Butler drops funny four-word reaction to Hield's huge Game 7

Butler drops funny four-word reaction to Hield's huge Game 7 originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

After all the teasing Buddy Hield has endured from Warriors teammate Jimmy Butler, the Golden State guard got the last laugh in Game 7 on Sunday night.

Hield was the star of the Warriors’ 103-89 win over the Houston Rockets at Toyota Center, scoring 33 points on 12-of-15 shooting with an NBA record-tying nine 3-pointers as Golden State advanced to the Western Conference semifinals — much to the dismay of Butler, who loves giving Hield a hard time.

“I plead the Fifth,” Butler told Bob Fitzgerald and Kelenna Azubuike on “Warriors Postgame Live” after the win, who had asked the star forward if Hield is included now, a nod to Butler’s viral Instagram post where he thanked all the Warriors, “excluding Buddy,” after missing their Game 3 win with a pelvic injury.

It’s all in good fun, of course. Butler and Hield love ribbing each other after games, and the latter served it right back during his postgame press conference.

“Jimmy didn’t say nothing to me yet,” Hield told reporters. “I’m not going to get on Jimmy yet; I’m going to keep it calm, but today I had to fill his role for him in the first half. He was slacking. But we all weathered the storm, and it was a great team win.”

And the shenanigans didn’t stop there. Hield welcomed Butler to the podium after his own presser was over, trolling his teammate every step of the way.

But after Butler got in a few more joking digs on Hield, the six-time NBA All-Star heaped praise upon the unofficial MVP of Game 7.

“Buddy was huge,” Butler told reporters. “But we know the type of basketball player he is, and he’s a tough cover for sure whenever he’s making shots. But he made so many right plays on the defensive side of the ball where it needed to go. Buddy was really, really, really, really big for us tonight.”

They really do love each other.

Luckily for Dub Nation, they’ll be treated to an entirely new NBA playoff series featuring plenty more of Butler and Hield’s hijinks. The Warriors now head to Minnesota for a best-of-seven series against Anthony Edwards and the Timberwolves, starting with Game 1 at 6:30 p.m. PT on Tuesday.

Download and follow the Dubs Talk Podcast

Buddy Hield stunningly ties NBA playoff Game 7 3-point record in win vs. Rockets

Buddy Hield stunningly ties NBA playoff Game 7 3-point record in win vs. Rockets originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Buddy Hield had the game of his life in the Warriors’ biggest contest of the 2024-25 NBA season.

The veteran guard made nine 3-pointers in the Warriors’ remarkable 103-89 win over the Houston Rockets on Sunday night at Toyota Center, tying the NBA record for the most triples in a Game 7.

Hield tied the record held by former Warriors guard Donte DiVincenzo, who accomplished the feat as a member of the New York Knicks in last year’s Eastern Conference semifinals against the Indiana Pacers.

Hield’s 3-point barrage is exactly what the Warriors needed after searching for scoring options in the Game 5 and Game 6 losses to the Rockets.

In an otherworldly shooting display, the 32-year-old made six 3-pointers in the first half and had a game-high 22 points at halftime, pacing the Warriors to a 51-39 lead.

Hield didn’t cool off in the second half.

His record-tying 3-pointer came with 18.7 seconds remaining in the fourth quarter and helped cement the Warriors’ victory.

The shot gave Hield a game-high — and playoff career-high — 33 points.

On a night when Steph Curry didn’t have the hot hand, Hield picked up the slack and tied an NBA record along the way.

Download and follow the Dubs Talk Podcast

What we learned as Steph Curry, Buddy Hield lead Warriors to Game 7 over Rockets

What we learned as Steph Curry, Buddy Hield lead Warriors to Game 7 over Rockets originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

HOUSTON – Survive and advance. The Warriors withstood a Game 7 slog Sunday at the Toyota Center, beating the Houston Rockets 103-89 to avoid a three-games-to-one collapse and advance to the second round of the NBA playoffs, where they’ll face the Minnesota Timberwolves. 

Game 1 is Tuesday night at the Target Center in Minnesota. 

The Warriors improved to 9-3 in elimination games under coach Steve Kerr, and 5-1 on the road. They’ve never lost in the first round with Kerr at the helm.

The Warriors have faced the Rockets in five playoff series and have now beaten them all five times.

Steph Curry was bottled up early on, but exploded in the fourth quarter, totaling 22 points, 10 rebounds, seven assists, two steals and two blocks. The rest of the Warriors’ Big Three came up huge, too. Jimmy Butler had a near triple-double of 20 points, eight rebounds and seven assists. Draymond Green scored 16 points to go with his six rebounds and five assists.

To beat the Rockets, the Warriors needed someone outside of that trio to step up. Buddy Hield remained in the starting lineup and answered the call, scoring 22 points in the first half and finishing with a game-high 33 overall.

A tone was set early by the Warriors defensively. When the Rockets began mounting a comeback in the third quarter, the Warriors quieted the storm and outscored them 33-27 in the fourth quarter. Experience and championship pedigree played out in front of our eyes.

Here are three takeaways from the Warriors’ Game 7 win.

