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Mavericks Blast Clippers Into the Sun
After Lakers Loss, Mavs Rebound With a Vengeance

WOWZERS!!!  After a couple of subpar games to open the season, the Mavs sprang back to life with a crackling performance. This is the team we hoped to see in this campaign. What a fun watch!!


GAME STORY

A couple of hours before the game, Coach Lue announced that Kawhi would be out, due to being elbowed in the face by his teammate Serge Ibaka in the last game. Marcus Morris was also out. KP continued to be on the injured list, but looked like he was enjoying the game from the sideline. 

Since this was quite possibly the most remarkable half in Mavericks regular-season history, I’ll describe it in some degree of detail. 

First quarter 

The Clips took their only lead of the game by scoring the first bucket. The Mavs took over from there. An early Luka steal led to a JRich and-one. Luka and Powell executed an alley-oop that rivaled the days of old. Powell stole a bad pass from PG (who had just committed another turnover), and the play ended with a Luka running layup and-one. Doe-Doe hit a three. A dramatic Luka drive-and-kick brought out a beautiful Maxi three from deep, giving Dallas an 11-point edge halfway through the period. 

A WCS offensive board led to a driving layup by JRich from Luka. Josh then hit back to back threes, the second off a Trey Burke steal. Burke followed that by a 10-foot step-back off the dribble. By the end of the quarter, Dallas had put 37 points on the board. 

And what were the Clippers doing all this time? Scoring 13 measly points, that’s what. Luka and Josh both had 13 points — the first time in 20 years that two Mavs had at least 13 points each in the first quarter. Carlisle denied that the Mavs were trying to attain quarterly scoring records like that, but did think the stat was tangible evidence of the team chemistry. 

Second quarter

The Mavs started the second period with a WCS offensive board, leading to a Hardaway jumper. James Johnson followed that with a three. Some more excitement was generated with a Brunson-WCS oop, A Hardaway three put the Mavs up by 30 for good. WCS secured an offensive rebound, ran the floor, and caught a DFS downcourt pass for a dunk and-one. Doe-Doe had a running PUJIT that was worth a couple of oohs and ahhs. Our boys scored on the next four possessions, and by then, the quarter was halfway over and the Clips were down by 40+.

After a few misses, the team scored on 6 of the last 7 possessions of the half, including: a Brunson three from a looong pass, a Dirk-like post-up from Luka, a Luka and-one over Batum; a Richardson steal and dunk, and a Burke three off an offensive rebound. 

Scoreline at Halftime:  77-27

This was the biggest halftime margin in the NBA shot-clock era!

Third quarter 

The Clippers went on their first and only run of the game, scoring the first 10 points of the period. After a Rick timeout, the Mavs fought back, including: a downcourt pass from Luka to a leaked-out Tim Hardaway; a brilliant Luka weave through traffic for an and-one; a Luka backdown for an and-one; a Richardson staredown three; a beautiful Hardaway catch and shoot; and, back-to-back threes from Tim -- one from Luka, and one from Willie from an offensive board. The Clippers managed to do a little damage in this quarter, and at the end of the third, Dallas’ lead had declined to 47. Would they be able to hold on?

Fourth quarter 

The final frame belonged to the reserves from both sides. Johnson, Green, Iwundu, Bobi, and Terry strutted their stuff, and more than made up the three-point loss of the third quarter to end the game with a 51-point victory. Woo-hoo!


NOTABLE ITEMS

  1. Style of play. Assistant coach Boucek said this is how they want the guys to play — with joy. She cited Luka as a joyful player, and observed that the team is taking on his personality. They aimed to have a hit-first mentality, forcing the Clips to play their game instead of otherwise, to rebound and defend on every defensive possession, and to play inside-out with lots of movement on offense. She thought this was a great opportunity for the new guys to get a feel for how much fun this style of play is. 
2.   Identity. This team looked night-and-day from the one that played the Lakers. The level of energy and engagement was high and consistent, and the players did indeed look like they were having a good old time. Ball movement and player movement were excellent. The team wasn’t just relying on hitting threes, and indeed, they were just so-so from deep as a whole, although they certainly had some beautiful shots. They attacked the paint the whole game, and most of their long shots came in the flow of the offense. They were clearly prioritizing rebounding. Their defensive effort was strong, and they managed to turn that effort into offense this time. Who says soccer is the beautiful game?!

3.  Statistics. The Clips were crushed in just about every category, but a few were notable. Dallas had an 87-76 advantage in shot attempts, as well as a 27-20 edge in FTAs. In addition, they far surpassed the Clippers’ pathetic shooting percentages (49/34/89 compared to 34/12/85).The Mavericks, as usual, took good care of the ball (8 turnovers costing 10 points), and managed to take advantage of forcing 14 turnovers from the Clips, to the tune of 22 points. Offensive rebounds and steals resulted in 14 Dallas second-chance points, along with a 28-3 advantage in fast-break points!  

4. Doncic. Luka had a 24/9/8 line, and 13 of his 18 shots were two-pointers. He led the team in all three statistical categories, and was a splendid floor leader. 

5. Richardson. Josh had a brilliant night, scoring 21 points on 8-13 shooting, including 4-8 from three. He led the team in minutes (26), and was a tenacious and effective defender. What a find for the Mavs! Carlisle remarked on how simpatico James and Luka are.  Rick dubbed him “calming, tenacious, a great competitor,” and a strong defensive player whom they “love.” An exciting player, for sure!

6.  Hardaway. Tim got his groove back in this game, putting 18 points on the board and shooting 50% from the floor (7-14 overall, 4-8 from deep). He was making an effort to play a more complete game, passing, taking shots off the dribble, and trying to create passing angles rather than just standing and waiting for someone to pass him the rock for a catch-and-shoot. Those efforts met with varying degrees of success, but it appeared that this is what he has been encouraged to do, and he was definitely an energy guy out there, as well as making shots. 

7. Centers. The four big men looked better this game,  combining for 22 points and 20 boards. They were all engaged on both ends of the floor, which was good to see. 

8.  Bench. Dallas won the battle of the benches 48-32. James Johnson played a big role (20 minutes), and was active on the boards with 8 rebounds. Carlisle remarked that James is taking on a role as locker-room leader, being the oldest guy on the team, at 33. Brunson performed his waterbug role with aplomb, and had 11 points in 13 minutes. And a Bobi sighting is always entertaining. 

9.  Clippers. The Mavs may have caught a break with the absences of Kawhi and Morris, but this level of beatdown can’t just be attributable to two players being out. After all, KP was also out for the Mavs. Paul George took responsibility for the loss, but it’s not all on him, either. Paul said the Clippers had not celebrated Christmas with their families until yesterday, and he thought they were sluggish coming back from the holiday. Really? Carlisle acknowledged that this wasn’t the best version of the Clippers, but said the Mavs had something to do with that. A truly humiliating performance by the Clips, on both ends of the court. 


Observations

Rick spoke openly of the “uneven” effort in the first two games, and said the team entered the game determined to be the harder-working of the two teams on the floor. He was proud of their response after an underwhelming start to the season. 

At the end of the day, this was a spectacular rebound by the Mavs. There was just nothing in either of the first two games that would have led anyone to think this performance was coming. Good on them!

Having said that, I still believe that this is going to be an unpredictable season across the NBA, perhaps wildly so. Without taking anything away from this victory, it probably behooves us not to overreact to results either way in these strange times. Derek Harper said that he thinks this effort was much more representative of who the Mavs really are than the first two games, and I agree with that. I am not saying that our guys are going to blow teams out by monstrous margins as a general matter, but the offense was much more characteristic of the well-oiled machine we saw last season, and the defense was visibly improved, I am inclined to be optimistic about our chances, if the guys can stay healthy. 

