Mateo’s Hoop Diary: Nuggets get serious in second half, taking out the Raptors late

The Champs came out blasting on offense, but we’re giving it up as easily because of inattentive defense and turnovers putting them on their heels. Then they got punked in the second quarter, getting outscored by 15 points. It was as if they were transported back to the Mesozoic era, and they were the prey of unfed velociraptors. They followed up the second half with a comeback from down 22 points behind Joker and Murray’s takeover.

Keep in mind the visitors were missing Immanuel Quickley, Jakob Poetl, Gary Trent Jr., Chris Boucher and Scottie Barnes.

Early, the Raptors couldn’t contain Aaron Gordon at close range. And Michael Porter Jr was dropping arrows from deep, middle and short distance.

In the second quarter, the offense fell apart, registering nine of 27 baskets. On the other side, RJ Barrett swished a left-corner triple, seized the baseline for a dunk and drove through the middle for another. Gradey Dick made three jumpers. Jalen McDaniels added six points. And with three minutes to go in the half, the hosts were down 22.

At intermission, the Nuggets were behind on the scoreboard 51-68. They accumulated 28 paint points, eight on the break, four via second chances, nine after turnovers and nine from the bench. MPJ scored 13 points on six of 11 ventures. AG had a dozen on 83.3% shooting. And the Joker had 12 as well, with seven assists, 10 boards and two steals.

The visitors had 28 interior points, 15 in the open court, 11 on extra tries, eight after turnovers and 19 from the reserves. Barrett racked up 15 on his scorecard on six of nine attempts. Dick followed with 13 on his ledger. Former Nugget Bruce Brown had nine. And Kelly Olynyk and Jontay Porter- MPJ’s brother- logged eight.

But Nikola Jokić cleaved coverages with his jumper, finished on the break, ran two-man actions with Jamal Murray, and boogied up close for four more baskets. He supplied 19 points in the frame and, contributed four helpings to Murray, Porter and Watson, and picked up four steals.

Murray produced nine points on three of five looks, but while he defended, Kelly Olynyk hunted him in the half court for a bucket from two feet away and drew a foul on him at the left elbow to take a trip to the charity line. Moreover, Olynyk recorded two more freebies and four field goals, totaling 14 points in the frame.

J. Porter dispatched six more points, and the rest of the Raptors made five of 15 baskets in the third quarter.

Following a 42-point outburst in quarter three and conceding 30, the fourth began with the Nuggets down 93-98, and Murray carelessly turning it over in the corner because he couldn’t hold on to the catch with one hand. In spite of that, he led the Nuggets in the last sequence, breaking down his cover from the wing to the paint, ripping apart the Raptors’ pick-and-roll defense, and getting loose twice after receiving Joker’s handoff. He also distributed six assists to Watson, Gordon, Jokić, KCP, Porter and Zeke Nnaji, generating 15 points.

With under seven minutes to go, the Nuggets took their first lead since the latter stage of the first quarter, when Murray dribbled past McDaniels, hitting a floater in the lane. On the Nuggets’ next possession, Jokić tipped in KCP’s missed pull-up, boosting the advantage to three points. The hosts made six of 10 baskets the rest of the way to close.

On the Raptors’ last possession, with 26 seconds left and down six points, Barrett raced down the floor, misfiring a layup, when taking a 3-pointer was the operative move. Had he made it, the visitors would have played for the steal before the foul.

Porter recovered the miss and the Raptors were extinct.

The Nuggets won 125-119. They had 66 paint points, 21 on the break, 11 on second opportunities, 19 after turnovers and 23 from the bench. Jokić’s stat line included 35 points on 14 of 26 attempts, with 17 rebounds, 12 assists, six steals and two blocks. Murray scored 26 on 57.9% shooting, plus 12 dimes, five boards and two rejections. AG and MPJ had 19 apiece.

The Raptors had 66 interior points, 19 in the open court, 20 on extra tries, eight after turnovers and 31 from the reserves. Barrett submitted 26 points on 10 of 20 looks. Olynyk filed 24 to his scorecard and six rebounds. And Dick noted 17 points.

Jokić handled on the on-court interview. He said, “The whole crew fought today, and we showed character that we are not quitters.”

At the postgame presser, coach Michael Malone said, “Do I like the fact that we didn’t play at all in the first half? No. But I’m really proud of the guys having the courage to not let go…we stayed with it. There was never any panic, which is what I loved about it as well.”

 

 

 

 

Mateo’s Hoop Diary: Jimmy Butler and Bam Adebayo couldn’t save the Heat from dropping a stinker at home against the Wizards

Delon Wright, waived by the guests on Feb.18 and now a Heatle, watched on the bench, likely repulsed, as the hosts couldn’t separate themselves from a G-League team their previous coach quit on for an advisory role. He witnessed his EXs spoil the fourth quarter while coach Erik Spoelstra ignored his number.

(Tyler Herro (foot) and Kevin Love (heel) were absent for the Heat.)

Forget the Heat’s accuracy over the last 10 games (38.9%, sixth in the NBA). The Wizards put a spell on its deep shooting, mostly closing out on time and getting bailed out by six free throw misses.

On the other side, Kyle Kuzma converted a poor nine of 32 looks but baited Nikola Jović into a pump-fake foul and persistently initiated contact on paint drives. Corey Kispert turned into Bradley Beal, popping off for five 3-point bombs when the defense overreacted to dribble penetration, plus gave up the corner and made one over Terry Rozier’s head at the top of the key.

After an efficient but passive first half, Butler was freed for a cut on the right side by Duncan Robinson’s back screen to dunk Adebayo’s lob from the top of the key and successfully rim-rolled going left. In the fourth, he scored in transition and a layup from the left dunker spot. Later, the Wizards keyed in on the often-used and predictable back screen that set him up at the basket after the catch, preventing it from causing more damage. He finished with 23 points on nine of 20 ventures.