Dray Day

As the majority of Warriors remained getting shots up at shootaround, Green was deep in conversation with Kerr. Few words were spoken by Draymond, listening deeply and nodding along to Kerr’s message. He was locked in, and it showed to start his sixth Game 7. 

After forcing a travel on Rockets center Alperen Sengun, Green followed by making a cutting layup for the first two points of the game. He then perfectly contested Rockets shooting guard Jalen Green at the rim and made a three at the top of the arc to give the Warriors a quick 5-0 lead. Green in the first quarter played nine minutes for the Warriors and was a plus-7 with eight points and three rebounds.

Green in the first half was a plus-14, and Sengun was a minus-13. Defensively, he was all over the place and aggressively stayed vertical whenever the Rockets challenged. Offensively, he was under control and was the Warriors’ second-leading scorer. 

The Warriors needed an all-time performance from Green, and he knew it. Green stifled the much bigger Sengun, and did more than his part offensively. Green finished as a plus-18, and Sengun was a minus-12.

Trust In Buddy

Kerr already had used four different starting lineups through the first six games of the series. His first five couldn’t be the same Sunday since Gary Payton II was ruled out due to a bad illness. There were plenty of question marks surrounding what Kerr would do with Hield, too. 

Hield only scored four points in the Warriors’ Game 5 loss, and then didn’t score a single point in their Game 6 loss. Yet Kerr kept him in the starting lineup for Game 7. And it sure paid off. 

The longtime sharpshooter found his hot hand again, lighting up the Rockets’ defense even more than he did when Hield scored 17 points in Game 3 and 15 in Game 4. Hield in the first quarter alone was up to 13 points, beating the buzzer from 42 feet to give the Warriors a 23-19 lead. Through the first half, Hield scored 22 of the Warriors’ 51 points, going 8 of 9 from the field and 6 of 7 on threes, all while Curry was held to just three points. 

Hield in the third quarter took just one shot, missing a three, but then cashed in on his first try in the fourth quarter to give the Warriors a 10-point lead. He scored another 11 in the fourth quarter, including three 3-pointers. His 22 points in the first half made all the difference, and were Hield’s most points ever for a playoff game.

Steph’s Deeper Impact 

He missed his first five shots, he only had three points at halftime and his impact still couldn’t be ignored. Curry in the first two quarters led all players in defensive rebounds (six), assists (five), steals (one), blocked shots (two) and plus/minus (plus-16). That’s what superstars do when their main power is being zapped. 

There’s also no doubt players like Hield were a beneficiary of all the attention the Rockets were putting on following Curry’s every move. His gravity at 37 years old with an injured right thumb is still as real as ever. 

But the Rockets came to life in the third quarter, cutting the lead down to three at one point, and Curry still couldn’t get going offensively. The Warriors held an eight-point lead entering the fourth quarter, and Curry immediately hushed the home crowd, first driving by Jabari Smith Jr. for a layup and then draining a deep three on the first two possessions of the fourth quarter.

Curry was scoreless in the first quarter, limited to three points in the first half and was at eight points through three quarters. The fourth quarter is winning time, and Steph put the Rockets to sleep with 14 points over the final 12 minutes.

Night Night, Houston.

Download and follow the Dubs Talk Podcast

Warriors avoid collapse, advance to West semis by beating Rockets in Game 7

Warriors avoid collapse, advance to West semis by beating Rockets in Game 7 originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Warriors made it more complicated than it needed to be, but they are rocketing to the Western Conference semifinals.

No. 7-seeded Golden State completed the first-round NBA playoff series upset of the Houston Rockets on Sunday at Toyota Center, beating the No. 2 seed 103-89 in Game 7.

Golden State built a 3-1 series lead but coughed up Game 5 in Houston and Game 6 in San Francisco before stabilizing the ship to win Game 7.

Surprisingly, Buddy Hield led the way with 33 points, while Jimmy Butler chipped in 20 points to help the Warriors advance.

Steph Curry was cold for most of the game but got hot in the second half and finished with 22 points. Draymond Green also bounced back with 16 huge points.

Golden State will head to Minnesota to take on the No. 6-seeded Timberwolves in the second round, with Game 1 scheduled for Tuesday night at Target Center.

Here’s the schedule for the Warriors-Timberwolves series:

Game 1: Tuesday, May 6 — Warriors at Timberwolves — 6:30 p.m. PT — TNT
Game 2: Thursday, May 8 — Warriors at Timberwolves — 5:30 p.m. PT — TNT
Game 3: Saturday, May 10 — Timberwolves at Warriors — 5:30 p.m. PT — ABC
Game 4: Monday, May 12 — Timberwolves at Warriors — 7 p.m. PT — ESPN
Game 5*: Wednesday, May 14 — Warriors at Timberwolves — Time TBD — TNT
Game 6*: Sunday, May 18 — Timberwolves at Warriors — Time TBD — TV TBD
Game 7*: Tuesday, May 20 — Warriors at Timberwolves — 5:30 p.m. PT — ESPN

NBC Sports Bay Area will have Pregame coverage one hour before tip-off of each game, along with Postgame coverage immediately after the final buzzer.

The winner of the Warriors-Timberwolves series will face the winner of the Oklahoma City Thunder-Denver Nuggets second-round series.

