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Beyond the Arc Sports

It’s Win or Go Home Time Again for the Grizzlies

When the Grizzlies take the court against the Utah Jazz in Game 5, they will be playing for the chance to continue their postseason run. Utah currently holds a 3-1 series lead after their win Monday night.  

But regardless of the outcome of tonight’s game, this season has already been a roaring success for the Grizzlies. 

If we’re being brutally honest, the likelihood that the Grizzlies make it out of the first round has always been slim. This is no disrespect, just the facts of life in the NBA when you’re the 8th seed.  

So how can the Grizzlies best optimize their chances of a victory? Defense. Three-point shooting. Free throws. Limiting turnovers. 

Defense: specifically, perimeter defense. The Jazz have consistently outshot the Grizzlies from beyond the arc during this series, so the Grizzlies need to figure out how to run them off the three-point line, and without fouling an active shooter.  

Three-point shooting: The Grizzlies are a collective 38 of 119 from long range in the first four games of this series, an abysmal 32 percent. By contrast, the Jazz are shooting 41 percent (67 of 163) from beyond the arc this series. Memphis needs to do a better job getting those shots falling from the perimeter in Game 5.  

Free throws: This one is two-fold, as the Grizzlies are struggling both with accuracy and disparity in free throws attempted. Utah is consistently doing a better job of getting to the free throw line and making their free throws. Figuring out how to close those gaps would be a huge boon for the Grizzlies.  

Limiting turnovers: Commit fewer turnovers, force more opponent turnovers, convert offensively on more opponent turnovers. This is obviously easier said than done, but even tightening up on ball handling just a little will pay big dividends. Make every possession count.  

Game 5 tips off at 8:30 p.m. CST.  

*All stats are from basketball-reference.com. 

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Beyond the Arc Sports

Grizzlies Lose First Home Game to Utah Jazz 96 – 88

The Grizzlies hosted the Utah Jazz at FedExForum Monday night, where Memphis had been undefeated for the first five home games of the season. It was the third matchup between the Jazz and Grizzlies, with Memphis winning the first two.

Memphis entered the night having played their most exciting home game thus far with Saturday’s Wrestling Night win over the Philadelphia 76ers. Mike Conley’s shooting bounced back in a major way (32 points on 12-24 shooting, 4-8 from deep).
Larry Kuzniewski

The win against Philly was a trademark Grizzlies nail-biter, with Memphis coming back late, and winning by 6 in overtime. Unfortunately, they lost Dillon Brooks to a freak injury that will leave him sidelined 6-8 weeks with a Grade 2 MCL sprain.

The Grizzlies started Monday night’s game in a stupor, playing sloppy on defense and shooting poorly (1-9) from the field, and stumbling out of the gate. Meanwhile, the Jazz got a Thanksgiving spread’s worth of open looks from three in the opening period, but only converted on four of 12.

Larry Kuzniewski

The Grizzlies defense stabilized, however, holding the Jazz to 36 percent FG shooting for the half, and Memphis was able to claw ahead midway through the second quarter to head into halftime with a 43-40 lead.

Mike Conley and Marc Gasol led the way in scoring for the Grizzlies in the first half, pouring in 16 points. Despite missing Dillon Brooks’ punch on both sides of the ball, the Grizzlies bench contributed 14 points in the half between Wayne Selden, Shelvin Mack, and MarShon Brooks. Surprisingly, Jaren Jackson led all Grizzlies in assists with 3 dimes in the half, and Memphis crushed the Jazz in the paint, 28-14.

Things were pretty much the same after halftime, with both teams struggling to score in a brawling defensive matchup. Both the Jazz and Grizzlies remained very much in the mud.

Grizzlies Lose First Home Game to Utah Jazz 96 – 88 (2)

One notable defensive stop (that featured two new Grizzlies) happened when Donovan Mitchell drove to the hoop and Garrett Temple kept his position between Mitchell and the basket, and guided Mitchell right into a Jackson weak-side block.

Speaking of Jaren Jackson, his defensive impact was felt throughout the game, and he avoided foul trouble (earning his first personal with 5:59 left to go in the third quarter). Moreover, he notched his first NBA career double-double with 10 points and 11 rebounds. Strangely, he only played 25 minutes, though he finished with 3 fouls, and wasn’t on the court at the end of the game.
Larry Kuzniewski

The Grizzlies tied the Jazz at 62 with about 3 minutes left in the third, but Utah pulled ahead and didn’t relinquish the lead. Memphis kept the game within striking distance until late in the fourth, and looked like they might make another late comeback, but couldn’t hit enough shots (especially from deep).

