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Grizz Win Another Thriller in OT, 98-95

For the second game in a row, the Oklahoma City Thunder pulled a four-point play to force overtime against the Memphis Grizzlies. And for the second game in a row, the resilient Grizzlies found a way to win in the extra period.

The Grizzlies slowly and methodically built a lead throughout the first 40 minutes of the game, and were seemingly in control with seven and half minutes left, leading 81-64. That’s when the Thunder dialed up their defense and the Grizzlies got tentative on offense. It was a combination that enabled OKC to erase the lead, and was helped in no small measure by a foul on Russell Westbrook by Tony Allen on a three-point shot with less than 30 seconds left. Westbrook made the free throw and the Grizzlies couldn’t score before the buzzer.

In overtime, the Thunder scored first, but the Grizzlies gritted out another win with a relentless, harassing defense and clutch shooting in crunch time. Allen was his usual trick-or-treat self, making vital plays on both ends, but also making a couple of bone-headed moves, including fouling Westbrook on a three-pointer again, with less than a second left in OT and the Grizzlies leading by five.

The Grizzlies had six players in double figures, including another vital 12 points from backup point guard Beno Udrih and strong minutes from second-string center Kosta Koufos, who came in when Marc Gasol got into foul trouble. The two Thunder stars, Russell Westbrook and Kevin Durant, each scored 30 points, but shot a combined 35 percent.

Game Four in the series takes place Saturday in Memphis.

Note: Kevin Lipe’s analysis of Thursday’s game is here. — bv

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Beyond the Arc Sports

Griz-Thunder Game 4 Preview

A few quick thoughts ahead of tonight’s Game 4:

Will the Griz Regret Game 1?: Before this series started, I picked the Grizzlies to win in 6, and that’s still where I’m at. But I’m actually slightly less optimistic about their prospects than I was before Game 3 despite the team pulling that one out. The Thunder finally made the adjustments they needed in Game 3 and it almost got them a victory. If series trends have reversed with those adjustments, then dropping Game 1 will be tough to stomach. The Grizzlies squandered 38 minutes of Kendrick Perkins and Hasheem Thabeet (the duo was a combined -14), a gift unlikely to be repeated in the series, via missed free throws and having Tony Allen on the bench while Kevin Durant led a fourth-quarter comeback. In retrospect — if even that — the Grizzlies spotted the Thunder a game, and with OKC seeming to have figured things out a little, that’s dangerous.

Will OKC Go Small Ball or Bust?: The Thunder have outscored the Grizzlies in the series with lineups featuring only one “big” (which almost always includes Kevin Durant at power forward) and Game 3 was the first time their lineup distribution tipped in that direction, playing 27 minutes small (+2) to 21 minutes big (-8). Given the results, does Brooks push most of his chips in on small ball tonight? If so, the Grizzlies can’t let themselves be out-rebounded again, and need to make their big lineups work to resist the temptation of keeping one of their three best players on the bench in order to match up with the Thunder. This all makes Zach Randolph a key player tonight. It was Randolph’s inability to control offensive rebounds in his grasp that stood out most amid the Game 3 rebounding problems. And it’s Randolph that will likely be “hiding” on a Thunder perimeter player defensively.

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Game 3: Grizzlies 87, Thunder 81 — Making Them When it Matters

Marc Gasol drew a crowd but still lead the Grizzlies to an 87-81 win and a 2-1 series lead over the Thunder Saturday night.

  • LARRY KUZNIEWSKI
  • Marc Gasol drew a crowd but still lead the Grizzlies to an 87-81 win and a 2-1 series lead over the Thunder Saturday night.

From the arena concourse to the locker room to the dais of the post-game press conference, the mood was more one of relief than exultation for the Grizzlies and their fans after escaping with an 87-81 win at FedExForum Saturday night to take a 2-1 series lead over the Oklahoma City Thunder.

The Grizzlies won this tight game for much the same reason they had lost Game 1 in Oklahoma City; free throws. The Grizzlies converted 23 of 28 attempts at the line (82%), including a perfect 6-6 from Marc Gasol and Mike Conley in the game’s final two minutes, while Thunder star Kevin Durant — a career 88% foul shooter — suffered a devastating empty trip with under a minute to play. Those Grizzlies free throws were the only points scored in the game’s final two minutes, which began with the teams tied 81-81.

In addition to Durant’s missed free throws, the Thunder also watched Derek Fisher, so strong in Oklahoma City, miss an open three off a turnover on the subsequent possession.

With Lionel Hollins astutely managing offense/defense substitutions down the stretch to mitigate potential mismatches against the Thunder’s small-ball lineup and with Conley and Gasol coming up clutch from the charity stripe, the Grizzlies’ late game execution pulled them through what had been a shaky performance for much of the game.