Rozier scored 16 points, seven assists and four rebounds. Aside from setting up Robinson’s threes, he was ineffective in the fourth quarter, supplying two points on 25% shooting.

Adebayo amassed 10 points and eight rebounds through quarters one and two. Then, he gobbled eight rebounds and six points, but was scoreless in the last frame with no free throw attempts and one miss late that Martin swooped in to put back, cutting the Heat’s deficit to two points with 31.5 seconds to go.

On the next play, Kuzma picked up Rozier on a forced switch on the right side, but hit him in the face with his offhand when trying to dive by, instantly getting penalized. Twelve seconds left. The possession returned to the Heat, which it gagged with Robinson’s well-guarded left-wing attempt and Butler’s right-side miss.

The Heat were upset 108-110. Scoring 62 paint points, 14 on the break, 13 on extra tries, 12 after turnovers and 27 by the bench couldn’t save the club from the indignity of losing to a group that had a 10-53 record before the match.

The Wizards connected on five tough deep shots and four against loose defense in the second half. Additionally, the visitors logged 40 interior points, 13 in the open court, seven on extra tries, 13 after turnovers and 17 by the reserves.

No, it’s not the twilight zone, but the Heat’s reality is sad- an inconsistent group at the wrong time of year. It shouldn’t have been close late and Spoelstra sold the company line at the postgame presser, saying, “This is what competition is about. Another team will make more plays, as frustrating as that may be… We dropped this one. We’ll have to live with those results, but this is also why we love this profession. We love all context and pressure at this time of year. And we didn’t handle our business in these three games.”

“I know there will be team’s in the East that don’t as well, and we are not leaving it up to them. We are just going to have to focus on ourselves. This is a harrowing ride, and our group has the right intentions. We will just take a day off tomorrow, recalibrate and get ready and prepare at practice on Tuesday for a big game on Wednesday.”

The loss should have been a tune-up win. The progress made in February, going 8-3, is being erased on a current three-game losing streak, which the crew had chances to succeed in each time.

The stat sheet will mislead those who didn’t watch in person or on TV. One of the worst teams in the NBA came into Kaseya Center, giving the Heat the business. Perhaps the result indicates Miami’s team isn’t as strong as last year’s eighth-seeded, Play-In victorious Eastern champs. During a timeout with under four minutes left, no one got the memo: “No threes allowed.” They permitted two more the rest of the way.

On Wednesday, the reigning champion Denver Nuggets, winners of eight of its last 10 and an awful matchup for the Heat, come to town. At this stage, the Heat are the tune-up for them.

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Mateo’s Hoop Diary: Heat couldn’t overcome turd quarter vs Thunder in Oklahoma City

Despite controlling the game early on the second night of a road back-to-back, the Heat’s offense fell apart in the third quarter and its embers were extinguished late by Shai Gilgeous Alexander.

Early, Jimmy Butler attacked the basket, scoring the Heat’s first six points. But Bam Adebayo and Duncan Robinson were cold- the former missed a jumper badly on the baseline and was denied by Luguentz Dort’s help defense, and the latter missed a pair of well-contested triples.

Halfway through the frame, coach Erik Spoelstra subbed out Nikola Jović and put in rookie Jaimie Jaquez Jr.. JJJ saved the Heat from an embarrassing start, creating contact on drives, making four freebies, hooking over Shai Gilgeous-Alexander in the post, beating everyone on the break and splashing a left-wing triple.

SGA countered for the hosts, registering 10 first-quarter points, primarily striking the lane against man coverage and the zone. Josh Giddey picked up three dimes. And the rest of the group made seven of 17 baskets, as no other Thunder player made more than one field goal.

After 12 minutes, the Heat led 29-27.

Then newcomer Patty Mills- the 15-year veteran who signed with the club on Wednesday- was unleashed. He registered four of five baskets, hitting three triples when the defense overreacted to inside pressure and nailed a midrange floater on the right side after Dort closed out too hard to the wing on the pass.

Butler scored twice in the second frame- a layup, low on the right side in the first minute and another in the last 42 seconds of the half, totaling five points. Additionally, Jaquez was still burning. He spun past Josh Giddey on the baseline for a layup over Chet Holmgren, successfully rolled right after the handoff from Adebayo and scored from the dunker spot when left alone.

Defensively, the Heat slowed down the Thunder and SGA. Help was sent when he beat Terry Rozier to the paint, stopping his layup. Two of his 3-point attempts were triumphantly contested, and Haywood Highsmith forced him into a difficult step-back jumper inside the right wing to end the half. His running mate, Jalen Williams, was the only host to record multiple field goals in the frame, and the Thunder was held to seven of 20 makes.

At halftime, the Heat was up 57-47 and up on the glass by five. The group had 28 paint points, eight on the break, one from an extra try, six after turnovers and 33 from the bench. Jaquez was the high Heatle with 17 points on six of seven attempts. Next were Butler and Mills, each with 11. And Adebayo struggled to score, logging three points, but had four assists and six rebounds.

The Thunder picked up 22 interior points, eight in the open court, 11 via second chances, seven after turnovers and 14 from the reserves. SGA dispensed 14 points on five of 12 attempts. And Williams had eight on 42.9% shooting.

Then, two-and-a-half minutes into the third quarter, the Heat climbed to a 14-point lead following a Robinson right-wing banger. The unit missed its next six field goals over five minutes as the Thunder neutralized Adebayo’s pick-and-pop jumper in the paint and disrupted three of Rozier’s shots from close, medium and long range.

