, the series or the game.

“No regrets,” he shrugged. “S— happens. We’ve been through a lot this year. Everyone in the organization knows what we’ve been through.”

Durant started to list the things that have happened to the Nets this season, but he quickly lost interest in the recap: Irving’s battles with the city of New York over its vaccine mandate, the James Harden trade, the uncertainty over Ben Simmons’ back injury as well as his mental health, a COVID-19 outbreak, injuries, a lack of consistency and most glaringly, camaraderie that proved impossible to develop.

“I wish we were more healthy as a group,” Durant said. “I wish we had more continuity as a group. But that’s just the league. Every team goes through that.”

He seemed both tired of talking about the drama and uninterested in making excuses. Aside from his injuries, Durant had been the Nets’ most consistent player.

Only he knows how much of a physical and mental toll it took on him. Monday night he wasn’t in the mood to admit to any fatigue or use that heavy load as an excuse.

Nash, however, was blunt.

“Over the course of the season,” Nash said. “There were just too many [things].” In many ways the basketball world performed a season-long autopsy on what went wrong for the Nets.

But the premise of those analyses is flawed.

It isn’t what went wrong for the Nets, or what happened to them. It’s about the decisions that allowed these team- and culture-shattering problems to exist in the first place.

Whether it be Harden quitting on the team and asking to be traded midseason, Irving being unable to play in games in New York City and Toronto due to his vaccination status, or even Simmons’ decision to force a trade from Philadelphia after last season and drawn out a “ramp-up” process to play again, which never came to fruition.

The Nets’ management and ownership have tried to support their stars throughout the season. Generally, superstar players appreciate that kind of respect. But outside of Durant, the Nets’ superstars did not make good on the deference they were shown, and that’s a problem for a team built as a star system.

Just think how much time and energy the Nets wasted on off-the-court issues that could have been spent on basketball. How many hours were spent discussing Irving’s vaccination status? How much energy was spent deliberating on what to do with Harden? How many hours were spent deciding whether Simmons would play in Game 4, rather than how the Nets were going to adjust to the Celtics’ swarming defense?

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1:07

Kyrie Irving admits his status was a distraction to the Nets this season and remains adamant he will return to Brooklyn in the fall.

Irving alluded to the toll and his responsibility in it after the game.

“It was just really heavy emotionally this season,” he said. “I felt like I was letting the team down at a point where I wasn’t able to play.

“I never want it to be about me, but I feel like it became a distraction at times.” Irving then reaffirmed the power he and Durant have been given within the organization.

“When I say I’m here with Kev, that entails us managing this franchise together — alongside Joe and Sean,” said Irving, who was referring to Nets owner Joe Tsai and general manager Sean Marks.

“We need to really be intentional about what we’re building.”

Irving spoke of his motivation to build a better team and culture next season, and not just relying on individual performance as the Nets so often had to this year. But he was clearly speaking as a star who has been fully empowered by his franchise, which is great when things work out but uncomfortable when they end as badly as the Nets’ season did.

If that sounds familiar, it is.

The West Coast version of the Nets — the Lakers — fizzled out in much the same way this season.

It’s ironic for a coach such as Nash, who made a name for himself as a player in a system as democratic as D’Antoni’s “Seven seconds or less” Phoenix Suns, and a general manager like Marks, who was reared in the San Antonio Spurs’ culture hive, to have built a team like this.

Like everyone else, they will each reflect on what they could have and should have done differently. Then they will try it all again next season, hoping the lessons from this season will matter.

“The tough part is we all grew a tremendous amount, we just weren’t able to benefit from it this year,” Nash said postgame. “To have gone through everything we went through this year, to say goodbye is tough. Because we fought hard to stay together.”

Nash is right. The Nets fought. They just weren’t always fighting the opponents on the floor.

D’Antoni, for his part, still has faith in Brooklyn’s superstar-laden roster.

