Jumat, 12 April 2019

Lakers announce Walton is out after 3 seasons - ESPN

LOS ANGELES -- A tumultuous week continued for the Los Angeles Lakers as the team announced that it has mutually parted ways with head coach Luke Walton on Friday.

This comes just four days after Magic Johnson left the franchise reeling by shockingly deciding to step down as president of basketball operations on Tuesday night. Walton finished his third season as head coach with a frustrating and disappointing 37-45 record in a season that began with massive expectations following LeBron James' arrival. Walton leaves the team with two years remaining on his five-year deal.

ESPN's Adrian Wojnarowski reports that former Cleveland Cavaliers coach Ty Lue is a strong frontrunner to replace Walton and that Philadelphia 76ers assistant Monty Williams joins Lue as the central candidates in the Lakers search, according to league sources.

"We would like to thank Luke for his dedicated service over the last three years," said Lakers general manager Rob Pelinka in a team statement. "We wish Luke and his family the best of luck moving forward."

Walton, who went 98-148 in his three seasons as head coach, thanked the franchise and controlling owner Jeanie Buss, who was a staunch supporter of Walton.

"I want to thank Jeanie Buss and the Buss family for giving me the opportunity to coach the Lakers," said Walton. "This franchise and the city will always be special to me and my family."

Walton's job security had been something many executives, coaches and agents speculated about since the start of the season not only because the Lakers had the makings of a flawed roster but also that Walton wasn't hired by Johnson and Pelinka. Walton was hired in 2016 by then Lakers executive vice president Jim Buss and then general manager Mitch Kupchak.

In his decision to step down, Johnson explained that he was considering firing Walton on Wednesday when the Lakers held their exit interviews but did not want to "disappoint" Buss and get in the way of her relationship with Walton and in the process hurt his own relationship with Buss.

Charged with trying to blend a roster constructed with eclectic veterans on one-year contracts and a core group of young prospects still learning how to play all around James with a plethora of ballhandlers but not enough shooting, Walton had what many felt was the most daunting job in the NBA.

While Johnson preached patience in the preseason knowing that it would take time for the new roster to mesh, Johnson admonished Walton in a meeting just six games into the season. The Hall of Fame point guard was upset with the team's defense and sluggish start but later told the Los Angeles Times and ESPN that Walton would not be fired barring something unforeseen. Johnson, though, said that his relationship with Walton was fine after the incident which he considered overblown.

Walton had the Lakers at 20-14 on Christmas night after a blowout win at Golden State and looking like they were on the verge of coming together. But the wheels came off in spectacular fashion when James and Rajon Rondo were injured during that game, sending the Lakers into a tailspin that they would never recover from.

Suspensions, injuries, never-ending drama, inexcusable losses to bottom-feeding teams and even a buffet of on-court gaffes -- enough to provide the internet with ammunition to come up with a "One Shining Moment" parody -- smothered the Lakers' season and ultimately doomed Walton.

Walton would lose Lonzo Ball (ankle) and Brandon Ingram (blood clot in shoulder) to season ending injuries as the Lakers had James, Ingram and Ball together for a total of only 23 games, going 15-8 during that span. The Lakers missed over 210 games due to injuries and used over 25 different starting lineups this season.

Now, for the fifth time since Phil Jackson last sat on the Lakers' bench in 2010-11, the Lakers will be looking for a new head coach to attempt to revive the proud franchise and take it to the postseason for the first time since 2012-13 season.

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http://www.espn.com/nba/story/_/id/26507762/lakers-announce-walton-3-seasons

2019-04-12 20:26:05Z
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Practice zing - Drive by Z. Johnson doesn't count - ESPN

AUGUSTA, Ga. -- It was a practice swing unlike any other.

Zach Johnson, the 2007 Masters champion, stepped to the tee box on the 13th hole at the tail end of Amen Corner during Friday's second round.

Johnson teed up his ball, squared up his stance and took a practice swing. What came next might be a staple of every weekend hacker's repertoire but was something rarely seen on the PGA Tour, especially at fabled Augusta National Golf Club.

