Showing posts with label Klay Thompson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Klay Thompson. Show all posts

May 30, 2018

Hoopdarshan Episode 63: Warriors-Cavaliers Part IV Preview with Thejas Balaraman


The entire lifetime of Hoopdarshan - India's top basketball podcast - has had a singular inevitability: Warriors vs. Cavaliers in the NBA Finals. For the fourth consecutive time, the two franchises meet again, meaning more Steph, more LeBron, more Durant, and Klay and Green(s), and Love and even JR & Swaggy P! Kaushik Lakshman and Karan Madhok invite Episode 63 guest Thejas Balaraman to wrap-up the Conference Finals & make our predictions for the Finals ahead!



Hoopdarshan is the truest voice of Indian basketball, and since we're such hopeless fans of the game, it will become the voice of everything basketball related we love, from the NBA to international hoops, too. On every episode of Hoopdarshan, we will be inviting a special guest to interview or chat to about a variety of topics. With expert insight from some of the brightest and most-involved people in the world of Indian basketball, we hope to bring this conversation to a many more interested fans, players, and followers of the game.

Make sure to follow Hoopdarshan on Soundcloud or search for 'Hoopdarshan' on the iTunes Store! Auto-sync Hoopdarshan to your preferred podcast app NOW!

Hoopdarshan can be found on...

July 21, 2017

May the rings be with you



How Warriors vs. Cavaliers in the NBA Finals was the greatest trilogy since Star Wars

This article was first published in my column for Ekalavyas on July 10, 2017. Click here to read the original piece.

Illustration by Eshita Munshi for Ekalavyas

Even George Lucas in his prime couldn’t have conjured up a better tale of suspense, greatness, dominance, revenge, and heroism: for the first time in the NBA’s 70-year history, the Finals over three consecutive years featured a trilogy of the same illustrious matchup of the Golden State Warriors vs. the Cleveland Cavaliers. The three-peat of Finals featured future Basketball Hall-of-Famers, MVPs, All NBA talents, memorable role-players, and enough basketball ‘force’ to put the greatest Jedi to shame.

As a matter of fact, Warriors-Cavaliers from 2015-17 has been the greatest trilogy since the original Star Wars movies, released between 1977-1983. As an ardent fan of both mediums of entertainment, please allow me to explain.

The Prequel

Let’s set up the world before 2014-15, or in Star Wars terms, revisit the later films: Episodes I-III. In The Phantom Menace, a young child with prodigious gifts named Anakin Skywalker is recruited by the Jedi for having unnaturally strong powers of the Force. Qui-Gon is convinced that Anakin is the “chosen one”. By Attack of the Clones, Anakin is living up to his potential as the true heir to the Jedi greatness.

Sound familiar? In the early 2000s, a teenager with prodigious gifts named LeBron James emerges in the international basketball consciousness. James gets a “Chosen One” tattoo over his back and becomes the first pick in the 2003 NBA Draft by the Cavs. By the end of the decade, he has already won two MVP awards despite being dented a little in the 2007 Finals because of 4-0 sweep by the robotic clones, I mean, the San Antonio Spurs.

But by 2010, LeBron has realised that there is a greater, darker level of power available that the Cavaliers couldn’t provide for him. In spectacular fashion, he joins the Dark Side with Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh, taking his talents down to South Beach, and immediately becoming the NBA’s biggest villain. Speaking of villains, Anakin in Revenge of the Sith has had enough of the Jedi and joins the Dark Side, too. He puts on a mask, speaks in a heavier voice, and is now hated by everyone.

Anakin is now Darth Vader, and his dominance supports the Galactic Empire, which is ruling over the rest of the galaxy. LeBron is now in the Miami Heat and spurs a mini empire of his own with four straight Finals, two championships, and two more MVP awards. He returns to Cleveland in 2014 and immediately makes them the favourites in the East again.

A New Hope

Rebellions come from unexpected places. A ragtag bunch of underdogs, including a son of a farmer in the quite planet of Tattooine (Luke Skywalker), an imprisoned princess who is actually his twin sister (Leia), a trash-talking pilot (Han Solo), his weird Wookie friend (Chewbacca), and two ever-confused droids (C3P0 and R2D2) lead an unlikely Rebel Alliance. No one expects much from them against the bigger badder lord of the Force Vader or the Empire.

Meanwhile, an innocent, harmless-looking hero just like Luke is called to action and realises that he, too, has some special powers of the force. His name is Stephen Curry, and his power is the three-point shot, and he has a sibling like Leia blessed with the force, too, except this sibling is a brother-in-splash and his name is Klay Thompson. With the rise of second-round pick and legendary trash-talker Draymond Green, this alliance of rebels – or Warriors from the Golden State – end up having the best record in the NBA in 2014-15 to go against the “Chosen One”.