“You’ve not seen anything of what they can do,” D’Antoni said. “It needs to have a chance. But it’s New York, and New York is, ‘What have you done for me yesterday?’

“Hopefully they’ll be able to get that.”

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What to watch for in an enormous Game 2 between the Brooklyn Nets and Boston Celtics

You heard the question as rivals eyed the standings and maybe even jockeyed to avoid them:

Why is everyone so afraid of the Brooklyn Nets?

Well, that’s why: Even when perhaps the world’s best player shoots 9-of-24 — even amid a season in which it has been impossible for them to develop any momentum — they take the No. 2 seed to the wire in Game 1 of what could be a riveting first-round series.

All it took was one of their two (available) stars compensating for the shooting struggles of the other, plus good games from two role players — Nic Claxton and Goran Dragic.

It felt like Game 5 of a late-round series. These teams know each other. They attacked in the ways you expected. The coaches did not leave much low-hanging adjustment fruit.

The end result was a gut punch for the Nets. The Boston Celtics are the more complete team. They went 33-10 in their last 43 games, mauling opponents by 13.5 points per 100 possessions — almost double the margin of the No. 2 team (the Phoenix Suns, an NBA metronome) in that span. Their rotation has been consistent for months.

You need similar cohesion to beat a team this good four times in seven tries. The Nets have enjoyed cohesion for zero seconds. Steve Nash is still stitching lineups — choosing between undersized three-guard groups heavy on shooting, and stouter defensive units featuring two non-shooters Boston’s vice-grip defense can ignore. Every choice is fraught.

Joe Harris’s absence has loomed over this entire season; he might be the best shooter among Brooklyn’s perimeter role players, and better than all but Bruce Brown on defense. The potential presence of Ben Simmons looms over this series. The Nets are hopeful he might return, maybe soon, and he might unlock the center-less lineups that probably represent the team’s highest ceiling.

All those uncertainties are why snaring Game 1 seemed urgent for the Nets once they took the lead. Their margin for error is a little smaller. Simmons would widen it some.

My best guess would be Brooklyn brings Simmons off the bench, at least at first, if he returns. The team has finally settled on a starting five in Kyrie Irving, Seth Curry, Bruce Brown, Kevin Durant, and Andre Drummond. I would be mildly surprised if the Nets upended it to accommodate a unique (to be polite) player who has not played in 10 months.

Even a limited Simmons would help the Nets get out in transition, and fortify them on defense and on the glass. (Boston’s overall size helps in ways that might be tough to notice in transition defense. They don’t have to worry about finding specific matchups; they each can take whichever opposing player is nearest. The Nets don’t run a ton, but they are efficient when they do.)

Boston smoked the Nets on the glass in Game 1. That was baked into the series. Boston ranked 11th in offensive rebounding rate, the Nets dead last in defensive rebounding. It will only get worse if Robert Williams III returns. That said, Brooklyn can be more diligent gang rebounding.

Daniel Theis, normally not much of a threat, plucked four offensive boards in Game 1. The Nets went the unconventional route of guarding him with Curry — a gambit that allowed them to put their two best defenders, Durant and Bruce Brown, on Tatum and Jaylen Brown. (Irving guarded Marcus Smart, with Drummond on the resurgent Al Horford — who logged a shocking 41 minutes! That seems unsustainable, even without back-to-backs.)

The Celtics could and should have gone at that matchup more by using Theis as a screener for Brown and Tatum — forcing the Nets to choose between getting themselves into rotation, or switching Curry onto one of Boston’s stars.

I wonder if Boston will even get that chance now. Brooklyn could rejigger matchups to eliminate the Curry-Theis weirdness. It could shift Curry onto Smart; Irving to Jaylen Brown; Bruce Brown onto Tatum; Durant onto Horford; and Drummond to Theis. That would end Theis’ volleyball game on the glass and spare Durant the burden of guarding Tatum — at the cost of slotting a smaller guard onto Jaylen Brown.