In that span, as the Heat’s offense was useless, the Thunder rattled off 17 straight points courtesy of SGA getting anything he wanted in the middle, Giddey punishing a double team on SGA from distance, plus Williams piercing the zone and burying a 3-pointer. The Thunder out-produced the Heat by 16 points in the sequence to lead 77-73 to start the fourth.

The guests made six of 14 buckets over eight minutes but were down seven on the scoreboard. Following up with five in a row- Rozier’s transition gash, corner triple and pick and pop shot, a three-footer from Butler and fallaway three from Robinson- still had the club behind by four.

SGA’s impact was as loud as a high-voltage thunderstorm, pulling up on his jump shot going right and left for a dozen more marks. And Aaron Wiggins connected on a second-chance triple, beat Caleb Martin to the cup for a layup and dusted Haywood Highsmith on the baseline, dunking as Rozier got out of the way. The lever that brought down the guillotine was Williams dribbling past JJJ and Adebayo’s help for a left-handed finish.

The Heat lost 100-107. The crew had 48 paint points, eight on the break, five on added attempts, 10 after turnovers and 45 from the bench. Jaquez led the group with 25 points on 10 of 13 looks. Butler’s 20 on 50% shooting followed.

The Thunder collected 46 interior points, 12 in the open court, 23 on extra tries, 18 after turnovers and 28 from the reserves. SGA had 37 points on 13 of 25 shots. Williams dropped 15. And Giddey tallied 11.

At the postgame presser, Spoelstra said, “If we could have finished off a couple more possessions, we might’ve had an opportunity to hold them under 100 [points].

In the locker room, Jaquez said, “Unfortunately, we didn’t get it done tonight, but we are going to learn from this and get better.”

The Heat is 9-0 when holding teams under 100 points in 2023-24. The team will not practice on Saturday (3/9).

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Mateo’s Hoop Diary: Luka Dončić and the Mavericks put the Heat away late in the fourth quarter

The Heat hung around with the Mavericks until it was floored by the knockout blows with two minutes left.

Tyler Herro (foot) and Kevin Love (heel) were absent.  As was Josh Richardson (shoulder), who will miss the rest of the season.

Early, the Heat stunned the Mavericks, converting 13 of its first 15 attempts and 36 points on 71.4% shooting in the frame. Terry Rozier channeled Heat legend Tim Hardaway, setting up Nikola Jović on the go for a layup, lobbing to Bam Adebayo, and finding him ahead of everyone upcourt for buckets plus scored eight points. And Duncan Robinson buried three trays and cut on the right side for a layup assisted by Jović.

Defensively, the visitors permitted the Mavericks 28 on the scoreboard. Luka Dončić scored over Rozier in the post, nailed a pair of triples and pierced the paint for a floater. Kyrie Irving added seven points and two dimes. The rest of the Mavericks made five of nine baskets in the period.

But the Heat went cold in the second interval, making 43% of tries in the lane and failing nearly every attempt from the top of the key, wings and right corner. Adebayo was ineffective, and Butler was passive; together, they supplied seven points on two six shots. Yet, Jaime Jaquez Jr. canned a corner triple and finished a layup on the right side.

The Mavericks attack was just as poor against man-to-man coverage and the zone. Dallas’ Dante Exum and Derrick Jones Jr failed on fast break dunks, the half-court sets were predictable and deep shots were contested cleanly. In the frame, the Mavericks tallied 28 points on seven of 21 shots.

At halftime, the Heat was up 58-54 and ahead on the glass by one. Additionally, it picked up 24 paint points, eight on the break, two on second chances, six after turnovers and 20 from the bench. Robinson was the scoring leader with 14 on five of five ventures. JJJ and Caleb Martin had eight apiece.

The Mavericks had 20 interior points, nine in the open court, six on extra tries, 11 after turnovers and 17 from the reserves. Dončić dropped a dozen points with four dimes and three rebounds. And Irving had 11 on his ledger with two assists.

Then Dončić seized the quarter, recording five assists, spinning past Rozier in the post, breaking into the paint on a pick-and-roll set for a jumper over Adebayo and swishing three 3-pointers. Irving added seven points, and the Mavericks took a 10-point lead late in the third.

For the Heat, Jovič registered seven fruitless minutes, and Butler was invisible for nine. In spite of that, Robinson tacked on five more, and Rozier kept the ember burning. The latter isolated his mismatch, PJ Washington, for a layup on the right side, canned a floater over Dereck Lively II, who is a foot taller (7-foot-1) and made two deep shots.

Butler cracked open the fourth quarter, hitting a left elbow jumper over Washington. He also made another over the same cover on the baseline and drove left past him for a midrange pull-up. His last basket was a fall-away jumper guarded by Exum that gave the Heat a 101-100 lead with four minutes left.

Adebayo, Robinson and Rozier missed five shots the rest of the way. But Rozier made the last two baskets- a left-wing triple facing drop coverage and slashing the lane for dos puntos.

The Mavericks recorded 23 points on eight of 19 looks in the fourth quarter. While the hosts led by two with under three minutes left, Dončić raised for a trifecta up top. He tried another with 93 seconds to go and the Mavs up three, but he missed and it was tapped to Irving on the left corner for three points.

After all that, the Heat had a faint pulse in the last 25 seconds, down three and spare time to go for a chance to tie if it could get one last stop. Except, Martin, without looking, swiped at Exum and was flagged for a reach-in foul. Exum made the two freebies, icing the game.

The Heat lost in Dallas 108-114 and was outrebounded by eight. It also had 40 paint points, 12 on the break, five via second chances, 10 after turnovers and 30 from the bench. Rozier put up 27 points on 10 of 17 attempts, plus 11 dimes and six boards. Robinson scored 19 on 70% shooting. Adebayo and Butler each had 14 points.

