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NBA's Top Stats, Best Highlights, Updated Playoff Picture from Aug. 9 Results

Aug 9, 2020
Portland Trail Blazers' Damian Lillard, left, and Jusuf Nurkic celebrate the team's win over the Philadelphia 76ers in an NBA basketball game Sunday, Aug. 9, 2020, in Lake Buena Vista, Fla. (Kevin C. Cox/Pool Photo via AP)
Portland Trail Blazers' Damian Lillard, left, and Jusuf Nurkic celebrate the team's win over the Philadelphia 76ers in an NBA basketball game Sunday, Aug. 9, 2020, in Lake Buena Vista, Fla. (Kevin C. Cox/Pool Photo via AP)

The final week of seeding games inside the NBA's Orlando bubble will be all about the race for the Western Conference's No. 8 seed. 

Portland and San Antonio gained more ground on Memphis Saturday, while New Orleans and Sacramento were officially eliminated from contention. 

Damian Lillard and DeMar DeRozan produced standout performances for their respective sides to move within a game of the struggling Grizzlies. 

The difference between eighth-place Memphis and Phoenix in 11th place is 1.5 games. Memphis, Portland and San Antonio have two games remaining, while the Suns have three left to play. 

Over in the Eastern Conference, Toronto and Boston earned victories to further solidify their spots alongside Milwaukee in the top tier of contenders. 

The Raptors and Celtics are locked into the No. 2 and No. 3 seeds, so if they win their first-round matchups, they would face off in the East semifinals. 

                 

Oklahoma City 121, Washington 103

Danilo Gallinari (OKC): 20 points, 2 rebounds, 2 assists

Darius Bazley (OKC): 23 PTS, 7 REB 

Jerome Robinson (WSH): 19 PTS, 6 AST, 2 REB

Darius Bazley exploded for 23 points off the bench to extend Washington's miserable stay inside the bubble. 

The 23 points marked a career high for the Oklahoma City guard, who had 29 points in four previous appearances in Orlando. 

The Thunder had six players reach double digits, with Danilo Gallinari joining Bazley in the 20-point column. 

Oklahoma City's victory moved it into a half-game lead over the Utah Jazz for the No. 5 seed in the Western Conference. 

The Wizards have two games left against Milwaukee and Boston to avoid going winless inside the bubble. The only good news going into those matchups might be the willingness to rest players with East seeds already locked into place.

        

Toronto 108, Memphis 99

Pascal Siakam (TOR): 26 PTS, 3 AST, 1 REB

Norman Powell (TOR): 16 PTS, 4 AST, 2 REB

Serge Ibaka (TOR): 12 PTS, 12 REB, 3 AST 

Dillon Brooks (MEM): 25 PTS, 6 REB, 2 AST

Ja Morant (MEM): 17 PTS, 10 AST, 4 REB 

Toronto's impressive all-around performance put more pressure on Memphis' playoff hopes. 

Nick Nurse's team broke the game open with a 40-point second quarter and followed that up by conceding only 17 points in the third. 

Pascal Siakam knocked down a quartet of three-point shots on his way to a game-high 26 points. 

Toronto received terrific production off the bench from Serge Ibaka and Norman Powell, who combined for 28 points. Ibaka also brought down 12 rebounds to record a double-double. 

Ja Morant put up 17 points and 10 assists, but he could not do enough to make up for the absence of points from Jonas Valanciunas, who was shut out in 27 minutes. 

The combination of Memphis' fifth bubble loss and wins by Portland and San Antonio cut the Grizzlies' advantage over both teams further. 

           

San Antonio 122, New Orleans 113

DeMar DeRozan (SA): 27 PTS, 4 REB, 2 AST

Rudy Gay (SA): 19 PTS, 5 REB, 3 AST

JJ Redick (NO): 31 PTS, 5 REB, 3 AST

Zion Williamson (NO): 25 PTS, 7 REB 

DeMar DeRozan powered a 41-point fourth quarter to keep San Antonio in the mix for the play-in series.

DeRozan scored 15 of his 27 points in the final 12 minutes to help the Spurs rally back after a 19-point third. 

DeRozan and Dejounte Murray were supported by strong bench performances out of Rudy Gay and Marco Belinelli. 

Gay produced his second 19-point outing in the bubble and his fifth double-digit point total since the resumption of play. 

New Orleans also received a massive contribution out of one of its veterans off the bench, as JJ Redick put up 31 points on eight three-point shots. 

Unfortunately for Redick, his postseason streak ended at 13 years in a row through the combination of New Orleans' loss and Portland's victory over Philadelphia.

              

Boston 122, Orlando 119 (Final/Overtime)

Gordon Hayward (BOS); 31 PTS, 9 REB, 5 AST

Jayson Tatum (BOS): 29 PTS, 9 REB, 6 AST

Jaylen Brown (BOS): 19 PTS, 12 REB 

Nikola Vucevic (ORL): 26 PTS, 11 REB

Terence Ross (ORL): 18 PTS, 7 REB, 2 AST

Jayson Tatum scored five points in the final 37 seconds of the fourth quarter to force overtime between Boston and Orlando. 

Tatum scored an additional five points in overtime to eke out a victory for the third-ranked team in the East. 

Before Tatum took over, Gordon Hayward shined for the Celtics. He produced 31 points while shooting 12-of-18 from the field. 

The total was the second highest of the season for Hayward behind a 39-point performance against Cleveland November 5. 

Despite not having Aaron Gordon in the lineup, the Magic fought hard with Nikola Vucevic and James Ennis III both recording double-doubles. 

Orlando now has two games to prepare for the postseason. The Magic are expected to start the first round against Milwaukee. 

          

Portland 124, Philadelphia 121

Damian Lillard (POR): 51 PTS, 7 AST, 3 REB 

Carmelo Anthony (POR): 20 PTS, 7 REB 

Josh Richardson (PHI): 34 PTS, 6 AST, 5 REB

Alec Burks (PHI: 20 PTS, 5 REB, 2 AST 

Damian Lillard made sure he did not let his poor close to Saturday's game against the L.A. Clippers affect him Sunday. 

The Trail Blazers star went off for 51 points to pull Portland closer to Memphis in the race for the No. 8 seed. 

The only other Portland player to reach 20 points was Carmelo Anthony, who moved into 15th on the NBA's all-time scoring chart past Paul Pierce

Josh Richardson and Alec Burks combined for 54 points to keep the Sixers in the contest, but they were short-handed with Ben Simmons out and Joel Embiid getting injured during the game. 

