Ranma wrote:Doc finally seeing the light?
The one light I've noticed, and this is minuscule, seems to be the reduction of techs. Blake Griffin's ejection may have been the bump in the head the Clippers needed to cut down on the complaining. But we did have one today on Crawford's part. Luckily it had no effect on the team.
The Clippers are still reliant on highlight reel plays. Jordan's grim posters to Monroe and Antetokounmpo energized the team into caring the load and protecting the win. The fun died as soon as the Bucks employed the Hack-A-Shaq, which infuriated especially Ralph Lawler and Mike Smith. It seems to me that the announcers are afraid that the Hack-A-Shaq may harm the Clipper's happy-go-lucky spirits and put them into a spell to the point they could actually lose a game (remember the FedEx false fire drill that knocked the Clippers out of their comfort zone vs. Grizzlies), but they shouldn't need to worry. They still have a perfect record every time the force foul strategy is used on DeAndre Jordan. Ralph and Mike have no reason to complain about Hack-A-Shaq. They should praise it, embrace it, thank that the rule hasn't been changed. If the opponent hacks DJ, the game is over, Clippers automatically win. (It has to happen in the 4th quarter for this to work, though).
Ranma, you might want to read my post on how DJ's free throw problems evaporate when the Clippers are within a 6-point cover in the 4th quarter and in overtime.
Anyway, for me to be convinced that Doc Rivers has indeed turned a corner, the Clippers will need three wins against elite teams. Here's their record as of today:
Elite teams (GSW, SAS, OKC, CLE, MIA, CHI): 0-2
Playoff teams (DAL, MEM, UTA, HOU, IND, CHA, TOR, ATL, ORL): 3-5
Lottery teams (the rest): 10-2