The Mavericks had 38 interior points, 19 in the open court, 16 on extra tries, 15 after turnovers and 33 from the reserves. Dončić finished with 35 points, making half of his tries with 11 assists and 11 rebounds. Irving provided 23 to the scoreboard on nine of 19 chances.

At the postgame presser, coach Erik Spoelstra said, “They were pretty committed to getting the ball out of [Jimmy Butler’s] hands and getting him out of his sweet spots… We have to find different ways then to make sure he gets activated and other ways he can get to his strength zones.”

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Mateo’s Hoop Diary: Jimmy Butler, Bam Adebayo and Terry Rozier’s big second half propels Heat to win over Pistons

The Miami Heat withstood the Detroit Pistons – arguably the most pitiful team in the NBA- after seven lead changes and one tie.

Early, Jimmy Butler and Terry Rozier were passive, and Bam Adebayo chronically misfired for the Heat. But Duncan Robinson sprayed drop coverage, pierced the zone, burned Ausar Thompson on the baseline with a hesitation dribble plus the layup and made two freebies.

Additionally, understudy Nikola Jović followed Robinson’s lead, setting up two trays and scoring six points. And Caleb Martin canned two baskets in the lane.

On the other side, the Pistons made a meager one of eight 3-pointers in the first quarter against weak protection. Although, Cade Cunningham logged seven points on three of five looks, including a ferocious slam over Jović. Jaden Ivey hit a bucket at the nail, successfully isolated Adebayo from the top to the cup on the left side and dribbled left to the baseline for a jumper over Robinson.

Next, Detroit’s Jalen Duren threw his weight around on offense, registering four shots in the square, none meaner than the lob over Adebayo and dunk after leaving his counterpart stuck in the post. On top of that, forward Simone Fontecchio made two triples, a floater and three free throws.

Yet, Caleb Martin detonated for 11 points, off-setting the win-starved Pistons’s second-quarter production. The only other Heatle in the frame to log multiple field goals was Rozier, swishing two midrange jumpers.

At halftime, the Heat was up 61-60 and behind on the glass by two. It had 24 paint points, eight on the break, seven on second chances, seven after turnovers and 24 from the bench. Martin had 15 points. Robinson had 12 on his scoring ledger.

The Pistons scored 28 interior points, three in the open court, seven on extra tries, five after turnovers and 16 from the reserves. Cunningham supplied a dozen points on four of seven shots. Fontecchio and Ivey each had 11. And Duren had 10 points.

Subsequently, the Heat had a shaky start coming out of intermission. The Pistons converted its first four of six baskets out of the break. But Adebayo triumphantly went at Duren three times, at close and midrange. Rozier splashed a few trays. And the rest of the Heatles made four of 10 shots in the period.

Defensively, the Heat contained visitors to 33.3% shooting in the fourth quarter. Ivey got free on the break for a layup through traffic and scored off a handoff. And Cunningham drove right for a four-foot finish and broke a trap on the left side for an elbow jumper. No other Piston tallied multiple field goals in the quarter as the Heat slowed down dribble penetration and contested outside jumpers on time.

For the Miami team, Butler closed the deal with a rim roll, driving past Evan Fournier and Fontecchio on the left side for a couple of layups, a right-wing pull-up triple and six freebies. The next scoring leader for the club in the fourth was Jaime Jaquez Jr., who put up a second-chance effort and hit a floater over Duren.

The Heat won 118-110 and were tied on the glass at 42. Furthermore, the hosts racked up 48 paint points, 16 on the break, 15 on second chances, 25 after turnovers and 31 from the bench. Butler logged 26 points on seven of 13 attempts, with eight assists and six rebounds. Adebayo and Robinson dropped 18 apiece. And Rozier had 17 points.

The Pistons had 48 interior points, nine on the break, 16 on extra tries, 14 after turnovers and 35 from the bench. Cunningham contributed 23 points on eight of 20 shots with eight dimes and four rebounds. Fontecchio was next on the scorecard with 22 points, making 43.8% of field goals.

At the postgame presser, coach Erik Spoelstra said, “I anticipated it would be a physical, competitive game and it was every bit of that.”

In the locker room, Adebayo spoke on Jović’s impact. He said, “He is taking advantage of his opportunities. Obviously, he’s a great, willing passer.” The big man also added that Jović makes the team more dynamic.

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‘We Know What It Takes in the Playoffs’: The Panthers Are Taking the League by Storm as the Postseason Approaches

The Florida Panthers are rolling and the league is taking notice.

 

Last season’s run to the Stanley Cup Final was an unlikely one for the Panthers.

 

They got in as an eighth seed, by one point and had to upset the Presidents’ Trophy winning Bruins in Game 7 of the first-round. Everyone knows that story, yet, the Panthers weren’t really garnering as much national attention ahead of the 2023-24 season as you’d expect for the defending Eastern Conference champions.

 

That’s certainly not the case anymore. 

 

On Monday night, the Panthers won another statement game, defeating the New York Rangers — a cup contender in their own right — 4-2 at Madison Square Garden. 

 

With 20 games left in the regular season, the attention of the league is once again swinging towards Sunrise as the Panthers sit atop the NHL. 

 

It’s quite evident that last year’s playoff run, specifically losing in the finals, has had an effect on the current Panthers team. 

 

“We know what it takes in the playoffs, how hard you need to play. Every shift, every game,” Panthers captain Aleksander Barkov said after Monday night’s win in New York. “That’s what we’re trying to replicate in these games.”

 

They play hard, fast, aggressive, on the edge. Some have called them “villains” — which isn’t a bad thing. Others have called them “dirty”. None of those outside comments have mattered much to the team. The one thing that’s constant for the Panthers has been their style of play — playoff brand hockey.