Portland has two games left against Dallas and Brooklyn to overtake the Grizzlies for the eighth seed. 

Gaining the No. 8 seed is important because that team only has to win a single game in the play-in series. The No. 9 seed has to win twice. 

Philadelphia is still in the mix for the East's No. 4 seed, but its path to that placing may be hard with Embiid possibly joining Simmons on the sideline.

               

Houston 129, Sacramento 112

Austin Rivers (HOU): 41 PTS, 6 REB, 4 AST

James Harden (HOU): 32 PTS, 8 REB, 7 AST

De'Aaron Fox (SAC): 26 PTS, 9 AST, 2 REB 

Austin Rivers created a rare occurrence in which neither James Harden nor Russell Westbrook was Houston's leading scorer. 

Rivers came off the bench to torch the Kings for 41 points, 18 of which came from three-point range. 

The high level of production was a welcome sight with Westbrook sidelined and Danuel House and P.J. Tucker combining for three points out of the starting lineup. 

Before Sunday, Rivers put up 31 points in four games in Orlando and hadjust a pair of 20-point performances this season. 

Harden was his normal self in the backcourt, eclipsing the 30-point mark for the third time in five games. 

Sacramento received another solid output from De'Aaron Fox, but Bogdan Bogdanovic was limited to 13 points, and its record in the bubble fell to 1-4. 

           

Brooklyn 129, Los Angeles Clippers 120

Caris LeVert (BKN): 27 PTS, 13 AST, 4 REB

Joe Harris (BKN): 25 PTS, 2 REB, 1 AST

Tyler Johnson (BKN): 21 PTS, 4 REB, 1 AST

Kawhi Leonard (LAC): 39 PTS, 6 AST, 2 REB 

Brooklyn continues to be the most pleasant surprise in the Eastern Conference. 

The Nets fended off a challenge from Kawhi Leonard and the Clippers to finish Sunday's seven-game slate with a nine-point victory.

Caris LeVert and Joe Harris got off to fast starts to help the Nets score 45 points in the opening stanza. 

Brooklyn shot 85.7 percent from the field in the first 12 minutes to set a new season best across the league, per NBA Stats: 

Kawhi Leonard clawed the Los Angeles Clippers back into the contest with a personal 11-0 run in the third quarter. 

The Nets answered that with a 10-3 run and opened up a 10-point gap at the start of the fourth period. 

Four of Brooklyn's five starters reached double digits and Tyler Johnson added 21 points off the bench to help push the team's bubble record to 4-2. 

           

Updated Playoff Picture

Eastern Conference

1. Milwaukee (55-15)

2. Toronto (50-19)

3. Boston (47-23)

4. Miami (43-27)

5. Indiana (43-27)

6. Philadelphia (42-28)

7. Brooklyn (34-36)

8. Orlando (32-39)

9. Washington (24-46)

        

Western Conference

1. Los Angeles Lakers (51-18)

2. Los Angeles Clippers (47-23)

3. Denver (46-24)

4. Houston (43-25)

5. Oklahoma City (43-26)

6. Utah (43-27)

7. Dallas (42-30)

8. Memphis (33-38)

9. Portland (33-39)

10. San Antonio (31-38)

11. Phoenix (31-39)

12. New Orleans (30-40)

13. Sacramento (29-40)

       

Follow Joe on Twitter, @JTansey90.

Statistics obtained from ESPN.com.

NBA Announces Finalists for MVP, Rookie of the Year, 6th Man of the Year, More

Aug 8, 2020
Milwaukee Bucks' Giannis Antetokounmpo tries to drive past Los Angeles Lakers' LeBron James during the second half of an NBA basketball game Thursday, Dec. 19, 2019, in Milwaukee. The Bucks won 111-104. (AP Photo/Morry Gash)
Milwaukee Bucks' Giannis Antetokounmpo tries to drive past Los Angeles Lakers' LeBron James during the second half of an NBA basketball game Thursday, Dec. 19, 2019, in Milwaukee. The Bucks won 111-104. (AP Photo/Morry Gash)

The NBA has officially announced the finalists for each of its 2019-20 regular-season awards, highlighted by Giannis Antetokounmpo, LeBron James and James Harden in the MVP race.

The league declared the seeding games in Florida wouldn't factor into the awards races, so only everything that happened through March 11 is being considered. 

Antetokounmpo has been the favorite to win his second straight MVP seemingly since the season began, but James made a late push before the play was suspended.

Here are the finalists for each of the major awards. 

        

NBA MVP Finalists

  • Giannis Antetokounmpo (Milwaukee Bucks)
  • LeBron James (Los Angeles Lakers)
  • James Harden (Houston Rockets

         

NBA Rookie of the Year Finalists

  • Ja Morant (Memphis Grizzlies)
  • Zion Williamson (New Orleans Pelicans)
  • Kendrick Nunn (Miami Heat)

        

NBA Sixth Man of the Year Finalists

  • Montrezl Harrell (Los Angeles Clippers)
  • Dennis Schroder (New Orleans Pelicans)
  • Lou Williams (Los Angeles Clippers)

     

NBA Most Improved Player Finalists

  • Bam Adebayo (Miami Heat)
  • Brandon Ingram (New Orleans Pelicans)
  • Luka Doncic (Dallas Mavericks)

         

NBA Defensive Player of the Year Finalists

  • Giannis Antetokounmpo (Milwaukee Bucks)
  • Anthony Davis (Los Angeles Lakers)
  • Rudy Gobert (Utah Jazz)

        

NBA Coach of the Year Finalists

  • Nick Nurse (Toronto Raptors)
  • Billy Donovan (Oklahoma City Thunder)
  • Mike Budenholzer (Milwaukee Bucks)

         

The most fascinating race could be the battle for Coach of the Year.

The National Basketball Coaches Association voted Mike Budenholzer of the Milwaukee Bucks and Billy Donovan of the Oklahoma City Thunder as co-winners, but ESPN's Adrian Wojnarowski reported Nick Nurse of the Toronto Raptors was one vote short of making it a three-way tie. 

Antetokounmpo's quest to become the first back-to-back MVP winner since Stephen Curry (2014-15, 2015-16) seems like a safe bet. He averaged 29.6 points, 13.7 rebounds and 5.8 assists in his 57 games being considered. 