“I feel like every game we have gotten better and today we were not better than the last game,” Gasol said afterward.

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Beyond the Arc Sports

Griz-Thunder Game 3 Preview: Twelve Takes, Part One

Getty_Thunder_Grizzlies_Game1.jpg

  • Ronald Martinez, Getty Images

I was mostly done researching and thinking my way through the elements of a planned two-part preview of Saturday’s game — one part meant to post Thursday morning, with a second part following Friday morning — and had begun the writing process Wednesday night when my laptop decided it had had enough. I lost everything. I’ll spare you the details of how this post came to be — a planes, trains, and automobiles of compositional technologies — but suffice it to say this isn’t quite what I’d intended.

The problem did heighten an issue I grapple with quite a bit: How much should I “show my work,” in math-class terms. I’ve always consulted statistics as a necessary companion to personal observation and other forms of information. Concepts such as pace, usage, efficiency, and other building blocks of “advanced” statistics are not new trends in this space. Often I cite specific numbers to support claims. But sometimes the math is left in the background, an unstated element that helped form an opinion or hone an observation.

I’m not sure which is preferable — some readers like to follow the data; others, I’m sure, grow weary of too much statistical recitation. So I try to find a balance. And this time, with research lost and limits of time and technology weighing against a recreation, I may not show much work. Just know that when I say that Kendrick Perkins is killing the Thunder or that Scott Brooks should really consider using more small-ball or that Jerryd Bayless may be hurting the Griz defense more than helping the offense that there’s something backing all of that up.

So, here’s a somewhat truncated and considerably less precise first installment of my planned twelve takes. Part two will post later in the day Friday if things go well or Saturday morning if they don’t.

1. New Nickname Alert: This has no bearing on the outcome of the series, obviously, but I took great pleasure in the TNT postgame show after Game 2, when Charles Barkley christened Zach Randolph with a new nickname, “Ol’ Man River,” in reference to Randolph’s “old-man game” and the way he keeps rolling along against younger, more athletic competitors. (They get weary, and sick of trying.) This is even more perfect than Barkley knows, given Memphis’ perch on the river the song refers to as well as the song’s own treasured history in Memphis. It’s too bad we can’t have James Hyter bless this with a FedExForum performance.

This isn’t the first time, incidentally, that a national broadcast has made a brilliant musical reference with regard to the Grizzlies — or to Randolph, to be specific. In the 2011 playoff run, there was a package on the Randolph and Gasol combo — before first-round, Game 2, I think; I can’t remember the network — to the tune of John Fogerty’s “Big Train (From Memphis).” This was also perfect. The rumbling, locomotive imagery and insistent, old-fashioned rhythm matching Gasol and Randolph’s rumbling, old-fashioned style.

It occurred to me, thinking of the late Hyter, that perhaps if the Grizzlies advance we could get Fogerty in town for a Griz-specific update of his song: “Big Spain (From Memphis),” anyone?

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Game 2: Grizzlies 99, Thunder 93 — Tony Allen’s Reminder, Mike Conley’s Breakout

Tony Allen was a difference-maker down the stretch as the Grizzlies evened the series 1-1.

  • LARRY KUZNIEWSKI
  • Tony Allen was a difference-maker down the stretch as the Grizzlies evened the series 1-1.

With six seconds left in a decided game, Tony Allen stole the ball and did what you’re not supposed to do, streaking down the floor for a needless exclamation dunk, then soaking in the boos it provoked. Seconds later, according to the Twitter feed of Commercial Appeal beat writer Ron Tillery, Allen walked by the scorer’s table and yelled, “First team, all defense [expletive].”

Was Allen taunting his opponent or the fans in Oklahoma City? I doubt it. More likely, his target was some mix of the basketball gods, himself, and his coach. He was letting out some frustration and reasserting something that seemed to have been forgotten. And he did it with his game before he did it with words.

In Game 1 of this series, Allen — by acclamation one of the two or three best perimeter defenders in the league — played only 21 minutes in a game in which his team gave up 60 of 93 points to two wing players in Kevin Durant and Kevin Martin. He sat for most of a fourth quarter in which his team gave up 29 points and watched a nine-point lead evaporate as Durant made a series of big plays down the stretch.

Afterward, his coach, Lionel Hollins, explained that Allen was too short to guard Durant now. Using other defenders on the Thunder’s brilliant star, the Grizzlies had surrendered 35-15-6 on 13-26 shooting.

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Griz-Thunder Game 2 Preview: The Conley & K-Mart Correlations

Mike Conley may be the most important player in this series for the Grizzlies.

  • LARRY KUZNIEWSKI
  • Mike Conley may be the most important player in this series for the Grizzlies.