 

It’s extremely hard to win in the playoffs whilst playing a run and gun game, which was the story of the 2021-22 Presidents’ Trophy Panthers who were swept in round 2 by the Lightning.  

 

When head coach Paul Maurice took over the reins ahead of last season in Sunrise, it took some time before the team could really buy into a defensive first approach to the game. Once they did, Florida began their miracle run to just sneak into the postseason.

 

The present day’s edition of the Florida Panthers has a lot of the cup final team’s style, sprinkled in with the offense from two years ago.

 

Defensive mindset first, the Panthers have been a scary team for opposing offenses to play. 

 

They have allowed two or fewer goals in 16 of their last 17 games — holding a 15-2-0 record across that span.

 

Goaltending has been elite all season. With 2.35 goals allowed per game, Florida is the No. 1 in the league in that category. 

 

The defense has also done a spectacular job at decreasing the workload for Sergei Bobrovsky and Anthony Stolarz, allowing 27.6 shots allowed per game — second fewest in the league. 

 

Two games into their current road trip, the Panthers have outscored their opponents 8-2, defeating the Rangers and Red Wings — both of whom are trending for the postseason.

 

As for offense, they’ve been rolling in that category as well, in large part because of Sam Reinhart’s contributions. 

 

Reinhart has been lighting up the NHL all season, his 44 goals is second most in the league — third most in Panthers history. Reinhart, 28, has five goals in his past three games.

 

“Sam’s been brilliant. He’s a fantastic player for us,” Maurice said. 

 

Like Reinhart, Carter Verhaeghe has been pushing the offense as well with 30 goals on the season. Matthew Tkachuk has been phenomenal since the end of December, scoring 46 of his 68 points since Dec. 23 (29 games).

 

Then there’s Barkov. 

 

Florida’s captain has had yet another standout year defensively and should have his name in the Selke conversation once the season is done. The offensive numbers don’t necessarily jump out, but he’s still over a point-per-game with 62 points in 56 appearances. 

 

On Monday night, under the bright lights of MSG, Barkov had the hockey world in awe after pulling off one of the craziest moves leading to a goal you’ll ever see.

 

He juggled the puck in the air, flicked it around Rangers defenseman K’Andre Miller, then corralled the puck once more while falling down before laying a perfect pass to Sam Reinhart who buried away the perfect assist. 

 

“[I’m] still shocked. It’s crazy, he doesn’t even understand how sick it was,” Ryan Lomberg said of Barkov’s play. “He’s so nonchalant that to him, it’s just another assist because that’s how he carries himself. Being able to watch that live and seeing the team’s reaction, it was a pretty sweet goal.”

 

As Barkov went viral around the league for that play, the Panthers latest swing — with a 4-0 win on national television over Detroit and 4-2 win over the powerhouse Rangers — the attention is once again swarming towards the guys in South Florida.

 

The goal, as Lomberg said, was “pretty sweet”. The same could be said about the Panthers season. There’s been a lot of trending upwards and team’s have people have taken notice with the playoffs are just a month away.


With the best record in the NHL, a top offense, defense and two goalies who can’t stop winning, Florida is in the driver’s seat and they don’t look like they’ll be slowing down anytime soon.

Christian Wilkins

Tea leaves predicted it: DT Christian Wilkins set to hit FA market

If you have been following the breadcrumbs or reading the tea leaves since the Miami Dolphins season ended in January, you may have gained a sense that the Fins and their star defensive tackle were about to part ways. And it’s no surprise that THAT is exactly what is about to happen come March 13th 2024. 



 

The clues that predicted this are as follows:



 

January 15th — Dolphins end of the season press conference



 

General Manager Chris Grier recalls that he and Christian Wilkins representation attempted to negotiate over last summer, the Dolphins and Wilkins camp admitted that the deal was fair at the time, but the two sides couldn’t come to an agreement.

 

Grier also used his classic line of “earned the right to be a free agent” which usually means, “this player will be leaving the Miami Dolphins in one way or another”.

 

Grier used this line when talking about the team’s former tight end Mike Gesicki last January of 2023. Gesicki found himself playing for the New England Patriots that season.

Then February and new defensive coordinator Anthony Weaver came, and Wilkins status with the team was still in the air, despite high praise from Weaver.

 

“I know that he’s positioned himself, obviously, for a huge payday, and as an ex-player, I completely understand the business of the league. I love Christian and would love to have him, but man, we’ll see.”

 

Then late February came, and Grier reiterated just as much as he did the first time – using his favorite phrase again, and telling us that he’d be having talks with Wilkins’ agent.

 

But nothing fruitful ever became of it.

And now Wilkins is on the verge of hitting the free agent market.

What is odd is that the Miami Dolphins did not use a card that was in their hands during this scenario – a card that may have gave the Miami Dolphins something in return if they lost Christian Wilkins to another team during the 2024 free agency period…

The non-exclusive franchise tag.

The Dolphins could have tagged Wilkins which would have given Wilkins and his camp the ability to negotiate with other teams, while the Dolphins had a chance to match any offer.

If the Dolphins refused or could not match, Wilkins would be headed to another NFL team, but the Dolphins would be compensated with two 1st-round picks from that particular club.

 

Sounds great for the Dolphins, doesn’t it?

 

But finding a team to trade two 1st-rounders for a defensive tackle in today’s NFL would be difficult, and this would hurt Wilkins chances of having a team approach him with a deal. The tag would have also increased Wilkins cap number for the 2024 season, and the Dolphins already have a limited amount of cap space for this upcoming year while having to make some expensive decisions on starting quarterback Tua Tagovailoa as well as others. However, it doesn’t hurt to try fishing and see what you can catch, and the Fins could have rescinded the tag by mid-July or even earlier if no team was biting and they wanted to do right by Wilkins.