In addition to those traditional counting stats, Antetokounmpo's defensive contributions are instrumental to Milwaukee's success. He's also a finalist for Defensive Player of the Year. His 32.04 player efficiency rating in 2019-20 is the highest single-season total ever tracked by Basketball Reference

No player has won MVP and Defensive Player of the Year in the same season since Hakeem Olajuwon in 1993-94. 

James will attempt to spoil Antetokounmpo's MVP party by winning the award for the fifth time. The Los Angeles Lakers superstar hasn't won the award since the 2012-13 season. He led the Lakers to the best record in the Western Conference this year and is averaging a career-high 10.3 assists per game. 

Harden can join Moses Malone as the only Houston Rockets players to win multiple MVP awards if he pulls off an upset in the voting. The Beard leads the NBA in scoring for the third straight season (34.3 points per game), in addition to averaging 7.5 assists and 6.4 rebounds per game. 

Rookie of the Year seems like Ja Morant's to lose, though Kendrick Nunn has been a vital part of the Miami Heat's success in the Eastern Conference. Nunn ranks fourth on the team in scoring (15.2 points per game) and shoots 35.6 percent from three-point range. 

Zion Williamson is expected to become the biggest star from this year's rookie class. The New Orleans Pelicans standout offered a glimpse of what his future could look like, leading all first-year players with 22.4 points per game. 

Unfortunately for Williamson, his pre-hiatus resume only consists of 19 games because of a torn meniscus that kept him out of action until Jan. 22. 

Morant was drafted to be the centerpiece of the Memphis Grizzlies' next successful era. The 20-year-old wasted no time in making a positive impact, averaging 17.8 points and 7.1 assists per game and posting a 48.1 shooting percentage. 

The Grizzlies are the No. 8 seed in the Western Conference thanks in large part to Morant's scoring and playmaking skills. 

While the NBA hasn't offered a date for when the awards will be given out, an official release from the league issued on July 21 stated that TNT will announce the winners during its coverage of the postseason. 

Ja Morant Dedicates Grizzlies' Win over Thunder to Daughter on Her 1st Birthday

Aug 8, 2020
Memphis Grizzlies' Ja Morant (12) and head coach Taylor Jenkins look on against the Utah Jazz during the second half of an NBA basketball game Wednesday, Aug. 5, 2020, in Lake Buena Vista, Fla. (Kevin C. Cox/Pool Photo via AP)
Memphis Grizzlies' Ja Morant (12) and head coach Taylor Jenkins look on against the Utah Jazz during the second half of an NBA basketball game Wednesday, Aug. 5, 2020, in Lake Buena Vista, Fla. (Kevin C. Cox/Pool Photo via AP)

Memphis Grizzlies rookie guard Ja Morant said Friday he struggled with the emotion of being in the NBA's Orlando bubble while his daughter, Kaari Jaidyn Morant, celebrated her first birthday back home.

Morant explained he called his parents before recording 19 points, nine assists and four rebounds in the Grizzlies' 121-92 victory over the Oklahoma City Thunder.

"I wasn't in a good mood at all," he told reporters. "[I] told them it was probably one of the toughest days of my life."

The Rookie of the Year contender said the victory was a bright spot in an otherwise difficult day.

"Kind of tough, but the thing I gave her today was a win," Morant said. "So hopefully she's thankful for that and all the gifts she's got back at the house."

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ysxhrghJkRM

It marked Memphis' first win at the Disney World complex in Orlando, Florida, after four straight losses to open the restarted 2019-20 season amid the coronavirus pandemic.

The Grizzlies still own the eighth and final playoff spot in the Western Conference with a 33-37 record, one game ahead of the Portland Trail Blazers and two clear of the San Antonio Spurs. A play-in tournament, which is triggered if the No. 8 team is fewer than 4.5 games ahead of No. 9, is all but assured, though.

Morant, who's averaged 17.8 points, 7.1 assists and 3.7 rebounds through 64 appearances in his debut campaign, will play a crucial role in determining whether the Grizz claim that last berth.

Memphis returns to action Sunday with a 2 p.m. ET tip against the reigning NBA champion Toronto Raptors.  

NBA's Top Stats, Best Highlights, Updated Playoff Picture from Aug. 7 Results

Aug 7, 2020
Memphis Grizzlies' Ja Morant (12) makes his way down the court during an NBA basketball game against the New Orleans Pelicans Monday, Aug. 3, 2020, in Lake Buena Vista, Fla. (AP Photo/Ashley Landis, Pool)
Memphis Grizzlies' Ja Morant (12) makes his way down the court during an NBA basketball game against the New Orleans Pelicans Monday, Aug. 3, 2020, in Lake Buena Vista, Fla. (AP Photo/Ashley Landis, Pool)

One playoff berth is left to be clinched inside the NBA's bubble in Orlando, Florida

The Memphis Grizzlies hold the inside track to land the Western Conference's No. 8 seed after it corrected its poor form with a victory over the Oklahoma City Thunder Friday. 

San Antonio and New Orleans also earned victories Friday to keep pressure on Memphis and Portland, who currently sits in ninth place. 

The final two playoff berths in the Eastern Conference were handed out to the Brooklyn Nets and Orlando Magic. 

Brooklyn clinched its postseason spot after a win over Sacramento, while Orlando landed its berth by way of Washington's fifth consecutive defeat. 

Philadelphia made an impact in its seeding race, as it overcame some early struggles to beat the Magic and move level with Indiana in the hunt for the East's No. 5 seed. 

Boston controlled the final matchup of the six-game slate against Toronto, but it is still 3.5 games back of the Raptors with the seeding games dwindling down in central Florida. 

               

August 7 Results, Stats and Highlights

San Antonio 119, Utah 111

Derrick White (SA): 24 points, 6 rebounds, 4 assists

Jakob Poeltl (SA): 19 PTS, 10 REB, 2 AST

Jordan Clarkson (UTA): 24 PTS, 4 AST, 2 REB

     

Derrick White led the Spurs to a vital win in the hunt for eighth place against a depleted Utah Jazz squad. 

Rudy Gobert, Donovan Mitchell, Mike Conley and Royce O'Neale did not play for Utah, and Joe Ingles featured for 17 minutes. 

White has been one of the best guards inside the bubble, and he produced another 24 points in Friday's victory. 

