LOS ANGELES — If there’s anything to be learned in the early days of the NBA playoffs, aggressiveness is rewarded, incidental contact is deemed just that and it certainly helps to have late-game shot makers who can create in scramble situations.
See Jamal Murray. See the blessed and highly favored New York Knicks, who seem to get every good bounce going their way.
And then there’s the Dallas Mavericks, who we don’t know just what to make of. But we know about Luka Doncic and Kyrie Irving, offensive wizards who can excel in a free flowing game and make due in one of those grinding affairs.
Doncic scored 32 and Irving 23 as Dallas tied its series at one game each with the Los Angeles Clippers Tuesday at Crypto.com Arena, 96-93.
The game was ugly for the most part, but Dallas seemed in firm control throughout. The Mavericks team that saw Doncic score 70-plus in Atlanta during the league’s inflated explosion no longer exists, that NBA doesn’t actually exist between April and June.
Mavericks coach Jason Kidd said the score was “90’s basketball at its best” in a tongue-in-cheek manner, but his team held the Clippers to their lowest field-goal percentage for the year (36.8).
Perhaps the Clippers were thrown off a bit by having Kawhi Leonard return for his first game since March 31, and the jump in intensity between regular season basketball and playoff ball could’ve caught him off guard.
But it could’ve also been the long bodies and wide bodies that the Mavericks can throw at each of the Clippers talented wings, disrupting their offensive flow. At the trade deadline, the Mavericks acquired Daniel Gafford from the Wizards and in a separate deal, P.J. Washington from Charlotte.
Despite both players coming from losing teams, they’ve aided in the Mavericks developing and adding a new layer to their defensive identity—a necessary layer.
“Every since March, we could see there was a shift in officiating,” Kidd said. “Less whistles and the physicality has stepped up and we embraced it. That’s who we are. The playoffs are no different.”
“We’re not afraid of the physicality. Maybe that’s why we were a little disappointed in Game 1. We weren’t physical. Maybe the rust, maybe the time off. Tonight we played 48 minutes of physical basketball.”
Dallas made things uncomfortable and whatever playoff jitters birthed by Game 1 clearly dissipated by gametime. Kidd believed that was clearly the case, particularly for his playoff-inexperienced bigs, Gafford and Dereck Lively II. Ivica Zubac bulled them in the opener, but a repeat was not to be had.
Zubac scored 13 with 12 rebounds but wasn’t able to set the tone like he did Sunday. And even with Gafford being ineffective, Maxi Kleber stepped in to hit two threes, including a triple with 2:08 left after a scramble to put Dallas up six.
Even the unlikely made impactful defensive plays and were generally attentive— Doncic and Irving. The Clippers hunted Doncic on switches, but Dallas often sent second defenders to aid, like Washington and Derrick Jones Jr. And when Doncic was left on an island, nobody actually scored on him.
Washington scored 10 of his 18 points in the fourth as Dallas turned what was a six-point deficit into a quick five-point lead. Even with the slim lead, the Clippers never felt air, and Doncic nailed two step-back threes in the fourth—one to break a 73-all tie with seven minutes left and another with 1:26 remaining to put the Mavericks up nine.
Kidd made football references to describe Doncic, a finalist for the Most Valuable Player award. Calling him the Mavericks’ quarterback, Doncic made a risky pass in the final minute in the attempt to beat a Clippers trap in their own backcourt.
It just went past the reach of Terrance Mann and to Irving, and victory was secured.
“You trust your quarterback. He makes a lot of passes a lot of people can’t make,” Kidd said. “It comes down to the receiver being able to catch it. Ky caught it and went to the free throw line.”
Therein lies the formula for the Mavericks, not only through this series but should they advance, how they’d plan for against Oklahoma City or New Orleans. A hellacious defense that makes things ugly, and then giving it to the talented quarterback with a few minutes left who can make plays.
Paul George scored 22 but dealt with foul trouble, while Leonard played 35 minutes in his return, scoring 17 with seven rebounds and four steals but missing all five of his 3-point attempts—many of those hitting front rim to illustrate his legs not quite being playoff-ready.
James Harden dominated Game 1 and had his moments in Game 2, but missed eight of his 10 3-point attempts and scored 22 with eight assists and six rebounds.
“That’s the playoffs right there. If you rewatch 80’s, 90’s, early 2000’s basketball and series, you can see the game slows down,” Irving said. “Some of the great players, their (scoring) goes up or down, efficiency goes up or down, depending on the series. You just gotta be ready for the unknown.”
One of the unknowns was Doncic drawing a technical foul, his first in quite awhile. Although he’s always been chirpy, it didn’t throw him off his game too much. Instead, he channeled the frustration into encouraging teammates—he and Irving, the unlikely pair of leaders dishing out positive reinforcement.
“I’ve learned with playing with other co-stars. You gotta trust him, you gotta let him be him and grow,” Irving said. “We empower each other to have that voice. I’d rather be out there with someone that’s emotional wants to do better for themselves and for the team than someone that’s quiet or just allow things to happen depending on everybody else to step in.”
“Sometimes when you get techs you just move on. That’s where we are, it’s the playoffs. You just have to bury and move on.”
Perhaps it’s a continuation of the Mavericks finding themselves, or maybe it’s the beginning of yet another dogfight between these two rivals. But the Mavericks seem to have come to the table with an added dimension of toughness this time around, one the Clippers were unable to match.
Source Agencies