ECF Preview: Handling The Raptors
2016-05-16[Note: Our regularly scheduled Sunday Night Edition of Cavs: The Podcast will appear on Monday Night/Tuesday Morning]
Well, at least it didn’t take one last overtime period to finally determine the opponent the Cavaliers will face in the Eastern Conference Finals that begin Tuesday night at the Quicken Loans Arena in downtown Cleveland. After six brutal games and three semi-contested quarters, the Toronto Raptors finally tore themselves free of the Miami Heat, savaging them 30-11 in the fourth quarter of Game 7, and sinking their teeth into their first appearance in the Conference Finals. It was a game when the Raptors’ All-Star backcourt tandem both stepped up and played like it, while their complementary players did just that. They also got a T-Rex sized performance from replacement center Bismack Biyombo, who rampaged for 17 points on a number of jurassic jams, while clawing down 16 boards against Miami’s diminished and undersized front court.
By the end of the game, when the rout was well and truly on, the assembled Toronto fans got brave enough to begin a collective chant of “We Want Cleveland!” And now, for better or worse, they’re about to get their wish…
The Cavs have presumably been spending their ages of time off (or at least half of it) studying the habits of these hard-nosed dinos from the North, while improving their own communication and reportedly adding some new wrinkles to their gameplan. But, before you start thinking they need to do anything drastic, like bring in Jurassic World’s Owen Grady (Chris Pratt) to help them get these Raptors under control, it doesn’t appear they have all that much to be concerned about, does it? After all, the Cavs seemed to have little trouble sweeping through both of their early round opponents, while the Raps got extended to a Game 7 in both of theirs. In fact, few if any media pundits believe Toronto have much of “a chance in hell” to upset the Cavs… or do much more than claw out a game or two.
Still, rather than letting hubris carry the day (this is Cleveland by the way… just in case the ominous timing of the new “Believeland” 30 for 30 wasn’t reminder enough), let’s take a look at the tangible and intangible matchups in this next round of a quest for a championship.
 The Backcourts
Uncle Drew vs. Special K:Â Both of these PGs drive their teams to a certain extent, albeit in starkly different ways. Kyrie has vastly improved offensively in the post-season (over the regular season), raising his scoring average from 19.6 to 24.4, his FG% from 44.8 to 47.7 and his 3P% incredibly from 32.1 to 53.8. He’s also increased his apg from 4.7 to 5.5, while reducing his turnovers from 2.3 to 1.6 per game. Basically, Kyrie has taken his game to a whole other level on offense, though defensively he’s been guilty of reverting to some of his bad habits. Lowry, meanwhile, has been the inverse. Despite his stellar physical defense, his offensive numbers have slipped. His back to back 30+ point games notwithstanding, he’s dropped from 21.2 to 17.4 ppg from the regular season to the playoffs, and his shooting percentages have taken a nosedive, from 42.7 to 34.9 overall and a steep drop from 38.8 down to 24.7 from downtown. Lowry’s apg (6.5) and tpg (2.9) have remained virtually unchanged.
Bottom Line: This matchup will be one of the biggest keys to the series, since Lowry most often got the better of Kyrie in the three regular season games. Irving’s offense will have to overcome Lowry’s physical D, while Kyrie can’t afford to become a human turnstyle on the other end. Otherwise, LeBron may have to switch onto the pit bull of a point guard for stretches.
Advantage:Â Toronto. And, it’s a slight one mainly because of regular season history. There’s a decent likelihood that Uncle Drew’s buckets cancel out Special K’s tenacity.
Pipe Bomber vs. Mamba Lite: One of these gunners prefers to take contested shots, while the other needs open looks or resorts to drawing contact. But, the other big difference between these two SGs is efficiency. For all of J.R.’s reputation as a conscious-free shooter, his shots per game in the playoffs have actually decreased vs. the regular season from 11 to 8.6, yet his FG% has risen from 41.5 to 47.8. He’s also only taken one additional three point shot per game in the playoffs (7.6 vs. 6.6 in the regular season), but is bombing away at a superhuman 50.8% (nearly 11% better than his 40% season average). Yet, despite the otherworldly shooting, the hallmark of this post-season thus far for Swish has been his terrific defensive play, particularly on Kyle Korver in the last round. On the flip side, the inverse has been true of DeMar DeRozan, who has struggled mightily with his volume shooting in the playoffs. His shot attempts are up (20.1 vs 17.7 in the regular season), but his percentage has fallen from 44.6 to 34.9 in the post-season, including just a paltry 19% from beyond the arc. Much of these woes can be attributed to facing tough defensive teams (Indiana and Miami), although it doesn’t look to get much easier against J.R. And, with fewer contact calls on drives in the playoffs, DeRozan has taken (8.4 vs. 6.4) and made (7.1 vs. 5.1) two fewer FTs per game.
