Three takeaways from LeBron, Lakers wearing down, eliminating Warriors

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LOS ANGELES — It didn’t take long to see where this game was headed.

The Lakers opened Game 6 shooting 6-of-6 from the floor, while the Warriors were 3-of-13 in that same time. The Lakers were up by as many as 17 in the first quarter, and while the Warriors got within as few as four, it never felt like the Lakers would lose this game by early in the third quarter.

LeBron James was not going to let them.

LeBron and a balanced Lakers attack won Game 6 122-101, taking the series 4-2 and advancing to the Western Conference Finals (which start in Denver on Tuesday).

As for the Warriors…

“This is not a championship team. If it were, we’d be moving on,” coach Steve Kerr said.

Here are three takeaways from Game 6.

1) Vintage LeBron has best game of series, sets tone

Every time you think LeBron is running on empty and at age 38 and has to conserve his energy for selected bursts, he does things like drops a 30-point, nine rebound, nine assist close-out game. LeBron played his best, most efficient game of the series shooting 10-of-14 and getting to the line 11 times.

“I may have looked like I was conserving my energy but I was dead tired after every one of them games. Same with tonight,” LeBron said. “You know, you really don’t have the opportunity to conserve your energy versus Golden State because they always keep you on your heels.”

A lineup change to get more shooting on the floor — starting Dennis Schroder over Jared Vanderbilt — had the Lakers playing faster and with more space, and LeBron took advantage of that early to set the tone. He attacked the rim with ferocity, not settling, and he was 8-of-9 in the paint for the game (and 2-of-5 outside it).

The other Lakers fed on that, which leads to item #2.

2) The Laker depth won them this series

Los Angeles did to Golden State in this series what the Warriors have done to so many teams over the past eight seasons:

The Lakers threw so many shot creators at the Warriors that they couldn’t keep up.

While the Warriors’ role players struggled (more on that coming up, keep reading), the Laker’s depth was the key to winning the series. Darvin Ham had guys he could turn to and trust.

On Friday night that started with Austin Reaves, who finished with 23 points on 7-of-12 shooting. He also made the biggest shot of the night. While the Lakers had dominated the first half they led by just seven and were letting the Warriors hang around, and Golden State looked like they would get the last shot of the half. However, Klay Thompson shot oddly early, Donte DiVincenzo grabbed Thompson’s airball to go back up but got blocked by Davis, and then this happened.

That shot made it 10 at the half, and a couple of quick buckets to start the third — including another Reaves 3 — and it was clear this would not be the Warriors’ night.

It wasn’t just Reaves, however. D'Angelo Russell had 19, Lonnie Walker IV scored 13, and of course Davis had 17 points and, more importantly 20 boards. He owned the glass in this game.

All of it was too much for a shallow Warriors roster. Whoever Ham turned to hit shots this series and made plays.

Steve Kerr did not have that luxury.

3) Depth, defensive issues that haunted Warriors all season doomed them

Going into this series, we predicted one of the keys would be how LeBron and Davis would handle the pressure of playing big minutes every other night.

We should have asked, how would Klay Thompson and the Warriors handle it?

We got our answer in the opening minutes of Game 6, when the Warriors started 1-of-10 from 3 (and 4-of-18 overall). The Warriors were getting a ton of open shots early — they were grabbing offensive boards and kicking out to open shooters — but nothing would fall. It was clear their legs were worn down.

Part of that comes back to the depth issue — the Lakers were deep with players like Reaves, Russell, Dennis Schroder, and of course LeBron, who could create their own shot. The Warriors had Stephen Curry — who was impressive again in Game 6 — and guys like Klay Thompson and Jordan Poole who were struggling. As the Lakers realized their depth advantage, they targeted the Warriors’ guards.

“We wanted to put pressure on Steph and Klay and Jordan to have to guard and defend multiple actions,” Darvin Ham said. “Sort of try to take some energy out of their legs, forcing them to defend multiple plays, multiple actions.”

It’s one of the biggest issues for the Warriors going into this offseason. If they are going to keep this core together — and that appears to be the plan, based on their words and from league sources — then they have to get more depth around them, to carry more of the load. They had it a year ago, but players like Otto Porter left, Jordan Poole got his extension but lost all his confidence in the playoffs, and the “two timelines” thing proved to be a disaster. They just missed on James Wiseman at No.2 in the draft, and while Jonathan Kuminga might yet develop into a rotation player Kerr did not trust him to play this series. Moses Moody did play, but his impact was limited.