 

But the Dolphins decided not to be selfish and not to frustrate Wilkins’ opportunity to land a big payday, which goes to show how much this team has started valuing player-front office relationships since Mike McDaniel entered the building in 2022.

 

So that’s the gist of it.

 

By the way, Grier also used the phrase “right to be a free agent” with starting offensive guard Robert Hunt. So we can probably make an educated guess on where that’s headed.

Mateo’s Hoop Diary: Heat win, outdueling Jazz in the second half

Early, the Heat’s prosperous long-range marksmanship and Jimmy Butler’s shot creation – nine points and four dimes- carried the unit in the first quarter. The Jazz were slow to contest in transition and gave up threes because of overreacting to the ball handler.

Defensively, the group neutralized Utah’s Lauri Markkanen in the paint, and he missed deep jumpers he usually buries. But Rookie Keyonte George and Collin Sexton did damage- the former incinerated the Heat’s outside protection and beat Bam Adebayo on a switch to the cup for a layup; the latter added six points. The rest of the visitors converted six of 11 baskets in the frame, plus added nine second-chance points.

Through 12 minutes, the Heat was behind 30-34.

Then, after nearly six wasted minutes, the Jazz’s offense came back to life. Big man Taylor Hendricks turned three offensive rebounds into six punishing points. John Collins scored on a pick-and-roll play with Sexton on the left side and swished a transition triple. And Sexton dribbled by Jaime Jaquez Jr, pivoted past Terry Rozier and hit a left-side floater over Duncan Robinson.

For the Heat, Caleb Martin supplied three triples. Adebayo had three paint finishes. And the rest of the squad registered five of 13 attempts.

At halftime, the Heat was down 58-62 and outrebounded by six. The hosts produced 22 paint points, two on the break, three on second chances, zero after turnovers and 16 from the bench. Butler had a dozen on five shots. Adebayo also had 12 on the scoring ledger. And D. Robinson was next with seven on three of seven looks.

The Jazz had 30 interior points, two in the open court, 17 on extra tries, three after turnovers and 15 from the reserves. Sexton dropped 12 points and three assists. Collins had 10 on his scorecard and four rebounds. And George picked up nine points.

Then George came out blasting, canning two 3-pointers, driving left for a layup with Butler on his right hip and making a baseline jumper over Orlando Robinson. Markkanen added five points from the line, and the remaining Jazz poured in five of 11 buckets.

But Butler countered, successfully striking the paint five times and contributing a corner triple. He scored 18 of the club’s 32 points in the third quarter. Additionally, Rozier scored six points and set up his teammates three times. Nikola Jović provided three dimes as well.

After three quarters, the match was tied at 90. Markkanen dispensed 12 points, and George added just as many. Despite their sharpshooting keeping the Jazz afloat, the group committed five turnovers late because of the Heat’s 2-2-1 press and tight man coverage hounding the ball.

For the hosts, Adebayo launched its assault with a turnaround jumper over former Heatle Ömer Yurtseven. As the sequence drew to a close, he made three freebies, hooked over Markkanen from six feet away, spun past Collins in the post for a finger roll finish and put back Rozier’s miss in transition.

Moreover, Butler and Martin combined for 14 fourth-quarter points on eight tries. And regardless of missing five trays (1/5) late, the Heat still tallied 36 more points to close the game. (With two minutes left in the game, Butler’s right arm accidentally caught Martin in the mouth after George’s missed runner. Martin was subbed out for D. Robinson and got six stitches, per the Miami Herald’s Anthony Chiang.)

The Heat won 126-120 but got outrebounded by eight. The team had 62 paint points, 14 on the break, nine on second chances, 13 after turnovers and 32 from the bench. Butler was the scoring leader with 37 on 12 of 19 attempts, with seven assists. Next was Adebayo with 23 on 67% shooting, plus seven rebounds.

The Jazz racked up 50 interior points, seven in the open court, 26 on extra tries, three after turnovers and 20 from the reserves. George dropped 31 points on 12 of 23 looks. Markkanen had 25 on 33.3% shooting. And Collins and Sexton had 18 apiece.

At the postgame presser, Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said, “When Bam [Adebayo] and Jimmy [Butler] play with that competitive spirit…our guys feel like we can beat anyone.”

In the locker room, Butler said the game was in the mud and similar to Playoff basketball. On the topic of getting the ball in the post, he said, “If anybody [has] the mismatch, get them the ball. We expect them to score or make the right play out of it.”

The Heat’s record improved to 34-26, sitting at sixth place in the Eastern Conference. The team will not practice Sunday.

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Mateo’s Hoop Diary: Nuggets cool off Heat in Denver

The Denver Nuggets outlasted the Heat in the first Finals rendezvous of the season on the second night of a back-to-back. The hosts opened the game on a 9-0 run, and minutes later, they forced Heat coach Erik Spoelstra’s hand to call a timeout as the advantage reached double-digits.

Denver sharpshooter Michael Porter Jr. buried a wing triple and made a layup in transition. Kentavious Caldwell-Pope shattered outside protections with three trifectas. Nikola Jokić directed the offense as a conductor would a symphony, setting up feeds to three snipers, plus spinning past Bam Adebayo at close range. And the rest of the team converted five of 11 shots, racing out to a 36-20 lead in the first quarter.

On the Heat side, understudy Nikola Jović canned a 3-pointer and scored on the dunker spot. Caleb Martin finished two layups. But not much else happened against man-to-man coverage until Jimmy Butler logged two straight baskets at the end of the period.

Yet, six early points to start the second quarter for the guests was enough for Nuggets coach Michael Malone to call a stoppage. Two dribble handoffs for Robinson, resulting in trays followed, as well two inside baskets for Terry Rozier. No other Heat player recorded more than a field goal in the second frame, but Jaime Jaquez Jr, Adebayo, Rozier and Butler combined for 10 of 12 freebies.