Johnson inadvertently hit the ball on his practice swing, sending it caroming off the tee marker on the right. The ball ended up about 3 or 4 yards in front of Johnson, who scooped it up and re-teed.

"Shoot, they got that?" Johnson said after the round, when told video of the swing existed. "Yeah, that was a good one there. That's a first. I thought I'd done it all, but now I know I've done it all."

Under United States Golf Association rules, a ball isn't considered to be "in play" until it's actually hit from the tee area. Because Johnson didn't have the intention of hitting the ball, he was allowed to re-tee and hit again.

"Zach's eyes were as big as I've ever seen them,. His jaw dropped and we had a good chuckle knowing that wasn't a penalty, but a not-so-top 10 moment." Matt Kuchar on Zach Johnson

The exact scenario is actually covered under Rule 18-2 in the USGA rulebook, "Ball at Rest Moved." If the mishap had happened on his second shot from the middle of the fairway, after he'd already hit his tee shot, he would have had to replace his ball in its original position and incur a one-stroke penalty.

The good news for Johnson: He hit his actual drive 285 yards down the middle of the fairway, knocked his second shot to 30 feet and two-putted for birdie on the 510-yard, par-5 hole.

"I can't think of a time I've done it -- not on purpose," Johnson said of hitting the ball during a practice swing. "Maybe I've tried to do it, but I don't think I could do it again even if I tried."

Johnson said he knew there wasn't a penalty involved because "it all comes down to intent."

"That's something we're going to laugh about for a long time," said Matt Kuchar, who was playing with Johnson and Ian Poulter. "I know there's supposedly footage of every shot hit here at Augusta this year, and I'm hoping to see that footage at some point.

"I didn't see it, but I heard it. Zach's eyes were as big as I've ever seen them,. His jaw dropped and we had a good chuckle knowing that wasn't a penalty, but a not-so-top 10 moment."

Kevin Kisner, who was playing in the group in front of Johnson, said he'd never done it in a competitive round.

"Only if I've been drinking," Kisner said.

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http://www.espn.com/golf/story/_/id/26507298/practice-zing-drive-z-johnson-count

2019-04-12 18:47:17Z
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James Harden should be the unanimous MVP over Giannis Antetokounmpo - Ryan Hollins | First Take - ESPN

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C0JNgkSjj_I

2019-04-12 15:45:01Z
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Is Ben Simmons the biggest X-factor in the 2019 Eastern Conference playoffs? | First Take - ESPN

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uNpX82fyL64

2019-04-12 16:21:56Z
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UFC 236 weigh-in video - MMA Fighting

At the UFC 236 weigh-ins, all 26 fighters taking part in Saturday night’s UFC 236 fights will step on the scale Friday, and we’ll have the live video here at MMA Fighting.

In the main event, UFC featherweight champion Max Holloway and Dustin Poirier will have to make the lightweight title limit of 155 pounds.

The UFC 236 official weigh-ins will be at 9 a.m. ET, and MMA Fighting will carry it live.

The UFC 236 ceremonial weigh-ins will be at 1:30 p.m. ET.

The UFC 236 weigh-in results are below.

Main card (PPV at 10 p.m. ET)

Max Holloway (155) vs. Dustin Poirier (154.5)

Kelvin Gastelum (184) vs. Israel Adesanya (183)

Eryk Anders (205) vs. Khalil Rountree Jr. (206)

Alan Jouban (171) vs. Dwight Grant (171)

Ovince Saint Preux (206) vs. Nikita Krylov (205)

Undercard (ESPN at 8 p.m. ET)

Jalin Turner (156) vs. Matt Frevola (156)

Wilson Reis (126) vs. Alexandre Pantoja (125.5)

Max Griffin (170.5) vs. Zelim Imadaev (171)

Boston Salmon (135.5) vs. Khalid Taha (136)

Undercard (UFC Fight Pass and ESPN+ at 6:15 p.m. ET)

Curtis Millender (170.5) vs. Belal Muhammad (171)

Montel Jackson (136) vs. Andre Soukhamthath (136)

Lauren Mueller (126) vs. Poliana Botelho (125)

Brandon Davis (136) vs. Randy Costa (135)

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https://www.mmafighting.com/2019/4/12/18306820/ufc-236-weigh-in-video

2019-04-12 14:29:28Z
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Forrest Gregg, who led Bengals to Super Bowl, dead at 85 - WCPO

CINCINNATI — Forrest Gregg, the coach who led the Cincinnati Bengals to their first Super Bowl appearance, has died, according to the Pro Football Hall of Fame. He was 85.

