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Game 3 preview

There isn't much to say about this series until Miami wins a game. There were some adjustments that the Heat could've made in game two but (wisely or not) chose not to. The starting lineup was the same, they were aggressively trapping Ben Gordon like before, they were working Shaq early before he tired out. And the Bulls beat their ass.

Not that I don't see the Heat taking tonight's game, I just don't see them getting particularly better. They're not going to get quicker on defense, and their role players will only succeed if the starts play to their fullest potential. The key has always been Wade, and if he continues to struggle the Heat are in trouble. There were stretches in game 2 (not coincidentally when Duhon was guarding him) when Wade was getting to the rim and getting layups, or fouls, or hitting an open 3-point shooter like Posey. It took a fantastic offensive performance by the Bulls to keep that lead up. So hopefully after TWO games of seeing Duhon fail there's no third shot. Beyond that, Kirk and Thabo (and re-animate Griffin in case of emergency) have done a decent enough job to keep Wade off of his peak, and the bum shoulder can do the rest. Although I'll refuse to believe he's hurting that bad until this series is over, the guy has, um, overstated his injuries enough in his career where I think skepticism is warranted. I can't help shake the thought that the magic of being at home will re-invigorate him and what was merely stretches of game 2 will be for an entire game.

(And by 'magic' of being at home, I don't mean special edict from David Stern and his referee doppelgangers. I hate hate hate stuff like this. Hate it. Instead of going into how much would have to go into a conspiracy I'll just ask this: If you truly believed the NBA is fixed in any way, why would you still be a fan? So if you don't believe it, stop saying it, it's annoying. If Dwyane gets lots of calls tonight it's because he gets a lot of calls. Sure, some of it is 'star' respect from the officials (who are bad, not crooked), but he's also really good at driving and drawing contact. It's not Stern weighing numbers of who will get more ratings: a team from Chicago or a team with two superstars.)

Basically, I'm not worried about what the Heat do, I just want the Bulls to keep playing their game. If they do they'll likely win. But we've seen too many games this season (often on the road, although their post-break road record is respectable) when offense doesn't run as smoothly. The easy answer is that things get tougher when the shots don't fall, but in game 1 the shots didn't fall, and the team (mostly Ben Gordon) made up for it by getting to the line. If they have really shown that maturity (hey, maybe the Bulls do have that 'playoff gear'!) then the offense is diverse enough to succeed. If they're timid (and I don't think they'll be intimidated no matter how dirty the Heat play tonight) and take contested jumpers instead of moving and driving, the twelve-point quarters could return.

There's that stat that 95% (or whatever) of the teams that go up 2-0 at home win the series. The reason for that isn't because being down 0-2 is insurmountable, it's because if a team has home-court advantage (thus had the better season) AND won 2 straight games against a team, that team is likely better. The better team wins the series. It has nothing to do with what the Bulls have done before in blowing a 2-0 lead, or what the Heat have done before coming back from an 0-2 deficit, I think the Bulls (right now) are just better than the Heat (right now). Doesn't mean they'll win tonight, but if they play like they have at home they will, and most of the Heat will gladly ease into summer vacation.

0 recs | Comment 14 comments

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Pre-Game Hype
Found this defense of the Bulls' chances while at Deadspin. I put this up at the last post, too, but thought it might get missed.

by Craig Hodges Explosion 3000 on Apr 27, 2007 4:01 PM CDT   0 recs

nice post
In reality, the Bulls won one game in which they shot poorly, and torched Miami in one game when they got hot. But to give the argument the benefit of the doubt, we'll instead pretend that the Bulls have been consistently hot. So far in the playoffs, the Bulls have .531 effective field goal percentage (e%) from the floor, including .513 e% on jump shots. That is a step up from the team's .493 e% in the regular season (.462 e% on jumpers). But this is not blind luck. The Bulls have been getting more open shots in the postseason than they did in the regular season because their ball movement has improved. 60% of the team's regular season baskets were assisted, 65% of its made jumpers. In the postseason, a shocking 71% of its made baskets have been assisted, 74% of its outside jumpers. Yes, the Bulls are making a lot of baskets, but they're doing so because they're moving the ball around and getting wide open looks. If the Heat continue to look a step slow getting to jump shooters, and the Bulls continue getting the ball to guys when they're open, there's no reason the Bulls can't continue to light Miami up.

by your friendly BullsBlogger on Apr 27, 2007 4:08 PM CDT to parent up   0 recs

There's your playoff gear
Those stats are astounding.  Maybe the Bulls can raise their collective game in the playoffs.

by paxson43 on Apr 27, 2007 6:14 PM CDT to parent up   0 recs

Like I always say
Deadspin could use the traffic. The blogger at Ron Karkovice Whatever could stand to use a calculator instead of the "almost the same" method.

by Paxson Jackson on Apr 27, 2007 4:10 PM CDT to parent up   0 recs

Re: Conspiracies and 2-0 Banter
Totally agree with you on the ref conspiracy. I think we learned after that one ref was suspended for kicking Duncan out of the game that refs have a LOT more autonomy in-game than even skeptics think. On the other hand, it doesn't have to be intentional: we are trained from a young age to be shaped by positive reactions. I wouldn't be surprised if refs have to keep this urge in check when 30,000+ people are collectively applauding one bias and booing the opposite. The 2-0 talk you also hit right on the head. If there's one thing that statisticians know, it's that anything that is possible will happen, given enough trials--even a team coming back from 3-0 will eventually happen in the NBA playoffs. Being unlikely is not an infallible predictor of outcome.

by Craig Hodges Explosion 3000 on Apr 27, 2007 4:18 PM CDT   0 recs

One thing about
the road games this year is Kirk has played better on the road than he has at home. I hope he has that killer instinct tonight.

I never liked that conspiracy crap either. I just hope the lovely Violet isn't reffing tonight.

www.tradeduhon.com

by sue369 on Apr 27, 2007 4:55 PM CDT   0 recs

Oh Yeah
I totally forgot about that.  Add that, for no clear reason, he's been down for two games, and you gotta think he's due.

by Craig Hodges Explosion 3000 on Apr 27, 2007 4:59 PM CDT to parent up   0 recs

Violet's bad
But Dick Bavetta, IMO, is still the worst. It's like he breathes through the whistle and every exhale is a foul. If he gets "rolling" - it could get ugly for the Bulls.  
In Pax we Trust!

by Jobu on Apr 27, 2007 5:42 PM CDT to parent up   0 recs

blame Stern
if the refs weren't so comically bad at times, there would be none of these incomplete theories.  I blame Stern for that. He has the responsibility to avoid even the appearance of impropriety with his product.

This is the not-so-dirty little secret that Stern can't just can't come out and say:  the fact is that it is impossible to have a flawlessly called game and that sometimes this fact affects the outcome of games to some unspecified degree.  

Enjoy the game and go bulls.    

by GWKD on Apr 27, 2007 5:44 PM CDT to parent up   0 recs

In the recent spirit of poetry
some iambic pentameter:

The Bulls opened with fury and with flair,
the upstarts hungry for Miami's crown.
Their two young stars have played beyond compare
and now it's time to put an old dog down.

by Petor on Apr 27, 2007 6:28 PM CDT   0 recs

Nice
PLAYOFF TIME. LETS GO CHICAGO!

by NittanyBull on Apr 27, 2007 6:34 PM CDT to parent up   0 recs

A tip of the cap to you sir.
I'm not in the mood,
yet I feel I must haiku.
A sign of respect.
For the remainder of this series, I will post only in haiku. Hibachi!

by preverbal on Apr 27, 2007 10:59 PM CDT to parent up   0 recs

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