Basketball 2009 NBA Playoffs - ROUND 1 Thread

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Discuss everything from ROUND 1 here!

Series standings:

Pistons 0 - Cavs 4
Bulls 3 - Celtics 4
76ers 2 - Magic 4
Hawks 3 - Heat 3
Lakers 4 - Jazz 1
Nuggets 4 - Hornets 1
Mavs 4 - Spurs 1

Rockets 4 - Blazers 2

My first round picks:

Cavs in 5
Bulls in 6
Magic in 6
Heat in 7
Mavs in 6
Rockets in 5
Lakers in 6
Hornets in 6

What are yours? And don't forget to go BET on the games!

http://www.sportscardfreaks.com/forums/vbookie-forum/

:party3:​
 
Bulls-Celts is a somewhat even matchup with Bulls hot, Rose on fire, and KG unlikely to play. Should be entertaining at least.
 
Jazz forward Okur questionable for L.A. opener

Utah Jazz forward Mehmet Okur is questionable for Sunday's playoff opener in Los Angeles with a strained hamstring.

Okur has been out since straining his right hamstring on Monday night against the Clippers.

He did not practice all week and sat out again Saturday in the Jazz's final workout before traveling to Los Angeles.

The Jazz say Okur will be a gametime decision, but his teammates say they aren't expecting to have Okur in the lineup.

Coach Jerry Sloan says Jarron Collins would likely start if Okur isn't ready Sunday.
 
Magic's Lewis, Turkoglu expect playoff return

Orlando Magic starting forwards Rashard Lewis and Hedo Turkoglu say their injuries won't sideline them for the NBA playoffs.

Both participated in full-contact drills on Friday.

Lewis missed the last three games with right knee tendinitis. The All-Star forward says he's feeling fine and will play normal minutes in the first-round playoff series Sunday against Philadelphia.

Turkoglu says he will be able to play through minor pain in his sprained left ankle, which caused him to miss the last two games.

The pair are the top scorers on the Magic behind center Dwight Howard. Lewis averaged 17.7 points and Turkoglu 16.8 this season.
 
Heat's Wade helps set tone with nightlife decree

In preparing for a 4½-day trip to Atlanta, the Miami Heat charter flight was loaded Saturday with luggage, uniforms, sneakers, tape and all the things players will want and need heading into the first two games of their Eastern Conference playoff series.

Party attire was optional, and highly discouraged.

Ask any player which NBA cities are the most fun to visit, and Atlanta quickly comes up. The scene, the nightlife, it's a tantalizing combination.

And this week, it's forbidden to Heat players.

Not by decree of the coaches -- but by captains Dwyane Wade and Udonis Haslem.

"I think it's the best leadership and the strongest leadership that these guys have shown here in a Heat uniform," Miami coach Erik Spoelstra said. "That's the most powerful. We've talked about it all the time as a staff. Sometimes that can fall on, you know, not deaf ears, but when your veteran guys and your captains say that, I think that's a beautiful thing."

Wade and Haslem are the only rotation players left from Miami's 2006 NBA championship team. They endured a playoff sweep in 2007 and the free fall to the NBA basement last season, so this year's postseason opportunity is particularly meaningful to them both.

So they decided long before the playoff matchup with Atlanta was known that wherever they were heading, a "no-go-out policy" would be in effect.

"The veteran guys before us, when we came in to the league like Brian Grant, Eddie Jones, that's what they believed in," said Wade, referring to two former Heat captains. "So this is the core of what we know. This is focus time. This isn't play time. Play time is the summer. You can do what you want in the regular season, too. Not now. We're the leaders, so we're just going from what we know."

Teammates didn't mind.

Wade is the NBA's scoring champion, and Haslem is considered by most as the hardest-playing guy in the Heat locker room.

What they say goes.

"They're our leaders," rookie point guard Mario Chalmers said. "They've been setting an example for us young guys all year long and that's what got us to where we are now."

The decision wasn't borne from some unsavory incident, nor has this Heat team given off a vibe that they're taking the playoffs less than seriously. Haslem said it's a move just to reaffirm how much the postseason means.

Players won't be locked in their hotels, either. Going to dinner, relaxing a bit, that's all acceptable.

Late nights and carousing -- even though there are two full off days between Sunday's Game 1 and Wednesday's Game 2 -- won't be tolerated, Haslem said.