Skywalker and the Alliance find a weakness in the Death Star and set out to destroy this vulnerable exhaust port to take down the Empire’s weaponised ship. For the Cavaliers, injuries to Kyrie Irving and Kevin Love leave them vulnerable in the finals, and even Lord Vader LeBron wasn’t enough to stop Curry and the Warriors from snatching the victory. At the very end of A New Hope, the heroes of the Alliance are honoured on a pedestal just like NBA champs are handed the trophy on centre-court.

The Empire Strikes Back

Considered by many to be the finest Star Wars film ever made, the second of Warriors-Cavaliers clashes in the Finals was also the most entertaining. In The Empire Strikes Back, the champion Rebels are now gaining more ground and setting up a legitimate base on the planet Hoth. Luke Skywalker spends much of this film improving his Jedi powers under the tutelage of Master Yoda. Before the final clash, it seems like he’s becoming, unanimously, the greatest Jedi around. The Millennium Falcon ship, brags Solo, can make hyperspace faster than the speed of light.

Oh, and the Warriors, their owner brags, are “lightyears ahead” of the rest of the NBA. They start 2015-16 on a 25-game winning streak and end up the season as the greatest regular season team ever, with a 73-9 record. Jedi Stephen dominates historically on all fronts to become the NBA’s first regular-season MVP. He is popular and likeable, and over in Cleveland, Lord LeBron is troubled by his rise.

The finale sets up another classic clash of the two warring sides. Just when it seems that all is going right for the Warriors, Draymond Green gets suspended for a nut-punch at LeBron in the Finals. His spiritual twin in Star Wars, Han Solo, is locked up in suspended animation in a block of carbonite. Things go awry for Golden State as LeBron reasserts his greatness, “strikes back” at the Warriors, and leaves them in tatters. By leading the Finals in all categories as the Finals MVP, he literally “sons” the unanimous MVP Curry and reminds him who is the greatest. Curry is injured and lost, and at the end of Empire, so is Luke Skywalker: Vader makes the big revelation that he is Luke’s father, cuts off Luke’s hand, and brings him down. After suffering a surprising loss in the previous Episode, Vader regains his place at the top.

Return of the Jedi

Luke Skywalker has to bring down his father, but he can’t do it alone. Han Solo is rescued, Princess Leia is in top form, and the gang is back together. In the previous instalment, Lando Calrissian betrayed his friend Solo; this time around, he has joined the Alliance, too. A bunch of Ewoks are destined to play a small but important role. The Jedi in the final film return more stacked than ever, and are determined to defeat the Empire.

Kevin Durant joins the Warriors, but he is no Lando: he is more like a mixture of Yoda’s smooth style and Luke Skywalker’s heroism. Our original Luke – Curry – now grows a beard to try and look more menacing. The rest of the gang is at the top of their games, role players like Iguodala, Livingston, and West play an important part, and the Warriors have yet another dominant season. Oh yeah, and JaVale McGee is Jar Jar Binks. No matter how much they Shaq’t-a-fool, you can’t knock on those rings.

The finale of the trilogy is the 2017 NBA Finals, or the final battle on the moon Endor and the Death Star. Despite predictions that this will be the most epic end to these “Wars”, the final doesn’t have the tension and excitement of the previous episode. Kevin Durant, the newest Jedi, returns to the final after being defeated by Lord LeBron in 2012, and this time – along with Curry – he gets his revenge. The Warriors win 4-1 while the Rebel Alliance blow some shit up. LeBron or Vader, despite excellence performances, lie lost in the end and defensively begin to look their age. There is a touching moment of mutual respect between LeBron and Durant, who is the former’s spiritual successor/son as the greatest of his generation. As the Warriors celebrate centre-court on their home floor, there is an Ewok party in Endor.

The Next Episodes

The latest episodes of Star Wars showcase a new generation of young rebels going against the newly-strengthened First Order. The son of Leia and Solo, Kylo Ren, is the new bad boy in the galaxy. Despite the new characters and plotlines, a lot of the themes of The Force Awakens provide nostalgia for the original trilogy.

The Warriors are sure to remain dominant for many more seasons, and despite some rise of talent in the East, odds are that it will be LeBron and the Cavs in the finals again next year. Some things will be different, but the general themes of this legendary rivalry will remain the same. Meanwhile, the NBA continues to change and evolve in reaction to the Warriors’ greatness and every team is starting to look for the next superstar player to usurp them, someone who can be a versatile defender like Draymond and shoot like Klay – or the child of Leia and Solo.

As for the next Star Wars film releasing later this year: I don’t know anything about The Last Jedi, but in NBA terms, it sounds a whole lot like Russell Westbrook. May the rings be with you all!