When it has nothing better going — and when Tatum rests — Boston might try posting up Jaylen Brown and even Grant Williams when the Nets hide smaller players on them. Both can playmake if the Nets send help. Jaylen Brown brutalized Bruce Brown on one post-up. Anytime Jaylen Brown or Tatum ends a Boston defensive possession on one of Brooklyn’s undersized guards, they should sprint the floor and cement that matchup.

Tatum played 45 minutes in Game 1, including the entire second half. Boston barely outscored opponents in the regular season when Jaylen Brown played without Tatum. The Nets have to win those minutes. The Celtics have to win the non-Durant minutes — which they failed at in Game 1, even though Tatum played every second Durant rested. Expect the Celtics to focus more on those minutes in Game 2 — to throw more help at Irving, and perhaps make sure Theis and maybe Payton Pritchard are on the bench.

(By the way: How many players are better than Tatum right now? There is Giannis Antetokounmpo, Durant, Joel Embiid, Nikola Jokic, and probably Luka Doncic. Is that the whole list? Your mileage may vary on how to rank Stephen Curry and LeBron James. Tatum was probably better than both this season — it’s close — but those guys are legends. No one wants any part of James in one game. Curry is on the outer edges of his prime, powering an offense unlike any other in stylistic terms. But Tatum has surpassed James Harden, Jimmy Butler, Damian Lillard, Anthony Davis, and Paul George. He’s above the best young guys, including Ja Morant, Karl-Anthony Towns, Devin Booker, Trae Young, and Donovan Mitchell. His companion in terms of overall rank might be healthy Kawhi Leonard.

This is Tatum’s series. He’s guarding Durant and serving as Boston’s No. 1 option on offense. That is what apex superstars do. He blocked Irving and Durant on jump shots in Game 1. Durant’s own guy swatting his jumper is unheard of. Danny Ainge took flak for some missed draft picks and an alleged tendency to hoard assets. Some of that was justified, much of it not. But the former Celtics president of basketball operations and his staff probably haven’t gotten enough credit for trading down to select Tatum — and getting another lottery pick in the process. That is an all-time masterstroke. Imagine if the Celtics had taken Markelle Fultz or even Lonzo Ball?)

Boston did well getting Tatum matched against Brooklyn’s small guards. The Tatum-Marcus Smart pick-and-roll — with Tatum as ball handler — might be Boston’s defining play of the series. Boston runs the reverse quite a bit too, and the Nets need to be better ducking Tatum’s screens for Smart — and maintaining their matchups. You can’t duck Smart’s screens for Tatum; that gifts Tatum easy pull-ups.

Boston mixed up its entry points to the Tatum-Smart two-man game. The Celtics surprised the Nets on two straight possessions by having Smart enter the ball to Tatum on the wing, and then scurry down to screen for him:

Smart’s pick mashes Durant, freeing Tatum. The Nets were ready for this on the next possession; Tatum preyed upon their expectations:

That Tatum spin-away is becoming one of his signatures.

For the season, Boston scored 1.401 points per possession on any trip featuring the Tatum-Smart pick-and-roll — No. 1 among 426 two-man combinations with at least 100 reps, per Second Spectrum. The Tatum-Derrick White pick-and-roll has the same effect, since White is often the hiding place for opposing point guards.

The Nets might try to avoid switching — even if it means Smart’s guy lunging to corral Tatum, briefly leaving Smart open and triggering rotations behind the play. When Brooklyn dialed in, it managed to defend without conceding the switch; this was a really nice bit of late-game defense:

Of course, Tatum can kick to Smart, and let Boston’s point guard take it from there in 4-on-3 situations. Boston has the collective passing chops now to exploit that. It’s incredible that in the span of 40 games, Boston has transformed from a team that didn’t pass enough to one that sometimes overpasses. (You can see White’s confidence in his jumper wavering.)