The Warriors won three of their four regular-season meetings with the Timberwolves, including both games at Target Center in Minneapolis.

The contentious first-round series with the Rockets featured several dust-ups between the players, but the Warriors prevailed in the end.

The Warriors stole home-court advantage by winning Game 1 in Houston. But the Rockets bounced back in Game 2, aided by Butler leaving eight minutes into the contest due to a pelvic contusion sustained after being undercut by guard Amen Thompson.

When the series shifted to the Bay Area, the Warriors pulled out a thrilling Game 3 without Butler. When the six-time NBA All-Star returned in Game 4, he gutted through 40 minutes and sealed the win with clutch free throws and a huge rebound in the final seconds.

The Warriors failed to put the nail in the Rockets’ coffin Wednesday in Houston and Friday in San Francisco, needing to travel back to the Lone Star State to take care of business.

The Warriors now are 5-0 in NBA playoff series against the Rockets.

Curry, Butler and Draymond Green believe they have enough to win the NBA championship this season, and they took another step toward achieving that goal by defusing the Rockets.

Download and follow the Dubs Talk Podcast

New York Knicks vs Boston Celtics Preview: 2025 NBA Playoffs series prediction, schedule, player to watch

The Boston Celtics swept the season series from the New York Knicks and it wasn't particularly close, with the average score being 125-109. Will the playoffs be any different, with both teams a little banged up? Let's break this series down.

When does the Knicks vs. the Celtics begin?

New York travels to Boston for Game 1 of the series on Monday, May 5, at 7 p.m. Eastern. The series goes almost every other day (with a couple of two-day breaks) the rest of the way.

New York vs. Boston Playoffs Schedule 2025

All times are Eastern (* = if necessary)
Game 1: Knicks at Celtics (Mon. May 5, 7 ET, TNT)
Game 2: Knicks at Celtics (Wed. May 7, 7 ET, TNT)
Game 3: Celtics at Knicks (Sat. May 10, TBD, ABC)
Game 4: Celtics at Knicks (Mon. May 12, TBD, ESPN)
Game 5: Knicks at Celtics (Wed. May 14, TBD, TNT)*
Game 6: Celtics at Knicks (Fri. May 16, TBD, ESPN)*
Game 7: Knicks at Celtics (Mon. May 19, 8 ET, TNT)*

Player to watch: Karl-Anthony Towns

With the Celtics having Kristaps Porzingis, this is the series where the Knicks truly need KAT to be at his best. New York got away with his subpar efforts in Games 5 and 6 of the Pistons series, but that's an easy path to a sweep if he plays that way against the reigning champs. And it isn't only about his offensive production. Boston exposed Towns repeatedly on the defensive end of the floor in their regular-season meetings, three of which were blowouts. Having a healthy Mitchell Robinson should help; we'll see how often Tom Thibodeau uses the "two bigs" lineup. However, New York needs a consistently elite Towns to pull off the upset, regardless of what Jalen Brunson brings to the table.
Raphielle Johnson, Rotoworld basketball analyst

Keys to watch for in New York vs. Boston

1) Can Knicks follow Magic’s defensive blueprint?

Orlando's defense did the best job we have seen of mucking up Joe Mazzulla's offensive doctrine, defending on an island (not helping as much and not getting in rotation), chasing Boston's shooters off the arc, forcing the Celtics to beat them another way (a lot of Jayson Tatum, plus the Boston's own elite defense).

Can the Knicks follow that blueprint? More importantly, will Tom Thibodeau even try? OG Anunoby and Mikal Bridges are quality perimeter defenders, but Boston rolls out five players who can shoot, which means Towns will have to defend in space this series. That is trouble. Beyond not having the personnel to execute the Magic's strategy — Orlando is loaded with long, physical defenders, New York is not — it's not Thibodeau's style to change drastically from what got the Knicks to the dance. Expect the Knicks to switch a lot this series, it's what they did in the last two meetings against the Celtics in the regular season.

The problem is that it allows Boston to get back to its drive-and-kick, swing-swing to an open 3-pointer offense where they thrive.

2) Brunson and Towns as targets

The Celtics are relentless — if they find a weakness they will go at it repeatedly, every chance they get. The most glaring weakness for the Knicks is that their two key offensive players, Jalen Brunson and Karl-Anthony Towns, are not great defenders. The Celtics will drag them into pick-and-rolls every chance they get, then drive the lane, which starts their kick-out-to-a-three offense. The Celtics will look to wear the Knicks' stars down.

If the Knicks are going to have any chance in this series, they have to play faster than normal, and Brunson and Towns have to hold up defensively. That may be too much to ask.

3) Injuries

The Celtics come in a little banged up after a very physical series with the Magic. Jrue Holiday has missed time due to a sore hamstring and that likely continues into the start of this series, Jayson Tatum is playing through a sore wrist, and Jaylen Brown has a bone bruise and right knee posterior impingement issue. However, Boston had a lengthy rest after knocking off Orlando, while the Knicks kept playing. Boston is feeling better.