Gregg only spent four seasons with the Bengals, from 1980 to 1983, but it was a time that fans still remember fondly. In 1982, Gregg's second season as head coach, the Bengals took the AFC Conference championship in the so-called "Freezer Bowl," the coldest NFL game in history.

That victory sent the Bengals to their first-ever Super Bowl appearance. They lost to the San Francisco 49ers 26-21, but that was the result of a comeback from a 20-0 deficit after the first half.

Gregg personally scouted and drafted future Hall of Famer Anthony Muñoz telling Bengals owner Paul Brown, "Anthony Munoz will be one of the best offensive tackles ever to play the game," according to the Hall of Fame.

Gregg personally attended a two-hour workout at the University of Southern California's practice field to watch Muñoz after his senior season. Because of multiple knee injuries, Muñoz played just one full game his senior season. But Gregg selected him third overall in the 1980 NFL Draft.

"I just remembered he would demand hard work but he would also appreciate it," Muñoz told WCPO Friday morning. " I just loved the guy. I loved playing for him. He had so many great qualities as far as leadership."

Prior to arriving in Cincinnati in 1980, the Bengals were 4-12 in 1978 and '79. The Bengals went 6-10 in 1980 but could've easily been 10-6 after losing some games late. The transformation had begun.

"You could see the tide turning," Muñoz said. "...The guy came in with a phenomenal plan to turn it around."

Gregg's time with the Bengals came in the middle of an 11-season span as head coach that also saw him leading the Cleveland Browns (1975-77) and Green Bay Packers (1984-87). But he first came to prominence as an offensive tackle, playing for the Packers in 1956 and from 1958 to '70, and playing one season for Dallas in 1971.

During Gregg's career as a player, he was named All-NFL for eight straight seasons, played in nine Pro Bowls and won three Super Bowls.

Vince Lombardi described Gregg as “the best player I ever coached.”

"That is like the highest of high compliments," Muñoz said.

Gregg was a member of six NFL/NFC championship teams and three Super Bowl winners. Gregg was also elected to the NFL’s All-Decade Team of the 1960s and the NFL’s 75th Anniversary All-Time Team. He was enshrined into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1977.

"The game lost a giant today," Hall of Fame President and CEO David Baker said in a written statement. "Forrest Gregg exemplified greatness during a legendary career that earned him a bronzed bust in Canton."

"He was the type of player who led by example and, in doing so, raised the level of play of all those around him. "Forrest symbolized many great traits and virtues that can be learned from this game to inspire people from all walks of life."

Muñoz said he had most recently seen Gregg at the hall of fame induction weekend in Canton in 2017.

Gregg was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease in 2011. He became the spokesperson for “Parkinson’s More than Motion,” a community of outlets and resources including a strong presence on Facebook where patients share their experiences online and includes a series of online videos aimed to educate the public on the motor and non-motor symptoms of the disease.

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https://www.wcpo.com/sports/football/bengals/forrest-gregg-coach-who-led-bengals-to-first-super-bowl-dead-at-85

2019-04-12 14:23:00Z
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The Five Most Interesting Players of the 2019 NBA Playoffs - The Ringer

Well, gang: We made it. After an 82-game war of attrition, we’re just one sleep away from our handsome reward: the 2019 NBA playoffs. Sixteen teams, four rounds, and at the end of it, only one team left standing to celebrate while hoisting the Larry O’Brien Championship Trophy. Even with an odds-on favorite looming over the proceedings, this is going to be fun.

Before the conference quarterfinals commence on Saturday, let’s take a look at the five players whose paths through the postseason most interest me, starting with the man of the moment in Milwaukee:

Giannis Antetokounmpo, Bucks

There’s nothing in the NBA scarier than Antetokounmpo with a clear runway and a head of steam—and that’s exactly what he has entering the postseason.

