Five things to watch during the NBA Playoffs
By Jaime Oppenheim
Part of the fun of the NBA playoffs is watching how the narratives we apply to each team, series and player unfold. Even after an 82-game regular season, there’s so much we don’t know.
Here are five things to keep an eye on as the playoffs get underway on Saturday.
1. Can Golden State play desperate basketball?
The numbers are familiar to us: 67 wins, first in defensive efficiency, second on offense, nearly 40 percent shooting from behind the arc.
With their balanced profile, the Warriors appear to be a team with few worries heading into the playoffs. Still, one remains - of the league’s top teams, no roster was able to take more plays off than Golden State.
During the regular season, the Warriors’ approach was pretty simple. They knew they had more offense and defense than their opposition, and they played like it, too. An ill-advised shot or poor transition defense every now and again wouldn’t kill them over 100-plus possessions.
In the playoffs, that will change. The Warriors will have to commit early to playing out every possession for all it’s worth, lest they risk an early exit.
2. Is Kevin Love ready to play a key role in a playoff run for the Cavaliers?
Kevin Love needs to step up for the Cavaliers this postseason.
3. Can Kawhi Leonard carry the Spurs in the playoffs?
Kawhi Leonard’s development from role player to focal point for San Antonio has been one of the season’s most intriguing storylines. It wasn’t until after the All-Star break that the fourth-year forward started turning up the heat, averaging 17.9 points per game on 52.1 percent shooting.
The real test comes now. It’s one thing to lead the Spurs in scoring during the regular season, but it’s another thing entirely to repeat it in the playoffs when the opposition is keyed in on you.
Tim Duncan, Tony Parker and Manu Ginobili carried the Spurs to another title last year, but this year, head coach Gregg Popovich is faced with an unenviable decision: Give his veteran core the chance to make another run, or turn Leonard loose.
4. Will the Atlanta Hawks become the second superstar-less team to win a championship?
The team-oriented Hawks must prove themselves in the postseason.
Head coach Mike Budenholzer, a Popovich disciple, wouldn’t have it any other way.
That doesn’t mean Antetokounmpo and Davis can’t put on a show.