Grizzlies Lose First Home Game to Utah Jazz 96 – 88 (4)

Defense was the star of the matchup tonight, with Gasol continuing to helm the Grizzlies on that end of the floor in Defensive Player of the Year fashion. Unfortunately, Rudy Gobert (15 points, 16 rebounds, 3 blocks) looked very much like the reigning DPOY, and held Jackson at bay. True to form, the Jazz played tremendous, and highly physical, team defense.

One area of weakness for Memphis on defense was their coverage on the perimeter. The defense gave up a lot of open looks beyond the arc, and I’m surprised the Jazz didn’t convert on more of their three-point attempts. Monday night also marked the first time this season the Grizzlies had more turnovers than their opponent, and the Jazz capitalized on those opportunities. Memphis lost on the offensive boards as well, pulling down 8 to Utah’s 13.

In his postgame press conference, head coach J.B. Bickerstaff said the game got away from the Grizzlies due to choppiness. He said the game was choppy in the way it was being called, and the team struggled to find a rhythm amid funky, injury-adapted rotations and offensive disorganization.

Bickerstaff also spoke about how the Grizzlies need re-establish the strong bench chemistry they had before Dillon Brooks’ injury.

Joe Ingles played exceptionally well for the Jazz, finishing with 27 points, 5 rebounds, and 7 assists. Garrett Temple’s defense on Donovan Mitchell was pretty impressive. Mitchell had 12 points on 3-14 shooting and went 0-2 from deep.

Mike Conley had another good shooting game, leading all Grizzlies with 24 points on 43.8 percent shooting from the floor, and converted on 3 of his 8 attempts from three.
Larry Kuzniewski

Gasol looked way more aggressive in this game, and has been talking about how he needs to step up his game in that regard. He banged around in the paint, took quick shots, and made assertive moves to the rim. He finished with 16 points on 7-13 shooting (missing all four of his three-point attempts), 5 rebounds, 3 assists, 1 steal, and 2 blocks. The Grizzlies need everything they can get on the offensive end, so hopefully Gasol maintains this level of aggression.

Kyle Anderson had a horrid shooting night, failing to convert on his sole three point attempt, leaving shots short at the rim, and shooting 27.3 percent from the floor on 11 shots. Anderson had a positive impact in other areas, however, gobbling up 13 rebounds, 5 assists, and a steal. But the Grizzlies will need Anderson to pick up his shooting if they want to stay above .500.
Larry Kuzniewski

Garrett Temple’s defense was on point, but he had a cold shooting night, contributing just 6 points on 25 percent shooting, and missing all four of his attempts from deep. Shelvin Mack also failed to hit a triple.

MarShon Brooks had 10 points off the bench, shooting 4-9 and 1-2 from deep, but was often trying to manufacture a shot totally on his own when the Grizzlies offense went stagnant. The Grizzlies can’t toss the rock to Brooks and expect him to pluck buckets out of thin air against an elite defensive team like the Jazz. Memphis definitely needs him to take shots, but he needed help getting better looks in this game.
Larry Kuzniewski

The Grizzlies return to action on Wednesday, when they travel to Milwaukee to take on the Greek Freak Bucks.

Spicy Stat of the Night:

Grizzlies Lose First Home Game to Utah Jazz 96 – 88

Cursed Tweet of the Night:

Grizzlies Lose First Home Game to Utah Jazz 96 – 88 (3)

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Beyond the Arc Sports

Is It Time To Worry About Mike Conley?

What’s going on with Mike Conley? His shot is cold from midrange and from deep. While he’s shown surprising speed and burst — considering he’s only been playing full speed basketball for about a month after having not played since November 13th, 2017 — his floaters and shots close to the rim aren’t falling.

I think it’s still too early to know for sure what Conley’s new normal is, but currently he appears to be experiencing a shooting slump and hasn’t gotten his legs back. He’s consistently mentioned the importance of — and that he’s working on — his conditioning in the few weeks he’s been back on the court.

In Ten Takes after Ten Games, Chris Herrington broke down a couple things that alarmed him about Conley in Wednesday’s game against the Nuggets. There was a moment where Conley sped between two Nuggets defenders to tap a loose ball downcourt for a Garrett Temple dunk, instead of handily beating his defenders to the ball and pushing the fast break himself. Herrington also pointed out that Conley often looked a little tired, and struggled to turn the corner like he used to in the game against Denver.

Are these things indicative of new physical limitations that Conley (and the Grizzlies) will have to deal with? I don’t know yet. But consider that the Grizzlies played Wednesday night’s home game coming off of a West Coast road trip that featured the Jazz and a back-to-back ending against Golden State.