The Bucks will have home-court advantage through the Finals, affording Giannis the chance to start and end every series in Milwaukee, where they are a dominant 33-8 this season. Antetokounmpo is surrounded by a deep and talented supporting cast, headed by All-Star swingman Khris Middleton and inside-out difference-makers Eric Bledsoe and Brook Lopez. He’s playing the best basketball of his life in a system optimized for his gifts by Coach of the Year front-runner Mike Budenholzer, and he enters spring fresher than ever; Giannis has played fewer total minutes in 2018-19 than he has in any single season since he was a spindly 19-year-old rookie.

Health is a concern for Milwaukee: Key contributors Malcolm Brogdon and Nikola Mirotic remain on the injured list, though they’re expected to be back in time for the second round, and a number of other Bucks, including Antetokounmpo, have been dealing with nagging ailments. Beyond that, though, there doesn’t seem to be anything for Milwaukee to fear; the Raptors, 76ers, and Celtics could all pose their share of problems, but the skyscraping wall that has separated would-be Eastern contenders from the promised land for nearly a decade came tumbling down last July, when LeBron James made the fateful decision to leave Cleveland for Los Angeles.

James’s absence from the postseason matters in an off-court sense, too. The NBA’s most popular and famous player being sidelined for the playoffs creates an attention vacuum. With everything seemingly pointing toward the Greek Freak’s coronation—a first All-NBA First Team selection, and a real shot at both Most Valuable Player and Defensive Player of the Year honors—this is Antetokounmpo’s opportunity to seize the throne, to establish himself as the next face of the league, and to take LeBron’s place as the new immovable object that will prevent a generation of Eastern teams from grabbing the brass ring.

That ascent will have to begin with a small but meaningful step: getting out of the first round of the playoffs. Antetokounmpo has yet to do that in three tries, and the Bucks franchise has done it just once in the past 30 seasons. Do that by knocking off the eighth-seeded Pistons, stay healthy in the process, get Brogdon and Mirotic back in the fold, and the path to a title starts to look much more manageable.

”People don’t think we can’t win it all. But at the end of the day, we are going to play for that,” Antetokounmpo recently told ESPN’s Tim Bontemps. “We are going to play till the end. It’s in our hands to decide what the end is going to be.”

There’s nothing but open space and opportunity in front of Giannis and the Bucks. Once they take off, there’s no telling how high or how far they could go.

Chris Paul, Rockets

An analytics adherent like Daryl Morey would likely downplay the value of momentum at this time of year, but Houston enters the playoffs as the NBA’s hottest team all the same. Mike D’Antoni’s team posted the NBA’s best record and its best efficiency differential after the All-Star break, turning in the league’s no. 1 offense (which you’d expect) and its no. 2 defense (which you would very much not!) in non-garbage-time play, according to Cleaning the Glass. The only team stingier post-All-Star: the similarly streaking Utah Jazz, whom Houston will face in Round 1.

It took the Rockets a while to rediscover the form that led them to Game 7 of the 2018 Western Conference finals, but as Morey said before the season, his job is to have his best team on the floor by mid-April. Well, it’s April, and Houston once again looks dangerous as hell, with James Harden operating as the sport’s most unstoppable offensive weapon, Clint Capela flexing on the interior (15 points on 68.2 percent shooting and 12.8 rebounds per game since the All-Star break), and vital role players like Eric Gordon, P.J. Tucker, and scrap-heap savior Danuel House Jr. scorching the nets from 3-point range. Everything’s lining up for the Rockets to once again take their best shot at the Warriors; whether they can put the champs down for the count this time could depend on how healthy and effective Paul is when it’s time for the main event.

Paul, when he’s at his best, is arguably the best non-Warriors second banana in the league—a game-controlling mastermind capable of working his team into a productive possession against any defense, of stifling the best ball handlers and scorers in the world, and of maintaining the Rockets’ roar when Harden hits the bench. We didn’t see much of that version of CP3 early in the season, leading many to wonder whether injuries and age had cost the about-to-be-34-year-old point guard the athleticism he needed to make a difference at the highest levels. But while Paul’s individual numbers haven’t been overwhelming following his return from a left hamstring strain in late January, his overall impact has been massive.

