Sunday News

NBA playoffs are a pressure cooker and these stars will feel it the most

As the final week of the NBA’s regular season unfolds, certainty only goes so far: The 20 teams that will make up the postseason field have clinched their spots, but none of the first-round matchups have been set.

- – Washington Post

When the jockeying for seeding ends tomorrow (NZT), the NBA’s attention will return to the championsh­ip chase, which sees the Denver Nuggets shooting to repeat, the Boston Celtics lapping the field in the Eastern Conference and a murky pack of challenger­s. These five stars have the potential to bring the championsh­ip picture into focus, but they must distinguis­h themselves over the next two months or face the wrath of disappoint­ed observers and yappy second-guessers.

Last season’s pressure-cooker candidates represent the boom-or-bust reality at play: Denver’s Nikola Jokic sloughed off years of doubts about his playoff capabiliti­es, while Ja Morant’s career imploded after the Memphis Grizzlies’ first-round exit and Kevin Durant’s Phoenix Suns undertook a radical overhaul after a second-round defeat.

1. Damian Lillard, Bucks

Given the excitement that greeted his blockbuste­r trade from Portland in September, Lillard has a strong case as the NBA’s most underwhelm­ing star. Look past his All-Star Game MVP performanc­e and there are a bunch of lingering red flags: his unrefined partnershi­p with Giannis Antetokoun­mpo, his central role in Milwaukee’s porous perimeter defence and his new team’s lack of chemistry.

Lillard and Antetokoun­mpo have yet to prove they can consistent­ly make the Bucks’ whole greater than the sum of their parts. Instead of forging a smooth pickand-roll partnershi­p as many expected, Lillard has settled somewhat uncomforta­bly into a secondary role while Antetokoun­mpo occasional­ly has been marginaliz­ed in late-game situations. When the Bucks come across a playoff opponent capable of slowing Antetokoun­mpo’s assaults on the rim, their top-five offence will become heavily reliant upon Lillard’s three-point shooting, which has been streakier and less efficient this season than his career standard.

The acquisitio­n of Lillard also required sacrifices in depth and two-way talent, leaving Milwaukee ranked 19th in defensive efficiency - the worst mark among the league’s top title contenders. In Portland, Lillard’s shortcomin­gs as a defender were easy to look past because he was the sole engine of the offence and his supporting cast was usually overmatche­d. In Milwaukee, he is bound to be targeted by opposing coaches during the playoffs and could wind up looking like the weakest link.

Trading for the 33-year-old Lillard was a title-or-bust decision for a Milwaukee team that lost in last year’s first round, and the longer-term view looks dim given how many of Antetokoun­mpo’s key teammates are headed for age-related decline. This will be a now-or-maybe-never postseason for the Bucks and especially Lillard, who requested a trade from the Trail Blazers so he could have a chance to win it all.

2. Jayson Tatum, Celtics

Much like the Bucks, the Celtics were plunged into crisis last summer by an unexpected postseason loss to the Heat. However, their major offseason additions - Kristaps Porzingis and Jrue Holiday - fit in quickly and neatly, boosting the juggernaut Celtics throughout a 60-plus-win season.

But Tatum, who is already heading into his seventh postseason appearance at 26, knows he will only be judged by the ending. His shaky showings to close the 2022 NBA Finals and the 2023 Eastern Conference finals surely contribute­d to Boston’s aggressive moves last summer, and he deserves credit for taking a half-step back on offence to accommodat­e the reinforcem­ents. Tatum’s two-way contributi­ons, consistenc­y, excellent health and unselfishn­ess clearly make him a top-five MVP candidate, even if his individual numbers aren’t as gaudy as some of his competitio­n.

The Celtics must perform better in lategame situations than they did in the past two postseason­s. Porzingis and Holiday give Boston a wider range of options, but ultimately Tatum will find himself in position to decide games - by taking key shots or by making the right reads in the final minutes. Though Celtics management has set the table as well as it can for Tatum’s championsh­ip breakthrou­gh, he must be the one to see it through.

3. Rudy Gobert, Timberwolv­es

Minnesota’s massive 2022 trade for Gobert has paid off handsomely, making it easy to forget the French centre was suspended for taking a swing at a teammate at this time last year. Indeed, Gobert, who was inexplicab­ly snubbed from the all-star team, deserves more credit for his remarkable bounce back from those unfortunat­e shenanigan­s. He is probably headed for his fourth defensive player of the year award, and has helped the Timberwolv­es to the second-best season in franchise history by captaining the NBA’s stingiest defence. Last season’s chemistry questions have given way to six months of consistent winning that has kept Minnesota at or near the top of the daunting Western Conference.

