The Niagara Falls Review

Green provides what the Lakers expected for the post-season

- HELENE ELLIOTT

The Danny Green who was active and smart and sure in the second quarter Wednesday was the Danny Green the Los Angeles Lakers needed to jolt them into taking firm control of the opener of the National Basketball Associatio­n finals.

It shouldn’t be a surprise Green sparked the scoring spree that turned into a 116-98 Lakers rout at AdventHeal­th Arena. Or that he was credited with three blocked shots, two steals and a plus/minus of plus-21, second on the Lakers to Anthony Davis’s plus-23. Fans winced at his rough shooting during the Lakers’ first-round playoff series against Portland and proclaimed him a potential weak link that could undermine the Lakers’ title chances, but his teammates didn’t think so. They knew better.

“I’ve watched Danny in playoffs that he’s played in and I’ve seen him knock down big shots consistent­ly,” guard Kentavious Caldwell-Pope said. “We know that Playoff Danny is going to come out and knock down shots like he did tonight.”

It shouldn’t be surprising that Green, who signed a two-year, $30-million contract as a free agent in July of 2019, thrives under pressure. Playoff Danny has been to the finals three times before and has won the championsh­ip twice, beating now-teammate LeBron James and Miami while with San Antonio in 2014 and prevailing again last season with Toronto in a six-game series against Golden State.

Green and James are three wins away from joining John Salley (Detroit, Chicago and the Lakers) and Robert Horry (Houston, the Lakers and San Antonio) as the only players to win NBA titles with three franchises, though Green’s quest to

join that short and distinguis­hed list has been overshadow­ed by James’s spectacula­r numbers and multilayer­ed performanc­es in the NBA’s Florida playoff bubble. To Lakers coach Frank Vogel, Green isn’t a hidden gem — he’s a gem. Period.

“He’s a winner. He makes winning plays. He provides on a regular basis defensive toughness and rebounding and all those types of things, and great IQ and understand­ing,” Vogel said.

On Wednesday, Green put his strong imprint on a game that had teetered back and forth in the early going. The Heat built a 13-point lead in the first quarter only to have the Lakers push past them, but the second of two straight three-point shots by Heat super sub Tyler Herro gave Miami a 43-41 lead in the second quarter.

On the first play out of the time out, Green sank a threepoint shot that gave the Lakers a lead they never relinquish­ed. He assisted on a three-point shot by Davis that padded the Lakers’ margin to four and pushed the lead to eight with a floater. He added another three-point field goal to pad the Lakers’ lead to 12 and also helped quash a Miami response by blocking a shot from Andre Iguodala. Later in the quarter, his steal gave the Lakers a possession they finished off with a dunk by Davis for a 17-point lead.

Green finished with 11 points on four-for-nine shooting, including three of eight from three-point range. He broke a tie with Kobe Bryant and Derek Fisher to take seventh place on the list of three-point shots made in the NBA finals, with 51.

Green wasn’t among the players who participat­ed in the postgame media webinar, but he has other outlets to express his thoughts. He hosts a podcast called “Inside the Green Room,” where he discusses basketball issues and, last week, spoke to Lakers president Jeanie Buss about the finals.

It was during one episode of the podcast he praised the fans who were loyal enough to continue supporting the Lakers after their playoff-opening loss to Portland and clapped back at others who had ripped him or the team on social media. “So when it’s all said and done, hopefully in October if we continue to play the way I know we’re capable, we can tell those fake fans to go somewhere and won’t invite them to the parade,” he said.

Safety precaution­s born of the COVID-19 pandemic probably will rule out a parade, he acknowledg­ed, but he made his point. He became Playoff Danny because he comes through when it matters, and so do the Lakers. They’re too strong, too talented and too deep to be stopped now, even if they’ll have to settle for a virtual parade afterward instead of the real thing.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? It shouldn’t be surprising that Danny Green, who signed a two-year, $30-million deal as a free agent in July of 2019, thrives under pressure.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO It shouldn’t be surprising that Danny Green, who signed a two-year, $30-million deal as a free agent in July of 2019, thrives under pressure.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada