The brilliant play of the Spurs in the Western Conference Finals was yet another example of the genius of Gregg Popovich. He made headlines in Game 5 when he placed Matt Bonner in the starting lineup to help space the floor and open up driving lanes, relegating Tiago Splitter to a backup role, coming off the bench for Tim Duncan. But that wasn't his most important rearrangement of the chess pieces on the NBA court,
the pivotal move had to be using Kawhi Leonard to defend Russell Westbrook.
...In the first half of game five, Kawhi's defense on Westbrook did not look good, Russ just seemed too quick off the dribble for Kawhi. In the second half, Leonard made an adjustment that had Popovich written all over it. He backed off of Westbrook and gave him the deep, low percentage jumper if he wanted it.
This proved extremely effective as Westbrook ended up going
5-of-9 from the field and 1-of-4 from the three point line in Game 5.
In Game 6, Kawhi really settled in against Westbrook. Russell went
8-for-23 and only managed to make one three pointer....
The most impressive aspect of the matchup between Kawhi and Westbrook was the serious problems he caused for Westbrook trying to pass the ball to his teammates.
Westbrook turned the ball over seven times in Game 6, after having just 15 in the previous 5 games.
But perhaps even more important was the way Kawhi kept Westbrook off the offensive glass.
After getting nine offensive rebounds through the first four games, Westbrook was shut out in games 5 and 6. That's a crucial adjustment in a series where the team who won the rebound battle won every game..."