Texas Two Step: An Alternate NBA History (NBA2K20)

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  • trekfan
    Designated Red Shirt
    • Sep 2009
    • 5817

    #121
    Re: Texas Two Step: An Alternate NBA History (NBA2K20)


    Ch. 21

    The regular season was over and the Rockets were the best team in the West and, by a few games, the NBA. Scottie Pippen had won MVP, barely beating out Michael Jordan in one of the closest votes in NBA history, a vote that made an already psychotically competitive Jordan even more competitive. “Jordan was pissed,” said NBA columnist Sam Gray. “He was angry he had been denied an MVP he felt he deserved — Pippen had been suspended for a failed drug test, he hadn’t, and he was the better player. But neither of those things swung the vote for him.”

    The MVP results had served as confirmation to Pippen that he was closer to Jordan’s talents than anyone thought — including himself. His confidence swelled heading into the playoffs. “That postseason, I felt like no one could beat me if I was on my game. I could only beat myself,” said Pippen.

    The Rockets swagger radiated off them in Game 1 against the Warriors. They weren’t afraid of Golden State and certainly weren’t about to let the Warriors try to upset them. Golden State, for their part, knew they had a tough hill to climb, but they felt like they could stretch the Rockets defense with their long-range shooting. “They weren’t the greatest defenders of the three-ball,” said Chris Mullin. “If we could force them to defend the perimeter, it would unclog the paint and allow our guys to get inside and score easy buckets.”

    The plan seemed sound … at least until tip-off. The Rockets didn’t allow the Warriors much breathing room and Pippen took extra-special pleasure in shutting down Mullin, who had an abysmal first quarter, missing every shot he took. “He was like a smoke monster, there one second and gone the next,” said Mullin. “He moved so fast, so fluidly, I was looking for him every time I touched the ball.”

    Houston would go up 28-22 in the first and in the second, with Pippen manning point, they would blow that lead wide open, piling up 26 more points to take a 54-36 lead into halftime. “We robbed them, beat them up, and left them for dead,” said Gary Payton. “They were mad, man, those *uckers weren’t happy heading into halftime.”

    While Pippen had been shutting down Mullin, Payton had done similarly to Tim Hardaway. The second half saw the Rockets run away with it, winning the game 113-89; Mullin was awful, going 5-12 for 10 points and no threes. Hardaway was slightly better, scoring 16 points on 6-12 from the field, but also with no triples. The Rockets allowed only one triple all game, late in the fourth.

    Game 2 was a different story for Houston, however — the Rockets aggressive defense got them in foul trouble (primarily Scot Roth) and Mitch Richmond went off for 21 points in a 101-91 Victory where the Rockets never led. “We got down early and got frustrated,” said Coach Kern after the game. “We cost ourselves this contest … we lost our way.”

    Game 3 was a tight win where Houston simply out-fought the Warriors. The game was close throughout and featured a terrible shooting night from Scottie Pippen (3-12) but a big night from Horace Grant, who stepped in with 22-7-4 and 4 blocks on top of that. Grant had become, once more, the third option for another team — but at least here he was a respected, beloved third option. “Horace’s play that game saved us,” said Kern. “We won’t win the series without that game … Golden State had momentum and we were not playing as well as we should have been. Horace stepped up when we needed it most.”




    Grant had put together a fine season — 17-9-4 on the year with 56% shooting from the field and 77% from the line. He was capable, a reliable scorer and an ace defender. Was he recognized as such by his teammates, the coaches, and his front office? Absolutely. He got praise from them. But the rest of the NBA and the fans, as a whole, seemed to forget about the man. “It bothered me on some level,” admitted Grant. “I really wanted to be the second option, the guy others looked to when the best player on the team was having an off night. But Gary had become that second option, right before my eyes, and he had earned it … I couldn’t hate him for it. He was a great player.”

    Grant’s heroics in Game 3 didn’t just deflate the Warriors, it caused them to fall apart. “We started arguing and bickering with each other in the locker room after that game,” recalled Mullin. “I wasn’t playing well, Tim wasn’t playing well … really, Mitch was carrying us. And Tim and I were very frustrated at ourselves.”