June 1, 2016

Hoopdarshan Episode 31: NBA Finals 2016 Preview with Ananth Pandian


Warriors. Cavaliers. The rematch. The 2016 NBA Finals are set to be epic, and we have an appropriately epic, Hoopdarshan-flavoured preview for you to satisfying all basketball palates. For Episode 31, hosts Kaushik Lakshman and Karan Madhok are joined by CBS Sports Writer Ananth Pandian to discuss what a title could mean for the Curry and Warriors' fairytale season, the pressure on LeBron to deliver a title to Cleveland, Klay's Yoda socks, and our final predictions for the series.

Ananth Pandian is a CBS Sports Writer based out of Austin, Texas. You can keep up with his entertaining Twitter profile or follow his articles on CBSSports.com

Episode 31 features a whirlwind 2016 NBA Finals preview, highlighted by discussions on LeBron and Curry's legacies, the NBA Game of Thrones characters, why the league's "old school" dislikes Stephen Curry, and our official predictions for the champion and the Finals MVP. Additionally, we catch up with news concerning Satnam Singh, the first Indian to be drafted into the NBA.



Hoopdarshan aims to be the true voice of Indian basketball, and since we're such hopeless fans of the game, it will become the voice of everything basketball related we love, from the NBA to international hoops, too. On every episode of Hoopdarshan, we will be inviting a special guest to interview or chat to about a variety of topics. With expert insight from some of the brightest and most-involved people in the world of Indian basketball, we hope to bring this conversation to a many more interested fans, players, and followers of the game.

Make sure to follow Hoopdarshan on Soundcloud or search for 'Hoopdarshan' on the iTunes Store! Auto-sync Hoopdarshan to your preferred podcast app NOW!

Hoopdarshan can be found on...

March 23, 2016

Game-changer


Stephen Curry and the NBA’s three-point explosion is evolving basketball across the globe

This feature was first published in my column for Ekalavyas.com on March 13, 2016. You can find the original article here.


Whenever I play basketball at my favourite court – the ‘Benares Club’ in my hometown Varanasi – my friends feature among them the usual gang of universal pick-up hoops personalities: the slow, lumbering, but effective post-player; the mid-range wizard; the pesky little ball-hawker; the fast-break specialist; the veteran who gives sage advice about passing first and shooting second; the one player only on court to intimidate and collect fouls; the fearless athlete driving into the basket; the indiscriminate chucker.

Now, anyone who has played basketball in India – especially in pick-up games – would’ve noticed how much the game relies on fast-breaks. Too often, one player of the defensive team doesn’t really play defence and instead, waits out on the wings. If a defensive rebound is secured, a teammate pitches the ball forward (Kevin Love / Wes Unseld inspired) to the player who sprints down the length of the court, making a beeline to be positioned right below the opposing basket for an easy layup before the opponents can catch up. This play is risky because it puts extra pressure on defensive possessions, but when it works, the faster/fitter team can pile up points in a hurry.

This ‘technique’ has been used by many in my friends circle, too, but recently, I let my imagination think ahead of itself, and imagine a slightly different, future scenario. In this imaginary scene, there’s a fast-break opportunity, but the player who had sprinted down to the other end of the floor didn’t wait for the ball below the opposing basket. Instead, he took a sharp left turn to the corner of the court to place himself an inch outside the three-point line. Milliseconds later, another teammate on offense turned right to position himself on the other end. The defensive players who made it back in time had to spread in two directions too, leaving the middle wide open. The ball moved around from one corner to a player in the middle to the other corner before it was shot.

Splash!

And just then, we were introduced to another important pick-up personality on the court, a character that hadn’t been valued or trusted too much in our parts in the past because, well, his speciality used to seem too damn unlikely to become a regular weapon in our offense. He was the three-point sniper.

He used to be just the shorter guy who had developed an outside shot as a survival instinct, his way of staying relevant on the court if he didn’t have the size, strength, or athleticism to bang down in the post or the handle to move with the ball and create his own shot. But now, he began to appear everywhere and was emulated by everyone else. The fearless athlete was shooting threes, the mid-range wizard was stepping out, the indiscriminate chucker didn’t need to be told twice, the foul-collector joined into the fun, and even the lumbering post-man got himself some range.

Basketball had changed. Outside had become the new inside. Threes were the new dunks.

And the root cause of this metamorphosis was this little, scrawny guard causing havoc thousands of kilometres away in California.

*

Basketball has a certain set of rules, and to a first-timer, remembering them all can seem tiresome. But the beauty of the game is that most of the rules are quite intuitive, and where basketball truly leaps into greatness is within the gaps between the rules. It is these gaps that bring in the creativity, the style, and the personality to the game. Everyone approaches the game differently, every unstoppable style is countered by a defence to stop it, and that defence evokes a new offensive style, calling the need for a new defence scheme, and so on and so forth. Basketball becomes a chess match, with each manoeuvre further evolving and developing the game.

