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I want Mike D'Antoni to get revenge for this series...

Discussion in 'Houston Rockets: Game Action & Roster Moves' started by Mr. Dominant, May 2, 2017.

  1. lewlloydfan

    lewlloydfan Member

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    i thought horry was a dirty cheater during his laker and spur days
     
  2. joeson332

    joeson332 Member

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    main reason I was so nervous even with that lead, three buckets and the Spurs get that momentum back, even tho that lead would still be fairly large. Love how they never let up.
     
    Tfor3 likes this.
  3. joeson332

    joeson332 Member

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    I remeber seeing MDA come up to Harden after Lou Will drew that 3 point foul. Dont recall that one tho
     
  4. heypartner

    heypartner Member

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    Wrote this in the game thread but seems more appropriate here...

    Interesting stat: no D'Antoni team has even reached 10 3FG made in a playoff game vs Pops, until now. Gentry did though when Nash/Amare swept Pops in 2010, 4-0, after ending the Shaq experiment. Yes, they swept the Spurs, even with the Spurs Big Three each averaging 20ppg.

    You just know MDA was thinking for probably the past 10 years what he'd do differently vs Pops if he just got another chance. And maybe gave Gentry and Nash a few free tips.
     
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  5. SAT Prep

    SAT Prep Member

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    That's probably a good way to play against an old team. Pau, LA, Lee, Manu, Parker will not beat this team down the court throughout the entirety of the game. There were a bunch of plays where James got the inbound pass and passed it like 45-50 feet to an Ariza near the corner three. I mean, barring some half-time snowballs, these guys are just going to get gassed. And this was happening after we would get scored on. I have a feeling we'll be seeing a lot more Simmons and Dwayne.

    As an aside, that was the most serene I have ever felt watching a Rockets playoff game. Like Buddah-level.
     
  6. Mr. Dominant

    Mr. Dominant Member

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    Maaan, the feelz.
     
  7. Fantasma Negro

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    The Agony of Mike D’Antoni
    Danny Chau

    The Gregg Popovich postseason experience is a rich text. One fan at the AT&T Center held up a sign that read, “GIMME SOME NASTY,” a callback to Pop’s infamously spirited rallying cry during a timeout … five years ago.

    [​IMG]

    Time flies when you’re consistently great. This time of year, the Spurs, even in defeat, seem to exist on a different plane from everyone else in the race. Some teams flip a switch to find the best version of their present selves. The Spurs flip a switch and suddenly have access to an entire database of Pop’s learned experience. The feeling of déjà vu can be overwhelming watching the Spurs. They are The Simpsons of the NBA postseason — these two decades of sustained success means there isn’t anything they haven’t seen or endured.

    Will Mike D’Antoni Get Over the Gregg Popovich Hump?

    A brief history of their rivalrytheringer.com
    With this second-round series, Mike D’Antoni has faced off against Pop in five of San Antonio’s 20 winning seasons, serving as a minor inconvenience to Popovich’s enterprises for a quarter of Pop’s playoff life. D’Antoni has yet to pull off a single series win. Those ultimately lopsided Suns-Spurs duels in the mid-2000s were a protozoan representation of modern NBA basketball, and helped shape its parameters. It was only fitting that they’d face off once again a decade later, armed with toys, new and old, fighting the same war. The personnel may have changed, but the themes that define the clash remain mostly intact. Which means, after five games, Pop once again has the upper hand. It’s almost cruel.

    After 20 consecutive seasons of playoff excellence, San Antonio’s moments of brilliance don’t blur together so much as they fold on top of one another. Their moments become replicates. Manu Ginobili’s game-saving block on James Harden at the end of Game 5 was the best version of Looper, sure, but it also gave me traumatizing flashbacks. It wasn’t the first time Manu had crushed a D’Antoni team in the final seconds:


    This was nine years ago, in an agenda-setting Game 1 of the Suns and Spurs’ first-round series (which Phoenix was favored to win). It was vintage Ginobili — in isolation, with off-kilter staccato steps, and an off-balance finish in traffic. It was the kind of play that Pop had learned to live with from Manu.