    Game 4 saw Houston close out the Warriors 100-85 in a game that wasn’t close after the first quarter. The Warriors slinked off, quietly, but they had at least won a game — they had made the Rockets bleed, just a little.

    The Dallas Mavericks would have liked to do that to their opponents.

    Dallas got embarrassed in the first round by the Clippers, of all teams — the Mavericks simply had no answers for Bernard King, who came off the bench in the second half of Game 1 and dropped 27 points. The Clippers outscored the Mavericks 74-46 in the second half, taking a close game and blowing it open. Game 2 saw Dallas again drop a first half lead, this time in the fourth quarter as Bernard King came off the bench and finished the game off in the final frame — King had 31 points in 31 minutes. Game 3, back in LA, saw the Clippers jump out to a huge first half lead and Dallas couldn’t come back.

    “Deflating doesn’t even begin to describe it,” said Derek Harper. “We knew we were the better team, we believed that, but the Clippers came in with no expectations and stunned us. Bernard King was showing the league that he was still capable as a starter, still worthy of being a top scorer, and we couldn’t slow him down enough.”

    The first round out was sickening for Trent Lewis — and the Mavericks owner was done preaching stability when it led to this type of performance. A day after the game, Lewis fired head coach Richie Adubato (who took over for John MacLeod early in the 1989-90 season) and made it known to the press that changes would be coming to the team in the offseason. No player, no coach, no staff member, no one was safe. “I was going to fix that damned team if it cost every cent I had,” said Lewis. “I stayed the course and what did it get me? Disappointment and humiliation.”

    As Dallas prepared for an offseason of change, Houston prepared for their next opponent — a familiar one for Rockets.

    The Admiral and the Spurs were waiting.
    Any comments are welcome.
    Texas Two-Step (2K20 Alt History)
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    The Gold Standard (2K13 Dynasty - Complete)

    Comment

    • trekfan
      Designated Red Shirt
      • Sep 2009
      • 5817

      #122
      Re: Texas Two Step: An Alternate NBA History (NBA2K20)


      NBA League Update: The Playoffs, Round 2
      By Sam Gray


      The Bracket:




      Round 1 Recap:

      The West saw the Rockets put down the Warriors in four, the only loss in Game 2. Other than that, Houston dominated the series and punched their ticket to Round 2. San Antonio, similarly, did the same thing, abusing Seattle in the post behind David Robinson (20-13 in the series), and now the Spurs have their rematch.

      In the other series, the Mavericks shockingly lost all three games — straight — against the underdog Clippers. Dallas was blown off the floor in Game 1, a 131-103 loss that saw Bernard King pour in 27 points in 25 minutes off the bench — Games 2 and 3 were a bit closer, but the Clippers seized momentum and never let go. Elsewhere, Phoenix easily took care of the Blazers, who only managed to win Game 3 — Drexler had no other teammate score more than 19 points in any other game (he averaged 27) and this could be the end of Clyde in Portland.

      In the East, the Bulls destroyed the Hawks, who are now faced with an offseason full of big decisions. The Knicks were beaten by the Heat, 3-1, as Miami’s Sherman Douglas put up 15-11 for the series and abused New York’s Mark Jackson (a free agent this summer and possibly the scapegoat of this series with his middling play).

      Cleveland took care of the Pistons without much issue as Detroit simply didn’t have the firepower to keep up. Boston had to go the full five games to beat back the 76ers, who were blown out in the second half of Game 5 thanks to Bird’s 30-8-7 line.

      Round 2 Preview:

      Out West, it’s the Rockets versus the Spurs, and San Antonio has vengeance on their mind. The Spurs fell in seven against Houston in the WCF last year and signed Jeff Hornacek for this exact reason, to give them the ability to stretch the floor and force Houston to play their way; the Rockets answered that big signing by adding Moses Malone, whose play has helped solve Houston’s rebounding issue (ranked 15th last season and 5th this year). This looks to be a knock-down drag out series, one that could go either way if someone can seize momentum.

      In the second series, the Suns face off against the Clippers. Phoenix has been great all year and that greatness hasn’t been impeded much by the Clippers, whom they went 3-1 against during the regular season. That said, the Clippers didn’t have Bernard King for any of that series and now, with King aboard and scoring in bunches, LAC can match Phoenix in scoring and bring defensive pressure; if the Suns are going to succeed, they’ll need to use their greatest advantage (Kevin Johnson) to outrun the Clippers defense.

