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View Full Version : LOL. Houston Rockets America's team



SpursBig3s
05-05-2017, 01:41 PM
:rollin
https://www.google.com/amp/s/theringer.com/amp/p/388b945353a9

With apologies to the Clippers’ third-quarter stretch in last Sunday’s Game 7 elimination loss to the Jazz — when head coach Doc Rivers threw out his version of the Lineup of Death: his son, Fat Raymond Felton, Marreese Speights’s 3-point shot that isn’t half as good as he thinks it is, and the remnants of Paul Pierce and Jamal Crawford — the Rockets’ performance through the first three quarters of Monday’s 126–99 Game 1 win over the Spurs in the second round was the most impressive basketball played in these playoffs. As someone who predominantly follows college basketball instead of the NBA during the winter, I can’t overstate how much it hurts that I made it to May without anyone telling me that the Rockets are my dream team come to life. I mean, I watched bits and pieces of Houston’s games throughout the season and heard plenty of NBA people talk about how this group shot only 3s, dunks, and layups. But there always seemed to be this universal understanding that the Rockets were a gimmick, built to entertain more than they were built to win.
I know I’m working with a small sample size, so stats nerds, please try to stay calm as you read what I’m about to write: After watching Houston’s two playoff games against the Spurs, I’ve already seen enough to be convinced that the Rockets are no gimmick. In Game 1, the Houston offense was every bit as good as advertised, dropping 126 points on the NBA’s best defense while hitting an absurd 22 3s. What’s more, the Rockets defense totally stifled San Antonio, holding the Spurs starters to 13-of-42 shooting (30.9 percent) as Google searches for “LaMarcus Aldridge contract” reached an all-time high. Two nights later in a Game 2 that the Spurs had to win and that Houston basically played with house money, the Rockets couldn’t hit anything, James Harden basically took the night off, San Antonio couldn’t miss, and Houston still had the game in reach before Gregg Popovich’s tirade at the end of the third quarter (https://twitter.com/ringer/status/859972822575271936) reminded the refs which franchise in this series pays the bills for the NBA. It’s tempting to make too much of the Rockets’ 121–96 loss in Game 2 on Wednesday, just like it was to make too much of their overwhelming Game 1 win. But all that truly matters is this: The Rockets seem to be the better team, they now have home-court advantage, the Spurs have yet to play particularly well on the road in these playoffs, and Tony Parker is out for the foreseeable future with a knee injury. The Rockets bandwagon remains in excellent shape.
Mike D’Antoni (AP Images)Beyond that, I’m all but certain this team is what people tried to pretend the Warriors were two years ago. Remember the underdog aura that followed Golden State in 2014–15, as though it wasn’t headlined by a two-time college All-American and lottery pick who is the son of a former NBA player (Curry), another lottery pick who is the son of a former NBA player (Klay Thompson), and a first-team All-American who won the NABC player of the year award over Anthony Davis in 2012 (Green)? Yeah, well the Rockets have actual underdogs, as every player on the roster either has been traded or played in the D-League at some point during their careers, while two of their top three scorers (Lou Williams and Eric Gordon) come off the bench. Meanwhile, Houston is coached by lifetime underdog Mike D’Antoni, who was born and raised in Mullens, West Virginia, and has had more legendary mustaches (one) in his coaching career than NBA Finals berths (zero).
Speaking of D’Antoni and the comparisons between the 2016–17 Rockets and the 2014–15 Warriors, remember how Golden State seemed to solidify the staying power of the 3-point era by shooting what felt like exclusively 3s throughout its championship season (even though the Rockets actually shot more that year)? Well, there’s this: While the 2014–15 Warriors launched from deep on 30.9 percent of their overall shot attempts, and last year’s Dubs pulled the trigger from behind the arc 35.9 percent of the time, this season’s Rockets have shot a staggering 46.3 percent (!!!) of their field goal attempts from 3 — a clip that shatters the NBA record (39.4 percent, held by the 2014–15 Rockets) and still somehow seems at least 50 percentage points too low. It’s like this is exactly what D’Antoni had in mind when he and the Seven Seconds or Less Suns invented the concept of scoring points in 2004.
The Spurs Need LaMarcus Aldridge to Rejoin the Living
San Antonio’s big man has been a playoff bummertheringer.com (https://theringer.com/2017-nba-playoffs-lamarcus-aldridge-san-antonio-spurs-132c69008a4e)
So back to the original matter at hand: Who says the Rockets can’t defeat the Spurs and then upset the Warriors in a seven-game Western Conference finals, sparing us from Cavs-Warriors Part III? You know what, don’t answer that. I have a feeling that a million pieces of data exist that would suggest Houston would get stomped in that matchup, starting with the fact that the Warriors would probably have five of the six best players in the series. But it could happen, right? Imagine if someone from the future came to you and said that the Rockets will beat the Warriors because they’ll drain 18 3-pointers every game, Patrick Beverley and Trevor Ariza will frustrate Curry and Kevin Durant just enough to stop the Warriors from matching Houston’s blistering pace, and Beverley will instigate an incident with Green in which Draymond gets suspended after taking a swing at Beverley’s crotch. Doesn’t all of that sound at least plausible?
It’s certainly enough for me to jump all in on the Rockets bandwagon. It’s been a foregone conclusion since the offseason that the Cavs and Warriors would meet in the Finals, and I’m willing to cling to any shred of hope that could prevent it from happening. The Rockets are not only that shred of hope — they also embody everything that I hold sacred about the game of basketball. They shoot an ungodly amount of 3s; they throw lobs and dunk on defenders; they talk a ton of trash; and they’re led by a guy with an iconic beard. And yeah, I know that Harden travels on his stepbacks, that the tape on his shoulder is stupid and probably does nothing, and that the thing he does to initiate contact on a 3 so he can flop and then head to the free throw line is a national crisis worthy of congressional attention. Excluding the robots that play for the Spurs, though, every superstar of the past 25 years has been hateable to some degree. I’m choosing to accept Harden’s theatrics as the cost of doing NBA business in the social-media era.
Besides, the Raptors can’t be America’s Team for obvious reasons, the Wizards and Jazz aren’t good enough to be taken seriously, and the idea of neutral fans cheering for the Celtics or Spurs makes me physically ill. Like it or not, the Rockets are our only hope. So join me in rallying behind our underdog heroes as they attempt to chuck, dunk, and flop their way to the Finals. Join me in cheering for the team that represents those of us who can do only one thing well on a basketball court. Join me on the bandwagon of the only team that can preserve the legacy of Cavs-Warriors, avenge the death of D’Antoni’s terrific mustache, and take down a giant with a group of players who nobody else in the league wanted. Please join me, America, in cheering for your team: the 2017 Western Conference champion (who will go on to lose to the Cavs in the Finals in, like, five games) Houston Rockets.