Stephen Curry is still a top-10 — maybe top-five — player in this league and capable of leading a team to a ring. But he needs a lot more help than he has right now.

Coach, front office moves update: Pistons make Williams hiring official, Borrego or Stotts to Bucks bench?

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There are far from settled across the NBA in both the coaching and front office circles, with news still leaking out daily. Here’s an update on things which have come to light in recent days.

• The Detroit Pistons made the hiring of Monty Williams official.

“A week ago, I was not sure what the future would hold,” Williams said in a statement, referencing reports he had planned to take a year away from coaching. “But, after talking with Tom [Gores, team principal owner] and Troy [Weaver, Pistons GM], I was excited hearing their vision for the Pistons going forward. They had a thoughtful plan and I am so appreciative of the emphasis they placed on the personal side of this business. They showed tremendous consideration for me and my family throughout this process.

“They also showed a commitment to success and doing things the right way,” he said. “As we discussed the team and expressed our collective goals, I realized that this would be a great opportunity for me to help a talented young team and build a strong culture here in Detroit. This is obviously a special place with a deep basketball history, and my family and I are looking forward to the opportunity to be a part of this city and organization.”

Williams has a six-year, $78.5 million contract with the team and that reportedly could grow to more than eight years, $100 million if incentives are hit. He was brought in to help build a culture of defense and discipline for a franchise with some nice young players but many questions.

• Kevin Ollie, the former NBA player and UConn coach who was in the mix for the Pistons’ job before Williams was hired, will be on the bench in Brooklyn next season.

• While Adrian Griffin has not officially signed his contract as the new Bucks head coach, he is sitting in on meetings running up to the draft and has essentially started the job, reports Eric Nehm and Shams Charania at The Athletic.

More interestingly, The Athletic reports the Bucks plan to put an experienced, veteran head coach next to the rookie Griffin, and are speaking to former Hornets head coach James Borrego and former Trail Blazers head coach Terry Stotts. Bringing in an experienced staff to put around Griffin is the smart move, with what we saw this season with Joe Mazzulla in Boston as an example of why this is the smart path.

• The Wizards have hired former Hawks head of basketball operations Travis Schlenk to be the right-hand man next to new Wizards president Michael Winger. This is a quality hire. Schlenk was rumored to have questioned Atlanta’s trade for Dejounte Murray to put next to Trae Young — a move ownership wanted — and by mid-season he was pushed out the door. Having Winger and Schlenk in the Washington front office is a lot of brain power, the question remains will they be given true freedom by owner Ted Leonsis to make moves for the long term and not prioritize just making the playoffs? The Wizards have a big offseason coming up with questions about new contracts/extensions for Kyle Kuzma and Kristaps Porzingis.

• Aaron Nelson, the training staff guru hired by the Pelicans away from the Suns in 2019 to help Zion Williamson and others, appears to be out of the mix in a restructured staff, reports Christian Clark at the Times-Picayune. Zion did not have a great relationship with Nelson, but the question is was Nelson the scapegoat for players issues beyond his control? From Clark’s article:

Williamson’s relationship with Nelson became strained during his rookie season. At different points, Williamson refused to work with him…

Brandon Ingram sat out 29 consecutive games with an injury the team described as a left toe contusion. Ingram kicked the back of a Memphis Grizzlies player’s foot in November. Two days after the injury, Pelicans coach Willie Green said Ingram was “day to day.” Days turned into weeks. Weeks turned into months. Ingram did not play again until Jan. 25 — exactly two months after hurting his toe…

Ingram has sometimes seemed unwilling to play through minor discomfort, to the point where some of his teammates have become frustrated with him over the past two years. The Pelicans thought they had solved their player care and performance problem by hiring Nelson. Four years later, Nelson’s time in charge of the department is over.

When the Pelicans have all their stars on the court, this is at the very least, a playoff team in the West and potentially a dangerous one. I’m not going to speculate on the internal dynamics of the Pelicans front office and training team, but after years of injury issues it’s fair to ask if this is a matter of the training staff, or is this on the players themselves?