Bottom Line: While Lowry has had some big games against the Cavs, DeRozan has had his share of struggles, and J.R. showed very few lapses on defense in the first two rounds. If J.R. can avoid foul trouble, he should get the better of this matchup.
Advantage: Cavs. A barrage of pipe bombs should help send the Mamba Lite packing for Los Angeles in the off-season.
The Frontcourts
The King vs. The Junkyard Dog: At first glance, this seems like a pretty easy one to call… LeBron is at the top of his game right now despite finishing third in the MVP voting, and DeMarre is… well, he’s done some interesting things with his hair anyway. On second glance… LeBron’s scoring and efficiency are actually down slightly from the regular season (23.5 vs. 25.3 ppg and 50 vs. 52%). He’s also getting to the line less (4.6 vs. 6.5) and shooting poorer from it (65% vs. 73%) in the post-season. However, both his rebounds (8.8 vs. 7.4) and assists (7.3 vs. 6.8) per game are up, as he’s relied more on his teammates to shoulder the scoring load while being a facilitator and a big in small lineups. Carroll on the other hand, has made enough of a name for himself as a guy who “plays LeBron tough” (I’m not going to use the phrase “LeBron stopper” because there really is no such thing), and has turned himself into a decent 3-D player (40% behind the arc). He’s not a tremendous source for offense, but the Cavs can’t just leave him alone either.
Bottom Line: There’s not much more that Carroll can do to slow LeBron down than say his former teammate Thabo Sefalosha did in the last series. Meanwhile, LeBron should continue his high level of playoff excellence, while looking to get other guys going.
Advantage: Cavs. Even Junkyard Dogs bow before The King.
Canadian Dynamite vs. Big Smack: For those of you salivating for the ultimate C:tB showdown of hotly debated big men who were picked in the 2011 draft… sadly, you probably won’t see it materialize (at least until probably Game 3 or 4 at the earliest… by which time it may be too late anyway). Yes, it doesn’t appear that Jonas Valanciunas will be healthy enough to start the series, leaving the Congolese Crusher, Bismack Biyombo, in his stead to face off against Tristan Thompson (well, at least Nate won’t be disappointed!). After a statistically rough series against the Pistons, TT bounced back with a dynamite performance against the Hawks, averaging 11 rpg (with nearly five orpg). For the most part, he manhandled the Atlanta frontline, limiting their effectiveness on the glass. While the Cavs may have caught a break with the injury to Jonas V, it may wind up being a case of frying pan/fire with how Biyombo has been playing since stepping into the starting lineup. In his four games since replacing JV, Bismack has averaged 12 boards and 11 points, throwing down some massive dunks followed by unabashed muscle flexing.
Bottom Line: TT might actually have his hands full with BB in this round, as he more closely resembles Drummond than Horford in style of play. TT may also find himself in some foul trouble with the attacking Raptor guards, so the Cavs will need to counter that and possibly force Biyombo out of the game with either KLove or Frye at the five.
Advantage: Even. Canadian Dynamite should still explode to give the Cavs some extra possessions, but Big Smack will make a difference in the paint (causing Nate to giggle uncontrollably). Jonas might make a late appearance, but it won’t change the outcome.
The Banana Republican vs. 2Pat: If you’re searching for the proverbial X-Factor behind why the Cavs have swept through the first two rounds with such relative ease… look no further than Kevin Wesley Love. KLove has been a different player in these playoffs, and a difference-maker for the Cavs. He’s averaging nearly three more points (18.9 vs. 16) and nearly three more boards (12.5 vs. 9.9) per game than in the regular season. He’s also getting an average of almost four additional shots up per game (16.5 vs. 12.7), as his teammates are looking to feed him with more regular touches. Though he’s weirdly shooting much worse from two-point range (36.4% vs. 41.9%), he’s lighting it up from downtown (44.4% vs. 36%), and stretching defenses like rubber bands. His counterpart for the Raptors, Patrick Patterson, has definitely been a physical presence, helping Toronto keep opposing PFs in check. Though he dodged having to face Chris Bosh in the last round, and got abused a little by rookie sensation Myles Turner in the first round. Patterson still does the little things to help his team, but his three point shooting has tailed off in the playoffs (29% vs. 36% in the regular season).