But Boston is still only a so-so shooting team around Tatum and Brown, and the Nets know it. They slid away from pretty much everyone else to crowd Boston’s stars, sometimes coaxing kickout passes. Brooklyn is betting on their ability to contest those shots, and on those Celtics missing:

(That’s another method of getting a small guard onto Tatum: running Tatum off a pindown from that guard’s man, in this case Grant Williams. Brooklyn has to either switch, or chase Tatum over — granting him a runway. Both are bad choices.)

Boston’s spacing around those Tatum and Brown isolations was sometimes clunky.

Brooklyn likes to mismatch hunt too; Boston just has fewer weak spots. White is a really good defender, but too short for Durant (who isn’t?) and not physical enough to disrupt Durant’s rhythm. Durant went at White every chance he got, to great effect.

Theis and Horford might be the pivot points of the series. The Celtics love to switch everything, but they have been hesitant (by their standards) to switch their bigs onto Durant and Irving. The Nets should prod that more. If Boston’s bigs drop back in pick-and-rolls, Irving and Durant rain pull-up fire.

Make enough of those, and Boston will switch. That starts an interesting cat-and-mouse game. Irving and Durant can roast Boston’s bigs off the bounce, but they sometimes choose not to — settling for pull-up 2s instead.

You can understand why:

Irving has Horford beat, but he sees a thicket of defenders. Theis leaves Drummond to clog the paint, and Smart takes an extra step from Brown to cover for Theis. That should expose Boston to some drive-and-kick meanness, but the Celtics are long, rangy, and very smart; they might be the league’s best help-and-recover team — experts at showing help without overcommitting, or revealing any easy passing lanes. Even here, they nudge Irving away from Durant, and stay within range of every Net.

Boston can also switch those bigs onto Irving and Durant, and spring hard double-teams on them — to quell a run, or just to keep Brooklyn off balance. The Celtics also tried pre-switching Horford out of pick-and-roll as his man jogged up to screen.

Swapping out one non-shooter opens the floor wide for Brooklyn. Those lineups are tiny — compromised on defense. Even the teensy four-guard lineups Brooklyn favors when Durant rests have both Bruce Brown (serving as power forward) and Claxton. Those lineups generally aligned with Tatum’s playing time — making it easier for Tatum to play mismatch ball. (I thought the Nets might try to avoid such overlap with Tatum.)

Boston stayed pretty big against those groups, producing some awkward matchups — including Horford guarding Dragic. Dragic spent most of that time chilling in the corner. The Nets might peck at that matchup by having Dragic run around pindowns, or set ball screens. Of course, the Celtics would probably switch all those actions. Boston could also go smaller, with only one of Horford, Theis, and Grant Williams. The Smart/White/Brown/Tatum/Horford group closed Game 1 and went plus-7 in 13 minutes.

With two non-shooters, the Nets have to max out on creativity and high-level anti-switch devices. Slipping screens before really setting them — getting ahead of the switch — is probably the most common anti-switch technique. Irving got one layup in Game 1 by using another: faking toward a ball screen, baiting the switch, and then zipping away from the screen — and away from both defenders. The Nets need more of that, plus the kind of set pieces that involve several players of different sizes — sewing confusion:

The other options are drastic: unearthing LaMarcus Aldridge for some combination of size and shooting (he could in theory play alongside Bruce Brown or Claxton/Drummond), or saying to hell with it and playing Durant at center with four guards.

That is where Simmons would change their team. The current Durant-at-center lineups are just too small. Simmons is 6-foot-11. He’s an elite defender and rebounder, though not quite the rim protector you’d hope (yet). He can play the Bruce Brown role on offense, only above the rim (if he’s not afraid to get fouled). He’s a good enough playmaker that the Nets might be able to play him with Brown. (The Nets have enough shooting to try Simmons with one of Claxton and Drummond in bigger lineup types.)

You can win with Irving, Curry, Guard X, Durant, and Simmons — whether Guard X is a defense-first guy like Brown, or one of Dragic and Patty Mills.

