Monday, May 7th, 2012 at 9:45 am  |  152 responses

Post Up: On The Brink

New York avoids a Heat sweep while Boston, Philly and the Lakers go up 3-1.

Sixers 89, Bulls 82 (PHI leads 3-1)

The Bulls dropped another close game on the road in Philadelphia to the Sixers and are now just one loss away from being eliminated in the first round and having the dubious distinction of being the fifth No. 1 seed to lose to a No. 8 seed.

Philly knocked off Chicago 89-82 to go up 3-1 in Game 4 of their first-round, best-of-seven series and the scene shifts to Chicago for Game 5 on Tuesday at the United Center in what could very well be the last time NBA basketball is played in the Windy City until October.

After losing Derrick Rose in Game 1, the Bulls were also without Joakim Noah, who suffered a severely sprained ankle in the third quarter of Game 3 and kept him on the sideline sporting a walking boot for Game 4. His season, like Rose’s, is most likely over, since it’s highly unlikely he’ll be ready to go on Tuesday with such a quick turnaround.

Carlos Boozer led Chicago in scoring with 23 points and 11 rebounds and Taj Gibson provided energy off the bench with 14 points and 12 rebounds. And CJ Watson made an appearance (finally) in Game 4 after going scoreless in Game 3. He put up 17 points but still struggled with his shot (5-18).

For the Sixers, Jrue Holiday has been a problem that the Bulls haven’t been able to solve since Game 2. Holiday struggled mightily in the game with his shooting going 7-23 from the field, but he hit back-to-back three-pointers late in the fourth quarter that pushed Philadelphia’s lead from 1 to 7—that proved to be the dagger in the ball game. He finished the game with 20 points, 8 rebounds and 6 assists.

And Spencer Hawes continued his strong play, as he registered 22 points and grabbed 8 rebounds, following up a 21-point, 9-rebound performance in Game 3.

Game 4 was a must-win for Chicago. A victory would’ve evened the series and given them life going back to their home court for Game 5, but a loss pretty much spells their doom. It’s no longer a matter of “if” the Sixers can beat the Bulls, but “when.” —Bryan Crawford (@_BryanCrawford)

Knicks 89, Heat 87 (MIA leads 3-1)

First it was a stagnant Dwyane Wade-Chris Bosh pick-and-roll, then it was a botched Wade dribble-drive, then it was a contested Wade fade-away, and then it was over. Whatever the hell it was, the Miami Heat’s final play was a massive failure, and the Knicks, for the first time in a few hundred centuries—or 11 years, if you’re into specifics—outscored their postseason opponent and earned a playoff victory. Huzzah!

The game’s final few minutes were especially chaotic. Carmelo Anthony (41 points, 12 of which came in the fourth) hit shot after shot, breaking only to find Mike Bibby (!), who drained a three that gave the Knicks an 84-81 lead. But LeBron James (27 points) consistently kept the Heat close, tying things up with a trey and then putting his squad up with a 3-point play that he converted while barreling down the lane and finishing with a certain finesse-and-strength combo that at this point deserves the adjective “LeBronesque.” Another one of those aforementioned Melo jumpers gave the Knicks the lead, and then Miami’s final-play fiasco went down, and suddenly we’re headed back to Florida for Game 5 with the Heat leading the series 3-1.

“For me personally, I would have loved to have the ball, but as a team we win games together and lose games together,” LeBron said after the inevitable question about the last shot. “That’s all that matters.”

As much as the Knicks’ fanbase can and will rightfully celebrate the playoff win, it’ll also lament the loss of starting point guard Baron Davis, who went down in the third quarter with a dislocated right patella. Without Davis, the Knicks turned to Bibby, who was surprisingly solid, and JR Smith, who shot 3-15 and was, ya know, not so solid. Elsewhere, Amar’e Stoudemire returned, and was impressively effective, racking up 20 and 10.