Bottom Line: This is another key matchup in this series, as the Raptors must find some way to neutralize Love’s ability to stretch the floor and get blazing hot from deep. The dynamic changes a bit if the Cavs are forced to go small and play Kevin or Channing Frye at the five, but it shouldn’t greatly change the complexion of the outcome.
Advantage: Cavs. 2Pat disappears like a hologram as the Banana Republican makes him fall for the tailpipe trick.
The Benches
The Wombat, Deep Frye, R.J. and Shumpman vs. CoJo, Stormin Norman, TRoss and (maybe) Argentinan Russell Brand: Neither team has had a ton of consistency from their respective benches, because both the Cavs and Raps have ridden their starters hard for the most part. Only Cory Joseph has averaged more than 20mpg (24.2) for Toronto off the bench (not including Biyombo whose numbers are skewed since he took over for Jonas), and Shump is the most played Cavs’ reserve at a mere 16.3mpg. Both benches are capable, and have guys who can step up and contribute in big ways (like Channing’s 27 against Atlanta or Joseph’s 18 against Indy). With the likely increase of physicality this series is bound to feature, there may be more need for some extended bench play due to foul trouble or matchups.
Bottom Line: While both benches can make a difference in this series, the Raps’ is stretched a bit thinner with the JV injury and departure to the starting lineup of Biyombo. It’s also probable that we see increased minutes for both Delly and Shump if Kyrie has a tough time handling Lowry. Frye could also play more if TT gets in foul trouble early.
Advantage: Cavs. The Orange Mamba and the Russians might even see some garbage time eventually.
The Coaches
The Answering Machine vs. The Rock: Back in his playing days, Tyronn Lue was once known as “The Answering Machine” because he was able to shut down Allen Iverson. These days, the nickname might still apply given how he’s come up with the answers to almost every problem thrown his way by both Stan Van Gundy and Mike Budenholzer. It’s impressive how Lue has handled himself as a veritable rookie with half a season and half a post-season under his belt. It’s even more impressive that he’s been able to coach the Cavs to a perfect playoff record thus far. On the opposite sideline, Dwane Casey has had ten times the regular season games and nearly twice the post-season games just this season to coach as Lue. He’s had to exhort his team to fight through adversity, injury and past history of choking and failure to get to this point. And, he uses that as a giant boulder on his shoulder at press conferences where he likes to call out reporters who have pronounced Toronto dead and buried. Both coaches probably ride their starters much too hard and too long, but Lue has done it to much better result and fewer injuries.
Bottom Line: Ironically, Casey will be the least playoff tested coach Lue has faced, but don’t let that fool you. Casey is a tough customer who gets his guys to buy in completely. Lue might finally wind up being forced to trust and incorporate some of his key bench guys to help ratchet up the defense on Lowry, and get Biyombo out of the paint.
Advantage: Cavs. No reason to think The Answering Machine doesn’t find a way to crack The Rock.
The Intangibles
Rest vs. Injuries: Having played only eight games in 31 days, the Cavs are well-rested and as healthy as any team this time of year has a right to be. They had a bit of rust to knock off in the first game against the Hawks and probably will again in Game 1 of this series. Still, they’ve certainly fared better in this department than the beat up Raps, who have lost Jonas V for four games and counting with a high ankle sprain, had a wrist scare with Carroll and a nagging thumb injury for DeRozan.
Advantage: Cavs.
The Arc vs. The Line: The Cavs have been living behind the three point arc, while the Raptors do the bulk of their damage from the free throw stripe. Chances are, this will even out on both ends as this series wears on, since Toronto will do a better job of defending the perimeter than the Hawks or Pistons did (forcing the Cavs to drive to the hoop more), and the Cavs will likely sag off of the Raptors to clog driving lanes (giving Toronto more open looks than the Heat or Pacers did). That said, unless the Cavs cool off significantly from downtown… three points is always worth more than two free throws…
Advantage: Cavs.
Offense vs. Defense: Similarly, for as good as the Cavs have been offensively and the Raptors have been defensively, expect this to even out more in the ECF. Toronto likely won’t be quite as inept scoring the ball as they were for much of the Heat series, and Cleveland likely will lock in defensively a bit sooner than the fourth quarter as they did against the Hawks. I imagine there will be fewer blowouts in this series, with most of the games decided by less than 10 points, yet that fact shouldn’t prolong the series either.