And it is the NBA – the finest basketball league in the world – that is the forefront of the game’s evolution and its changing styles. Since it is the gold standard of basketball that young players aspire for, aesthetics and tactics adopted by the best players and teams in the NBA eventually trickle down to young players in NCAA Division 1, High School, and grassroots basketball around the world. Soon, it is not just the players, but many coaches and trainers who begin to adopt those tactics in their teaching of the game.

Basketball is a team game, but NBA history has been defined by game-changing individuals who have crashed the party with their own unique style of dominance and nudged a shift in the game’s philosophy over the years. Last month, the 99% Invisible podcast went into great detail in explaining how the game shifted from the biggest men to the smallest ever since its inception. When basketball was grounded in the NBA’s earliest years, players like George Mikan used their size and passing ability to become the best and stand tall over their competitors. Soon, the likes of Bill Russell and Wilt Chamberlain added a breath-taking athletic ability to that size, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar dominated college ball with his size so much that they had to ban dunking for a decade, and big men like Shaquille O’Neal became unstoppable all the way into the 90s because no one could match their combination of size, strength, and skill. Of course, mirroring the NBA, ‘taller’ was considered ‘better’ in basketball in the rest of the world, too. The ball went in to the big men first, who would scope out the defensive schemes and decide the best mode of offense for himself or his teammates.

But slowly, the perimeter player began to take over. It started in earnest with Magic and Bird, and then, the era of the swingman launched the NBA into a new direction with Michael Jordan, Kobe Bryant, and into the 2000s, LeBron James. Instead of playing inside-out, many of these teams centred around talented swingman used these perimeter stars to have the ball in their hands a lot and creating plays for themselves and for others. These players were faster than the big men and had a better ability to create their own shot and beat opponents off the dribble. Since they were smaller, more fans around the world related to these players, and the Jordanesque “Hero Ball” was born.

Which brings us to current day. The three-point shot was introduced in the ABA and later in the NBA in the 70s, and its ascent over the next few decades was slow and steady. But in the last few years, the numbers have skyrocketed. From 2.77 threes per attempted per game in 1980, NBA teams are now attempting nearly 24 threes a game. At the top of this revolution are players like Damian Lillard, James Harden, Klay Thompson, and Paul George.

And the three-point King – in every sense of the word – Stephen Curry.

*


Curry – the reigning MVP who is in line to become the MVP again – is having a season that is shattering NBA history. Apart from leading the league in scoring (30.7 ppg) and an All Time best Player Efficiency Rating (32.99), Curry has made more threes already in a season than anyone in history with over a month left in the season, (he’s number 2 and number 3 on that list), made 300 threes in a season, has broken the streak of most games with at least one three made, and is making over 5.1 threes per game, by far the best rate in NBA history. In a league that has featured Larry Bird, Reggie Miller, Ray Allen, and more, Curry is already the greatest shooter of All Time – and he’s still only 27!

More than the numbers however, are the emotions that Curry has evoked in the basketball world. He has made the three-pointer the sexiest thing in the game. Curry’s range continues to get farther and farther away from the basket. He is making 25 to 30 footers with ease, and that game-winning shot over the Thunder a few weeks ago – his casual confidence to even try that shot and then make it – disoriented the world’s understanding of how even to play defence against someone that skilled. Just like Wilt Chamberlain, Michael Jordan, and Shaquille O’Neal in the past, he has become an offensive problem that will need a creative, evolved defensive solution.

Curry is also the most popular player in the NBA: his jersey sells more than any other and he would’ve been the leading All Star vote-getter had it not been Kobe Bryant’s last season. Many players have been compared to Michael Jordan over the last 15 years, but Curry’s level of night-to-night dominance and the circus that follows his greatness makes him in many ways the closest one (for a short term). The Warriors, gunning for Jordan’s Bulls record of 72 wins in a season, have become the league’s most fascinating traveling bandwagon. Decades from now, we’ll see young players in remote parts of Earth wearing ‘Warriors # 30’ jerseys the way we see ‘Bulls # 23’ today.

Curry isn’t the only one, but he has been the front-runner of the three-point revolution, and the NBA’s smartest analytic minds will tell you that if a good shooter takes (and makes) a high percentage of their threes, it is far more effective than the same shooter making a higher percentage of their twos (and particularly, the less effective long-twos). Even the maths is now telling us that if you can shoot above a certain percentage from behind the arc, then shoot away.

Of course, no revolution comes without its complaints. A few months ago, Curry’s former coach Mark Jackson mentioned that, despite his talents, Curry was ‘hurting the game’. “What I mean by that is that I go into these high school gyms, I watch these kids, and the first thing they do is they run to the 3-point line,” Jackson said, “You are not Steph Curry. Work on the other aspects of the game.”

Curry’s (and others’) penchant for the three-point line seems to have put the mid-range game on life-support, and even many of today’s talented bigger players (DeMarcus Cousins, Anthony Davis, Karl Towns) are moving further and further away from the basket on offense. No wonder Brian Shaw – former Laker player and Nuggets coach – in India last week complained that the Warriors’ success was only due to a lack of good Bigs in today’s game.