Defensively, the crew held the hosts to 23.8% shooting in the sequence by contesting jump shots on time after the catch. On top of that, doubling in the post and deflecting passes in traffic, created five turnovers.

With over three minutes to go in the first half and the Nuggets’ lead cut to six points, Jamal Murray received a handoff from Aaron Gordon that initiated a pick-and-roll set with Jokić at the top. As Murray dribbled down the left side and passed to his center cutting down the middle, his left foot accidentally stepped on AG’s right shoe. KCP didn’t hesitate to foul, getting his hurt teammate out of the game. (Murray then walked to the locker room and didn’t return for the next half.)

At halftime, the Heat was behind on the scoreboard 51-56 and tied on the glass at 22. Additionally, it racked up 22 paint points, eight on the break, nine via second chances, six after turnovers and nine from the bench. Rozier led all scorers inefficiently, with 10 points on two of seven shots. Butler had nine points, followed by Adebayo, Robinson and Martin, each with eight.

The Nuggets scored 18 interior points, seven on the break, nine on second tries, 11 after turnovers and five from the reserves. MPJ was the high Nugget, registering 18 points on seven of 12 attempts. Next was KCP, with 13 on his ledger and AG’s eight.

Yet, the Heat’s offense stalled out in the third interval, thanks to the Nuggets’ length in the backline disrupting anything Adebayo tried in the paint and the outside defense permitting only 33% of hoisted triples. The Denver outfit contained last year’s first losers to 19 points in the quarter.

Inversely, Porter sprayed the Heat with five baskets- driving on the baseline for a layup after pump-faking Jović, canning two threes, attacking the middle for a five-footer and fading over Martin on the right side. Moreover, Jokić contributed four points, four dimes and four rebounds as the home squad established a 13-point lead entering the final frame.

Jokić carried the champs in fourth, connecting on a turnaround jumper between two defenders, hooking over Adebayo and making four free throws.

But, after making eight of 18 shots through nine minutes, the Heat was down by seven. Next, four consecutive baskets were logged- Adebayo shooting over Jokić twice and Rozier swishing a pair of jumpers.

With 40 seconds left and the Heat four points below, Jokić, at the nail, illegally extended his right arm, clipping Adebayo, and was called for a foul and possession changed. On the next play, Rozier and Adebayo ran a pick-and-pop set that got the former open on the right wing facing Jokić in drop coverage. Rozier airballed.

On the other end, KCP missed a corner 3-pointer, and Butler got downhill quickly for a layup the Nuggets gave him because they didn’t want any trays inflicted on them. Subsequently, the free throw formality followed.

The Heat lost 97-103. It had 48 paint points, 12 on the break, 11 via second chances, 12 after turnovers and 16 from the bench. Adebayo scored 22 points on eight of 18 looks with seven boards. Next, Butler supplied 21 on 41.2% shooting and seven rebounds. Rozier had 19 points on six of 15 attempts.

The Nuggets gathered 40 interior points, nine in the open court, 13 on extra chances, 15 after turnovers and 15 from the reserves. Porter had 30 points, making 52.2% of tries, plus 11 rebounds. Jokić had 18 points and 11 rebounds. And KCP produced 18 on his scorecard.

In the locker room, Adebayo said, “We missed a lot of shots we usually make.”

When asked about assessing the overall performance, Butler said, “They’re where we want to be in the sense of finding a way to win. [Jamal Murray] went down, and they kept at it… We’re not quite there just yet, but we have a little bit more time to get there.”

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Miami Dolphins Tua Tagovailoa and Trent Sherfield dance in celebration of a touchdown against the Browns.

Something to Hold You Over Until Next Football Season

Top Sporting Events Between Now and September

 

Confetti flies down on the field, and Patrick Mahomes is going to Disneyland! The most bittersweet event in sports signifies that the NFL season has come and gone. What now? There are only so many mock drafts that fans can sort through until they need to get the heart racing. Your girlfriend thinks she has you all weekend during the offseason, but we need our fix year-round! This article will serve as a guide for just that. From February to August, I have you covered with the best sporting events of the next seven months.

 

March Madness (March 19th – April 8th)

March Madness is just about as good as it gets for sports bettors and college fans. From Cinderella stories, to breakout stars and Sister Jean, a 100-year-old nun who knows ball. There truly is something for everyone in the championship tournament of College Basketball. If you miss 7 hours of commercial-free football, just wait until you get 12 hours of unhinged basketball chaos! You have not lived until your bracket has been busted before noon on day one. Grab your comfy hoodie, sit in your favorite spot on the couch, and only get up for food delivery and bathroom breaks. Time to lock in!

Cinderella Team: New Mexico Lobos (100/1)

Favorite: Purdue (8/1)

 

MLB Opening Day (March 28th)

Say what you will about Baseball, the season is too long, games too slow, and the Marlins sell off all of their stars when it comes time to pay them the big bucks. Although these things may be true, nothing compares to Opening Day. We can all agree that 162 games is a lot of games, and most will not be tuning in every night, but on Opening Day, every team is 0-0. You finally get to see your squad for the first time in six months! Can the Rangers shock the world and repeat? Will the Dodgers look as good as they do on paper? Will the Yankees bounce back from a down season? We will have some hints on March 28th!