"Some guys will even have their family around," Haslem said. "Basically, we're going on a business trip."

Violators, Haslem warned, may face fines.

"It's not really a curfew," Haslem said. "But we've got eyes everywhere."

The Heat have seen many times before what late nights in a party scene can do to a team.

Miami has what's known around the league as the "South Beach Factor." The lure of Miami Beach is tough for some players visiting South Florida to ignore, and a late night in a club -- whether imbibing or not -- is sometimes tough to overcome when playing basketball the next day.

Atlanta's the same way, Haslem said. He spent time there hanging out last summer, enjoying the scene.

But not this week, he insists.

"The No. 1 focus right now is to take care of business," Haslem said.
 
LeBron, Cavs crush Pistons in series opener

LeBron James crossed midcourt and launched the ball toward the basket more than 40 feet away as the horn sounded.

As Cleveland's star, the Detroit Pistons, 20,000 fans and a TV audience watched the shot's arching flight, James never stopped running.

"I was going to chase it until it went in the hoop," he said.

Off the backboard, through the rim, then the net.

It was halftime. It was over.

James banked in a stunning 3-pointer at the end of the first half and finished with 38 points, eight rebounds and seven assists as the Cavaliers embarked on their quest for a first NBA championship with a 102-84 win over the Pistons in Game 1 on Saturday.

James' 41-footer demoralized the Pistons and gave the Cavs the league's most dominant team -- home or away -- during the regular season, momentum and a 12-point halftime lead.

Cleveland held off one second-half surge by Detroit while James was on the bench and closed out the Pistons, who will try to even the best-of-seven series in Game 2 on Tuesday night.

To do that, Detroit will have to devise something to slow the brilliant James, who had his way for 41 minutes. The likely MVP went 13-of-20 from the field, 11-of-14 from the line and didn't commit a turnover. Cleveland had only five miscues, a postseason franchise record.

"It's tough when he is going like that," Pistons forward Antonio McDyess said. "No matter what you do; trap, he's going to make that play; contest shots, he's making shots. He's going to the bucket and being fouled. It's just tough."

Asked about his range afterward, James paused.

"Uh," he said. "Pretty much unlimited."

So, it seems, is everything else about him.

The Pistons have seen James' act in the playoffs before, and still don't know how to deal with him.

"We have to know where LeBron is at all times," Richard Hamilton said. "When you score 38 against us, we can't have that and have a chance. We have to figure out a way to stop him."

Joe Smith scored 13 points and Zydrunas Ilgauskas had 12 and 10 rebounds for the Cavs, who pushed the tempo in the second half and outran the aging Pistons.

Rodney Stuckey scored 20 and Hamilton 15 for Detroit, which came in as a No. 8 seed and could be in for a shorter postseason run after making the Eastern Conference finals the past six years.

Pistons forward Tayshaun Prince had just four points -- 10 below his average -- in 37 minutes. He was wearing a large wrap on his injured back after the game.

James closed the opening half with another one of those plays that defines his greatness.

After Hamilton's jumper brought the Pistons to 54-45 with two seconds left, James took the inbounds on the fly, blew past Prince on the far sideline and dropped his long 3-pointer. By the time it tumbled to the floor, James was nearly under the basket.

He then paused and stood on the baseline, soaking in the love from Cleveland's fans, who have watched him perform similar feats before.

Did he call glass?

"Yeah," he said. "After I hit it."

The Pistons left the floor shaken.

"Man," Stuckey said of James' big shot. "It is what it is. He made it and they got a bit of momentum."

Detroit regrouped and came out hungry after halftime. The Pistons hung around by knocking down jumpers and managed to pull within 80-72 early in the fourth quarter on Will Bynum's basket with 8:50 left, forcing the Cavs to call a timeout.

James checked back in at that point, and when play resumed, guard Mo Williams, who didn't shoot well in his first playoff game with Cleveland, made a 3-pointer and the Cavs were on their way to an easy win. About the only thing that didn't go James' way was that his beloved New York Yankees gave up 14 runs in one inning to the Cleveland Indians.

James, as is almost always the case, was the difference.

When he wasn't scoring, he was setting up his teammates for easy baskets.

