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Beyond the Arc Sports

Playoff Preview: Grizzlies vs. Jazz

The young, gritty, and resilient Memphis Grizzlies squad defied all odds and expectations to secure a spot in the NBA playoffs after knocking off the San Antonio Spurs and stunning the Golden State Warriors in the NBA’s play-in tournament.

Memphis will have a first-round matchup against a hot Utah Jazz, who had the league’s best record in the regular season. How do you prepare for a team most viewers didn’t give a chance of winning against the Warriors in San Francisco?

The Grizzlies will be the underdogs in the series, but the Jazz should in no way underestimate them. Memphis players are not just going to have a “we are just happy to be here vibe.”

Both teams have something to prove. Last season, Utah was bounced out of the first round after having the Denver Nuggets up 3-1 in the series. Memphis barely missed the playoffs after a heartbreaking loss to the Portland Trailblazers in the play-in tournament. 

To preview this series, our Sharon Brown and Aimee Stiegemeyer answer questions that may determine if Memphis will advance to the second round. 

Will Dillon Brooks be able to contain Donovan Mitchell? 

Sharon Brown: Mitchell is recovering from an ankle injury that caused him to miss the last 16 regular-season games. Mitchell averaged 35 points in the two games against Memphis in the regular season. 

Everything is really depending upon which version of Mitchell will be present during this series. The strategy in defending Mitchell should be the same as how Brooks defended Stephen Curry in the last two games against the Warriors. If Brooks can limit Mitchell and defend without fouling, Memphis will have a great chance of pulling off the impossible and at least take one game in Utah. 

Aimee Steigemeyer: That is the hope. One of the necessary factors for success for the Grizzlies in this series will be his ability to lock up his defensive assignments. I might not always agree with his shot selection, but I absolutely believe in his defensive abilities. 

Can Ja Morant have a repeat performance from the play-in elimination game against the Warriors to advance to the second round?

Sharon: Absolutely, he must continue to play out his mind and with poise. In the regular-season matchups against Utah, Morant put up 36, 32, and 12. So he is more than capable of finding his shots among the trees. The Murray State alum needs to continue to have confidence in his three-point shot as he did in Wednesday’s game. 

He knows the team is counting on him in order for them to advance to the next round, and I believe he will be ready for the task before him. 

Aimee: Simply put — yes. Ja Morant is ready for the moment.  

Which matchup are you looking forward to seeing — Jonas Valanciunas against Rudy Gobert or Mike Conley against Morant?

Sharon: Both matchups should be great. To see Valanciunas and Gobert battle in the paint will be awesome, but to see Conley and Morant go at it will be edge-of-your-seat entertainment. It will be good to see the old guard Grizzlies player in Conley go up against the new Grizzlies cornerstone in Morant. Either way, it will be good for Memphis to see how the two players match up in games of this caliber. 

Aimee: Do I really have to choose? I am looking forward to both for different reasons. The past point guard vs. present point guard narrative is compelling for sure. Regardless of the outcome of this series, there is a very “passing the torch” feel to it. I’m rocking with Morant all the way, but Conley will always be my Captain.  

Having said that, Jonas Valanciunas has just been a pure, unbridled basketball joy to watch all season, and I will take as much of that as I can get.  

Which bench player do you think will be the most impactful? 

Sharon: If Grayson Allen can continuously hit 4 of 5 from the three-point line like he did Friday night against the Warriors, then it would be him, without question. Also, I am interested to see how well Xavier Tillman Sr. will match up against Derrick Favors in the second unit. 

In order for Memphis to win this series, bench production will be key. The second unit is the reason the Grizzlies won plenty of games in the regular season and that shouldn’t change in this playoff series. 

Aimee: It will be a toss-up between De’Anthony Melton and Xavier Tillman Sr. Really, it needs to be all of them stepping up, as this Grizzlies lineup is very much one that wins as a team. 

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From My Seat Sports

Tigers Tested, Sweet Lou, and the NBA

The coronavirus, college football, and math. You can choose two, but you can’t have all three.

The average reproductive number for coronavirus infection — the number of people a person carrying the virus infects — is between 2 and 3. Some carriers of the virus won’t infect anyone they encounter, but some will infect more than 10. It’s the nastiest “bug” in recent human history, precisely because it’s so easy to share but so hard to detect.