For New York, Brunson is playing through a sore ankle (which appeared to limit him at times in the final game, except in the clutch), and Josh Hart has a wrist issue. While both teams are not at 100%, injuries are not what will decide this series.
—Kurt Helin, NBC Sports lead NBA writer

Predictions

Jay Croucher (NBC Sports Lead Betting Analyst): Celtics in 5

Worst possible matchup for the Knicks - KAT struggles in space defensively, and no team is better placed to punish him than Boston with the best spacing in the league. Tatum and Brown will hunt Brunson on switches relentlessly.

On the other end, the Celtics have elite defensive options to make Brunson's life difficult. The Knicks have great talent but it hasn't clicked at the highest level all year - it magically happening in round 2 of the playoffs seems improbable.

Vaughn Dalzell (NBC Sports Betting Analyst): Celtics in 6

This series will be a dogfight and while the Knicks improved this year, the Celtics are just too well-rounded to beat. While both teams have four constant scoring threats in the lineup (Tatum, Brown, Porzingis, White vs Brunson, KAT, Anunoby, Bridges) -- I am not sure about the New York role players and bench having enough in them to give the Knicks more than two wins in this series. Boston's bench is so much deeper and offers instant offense, unlike New York's trio of Miles McBride, Mitchell Robinson, and Cam Payne.

Kurt Helin (NBC Sports lead NBA writer): Celtics in 5

If anything, I would be closer to moving this to Boston in a sweep over Boston in six, I just don't see a path to success in this series for New York: The Celtics will win not only the 3-point game but also the possession game in this series, and that is just too much for the Knicks to overcome. However, we'll give the Knicks one game, assuming a cold-shooting Celtics squad and a big Jalen Brunson night, and say it's a gentleman's sweep.

Josh Hart expects Knicks to play with 'level of freedom' as playoff underdogs against Celtics

If the Knicks soon punch a ticket to the Eastern Conference Finals for the first time in 25 years, they'll achieve the long-coveted feat as undisputed underdogs. Their semifinal-round opponent is the reigning champion Boston Celtics, poised to defend the NBA's crown and reassert dominance shown during four regular-season matchups.

The storied history between the Knicks and Celtics holds no weight with today's players. While this series marks the 17th playoff meeting between the division rivals -- the second most for any pair of opponents in league history -- they haven't battled this late in a season since 2013.

Nevertheless, the Knicks face a rather tall order with the Celtics stamped as clear-cut favorites and owning home-court advantage. But the outside noise from doubters isn't penetrating their walls. The upcoming games will provide a clean slate and an opportunity to change narratives.

This is how Josh Hart feels, at least.

"If we're counted out already, we should play with a great level of freedom," the Knicks' guard said after Sunday's practice. "We don't really care too much what the outside world said. We're focused on how we feel internally... We don't really involve ourselves with what other people think. The same people who praise us one day, kill us the next. We're focused on us."

The Knicks were consensus favorites in the first round, and nearly closed out their series against the Detroit Pistons in five games. But inconsistent play from some key contributors and the natural uptick in physicality stretched the bout, and New York managed to avoid a do-or-die Game 7 with last-second heroics from Jalen Brunson on the road in Game 6.

In order to outlast the Celtics, the Knicks will need to display toughness from the jump. They'll also need to learn from past mistakes and address their weak points. Boston made 39 more three-pointers than New York in their four-game regular-season sweep. According to NBA.com, that's tied for the fourth-biggest differential for any regular-season series since the three-point line's inception in 1979.

Hart serves best as a facilitator in transition and ball hawk near the glass. His aggressiveness on both ends of the floor can wreak havoc on opponents. But the Knicks would welcome more offense from the double-double machine in extended minutes -- he averaged just 11.8 points across six first-round games. Suffice to say, there's room for growth and pressure to deliver with the stage even brighter.

"I think it'll be a different series. I've never played against [the Celtics] in the playoffs," Hart said. "The physicality always heightens in the playoffs. We can handle the physicality, but they're such a skillful team, we've got to make sure we're not just worried about physicality. We're making sure we're locked-in mentally to their tendencies. Not just their plays, but their personnel."

A trip to the East Finals requires four wins, and the odds of the Knicks racking them up are undoubtedly daunting. They struggled mightily against elite competition this season, finishing a lowly 0-10 against the NBA's top three teams. Four of those losses came against the Celtics, while two came against a potential East Finals opponent in the Cleveland Cavaliers.

The Knicks and Celtics will begin their Eastern Conference semifinal series on Monday night, with tip-off scheduled for 7 p.m. at TD Garden.

Jrue Holiday off injury report, on track for Game 1 vs. Knicks

Jrue Holiday off injury report, on track for Game 1 vs. Knicks originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

Celtics guard Jrue Holiday is expected to return from a strained right hamstring when Boston opens its Eastern Conference finals series against the Knicks on Monday night.

No Celtics players were listed on the injury report Sunday, meaning they could be at full strength when Game 1 tips off. It’s the first time Holiday hasn’t been on the injury report since he missed the final three games of Boston’s first-round series win over Orlando in five games.

Coach Joe Mazzulla said Holiday was able to “work on everything he wanted to work on” during Boston’s practice session Saturday.

One of the Celtics’ top defenders and facilitators on offense, Holiday averaged 10 points, 5.5 assists and 3.5 rebounds in the opening two games of the Magic series.

