The NBA would love seven games of this, but will have to settle for one … and change, if there’s a repeat of whatever clock malfeasance occurred in Los Angeles on Saturday night.
Another footnote of the LeBron James-Stephen Curry book was entered, with the Warriors coming away with a 128-121 victory, and it’s likely those two will do this dance again in a little over a month in the Play-In Tournament — although it’s not completely out of the question Golden State or the Lakers overtake whomever is floundering in the eighth spot, nor is it too crazy to envision the Houston Rockets making life miserable for both veteran teams in the meantime.
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On one hand, there won’t be a trip to the Western Conference finals on the line, like last May. But getting just one game of this, should it turn out as such, will leave the NBA world wanting more because so much has been invested in these two — perhaps at the expense of other compelling stories that will take center stage before too long.
The nature of the game and thrills of earlier matchups produce the feeling both would be dangerous in a seven-game series against some of the neophytes at the top, and then you remember they’re playing against each other and not the powers who’ve actually proven to be worthy over the season to date.
Being compelling can be confusing, but neither of these teams are truly championship-worthy; they just happen to be led by the preeminent winners since Kobe Bryant and Tim Duncan stepped away.
April Madness will have to do, as it feels destined one team will advance to another win-or-go-home contest and the other will head to an offseason of what-ifs, regrets and finger-pointing. This night wasn’t without controversy, even before the shot clock malfunctioned in the last two minutes. James’ leaning triple in Curry’s grill was too good to be true, as replays revealed James’ shoe was on the out-of-bounds line, and the 3-pointer was snatched from the scoreboard some 20 seconds after the matter seemed adjudicated.
James has seen it all, and he can’t recall an instance like that. It’s a new rule, predicated on getting things right in a reasonable manner in a reasonable aftermath of a critical play. Key word: reasonable.
The 11-minute delay where multiple plays were reviewed was followed by another unfathomable one, this one by the computers operating the shot clock, killing all momentum for what should’ve been a winding finish to a really good and well-played game.
LeBron mouthed he’s too old for this, without a hint of irony considering sitting feet away from him was the man who should be too old and seasoned to be blaring out shot-clock numbers, longtime Lakers PA man Lawrence Tanter.
Blame the league for the former, not the latter — even though we’ve all begged the league to use the tools at its disposal to get things right.
And perhaps the league has gotten this Play-In thing right, too. While it would be wild to watch the Warriors and Lakers chase the eighth-seeded Dallas Mavericks for the last spot in the traditional setup, the added intrigue in the ninth and 10th spots has erased some of the March malaise.
If not for the Play-In, there would be crowing and moaning about the conference imbalance, whining that Adam Silver should scrap conferences and go to a 1-16 playoff model — and best believe, don’t rule out the complaints if we don’t get a full helping of spring Steph and spring LeBron when the weather breaks.
As an aside, it’s a bit funny to watch us trip over ourselves to say Kevin Durant tipped the scales of this great individual rivalry (he did) while not valuing the Lakers employ an all-time great on the back end of these battles in Anthony Davis (he is).
Suffice to say, if Davis was undervalued he should be no longer….
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