Kicks Through the Lens (Week 7 of Playoffs)

Kicks Through the Lens (Week 7 of Playoffs)

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When an NBA Finals features LeBron James as well as the team that Kobe Bryant (R.I.P.) played for, you know you can expect most of the countdown to consist of Nike LeBrons and Kobes. Anthony Davis catapulted himself into the Kobe 5 Protro spotloight this past week. The Laker forward donned new colorways of the Mamba’s fifth signature sneaker, one in particular that could very well rival Iguodala’s pair from last week’s list. We haven’t seen a custom sneaker make our Kicks Through the Lens in quite some time, but a Miami Heat player changed that while sporting an eye-catching iteration of the Nike Zoom Freak 2’s. LeBron James stays steady in his rotation, sticking with either the 17’s or 7’s once again. Will we see him rock a pair of his new 18’s during these Finals, or will he save his new model for the 2020-21 season?

 

The Miami Heat made this series interesting on Sunday night, making the bout a 2-1 advantage Lakers. Jimmy Butler truly showed why he is one of the top players in the entire league. Anthony Davis was in foul trouble throughout Game 3 and L.A.’s offense was lackluster at best. Young players such as Tyler Herro and Duncan Robinson of the Miami Heat are showing just how valuable shooting is in today’s NBA. Tonight’s Game 4 holds huge implications as Los Angeles can go up 3-1 or Miami can even things at two games a piece.

 

 

10. Nike LeBron XVII “Air Command Force” – LeBron James

 

     

 

 

9. Nike LeBron VII “Media Day” – LeBron James

 

           

 

 

8. Nike Zoom Freak 2 Custom (done by @solesbysir) – Bam Adebayo

 

     

 

 

7. Nike Kyrie 6 “Bruce Lee” – Rajon Rondo

 

     

 

 

6. Nike Kobe 5 Protro “Zebra P.E.” – Bam Adebayo

 

     

 

 

5. Nike LeBron XVII “Courage” – LeBron James

 

           

 

 

4. Nike Kobe 5 Protro P.E. – Anthony Davis

 

     

 

 

3. Nike LeBron XVII P.E. – LeBron James

 

           

 

 

2. Nike Kobe 5 Protro “5 Rings” – Anthony Davis

 

     

 

 

1. Nike Kobe 5 Protro P.E. – Anthony Davis

 

                 

 

 

Oct 6, 2020 No Comments
SR-NBA Playoff Preview: The NBA Finals

SR-NBA Playoff Preview: The NBA Finals

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Two months ago, 22 teams embarked on an unprecedented voyage to unchartered territory. And after occupying the Disney Springs bubble at Lake Buena Vista in Orlando, Florida, 20 teams have competed for a shot at the NBA Title, and have promptly been eliminated from the running. And after the two-month frenzy, only two remain.

We’re here.

Tipping off at 9:00 p.m. ET on ABC, it’ll finally be time for the NBA Finals, in it’s most atypical form, of course.

This sport’s showcase of immortals, if you will, is going to be unlike any of its predecessors; the atmosphere, aesthetic, even the court design is all different. But throwing the facts that there won’t be a rowdy home-court advantage and ubiquitous celebrities packing the front rows of every game to the side, two variables are left unaltered: the grandiose and pageantry the Finals naturally display, and the legacy that can be made in one of professional sports’ most historic schedule of games.

Legends arise on this stage, while those not quite ready for the spotlight always get humbled by the moment.

Back on that ominous night of March 11 when the season was suspended, we didn’t know how long (or if) we’d continue to see basketball on our television screens. It took league-wide polling, debates between Player’s Association members and league executives, formulation of testing protocols to keep players, coaching and additional staff safe from the harm that the COVID-19 pandemic has done to an innumerable number of people across the world, so thanks to the many frontline workers for making this bubble possible and safe for all.

Using recency bias, but it’s arguably been the most memorable time in the history of this league. And it’s baffling to think it is coming to an end so quickly.

Okay, now that we got all of the poetic jumbalaya out of the way, let’s get to the tale of the tape.

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1. Los Angeles Lakers (52-19, 1st in West, Won 1st Round vs. POR 4-1, Won WCSF vs. HOU 4-1, Won WCF vs. DEN 4-1) – The top-seeded Los Angeles Lakers crusaded through the Western Conference playoffs with ease, losing only a game in each series while “Gentleman’s Sweeping” their opponents in the Trail Blazers, Rockets, and Nuggets.

The Conference Finals that just about everybody saw coming featuring the Battle of Los Angeles, never came. And with the Clippers blowing a 3-1 lead against Denver to spoil the favored preseason pick of the final two in the West, the Lakers capitalized on the opportunity to get over their surprise of a lesser opponent in the conference finals with expeditious fervent.