The Colorado product has four 20-point performances for Gregg Popovich's team in Orlando. Friday's number was two points off his highest total since the resumption of play. 

Jordan Clarkson was one of the few Utah regulars who received a normal dose of playing time. He produced 24 points off the bench for Quin Snyder's side. 

Miye Oni, Emmanuel Mudiay and Tony Bradley all reached double digits for Utah, who dropped to 2-3 in Orlando. 

San Antonio is two games back of eighth-place Memphis and one game behind ninth-place Portland, who currently has a game in hand.

           

Memphis 121, Oklahoma City 92

Dillon Brooks (MEM): 22 PTS, 6 REB, 4 AST

Jonas Valanciunas (MEM): 19 PTS, 11 REB, 2 AST

Ja Morant (MEM): 19 PTS, 9 REB, 4 AST

Chris Paul (OKC): 17 PTS, 5 REB, 5 AST

     

Memphis finally earned its first win in the bubble Friday. 

Ja Morant was one rebound away from a double-double in his showdown with Chris Paul and Oklahoma City. 

The Rookie of the Year candidate put on a show throughout the contest to revive Memphis' hopes of earning the No. 8 seed. 

Jonas Valancuinas recorded a double-double, which was his 36th of the campaign, as he thrived in the paint with Steven Adams out for the Thunder. 

In a 13-game span dating back to February 26, Valancuinas has 11 double-doubles. The only games in which he did not produce at that level was the bubble opener against Portland and a March game against Brooklyn.

With three games remaining, the Grizzlies hold a one-game advantage on Portland and lead San Antonio by two games.

Due to their poor start, the Grizzlies will not be able to clinch the No. 8 seed outright. A play-in series will occur if the No. 9 seed is within four games of the eighth-place side. 

              

Brooklyn 119, Sacramento 106

Caris LeVert (BKN): 22 PTS, 7 AST, 5 REB

Joe Harris (BKN): 21 PTS, 4 REB, 4 AST

Jarrett Allen (BKN): 17 PTS, 11 REB, 8 AST

Bogdan Bogdanovic (SAC): 27 PTS, 6 REB, 2 AST

De'Aaron Fox (SAC): 21 PTS, 7 AST, 2 REB

     

Jarrett Allen was two assists away from recording a triple-double in Brooklyn's playoff-clinching win over Sacramento. 

The Nets are now guaranteed to finish in either seventh or eighth place. 

Caris LeVert produced 19 of his 22 points in the first half. Brooklyn rallied from down three after the first quarter to up 10 by halftime. 

Despite all of their absences, the Nets have put up at least 115 points in five straight games, which ties the longest streak with that many points in franchise history, per ESPN Stats & Info:

Sacramento did not go down without a fight, as Bogdan Bogdanovic and De'Aaron Fox once again eclipsed the 20-point mark.

The Kings need to win out and receive some help to overtake Portland, San Antonio and Phoenix to earn a spot in the West play-in series. 

         

Philadelphia 108, Orlando 101

Joel Embiid (PHI): 23 PTS, 13 REB

Tobias Harris (PHI): 23 PTS, 15 REB, 4 AST

Alec Burks (PHI): 22 PTS, 4 REB, 2 AST

Evan Fournier (ORL): 22 PTS, 3 REB, 3 AST

Nikola Vucevic (ORL): 21 PTS, 12 REB, 3 AST

      

Philadelphia performed at its best in the fourth quarter to close out an upset-minded Orlando team. 

The Sixers entered the final stanza with a two-point advantage and outscored the Magic by seven in the fourth. 

Joel Embiid controlled his paint battle against Nikola Vucevic and others by putting up 23 points and 13 rebounds. 

Tobias Harris continued his strong run in the bubble with his third 20-point outing in the last four contests. He also produced his first double-double since March 5. 

With Ben Simmons out injured, Alec Burks turned in 22 points off the bench, and Matisse Thybulle came up with a few important plays. 

Orlando received 20-point outings from Vucevic and Evan Fournier, but it could not match Philadelphia's scoring depth. The Sixers had four players with 21 points or more. 

         

New Orleans 118, Washington 107

Jrue Holiday (NO): 28 PTS, 6 AST, 3 REB

Brandon Ingram (NO): 17 PTS, 5 AST, 4 REB

Rui Hachimura (WSH): 23 PTS, 6 REB, 2 AST

Thomas Bryant (WSH): 22 PTS, 8 REB

     

New Orleans eliminated Washington from playoff contention by earning a much-needed win in its own playoff hunt. 

Jrue Holiday stepped into a starring role for the Pelicans, as he produced 28 points while shooting 11-for-16 and totaled six assists, three rebounds and a pair of steals. 

Brandon Ingram turned in another solid game with 17 points, but only one other New Orleans player was able to reach 15 points with Zion Williamson out of the lineup.

Washington fought hard until the end, with Rui Hachimura and Thomas Bryant once again starring in the paint, but it could not muster enough to stay alive in the East playoff race. 

The Wizards have three more attempts to win their first game in the bubble. They close with Oklahoma City, Milwaukee and Boston. 

        

Boston 122, Toronto 100

Jaylen Brown (BOS): 20 PTS, 6 REB, 2 AST

Jayson Tatum (BOS): 18 PTS, 7 REB, 4 AST

Fred VanVleet (TOR): 13 PTS, 4 REB, 4 AST

      

Boston asserted its dominance over Toronto with terrific three-point shooting. 

The Celtics knocked down 16 three-point shots and blew the game open by outscoring the Raptors 39-20 in the third stanza.

Jaylen Brown and Jayson Tatum combined to hit six shots from downtown, and both contributed in other parts of the stat column as well.

Brown delivered the pass of the night, as he picked out Gordon Hayward from across the court for a layup. 

Toronto struggled to match Boston's three-point output. The Raptors' five starters went 3-for-19 from three-point range. 

The Raptors are still in good position to land the No. 2 seed, but they have a trio of tough tests left against Milwaukee, Philadelphia and Denver.