Advantage: Cavs (though it’s close).
The ‘Land vs. The North: Yes, Toronto is the only NBA city representing an entire country… and, yes they have a cool name for their area outside the arena (Jurassic Park)… and, yes their fans are crazy loud during their home games. However, no city is more starved for a championship than Cleveland (a fact that “Believeland” underscored this past week)… the Q is a cooler name than the Air Canada Centre… and Cavs fans are just as loud (if not more so) than their counterparts from the North. Plus, Game 7 (if necessary) is in The ‘Land… which is a much different prospect than winning a deciding game in Canada.
Advantage: Cavs (so take off you hosers!)
Prediction
While I’m tempted to push my luck and pick yet another sweep, something tells me this will be the round where the Cavs drop a game due to either foul trouble, a poor substitution pattern or a Toronto back court YOLO game. However, it will only be one game, and the Cavs will control the Raptors to complete the “gentleman’s sweep” 4-1 as they continue their quest for that elusive championship.
Westbrook coming up big right now…
But not Durant. Too much hero ball.
I’m gonna just start calling Enes Kanter “Pornstache”
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Yes!
A game one loss would rattle GS. We had them rattled through Game 3 last year until Iguadala came to the rescue
Durant and Russ both need these shirts for Dion…
http://rlv.zcache.com/hes_my_weirdo_shirt-r203ef88049514be985dda91609dac189_i80w6_1024.jpg
Dion has been pretty decent tonight….he’s a lot different on this team than the terrible chucker he was in Cleveland. I guess Russel and Durant finally got him to heel…
Kanter’s moustache is horrendous… but he’s a pretty good rebounder…
He’s an offensive machine, really….if he was above average defensively, he’d be a top player in the league.
He looks like an 80’s salsa singer
Come on Thunder, come onnnnnnnn
Lets GO OKC!!!
Wow… just turned it on… this is unexpected…
Almost as surprising as the Andersons having tickets to the game…
OKC been behind the entire game, just took lead…just wait till GS puts in their walking, dribbling cheat code…
Let’s go, Thunder!
DION!!!!!!
Good job Thunder, lets go
Wow, Dion!
Gotta be the shoes.
They can’t hurt…
BelieveLAND, that GS defense on “another level” just gave up 38 in the 3rd quarter.
Any NBA team can have a big quarter…GS defense is right near the top of the NBA.
Great job at the end of the quarter by the Thunder. Westbrook has shown up. Durant needs to in the fourth.
Good quarter for OKC. Should be a fun fourth.
WHere is Durant. He is barely making his presence felt. Do something!
He hasn’t been terrible, although he does have 5 TOs….he’s just not been great. They are really lucky Westbrook went off that quarter.
OKC right in it….need to play a smart 4th…
Kanter really getting abused on defense.
He can’t handle Green at all…much as I hate to say it…
Frye and Thompson are much better.
Hack-a-whomever strategy by both teams… WTF
Watch Speights drill 3 threes in the next 60 seconds…
How many times has Westbrook been thrown to the floor? And no one even touches Curry. Slam him
Thunder’s best chance is to force transition as much as possible (easier said than done)….really too hard to score halfcourt…
Thunder blowing this game from the FT line
then holds a pose. dances around. smiles. Somebody kick him in the face
After that Curry bank-in three, I really want to see them lose.
Like that is complete bull. Complete. bull
Stupid Durant. Stupid
I’m scratching my head trying to figure out what the hell West/KD are doing. Yeah, West got a few to go in but there was no ball movement and he kinda settled for those shots.
Like that move by Klay. Like that had no business going in. That doesn’t infuriate anyone?
Ha for some reason not me :)
He’s so unathletic and all his moves are slow, yet he just drops 35 so often. Drives me nuts.
Again, man wish someone would bust his face in.
OKC is just completely flat. No interior presence on the offensive end. They just keep shooting long two’s. I’m actually surprised due to the way they beat SA.
Westbrook and Durant are so called
cold*****
Our ball movement compared to both the Spurs and OKC looks on another level.
Golden State’s defense compared to Atlanta and Detroit is also on another level.
Spurs’ ball movement vs OKC was poor. They aren’t the Warriors.
Durant is so cold from range
KD needs to be a lot better. Like way, way better.