Living legend LeBron James now heads to his tenth (!!!) NBA Finals with the sole goal of earning ring No. 4 as he continues to chase ghosts of fellow legends past on a trajectory only the King himself is on heading towards. And he’s doing all of this in his 17th season. Averaging nearly 26 points, 9.9 rebounds, and 8.8 assists this postseason, LBJ is on a mission to further supplant himself as this game’s GOAT, and he can’t think of a better way to earn that fourth ring against the same team he won his first two with.

Accompanying him is a Kentucky product that could be perceived as the most lethal teammate he’s ever played alongside in Anthony Davis, who has been on a tear in the deepest postseason run of his career. The inside-out threat has yet to meet his match in these playoffs, and he’s likely to continue to put up gawdy averages of 28.8 points, 9.3 rebounds, and 3.6 assists in 15 games in the 2020 NBA playoffs.

The Lakers, who finished third in overall defensive rating (106.1 Def. Rtg.) to finish off the regular season, showed why they deserved that accolade by posting an 108.1 rating while facing the likes of the two highest-scoring backcourts in the league in back to back rounds (Portland and Houston) as well as the dynamic duo of Jamal Murray and Nikola Jokic.

Yes, the Lakers are inconspicuously top-heavy, but it wasn’t just the James and Davis show in the bubble playoffs. Frank Vogel’s halfcourt sets that incorporate the likes of Kentavious Caldwell-Pope and Alex Caruso help space the floor for LeBron and AD to make plays in, but they’re able to hold their own when things break down, as the Lakers post a 115.6 offensive rating as a team.

Additionally, the name of the game for this series is depth, and the Lakers surely have that when it comes to having energy sparks that offer support to starters when they’re sitting down. Kyle Kuzma’s shot is getting there and he’s been getting his numbers while aggresively hustling, cutting to the basket and flashing for guards to hit him in stride when they’re handling the rock.

Even Dwight Howard, who returns to Orlando for a shot at winning his first NBA championship in his second-ever NBA Finals for the team that beat him back in 2009, transformed his game during the duration of the playoffs to be the active big that’s dominated small lineups, acting as a roll threat who is always roaming off-ball.

His usage might be in question if he cannot defend Goran Dragic, Duncan Robinson, and Tyler Herro onthe perimeter efficiently this series, but if he can hold his own like how he was in the conference finals, Frank Vogel could get creative with his flipping of JaVale McGee and Dwight in the active lineups to make different looks for the Heat to decipher.

Playoff Rondo reappeared out of the blue after a not too impressive regular season, and has energized off the bench as the Lakers’ sixth man by averaging a little under 10 points and 7.2 assists, which have come at big times when the Lakers have gone on huge runs to put opponents in the playoffs away.

The Lakers defend the rim well, and have length to stifle even the most creative of backcourts to get theirs in the open court, in which LeBron and crew are a spectacle in. They average a sum of 8.5 steals per game and in the series against Denver, they plucked around their regular average of 9 steals per game. For obvious reasons, Miami cannot afford to get loose with the ball and allow the Lakers set up in transition.

This postseason is one that Lakers fans have been waiting for since 2013, the last time they even got into the dance. It’s sentimental considering the fact that this is the first time in the playoffs since the late-great Kobe Bryant took them there to win title No. 16 against Boston in 2010.  Frank Vogel’s machine of a defensively-sound Lakers squad has them in the Finals for a league-best 32 times, and if their cards are stacked right, it’s likely that the elusive – and Celtics tying – title 17 is coming their way this year.

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5. Miami Heat (44-29, 5th in East, Won 1st Rd. vs. IND 4-0, Won ECSF vs. MIL 4-1, Won ECF vs. BOS 4-2) – It’s up to you if you viewed Miami’s trip to the Finals as peculiar or immaculate. Ask any fan of the South Florida franchise, and they’ll brazenly proclaim that all prognosticators have been sleeping on them all season long. Their proof? Their playoff record, and conquested foes along their path to their first Finals since 2014.

This was a business trip for Jimmy Butler, who’s repeated that consistently ever since he’s gotten in the bubble. It’s been nohting but dog fights for these Miami Heat, as they’ve clawed and scratched their way to the Finals by beating much more superior foes in the East’s best Milwaukee Bucks in five games and third-seeded Boston Celtics in the conference finals in six games. And you’d think it’d be behind the play of their only All-Star in Butler. Quite the opposite, actually.