Davis will almost definitely miss the remainder of the series, which’ll fuel talk of the return of a certain New York point guard who’s been sidelined for the past month following knee surgery. At this point, given the late-March injury that kept Jeremy Lin off the floor and out of the news for the past month, Linsanity feels like an isolated incident, a tornado that stormed through Manhattan and left rubble in the form of replica jerseys and bootleg t-shirts.

The Knicks and Heat face off next on Wednesday night, which is more than enough time for the hype machine to get Lin’s name back in the minds of optimistic Knicks fans hoping for one more miracle out of a 2011-12 session that’s featured one or two of ‘em. No team in NBA history has fought back from down 3-0 to advance to the subsequent round, but a little historical context won’t cloud the optimism of a fan base that doesn’t appear ready to waive goodbye to this dizzying rollercoaster of a season just yet.

Knicks coach Mike Woodson said Lin’s status remains uncertain, and that we’ll be receiving more information on the matter shortly, but the consensus is that by Wednesday, Lin should be good to go.

Which means: Like or not, some version of Linsanity is on its way back to town. Prepare accordingly. —Adam Figman (@afigman)

Celtics 101, Hawks 79 (BOS leads 3-1)

As much as side stories from Boston’s side (Ray Allen’s health) and Atlanta’s (Josh Smith’s return after missing Game 3; Al Horford’s first action since January) tried to captivate headlines on Sunday, this game boiled down to one match-up: Paul Pierce vs. Joe Johnson. Whichever all-star could play with the most urgency and execute would win the contest. Pierce, who’d averaged 23 points and 7 boards in the series, needed a good night to help the Celtics take a dominating 3-1 lead. Johnson, who’d had nights of 11, 22 and 29, had to be colossal for the Hawks to even the series at 2-2.

From the gate, it was clear that only Pierce got the above memo. It didn’t matter whose hand was in his face, Paul would nail the first-half shot. Floaters. Fadeaways. Fifteen-footers. The flightless Hawks had no answer. Things were going so well for Boston’s future Hall of Famer that TNT analyst Reggie Miller had to chime in: “He’s beautiful to watch. You’re watching greatness in [Number] 34 in white.” In fact, the only way Atlanta could slow Pierce down was with an inadvertent trip from Josh Smith towards the end of the first half. Didn’t matter. By that time, Boston was already nearing a 20-point lead. Pierce finished with 24 points in just 17 minutes.

As for Joe Johnson, we’re not sure what his issue was. Though he always wears a placid look about the face, Joe seemed especially uninspired in this one. Reggie tried to keep the talk around the Hawks guard optimistic with a “When he’s engaged, when he’s tuned in [he’s good]” line, but there was no helping this pathetic performance. 9 points, 3 assists and 1 rebound in a crucial Game 4? Seriously? And the fact that Johnson had fewer shot attempts (8) than the super-rusty Horford (10) shows an inexcusable lack of fire.

The Hawks All-Star and the rest of a bruised Hawks squad will have one last chance to stop Pierce, Rajon Rondo (20 points, 16 dimes) and company on Tuesday in Game 5. Oh, and Joe, just in case you decide to show up for that one, the game’s at 8 at Philips Arena in downtown Atlanta. —DeMarco Williams (@demarcowill)

Lakers 92, Nuggets 88 (LAL leads 3-1)

Ramon Sessions and Steve Blake hit clutch 3-point baskets in the final minute to help the Lakers hold on for a 92-88 victory over the Nuggets in Game 4. With 48 seconds left in the game, Pau Gasol found Sessions in the corner for a wide open look, giving LA a three-point cushion. Following an offensive goaltending call against Andre Miller, the Lakers went for the dagger on the next offensive sequence with Kobe Bryant finding Blake in the opposite corner for a three, putting the game out of reach. Blake finished with 10 points in 29 minutes of game action off the bench. Bryant praised him after the game. “He’s done it for us in the past,” Bryant said. “These moments don’t scare him.”  Bryant improved on his game 3 struggles, adding 22 points, 8 rebounds and 6 assists in Game 4. Andrew Bynum posted 19 points and Jordan Hill made a nice contribution off the bench with 12 points and 11 rebounds.