I did a radio interview with a station in Tulsa on Monday afternoon. Early on, we talked about how defending Kevin Martin would be a key to the series. At the end, they brought it back to Martin, saying — and I agree — that he’s become the biggest “x-factor” for the Thunder since Russell Westbrook’s injury. Then they asked if I thought there was a Grizzlies player whose performance was a barometer of team success. I laughed. Funny you should ask …

I’ve been half-jokingly touting the Conley Correlation all season — predicting it before the season, really — and it’s mostly held up in the playoffs. In Game 1 against the Clippers, Conley looked overmatched, particularly in the first half, and the Grizzlies were blown out. After that, Conley settled down and played Chris Paul, if not quite even, at least closer than most would have expected, putting up a massive 28-9 in a Game 2 that was only lost on a last-second shot by Paul. In the four wins, Conley notched 36 assists to only five turnovers, scoring 15 or more points in three of the four wins. He did shoot a dreadful 1-9 in a Game 3 win, but offset that with a superb 10/0 assist/turnover performance.

Against the Thunder, Conley had his worst all-around game of the playoffs so far, shooting 5-15 with only three assists and a couple of killer turnovers in the final minute. If the Grizzlies are going to have a chance to win this series, that can’t stand. Facing the athletic but inexperienced Reggie Jackson or the 38-year-old Derek Fisher in most instances, Conley needs to assert himself. He’s the best all-around guard in this series now, and the Grizzlies probably won’t win unless he plays like it.

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Game 1: Thunder 93, Grizzlies 91 — Déjà Vu Times Two

Game 1 in Oklahoma City Sunday afternoon yielded a pretty simple synopsis: The Grizzlies made too many mistakes — 10 missed free throws and more turnovers than made field-goals in the final five minutes — and Kevin Durant was brilliant.

Ultimately, this game — played, ridiculously, less than a day and a half after the Grizzlies and Thunder had polished off their first-round opponents — felt like a combination of the Grizzlies’ Game 1 and 2 losses against the Clippers. Like in Game 1 of that series, the Grizzlies played non-optimal lineups (Austin Daye and Keyon Dooling combined for 13 shaky minutes) and gave up a huge fourth quarter with an All-NBA defender (Tony Allen) mostly on the bench. Like in Game 2 of that series, the Grizzlies lost a close game on the road with a legit superstar (Durant) taking over down the stretch.

It was a frustrating loss, but not one that should shake the team’s confidence in terms of being able to win this series. Durant (35-15-6 on 13-26 shooting from the floor and 9-10 from the line) went large. Now-crucial second scorer Kevin Martin (25 and 7 off the bench on 8-14 shooting) was allowed to join him. The Grizzlies got poor play from both of their starting guards, fell apart down the stretch, and missed tons of free throws. All of this and the Thunder barely survived — potentially a missed Quincy Pondexter free-throw from overtime — in their own building. The Grizzlies could play the same game the rest of the series and have a chance to win. And odds are they’ll play better.

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Grizzlies-Thunder Series Preview: Ten Takes

Zach Randolph vs. Nick Collison could be a key match-up in the series.

  • LARRY KUZNIEWSKI
  • Zach Randolph vs. Nick Collison could be a key match-up in the series.

With the barely-a-day break between the end of the first-round series with the Los Angeles Clippers and the start of Sunday’s second-round series with the Oklahoma City Thunder happening to coincide with a day of solo parenting for me, there wasn’t much time to research this Thunder-Grizzlies playoff rematch. (Grizzlies Playoffs: Revenge Tour 2013)

But I did manage to scribble out 10 quick takes on what lies ahead. This time I’m blaming any typos, tortured sentence constructions, or other deficiencies on David Stern:

1. Schedule: Only the first three games have been announced by the league so far:

Game 1: Noon, Sunday, Oklahoma City (ABC)
Game 2: 8:30 p.m., Tuesday, Oklahoma City (TNT)
Game 3: 4 p.m., Saturday, Memphis (ESPN)

2. There’s Some History Here: Past results aren’t going to be much guarantee of future performance in this series, not with first James Harden, and then Rudy Gay, and now Russell Westbrook all out of the mix. But the Thunder probably figure more prominently in recent Griz lore than any other team. Over the past three seasons, these teams have battled to a 9-9 draw across three season series and a seven-game playoff battle. Four of those 18 games went to overtime and homecourt hasn’t been an overwhelming factor, with each team winning several times on the opponent’s floor.

The Thunder were witness to Tony Allen’s breakout game for the Grizzlies. They were the backdrop to The Birth of Grit and Grind. The postseason series in 2011 included that triple-overtime home heartbreaker. This season’s three-game series was highly eventful, from the Gasol/Perkins/Randolph Incident, to the Grizzlies demoralizing-in-the-moment first game after the Rudy Gay trade, to Marc Gasol’s overtime tip-in.