While Butler has taken the backseat to let Erik Spoelstra’s rotation handle things in tight moments, the fiery guard play of trio of Polish Dragon Goran Dragic, undrafted rookie former “Product Development Intern” Duncan Robinson (check his LinkedIn for further clarification) and the self-expressed bucket Tyler Herro have answered the call, causing irreparable damage to all backcourts they’ve faced this postseason.

And in the backcourt is perhaps Miami’s most integral teammate, Bam Adebayo. One of a few pioneering as the future archetypes for big men in today’s (and tomorow’s) game as a point center, the Most Improved Player award nominee has been Miami’s defensive anchor as a big time rim protector and roll threat that breaks down any defense he sees.

Miami’s never-stagnant offense features so many interchangeable parts, and they become like chess pieces when fit into the manipulative gameplan Spo rolls out every game to beat the best of ’em. Miami has a bunch of dribble penetration sets in their playbook, but when people watch these Heat, they describe their offense as anything but.

Off-ball movement dominates the play sheet, and guys cut, screen, and flow into different handoff, curl, flex and drag actions that usually generate the perfect looks for shooters on the wing. And speaking of shooters, it’s rather repetitive to exclaim that nine of Miami’s scorers – that’s both lengthy wings and speedy guards combined – shot over 36 percent from downtown in the regular season. In the playoffs, that team-wide number stayed the same at 35.7 percent. Defensively is where Erik Spoelstra’s heat glow the brightest, however.

Combinations of talking, quick helpside rotations, pesky hands, sticky man-to-man physicality, and unpredictable combinations of zone coverages throw even the most elite of offenses off their games with their 109.4 defensive rating during the bubble playoffs.

They shut down any controversy of that Jimmy Butler-TJ Warren rivalry with a quick sweep of the now-diminishing Indiana Pacers, and then shocked the world by knocking off the league’s best team in Milwaukee, erasing MVP Giannis Antetokounmpo and whatever chance the Bucks had of winning the division in five games. They capped off their winning of the East by coming back on the Celtics with double-digit deficits in consecutive games, relegating Boston to playing hero ball while exposing their inabilities to break Miami’s zone combinations.

These Heat have a 2019 Washington Nationals feel to them: a young core of power hitters that weren’t expected to string it together and make the playoffs in the first year they were around each other, let alone make the Finals. That is, until they ended up sneaking into the postseason with the blueprints credible enough to map out all weaknesses of their superiors in their division. And of course, that ultimately led to their qualification and eventual win of the Commissioner’s trophy with a win over the league’s best team in the other conference.

After a lenghty process of drafting well, competing, and only missing the playoffs three times since 2014, the Heat have successfully “rebuilt” a championship roster on their way to competing for their fourth title.

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NBA Finals: West’s No. 1 Los Angeles Lakers vs. East’s No. 5 Miami Heat

Los Angeles Lakers forward LeBron James (23) drives to the basket against Miami Heat center Bam Adebayo (13) and Jimmy Butler (22) in the fourth quarter of an NBA basketball regular season game at the AmericanAirlines Arena on Friday, December 13, 2019 in Miami. DAVID SANTIAGO DSANTIAGO@MIAMIHERALD.COM

We’ll be getting to the basketball side of things a little later, but just speaking about the narratives in this year’s finals is taking up a whole section for itself. Some storylines of these finals include, but are not limited to:

  • LeBron, in his tenth NBA Finals, faces his old team, coach, and owner for the first time in a competitive series since he departed back to Cleveland after the 2013-14 season. After he left, rumors of LBJ wanting Erik Spoelstra fired and Pat Riley hired as the head coach swirled in the media, so there may be some unresolved conflict that rears its head this series.
  • Also, he has something to prove to doubters that said he had easy trips to the Finals because he “played in the East”, as James dominated the Western playoffs the first time around.
  • Bron will be able to take another sizeable step towards all-time supremacy if he is to win his fourth ring with his third team, something both Jordan and the Black Mamba cannot say they’ve done.
  • Erik Spoelstra meeting his (former) biggest rival in the East in Frank Vogel for the first time since those tense duels between the Pacers and Heat for three straight postseasons. Spo has never lost a series to Vogel, thanks to LeBron.
  • Jimmy Butler, the stern, hard-nosed blue-collar swingman whose personality has rubbed a litany of coaches the wrong way, has found a permanent home for the rest of his career and could affirm his place as a HOF’er by exacting his revenge on LeBron James, a player he’s never beaten in a competitive series, even dating back to his days as a Chicago Bull.
  • Is Miami another dynasty on the rise in the NBA that’s Golden State like with their profuse amount of perimeter scorers?
  • Andre Iguodala makes his sixth NBA Finals, and his fifth where his opponent will be LeBron James (remember, Iggy won the 2015 Finals MVP after shutting The King down…)
  • Who does Dwyane Wade root for? His friend and former LeBron teammate, or his native Heat?
  • (Pretty silly, but applicable: the battle of current boyfriend vs. ex-boyfriend! Tyler Herro is set to square off against Kyle Kuzma. Why is that even here, you ask? Herro is in a relationship with IG model Katya Elise Henry, Kuzma’s former companion.)
  • Dion Waiters is guaranteed a ring! Up until his suspension and eventual trade, Waiters played with the Heat for four years.
  • Last but certainly not least, the Lakers have the privilege of playing in the NBA Finals after such a tough year, and can honor the former Laker and fallen legend Kobe Bryant by winning the first title for the franchise since he won his back in 2010.