Thunder just can’t run an offense. They have to shoot or force the ball inside after -at most- two passes. Just move the ball and stop running around like crazy.
I don’t know. Warriors have just made some insane shots. The Thunder haven’t. KD needs to go insane, unconscious supernova. Overall, I like Thunder’s energy and defense. They’ve done a really good job of getting the ball out of Curry’s hands so far. But obviously when he hits an insane shot, what are you going to do.
Man, I hate the Warriors. Wish someone would just pick Curry up and slam his head into the hardwood. Like Lebron takes so much physical abuse in a game. And Curry prances around like a fairy, untouched.
An weak effort by OKC. Turnovers, losing the rebound battle and just sloppy play in general.
Ridiculous….
And then the way GSW is always on the refs and they make all these shoves and forearm shivers in the game that are never called.
Does anyone else feel insanely infuriated by the way GSW plays. Just by the wya they play alone, nothing about them or anything. I can’t put my finger on it. It always feels like they are pulling things off and reaping rewards that are more than what they deserve, just in the play on the court itself.
Like shots going in that just aren’t supposed to. Drives to them rim being made by guys who have no athleticism to be able to get to the rim. It’s just all infuriating.
They get a lot of easy shots, because they play good offensive basketball. Then they have Klay and Curry who can just be unguardable when they are hot. Just super tough to defend.
Haha I still think it’s that homer hate ;)
Yeah Curry and Klay are hard to guard and it makes everyone else’s job easier. I do hate them for what they have done to the Cavs, so hopefully we get our revenge.
Maybe. I don’t know. I’m trying to put homer hate aside and just watch them play as a general fan of the game, and it still drives me up the wall. Like I catch myself imagining Adams slamming Curry into the ground.
Man it just seems like OKC doesn’t wanna be in the court today.
Obviously this is one of those games where Klay can’t miss…
Adams needs to lower his shoulder and throw guys to the floor, a la Braymond, in order to avoid the moving screen call…
Great feed, Dion!
He does seem to have reinvented himself this season, more of a facilitator and D guy….that will keep him in the league.
Okc completely out of control on offense. When they slow down just a little, they don’t turn it over.
Pretty good sequence there….that’s the level of play I was hoping for.
GS getting easy looks, OKC getting tough looks…story of the game.
I don’t understand those long two’s by OKC. It just makes no sense whatsoever.
Part of it is that GS is probably the best in the NBA at preventing decent attempts from 3…one of the reasons I feel the Cavs have very little chance against them.
Very little chance is way too pessimistic, and the Cavs will launch enough threes.
We’ll see. If both teams are healthy, I honestly gives the Cavs about 15% chance. That may even be optimistic.
Did you become a GS fan? I am not a homer, but the Cavs are playing darn good now. The series will go at least six, and maybe seven.
Nice run by the OKC. Let’s see where this goes.
Adams could do that all night.
GS making the Thunder look pretty bad right now…
I feel the Thunder are making themselves look really bad. No ball movement, no presence in the paint and stupid turnovers.
Agreed to an extent, but the GS defense makes interior passes tough….they punish sloppy passing more than any other team.
We are having a one on one conversation lol.
True about their defense. Second to none for sure. I just think a lot was the Thunder’s own fuck ups as opposed to defense intensity from GS.
A lineup with Dion at the point is destined to fail.
Yeah, that’s a pretty good NBA maxim…although he was okay against the Spurs…
The Thunder need to stop turning the ball over. Just careless…
They look horribly in over their heads.
According to ESPN boxscore, they have 6 TOs already….seems like 12…
Dion will save the day with a rampage of long twos. Seriously, Thunder are playing out of control, and they are pretty lucky GS has missed a lot of shots so far. They could be down double digits right now easy.
Ridiculous Curry shot over Adams…
That bogut foul on Westbrook looked benign in slowmow, but game speed it was a brutal hit
F*ck Steve Kerr. He knows his team is full of cheaters and he acts like he’s God’s give to NBA coaches…
Gift*
Wow, terrible basketball so far, both teams. Just taking terrible shots both ends. They should settle down after this TO.
Abysmal first 5 minutes. That was unexpected.
Westbrook needs to calm down. Thunder have no chance when he plays like this. Maybe that elbow to the face will help him.
He needs to attack the basket and not take those mid range shots.