We can only hope the next four-to-seven games between these small-market rivals will be as intense and memorable.

3. Grizzlies First Round Notes: The Grizzlies exit their first-round series having settled on a eight-man rotation — starters backed by Jerryd Bayless, Quincy Pondexter, and Darrell Arthur. Keyon Dooling got spot minutes as a back-up point guard when he was healthy and Ed Davis started out in a similar frontcourt role before falling out of the rotation entirely.

Zach Randolph played his best basketball in two years. Marc Gasol was solid on both ends. Mike Conley continued his ascent. Tony Allen rebounded like a beast and scored efficiently. Tayshaun Prince and Quincy Pondexter’s shots came and went, but their defense and all-around team play was mostly a plus through.

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Postgame Notebook: Grizzlies 90, Thunder 89 — Gasol Tips It Home, West Race Tightens.

The Lead: With fewer than four minutes left in the third quarter, the Grizzlies had never trailed and had held the league’s top-ranked offense to a paltry 44 points on something like 35% shooting. But the Grizzlies offense was sputtering — they were working on a 14-point quarter and shooting in the 30s themselves — and you got the sense that if the Grizzlies didn’t find a better offensive flow then Kevin Durant was going to manufacture enough points to win it.

And that’s what it started to look like. In scoring 17 straight points for the Thunder from the mid-third into the early fourth, Durant brought his team from nine down at one point to taking their first lead. When the Thunder later pulled up by six with 1:26 to play in regulation on a three-pointer from sixth man Kevin Martin, it looked like they were on the verge of completing the comeback.

Instead it became of battle of big plays, and the Grizzlies made more. Mike Conley — as he had for most of the night — manufactured some points of his own to get it down to a single-possession game and 15 seconds to play. With Russell Westbrook splitting a pair of free throws, the Grizzlies, down three, ran a familiar play that almost never works: An in-bounds lob to the rim. But this time Jerryd Bayless caught the pass and drew contact, just missing a three-point play. A possession later, Bayless was fouled on a baseline drive. With Bayless and Westbrook alternating four straight perfect trips to the line, the game remained a three and the Grizzlies were forced to take a long-range shot. A chaotic possession resulted in a Bayless pump-fake and straightaway dagger to force overtime. Amid all the madness, credit Lionel Hollins for superb late-game management at the end of regulation.

In the final period, Marc Gasol, who had been quiet for much of the night, made decisive plays. His running hook over Kendrick Perkins gave the team a three-point lead. Then the Thunder’s stars answered: Durant with a floater and Russell Westbrook with a circus finish in front of the rim. With the Grizzlies down one and the shot-clock off, the Grizzlies went — as they had for much of the game — to Zach Randolph on the right block, even though Nick Collison was guarding him and well and Randolph wasn’t getting calls. Randolph missed a seven-footer, but Gasol reached up to tap it home with under a second to play and ran down the floor raising his fist and howling as time expired.

“Shit,” what can you say?

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Road Recap: Thunder 106, Grizzlies 89 — Three Issues of Ongoing Concern

Zach Randolph has been calling for the ball. Now hes likely to get it.

  • LARRY KUZNIEWSKI
  • Zach Randolph has been calling for the ball. Now he’s likely to get it.

Last night in Oklahoma City was the absolute worst way for the Grizzlies to begin life post-Rudy Gay: On the road, against arguably the best team in the NBA, which was, itself, coming off three days rest and into a nationally televised revenge game against a team that had beaten them in their building earlier in the season. Meanwhile, the Grizzlies were still wrapping their collective heads around a disruptive trade and were playing with only nine active bodies, three of which were first- or second-year players who have relatively minimal NBA game experience.

Needless to say, it didn’t go well for the Griz. The Thunder went an entire quarter without having a possession end with a missed shot, on the way to building a 25-point lead. A bout of temporary insanity from Russell Westbrook and the Grizzlies’ pride conspired to make it a game again in the second half, if briefly, with the Grizzlies coming back to within 10 points. But then Kevin Durant did Kevin Durant things.

With all those first-graph factors in mind and considering that the Grizzlies were playing without four potential rotation players in trade acquisitions Tayshaun Prince, Ed Davis, and Austin Daye and the still-recovering Quincy Pondexter, you can pretty well ignore this loss.

But there were a couple of problems — and one pre-game grenade — that underscore some big issues going forward in terms of whether this team can maintain it’s stature post-trade:

Can Z-Bo Still Carry the Offensive Load?
Zach Randolph reacted to the Rudy Gay trade, in part, by suggesting it might allow him to become a bigger part of the offense, making this at least the third time in the past few weeks — including his Bulls post-game TV interview and his All-Star reaction — in which he’s done a variation on “give me the ball more.”