Take this math and apply it to a college football game. Two programs on a field, each with a minimum of 100 people sharing a sideline. The idea of one of those teams playing as many as eight games this fall and keeping that reproductive number at zero is really bad math. It’s ludicrous. The Memphis Tigers and the program’s followers learned this after but one game, their season-opening beating of Arkansas State. With multiple members of the program testing positive for COVID-19 (as announced last Friday), the Tigers’ next game — scheduled for this Friday against Houston at the Liberty Bowl — has been postponed. At least.

So pandemic football comes down to the frequency of COVID tests within each program, and how those tests are reported. Were Tiger players and staff infected with the virus during their game against the Red Wolves (six days before the positives were announced)? Arkansas State played its game at Kansas State last Saturday, but several players on the depth chart were sidelined. And there was plenty of finger-pointing — toward the A-State program — over social media throughout the weekend. It stands to reason, if I understand contact tracing, that if one team had infected players during a football game, the opposing roster would be compromised (as potential carriers) a week later. It’s ugly math if you’re a football fan. And no game on your favorite schedule should be written in ink.

• For the third time in eight seasons, the St. Louis Cardinals are wearing a patch commemorating the life of a legendary player, one whose statue stands in front of Busch Stadium. The greatest Cardinal of them all, Stan Musial, died in 2013. Five years later, Red Schoendienst joined his former roommate in that great clubhouse in the sky. Then on September 6th, Lou Brock passed away at age 81. It seems especially cruel that a man whose number 20 has been retired by the Cardinals for more than 40 years was taken from us in the already-plenty-dreadful year 2020.

Brock’s 3,000th hit (in August 1979) is my earliest distinct memory of the Cardinals. I got the chance to meet Mr. Brock twice — once at Tim McCarver Stadium and once at AutoZone Park — and both times he treated me like I was the first fan he’d ever met. Like fellow Hall of Famers Musial and Schoendienst, Brock was somehow better at being a human being than he was at playing baseball. He also happens to have been one of the most competitive men to ever set foot on a diamond. (Brock is the only player Sandy Koufax acknowledges having hit with a pitch on purpose. Brock was that disruptive upon reaching base.) The world needs more Lou Brocks. I’m grateful we had him as long as we did.

• Nine months into the most unpredictable year of our lives, it’s nice have the NBA playoffs nearing completion. When it comes to the NBA Finals, what you expect is typically what you get. Since the turn of the century, only three teams seeded lower than third have reached the Finals. And all three — the 2006 Mavericks, the 2010 Celtics, and the 2018 Cavaliers — lost the championship series. The fifth-seeded Miami Heat could become the fourth “surprise” entry if Jimmy Butler and friends can knock off the third-seeded Boston Celtics. More than likely, the de facto Finals will be played in the Western Conference, where we could see a “Battle for L.A.” (unless the Denver Nuggets crash the party): both the Lakers’ LeBron James and Clippers’ Kawhi Leonard are aiming to lead a third franchise to a title. The NBA doesn’t exactly welcome Cinderella to its dance, but a clash of familiar champions — even in new uniforms — might be just the right vitamin for a 2020 sports fan.

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Beyond the Arc Sports

Real Talk: About the Grizzlies and the Playoffs

As the Grizzlies continue to improve in the standings and other Western Conference teams fall short, there has begun to be some buzz about Memphis making a playoff push. This would be a terrible idea, as I will explain further.

For reference, currently the Grizzlies are 9th in the WC standings, one game back from the 8th seed.

The Grizzlies are going through a real, honest-to-God rebuild. With new front office decision makers and a new head coach, this team is finally in a position to execute a successful rebuild.
There is a young, dynamic core of exciting players to build around, and in many ways the future is looking brighter for this franchise than it ever has. Which is all the more reason why this process shouldn’t be rushed.

The 2019-2020 Memphis Grizzlies are a very young team, green behind the ears and still learning how to play together. They are still building chemistry and learning how to put together four complete quarters of basketball in the same game. It isn’t always pretty to watch, but this is a very good thing. It is exactly what they are supposed to be doing at this point in the rebuilding process.

But What About the Boston Pick?
Well … what about it? The first-round pick that we still owe to Boston is top-6 protected this year and while it would not be wise to lose deliberately, chances are the Grizzlies will organically end up a lottery team again this summer. Which allows the possibility of ending up with another very good draft pick this summer.

Yes, said pick is unprotected after this year, but the likelihood that the Grizzlies will end up as even the 8th seed is much greater next year. If that is the case, Memphis could potentially convey a pick that is outside the top-10 in 2021.

