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And, yeah, I feel that way about the Bulls. They are slightly more talented than a depleted Boston team. They can control the boards without Kevin Garnett around. They have just as many options at the end of games. They will be positively frightening at home with their crowd behind them. (I see them winning Game 3 by 20-plus on Thursday night.) And yet, I still think they will lose the series. The playoffs come down to experience and savvy and trust and teamwork and little things like "we ran out of timeouts two games in a row" and "in Game 2, we had the ball up five with 2:30 left and a chance to put Boston away and somehow didn't feed Ben Gordon even though he had an actual fireball shooting out of his butt." These Bulls (not just the players, but the coach as well) haven't had enough playoff reps.
The dirty little secret of this series: Paul Pierce is wiped out. The dude played 108 games last season, then another 82 this season -- all while waving a "come and get us, we're the champs" bull's-eye for every comer -- and spent the past two months carrying a KG-less team on both ends. Now he's wiped out and there is no real way for him to rest: This series is going seven, so is the next one and, if they make it that far, Cleveland will be waiting ... and Pierce is the only guy on the Celtics who can remotely consider handling LeBron. By that point, after playing 200-plus games in 20 months, he will potentially have to slow down the Bo Jackson of basketball seven times over 14 days. And that's if Pierce doesn't break down before then. There was an uh-oh play in the fourth quarter of Game 2 when he tried his hesitation step-back jumper on Rose, couldn't get any lift and got the shot swatted in his face. In 10 years of following him, I can't remember that happening once.The situation is what it is. Just know that Boston's future in Round 1 rests in Ray Allen's hands. Chicago doesn't have anyone to defend him. The Celtics lost Game 1 because he stunk. They won Game 2 because he went bonkers in the second half. He has become the litmus test of this series -- as Allen goes, so will the close games.
And now, Allen holds a wonderful Bulls-Celtics series in his hands. The champs will fall in Round 1 unless Ray Allen comes through. It's as simple as that. As a Celtics fan, I can only tell you this: When one of the great clutch shooters in recent NBA history holds your immediate playoff destiny in his hands, it's a good place to be.
I don't want to jinx it, but Vinny Del Negro is putting on an anti-coaching clinic for the ages. He ran out of timeouts in both games, never double-teamed Pierce when he was heating up in Game 1, didn't attack a one-legged Rondo in Game 2, put Kirk Hinrich on Allen for the biggest play of Game 2, played Brad Miller too much when the JoakimNoah-Ty Thomas combo was destroying the Celtics, and called two timeouts in the final three minutes of Game 2 to design plays for Ben Gordon, who, again, had an actual fireball shooting out of his butt. You can't just scream "go to Gordon again" from the sidelines, Vinny? Actually, why am I complaining about this? Forget I mentioned it.
The VDN criticism is becoming silly.
Quote from: cordobes on April 23, 2009, 04:38:47 PMThe VDN criticism is becoming silly. Don't agree. We'd be ripping Doc to shreds if he did this, and rightfully so.
Quote from: cordobes on April 23, 2009, 04:38:47 PMThe VDN criticism is becoming silly. Don't agree. We'd be ripping Doc to shreds if he did this, and rightfully so. Love this Simmons article except for the prediction for tonight's game. I hope Rondo doesn't lay an egg on the road with all of this media attention he has been getting. This has been his problem though. Consistency. Simmons has been good lately. He has given props to Doc and been funnier, IMHO.
For example, can you explain to me what's exactly wrong with putting Hinrinch on Allen in the last play?
Quote from: cordobes on April 23, 2009, 05:24:45 PMFor example, can you explain to me what's exactly wrong with putting Hinrinch on Allen in the last play?For the Celtics or Bulls? Because Hinrich is arguably their best (healthy) perimeter defender.
Quote from: Chris on April 23, 2009, 05:29:18 PMQuote from: cordobes on April 23, 2009, 05:24:45 PMFor example, can you explain to me what's exactly wrong with putting Hinrinch on Allen in the last play?For the Celtics or Bulls? Because Hinrich is arguably their best (healthy) perimeter defender. Exactly. Simmons doesn't seem aware of that though.
Quote from: cordobes on April 23, 2009, 05:31:18 PMQuote from: Chris on April 23, 2009, 05:29:18 PMQuote from: cordobes on April 23, 2009, 05:24:45 PMFor example, can you explain to me what's exactly wrong with putting Hinrinch on Allen in the last play?For the Celtics or Bulls? Because Hinrich is arguably their best (healthy) perimeter defender. Exactly. Simmons doesn't seem aware of that though. Just because Hinrich is the best perimeter defender they have doesn't make him the ideal defender to guard Allen on the last play. Allen's got like 3-4 inches on Hinrich. And with his high release, Allen can get his shot off on Hinrich all day.