"It's contagious," said Williams, who went 5-of-14. "You see that he's the reason why this team is the way that it is. When you have your best player being that unselfish, you find yourself being the same way."

For a large chunk of the first half, an expected defensive struggle between two of the East's roughest teams was an offensive extravaganza. The Cavs and Pistons traded baskets -- most on jumpers -- and threatened to take a game expected to end in the 70s or 80s into triple digits.

When Rasheed Wallace dropped a short shot in the lane to bring the Pistons within 37-36, Detroit was shooting an eye-popping 65 percent (15-of-23) from the floor and getting good looks against the league's best defense. Cleveland was nearly as hot, hanging around the 60 percent mark.

The Pistons finally cooled, and the Cavs took off.

James fed a no-look pass -- left-handed -- across the lane to Smith for a dunk, igniting a 20-9 run that gave Cleveland a 12-point halftime bulge.

Detroit missed 12 of its final 15 shots in the opening half, an untimely drought it never overcame.

"To come in and shoot 46 percent, only have seven turnovers and be that close on the boards, it should have been closer than an 18-point game," Pistons coach Michael Curry said.
 
Rose scores 36 as Bulls stun KG-less Celtics

Derrick Rose had a playoff debut like few others and led the Chicago Bulls to a victory over the Boston Celtics in the playoffs.

Not even Michael Jordan did that.

Rose matched Kareem Abdul-Jabbar's record with 36 points in his playoff debut, adding 11 assists to lead the Bulls to a 105-103 overtime victory over the defending NBA champions in Game 1 of their best-of-seven first-round series.

Playoff experience?

"He doesn't need it," Bulls guard Ben Gordon said. "He's poised beyond his years. He already carries himself like a veteran out there. He had a phenomenal game tonight, to say the least."

Game 2 is Monday, the anniversary of the 1986 playoff game when Jordan scored 63 points against Boston -- in a Bulls loss. In fact, Chicago had not beaten the Celtics in 10 postseason games since the Chicago Stags beat Boston in the 1948 Basketball Association of America quarterfinals.

"I hope this is a wake-up call," said Paul Pierce, who scored 23 points. "I hope we realize that the Bulls, they're not just a team that's happy to be in the playoffs. So hopefully the guys will wake up and realize this is reality. We've better come to play."

Tyrus Thomas scored 16 points -- making six of Chicago's eight points in overtime, including the game-winning jumper with 51 seconds left in overtime. Joakim Noah, who was also making his postseason debut, scored 11 with 17 rebounds for the Bulls as they wrested the home-court advantage from Boston.

"As the games go on, the moments get bigger," Chicago coach Vinny Del Negro said. "I feel like the guys have taken a big step forward, and we know we have a huge challenge in front of us. We'll enjoy this one for a minute, and then get back to work."

Rajon Rondo scored 29 points with nine rebounds and seven assists for Boston, which was without Kevin Garnett and didn't get what it needed from the rest of the Big Three, either.

Pierce scored 23 points on 8-of-21 shooting, but missed the potential game-winning free throw at the end of regulation and had a potential game-tying basket blocked by John Salmons with 3.7 seconds left in overtime. Ray Allen, who scored four points on 1-for-12 shooting, had a chance to send it into a second overtime but his jumper from the right side bounced off the back of the rim.

"It just looked like everybody decided that they were going to be 'the guy' tonight. They were going to, you know, replace Kevin for whatever reason," Celtics coach Doc Rivers said. "And then all of a sudden we got into a fight. And one thing I'd say about our guys, they join in. But, at home, you're supposed to start it."

Too hurt to play and too frustrated to watch, Garnett took refuge in the locker room after the first half while his teammates rallied from an 11-point deficit. Rondo hit a short jumper over Noah in the lane to give the Celtics a 96-95 lead, but Rose -- who missed four crucial foul shots down the stretch when Memphis lost the NCAA championship game last year -- put Chicago ahead on two free throws with 9.4 seconds left in regulation.

Noah fouled Pierce with 2.6 seconds left, but after tying it 97-all with his first free throw the Celtics captain missed the second and the game went into overtime.

"That was a big miss," Gordon said. "If he makes it I think we need a miraculous shot because we were out of timeouts."