The Lakers grabbed 19 offensive rebounds and did a great job containing Denver big men JaVale McGee and Kenneth Faried, holding them to a combined 14 points and 11 rebounds. ”Losing always gets old. Losing is not fun. I’m not unhappy with my team, I’m not happy with where we’re at, but we still have a series to play,” Denver coach George Karl said. Danilo Gallinari led Denver with 20 points and Miller added 15. Game 5 is Tuesday night in L.A. —Nima Zarrabi (@NZbeFree)

Fan of the Night: This lady is a kook. Then again, she was wide open for three—c’mon Ty, pass the rock!

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  • http://slamonline.com Allenp

    Good point NBK
    I think of Kidd and Payton as contemporaries, but they aren’t. Kidd is in the Iverson/Kobe generation.
    Should he bump Iverson or Kobe?
    Now that’s a good question

  • Da-Meat-Hook

    My bad Myung, I thought we were doing decades instead of draft classes.

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    The real problem with this is when all these guys hit their primes. Like take Kidd and Hill for example. They should technically be grouped together because they were drafted together. But Hill hit his prime years before Kidd did. And Kidd’s prime lasted long after Hill’s was over. This is too hard without some kind of guidelines lol

  • http://cnbc.com JTaylor21

    I think JKidd should replace AI.

  • http://Roosterteeth.com Caboose

    Hrmmm…I’ve gotta take AI over Kidd. Kidd will push a good team over the top, but prime Iverson might have pushed the Bobcats to the playoffs this year.

  • http://slamonline.com Datkid

    he should bump neither…. and I like GP. although the offensive flow most likely improves with one gone. unless iverson finally on a team with equally talented people decides to simply pass instead of score… hmmm

  • http://Roosterteeth.com Caboose

    Just saying, at their best, Payton only averaged 1.1 assists more than Iverson. And only .5 more for his career.

  • http://idunkonthem.blogspot.com albie1kenobi

    word to nbk on the guideline. i feel that we created multiple generations from the 1990-present because we are familiar with them. So in a sense we created expansion teams that water-down the talent. Gen I consisted of 5 best players in the first 3 decades of the league, so this is quite skewer.
    nevertheless, props to Caboose for bringin up this fun thought exercise. i’m totally reminiscing the “forgotten” 90s.

  • http://cnbc.com JTaylor21

    JKidd’s 107 trip dubs in the RS and 11 in the Postseason are more impressive than anything AI ever accomplished.

  • http://Roosterteeth.com Caboose

    Word albie. Let’s try this then, split the game into 4 generations then you guys pick your own “All Gen” team.
    Gen I: Players drafted before 1968
    Gen II: Players drafted between 1968-1982
    Gen III: Players drafted between 1983-1995
    Gen IV: Players drafted between 1996 and present.
    That should be a challenge.

  • http://www.slamonline.com Nick Tha Quick

    ^^ JT with the blasphemous speech in many circles (although I fully agree).

  • http://slamonline.com Datkid

    who guards westbrook lakeshow? He can probably swing a series by himself

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    .Gen 1: Frazier/West, Robertson, Baylor, Russell, Chamberlain.
    .Gen 2: Magic, Julius, Bird, Moses, Kareem
    .Gen 3: Stockton, Jordan, Pippen, Hakeem, Shaq
    .Gen 4: Iverson, Bryant, James, Garnett, Duncan.

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    that is how it would break out too me with Caboose’s guidelines.

  • http://Roosterteeth.com Caboose

    Personally, my teams would then be:
    Gen I: Oscar, West, Baylor, Russell, Wilt
    Gen II: Magic, Erving, Bird, Moses, Kareem
    Gen III: Stockton, Jordan, Pippen, Olajuwon, Shaq
    Gen IV: Iverson, Kobe, LeBron, Garnett, Duncan

  • http://Roosterteeth.com Caboose

    Nbk, we totally just picked the exact same teams. And I honestly didn’t see yours before posting, just tapping away on my iPhone.