    “I went for it,” Ginobili said. “But very risky. It was a risky play.” Manu actually said that after Game 5 on Tuesday night, but it’s essentially been the mission statement Ginobili has carried with him through time.

    That off-balance layup in 2008 was the first strike of the hammer that sent a nail through D’Antoni’s tenure with Phoenix. D’Antoni went east after the Suns’ first-round exit, while Popovich siphoned some of his counterpart’s offensive philosophies and injected them into the Spurs’ aging core. Pop adapted; D’Antoni, in Houston, mutated. The D’Antoni-Popovich war is a moving history. But the ghosts from their old battles still linger.

    Three Unlikely Spurs Won the Best Game of the Playoffs
    Manu, Danny, and Simmons — just like Pop planned ittheringer.com

    The Rockets’ 110–107 loss to the Spurs in Game 5 happened in a stunning overtime, but a familiar sinking feeling that all Mike D’Antoni devotees are familiar with began to percolate in me with about four minutes to go in the fourth quarter. Houston had held San Antonio scoreless for nearly six minutes, and had only a three-point lead to show for it. As Steve Nash would’ve said in a past incarnation of this team: we weren’t built for this. The Rockets had technically won the fourth-quarter battle, 16–15. But they weren’t built for rock fights, period. This wasn’t D’Antoni’s game — not then, not now.

    “Playing the Suns is like being a passenger in a car going 75 miles an hour,” former Nets coach and extremely safe driver Lawrence Frank told writer Jack McCallum in Seven Seconds or Less, a deeply embedded story about D’Antoni’s Phoenix Suns published 10 years ago. “When you’re driving, like they are, you feel comfortable. But when you’re a passenger, you’re uncomfortable. The trick is how to figure out to be a driver. But they don’t let you do that.” Despite how close the game was the entire way through, and despite their 15-point advantage from behind the arc, the Rockets lost control of the wheel. James Harden, D’Antoni’s perfect avatar, looked hollow in the deciding minutes of extra time. He was in no fit state to drive.

    D’Antoni deflected a question specifically regarding Harden’s fatigue during the postgame presser. “Fatigue was in everybody,” he said. “[It was] 16 to 15 in the fourth quarter — everybody was tired.” It was an answer intended to level the playing field, and as a coach, it was the right response to give: if everyone was tired, then no one person needs to be singled out. But playoff basketball is not egalitarian. Impact is weighted. The best D’Antoni teams had the same fundamental flaws: an extremely short rotation, and an exposed vertebra. At his most successful, he finds a singular player capable of serving as the backbone to his organizing principles — but it comes at a price. In a battered Harden, D’Antoni is confronted by the specter of his past: an overclocked Steve Nash, whose burden of being a one-man system always caught up to him in the postseason as his body broke down.

    The winner of Game 5 in a best-of-seven series has historically gone on to win the series 82 percent of the time. Mike D’Antoni finds himself in all-too-familiar territory. Time is starting to feel like a flat circle with him, but there are several factors that could finally change his fortunes against Popovich this time around. One, Tim Duncan is retired. Two, Kawhi Leonard, while vowing to play in Game 6, is physically compromised. And three, when you are a team that attempts nearly 43 3-pointers a game in a series, you will continue to submit yourself to entropy.

    There is a lot that Gregg Popovich seems capable of controlling, but he can’t stop a random hailstorm once it starts. In any case, Game 6 will see more of the same from the Rockets; as tired as they may be, they’ll hope that the ball finds energy. They’ll play a short stack, and they’ll let it fly without inhibition. It’s a D’Antoni team. They’re not built any other way.
    https://theringer.com/2017-nba-playoffs-mike-dantoni-gregg-popovich-rockets-spurs-384ca07b8529
     
  8. elmotsangtt

    elmotsangtt Member

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    Expand the rotation for troy, sam and harrel and hope kawaii rest in game 6. Move ryno to 5 and start eric. It is possible
     

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