Some NBA circles are even considering tweaking with the three-point line and moving it back to make the shot tougher and bring back attention to mastering the inside game.

*

Mark Jackson is right in some ways, and wrong in many others. Sure, none of us are Steph Curry, but then again, none of us have been Magic Johnson, Michael Jordan, Shaquille O’Neal, Kevin Garnett, Allen Iverson, or LeBron James either. Those athletic, talent, or size limitations haven’t stopped young players from around the world emulating their favourite stars. Big guys want to flex and bang inside like Shaq, bring some finesse to the game like Garnett, or copy Kareem Abdul-Jabbar’s sky-hook. Wingmen want to dominate from the perimeter through scoring like Jordan or Kobe or by running the floor as All-Round players like Magic or LeBron. The smallest guys on the court relied on their speed like Iverson or Isiah Thomas. These models of excellence seem practically unachievable, but if we’re not going to try and be like the best, why even try?

And now, there’s Steph Curry, who is the Abdul-Jabbar of perimeter players, making a three-pointer look as easy as the big man’s traditional sky-hook. Because of Curry’s size – or lack thereof – he has further democratised basketball, making excellence look like a tangible, achievable goal, even for those without otherworldly genetic blessings.

But, hey, Mark Jackson is right: None of us are actually Steph Curry, who is a once-in-a-generational talent. He is blessed with speed, genius, and puts in more hard-work into perfecting his art than most beings on Earth. He is transforming the game as we speak, in real time, hitting his sixth and seventh three while we’re still tweeting about his third and fourth.

Curry’s exploits are changing the approach to the three-point-line, and thus, the entire approach to attacking and defending in the game of basketball. There will soon come a time among the younger generation of ballers where a three-point shot becomes a bigger weapon even in the arsenal of pick-up games than the humble two-pointer.

*

Out on our court in Varanasi, my imagination is suddenly crashed by reality. Sure, the players on offense are spreading wide instead of running into the basket, but their efforts are coming up short. None of us have close to the speed, release, accuracy, form, and perfection to our shot that Curry has.

Instead of expecting a splash, there is a whole lot more dry clangs off the rim.

The ball is rebounded by the defensive side, who throw it forward for a quick, fast-break possession, too. But this team stays within their limits, and goes for the easiest, most reliable scoring opportunity: a bee-line to the basket and an easy lay-up. Maths always wins, and until we can shoot threes with the accuracy of the NBA’s new greats, the easiest shot in the game is still the best shot in the game!

November 13, 2015

The Hungry Kings: Why the 2015-16 Golden State Warriors could be one of the most dangerous teams in NBA history


The best team in the league seems to have gotten better. The Golden State Warriors have the dangerous combination of talent and anger, of wearing the crown while being motivated to prove a point to all contenders again. They are the NBA's 'Hungry Kings', and their blistering start to the season could lead them on to become one of the greatest NBA teams of All Time.

Check out my full article on SportsKeeda

June 17, 2015

Splash Champs: The deep Golden State Warriors splash their way to 2015 NBA Championship


The Warriors won 67 games in the regular season, a franchise best and the best record in the NBA this season. In the playoffs, they swept the Pelicans 4-0, bounced back from a 2-1 deficit to beat the Grizzlies 4-2, took care of the Rockets in five games, and survived a superhuman effort by LeBron James in the Final to bounce back again and win 4-2.

For the future, there are many who believe that the Warriors’ success will legitimize ‘small ball’ forever and influence many more to take after their footsteps. But building a true contender around shooters isn’t as easy as Curry and co. made it seem. The Warriors were able to do so because they had historically great shooters, amazing versatile defensive players, and a great deal of sacrifice. It’s a rare formula that will be difficult to replicate.

Click here to read my full feature on SportsKeeda.

June 2, 2015

Hoopdarshan Episode 7: NBA Finals and Championship Legacies with Harsh Madhok


With the 2015 NBA Finals looming, we tackle one important question on Episode 7 of Hoopdarshan: "What would an NBA title mean for..." Co-hosts Kaushik Lakshman and Karan Madhok are joined in a roundtable discussion by Karan's brother Harsh Madhok. Join us on our banters which are both wild and analytical, as we discuss the legacies of the players at the Finals, predict if it will be Stephen Curry or LeBron James that walks out on top, and explain how Warriors vs LeBron is just like the T-1000 vs The Terminator.

Can David Blatt become the first coach to win both Euroleague and NBA titles? How big a party would JR Smith have if he becomes champ? Does a title influence Kevin Love's decision to stay in Cleveland or not? Hey, can Cleveland break their pro-sporting curse? Does LeBron become the greatest Finals loser since Jerry West or move a couple of rungs up the ladder in the pantheon of the NBA's greats with a third ring? How would Stephen Curry's shooting sprees influence future basketball aspirants in India? We answer all those questions, and many more - you are guaranteed to find no better and funner NBA Finals preview than here on Hoopdarshan!