Since the All-Star break, the Rockets have outscored opponents by 8.2 more points per 100 possessions with Paul on the floor than when he’s off it. Houston has been elite when Paul has run the show without Harden, posting a plus-9.9 net rating in CP3-but-no-Harden minutes. And while Houston’s margin has been even bigger in Harden-no-CP3 floor time, it’s been an astronomical plus-17.6 points-per-100 when they’ve shared the floor, the 10th-best mark of any duo to log at least 400 minutes together since mid-February. This was the model the Rockets relied on last season: an all-world creator, pick-and-roll facilitator, and isolation shot-maker at the wheel at all times, and, for large chunks of the game, two of them. With Paul struggling and hurt, Harden had to go galactic. Now that he’s back and healthy, he’ll be able to take some of that burden from the Beard.

Another heartrending late-season injury, and one world-historic 3-point freeze-up, kept Paul and the Rockets from playing for last season’s championship. But the guard is only going to get older, more expensive, and harder to build around, especially on a team that seems adamant about avoiding the repeater tax; this could be his last chance. Can he help Harden get all the way to the finish line this time? Or will one of the greatest players of his generation once again come up short?

Damian Lillard, Trail Blazers

After a franchise-shaking first-round sweep at the hands of the Pelicans last year, and a summer in which its most notable additions were Sauce Castillo and the top search result for “the other curry,” Portland seemed to be on the precipice of sliding down the Western pecking order. And even if that didn’t wind up being true—and it didn’t, as the Blazers topped 50 wins and secured home-court advantage in Round 1—there still really wasn’t much they could do to change anybody’s mind about who they were.

Barring some miraculous push for 70 wins, or the addition of a legit superstar at the trade deadline, Portland would still look like the same old “pretty good” squad that executes its way to a high regular-season win total before bowing down to better talent. Only in the playoffs could the Blazers prove they’re something different—to us, and to themselves. “We’re really looking forward to that opportunity to redeem ourselves,” Lillard told SB Nation’s Paul Flannery last month.

For a second there, it looked like they might be able to make the most of it, running and gunning and pushing Denver and Houston for the West’s no. 2 seed ... and then Jusuf Nurkic shattered his left leg going for a double-overtime rebound, only one week after CJ McCollum suffered a popliteus strain in his left knee. (McCollum will be available to start Round 1, though he didn’t quite look 100 percent in his first two games after coming back; Nurkic will be on the shelf for a long, long time.) Just like that, the Blazers’ chances of making the franchise’s first Western Conference finals since 2000 seemed to vanish.

Another exit before the conference finals wouldn’t necessarily tar Lillard’s reputation. He’s still a three-time All-NBA selection (and a virtual lock to add a fourth come season’s end) who ranks among the NBA’s most lethal pick-and-roll playmakers, and consistently earns praise as one of the league’s most valuable culture-setting leaders. But since his game- and series-winning buzzer-beater against the Rockets in Game 6 of 2014’s opening round, Lillard has struggled in the postseason, shooting just 38.5 percent from the field and 32.5 percent from 3-point range in 24 playoff games. In three of those seasons, the Blazers bowed out in five or fewer games; in 2016, the only other year of Lillard’s career in which they’ve advanced, they were down 2-1 before the Clippers lost superstars Chris Paul and Blake Griffin for the rest of the series.

The Blazers’ rough run of postseason luck isn’t all on Lillard’s shoulders; they were injured and outgunned against Memphis in 2015, ran into two buzzsaw Warriors teams in 2016 and 2017, and had a team-wide collapse against New Orleans last season. But it seems odd that a star so synonymous with performance in the clutch has gone five years without a signature postseason moment. Rightly or wrongly, Dame’s inability to push the Blazers farther than they’re supposed to go in the playoffs contributes to the tendency to drop him down the rankings of the league’s best point guards below peers who might not be clearly superior players, but who have superior postseason résumés.