Anyway, whatever the future holds, this was a WAY COOL game to watch, and hopefully will be one of many such this season. 

See you MFFLs for the next recap after the Charlotte game!
Great game against an undermanned Clippers team but I am still concerned that Mavs aren't sharing the ball as much as I'd like.

Certainly Luka is a pass-first guy but our guards in particular seem to all want to find their own shots. THJ is the worst offender and a black hole when he gets the ball. I like him a lot in spot up shooting situations. I do not like him dribbling around and taking a shot off the dribble instead of looking to pass.

When KP is back things will look better, but the lack of passing is a concern.
Great recap, as always. Johnson is a much more complete player than I realized. Bringing the ball up the floor, and even doing a bit of facilitating. I know his expiring contract is a trade asset, but I wouldn't mind him sticking around as a bench big and veteran leader.
(12-27-2020, 09:19 PM)mavsluvr Wrote: [ -> ]At the end of the day, this was a spectacular rebound by the Mavs.


https://media.giphy.com/media/u5C6s7LDK7G9y/giphy.gif
A couple of rotation notes.  This is through three quarters.  The third quarter started out as a repeat of the first and then it was deep bench the rest of the way once we got to the fourth:

We are getting further away from the platooned lineups we saw in pre-season and against Phoenix.  Sunday we saw Luka/JRich stay on with the first wave of subs as Powell/DFS/THJ sat.  Carlisle is constantly experimenting.

THJ was 1 for 4 and +0 when JRich was on the floor with him.  He was 6/10 and +25 when he was on the floor without JRich.

Carlisle seems willing to play Finney with a single big IF Luka is out there also.  If Finney plays without Luka, it tends to be with two bigs.  Another way of looking at that is Luka is the PF when we play the current starters (or Luka makes is OK to call DFS a PF). 

B & B were not paired yesterday.  Burke came in as part of the first bench waive to be on the floor with Luka.  He and Luka left when Brunson came in to run the show.  I never believed B & B would be a thing as Burke does his best work alongside Luka.   KP and Brunson were fantastic together last season.  When KP returns we will probably see him sit quickly (like Powell did the last two games) and come back in with Brunson when Luka sits.  

We run two bigs together except when Powell is in (unless you consider Luka/DFS to be kind of "bigs" next to Powell).  Maxi and WCS came in when Powell sat.  Then it was WCS/Johnson.  Then it transitioned to Johnson/Powell briefly and then we finished the half with Powell as the lone big again.  This probably sets up for KP to replace Powell leaving DFS in the starting lineup most nights.  It is important to note though that the "starters" are together for about six minutes in the 1st and 3rd and then there will be a long stretch of Luka with 3 bench guys as KP sits and then KP with 2 bench guys when Luka sits.  The most interesting thing will be to see how we end the 2nd and 4th.  THJ has been the odd man out a few times so far this season.

Redundancy is going to be helpful in 2021.  But, when KP comes back it is going to be hard to find minutes for both WCS and Johnson.  My interest perks up when Green enters the game.  But with everyone healthy, it will be hard for him to get much more than a 2nd quarter cameo in games that are not blowouts.
(12-28-2020, 09:25 AM)DanSchwartzman Wrote: [ -> ]A couple of rotation notes.  This is through three quarters.  The third quarter started out as a repeat of the first and then it was deep bench the rest of the way once we got to the fourth:

We are getting further away from the platooned lineups we saw in pre-season and against Phoenix.  Sunday we saw Luka/JRich stay on with the first wave of subs as Powell/DFS/THJ sat.  Carlisle is constantly experimenting.

THJ was 1 for 4 and +0 when JRich was on the floor with him.  He was 6/10 and +25 when he was on the floor without JRich.

Carlisle seems willing to play Finney with a single big IF Luka is out there also.  If Finney plays without Luka, it tends to be with two bigs.  Another way of looking at that is Luka is the PF when we play the current starters (or Luka makes is OK to call DFS a PF). 