  • http://cnbc.com JTaylor21

    GenI- Oscar/Frazier/West/Russell/Wilt
    GenII- Isiah/Magic/Larry/Moses/Kareem
    GenIII- Stockton/MJ/Barkley/Malone/Hakeem
    GenIV- Paul/AI/Kobe/LeBron/Duncan

  • http://Roosterteeth.com Caboose

    JT: you’re missing Shaq.

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    LOL that’s awesome.
    .
    I would put Frazier in over West. Because Frazier gave West 36 and 19 for the 1970 title. So there is a slight difference, I put West in there because just about everyone considers him a better overall player.

  • http://cnbc.com JTaylor21

    KG came along before 96 (95 draft)

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    I would love to see Gen 1 vs Gen 3. I would never be able to pick a winner.

  • http://Roosterteeth.com Caboose

    Ah nice JT, missed that one. Swap Dirk in for me then.

  • http://cnbc.com JTaylor21

    Caboose, I know. I just feel that Malone was better than Shaq in the 90s. 2000s were a different story though.

  • http://Roosterteeth.com Caboose

    Oh no no, not when they peaked. Otherwise you’d be taking Magic and Bird in basically their sophomore year. Take every player at his prime, the dates are just for qualifying for the gens.

  • http://cnbc.com JTaylor21

    Don’t sleep on Gen II though. They have 3 of the best all-time at their respective positions.

  • http://slamonline.com LakeShow

    Sessions and Kobe. Blake occasionally. Maybe MWP or Barnes. It doesn’t matter. Like I said he is going to get his, but I think he will “get his” at any cost. Including OKC losing with him going out guns a blazing.
    Your right he can swing a series. In both directions.
    I honestly would not put money on any of these “era” teams in a 7 game series. Anyone of those teams could win against the others under the right circumstances. nbk’s gen 3 looks so deadly, but then you look at his gen 2 and it’s like, weeeeeeell, maybe…. Then you look at his gen 4 and that one is as deadly as the others imo. I would take Kidd on the gen 4 team over Ivy. Only because they could use the passing and organizing Kidd would provide. Iverson is basically a small Kobe offensively. (completely different players, but provide similar offense)
    Unless LeBron wanted to fully take on PG duties then AI, and Kobe with Bron playing point is absolutely ridiculous.

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    Ehh, I knew KG was drafted in 95 i just ignored it.

  • http://cnbc.com JTaylor21

    Oh…ok, my fault. Shaq replaces Malone.

  • Myung

    Gen 4: nash kobe lebron dirk duncan (hardest to omit: durant)

  • http://Roosterteeth.com Caboose

    Not to make this an anti-Bron rant, but look at the players Jordan went through in his generation vs the league today. I’m probably rewriting history a bit, but Jordan’s league looks stronger (from the top down view) than LeBron’s.

  • Myung

    Gen 4: stockton mj pippen Karl Malone hakeem (hardest to omit: shaq)

  • http://Roosterteeth.com Caboose

    Myung, you’ve got prime Malone over prime Shaq?

  • Myung

    Gen 1: before my time so no comment. gen 2 was slightly before my time too (followed the nba in the mid 80s) but since i saw a few of them, i will go magic, zeke, bird, doc, kareem (hardest to omit: Moses… and Dominique… jk).

  • Myung

    I guess im trying to not put in two centers. Btw shaq had a tremendous prime, but Karl Malone is statistically the best pf of all time. Duncan dwarfs him w the rings and will continue to compile stats and should be considered the best pf of all time but Karl is a close second. i will still take Karl over shaq. second leading scorer in nba history. ridiculously healthy in his first 18 seasons ( missed 10 total games).

  • http://Roosterteeth.com Caboose

    But Wilt is statistically the best player of all time. I think Olajuwon could play the 4 next to Shaq; his defense was so damn good. Put it this way, I say Stockton has a ring(s) if you replace Malone with Shaq.

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    Hakeem did play the 4 for a few years. So there is that.

  • http://abcnews.com BigBlue

    Baron Davis is out for 12 months. Damn. Knicks got the injury bug something awful.