Lillard and Co. face a tough first-round matchup against Oklahoma City, which beat them four times during the regular season. Without two-way linchpin Nurkic, with McCollum still working his way back from the knee strain, and with little in the way of playoff-tested complementary scoring or playmaking in reserve, Lillard once again has his work cut out for him. But he also has an opportunity to gain some measure of redemption after last year and to burnish his bona fides as one of the sport’s most dangerous offensive players. The Blazers’ postseason survival may wind up coming down to Lillard setting fire to a very good defense all by himself. I’m down to tune in for that.

DeMarcus Cousins, Warriors

It took six-plus years of roiling dysfunction in Sacramento, a brief and career-altering stint in New Orleans, and a surprise phone call to Golden State GM Bob Myers, but Boogie’s finally set to make his first-ever playoff appearance. The big question: How will he fare on the sport’s grandest stage?

It’s been an up-and-down season for Cousins. After a year-long rehabilitation from a torn left Achilles tendon, he hit the ground running in his return to the court, looking like a seamless scoring and playmaking fit for a Warriors team that frankly didn’t need a whole lot of scoring help. But a post-All-Star stumble marked by disinterested and defective defense—including, notably, Cousins’s struggles in pick-and-roll coverage when drawn away from the rim—offered at least some cause for concern about how the four-time All-Star would hold up in postseason matchups against opponents who can gear their offensive attacks toward trying to exploit his lack of lateral quickness.

Since Cousins’s introduction to the lineup in mid-January, the Warriors have outscored opponents by 4.6 points per 100 possessions with him on the court ... and by 8.8 points-per-100 when he’s off it, according to NBA.com/Stats’ lineup data. Overall, Golden State’s five-All-Stars lineup of Cousins, Stephen Curry, Kevin Durant, Klay Thompson, and Draymond Green has been great, posting a plus-12.6 net rating. But among Warriors units to log at least 75 shared minutes, that’s only the fourth-best mark on the team, behind the Death Lineup that bumps Green to the 5 and moves Andre Iguodala to the wing, the season-long starting lineup with Kevon Looney at center, and the late-season model that plops prodigal Warrior Andrew Bogut into the middle. It’s not that the Boogiefied Warriors aren’t imposing; it’s that, as Ethan Strauss of The Athletic wrote earlier this week, lineups featuring him often seem like the third- or fourth-best option available to this particular team.

As the playoffs progress, though, that might not remain the case. The Warriors’ first opponent, the eighth-seeded Clippers, feature a pick-and-roll-heavy attack piloted by Sixth Man of the Year favorite Lou Williams and a center platoon of third-year surprise Ivica Zubac (thanks, Magic!) and ace reserve Montrezl Harrell—not the kind of low-block bruisers or defensive deterrents likely to cost head coach Steve Kerr much sleep, but potentially a matchup better suited to Looney, Bogut, or Green than the comparatively plodding Cousins. Beyond Round 1, though, Golden State’s path to a third-straight championship could include clashes with bigger, more physical, and more worrisome pivots.

Round 2 will bring a rim-wrecking shot-swatter, whether it’s Clint Capela of the Rockets or Rudy Gobert of the Jazz. And in the Western Conference finals, opponents could include mustachioed brick wall Steven Adams, sweet-shooting LaMarcus Aldridge, or playmaking savant Nikola Jokic; had Portland’s Nurkic not gone down, all four possible combatants would have presented Golden State with a thorny problem. And the four favorites to represent the Eastern Conference in the NBA Finals could each pose their own issues in the middle, with Milwaukee’s Brook Lopez, the Toronto tandem of Marc Gasol and Serge Ibaka, and Boston’s Al Horford all boasting a shooting touch that can stretch an opposing defense to its breaking point, while Philly’s Joel Embiid is capable of smashing a coverage into submission down low.

