I had to watch this one, just to see what would happen. Would the Lakers come back assert their superiority and take control of the series, or would the Thunder to continue to outwork them and expose their weaknesses?
I think a 21- point win shows that it was the Thunder who are now in control of the series and have the momentum. The Lakers suddenly look very vulnerable, with the triangle offense unable to generate enough open looks and Bynum and Gasol being double- and triple-teamed, an ordinarily high-scoring franchise, sudden;y looks like a bunch of overpaid, over-sized punks.
After the last game I said Phil had some work to do, and he obviously hasn't done it yet. What can Mr. Zen say or do to turn this around?
I'd be the first to admit that I'm surprised by this. I had assume the Lakers would glide through this first-round series as they often do. Not just because of who they are, but how they are constructed- big strong rebounders on the inside, slashers and ball handlers on the outside- the way good basketball teams are supposed to be put together. All the way back to the Celtic teams of the past with Russel.
The Thunder are smaller and weaker, yet they are the ones imposing their will and winning the battle. The Lakers cannot stop their drivers or stay in front of them, they can't even slow down the game to get control over it. They don't seem to have anyone who can stay with Durant or Westbrook, and OKC role players are outworking their opponents. LA looks completely flustered, nothing like the team the LA fans are used to. I would have to say Phil is being badly out coached in this series. The Thunders are the more disciplined team out there, working hard on both ends and playing smart basketball. If the Lakers perimeter players don't make their shots, the Thunder may take this series. What is clear is that the Thunder have chosen to shut down Gasol and Bynum at all costs, challenge every shot they put up and prevent easy baskets. Laker big men are finishers more than passers, and their outside shooters aren't used to having to make shots to stay even or catch-up in a tight game.
The series is tied 2-2, but the edge is with the young upstarts. There is no intimidation factor working for the Lakers and their fair weather fans aren't use to a team coming into the Staples Center confident in their ability to outplay and outwork them. I have to wonder who both the team and the fans will respond if the Thunder start game 4 like they did game 3. How cool will it be to be in the stands when you are watching your team get out-hustled for the loose balls?
Very entertaining first-round series. Should get much more interesting from here!