  • Anthony

    before the gen I II III IV discussion, you guys were talking about T-Mac playing with Shaq and how many rings they couldve possibly get, but what about Duncan having the same supporting cast than Shaq, any thought on this ?

  • http://www.kb24.com The Seed

    Can’t believe some DUMMY is comparing TMac to Kobe, I watched Tmac play and he was a ball hog who didn’t play defense, put up bad shots and choked over and over again. being up 3-1 losing to Pistons. Also the Rockets were better when he was hurt. Tmac had Yao and did nothing with him and Tmac is so overrated to be compared. More like Tmac compared to Anferenee Hardaway. Tmac wouldn’t even compare himself to Kobe. Tmac on the Lakers would have been worst. Tmac has no work ethic, been reported, no post game, never wanted to be the best and settled for jumpers too much. Some of yall need to rewatch Tmac play, ALSO NOBODY DURING THAT TIME EVER ON NBA BROADCASTS OR ANALYST EVER COMPARED TMAC TO KOBE, wow someone must hate Kobe. HE GOT THOSE ringsssss and he got a ring as being the only Hall of Famer on his team getting to two multiple rings. BOOK IT!!

  • http://Roosterteeth.com Caboose

    Anthony: That’s a really good question. Honestly, I’d say probably close to the same result.

  • IAMORANGE4EVER

    First off, @Max LOL at that video of the Knicks fan. As for the Knicks game 4 win, it felt good. They have another game to play. I’m thankful for that. Love that these Knicks, despite all the adversity they’ve been through, simply won’t go quietly. Melo made all the right moves on Sunday. Amar’e played with a lot of heart with his hand all stitched together. Can’t believe he played and grabbed a double double. I do feel bad for Baron Davis though…couldn’t even watch the replay.

  • MeloMan15

    @Fatlever… they won 4 games in a row to make sure they would get into the playoffs… once they clinched hat they started tanking, to avoid miami… and why would the knicks want miami, they lost to them 3 times in the regular season. Clearly they wud have prefereed the bulls… they just didnt wanna sissy out and lose games on purpose

  • jinolin

    I don’t get how you can put the Stockton/Malone combo together for their respected generations, when both guys couldn’t get it done when it… I’d go with Isiah Thomas at the point for Gen III.
    This is open to opinions.

  • MeloMan15

    As for t-mac… the curse was set as soon as he left the raptors… could’ve had something great with vince but wanted to be the man, and it’s backfired his whole career… in terms of winning

  • http://cnbc.com JTaylor21

    So you’re going to sit there and act like Kobe’s teams never choked big leads before? How bout losing to PHX in 06 after being up 3-1? How bout losing after being up 24 to the Celtics (largest comeback in the NBA Finals since ’71) in the 08 Finals? How bout losing by the largest margin in NBA Final’s history to the same celtic team? Kobe fans are funny, it seems like they suffer from selective ammensia with regards to Kobe’s playoff failures.

  • http://slamonline.com Mars

    Happy for the Knicks, but we all know that series is over as too is Baron’s season. Man I love BD’s heart, so sad to see him go down like that. Get well soon Baron Davis. Almost as ugly as Shaun Livingston’s injury. :0(

  • http://Slamonline.com nbk

    Isiah would be in Magic’s generation. Not Stockton’s.

  • http://www.t-mac.com/tmac/index unf*ckwitable

    Sorry for bringing this up again but i think possibly yesterday in a thread i may have offended/angered some people with some comments on racism(i didnt use any racial slurs). Anyone it goes against what i believe in so if i did offend anyone( i wasnt trying too but thats no excuse) im sorry.

    Someone called me something which got me heated and then i just made myself look silly and childish.

  • http://slamonline.com Allenp

    It’s not blasphemous to think Kidd is better than Iverson. I’m one of the biggest Iverson fans in the world, and I think that’s a decent position to have. I don’t know if I agree, but I think it’s a legitimate belief to hold.

  • http://juan.garcia@computershare.com Miami Joe

    Whatt a bunch of f’n nerds. Sounds like a Dungeons & Dragons meeting up in here.

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