mattg wrote:___Rand___ wrote:Indy dominated the boards in game 1 56-39. This is the team that had trouble cleaning up the boards against Knicks. This was a factor in their come back. I don't see them being able to do that again.
Rebounding is much too contextual and nuanced to blindly look at like this. OKC forced 25 turnovers, and thus shot way more shots, but because OKC missed those shots, Indy racked up the defensive boards. They had the same offensive rebounds basically.
There is no chance Indy turns the ball over 25 times again, which means that they won't have a massive defensive rebounding edge and OKC likely "wins" the rebounding battle. However, Indy will likely have a substantially better offensive game because they will get more shots up without turning the ball over 25 times and likely score double digit more points where as in game 1 they didn't even get shots up in those situations.
IMO this series comes down almost entirely to transition defense. If OKC can't score 20+ppg off turnovers and in transition every game they have no chance and if they are lucky will push it 6 games. If they can score 20+ every game off turnovers on the break then they'll win going away in 5 or 6 games.
Kudos. So much better than the random .... "well they won't shoot that good again" or similar simple takes. See them all the time. The other end of this to me that you forgot was that OKC switched from a two bigs starting lineup to one. It was the first thought I had when I saw they made the change, was that the Pacers have rebounding issues. Something you could take advantage of, and they gave up that opportunity right off the bat.
It'll be interesting to see if they go back to the 2 bigs lineups.





