Despite that progress, Gobert isn’t widely regarded as a “16-game player,” the moniker crafted by his rival, Golden State Warriors star Draymond Green, to highlight stars capable of raising their games in the postseason. Dating from his time with the Utah Jazz, Gobert has played for winning teams in each of the past eight seasons but has won only three playoff series and never reached the conference finals. The simplistic nature of his screenand-dive offensive game coupled with his periodic struggles to defend stars on the perimeter have prompted accusation­s that his regular season impact doesn’t translate to high-level playoff basketball.

Gobert’s defence will be essential to Minnesota’s winning formula in any postseason showdown, considerin­g scintillat­ing guard Anthony Edwards is still just 22 and all-star forward Karl-Anthony Towns is sidelined after knee surgery. While Gobert has more capable defensive talent around him than he did in Utah, that will only heighten scrutiny if Minnesota falls flat. The Timberwolv­es sacrificed four firstround picks to land Gobert and will face a major salary cap crunch this summer once Edwards’s new contract kicks in. If Minnesota can’t post its first playoff series win since 2004, management will be forced to consider breaking up its star trio.

4. Bradley Beal, Suns

Simply put, Beal has been one of the league’s worst values on a production-per-dollar basis this season. The former Washington Wizards guard is earning $US46.7 million - more than anyone besides Curry, Durant, James, Jokic and

Joel Embiid - yet he has appeared in only 49 games and has posted a pedestrian 15.4 Player Efficiency Rating. His first season in Phoenix has been a forgettabl­e mashup of nagging injuries and clunky adjustment­s to his new life as a third wheel behind Durant and Booker.

In theory, there’s still enough firepower on hand to outscore virtually any team in the West bracket, but postseason success will require Beal, who hasn’t played in the second round since 2017, to perform more effectivel­y as a scorer, distributo­r and defender. Phoenix’s ninth-ranked offence must ascend to greater heights to compensate for its thin front line and mediocre defence. If the Suns fall to a more cohesive opponent such as the Nuggets or the Oklahoma City Thunder in the first round, new owner Mat Ishbia’s decision to bet on Beal’s waning star power will elicit a new round of pointed criticism.

5. Paul George, Clippers

With Kawhi Leonard nursing a late-season knee injury and James Harden averaging just 15.2 points on 38.7% shooting since the all-star break, George must assert himself if the Clippers are going to prevail in the first round. His 39 points, including the game-winning jumper, to beat the Cleveland Cavaliers last weekend were just what the doctor ordered.

But the 33-year-old faces pressure on several fronts. His 2019 team-up with Leonard hasn’t delivered a Finals appearance, and Clippers fans will be expecting a big postseason from the nine-time all-star after he missed the 2023 playoffs because of a knee injury. What’s more, the Clippers signed Leonard to a lucrative contract extension in January but did not reach a similar deal with George, who holds a $48.8 million player option for 2024-25 and could become one of this summer’s top free agents if he opts out.

This postseason also serves as a potential pivot point for the organizati­on, which will leave Crypto.com Arena for Intuit Dome next season. Considerin­g the Clippers’ up-and-down regular season, a conference finals trip seems just as likely as another first-round flameout. A signature postseason for “Playoff P” would maximize his contract leverage and generate excitement around the franchise’s move to Inglewood, but a whimpering exit would make observers question the shelf life of an expensive roster built around Leonard, George and Harden.

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 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Paul George of the LA Clippers, above, and, right, the Minnesota Timberwolv­es’ Rudy Gobert.
GETTY IMAGES Paul George of the LA Clippers, above, and, right, the Minnesota Timberwolv­es’ Rudy Gobert.
 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Damian Lillard of the Milwaukee Bucks is cheered on by teammates.
GETTY IMAGES Damian Lillard of the Milwaukee Bucks is cheered on by teammates.
 ?? ?? Bradley Beal of the Phoenix Suns, left, and the Boston Celtics’ Jayson Tatum.
Bradley Beal of the Phoenix Suns, left, and the Boston Celtics’ Jayson Tatum.
 ?? GETTY IMAGES ??
GETTY IMAGES

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