           

Updated Playoff Picture

Eastern Conference 

1. Milwaukee (55-14)

2. Toronto (49-19)

3. Boston (46-23)

4. Miami (43-26)

5. Indiana (42-27)

6. Philadelphia (42-27)

7. Brooklyn (33-36)

8. Orlando (32-38)

9. Washington (24-45)

      

Western Conference

1. Los Angeles Lakers (51-17)

2. Los Angeles Clippers (46-22)

3. Denver (45-24)

4. Houston (43-25)

5. Utah (43-26)

6. Oklahoma City (42-26)

7. Dallas (41-30)

8. Memphis (33-37)

9. Portland (32-38)

10. San Antonio (30-38)

11. New Orleans (30-39)

12. Phoenix (30-39)

13. Sacramento (29-40)

       

Follow Joe on Twitter, @JTansey90

Statistics obtained from ESPN.com

Pelicans' Win over Grizzlies Further Clouds Western Conference Playoff Race

Aug 4, 2020
New Orleans Pelicans' Zion Williamson (1) brings the ball up court against the Memphis Grizzlies during the second half of an NBA basketball game Monday, Aug. 3, 2020 in Lake Buena Vista, Fla. (AP Photo/Ashley Landis, Pool)
New Orleans Pelicans' Zion Williamson (1) brings the ball up court against the Memphis Grizzlies during the second half of an NBA basketball game Monday, Aug. 3, 2020 in Lake Buena Vista, Fla. (AP Photo/Ashley Landis, Pool)

The NBA may have designed its Disney bubble's 22-team format primarily as a means to get Zion Williamson onto more television screens, but it created a race for the eighth seed in the Western Conference that's more fun—and more competitive—than expected.

Williamson's New Orleans Pelicans defeated the Memphis Grizzlies 109-99 on Monday, cutting Memphis' lead for that final playoff spot to two games. Ninth place belongs to the Portland Trail Blazers. They moved percentage points ahead of the San Antonio Spurs when the Spurs lost 132-130 to the Philadelphia 76ers on Monday.

The Blazers and Spurs hold a half-game lead over the Pelicans, a one-game lead over the Sacramento Kings and a game-and-a-half lead over the Phoenix Suns. That's all going to change 24 hours from now, but that's where things stand.

With Memphis having lost its first three seeding games, it's a near certainty the eighth and ninth seeds will be within four games of each other, triggering a play-in series in which the ninth seed must beat the eighth seed twice before the eighth seed wins once to earn a matchup with the Los Angeles Lakers in the first round.

The Pelicans' win over the Grizzlies was huge, not only because it kept them within striking distance of a shot at the playoffs, but also because it represented the gradual lifting of Williamson's controversial minutes limit. After the No. 1 overall pick played just 15 and 14 minutes in New Orleans' first two games, head coach Alvin Gentry and team president David Griffin found themselves playing defense, insisting it was simply to get Williamson's conditioning back up to speed after he missed training camp because of a family situation. But Williamson came alive against Memphis, playing 25 minutes and looking more like the phenom he was in limited games after making his NBA debut in January.

New Orleans' schedule gets easier, including two games against the Kings, who are not in last place but are in by far the most trouble of any of the teams fighting to reach the playoffs. Sacramento suffered a disappointing loss to the Orlando Magic on Sunday following a bubble-opening loss to the Spurs on Friday. With Marvin Bagley III out, the Kings' hopes are fading.

Besides the Spurs, who have looked impressive so far despite the last-second loss to the Sixers, the team that has impressed the most in this cluster has been the Suns. Phoenix took care of the happy-to-be-here Washington Wizards in its opening game and then pulled out a 117-115 win over the Dallas Mavericks on Sunday. Devin Booker has thrived in the bubble, scoring 30 points against Dallas and 27 against Washington.

Booker has long been accused of being an empty-stats star because of the Suns' lack of anything close to team success in his five seasons in the NBA. These eight seeding games are the most meaningful games he's played in his professional career. So far, he's risen to the moment.

Though the league's preference seems to be for New Orleans to snag the eighth seed, the popular pick heading into the bubble was Portland because of Damian Lillard's proven playoff record and the returns of starting power forward Zach Collins and center Jusuf Nurkic to the lineup. Thus far, the Blazers have been a mixed bag.

They pulled out an overtime win against the Grizzlies in their opening game but fell to the Boston Celtics on Sunday despite mounting a second-half comeback. The formula is there: some big-time shots from Lillard in the Boston game and CJ McCollum in the Memphis game, and Nurkic looks like he hasn't lost a step. Backup guard Gary Trent Jr. has had two breakout performances. But Collins is reacclimating less easily than Nurkic, still plagued by his old fouling problems. And Hassan Whiteside, after starting all season in Nurkic's absence, has struggled in a bench role.

Portland's schedule won't get any easier. It faces the Houston Rockets, Denver Nuggets, Los Angeles Clippers and the 76ers before closing with two more winnable games against the Mavs and the Brooklyn Nets. The Blazers own tiebreakers over the Pelicans and Spurs, but they can't afford any more lackluster performances like in the first half against the Celtics.

By the middle of next week, the rest of the playoff field may be set. But the race for the final seed in the Western Conference has been the most compelling story of the bubble's early stages, and it's going to come down to the final day. Get ready.

   

Sean Highkin covers the NBA for Bleacher Report and co-hosts the Bulls vs. Blazers podcast. He is based in Portland, Oregon. His work has been honored by the Professional Basketball Writers Association. Follow him on Twitter, Instagram and in the B/R app.


Former Detroit Pistons and Orlando Magic head coach and current TNT color commentator Stan Van Gundy returns to The Full 48 with Howard Beck to discuss life in the NBA bubble as a member of the media, the reason for the high-scoring games, injury management vs. load management, Zion Williamson and the Pelicans, Philadelphia's chances at a championship and why Ben Simmons is the most underrated player in the league.

Grizzlies' Ja Morant Praises 'Great Role Model' Zion Williamson on Twitter

Aug 3, 2020
New Orleans Pelicans forward Zion Williamson, left, and Memphis Grizzlies guard Ja Morant exchange jerseys after an NBA basketball game in New Orleans, Friday, Jan. 31, 2020. The Pelicans won 139-111. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)
New Orleans Pelicans forward Zion Williamson, left, and Memphis Grizzlies guard Ja Morant exchange jerseys after an NBA basketball game in New Orleans, Friday, Jan. 31, 2020. The Pelicans won 139-111. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)

Memphis Grizzlies star Ja Morant spoke highly of fellow South Carolina high school product Zion Williamson following Memphis' 109-99 defeat to the New Orleans Pelicans on Monday night.

Morant and Williamson, who were briefly teammates on the AAU circuit, shared a moment on the court once the game ended. Morant directed a message to the Pelicans star on Twitter, writing, "let's continue to stay solid & be a great role model to the people who look up to us."