Those are a bunch, and quite honestly, a tip of the iceberg. But back to the basketball side of things: Miami got this far using the zone coverages to their advantages, but they only had to really worry about one skill position player gashing their D when they went to those 2-3, 2-1-2, and high 1-2-2 press coverages. But now, the defensive intensity will have to be focused on both Anthony Davis and LeBron James at the same time.

Remember when the Celtics went on lengthy cold streaks, frequently turning it over and not being able to generate good looks for each other? That mainly was caused by Miami’s effort to take away the middle of the defense, meaning that Jayson Tatum, Kemba Walker and Jaylen Brown were caught standing around, unable to cut and create driving space. Daniel Theis had the ball in his hands in the middle of the zones a lot when Miami went away from man-to-man. Meaning now, he’ll be substituted for Anthony Davis. And we all know how well AD does in the midrange.

But, the Lakers will still have to execute their offense, which heavily involves the daunting LeBron-to-AD pick-and-roll. Perhaps the most arduous two-headed attack in the bubble, double-teams and ball-denial will have to be Miami’s bread and butter this entire series, if they’re to have a chance. But, they certainly have the energy and tenacity to put up a fight. After all, they did beat the league’s best team in a series that wasn’t even close.

Offensively, they have to look toward their guards to get buckets, so that signifies a couple of things: 1) Duncan Robinson coming off curls and off-ball screens and/or dribble handoffs to catch defenders under screens, so he can pop those Klay Thompson-like attempts from behind the line, 2) Dragic-Bam Pick and Roll drives or dishes by way of lobs to get Bam’s numbers up, or 3) Jimmy Butler making instant offense as the pure hooper he is, freeing up wing shooters as they collapse on him and try to force him into a bad shot. Either way, they cannot have the third-best defensive team in the league playing them straight up.

Every game will be different, as these are two coaches that know each other inside and out. A classic series could be expected, or conversely another Gentleman’s sweep could happen for both teams. Action Network has the Lakers as -4.5 favorites in Game 1 of this series, and have them winning the series in 5 with +275 odds.

There is middle ground for both teams to work with, and just like every other series for both teams, whoever sets the tone on the glass, makes the right reads more, rotates with intent harder, turns it over less, and whatever side rises to the occasion more will win this NBA Title.

But if we’re talking Miami’s advantage in x’s and o’s…best believe the Lakers’ advantage of Jimmies and Joes in the Goliathic tandem of LeBron James and Anthony Davis could be the biggest factor that tips the scales in the favor of the 16-time world champs.

Prediction: L.A. Lakers Def. Miami Heat 4-2, Win NBA Title.   

Photo credit: vanderbilthustler.com

Oct 1, 2020 No Comments
Kicks Through the Lens (Week 6 of Playoffs)

Kicks Through the Lens (Week 6 of Playoffs)

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The stage is set. The Miami Heat and Los Angeles Lakers will meet on Wednesday night to kick off the 2020 NBA Finals. Two teams that didn’t even make the playoffs last year will now be squaring off for the Larry O’Brien Trophy. LeBron James has been seen wearing his new 18th model during pre-game warm-ups and then switching to either his 17’s or 7’s come game time. Kobe 5 Protros remain steady among players in addition to new colorways spotted. Unlike ten years ago during the original run of the Kobe 5’s, todays game is truly “positionless basketball” – with point guards 6’2″ and big men 7’0″ rocking low top Kobes.

Jordan Brand athlete, Kemba Walker, wasted no time in wearing some Celtics-inspired Air Jordan 35’s. LeBron has been wearing mismatched shoes as well as changing pairs during halftime (hey, whatever works, right?). The young Miami Heat squad is filled with players sporting Kobe models and now they’ll be facing the team the late great Mamba played for. In surprising fashion, this week’s #1 spot was taken by a new player for the first time all season. Look below to see who rocked one of the best P.E.’s yet.

