by Flack » Tue May 10, 2011 8:47 am
Review of the Heat/Celtics game: 88 all at the end of the fourth. Game went into OT and the Heat turned on the heat, winning 98-90 and taking the series to 3-1.
And now, the Thunder. The God damn Thunder.
The Thunder went in to Game 4 after suffering an embarrassing loss in Game 3 by blowing a 16 point lead in the 4th quarter. After blowing a 16-point lead in the fourth, you start wondering things like "Why are we in the playoffs?" and "Maybe basketball wasn't the sport for me ..." With the Thunder down 1-2 in the series, Barkley commented (and others echoed) "whoever wins game 4 will win the series."
And with that the Grizzlies attacked, taking a ten point lead within minutes and eventually an 18 point lead in the first half. The Thunder were over -- they were done, washed up, written off. BUT WAIT! You know what they say -- THUNDER NEVER FORGETS! Okay that doesn't even make sense, but neither does the Thunder comeback that we witnessed! Led by Russel "I don't pass to no one" Westbrook, the Thunder came alive, trailing by four at the end of the half.
The charge continued in the second half. Westbrook, for the most part, quit with the stupid 3-point attempts and instead began taking it to hoop JUST LIKE I YELLED FOR HIM TO DO and began drawing fouls. Durant did his part, nailing multiple clutch shots. The third and fourth quarter were neck and neck, with a dozen lead changes between the two teams.
With six minutes left the Thunder led by 10, but as all Thunder fans know, that's puh-lenty of time for us to blow a lead, which of course we did. Memphis clutch Mike Conley hit a 3 with 4 seconds left; Westbrook countered with a stupid hail Mary that led us into the first overtime, 96 all.
When your team loses a 10 point lead, momentum is not in your favor. The Thunder pulled ahead and held a 3-point lead up until the very end of OT. Things looked good for the Thunder as Conley and Mayo (two of Memphis' 3-point shooters) fouled out ... until Greivis Vasquez, Kevin Durant's high school pal, nailed an unbelievable 3 (launching the ball from his shoulder!), tying the game at 109 at the end of OT #1.
At some point during all of this I lost consciousness and my wife had to revive me with the shock paddles, but we went back and forth some more and after Harden hit an amazing 3 (one of the few times Westbrook shared the ball) the game was tied up at 119-all and went into triple overtime.
This was the sixth NBA playoff game ever to go into triple over time.
Eventually, key players began fouling out (that happens when you get to 3OT) and players began running out of steam. The Thunder rallied at the end, pulling ahead for a final score of 133-123, making the series 2-all with game 5 in OKC Wednesday night.
I hope it ends early. My ticker can't take another game like that one.
Neither one of these teams are great at finishing games and I can only assume the Mavs will finish them off in a 4-0 or 4-1 run in the next round.
Review of the Heat/Celtics game: 88 all at the end of the fourth. Game went into OT and the Heat turned on the heat, winning 98-90 and taking the series to 3-1.
And now, the Thunder. The [i]God damn Thunder[/i].
The Thunder went in to Game 4 after suffering an embarrassing loss in Game 3 by blowing a 16 point lead in the 4th quarter. After blowing a 16-point lead in the fourth, you start wondering things like "Why are we in the playoffs?" and "Maybe basketball wasn't the sport for me ..." With the Thunder down 1-2 in the series, Barkley commented (and others echoed) "whoever wins game 4 will win the series."
And with that the Grizzlies attacked, taking a ten point lead within minutes and eventually an 18 point lead in the first half. The Thunder were over -- they were done, washed up, written off. BUT WAIT! You know what they say -- THUNDER NEVER FORGETS! Okay that doesn't even make sense, but neither does the Thunder comeback that we witnessed! Led by Russel "I don't pass to no one" Westbrook, the Thunder came alive, trailing by four at the end of the half.
The charge continued in the second half. Westbrook, for the most part, quit with the stupid 3-point attempts and instead began taking it to hoop JUST LIKE I YELLED FOR HIM TO DO and began drawing fouls. Durant did his part, nailing multiple clutch shots. The third and fourth quarter were neck and neck, with a dozen lead changes between the two teams.
With six minutes left the Thunder led by 10, but as all Thunder fans know, that's [i]puh-lenty[/i] of time for us to blow a lead, which of course we did. Memphis clutch Mike Conley hit a 3 with 4 seconds left; Westbrook countered with a stupid hail Mary that led us into the first overtime, 96 all.
When your team loses a 10 point lead, momentum is not in your favor. The Thunder pulled ahead and held a 3-point lead up until the very end of OT. Things looked good for the Thunder as Conley and Mayo (two of Memphis' 3-point shooters) fouled out ... until Greivis Vasquez, Kevin Durant's high school pal, nailed an unbelievable 3 (launching the ball from his shoulder!), tying the game at 109 at the end of OT #1.
At some point during all of this I lost consciousness and my wife had to revive me with the shock paddles, but we went back and forth some more and after Harden hit an amazing 3 (one of the few times Westbrook shared the ball) the game was tied up at 119-all and went into [b]triple overtime[/b].
This was the sixth NBA playoff game ever to go into triple over time.
Eventually, key players began fouling out (that happens when you get to 3OT) and players began running out of steam. The Thunder rallied at the end, pulling ahead for a final score of 133-123, making the series 2-all with game 5 in OKC Wednesday night.
I hope it ends early. My ticker can't take another game like that one.
Neither one of these teams are great at finishing games and I can only assume the Mavs will finish them off in a 4-0 or 4-1 run in the next round.