Garnett injured his right knee on Feb. 19 and played just 66 minutes, 18 seconds over the last 26 games as the Celtics tried to get him back in shape for the playoffs. But the team kept pushing back the date of his return -- from the final three games, to the last two and then to one before Rivers shocked everyone on Thursday when he announced that Garnett wouldn't be back in time for Saturday's playoff opener and probably not at all.

Garnett hasn't traveled with the team or been on the bench during his recovery, but Rivers and the players all said that it would be vital to have him out there to cheer them on. That lasted for 24 minutes of fist-pumping, ear-chewing and butt-slapping before Garnett decided he couldn't take it any more.

"He was on the bench in the first half and we were down eight points. So this is about the players in uniform," Rivers said. "Kevin is gone. And he ain't coming back. The guys in the uniform have to play."

Garnett had to watch on TV as Rose hit a hanging jumper in the lane to give the Bulls a 55-44 lead before Boston cut the lead to four points and, with an 8-0 run later in the third, take a 68-67 lead on Rondo's 3-pointer with four minutes left in the quarter.

With the loss at home, the Celtics showed they are in for a long road -- and probably a short playoffs -- without Garnett. As the No. 2 seed in the East, a team that has two All-Stars and won 62 games -- Boston was expected to advance to the conference finals and a potential matchup with Cleveland.

On the other hand, the eighth-seeded Atlanta Hawks took the Celtics to seven games in the first round last year, and that proved to be a mere speed bump en route to their unprecedented 17th NBA title. But now Boston has lost the home-court advantage that got it through the first two rounds last year.
 
Mavs halt road drought, sink Spurs in opener

Dirk Nowitzki and the Dallas Mavericks walked off the court, savoring their first road playoff victory in three years. A pack of fans stuck around and hollered "Let's go Mavs!" in one of the most hostile places to wear green and blue.

No one bothered them or shouted back. The stands had emptied quickly, and the San Antonio Spurs were already back in the locker room knowing they've got a lot of work to do.

In a giant Game 1 road victory for the Mavericks, who hadn't won a road playoff game or postseason series since going to the NBA finals in 2006, Josh Howard scored 25 points and Dallas stole the home-court edge in 105-97 victory Saturday night.

"To get a win? Yeah, it's good to get a win here," Howard said. "I wouldn't say steal."

He's right. The Mavericks earned this one.

The sixth-seeded Mavericks, who had lost nine consecutive playoff road games, outscored the Spurs 31-23 after the teams entered the fourth quarter tied. Until then, the rematch of the Texas rivals had every bit the look of the their thrilling 2006 West semifinals meeting that remains one of the best seven-game series in recent playoff history.

For the Spurs, it was their first loss in a playoff opener since being beaten by Denver in 2007. San Antonio went on to win the next four games, but that was a younger and healthier team than these Spurs.

"We've been here before," Spurs forward Tim Duncan said. "But it's a big loss at home for us."

Duncan scored 27 points, and Tony Parker had 24 for the Spurs.

Game 2 is Monday night in San Antonio.

Dallas, a weak road team for most of the season, dealt the Spurs just their fourth playoff loss on their home court since 2007. The Mavericks were 18-23 on the road this season, but perhaps the more relevant mark for them begins March 31: the day Howard returned from a sore ankle that will require surgery this offseason.

Since then, Dallas is 8-2 overall and 7-1 in the games he's played. He played just 34 seconds in the fourth quarter against the Spurs, and afterward, acknowledged the ankle was sore.

"But time to tough that out," Howard said.

Dallas coach Rick Carlisle said he labored with the decision to sit Howard.

"If we could keep him out it might be better for his ankle, and the smaller lineup was able to finish the game well," Carlisle said.

Did it ever, thanks to the smallest of that bunch -- 6-foot Jose Barea.

Besides pestering Parker on defense as good as Mavericks defender -- Parker was 2-of-6 in the fourth -- Barea seven of his 13 points in the fourth quarter.

Jason Terry scored 12 points for the Mavs, including two 3-pointers. But the NBA's leading candidate for Sixth Man of the Year took a backseat in the fourth to Barea, whose floating runner with 5:31 left made it 93-83.

Parker said he though Barea at times "was flopping because he's little, but those can go both ways and it didn't go my way tonight."

Barea said he was just doing his job.