Also not listed on Boston’s latest report is Jaylen Brown, who has been dealing with a right knee injury that sidelined him for the Celtics’ final three regular-season games.

GP2 to miss Warriors vs. Rockets Game 7 with illness

GP2 to miss Warriors vs. Rockets Game 7 with illness originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Warriors will be without a key player for their win-or-go-home Game 7 matchup against the Houston Rockets on Sunday at Toyota Center.

Golden State guard Gary Payton II will not play due to an illness, the team announced Sunday afternoon.

“He’s just sick as a dog,” Steve Kerr told reporters 90 minutes before tip-off. “Woke up ill and didn’t go to shootaround. Hasn’t eaten. No way he can play.”

Payton has started and come off the bench in the series against Houston, averaging 6.3 rebounds, 2.3 rebounds and 1.7 assists in 16 minutes per contest.

Golden State has struggled on the glass against the Rockets in this series, and Payton certainly could have helped the Warriors close the offensive and defensive rebounding gap in Sunday’s big game.

The 32-year-old is an energizing two-way force on both ends of the floor, something Golden State, losers of consecutive games, certainly could use in a hostile environment on the road in Game 7.

Download and follow the Dubs Talk Podcast

Şengün claims Rockets have ‘no reason' to lose Game 7 vs. Warriors

Şengün claims Rockets have ‘no reason' to lose Game 7 vs. Warriors originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Both the Warriors and Houston Rockets are confident they will walk out of Toyota Center on Sunday night with a series-clinching Game 7 win if they are able to execute their respective game plans.

However, only one team can move on to the Western Conference semifinals against the Minnesota Timberwolves.

Rockets’ star center Alperen Şengün and his teammates are extra confident heading into Sunday’s big game after winning both Games 5 and 6 to force the win-or-go-home contest on their home court, and believe if Houston does the little things right, it will successfully complete the rare three-games-to-one series comeback.

“I don’t think they have beaten us yet, we have beat ourselves this series,” Şengün told reporters at Rockets shootaround on Sunday. “We missed free throws, easy shots. When we’re locked in, we were locked in defensively and offensively. We have all the talent in the world. There’s no reason for us to lose this game.”

Of course, the gravity of the game against an experienced team like the Warriors, is not lost on Şengün, who recognizes the moment will not be too big for Warriors stars Steph Curry, Jimmy Butler and Draymond Green.

“We know it’s going to be tough. They have so much more experience than us, but we’re ready for it, we’re going to play hard,” Şengün added. “We’re going to do what we do, but we know it’s not going to be easy. Just go and do what we did the past two games, play hard, get the 50/50 balls, offensive rebounds and then get the win.”

Golden State has lost consecutive games after jumping out to a commanding 3-1 series lead, and is looking to avoid unfortunate history on Sunday night.

The only thing standing in the Warriors’ way are Şengün and the Rockets. And perhaps themselves.

Download and follow the Dubs Talk Podcast

Why Miles McBride is Knicks' X-factor in NBA playoff matchup against Celtics

The Knicks' bench is thin. It’s a challenge the team has dealt with all year, as they finished last in bench scoring. The starting lineup played more than any five-man unit in the NBA during the regular season, and the playoffs have only increased the burden on the starters. The Knicks' bench averaged 11.5 points in their six-game first round series win against the Detroit Pistons.

Heading into their second-round playoff matchup with the Boston Celtics, the Knicks will need a bench player to step up and be an X-factor. That reserve has to be combo guard Miles McBride.

McBride’s playoff experience this year has been difficult -- in the first round, he averaged just 3.8 points. The guard shot an ugly 26.7 percent from the field and 26.3 percent from behind the three-point line.

Creating depth off the bench has been a challenge for the Knicks in the playoffs, as only McBride and Mitchell Robinson averaged double-figure minutes. Cam Payne found a rhythm with 14 points in Game 1, but scored only eight combined points over the last five games.

While McBride had a series to forget, he offers the Knicks solid two-way play on the floor that is needed in a series against an elite Celtics team. Despite standing just 6-foot-2, he has a near 6-foot-9 wingspan, and he’s also a career 36 percent shooter from beyond the arc.

The first round was a shocker. McBride has been productive and a quality rotation piece since the Knicks first transformed the roster and sent away Immanuel Quickley and RJ Barrett to the Toronto Raptors to acquire OG Anunoby. The Knicks’ sixth man this season, McBride was solid with 9.5 points in 24.9 minutes. In last year’s playoff run, he was a vital contributor, averaging 11.0 points on 43.5 percent from the field in 13 games.

McBride only averaged 16.0 minutes in the first round. But as the Knicks prepare for the Celtics, he should see a larger role. He has been an above average three-point shooter the last two seasons.

Making a positive impact

One issue for the Knicks will be getting up threes. They're currently dead last in three-point attempts per 100 possessions among the 16 playoff teams. Against a Celtics club that had the highest three-point attempt rate in the regular season, the Knicks are going to need to let it fly.

McBride leads the Knicks in three-point attempts per 36 minutes in the postseason. That could be crucial in helping push the team into more shots from long distance.