Conley played heavy minutes in each game, including both back-to-backs. He was guarding Steph Curry till late Monday night in Golden State, flew back to Memphis, and played the 9-1 Nuggets on Wednesday. Jamal Murray nearly had a 50 point game against the Celtics before his visit to Memphis. I don’t think we have to hit the panic button on Mike Conley yet. We’ll need more time, and he’ll need more time to get his legs back.

It is somewhat alarming that Conley is playing heavier minutes this year (31.5) than he did in his short stint last season (31.1). And this is happening when Conley has much better backup in terms of handling the ball and initiating the offense.

We’ve seen Wayne Selden, Kyle Anderson, and especially Shelvin Mack afford Conley the ability to play off the ball, and that’s kicked the Grizzlies offense up a notch from when Conley had to facilitate everything. If Conley’s experiencing a shooting slump and conditioning is a work in progress, I think the Grizzlies offense could vault higher than where it currently resides, in the middle of the pack.

I’m not sure what Coach Bickerstaff could’ve done to get Conley more rest on the West Coast road trip and the home game against Denver. The Jazz and Nuggets games were close, and the Grizzlies collapsed in the second halves of the Suns and Warriors games. As improved as the roster is, the Grizzlies can’t live without Conley when trying to come back or close out a game.

Conley remains the crux for the Grizzlies’ hopes for a meaningful playoff run. To me, his game looks like it’s almost back where it used to be, minus shooting and conditioning, but maybe he isn’t the player he used to be. How will it all play out?
¯\_(ツ)_/¯

Categories
Beyond the Arc Sports

Deflections: Playoff Schedule, Game Recap, Final Attendance Numbers

For the record: Zach Randolph was clearly last nights Man of the Match

  • LARRY KUZNIEWSKI
  • For the record: Zach Randolph was clearly last night’s Man of the Match

The Grizzlies kept hope alive for a few hours last night with an 86-70 win over the Utah Jazz at FedExForum, but that hope for homecourt ended when the Los Angeles Clippers squeaked out a road victory on what could have been the last night of NBA basketball in Sacramento. Now, the first round playoff series rematch between the Grizzlies and Clippers will open Saturday night in Los Angeles before returning to Memphis for games three and four next Thursday and Saturday. The series schedule (all times central):

Game 1 — Saturday, April 20th — Los Angeles — 9:30 p.m.
Game 2 — Monday, April 22nd — Los Angeles — 9:30 p.m.
Game 3 — Thursday, April 25th — Memphis — 8:30 p.m.
Game 4 — Saturday, April 27th — Memphis — 3:30 p.m.
Game 5 — Tuesday, April 30th — Los Angeles — TBD
Game 6 — Friday, May 3rd — Memphis — TBD
Game 7 — Sunday, May 5th — Los Angeles — TBD

Game Recap: After trading baskets with the Jazz in the first half, the Grizzlies brought down the hammer defensively in the third quarter — something we’ve seen quite a bit this season — holding the Jazz to 13 points in the quarter and building a lead that was never seriously threatened. The best news came up front, where Zach Randolph had his best game in months, with 25 points on 10-20 shooting and 19 rebounds in only 32 minutes. Randolph didn’t face the most stout defenders in Utah’s Al Jefferson and Paul Millsap, but his energy and relentlessness were encouraging nonetheless. It was a nice, confidence-boosting performance to enter the playoffs on. Off the bench, both Ed Davis (nine rebounds and four blocks in 22 minutes) and Darrell Arthur (5-9 shooting in 16 minutes on a flurry of mid-range jumpers) did what they do best well, and both at the same time. We haven’t seen that occurrence enough in the regular season, but a repeat might win a playoff game.

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Sports Sports Feature

Jazz Slap Hapless Griz, 118-94

What happens when the NBA’s highest-scoring offense meets the Grizzlies’ “Bluff City” defense? Well, in Salt Lake City Saturday night it was all that Jazz all over Memphis. And it was all over early.

A sidenote: In the Flyer office, there’s an interesting betting pool. Entrants have to predict which Memphis basketball team will win more games this season — the Memphis Tigers or the Grizzlies. Early betting has the Tigers coming out on top. If things continue as they went for the Griz tonight, those bettors will be in the money.

Memphis reverted to last-season’s NBA-worst-record form, and the Jazz, led by Carlos Boozer’s 31 points, took advantage, coasting to an easy win.

Rudy Gay led the home-team in scoring with 18; Pau Gasol added a very un-AllStar-like 11. Check out all the depressing stats, recap, etc. here.