Alas, we don’t know if or when Simmons might return, or how much he’ll give. One or two such “ifs” make for an uphill battle against a team as together and buttoned-up as Boston — especially without home-court advantage. Even if Brooklyn loses tonight, it still has three of the remaining five games at home. It has the firepower to beat anyone.

It’s just hard to imagine these Celtics losing four times in five games. The Nets may need Game 2.

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Kyrie Irving fined $50,000 for flipping off Boston Celtics fans during Game 1

Brooklyn Nets guard Kyrie Irving has been fined $50,000 by the NBA after he flipped off several Boston Celtics fans on two occasions during Sunday’s Game 1.

In a release Tuesday, NBA president of league operations Byron Spruell said Irving was being fined for “making obscene gestures on the playing court and directing profane language toward the spectator stands.”

Following the Nets’ 115-114 loss, Irving said he was responding to words he heard from the crowd and that he would have “the same energy” for the fans that they had for him.

“When people start yelling ‘p—y’ or ‘b—-‘ and ‘f— you’ and all this stuff, there’s only but so much you take as a competitor,” Irving said. “We’re the ones expected to be docile and be humble, take a humble approach, f— that, it’s the playoffs. This is what it is.”

Game 2 of the series is Wednesday night.

Irving, who played for Boston for two seasons from 2017 to 2019, said Sunday that he has gotten used to getting booed by Celtics fans since leaving the team. Last season, Irving had a water bottle thrown at him by a person in the crowd as he made his way off the floor.

He also said last season that there was “subtle racism” from the TD Garden crowd at times, acknowledging that he heard some racist comments.

Kevin Durant, who has had his own high-profile team changes during his NBA career, shared his perspective Tuesday on how fans react to players they used to root for, saying “It’s healthy once everybody understands both sides.”

“It’s rooted in love,” Durant said. “They once loved you. They once cheered for you and bought your merchandise and had life-altering experiences coming to games watching you play. So when that kind of gets ripped from them from just something like a trade or demanding a trade or wanting to lead, they feel like a piece of them is gone too.”

Asked if he thought Irving enjoyed playing the villain role, Durant said, “Some days he might be up for it; some days he might not. But he understands what this job entails. We understand what this situation is. So he might not be in the mood for it next game, who knows.”

Nets swingman Bruce Brown, who is a Boston native, said he doesn’t think Irving is concerned about the reception that is likely awaiting him from Celtics fans in Game 2.

“The Celtics fans are loud,” Brown said. “They can be a little much sometimes, but it’s Boston. A great fan base. They’ll be on him [Wednesday], but he ain’t too worried about it.”

ESPN’s Nick Friedell contributed to this report.

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NBA playoffs 2022 – LeBron, Kevin Love and more react to Brooklyn Nets-Boston Celtics Game 1 thriller

We’ll take more of that, please. The 2022 NBA playoffs have been off to a strong start, and Game 1 of the first-round playoff series between the Brooklyn Nets and Boston Celtics was no exception. The 115-114 Boston win had plenty of excitement thanks in large part to the heroics of Jayson Tatum and Kyrie Irving.

Tatum (31 points) sealed the win for the Celtics when he caught a pass from Marcus Smart, spun around and dropped in a layup just before time expired. The win marks Tatum’s fourth straight 30-point game in the playoffs dating back to last postseason. The 24-year-old ties Larry Bird in 1987 for the longest such streak in Celtics history.

On the Nets side of the equation, Irving put on a show. He scored 39 points, including 18 in the fourth quarter. Kevin Durant added 23 points but shot just 9-of-24 as Boston’s defense applied pressure, making things challenging on the Brooklyn star.

The matchup — which was tied with less than two minutes left to play — had the league talking.

LeBron James, Draymond Green, Kevin Love and more NBA stars turned to Twitter fingers to react to Kyrie’s skills, Tatum’s buzzer-beater and the possibility of six more games just like this one:



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