The Bottom Line
The playoffs should not be a goal for this Grizzlies team until they have developed enough to sustain a deep run. End of discussion.
As it stands right now, even if they did end up in the 8th seed, it is very unlikely they would make it out of the first round of the playoffs. Which makes the risk of injury too great, with the potential for a reward (or even a second-round series) much too small.

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News

On Powe and Mo’

Chris Herrington sizes up the latest addition to the Grizzlies and the significance of tonight’s big game with New Orleans at his Beyond the Arc blog.

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News

Grizzlies Beat Cleveland, 112-105

The Memphis Grizzlies beat the hapless Washington Generals, er, Cleveland Cavaliers Friday night, and moved into the final playoff spot in the Western Division. Chris Herrington has details.

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Can the Grizzlies make the playoffs?

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Playoff Bound?

As streamers fell and the Gap Band played at FedExForum Monday night, the Memphis Grizzlies, having just registered an exciting 100-97 win over the Orlando Magic, found themselves somewhere they haven’t been since October — with a winning record — and yet somewhere they expected to be all along — in the thick of the NBA playoff race.

As they enter the final two-and-a-half months of the season, the Grizzlies are well positioned for the playoff run promised by owner Michael Heisley last summer. But whether the team could get to this point had been in doubt for much of this surprising, interesting, and wildly inconsistent season.

After a 4-4 start, the Grizzlies went on a five-game losing streak in mid-November. Hosting Lebron James and the Miami Heat on November 20th, with the team showing signs of internal disarray and a 4-10 start looming, Rudy Gay drove to the baseline in the final seconds and hit a buzzer-beating jumper over James.

It wasn’t just a game winner. It may well have been a season saver. It was at that moment that the Grizzlies’ 2010-2011 playoff campaign regained a pulse, the start of a maddening, Sisyphean journey back to contention that has seen the Grizzlies get to within two games of .500 on five separate occasions, only to slip back again each time, and to get to within one game of .500 last week only to lose a 16-point lead to the lowly New Jersey Nets in the next game.

But, over the past few days, the Grizzlies finally pushed that rock to the top of the hill — overcoming a 21-point second-half deficit to steal a road win against the Philadelphia 76ers and then coming home the next night to rough up an overmatched Washington Wizards team.

“It’s nice to be back at .500. We’ve been scratching and clawing. Stuttering and starting and stuttering,” coach Lionel Hollins said after the Wizards game, describing the team’s season to this point.

And Monday night, against one of the league’s elite teams, with O.J. Mayo suspended and top scorers Zach Randolph and Rudy Gay having subpar games, Hollins got contributions from all over to finally get his team back in the black: point guard Mike Conley’s first career 20-plus point and 10-plus assist game; center Marc Gasol playing the Magic’s Dwight Howard, the league’s best center, close to even; reserves Tony Allen and Darrell Arthur making timely plays.

At 25-24, the Grizzlies are actually a game behind where they were at this point a season ago. But that was a different Western Conference, one in which it took 50 wins to qualify for the playoffs. With the middle of the West sagging a bit this season, a post-season birth is not likely to come with so steep a price tag. At the moment, that 25-24 record is good for ninth place, only one game behind the Portland Trailblazers for the conference’s last playoff spot.

And this is a different Grizzlies team, one deeper, tougher, and more experienced than last year’s model. Plagued with arguably the worst bench in the NBA, the 2009-2010 Grizzlies weren’t set up to sustain their level of play as the season wore on. This year, with more functional depth and a more favorable late-season schedule, the end game should play out differently.

The result should bring the Grizzlies and their fans, if not their first playoff berth since 2006, at least a legitimate post-season race into the final weeks of the season.

Larry Kuzniewski

supreme Marc Gasol.

At the outset of the season, the Grizzlies’ hopes for a playoff run hinged on repeating what went right last season — namely, an effective power game built around the frontcourt duo of Zach Randolph and Marc Gasol and strong overall play from their returning starting five — while improving on the team’s two primary problem areas: defense and depth.

That power game stumbled out of the gate. Gasol missed opening night with a preseason ankle injury, and Randolph joined him on the sidelines early in that game with a bruised tailbone, leading to a depressing double-digit home loss to the Atlanta Hawks to start the season.

But the duo has rounded into a reasonable facsimile of last season’s dominance. The Grizzlies once again lead the NBA in points in the paint. They won’t be able to duplicate last season’s league-best offensive rebounding, but after a rough start they are sixth and rising in that category. And Randolph and Gasol are one of only two power forward/center combos averaging more than 30 points and 20 rebounds a game. (The other is Minnesota’s Kevin Love and Darko Milicic, where Love carries most of the weight.)