This is a fun way for Cols to make fun of me. Go back and read our thoughts on the 2011 draft which featured Bismack, TT, Kyrie, Kawhi, and my “best player in the draft, ” Derrick Williams.
https://cavstheblog.com//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////?m=201106&paged=5
I went back and read “Why I Want LeBron to Fail (Forever)”. Particularly interesting.
Count me among those who think the Jonas injury was a blessing in disguise for Toronto. His screens, his defensive presence, and his ability to roll make him a much better complement to the Raps’ guards. Raps guards all started playing better when Jonas (and admittedly, whiteside) went down. Big V can’t come back quickly enough.
Great article, EG. I especially loved “Banana Republican.” I’m a little wary of Lowry. He’ll get the best of Kyrie for a couple games. Cavs in six.
Six. Hahahahaha. Wrong again Mr Smith
I’m a huge Thunder fan right now. I’m also looking forward for the Biyombo train to come to a wrecking halt once he has to play real front court players instead of Justice Winslow.
The media hype over Biyombo has gotten out of hand. It makes me worry about the upcoming podcast.
Lmao. Noted! Cols I didn’t see you comment on Carson’s 5 on 5 answer about superior talent beating the Spurs…
I think every cavs fan should be a huge thunder fan if just to hope GS has to battle for 6 or 7 games.
Is there really that much media hype over Biyombo? I haven’t noticed an overabundance really…
I worry about the sanity about someone ‘worried about the upcoming podcast’.
http://1u88jj3r4db2x4txp44yqfj1.wpengine.netdna-cdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/08/tumblr_mopk04f5ia1qbg80vo1_500.jpg
Hey, fanboys have heart you gotta give em that
No, that’s fan men…
Nice article. Looking forward to some big games by KLove and LBJ. Also, if Kyrie can make Lowry really work on D then his offense will wither in the 4th Q.
Let’s Roll!
Good article ;) As far as the Raptors, I said it on a previous post after they won the game against Miami, no fear… We are better at every position from top to bottom other than Ky’s defense. We will have the top 3 players on the floor with our starting 5 and our bench is light years better than theirs. Okay, so once DeRozan and Lowry sit and the benches are playing, who’s gonna stop Delly, Schump and Frye? Seriously, the Raptors have absolutely no chance to win(not even 1 game) against the team that played against the Hawks.… Read more »
I feel as if the defender that is assigned to Curry to often in this league doesn’t do a good enough job of fighting through the screen to stay on him. Now obviously many of those screens are just illegal screens by Draymond and Bogut, but too often it seems the defender with the Curry assignment doesn’t fight enough through the screen and just gives in to the switch. I think if the Curry defender fought through the screen more, more illegal screens would be called, also the ball would be taken out of Curry’s hands more often. Obviously, much… Read more »
The problem with Golden State is the insane amount of moving screens that they use and not get called for, so it’s not as easy.
https://youtu.be/5ZQpKAibkEU
Disgusting, between Bogut and Green I want to puke. And then when it is called on Green he gets away with throwing a tantrum. Enough!
I’d put in a play specifically to put my foot behind bogut when he does that cheap backing into you moving screen. Tell him you’re going to roll his ankle and he’ll think twice about it.
If you guys had a chance to read the transcript from their coach’s conference call today, it looks like they’re going to go with the “clog the paint and force them to shoot strategy.” Which is funny because statistically the Cavs were the best 3 point shooting team against the Raptors this regular season, and I can only see that going up.
I’m predicting a hearty dose of pipes being laid in this matchup.
Tim MacMahon from ESPN on Durant:
“Kevin Durant’s numbers against the Warriors this season put him in exclusive company. He averaged 36.3 points, 12.0 rebounds and 6.3 assists against Golden State, making him the first player in more than four decades to put up 36/12/6 production against a single opponent while facing that foe a minimum of three times that season. The others members of that club, per Elias Sports Bureau: Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (1972-73 vs. Knicks and 1973-74 vs. Rockets) and Wilt Chamberlain (1963-64 vs. 76ers, 1965-66 vs. Lakers and 1965-66 vs. Pistons).”
Wow.
I’ll take 35.8 – 13.3 – 8.8 in six games. In the finals.