Knicks’ Julius Randle undergoes ankle surgery, should return for training camp

2023 NBA Playoffs - 	New York Knicks v Miami Heat
Nathaniel S. Butler/NBAE via Getty Images
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The Knicks’ Julius Randle sprained his ankle with two weeks to go in the regular season. He returned from that in time to face the Cleveland Cavaliers and their massive front line in the playoffs, but he struggled in that series — 14.4 points a game on 33.8% shooting — and injured his ankle again in Game 5. He did make it back for the Heat series after missing Game 1 but was never fully himself.

Now, as he hinted at during the playoffs, Randle has undergone offseason arthroscopic surgery on his left ankle, reports Adrian Wojnarowski of ESPN. Randle is expected to be ready for the start of training camp in the fall.

Randle had an All-NBA season, averaging 25.1 points and 10 rebounds a game, and was part of the reason, along with Jalen Brunson, the Knicks were the No. 5 seed in the East last season.

Randle’s name has come up in trade rumors, mostly with him going out if the Knicks get in the mix for a superstar who becomes available this offseason. If someone such as Karl-Anthony Towns or Bradley Beal hits the market and New York wants to be in play, sending out Randle — set to make $25.6 million this season, with two more seasons on the books after that — is the way to match salaries.

Randle should be healthy and ready for training camp for whatever team he is on come September.

Watch Victor Wembanyama highlights from French league playoffs

TOPSHOT-BASKET-FRA-ELITE-ASVEL-METROPOLITANS 92
OLIVIER CHASSIGNOLE/AFP via Getty Images
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Give Victor Wembanyama and his handlers credit — they have got him out there playing. The management teams for a lot of future No. 1 picks would have their guy in bubble wrap by now, not doing anything but solo workouts in a gym, not wanting to risk any injury or risking his draft status.

Wembanyama — the 7’4″ prodigy on both ends of the floor — is on the court in the semi-finals of the French LNB league (the highest level of play in France). His team, Boulogne-Levallois Metropolitans 92, is one win away from the LNB Finals. While they lost on Friday to Lyon-Villeurbanne (the best-of-five series is now 2-1 Boulogne-Levallois), Wembanyama put up some highlights worth watching.

The San Antonio Spurs will select Wembanyama with the No. 1 pick in the NBA Draft (June 22). San Antonio — and possibly Wembanyama — will make their Summer League debut at the California Classic Summer League in Sacramento in early July, before heading on to Las Vegas for the larger, official Summer League. While Wembanyama is playing for his French team in the playoffs, how much the Spurs will play him in the summer leagues — if at all — remains to be seen (top players have been on the court less and less at Summer League in recent years).

Spoestra’s biggest Heat adjustment for Game 2? Play with more ‘toughness and resolve’

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DENVER — The days between NBA Finals are filled with talk of adjustments. After an ugly Game 1, much of that falls on the Heat — what can Erik Spoelstra draw up to get Jimmy Butler better lanes to attack? How must the Heat adjust their defense on Nikola Jokick?

Spoelstra sees it a little differently.

“Scheme is not going to save us,” he said.

His point is straightforward, the team’s best adjustment is simply to play better. More effort, more resolve. The trio of Max Strus, Caleb Martin and Duncan Robinson must do better than 2-of-23 from 3. The Heat can’t settle for jumpers like they did in Game 1, they have to attack the rim and draw some fouls, getting to the line (the Heat had just two free throws in Game 1). Their halfcourt defensive decisions have to be sharper. Those are not scheme-related things.

The Heat saw some of that in the second half, but Spoelstra made it clear the better last 24 minutes (particularly the last 12) was more about effort than the adjustments they made (such as playing more Haywood Highsmith and putting him on Jokić for a while).

“I never point to the scheme. Scheme is not going to save us,” Spoelstra said. “It’s going to be the toughness and resolve, collective resolve. That’s us at our finest, when we rally around each other and commit to doing incredibly tough things. That’s what our group loves to do more than anything, to compete, to get out there and do things that people think can’t be done.

“The efforts made that work in the second half, but we’re proving that we can do that with our man defense, too.”

Among the things many people don’t think can be done is the Heat coming back in this series. But Spoelstra is right, proving people wrong is what the Heat have done all playoffs.