 

 

**Honorable Mention** – Nike Flip Flops – LeBron James

 

     

 

 

10. Nike KD 13 “Easy Money Sniper” – Paul Millsap

 

     

 

 

9. Nike Kobe 5 Protro P.E. – Torrey Craig

 

     

 

 

8. Nike LeBron XVII “2K Playoffs” – LeBron James

 

           

 

 

7. Air Jordan XXXV “Celtics” P.E. – Kemba Walker

 

           

 

 

6. Nike Kobe 5 Protro P.E. – Anthony Davis

 

           

 

 

5. Nike Kobe 5 Protro “P.J. Tucker” – Bam Adebayo

 

     

 

 

4. Nike LeBron XVIII “Reflections” – LeBron James

 

           

 

 

3. Nike LeBron XVII P.E. – LeBron James

 

     

 

 

2. Nike LeBron VII P.E. – LeBron James

 

           

 

 

1. Nike Kobe 5 Protro “South Beach” P.E. – Andre Iguodala

 

                 

 

Sep 29, 2020 No Comments
Kicks Through the Lens (Week 5 of Playoffs)

Kicks Through the Lens (Week 5 of Playoffs)

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The Eastern and Western Conference Finals are off and running. The Denver Nuggets came back from yet another 3-1 deficit to upset the Los Angeles Clippers in the second round of the playoffs. The Clippers’ title hopes will have to wait until the 2020-21 season as they go yet another year without advancing to a Conference Finals. The Boston Celtics and Miami Heat are squaring off against each other in the east, in what can easily be either team’s series to win. Anthony Davis hit the biggest shot of his career on Sunday night, netting a step-back 3-pointer at the buzzer to edge LA over Denver and go up 2-0 in the series. It was definitely a Kobe Bryant moment as the Lakers were sporting their ‘Mamba’ jerseys and A.D. was wearing the “Bruce Lee” Kobe 5’s.

 

No P.J. Tucker in this week’s countdown as his team has “gone fishing.” This week’s Kicks Through the Lens will be the last time Kawhi Leonard and Paul George are featured until next season. LeBron debuted a brand new P.E. colorway of his Lebron 7’s this past week with a nod to another professional sports team in LA. One under-the-radar player brought back a P.E. from his college days. Paul George gave us one last great color scheme in his Nike PG 1’s. Since we are down to four teams left in the playoffs, our countdown will now be 10 sneakers due to there being less material to choose from. Will a Kobe or LeBron model grab this week’s top spot?

 

 

10. Nike Kobe 5 Protro P.E. – Paul Millsap

 

     

 

 

9. Nike KD 11 “Tennessee P.E.” – Grant Williams

 

     

 

 

8. Nike PG 1 P.E. – Paul George

 

     

 

 

7. New Balance THE KAWHI “Jolly Rancher” – Kawhi Leonard

 

           

 

 

6. Nike Kobe 5 Protro P.E. – Anthony Davis

 

     

 

 

5. Nike Kobe 5 Protro “EYBL” – Bam Adebayo

 

     

 

 

4. Nike LeBron XVII P.E. – LeBron James

 

           

 

 

3. Nike Kobe 5 Protro “Bruce Lee” – Anthony Davis

 

           

 

 

2. Nike LeBron XVII “Air Command Force” P.E. (Alternate) – LeBron James

 

           

 

 

1. Nike LeBron VII “Dodgers” P.E. – LeBron James

 

           

 

 

Sep 22, 2020 No Comments
Nike LeBron 18 Officially Unveiled (Release Dates)

Nike LeBron 18 Officially Unveiled (Release Dates)

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Usually an athlete’s new signature sneaker is releasing on the horizon of a new basketball season. New challenges, a 0-0 record, and unclear ending points to that particular season. The Nike LeBron 18 will be releasing on the cusp of King James tipping off in the Western Conference Finals and chasing his fourth ring. LeBron briefly debuted his 18th signature model during his time in the bubble, seen sporting different colorways both on the court and off. The LeBron 18 is lower cut than the previous 17th model but uses the familiar battleknit material on the uppers. The heel of the shoe will feature both Zoom and Max Air for the first time since the Air Force 25 (2007). The Zoom Air unit fits right in between the Max bag in the heel, fitting together almost like a puzzle.

 

     

So far we know of four colorways releasing of the LeBron 18 and when they will be. The first one will debut later this month in China. The second iteration will follow the same suit but then and then have a stateside release in early October. During the Lakers’ time in the bubble we have seen Lebron rock new P.E.’s of his 17’s and even the 7’s. Will James start sporting some P.E. color schemes in his new 18th model for the Western Conference Finals and possibly The Finals? Or will LeBron reserve the on-court spotlight for the 18’s until the 2020-21 season? Look below to see some detailed pictures of the Nike LeBron 18 as well as when each colorway will be releasing.