Hoopdarshan aims to be the true voice of Indian basketball, and since we're such hopeless fans of the game, it will become the voice of everything basketball related we love, from the NBA to international hoops, too. On every episode of Hoopdarshan, we will be inviting a special guest to interview or chat to about a variety of topics. With expert insight from some of the brightest and most-involved people in the world of Indian basketball, we hope to bring this conversation to a many more interested fans, players, and followers of the game.

Make sure to follow Hoopdarshan on Soundcloud or search for 'Hoopdarshan' on the iTunes Store! Auto-sync Hoopdarshan to your preferred podcast app NOW!

Hoopdarshan can be found on...

June 1, 2015

2015 NBA Playoffs - Expert's Bracket Challenge - Finals!


There are two ways to preview the NBA Finals. The short version and the long version.

The short version of the upcoming Cavaliers and Warriors clash isn't actually about any of the players involved in the series at all. It's about two young kids and the magic of Vine.

You want to know everything about the Cleveland Cavaliers? Terrance Jackson, the seven-year-old LeBron fan, explains it all succinctly in six glorious seconds. "LeBron James, LeBron James, LeBron James, LeBron James, LeBron James."

Want to know everything about the Golden State Warriors? Riley Curry, the two-year-old daughter of Stephen Curry, quotes Big Sean to tell us exactly how Curry and the Warriors currently feel right now. "Way up... I feel blessed."

We could just leave it at that and let you guys decide which child vine-d it better. But of course, you're not here for the short version, are you?

Welcome to the 2015 NBA Playoffs Expert's Bracket Challenge. Before the playoffs, I joined ranks with fellow fans and experts of the NBA in India - Akshay Manwani (@AkshayManwani) and Kaushik Lakshman (@_kaushik7) - to turn this season's playoffs into our own mini competition, and in the process, give the fans of the game some hoops food for thought. Akshay suggested the idea and the rules before the playoffs begin, and after two rounds, we are still in fierce competition.

Here are the rules again: Each of us will get +2 for getting the series result correct. Additionally, if we get the scoreline right, we get a bonus of +1. You can find our First Round predictions here. Below, we move on to the tally on the scorecard and then make our predictions for the Second Round. Keep yourselves updated and feel free to give us your own predictions in the comments section at the end of this post.

Akshay, who got on to a hot start in Round 1 and has mathematically wrapped up the competition, headed to the first ever Hoopistani Bracket Trophy even before the Finals begin. Here are the scores as they stand right now.

Scorecard
  • Akshay Manwani: 30
  • Kaushik Lakshman: 26
  • Karan Madhok: 21
And now, here is the long version. If the vines above didn't satisfy you, here is how we feel that the 2015 NBA Finals are going to go down....

Golden State Warriors v Cleveland Cavaliers

Akshay's Pick: It’s probably fair to say that the two best teams made it through to the NBA Finals. The Golden State Warriors started the season hot, finishing 67-15 and hardly suffered a hiccup (other than being down 1-2 against Memphis) in their road to the NBA Finals. The Cavaliers had an ordinary start but once LeBron had the injury break and the Cavs made the trades for JR Smith and Iman Shumpert, they played a whole lot better, which reflected in their series wins against Chicago and Atlanta in these playoffs.

Even so, a few weeks ago, particularly before the start of the Cleveland versus Chicago Conference semifinals series, it would have been difficult to imagine Cleveland giving any trouble to Golden State in the Finals. But the manner in which the Cavs have played, without Kevin Love and with a hobbled Kyrie Irving, is proof of LeBron’s genius and the stellar contributions by Smith, Tristan Thompson, Timofey Mozgov and Matthew Dellavedova. If James can get this supporting cast to contribute one final time this season at a high level, while creating all kinds of matchup problems for Golden State by himself, it should test the Warriors.

Golden State’s biggest concern has to be Klay Thompson’s health. They cannot afford Thompson to sit out any game for he is one of their most important two-way players. If Thompson is at full strength, the Warriors led by Curry, have the greater offensive arsenal, play good defense, have home-court and the deeper bench. They must also look to push the pace rather than allow the Cavs to dictate the pace and reduce the contest to a half-court game. To summarize, James may be the best player in the contest, but the Warriors will finish as the better team. Warriors win 4-2.

Karan's Pick: In a season where LeBron got more rest than any full season ever before, he has responded with characteristic brilliance in the playoffs, dominating every matchup thrown at him in the previous three series and making the Eastern Conference bow to his mercy. Curry, meanwhile, has become the NBA’s breakout star with the ability to change momentum in a couple of possessions and destroy the will of his opponents no matter what type of defensive scheme they throw at him.