This probably won't be the first time Morant and Williamson cross paths on the court with the playoffs at stake.

Once he made his long-awaited debut this season, Williamson lived up to the hype. He's averaging 22.3 points and 6.4 rebounds per game while shooting 57.9 percent from the field.

Morant has far exceeded expectations. He's averaging 17.7 points and 7.0 assists and is the biggest reason the Grizzlies are eighth in the Western Conference.

These two are poised to be competitive rivals for years.

Zion Williamson, Brandon Ingram Power Pelicans Past Ja Morant, Grizzlies

Aug 3, 2020
New Orleans Pelicans' Zion Williamson (1) shoots in front of Memphis Grizzlies' Brandon Clarke (15) during the second half of an NBA basketball game Monday, Aug. 3, 2020 in Lake Buena Vista, Fla. (AP Photo/Ashley Landis, Pool)
New Orleans Pelicans' Zion Williamson (1) shoots in front of Memphis Grizzlies' Brandon Clarke (15) during the second half of an NBA basketball game Monday, Aug. 3, 2020 in Lake Buena Vista, Fla. (AP Photo/Ashley Landis, Pool)

The Memphis Grizzlies' grip on the eighth seed continued to slip as they suffered their fourth straight defeat, losing 109-99 to the New Orleans Pelicans on Monday.

The Pelicans, meanwhile, earned a much-needed victory as they attempt to climb into the playoffs. They had dropped their first two games of the NBA's restart in Florida.  

Zion Williamson's playing time has been a big storyline surrounding the Pelicans, who have to balance their quest for the postseason with doing what they can to limit his injury risk. The 2019 No. 1 overall pick was on the floor for 25 minutes after getting 29 combined minutes in the team's last two outings.

That perhaps reflected how badly the Pelicans had to turn things around.

           

Notable Stats

Zion Williamson, SF, Pelicans: 9-of-21 FG, 23 points, seven rebounds, five assists

Brandon Ingram, SF, Pelicans: 8-of-16 FG, 24 points, seven rebounds, five assists, two steals

Josh Hart, SF, Pelicans: 5-of-6 FG, 15 points, seven rebounds

Ja Morant, PG, Grizzlies: 5-of-21 FG, 11 points, five rebounds, eight assists

Jaren Jackson Jr., PF, Grizzlies: 7-of-17 FG, 22 points, two rebounds, two assists, one steal, two blocks

            

Williamson Helps Pelicans Close out Win

In the Pelicans' first game back, they held a 93-89 lead on the Utah Jazz when Williamson exited with 7:19 left in the game. He remained on the bench as New Orleans saw its advantage evaporate en route to a 106-104 defeat.

Head coach Alvin Gentry said on ESPN as the fourth quarter opened that the plan was for Williamson to play eight-to-10 minutes in the final frame. He made it to the 6:21 mark before exiting, appearing visibly fatigued.

https://twitter.com/thebirdwrites/status/1290450494880722945

Williamson re-entered with 4:29 left and the Pelicans clinging to a seven-point lead, 97-90.

In general, Williamson still looks a step below where he was before the NBA suspended the season in March. He has the strength to score inside, but the explosion isn't quite there. Still, he scored six points over those final four-and-a-half minutes to help New Orleans hang on—a stark contrast from that Jazz game.

Brandon Ingram delivered the dagger when he connected on a pull-up jumper with 1:02 remaining to make it a nine-point game, 108-99. His outing mirrored his overall effort over what has been a career year.

Even in the likely outcome the Pelicans miss the playoffs, Monday was an example of why fans should be so excited about the future.

             

Grizzlies Doomed by Bad Night from Morant

The Grizzlies briefly turned the tide against the Pelicans in the third quarter thanks to their defense, but that progress was undone by their poor offense. They held New Orleans to 21 points but scored just 23 themselves.

This isn't a game Ja Morant will remember fondly. The rookie guard moved the ball around the floor well but didn't have his shooting touch.

Two-time All-Defensive guard Jrue Holiday was causing problems for Morant all night.

https://twitter.com/peteredmiston/status/1290442173100560395

Jaren Jackson Jr. was similarly inconsistent, only really coming on strong against a tired Williamson in the fourth quarter. His five fouls also impacted how aggressive he could be inside on both ends of the court. 

The bench stepped up for Memphis to ensure the team was never too far behind the Pelicans. The quartet of Grayson Allen, Brandon Clarke, De'Anthony Melton and Anthony Tolliver combined for 33 points.

Allen, in particular, picked a good time to have his best performance of the season.

https://twitter.com/Kazeem/status/1290429525373997057

In order to stop their current slide, the Grizzlies will still need more from their two best players when they return to the court.

           

What's Next?

The Grizzlies meet the Jazz on Wednesday, while the Pelicans play the Sacramento Kings on Thursday.

15 Under-the-Radar Games to Watch During NBA Restart in Orlando

Jul 31, 2020
22 NBA teams will participate in the league's restart in Orlando beginning today.
22 NBA teams will participate in the league's restart in Orlando beginning today.

The NBA is officially back on the court after four-and-a-half months away. The path to the playoffs over the next 15 days features eight "seeding games" per team, all to be played on the bubble campus at Disney World in Orlando, Florida.

Participating in the restart are nine teams from the East and 13 from the West, with the top eight teams from each conference qualifying for the playoffs—which will play under their normal format. The condensed schedule to close out the regular season means games beginning in the afternoons and playing through the night

We know you're ready for showdowns like Lakers-Clippers and Bucks-Raptors—we don't need to point those out for you. Instead we've chosen to highlight the matchups floating under the radar, the hidden gems of the next two-plus weeks.

Many of the games listed below will be on NBA League Pass, and you can stream them live on B/R Live here. Others will broadcast on national television and are noted accordingly. To view the complete schedule for the NBA's restart in Orlando, go here. And these are the standings heading into the resumption of play.

Note: All tip-off times Eastern

     

Friday, July 31

Orlando Magic vs. Brooklyn Nets | 2:30 p.m. on NBA League Pass | Stream Here

The first afternoon game of the restart is instantly a crucial one in the Eastern Conference playoff race. Brooklyn has a half-game lead over Orlando for the No. 7 seed, which is some of the most-valuable real estate in the league with the introduction of the play-in series between teams that finish eighth and ninth.