After playing last summer for the Spanish national team and coming back perhaps too soon from his pre-season ankle sprain, it’s taken Gasol longer to round into shape. On the season, his defense, rebounding, and scoring efficiency have all been below last season’s level. But the recent signs have been encouraging. Gasol has scored in double digits in six consecutive games, his blocked-shot numbers have been on the rise, and he just put up 19 points and 8 rebounds against the league’s best defensive center.

As for Randolph, he’s overcome his season-opening injury to be as monstrous a scoring and rebounding machine as he’s ever been. Randolph’s rebound rate this season is a career high. He’s set a franchise record with 14 consecutive double-doubles. And he’s been named the Western Conference Player of the Week twice.

Joining Randolph as a co-alpha dog has been Rudy Gay, who hasn’t made “the leap” exactly, but he has responded well to his controversial off-season contract extension with modest across-the-board improvements and by bolstering his reputation as a prime late-game option with three game-winning or overtime-forcing shots. But Gay’s most significant improvements have not been related to scoring but instead have come in his areas of greatest weakness: playmaking and defense. Gay has become a more willing and effective passer, and his assist rate, while still middling, is the highest of his career. Defensively, his block and steal averages are both career highs, but he’s also just been more solid overall. After being only moderately better defensively when Gay was on the floor last season, the Grizzlies have been significantly better defensively with Gay this season.

Much like Gay, point guard Mike Conley has responded to his widely criticized summer contract extension with solid rather than dramatic improvement. And, like Gay, his most important advances haven’t come from scoring. Instead, Conley has solidified himself as a legitimate starter with better consistency and ball control that has united a career-high assist rate with a career-low turnover rate. (Though Conley’s usually sure hand seems to get a little wobbly in the clutch.)

The one real chink in a starting unit that was among the league’s best last season has been shooting guard O.J. Mayo, whose tumultuous season has included a move to the bench, a black eye at the hands of teammate Tony Allen after complaining about a gambling debt, and, most recently, a 10-game suspension for a failed drug test that found the banned supplement DHEA (available in various over-the-counter products) in his system. But even when Mayo has played, he’s been far less effective on both ends of the floor, with a huge drop in his shooting accuracy and — according to both the eye and the numbers — some serious problems on the defensive end.

With less scoring production from a revolving-door shooting guard rotation and a rebounding and shooting-percentage decline from Gasol as prime culprits, the Grizzlies offense has slipped from 17th a year ago to 21st so far this season. But if the team’s returning core and power offense has fallen off slightly, that decline has been more than offset by vastly improved team defense and much better depth — advances rooted in the same two “new” additions, Allen and Darrell Arthur.

A defensive specialist for the champion Boston Celtics, Allen signed a free-agent contract with the Grizzlies over the summer with an eye on a bigger role that, frankly, his limited offensive skills didn’t warrant. This desire put Allen at odds with his coach, who also had to get comfortable with not only Allen’s rather unconventional game but also his equally unusual personality.

For the first month and a half, it wasn’t really working. Allen was averaging about 10 minutes a game, with a handful of “did not play – coach’s decision” designations by his name. Allen’s demeanor was sullen and disappointed. But, gradually, Allen came to accept his role, Hollins grew more comfortable with him, and Allen finally carved a regular role in the team’s rotation. And then we found out what an engaged Tony Allen is like: A wildly entertaining player both on the floor and on the bench, where he became perhaps the league’s most vocal and demonstrative cheerleader. A chaotic, destructive defender whose ferocity rubs off on teammates. An unpredictable “trick or treat” contributor who has fans alternately hiding their eyes and raising their arms.

Allen is the most unusual Grizzlies player since Bo Outlaw. His ability to jump into passing lanes to generate steals while still recovering to contain his man might be unparalleled league-wide. He has a knack for deft passes, swooping blocks, and thunderous dunks. He also has a knack for wobbly dribbling, missed lay-ups, dead-on-arrival jumpshots, and curious on-court decisions. He’s the most entertainingly volatile Grizzlies player since Jason Williams, except Allen’s energy is more positive. This is a guy who beat up a teammate over a gambling debt and still became a folk hero among fans and a rallying point for teammates.