In the matchup, however, all of the numbers on both ends of the floor point overwhelmingly in Golden State’s direction. They are a better team on offensively and defensively, have more depth, and a stronger home advantage. Golden State's 12-3 record in the Western Conference playoffs is arguably more impressive than Cleveland 12-2 evisceration of the East.

But Cleveland have LeBron, who is the best individual player in the series and the only major player on each side with championship experience. This will go a long way over the young and inexperienced Warriors, and it is respect for his abilities and Championship mettle that I feel that Cavaliers will have a chance in this series.

Eventually, I don’t think even LeBron will be enough to stop the upcoming wave. The Warriors and the Splash Brothers are that kind of an unstoppable force this season, and they will eventually bomb their way to bring the franchise its first NBA title since 1975. Warriors win 4-2.

Kaushik’s pick: After a long season, it all comes down to this. Golden State has been consistently excellent from start to finish, and while Cleveland took a while to get going, they found their groove post the Mozgov-Shump-JR trades. We can confidently say that we have two deserved finalists.

Golden State’s free flowing offense and intense defence might be unlike any opponent Cleveland has faced. Curry, lanky and weak as he may physically seem, is unstoppable. Thompson is a dangerous 2 guard, Draymond Green is a bad bad man, Barnes is quietly having a fantastic playoff run, and Golden State is just a machine rolling at optimum setting. You could argue they haven’t been very well tested in the playoffs due to how the matchups worked, especially against such a big superstar, but that might be clutching at straws to find a weakness.

Cleveland on the other hand, have ridden the LeBron express, who has been on a one man mission that has effectively taken down the Eastern Conference by himself. Thompson’s rebounding has been such a huge plus for the Cavs, but you would have to wonder whether he will have the same effectiveness against the likes of Bogut and Green. Smith, Shumpert and Dellavedova will have the same opportunities as before because LeBron is LeBron and much will depend on whether they can be as effective as they have been.

Cavs have been extremely impressive this post season and perhaps have punched above their weight through this run, but perhaps this is where the weight category is too high for them. Golden State is a deeper, more polished team, that in my opinion, will be a juggernaut and too much for the Cavs to deal with. Warriors win 4-1.

May 29, 2015

Final Frontier: What happens when a Warrior and a Cavalier collide? My NBA Finals preview


We are less than a week away from another mighty war of hooping proportions, and this time, the soldiers and knights will be shooting hoops instead of swinging swords. The 2015 NBA Finals will pit the best playoffs’ best performing teams from each conference against each other for the ultimate goal: the Larry O’Brien trophy. The swash-buckling cavaliers of Cleveland will face against the mighty Warriors of the Bay Area. And in four to seven battles over the next few weeks, the finest hoops army in the realm.

The Cavaliers have lost just two playoff games and the Warriors have lost only three. Both sides are peaking at the right time, ranking among the top in the post-season in offensive efficiency, defensive efficiency, rebound percentage, and true shooting percentage. What will now happen when these two teams – stacked with great superstars and the perfect role-players around them – clash in the Finals?

Read the full article on SportsKeeda here.



February 18, 2015

Quarter Mania: Klay Thompson and the top scoring quarters in NBA history


The magical 'Klay Kquarter', where Klay Thompson scored an 37 points in the third quarter, gave the Warriors' guard the NBA record for most points in a single quarter by an individual player. Thompson had to outduel several historic moments by other stars over the ages who have also experienced magic in under 12 minutes. Here is a look at the top five scoring quarters in NBA history.

Read the full article on SportsKeeda here.

February 2, 2014

Warriors: 5-Man Wrecking Crew


The Warriors are an exciting and likable team who have the gift not many others in the league can boast of: five players with the potential of dominating their position on any given night. Now, they have to turn that potential into consistent reality to become into surprise championship contenders in the West.

Click here to read full feature.

June 27, 2013

Klay Thompson: The Language of Swish


This feature was first published in the 109th edition (2013 - No. 12) of SLAM China Magazine. Here is my original English version of the story.

Klay Thompson moved his elbow up to a shooting position, making an ‘L’ shape with his hands, and then let his wrists throw the imaginary ball into an imaginary hoop. “Just like that,” he instructed the rows of eager teens seated ahead of him, “Let your hand form this motion. My father taught me: your shooting hand should look like you’re reaching high for the cookie jar.”

There was a brief moment of silence, and then his translator picked up those words and began to convert them in Chinese for the audience. Thompson turned to his side while the translator talked and showed the shooting form again. A perfect ‘L’. And the wrist dropping into the cookie jar.

Thompson couldn’t speak a word of Chinese. And the basketball-loving teenagers at the ‘Klay Thompson Fan Day’ in Beijing struggled with their English. And yet, they didn’t have to wait for the translator to understand. With a simple gesture of the hands and a flick of the wrist, he had gotten his point across.