B & B were not paired yesterday.  Burke came in as part of the first bench waive to be on the floor with Luka.  He and Luka left when Brunson came in to run the show.  I never believed B & B would be a thing as Burke does his best work alongside Luka.   KP and Brunson were fantastic together last season.  When KP returns we will probably see him sit quickly (like Powell did the last two games) and come back in with Brunson when Luka sits.  

We run two bigs together except when Powell is in (unless you consider Luka/DFS to be kind of "bigs" next to Powell).  Maxi and WCS came in when Powell sat.  Then it was WCS/Johnson.  Then it transitioned to Johnson/Powell briefly and then we finished the half with Powell as the lone big again.  This probably sets up for KP to replace Powell leaving DFS in the starting lineup most nights.  It is important to note though that the "starters" are together for about six minutes in the 1st and 3rd and then there will be a long stretch of Luka with 3 bench guys as KP sits and then KP with 2 bench guys when Luka sits.  The most interesting thing will be to see how we end the 2nd and 4th.  THJ has been the odd man out a few times so far this season.

Redundancy is going to be helpful in 2021.  But, when KP comes back it is going to be hard to find minutes for both WCS and Johnson.  My interest perks up when Green enters the game.  But with everyone healthy, it will be hard for him to get much more than a 2nd quarter cameo in games that are not blowouts.
Interesting observations. Thanks for sorting this out for us!
Hi mavsluvr! Thanks for the great (as always) recap!
(12-28-2020, 10:52 AM)mavsluvr Wrote: [ -> ]Interesting observations. Thanks for sorting this out for us!

+1 on this, great stuff Dan. I agree that KP will be the 1 big starter which means I was right all along that Mavs would not start Powell when KP is back (sorry Kamm).

The real head scratcher is why Powell is starting as the lone big. He is not good at that role. Rick is good at maximizing player's strength but having Powell as a starting center does not play to his strengths. I don't see why you wouldn't use WCS as your KP replacement when KP is out or sitting (B2B for example). That would allow you to keep the rest of your rotations pretty much in tact.

THJ is annoying but will be less annoying when KP is back. Right now he is majorly shot hunting. He needs to be a guy that is just a spot up shooter. Mavs really need another facilitator.
(12-28-2020, 01:22 AM)BolsDamols Wrote: [ -> ]https://media.giphy.com/media/u5C6s7LDK7G9y/giphy.gif

LOL, I wondered if anyone would pick up on that.
(12-28-2020, 09:25 AM)DanSchwartzman Wrote: [ -> ]But, when KP comes back it is going to be hard to find minutes for both WCS and Johnson.


Hard to believe the Mavs won't make a trade this season. They're running essentially 6 centers with Maxi, WCS, Johnson, Powell, Boban, KP. 

When KP comes back for his assumed 30mpg, 2 of these guys are going to get their minutes cut significantly. Johnson has shown he can be a very valuable defensive big/wing. WCS has been our best big of the first 3 games.
(12-28-2020, 01:36 PM)SleepingHero Wrote: [ -> ]Hard to believe the Mavs won't make a trade this season. They're running essentially 6 centers with Maxi, WCS, Johnson, Powell, Boban, KP. 

When KP comes back for his assumed 30mpg, 2 of these guys are going to get their minutes cut significantly. Johnson has shown he can be a very valuable defensive big/wing. WCS has been our best big of the first 3 games.

Yeah, it is super early and I don't think we are done seeing lineup experiments.  Recall that last year Maxi started the first four games before moving to his bench role.

I've posted that I like Willie's upside.  There is good energy when he and Maxi share the floor.  HOWEVER, I can't help but think back to free agency and recall that we seemed hot on the trail of Gasol before he picked the Lakers.  So, Dallas may not share our high opinion of Willie.
(12-28-2020, 10:54 AM)fifteenth Wrote: [ -> ]Hi mavsluvr! Thanks for the great (as always) recap!
You're welcome, fifteenth!  Looking forward to your thoughts in what should be an interesting season!