If the Knicks can create some opportunities in transition, that could be helpful to open up three-point looks for shooters like McBride, who opens up different lineup options for them. This season, teams have put their centers on Josh Hart, while having a smaller player guard center Karl-Anthony Towns. The Celtics went to that strategy in all four regular season matchups.

If opponents play non-shooters on the perimeter, the Celtics have no problem putting big men like Kristaps Porzingis on them. Having a willing shooter in McBride is important for spacing on the floor to give Knicks stars Jalen Brunson and Towns room to operate.

Having McBride on the floor has usually worked for the Knicks. In 1,593 minutes, the Knicks were a plus-7.79 points per 100 possessions with him, according to PBP Stats. Even in his disappointing 96 minutes on the floor during the first round, the Knicks outscored the Pistons by 6.1 points per 100 possessions.

The Knicks are now underdogs in their upcoming series. But if McBride can re-discover his outside shooting, it can give New York a boost off the bench and provide the club with a better chance of competing with Boston.

Three key Warriors questions for win-or-go-home Game 7 vs. Rockets

Three key Warriors questions for win-or-go-home Game 7 vs. Rockets originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

HOUSTON – It all comes down to this.

Sunday night in Houston, the Warriors will know their fate. Win and move on to Minnesota. Lose and go home with a heightened offseason full of questions from a first-round exit after going all-in and acquiring Jimmy Butler at the NBA trade deadline. 

The Warriors shouldn’t want to have another 50-point Game 7 like they needed from Steph Curry two years ago to advance to the second round. Curry has averaged 32.6 points on 46.7 percent shooting with a 42.4 3-point percentage for his career in five Game 7s. Draymond Green has played in five such games like Curry, and was extremely locked in at shootaround, intently listening during a long conversation with coach Steve Kerr. The last time Butler played in a Game 7 he dropped 28 points, seven rebounds, six assists and three steals to lead the eighth-seeded Miami Heat past the Boston Celtics to reach the NBA Finals two seasons ago. 

There aren’t many worries regarding how those three will play with their backs against the wall. Every question is centered on those around them. 

With that being said, here are three quick questions ahead of Game 7 between the Warriors and Rockets. 

Who Starts? 

Kerr already has used four different starting lineups through the first six games, all while the Rockets trot out the same starters every time. Rewarding Buddy Hield’s Game 3 performance of 17 points and three steals made sense, and Hield then scored 15 points and had two early steals that set a tone in the Warriors’ Game 4 win. But in the last two games, Hield has scored four points, going 2 of 10 from the field, missing all six of his threes and was held scoreless in the Warriors’ Game 6 loss

Gary Payton II replaced Brandin Podziemski on Friday night, but Payton was a minus-12 in 20 minutes. He made a costly mistake fouling Fred VanVleet for a four-point play to open the fourth quarter, and wasn’t impactful enough on either side of the ball. Payton also was added to the injury report Sunday morning because of an illness and wasn’t seen at shootaround. 

“I think it complicates things, but it just requires everybody else to step up, just like any other injury,” Podziemski said at shootaround when asked about what happens if Payton can’t play. “It’s Game 7, it’s win or go home. Whoever we have or don’t have, we’re going to roll with them and give it our best shot.” 

The starting lineup of Curry, Podziemski, Hield, Butler and Green has played the most minutes (34) among five-man units for the Warriors this series, and has produced the best net rating (20.4). Moses Moody typically was part of the starting five in place of Hield, but that group has a minus-6.4 net rating in 26 minutes over three games during the series, with a 105.9 offensive rating and a 112.2 defensive rating. 

Still, they went 16-3 together in the regular season and it might be best to trust what helped get Golden State here in the first place. 

Have They Figured Out The Zone? 

Houston’s zone defense has been torturous for the Warriors thus far. The Warriors emphasized it during film sessions and know they will have to beat it to earn a victory on the Rockets’ home court. Between the Rockets’ length and athleticism, the Warriors have looked like a lost team trying to break down their zone defense. 

But maybe it’s all in their own heads. 

“We’re just overcomplicating it to what it really is,” Podziemski said. “It seems as if from the film, a lot of times they don’t even really know what they’re doing. They’re just trying to follow Steph around and trying to match up in space. We just need to simplify things, which we’ve done. I think we’ll be ready tonight.” 

Podziemski agreed there has been some hesitation as the Warriors are trying to figure out what the Rockets are doing, processing that and still playing their style of basketball. The Warriors believe they have figured out what the Rockets’ plan is in their zone defense, and now it’s all about making plays when recognizing it. Making open shots would help, too. 

In their last two games, both losses, the Warriors are shooting 33.9 percent on shots considered open (defender within four to six feet) and 38.8 percent on wide-open shots (closest defender more than six feet away). They shot 27.8 percent on open threes in those two losses, and 34.8 percent on wide-open threes. 

Is Everything Really On The Table? 

Those were the words of Kerr after Friday night’s Game 6 loss. And yes, that includes using Jonathan Kuminga. 

Kerr went deeper on Kuminga’s possible role for Game 7 when speaking to reporters over Zoom on Saturday night. 