World Series Winner: Los Angeles Dodgers (3.5/1)

 

Golf Grand Slams (April 11th – 14th, May 16th – 19th, June 13th – 16th, July 18th – 21st)

This year, more than ever before, Golf will be must-watch TV. Jon Rahm took his Green Jacket to LIV and will be defending from the “dark side.” Brooks Koepka, one of LIV’s first premier signings, dominated the PGA Championship. Wyndham Clark came out of nowhere in LA to win the US Open, and Brian Harman did the same in The Open at Royal Liverpool. For the first time, the talent on both tours is nearly equal, and tensions are rising. Can PGA stars like Jordan Spieth, Rory McIlroy, and Scottie Scheffler hold off their LIV combatants Jon Rahm, Brooks Koepka, and Bryson Dechambeau? In what is seemingly an afterthought for the first time in three decades, what will Tiger Woods look like? He is looking older due to many injuries, and expectations are low. Each year might be his final in competition, so enjoy it while it lasts. 

Major Predictions:

Masters: Jordan Spieth (18/1)

PGA: Rory McIlroy (10/1)

US Open: Dustin Johnson (25/1)

The Open: Ludvig Aberg (33/1)

 

UFC 300 (April 13th)

The UFC has built an empire atop the combat sports world. Dana White loves to do it big for monumental events, and UFC 300 will be no different. Although critics will claim that the mainstream “star” power is missing from this card, it is STACKED. There are top tier fighters who are barely making the bottom of the main card. UFC PPV prices are generally quite steep, and might be a barrier for the casual fan, but I believe that if there was ever a time to treat yourself, UFC 300 is that time.

Periera v Hill: Hill by 2nd round KO

 

NBA Playoffs (April 20th – June 23rd)

Similar to the MLB, there are a lot of games in the NBA regular season. Not quite 162, but 82 games is still a lot when stretched from October to April. The first half of the regular season is also in direct competition with NCAAF and the NFL. The NBA In-Season Tournament was a fun experiment that got a spark during the early part of the season, but the casual interest faded over time. For many fans, the season starts after the All-Star Break. The race to the playoffs heats up (pun intended), and stars treat every game like a must-win. The product is better and more intense during the playoffs. The 2022-2023 Miami Heat are a pretty perfect example of that. They barely—and I mean BARELY, snuck into the playoffs and still managed to beat the toughest possible route to the NBA Finals. There are tons of storylines heading into this season’s playoffs. Steph and LeBron battling it out for the final seed in the Western Conference, while the Timberwolves and Thunder have surprised many atop the West. Can the Heat sleepwalk their way through the playoffs again, or is the East too strong and stacked this season? 

Finals Prediction: The Clippers defeat the Bucks in 6 games to win it all

 

NFL Draft (April 25th – 27th)

A beacon of hope shining through the doldrums of April; showing football fans that there is a light at the end of the tunnel. The NFL draft is a three-day event that showcases college football’s best. What NFL team will add what players? For the fans of struggling teams, this is a moment of optimism in an otherwise dreary fanhood (unless you are a fan of the Carolina Panthers, who traded away their first overall pick for Bryce Young last season). Will a young rookie be the spark that ignites your franchise into a decade of success? Probably not, but there is HOPE. For the better teams, this is a chance to pick up young talent and keep things moving. One rough draft can derail everything. This year, the Chicago Bears have a lot to look forward to. They traded for the aforementioned Panthers’ pick, and as a result, have the #1 and #8 overall picks this season. Having multiple first round picks is the kind of draft situation that the Miami Dolphins used to begin their rebuild. This is a dream for fans, but a nightmare for management. Do you go the obvious route, draft Caleb Williams, and dump Justin Fields after an unfair shot at leading a winning roster? Do you keep Fields, trade the pick for a haul, and build a talented roster around the talented QB? Seems like a damned if you do, damned if you don’t situation. Will the Bears draft according to prior history? Williams has a lot of comparisons to Patrick Mahomes. The Bears once passed on the 3-time Super Bowl winner for career backup Mitch Trubisky. I believe that Justin Fields has top-10 QB potential, but there is no way that you can pass up on a talent like Caleb Williams.

Caleb Williams goes first overall to the Chicago Bears (duh)

 

UEFA Champions League Final (June 1st) 

I used to play FIFA 13 with the fellas, and my go-to squad was Real Madrid. That front line of Ronaldo, Benzema, and Bale were unstoppable. Tony Kroos hit rocket shots from the midfield, and Luka Modric was a great facilitator. It was frustrating that for most of the season, these teams battled within their separate divisions. It wasn’t until I discovered the Champions League that my interest in the game peaked. The best teams from the best divisions battle in a bracket-style competition. Now, let’s talk 2024. Manchester City is the favorite to win UCL by a wide margin (+150, closest squads are Arsenal and Real Madrid +500). Can Erling Haaland continue to dominate and lead City to their second UCL title in as many years? Or will somebody rise to the occasion and knock off the unanimous favorites?

Man City takes the Champions League title for the second year in a row, beating Arsenal 4-1

 

Summer Olympics (July 26th – August 11th)

Let me be the first to admit the Olympics are not my thing. The good news is the Summer Olympics are in France, which gives American sports fans an excuse to get up as early as possible to watch two foreign countries battle it out in sports like Skeleton, Badminton, and Table Tennis (that was sarcasm). The mainstream competitions like Swimming, Track, and Gymnastics all have captivating storylines, and there will be some wild moments. If I could pinpoint an issue with the general interest in the Olympics, it is likely that most of these sports and athletes are not followed for four years until they show up on TV. The Olympics need more star power.

USA brings home 45 gold medals

 

Honorable Mention/Snubbed: Kentucky Derby, NHL Playoffs, Tennis Grand Slams

 

As we bid farewell to another exciting NFL season, the sports world offers thrilling events to keep us engaged over the next seven months. From the chaos of March Madness and the crack of a bat on Opening Day. From Golf’s turf war and UFC’s spectacular battles. There is something for everyone. For the fans on the global stage, you have the Champions League final and the Summer Olympics! While we wait for our fantasy drafts, let us embrace these events as we eagerly await the return of football.