 

 

Nike LeBron 18 “Empire Jade” – September 21 (Greater China Exclusive)

 

                             

 

 

Nike LeBron 18 “Multicolor” (James Gang) – September 24 (China), October 9 (North America)

 

                 

 

 

Nike LeBron 18 “Los Angeles By Day” – November 6

 

                 

 

 

Nike LeBron 18 “Reflections” – September 21

 

                 

 

Sep 18, 2020 No Comments
SR – Playoff Preview: The Eastern Conference Finals

SR – Playoff Preview: The Eastern Conference Finals

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Six weeks. Seven days. That’s how long the Lake Buena Vista bubble in Orlando Florida has been inflated, and since the July 30th restart date, and while sports media personalities have bloviated and broken down all major and minor happenings both on and off the court, we’ve been blessed with some awesome basketball in this restart.

On another note, it’s fortunate that all players have been able to stay safe and COVID-19-free during the abridged resumption, and additionally, having players take such stoic stances on social justice issues with strength and steadfastness helped to move the conversation about civic justice to the forefront. This bubble has been a huge success, and it’s weird to think it’s almost all over.

Now back onto the topic of basketball: The playoffs have resembled nothing like how fans and T.V. personalities predicted prior to its beginnings.

Specifically in the East, seeing the top-seeded Milwaukee Bucks who carried the league’s best record fall in the second round to the fifth-seeded Miami Heat was definitely not on a lot of peoples’ 2020 bingo card. And after that, the defending champion Toronto Raptors found themselves in a tight series against seasonal superior Boston that went the distance, as they went on to go down in seven.

Wild.

Now, game two of this physical showdown between two of the Eastern Conference’s remaining factions will take place tonight, live on ESPN at 7 p.m. ET.

Miami looks to assert themselves as the Alpha competitors after knocking off the top seed in the Eastern playoffs behind the suffocating defensive schemes put forth by head coach Erik Spoelstra, the spectacular two-way play of Jimmy Butler, and these sharpshooting wings Miami rolls out.

Conversely, Boston will have something to say about that, for their ability to match physicality with length is equally unmatched, and with the mountainous rise of Jayson Tatum’s superstar status mixed with the other two pure isolation scorers, this conference finals that is purely matchup-based will provide fireworks in more ways than just on the court.

There are some subtle storylines that have been in the making for a couple of years now, even dating back to 2012 when the LeBron James-Dwayne Wade-Chris Bosh-led Miami Heat and Kevin Garnett-Paul Pierce-Rajon Rondo-Ray Allen-led Boston Celtics went to war, but until we get to those, let’s get into the breakdowns for the final teams standing in the East.

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3. Boston Celtics (48-24, 3rd in East, Won First Round vs. PHI 4-0, Won ECSF 4-3) – We are going to have new NBA champions and new champs coming out of the East since the Boston Celtics eliminated any chance of title retention for Toronto after overcoming them in seven during the Eastern Conference Semifinals.

In the previous series, Boston started out in startling fashion, smacking the Raptors by 18 in a Game 1 blowout. Boston’s length and adeptness at scoring in the halfcourt transferred from their first-round series against Philly. Jayson Tatum and Kemba Walker were unstoppable, and that narrative carried into game two with the Celtics fending off the resilient title holders, winning by seven to take a 2-0 series lead with Gordon Hayward’s starting lineup replacement in Marcus Smart nearly scoring 16 straight points in the second game’s fourth quarter.

What seemed to be a steamrolling and impending 3-0 lead turned into a momentum-altered reshuffling, with Toronto’s OG Anunoby splashing a wide-open three-ball in the opposite corner from a side-out heave with a half-second remaining on the clock. Jaylen Brown and Kemba Walker would subsequently struggle in a momentum shift of a Game 3, as Toronto tied the series at 2 apiece.

Anxieties arose, and it looked as if the Box-And-1/5 Triangle And 2 zones had Boston confounded and on the ropes. Those nerves got extinguished in Game 5, as Boston put on a show similar to their Game 1 outing where they trounced Toronto again, now with the confidence heading into their first chance at eliminating the champs.

But to do that, it took four quarters, two overtimes, late-game mishaps, and a decisive Game 7 to make that happen. Tatum answered the call when both his counterparts in Walker and Brown struggled and did what superstars do: drop 29-12-7, lock up on the other end, and honor his idol, Kobe Bryant, by breaking his record of being the youngest player in postseason history to put up a stat-line of 25p-10r-5ast at the age of 22.