“I thought he played well in Game 3 when we started him, especially defensively,” Kerr said. “He did a good job on Jalen Green. I think that’s an area where he can help us. On-ball defense. The key is what’s the combination around him? We know they’re in zone an awful lot. Can we find the right combination with JK, with the shooting and spacing, passing we need to expose the zone? These are all the questions we’re asking.”

“As I’ve made very clear, the arrival of Jimmy made the combinations much tougher for JK. So that’s what’s been standing in his way. I’ve gotta feel the game. I’d love to get him out there, because I think he can help us, and doing that early, I think that’d be helpful for him and for us.”

Kuminga has played two games, entering Game 2 when Butler went down with a pelvic contusion from a scary fall and starting Game 3 when Butler was ruled out. Green is 3 of 8 overall for seven points when guarded by Kuminga in those two games, and has made only one of his five 3-point attempts. More than anything, though, the Warriors desperately need someone who can get them a bucket, and perhaps the wild card of Kuminga can get the job done. 

For how fun Pat Spencer’s minutes have been, the most likely bench player to see an uptick in minutes is veteran center Kevon Looney. The last time Looney played a Game 7, he grabbed 21 rebounds, including 10 on offense. Rockets center Steven Adams is a plus-53 in the series, and pairing him and Alperen Şengün has been a rebounding nightmare for the Warriors. 

Throughout their decade together, Kerr has shown the ultimate trust in Looney. Don’t be surprised if he turns to him for some big-time minutes in Game 7. 

“I’m always ready,” Looney shared. “Rebounding is what I do. I’m excited about this game and trying to make an impact. It’s always fun to go out there and play a game like this and to go against somebody like Adams and Şengün and all those guys that are great rebounders, I’m going to try and leave my mark. 

“I’m looking forward to it. Whatever happens, I’ll be ready.”

Download and follow the Dubs Talk Podcast

Draymond confronts moment of truth in Warriors-Rockets Game 7

Draymond confronts moment of truth in Warriors-Rockets Game 7 originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

It’s rare that Draymond Green gets melancholy in the wake of defeat. But there he was Friday night, after the Warriors’ Game 6 loss to the Houston Rockets, issuing 14 atypically brief responses until the 15th question put a lump in his throat.

Asked about the retirement of legendary San Antonio Spurs coach Gregg Popovich, Green spent a full three minutes reminiscing about Popovich’s career. Draymond played for Pop, winning a gold medal at the 2020 Olympics in Tokyo. The two shared a mutual respect. A kinship.

“I just wish,” Green said, near the end of his remarks, “I had one last time to go hug him on the sideline before a game.”

This moment, rich with warm sadness, with Green barely able to subdue his emotions, was an ode to the end of one man’s era coming from the heart of a man who knows his own era is turning down that same road.

Through the first six games of this first-round Western Conference playoff series, there has not been much of the Draymond whose dynamic activity altered the balance of games, even if statistics didn’t always reflect it. He has had moments of brilliance, most notably his game-saving stop of Alperen Şengün in the final seconds of Game 4. There also have been long stretches when Green’s offensive impact is neutralized by burly point guard Fred VanVleet and Houston’s lengthy, athletic wings.

Green’s defense on Şengün – five inches taller, 20 pounds heavier, 12 years younger – has been a fascinating game-by-game skirmish, with each winning his share of battles. Şengün is averaging 20.8 points, on 46.3 percent shooting from the field, and 5.3 assists per game, averages slightly higher than his regular season statistics.

When the Warriors step onto the court Sunday at Toyota Center in Houston for Game 7 against the Rockets, it won’t take long to discover if Draymond still can be that firebrand who can moderate his passion while pushing himself and his teammates to levels beyond imagination.

If he is that dude, the Warriors have a very good chance to beat the odds.

If he is not, the Warriors will need magnificent performances, beginning with Stephen Curry and Jimmy Butler III, to have a chance.

“He’s our key in terms of what that emotion looks like,” coach Steve Kerr said Saturday. “He’s been in a bunch of Game 7s. He’s had monster Game 7s.”

Green’s last Game 7 was two years ago as a power forward in a first-round series against the Kings in Sacramento. He finished with eight points, eight assists, six rebounds and two steals. Matching up against Harrison Barnes, Green was plus-25 over 38 minutes, and the Warriors followed Curry’s 50 points to a 120-100 victory.

This time around, Green is at center, wrestling with the considerably more imposing Şengün.

Just as two years ago, it’s win or go home.

“Just got to meet force with force, execute the game plan,” Green said after the Game 6 loss on Friday. “Everybody will be excited. It will be hyped in there. It will be loud.

“Then the game starts and there’s just basketball. You got to execute your game plan, stay the course. They’re going to make runs. Stay the course. Continue to fight. But got to execute.”

There is no question Draymond, one of the game’s biggest brains, knows the way. The first six games of the series, however, have left open the question of whether his body still has the ability to achieve the commands coming from his mind.

He’s averaging 6.6 points per game, shooting 36.6 percent from the field, 26.1 percent from distance, 57.1 percent from the line. While it’s true Draymond’s value defies simple statistics, it’s striking that he’s averaging 5.5 rebounds and 3.0 assists per game.