"I just trying my hardest to bother him," Barea said. "Stay in front of him as much as I can. Try and stay in front of him and take a couple of charges the best I can. It worked out."

San Antonio entered the playoffs facing big doubts about how it'd fare without Manu Ginobili, who's out for the playoffs with an injured ankle. In the fourth quarter, when the Spurs could've used his offense and energy the most, the Spurs shot 40 percent while Dallas shot nearly 58 percent.

Duncan, wearing a sleeve on his achy left knee instead of the bulky contraption he wore at practice Friday, scored five points in the fourth but couldn't help the Spurs keep pace. Duncan has never lost a first-round playoff series.

"It's tough," Terry said of winning in San Antonio. "This is probably the toughest place, besides Cleveland, to play in the league. It's not going to be anything different on Monday night."
 
Yao, Rockets manhandle young Trail Blazers

Coming out strong against the Trail Blazers was the first step of a very logical progression for Yao Ming.

"Because this was the first game, and also the first couple of minutes of the first game -- the first couple of minutes can set the tone for the game, and the first game can set the tone for the series," Yao said.

The 7-foot-6 Yao scored nine of Houston's first 11 points and finished with 24 in the Rockets' 108-81 victory over the Trail Blazers on Saturday night. It was the opener of their first-round playoff series.

The Rockets led by as many as 31 points in the second half and there was simply no way the young Blazers could catch up.

Yao scored all of his points in the first half, and added nine rebounds. He hit all nine of his attempts from the field and all six of his free throws.

Portland centers Joel Przybilla and Greg Oden had no answer for the seven-time All-Star from China.

"We tried to play behind him," Przybilla said. "So we'll make adjustments for the next game. He hit every shot he took so we got to do something."

Yao did not attempt a shot in the second half and sat for all of the fourth quarter.

"That's the beauty of Yao -- he's incredibly efficient," teammate Shane Battier said. "Not many guys in the league are capable of having this kind of night, where he makes every shot he puts up."

Aaron Brooks added 27 points for the Rockets, who haven't advanced out of the first round of the playoffs since 1997.

Brandon Roy had 21 points for the Blazers in their first playoff appearance since the 2002-03 season. Portland embraced the young team this season, and some 10,000 fans showed up at a downtown rally earlier in the week in support of the team.

On Saturday night, many fans were already headed out the door by the end of the third quarter.

"It's a bad night," coach Nate McMillan said. "We lost."

The loss snapped a six-game winning streak for the Blazers, as well as a six-game winning streak at home. Portland was 34-7 at the Rose Garden during the regular season.

The Blazers beat the Denver Nuggets 104-76 in the final game of the regular season to earn the fourth seed in the postseason.

The Rockets fell 95-84 in the season's final game, dropping them to the fifth seed.

Oden, who sat out of practice Friday because of a sinus infection and was considered a game-time decision, played off the bench and had 15 points and five rebounds.

Oden spent several minutes in coach Nate McMillan's office prior to the game. Afterward, McMillan said, "Looks good. No issues."

Yao went on to score 14 points by the midway point of the first quarter, giving the Rockets an 18-12 lead. He finished the quarter 7-for-7 from the floor for 16 points.

"He just got going," Rockets coach Rick Adelman said. "He was on a roll. He was making turnaround jumpers, jump hooks, face-up jumpers. He did everything."

Houston collectively shot 75 percent in the first quarter, missing only five of 20 shots.

The Rockets extended their lead to 40-26 on Von Wafer's jumper in the second quarter, before going up 58-41 on Ron Artest's layup.

There was a scary moment on the other end when Roy got caught in a tangle of players scrambling for the ball on the floor. Roy sat on the court for several moments, and when his teammates came to his aid, he appeared to mouth "my back." But he returned shortly thereafter.

The Rockets led 62-44 at the half. Artest and Brooks each had 13 points in addition to Yao's 24.

Luis Scola's layup put Houston up 80-55 late in the third quarter. Brooks opened the fourth with a 3-pointer that made it 88-58.

Scola finished with 19 points, and Artest had 17.

The Rockets have been without seven-time All-Star Tracy McGrady since February, when he underwent season-ending microfracture surgery on his left knee.

"I think it's disappointing that we didn't come out to play from the start," Przybilla said. "There's no reason why we shouldn't have come out with the same intensity."
 
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