Larry Kuzniewski

Grizzlies co-alpha dog Rudy Gay

But the former Griz player Allen evokes the most is probably James Posey, from the team’s first playoff run in the 2003-2004 season, another tough wing defender who came to town on a modest free-agent deal and changed the defensive tone of the team.

Among rotation players, Allen leads the league in steals per minute, and his ball-hawking style has inspired teammates, with Gay, Conley, and Sam Young also excelling in this area. As a team, the Grizzlies lead the league in both steals and opponent turnovers, and this has helped instigate a dramatic defensive improvement, with the team leaping from 23rd in defensive efficiency last season to 11th this season.

The Grizzlies’ ability to take the ball from opponents and take care of it for themselves has been one of the biggest positive changes this season, going from a +1 turnover differential last season (21st in the league) to -2.3 this season (second only to the Portland Trailblazers). Essentially, while the Grizzlies haven’t been quite as effective with their scoring opportunities this season, the improved turnover differential and strong offensive rebounding have made up in quantity what the team’s lacked in quality.

And the team’s previously deplorable depth has probably advanced as much as the defense, with Allen and an improved Arthur giving the team two high-quality reserves — or two more than the team had a year ago.

After being thrown to the wolves as an overmatched rookie starter and then losing most of his second season to injury, Arthur has emerged this season as the player the Grizzlies always hoped he could be: A quick, active athlete, Arthur has graded out well defensively. Offensively, he’s proven a deft scorer both on mid-range jumpers and around the hoop. On an isolation-heavy team, Arthur is especially helpful in that he thrives playing off others with catch-and-shoot or catch-and-finish scores.

Led by Allen and Arthur, and with reasonable contributions from second-year swingman Sam Young and rookie point guard Greivis Vasquez, the Grizzlies have decent depth for the first time in three seasons. Last season, the Grizzlies were +7.3 per 48 minutes with their primary lineup and -6.7 without them. This season, the primary lineup (Conley-Mayo-Gay-Randolph-Gasol) has fallen off slightly (+4.9), but the team’s plus/minus is only barely negative with other lineups, and lineups where Allen or Young have replaced Mayo have been very positive.

Overall, the Grizzlies on-court performance this season has been better than its record. Point differential is commonly considered a better indicator of future performance than win-loss record. By that measure, the Grizzlies, at +1.1, have been better than two teams ahead of them in the standings: the 25-22 Portland Trailblazers (+0.4) and even the 29-20 Utah Jazz (+0.3). And considering the Grizzlies have put up a positive point differential against what has been a difficult, road-heavy early schedule, the indicators are very positive going forward.

ESPN.com‘s John Hollinger does daily NBA power rankings based on how well teams have faired against their schedules and has the Grizzlies ranked 10th after the win over the Magic. By applying past performance against the strength of a team’s remaining schedule, Hollinger also does daily playoff odds, which have the Grizzlies with a 57.2 percent chance at making the playoffs, better than Portland’s 42.4 percent.

But if the metrics are so strong for the Grizzlies, why have they been fighting uphill all season to get to their current 25-24 record? They’ve struggled some in close games, improving to 7-9 in games decided by three or less or in overtime with Monday’s win over Orlando, and have gone 1-4 in overtime games. Among these are three of the most unlikely losses Griz fans have ever seen: Losing on a fullcourt buzzer beater in Sacramento, on a stolen inbounds pass at New Orleans, and on a fluky series of miscues at Phoenix.

The team has also been inconsistent, manifested in a competitive 7-7 record (with two overtime losses) against the league’s eight best teams and a modest 8-5 record against the league’s eight worst teams.

Another issue, as Hollins acknowledged after the win over Orlando, is that it’s taken awhile for this team to come together — and given Mayo’s current suspension and uncertainty over his status approaching the NBA’s trade deadline, questions still remain. The Grizzlies spent a month of the season playing lackluster — and since jettisoned — veteran guard Acie Law and not playing Allen much. Four different players have started at least seven games at scoring guard.

But, in winning six of their past seven games to get above .500, the Grizzlies have gotten in a groove. And the remaining schedule is conducive to maintaining momentum. After their road-heavy start, the Grizzlies will play more home games the rest of the season than any other Western Conference team. Having taken five road trips of three games or more already, the Grizzlies don’t have a trip longer than two games remaining.

An optimistic but also realistic look at what this team has done and the way the remaining schedule plays out suggests this: If Gasol continues to come around as a physical presence, the team can sort out its complicated wing rotation in a satisfactory manner, and they can avoid major injury, fans can get ready for a return of playoff basketball in Memphis this April.