Boston earned the right to be in the conference finals, so now it comes down to executing in what should be an enjoyable series against a rival that’s been a thorn in Boston’s side for the past decade.

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5. Miami Heat (44-29, 5th in East, Won First Round vs. IND 4-0, Won ECSF vs. MIL 4-1) – It was rational to consider the Miami Heat to be ions away from the Conference Finals picture at the season’s beginning back in October last year, let alone them dethroning the Milwaukee Bucks and ending their historic season.

A season that, albeit ended quite abruptly, included a bevy of awards to their two stars in Giannis Antetokounmpo and Khris Middleton, (Giannis is the likely favorite to repeat as MVP, and Khris Middleton became an All-Star for the second straight year) and head coach Mike Budenholzer (coaches poll co-winner for Coach of the Year with ex-Thunder coach Billy Donovan).

But looking at this year, it was difficult to truly visualize any other outcome than Miami moving on to the conference finals. When it comes to the playoffs, every coach and player has an idea of what offense a team will attempt to run through their best players, so for Miami, who already had Giannis’ number in the regular season, showed the collective basketball universe they weren’t to be taken lightly.  Remember when we said Bam Adebayo was the best defender against Antetokounmpo in the entire league this season?  

We weren’t kidding.

Miami proved that they had the recipe to cut the head from the snake against the reigning MVP and take him away from his game. That, promptly, took the Bucks out of the equation for the three games they won against the Bucks with Antetokounmpo on the floor. And it wasn’t just Bam sticking onto the Greek Freak like glue – Miami actively switched Jae Crowder, Jimmy Butler, and the off-the-bench Andre Iguodala onto him. In the first three games, they beat Milwaukee with Antetokounmpo on the floor.

But in Game 4, things went from bad to horrid, as their transcendent star went down, clutching his ankle he injured during the third game of the series. He didn’t return and although Khris Middleton’s heroics kept the Bucks in the Disney resort for another few nights, they would go down in five, all because of the air-tight defense played by Miami’s combination of starters and role players, and knock-down shooting from the likes of Goran Dragic, rookie Tyler Herro, and wings Jae Crowder and Kelly Olynyk.

These Heat are serious about making it back to the finals for the first time since 2014, and their identity of grit, effort, and attention to detail got them within the thick of things to win their franchise’s fourth title. Boston stands in their way and though they’ve lost the season series to Boston two games to one, these new-look Heat aren’t messing around.

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Eastern Conference Finals: No. 3 Boston Celtics vs. No. 5 Miami Heat

Boston Celtics forward Jayson Tatum (0) shoots against Miami Heat forward Jae Crowder (99) during the second half of an NBA basketball game Tuesday, Aug. 4, 2020, in Lake Buena Vista, Fla. (Kim Klement/Pool Photo via AP)

It’s rather redundant to reiterate how matchup-enamored this duel between two elite defensive squads is, and as unexpected as this seven-game series will be, this is the first time in NBA history that the two teams in the East playing in the conference finals won’t be a No. 1 or No. 2 seed. But that’s pretty on-brand for this 2019-20 season (and 2020 altogether): nothing is as scripted or going along with the schedule.

As it goes for both teams as previously mentioned, Boston went 2-1 against the Heat this season, with Miami’s lone win against the Celtics coming in the Bubble without Jimmy Butler. There has been time to adjust and formulate a gameplan for both teams, and on Tuesday and Thursday night, the time to put away the study guides will be upon both franchises.

In Boston’s prior series against Toronto, there wasn’t any argument as to who the Celtics’ best player was in the series. Jayson Tatum’s rise to superstardom isn’t quite finished yet, but it’s really ascending rather quickly. Averaging 24.3 points, 10.3 rebounds, and 5 assists in the seven-game series, and his wing accomplice Jaylen Brown (20.7 ppg.) was instrumental on the defensive end in locking down Raps superstar and Most Improved Player Pascal Siakam.

Kemba Walker (17 ppg.) didn’t have the ideal series to help propel the Celtics to the ECF but was big in making clutch plays against Toronto’s switching efforts late in Games 2, 3, and 7.  As a team, Boston averaged 107.6 points per game in the past two series they’ve played – the worst offensive output of all the remaining teams inside the bubble. As a team, they shot 44.8 percent from the field and 34.6 percent from the three, which is rather an impressive feat considering the fact that Toronto was that tedious to score on as the best defensive team in the East.