This game will mark Jamal Crawford's 2020 debut, at long last, after the veteran signed with the Nets earlier this month after Brooklyn's roster was decimated by injuries, opt outs and positive coronavirus tests. These teams also play a bookend matchup on Aug. 11 that will likely carry similar playoff implications. 

       

Saturday, Aug. 1 

Utah Jazz vs. Oklahoma City Thunder | 3:30 p.m. on ESPN

Remember March 11, 2020? That seems like roughly six years ago. It was that night when the Jazz and Thunder players were on the court, mere minutes from tipoff, when the NBA and the sports world at large turned upside down.

Utah center Rudy Gobert tested positive for the coronavirus, trainers sprinted on to the floor to alert officials, players stayed at the arena for hours to be tested, and the league suspended the season. Well, almost five months later, this game goes on.

    

Sunday, Aug. 2

San Antonio Spurs vs. Memphis Grizzlies | 4 p.m. on NBA League Pass | Stream Here

Memphis enters the bubble as the No. 8 seed and will have plenty of competition and work to do in order to hold on to that spot for two weeks.

San Antonio is four games back and has made the playoffs 22 seasons in a row—the longest active streak in North American sportspositioning the Spurs as the team with the most to play for in their eight seeding games. This game juxtaposes the veteran Spurs with the youthful Grizz. If Memphis holds at eight and San Antonio jumps to nine, it would provide a preview to a very intriguing play-in matchup.

    

Tuesday, Aug. 4

Dallas Mavericks vs. Sacramento Kings | 2:30 p.m. on NBA League Pass | Stream Here

Two young and absolutely joyous teams to watch. The lineup combinations and pace of play will provide high entertainment value. We could legitimately see the Mavs' Luka Doncic, Kristaps Porzingis and Boban Marjanovic on the floor at the same time with the Kings' De'Aaron Fox, Buddy Hield and Bogdan Bogdanovic. Please sign us up.

As for the stakes, Dallas appears safe at the seventh seed and could move up a couple spots with strong performances in the seeding games, while Sacramento has all the motivation to move up from No. 11 to 8 or 9 and break the NBA's longest active playoff drought, currently at 13 seasons.

     

Thursday, Aug. 6

Portland Trail Blazers vs. Denver Nuggets | 8 p.m. on NBA League Pass | Stream Here

The Nuggets may well define "under the radar" in the NBA, always hanging out in the top half of the West while headlines go to LA or Houston or (until this season) Golden State.

Denver's challenge will be the transition from being one of the best home-court teams in the league to playing in empty gyms. If Nikola Jokic, Jamal Murray and Paul Millsap can make that adjustment, the Nuggets have a chance to reach the second seed and could be a team no one wants to see. The same could be said about Portland and the always hungry Damian Lillard. The ninth-place Blazers will essentially be in playoff mode from their first game and will need Dame, CJ McCollum and Carmelo Anthony to get hot quickly and stay that way in order to reach the postseason.

https://twitter.com/nuggets/status/1285299689131085824

     

Friday, Aug. 7

Boston Celtics vs. Toronto Raptors | 9 p.m. on TNT

A crucial game for the second seed in the East, which is valuable for this reason: That seed gets a likely first-round matchup with either Orlando or Brooklyn, instead of the 3 vs. 6 series against objectively stronger squads like Philadelphia or Indiana (remember the Sixers took the Raptors to seven games last season).

Toronto begins with the leg up—a three-game lead over Boston—and depending on how both teams play for the first week, the Raptors could use this game to clinch the No. 2 seed. On the other hand, the Celtics could close that gap, put pressure on Toronto and create a real race for that spot.

     

Saturday, Aug. 8

Phoenix Suns vs. Miami Heat | 7:30 p.m. on NBA League Pass | Stream Here

At about the halfway point of seeding games, Phoenix may already be eliminated, barely hanging on to playoff contention or actually very much in it, while Miami, regardless of how it plays, is pretty much set in the 4/5 range in the East, with not a whole lot of room for movement.

As such, this game has the makings of a Devin Booker explosion, along the lines of the 70 points in a game he scored three years ago. There would be nothing better than Booker finding a good scoring rhythm early, Jimmy Butler taking it personally to switch on to him defensively, and the two just going at it for the whole game. 

    

LA Clippers vs. Portland Trail Blazers | 1 p.m. on TNT

We're framing this less as Blazers vs. Clippers and more as Damian Lillard vs. Paul George. OK, we're framing this completely as Dame vs. PG. What if LA eliminates Portland in this game? Will George return the favor? What does he have saved in his drafts? How petty will it get?

Los Angeles Lakers vs. Indiana Pacers | 6 p.m. on TNT

How good are the Pacers, genuinely? Asking for everybody around the NBA. All season we've been impressed with Indiana just rolling steady and collecting wins, even without Victor Oladipo, while at the same time perhaps writing them off as not being able to reach that next tier of teams in his absence.

Well, now he's back, and this game, against the best team in the West and MVP-candidate LeBron James, will be the stick by which to measure the Pacers. The result won't make or break them, but how they play will demonstrate whether a deep run in the East playoffs is achievable.

Indiana did take a big hit when forward Domantas Sabonis was forced to leave the bubble with a left foot injury that could keep him out for the season.

     

Sunday, Aug. 9

Memphis Grizzlies vs. Toronto Raptors | 2 p.m. on NBA League Pass | Stream Here

A great test for Rookie-of-the-Year front-runner Ja Morant and Memphis against the defending champs. With just a couple games left, it will be crunch time at this point for the playoff-hopeful Grizzlies, so there should be a significant sense of urgency, even if the Raptors have already clinched the second seed.

To focus on a game within the game, Morant's matchup with either or both of Kyle Lowry and Fred Van Vleet will be fun to watch, given that the pair are two of the strongest and most-physical defensive guards in the NBA. They'll give the rookie a taste of the playoff intensity he can expect if Memphis gets there.

    

Thursday, Aug. 13

New Orleans Pelicans vs. Orlando Magic | TBD p.m. on NBA League Pass | Stream Here

This game brings some of the highest stakes of any interconference matchup during the seeding games. It'll be the final game for both teams, which will be battling for seeds No. 7, 8 and 9 in their respective conferences, and the Pelicans will be competing among five other teams in the crowded West for those spots.