The Warriors added Cousins to punish smaller, switch-heavy defenses like Houston’s, yes, but also to combat the biggest bads they might face along the way. Boogie has looked pretty damn good doing it of late, too, pounding Capela and the Rockets to the tune of 27 points, eight rebounds, and seven assists on March 13 …

... and thoroughly dominating Jokic on his way to 28 points, 13 rebounds, and five assists in a win over Denver on April 2:

If Cousins can do that while holding up in coverage for four rounds, he’ll be well on his way to the lucrative long-term contract he missed out on last summer due to the Achilles tear. The Warriors expect he can, and will; as Green put it recently, “Somebody else plays their best game with their center, and we play our best game? We will win. Simple as that.” Just how much Golden State’s best game against the best opponents actually features Boogie, though, remains to be seen.

Gordon Hayward, Celtics

It became exhausting, this season, trying to keep track of whether or not Hayward was back after returning from the broken left tibia and dislocated left ankle that cost him nearly all of his first season in Boston. It looked like it, and then it didn’t, and then it did, and then it didn’t; and that just sort of continued through winter and into spring, with the max-salaried swingman struggling to find consistency and stability in his comeback from the most crushing injury of his nine-year career.

When Hayward felt confident enough in his surgically repaired leg to attack off the bounce and explode to the basket, he resembled the All-Star who shined so brightly in Utah. When that self-belief waned, he became a “liability on both ends of the court” who sometimes disappeared from view entirely, leaving the Celtics and their fans wondering if the do-it-all playmaker they’d seen in Salt Lake City was gone for good. (For what it’s worth, Hayward told ESPN’s Jackie MacMullan that Paul George said it took him “two full years before he could play freely” after suffering a similarly devastating leg injury in 2014.)

After 72 games and nearly 1,900 minutes, definitive answers still remain tough to come by. But the good news for Boston is that, as the regular season wrapped up, Hayward looked solid once again. Over the season’s final five weeks—a span interrupted by a short stay in the league’s concussion protocol—Hayward averaged 14.7 points, 4.6 rebounds, and 3.1 assists in 26.3 minutes per game. He shot 60 percent from the field during that stretch, headlined by a perfect 9-for-9 performance in a blowout win over the same Pacers team that the Celtics will face in Round 1.

Hayward was more aggressive in getting to the basket late in the season, too. Through March 4, he’d averaged 5.2 drives to the basket per game, kicked the ball out to a teammate on 48.4 percent of those forays into the paint, and shot just 44.8 percent on the field-goal attempts he did take. Over his final 14 games, though, he ratcheted things up, driving to the hoop 7.4 times a night, giving up the rock after penetration just 35 percent of the time, and shooting a scorching 68.3 percent on his takes. He also started to seem more comfortable taking body contact from would-be shot-blockers: During that 14-game stretch, Hayward shot 48 free throws compared to 130 field goal attempts, a free throw rate of .369, right in line with the mark from his All-Star season in Utah and miles above the .275 rate (which would’ve been a career low) he’d managed before his strong closing kick.

An assertive and bold Hayward—one actively looking to make plays for himself and others, rather than resigning himself to the corners in a complementary role—is a good thing for Boston. It means Kyrie Irving isn’t the only Celtic that Brad Stevens can rely on to create his own high-percentage shot; when Hayward scored 15 or more points this season, the Celtics were 17-4. If Hayward is on, Irving and Al Horford won’t need to shoulder as much responsibility for getting the Celtics into their sets, or finding good looks for their teammates; when he dished five or more assists, Boston was 12-5. Hayward also gives Stevens another reliable two-way contributor with the size and skill set to fit into any lineup. Even given all the peaks and valleys, Boston still outscored opponents by nearly two more points per 100 possessions with Hayward on the floor during the regular season than when he sat.

With every spotty performance and sound-bite pop-off, the Celtics have spent the last six months giving us reasons to doubt them. (The news that they’ll be without heart-and-soul guard Marcus Smart for at least the first round doesn’t help matters.) Hayward continuing his late-season surge in the playoffs, alongside a highly motivated Irving and a fully operational Horford, could provide a pretty compelling reason to believe that, after all that’s come before, Boston might yet have a shot at being the team so many envisioned.

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https://www.theringer.com/nba/2019/4/12/18307292/most-interesting-players-2019-playoffs

2019-04-12 12:11:55Z
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