They’ll hope those numbers improve at some point in this series since they’ll need all the offense they can manage to push onto the floor. Though his condition is improving, Gordon Hayward’s return is still up in the air. Averting from his averaged 17.5 points per game and his role as an extra piece to Boston’s offensive auxiliary for a second, he’s a dually-gifted wing defender that’s good at taking the three-ball away as well as limiting dribble penetration attempts from guards.

His absence hasn’t nullified Boston completely, however. Through two rounds and a whole playoff series without Hayward in the second round, Boston has allowed opponents to only score 100 points per contest, meaning they’re the best remaining defensive team in the bubble. In five of the seven games against second-seeded Toronto, they held Pascal Siakam, Kyle Lowry, Fred VanVleet, and others under 100 points.

Regardless of the positive attributes thrown Boston’s way, Miami will have a bunch to counter-argument that notion.

A lot of people who predicted the Bucks to fall to the Heat in the second round have to be patting themselves on the back right now. They were right. Star power and regality doesn’t mean anything if your best player and MVP candidate can’t find a way to individually beat his matchups and get his numbers, and conversely, a supporting cast that isn’t hitting their shots and playing that tight defense they’ve played all year as the best team in the NBA doesn’t help the cause.

Miami absolutely gave zero room or time for the Bucks to adjust, or gain a sliver of confidence in the series, with a “Gentleman’s Sweep” in the second round winning 3-1 and advancing to the Conference finals for the first time in six years. Led by their fiery leader Jimmy Butler, these blue-collar Heat aren’t in the Conference Finals by coincidence, like it’s some Cinderella Story that’s clock hasn’t struck midnight.

This team is built to win and win now. Butler looked as if he got over last year’s semifinal loss to Toronto as a member of the 76ers, and promptly stuck it to the Bucks. Putting up crazy scoring numbers of 23.4 points, 5.8 rebounds, 4.4 assists and 1.8 steals, not backing down an inch from the grandiose of the top-seeded Bucks.

Alongside him was the spectacular two-way effort of rising star Bam Adebayo, who kept Antetokounmpo under wraps the entire series. Averaging a double-double of 17 points and 12 rebounds, he also contributed in sharing the rock, compiling a little over six assists per game.

High screen and roll actions that draw bigs out onto the perimeter stretch the floor and create mismatches down low, and allow Bam to pitch the ball into the mid or low post where guards will be attached to one of Miami’s taller wing shooters. They did it all in their last series against Milwaukee, and they’ll stick to their guns in this series to generate mismatches under the basket.

As for their guards, Goran Dragic will look to attack Kemba Walker in Pick and Roll sets and be the focal point of ball movement for the Miami Heat to enact their offense. Dragic has been an efficient scorer with the ball in his hands, but has been huge in not having a tunnel vision to create offense for others by cutting and setting key off-ball screens that free up shooters on the wings. He’ll be instrumental in controlling the tempo of the floor, and Boston will have to really have to work hard to get physical with him and get him out of rhythm early.

The unstoppable force that is Erik Spoelstra’s on-the-fly adjustments, Miami’s hard-nosed defensive identity, mental toughness, efficient outside shooting and acquired confidence from the likes of other pieces in Jae Crowder, Duncan Robinson, rookie Tyler Herro, Kelly Olynyk and so many more meets the immovable object that is Boston’s equally tough defense, talented wing scoring from the future superstar duo of Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown, gritty effort from Marcus Smart, volume scoring of Kemba Walker and Boston’s battle-tested attitude.

Another additional narrative that makes this duel of a series that much more intriguing: former Celtics Kelly Olynyk and Jae Crowder are looking for revenge against the teams that traded them away to help create the Boston team that they are playing against.

This is as far as the 2017 Celtics went with Crowder and Olynyk, who, alongside Isaiah Thomas, helped propel the Celtics over the then-threatening Washington Wizards in seven to advance to the Conference Finals, where they would lose in five to LeBron and Kyrie Irving’s Cavaliers. Whether the two former Boston draft picks head home or advance to their first Finals is incumbent on their role of being integral 3-and-D men in locking down former teammates in Marcus Smart and Jaylen Brown, as well as Jayson Tatum, a guy they never got a chance to play with as he was drafted third overall one year later.

This series is going to be another dogfight, and surely it’ll go the distance. There isn’t much of a claim to refute that. DraftKings thinks this series will belong to the Miami Heat, since they are -162 point favorites to advance to the Conference Finals. And with the momentum they have, very few teams are as balanced and hungry as these Miami Heat. Whoever wins this series will win by simply wanting it more; that means whoever cuts harder, drives harder, locks up harder, and whoever plays with more fire will end up winning it.

And just by the eye-test alone, Miami could pass that with flying colors.

Prediction: MIA wins series 4-3, advances to NBA Finals.

Sep 17, 2020 No Comments