And all of that may still fall to the back burner because this game will feature Zion Williamson and Aaron Gordon on the court at the same time. Think of the dunks. Oh my, the dunks. If both teams are still in contention and those two stars have reached solid game shape, this game could turn into a show. 

https://twitter.com/brlive/status/1270808956085174272

      

San Antonio Spurs vs. Utah Jazz | TBD p.m. on NBA League Pass | Stream Here

With every game in the bubble on a neutral court, the importance of playoff seeding shifts from home-court advantage to better matchups. We bring that up here because Utah, currently in the fourth spot, isn't playing solely to hold on to that higher first-round seed; if the Jazz fall to fifth, effectively nothing changes.  

So the question at this stage, the second-to-last day of seeding games, will be twofold: How much upward movement opportunity does Utah have left, and how much desire will it have to win in order to move up or simply avoid falling down, based on what each result would determine as the Jazz's first-round opponent?

This is basically a long-winded way of asking: At this point, what is their level of motivation and how long are the starters playing against a Spurs team that will likely need every single win to reach the playoffs and keep its aforementioned streak alive?

    

Portland Trail Blazers vs. Brooklyn Nets | TBD p.m. on NBA League Pass | Stream Here

Similar to the Booker premise mentioned earlier, this matchup has the potential for a dominant individual performance. Depending on what these teams have or have not clinched, and maybe even more so if they need a win to stay alive, there are multiple candidates to take over and turn this game into their own mixtape.

Given it'll be the last seeding game for both teams, players will have been able to find some good rhythm and be closer to game shape. Lillard could get hot from 3-point range and start launching from anywhere inside half court, while Anthony could go into "Hoodie Melo" mode and, perhaps for no other reason than to prove he still can, pour in a vintage onslaught of buckets. Speaking of something to prove, Crawford, who scored 50 in his final game of the 2019 season, remember, might feel inclined to do so again.

    

Friday, Aug. 14

Philadelphia 76ers vs. Houston Rockets | TBD p.m. on NBA League Pass | Stream Here

This pair of teams will hope to have a series of questions answered by its last game before the playoffs. For the 76ers: Are they playing like a legit title contender? As the best home team and worst road team (aside from the Wizards) in the bubble, how have they adjusted to the neutral, quiet games? Ben Simmons says his back feels great—is he playing like it? Is Joel Embiid dominating games, why or why not?

For the Rockets: Russell Westbrook traveled to Orlando late after a positive coronavirus test and did not have the same amount of practice time as his teammates—what has his progression on the court looked like? How well are Westbrook and James Harden playing together and complementing each other? Which player(s) is closing out games, how is he doing it and what's his level of success? Does their small 1-5 lineup appear like it will work in the playoffs? Deep runs in the playoffs for both teams hinge on the answers to these questions.

       

OKC Thunder vs. LA Clippers | TBD p.m. on NBA League Pass | Stream Here

Chris Paul and Shai Gilgeous-Alexander face their old Clippers teammates while Paul George faces his former Thunder squad, more than one year after the blockbuster trade that has somewhat surprisingly benefitted both teams pretty quickly, with LA one of the title favorites and thought-to-be-rebuilding OKC firmly in the playoff picture.

Seedingwise, the Clippers have much more to lose than they can gain before the postseason (they're 5.5 games behind the Lakers, only 1.5 ahead of Denver and 4 ahead of OKC), and you know CP3 would relish the chance to bump them down a spot to make their path to the finals a tad more difficult.

And while an obvious thing to watch for is how George and Kawhi Leonard look together game by game, keep your focus on LA's enormous advantage in the bubble: its depth. As coaches manage minutes while players get back into shape, bench rotations and second units are going to be critical. Enter reigning Sixth Man of the Year Lou Williams and runner-up Montrezl Harrell, both of whom left the bubble for family reasons and had to adhere to quarantine procedures upon their return—most notably with Williams set to miss LA's first two games.

But by this end point of the "regular season," both players should be back in the rotation, and their production off the bench could be what sets the Clippers apart from the rest of the top title contenders in the league.

Ja Morant Calls NBA Restart Format Unfair to Grizzlies: 'More Fuel to the Fire'

Jul 30, 2020
Memphis Grizzlies guard Ja Morant (12) plays in the first half of an NBA basketball game against the Orlando Magic Tuesday, March 10, 2020, in Memphis, Tenn. (AP Photo/Brandon Dill)
Memphis Grizzlies guard Ja Morant (12) plays in the first half of an NBA basketball game against the Orlando Magic Tuesday, March 10, 2020, in Memphis, Tenn. (AP Photo/Brandon Dill)

The Memphis Grizzlies head into the NBA's restart as the No. 8 seed in the Western Conference, with a 3.5-game lead over the Portland Trail Blazers, Sacramento Kings and New Orleans Pelicans.

And rookie phenom Ja Morant doesn't believe it's fair that even if the team maintains that cushion after eight more regular-season games, it'll be forced to participate in a play-in game, as he said on ESPN's The Jump on Thursday. 

"But, you know, we can't control that," he added. "Only thing we can control is how, you know, we go out and attack each of these games before that decision is made."

Teams may head into the postseason having played a different number of games because the coronavirus halted the season March 11, and the NBA settled on an eight-game regular season for this week's restart and a standard playoff format. 

The one difference is that if the Nos. 8 and 9 seeds finish within four games of each other, they'll face off in a play-in matchup. That could hurt a team like Memphis, which is in the driver's seat to lock down the No. 8 seed. 

But Morant is using it as motivation. 

"I just feel like it's an extra chip," he said. "You know—more fuel to the fire, more motivation for us."

The 20-year-old Morant is a deserving front-runner to be named Rookie of the Year—depending on where voters fall on Zion Williamson's injury-shortened campaign—and has injected life into a Grizzlies team that came into the season with fairly low expectations. 

"Coming into the season, I think we were projected to be 29th, and look at us now," Morant said. "So we just use that as fuel, continue to work. We're all very hungry. We know what we're capable of. Just go out and play."

Morant is averaging 17.6 points, 6.9 assists and 3.5 rebounds per game, shooting 49.1 percent from the field and 36.7 percent from three. He's also a nightly highlight waiting to happen, given his explosive athleticism.

BR Video

Alongside Jaren Jackson Jr., he's given the Grizzlies an exciting young one-two punch. That combination was expected to revitalize the franchise in the years to come. Instead, it's a bit ahead of schedule and looking to secure a playoff berth.