“I think he recognizes that this series is not pleasant for him,” Kerr said. “He rarely gets the big on him to run, pick and roll. They’re putting VanVleet on him, trying to take him out of the offense, trying to take his rhythm away, trying to goad him into technicals and flagrants, like (Jalen Green did in Game 6). Draymond knows he cannot respond to that stuff in that way.”

If the Warriors leave the arena with a loss, they must cope with knowing that if there is a next postseason opportunity for their accomplished core – Curry, Butler and Green – will come when Curry is 38, Butler and Green each 36.

Green’s career has been among the most challenging of any player still active in the NBA. His uniqueness on defense has utilized to the max, spending nearly half his minutes bumping and banging off men as much as seven inches taller and 50 pounds heavier.

How long can Draymond reasonably be expected to excel at that? Golden State needs an elite performance, something vastly superior to that which he has delivered in any of the first six games.

“He’s just got to maintain his composure and recognize he’s the best defender in the world,” Kerr said. “If we do our jobs, and he’s guarding at his best capability, and he’s maintaining his emotion, and we’re doing our jobs, taking care of the ball, we got a great chance to win.

“And he gets the last laugh.”

That laugh that would affirm to Draymond, the Warriors and the rest of the NBA that this game-changing menace still has plenty of road ahead. And it would be heard all over Texas.

Download and follow the Dubs Talk Podcast

Nuggets beat Clippers to reach Conference semi-finals

Michael Porter Jr celebrates as the Denver Nuggets beat the Los Angeles Clippers in game seven of their series in the first round of the 2025 NBA play-offs
Michael Porter Jr was one of six Denver players who reached double figures for point scored [Getty Images]

The Denver Nuggets beat the Los Angeles Clippers 120-101 on Saturday to seal their passage from the first round of the NBA play-offs.

The series went to game seven, with the decider being played in Denver, and the hosts dominated to reach the Conference semi-finals.

The Nuggets are the fourth seed in the Western Conference and will next face top seeds, the Oklahoma City Thunder, who host game one on Monday.

Denver used a big third quarter to clinch victory over the Clippers, stretching their lead from 11 points up at half-time, to 93-66.

The Nuggets had six players reach double figures, with Aaron Gordon (22 points) and Christian Braun (21) leading the way for the 2023 champions, while Russell Westbrook added 16 points off the bench.

Three-time MVP Nikola Jokic finished two assists shy of a triple-double, claiming 16 points, 10 rebounds and eight assists along with three steals.

"In the play-offs, we know that everybody needs to step up," said the 30-year-old Serbian centre.

"Everybody who plays needs to contribute something - everybody did that."

Kawhi Leonard led Los Angeles with 22 points but James Harden, who had 13 assists, was held to seven points as the Clippers lost in the first round of the play-offs for the third straight season.

The Golden State Warriors visit the Houston Rockets to decide the final Conference semi-final spot on Sunday, while the Indiana Pacers hit the road to begin their semi-final series with the Cleveland Cavaliers.

With help from bench, Jokic, Nuggets dominate Clippers in Game 7 to advance

Nikola Jokic and the Denver Nuggets were not going to let history repeat itself.

A year after blowing a 20-point fourth quarter lead in Game 7 to the Timberwolves, the Nuggets led by up to 35 and were not going to let the Clippers make a late comeback, ultimately cruising to a 120-101 win that makes the game sound closer than it actually was.

"This was not the championship," Nuggets interim coach David Adelman said. "I'm sure it kind of felt like that to the fans on both sides because the series was so insane and the ups and downs were so crazy – it's one of those series you won't forget that you were a part of."

As great as Nikola Jokic was — 16 points, 10 rebounds, eight assists — what turned the game was the play of Russell Westbrook, Payton Watson, and the Nuggets' bench. The Clippers were the better team through 12 minutes and led 21-16 after one quarter, but with Jokic on the bench the Nuggets made a 7-0 run to start the second quarter. Things snowballed from there. It was a huge change for the Nuggets who have struggled with depth in this series and throughout the season.

Aaron Gordon led a balanced Nuggets attack with 22 points, while Christian Braun had 21. Westbrook came off the bench to score 16.

"In playoffs we know that everybody needs to step up, offensively, defensively, whatever, energy-wise. And everybody who plays needs to contribute something," Jokic said. "It was special today the guys did that."

Kawhi Leonard had another solid game leading the Clippers with 22 points. However, James Harden, who had faded as the series went on until he bounced back with a huge Game 6, returned to his struggles and finished with 7 points. Denver's Christian Braun had a strong night defending him.

"James is a tough cover. He is one of the best one-on-one players to play the game and I think Christian did a good job trying to make the game difficult on him," Westbrook said after the game. I thought he did an excellent job and he has been doing that all year."

It was a rough way to end the season for a Clippers team that overachieved all season, winning 50 games despite losing Paul George to Philadelphia last summer. Tyronn Lue did a brilliant coaching job this season, getting the most out of an aging roster, and they were finally healthy. Still, it was not enough for the Clippers to get out of the first round. The team has financial flexibility heading into next season, it will be interesting to see which direction they go.

Denver is going to Oklahoma City, where it will face a rested Thunder team that is deeper and better than the Clippers.

"It feels good," Adelman said of the win, "but I also know we're flying to OKC tomorrow."