I don’t think anyone should (not that I’m accusing) minimize what Lowry can do. He has been amazing all through these playoffs . He is without a question, their “Go To” guy. He can drive to the basket at will no matter who his pounding on him. He can do it like Westbrook can. He has improved to a whole different level this year. I really believe this comes down to the winner of the 3rd quarter more. I’ve watched almost every Raps game and they have ADD the 3rd quarter. I found myself smacking myself on the forehead shouting… Read more »
Outside of Games 3, 6 & 7 against the Heat though, his shooting has been abysmal… What he really got going in the last two games, however, beyond the shooting was the trips to the line. He had 21 attempts in Games 6 & 7 after a combined 23 in Games 1-5…
What else did the Raps have? lol Without Lowry, they aren’t even playing tomorrow. Heat had no answers for him so they had to foul. But regardless, he has been quite the force for this team and I really admire his tenacity & improvement.
Which is exactly why I don’t think they take more than a game from the Cavs… I think Lowry is a tough competitor and he deserves props for how hard he works and has worked on his game… But he’s not a great shooter, and the M.O. that both he and DeRozan had of drawing contact and fouls during the regular season hadn’t bourne out much until the last two games against the Heat… He’s definitely the straw that stirs the Raptors’ drink… but to put him in a class with Westbrook is a bit of hyperbole IMHO…
Yep. There’s basically a 100% chance the Cavs win the series. A 99% chance of it being in 5 games or less.
So Cols. Im not a betting man, but…
How about a friendly Wager. I’ll wager the series goes more than 5 games. If it doesnt, I will do an instacap where I wear a “Cols was right” T-Shirt.
If it goes 6 or 7 games, you have to comment on each of the next 99 posts on CtB with “There is a 100% chance Cavs: the Blog is the best Cavs coverage around”.
You up for it?
In.
This is one of those matchups where I’d be happy to see Delly and Shump make early subs. Lowry and Derozan will eat up our guards and outside those two, Toronto doesn’t have anything to go to for buckets. Lowry will eat Kyrie’s defense for lunch, even his playoff defense. And J.R. staying with 59-year-old Korver is much different than keeping up with athletic 6’7″ DeRozan. That’s a job more suited to Shump. On the flip side, KI and JR will destroy Toronto reserves. LBJ may have to cover DeRozan and J.R. on Carroll. Still wish we had picked up… Read more »
Nope. Lowry and Derozan have a large history of shrinking when things get tough. They’ve played Indiana! and Miami!!! and struggled with both teams.
There is going to be a huge shock when they play the Cavs because the Cavs are playing at a much much higher level than those two teams. I don’t think they can adjust to that level.
Biyombo sucks. He dominated (if you can call 11 points domination) Miami when they had zero big men healthy. TT easily wins that battle.
It wasn’t the points so much as the glass work that Biyombo contributed… Let’s be clear, he doesn’t have any offensive moves other than catch lob/dunk lob… but he can rebound almost as well as TT and can protect the rim, probably better than Jonas…
Have you been watching Derozan lately? That thumb injury has taking its toll & he’s not been playing stellar.
Why do you think the Raptors will be able to defend the three point line better? They were terrible at it in the regular season; second worse in the NBA allowing opponents to shoot 37% from deep. They have been better in the post season (seventh out of the 16 playoff teams) but that may be due in large part to who they have played thus far.
Yep. Raptors are an easy matchup for the Cavs. They suck at everything the Cavs do well. Biyombo will look terrible against Cavs.
They’ve been decent in the post-season at defending the three. Granted the Hawks sagged off (at least in the early going) from the perimeter, but the Raps have more physical guards as well as Carroll and 2Pat who can help defend… Not saying they will shut down the Cavs in any respect, just think they will game plan more to defend the three ball…
No one is going to care about this series outside of Cleveland and Toronto. All eyes are on GSW/OKC as Cleveland drops a quiet extinction event on the Raptors.
Oh, I think the Bay Area will be watching peripherally…
Special K has owned Irving many times the last two years, and if the Lowry of Game Seven shows up for the series, I think Shump/Delly (or LeBron switching) will have to get more minutes on defense. Lowry is much more than “remotely scary.” He can be very scary if his shooting touch is back. Lowry/DeRozan will probably go off for 1 or 2 games, but regardless I am in EG’s camp with Cavs in 5. Got a ticket for Game One (yeah) and am looking for an even first half while the Cavs shake off some rust. An 8-10… Read more »
Cavs in 4 or 5. I’d pick 4 but at some point they are going to get bored and drop a game.
So Cavs in 5. Toronto has nobody who is even remotely scary. And TT > Biyombo. Biyombo will be exposed as a fraud this series. Beating up on Miamis small front court is easy.