This is how you shoot a perfect jump-shot. And it sounds like a “swish” in every language.

Thompson’s been accustomed to that sound now. The 23-year-old exploded to the scene in his second season in the NBA as one of the most dangerous shooters in the league. After just starting 29 games in his rookie year, Thompson was in Golden State’s starting five for all 82 contests in 2012-13 and averaged 16.6 points per contest. And then, he became part of a magical playoffs run for the Warriors as the lower-seeded team upset the Denver Nuggets and battled the heavily-favoured Spurs to Game 6. It was in this series that one of Golden State’s two wins came courtesy of Thompson’s career-best night, when he scored a career-high 34 points on 8-9 shooting from beyond the three-point arc, and added a career-high 14 rebounds.

About a month and a half after his heroics – and the Warriors’ subsequent playoff loss – Thompson found himself breaking a sweat on the basketball court for the first time since he played the Spurs. The competition and the stage were distinctly different, of course. He was playing a casual one-on-one game with a Chinese media personality in a quiet hall on the East side of Beijing.

But within moments, every court in every city and every opponent in the world morphed into the same thing. Because the sound of the “swish” was still the same.

Understandably, it was Thompson’s potent jump-shot that was the center of attraction at this shooting clinic at Beijing. And Thompson obliged the young learners with tips on how to perfect that jumper, both through the body and the mind.

“Physically, you have to practice hard to improve the shot, and make sure to spend enough hours in the gym,” he instructed, “But you have to have mental confidence too. You have to have ultimate belief in yourself that you are the best shooter, that even if you’ve missed 10 in a row, you will be able to make the next 20.”

Thompson’s range has come into even extra scrutiny because of the changing circumstances around the league and the increasing reliance on three-point shot for success. In the NBA Finals, Danny Green made waves by breaking the record for most threes made in a Finals. The Miami Heat – with Ray Allen, Norris Cole, Mike Miller, Shane Battier, and more – became a dangerous crew from beyond the arc as well. The New York Knicks enjoyed a wealth of success this season because of their three-point accuracy. And how can we forget Thompson’s own teammate Stephen Curry, who is well on his way to becoming one of the greatest three-point shooters of all time. (“He’s the best shooter I’ve ever seen,” Thompson says of Curry.)

“The three-point shot shows the evolution of the game,” Thompson spoke to the assembled kids at the clinic, “It has become huge in the NBA, and we see how great three-point shooters are spacing the floor. “I think three-point shooting has become a real weapon and is the future of the league.”

In that case, Klay Thompson is the future of the league, too.

Thompson visited China in mid June, travelling to Xian, Beijing, and Chengdu, to promote the NBA Global Games 2013. He will be back in Beijing and Shanghai in October, along with Curry and the rest of his Warriors’ teammates, to take part in ‘China Games’, two pre-season NBA games held in China against the world famous Los Angeles Lakers. Even though they are technically just ‘exhibition’ games, Thompson believes that he will be ready to response to the playoff-type atmosphere at these contests.

“Whenever the crowd is like that, you wanna give them a show. Both of our teams are really competitive. It’s fun to play in front of fans who are rowdy and who love the game, and that’s what we’ll see in these two exhibition games in Beijing and Shanghai. I’m really excited for them, and my teammates will be too.”

Looking ahead, Thompson also feels that he and his team will be motivated to come back stronger after their memorable run this season.

“If we don’t go past the second round next season I feel it will be a disappointment,” he said, “We have a bright future. As long as we keep our core together and keep working hard, I think we can win championships in the near future.”

Speaking on his own goals for next season, Thompson added: “I wanna be a better pick and roll player and better at finishing around the rim. And keep working on the defensive end as well – people forget that the game is 50 percent defense. I think I can be an All Defensive player in this league. It’s gonna take a lot of work, but I think that I can get there. I took big strides in that area last summer. I don’t wanna be known for just my shooting. I wanna be known as a good defender, a good passer, and hopefully I can add one new element to my game every year. Hopefully next year I can also be a better play-maker than I was this last year.”

His angst for improvement is understandable. No man wants to be pigeon-holed into one box. Klay Thompson has an arsenal of different, improving talents, and he’s making it clear that he wants to make considerable improvements in all of them.

Shooting is still his calling card though, and it was still the major reason why fans gasp when they see him catch fire and when youngsters listen when he teaches them how to emulate his form. It is that shooting form that breaks barriers of language and culture and gets the point across. From the perfect release to the perfect “swish.”

January 11, 2013

Lee, Curry, and the Rising Warriors

Playing like All Stars, David Lee and Stephen Curry have led the surprising Warriors to fifth place in the West. Coach Mark Jackson has helped change the culture of the team and has them aiming for their best finish in the Western Conference in 20 years. Here's what this team is doing right, and with the eventual return of Andrew Bogut, what more this team needs to do to continue their positive start.

Click here to read the full feature!