      In the East, the Bulls face off against the Heat in a series many see as a sweep — simply put, Miami doesn’t have the stars to go against Jordan and Hakeem. With how dominant Hakeem has been in the postseason so far (29-11 with 3 steals and 4 blocks), there’s little concern that Miami will do more than maybe steal one game.

      In the East’s other series, the Celtics face off against the Cavs, another matchup between these two franchises. Last year, Boston beat Cleveland to reach the Finals. In the 1990 playoffs, Cleveland beat Boston to get to the ECF — this will be the rubber match and someone is going to walk away unhappy; the series could go either way considering how well these teams know one another, but when in doubt, bet on Larry Bird.

      (The random number generator has assigned me Games 3 and 4 of the series. Can the Rockets beat the Spurs once more?)
      Any comments are welcome.
      Texas Two-Step (2K20 Alt History)
      Orange And Blue Forever (NCAA 14 Dynasty)
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      Second Coming (2K16 Sonics MyLeague - Complete)
      The Gold Standard (2K13 Dynasty - Complete)

      Comment

      • RolePlayer
        MVP
        • Nov 2015
        • 1729

        #123
        Re: Texas Two Step: An Alternate NBA History (NBA2K20)

        You're gonna need Scottie to step up against the Spurs, 11 points won't cut it in this series I think.

        Comment

        • marshdaddy
          MVP
          • Mar 2017
          • 1629

          #124
          Re: Texas Two Step: An Alternate NBA History (NBA2K20)

          Love all the storylines, excited to see what comes of the East. West feels like Rockets to have, but East feels wide open.

          Comment

          • kibaxx7
            キバレンジャー
            • Oct 2018
            • 2027

            #125
            Re: Texas Two Step: An Alternate NBA History (NBA2K20)

            As Role said, a little bit more from Scottie and Moses and you shouldn't have a real problem against the Spurs. Shame that my Blazers lost in the first round.
            #AllRed | Club Atlético Independiente
            (best viewed on the "vB5" style)
            × Watched: Bring Her Back (2025), Amarcord (1973), The Old Man & the Gun (2018) ×

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            • trekfan
              Designated Red Shirt
              • Sep 2009
              • 5817

              #126
              Re: Texas Two Step: An Alternate NBA History (NBA2K20)


              Ch. 22

              The Rockets and the Spurs were, once more, set to tee off and it was a series both teams wanted badly. Despite the Mavericks being the Rockets regular season antagonists, Houston had too much history with San Antonio after their fierce seven-game WCF the year before. “We absolutely wanted to put those *uckers down,” said Gary Payton. “They thought they were the good guys — they were the team led by the quiet, dignified best center in the conference. They were a small market team taking on a bunch of bullies … well, we weren’t just bullies, we were the best damn team in the league and the best in the state. Period.”

              The Spurs were careful not to give the Rockets any bulletin board material — even though they waltzed through Seattle to get to the second round, the entire team was focused on just one thing and one alone: besting Houston. “We were locked in,” said David Robinson. “We thought that this year was our year … we had Jeff, we had Terry, we had a great bench, we were ready to do this.”

              Unlike the year before, however, the Houston press wasn’t picking San Antonio to advance. Wrote Houston Chronicle columnist Chris Judge:

              To pick against the Houston Rockets in this series would be like picking against the Yankees in a series against the Mets; it simply makes no sense. Houston has the reigning MVP in Scottie Pippen, who’s healthy in these playoffs (unlike last year). Houston has a developing superstar point guard in Gary Payton, a reliably good forward in Horace Grant, and one of the best benches in the league. The Rockets have home court advantage and reinforced their biggest weakness last year, center, with one of the all-time great centers in veteran Moses Malone. Houston should win this series and it shouldn’t be close — Rockets in five.

              Judge’s sentiment was widely held in the media and, in Game 1, Houston made that sentiment look smart. The Rockets and Spurs engaged in a brawl in the first half, both teams struggling to score, and Houston took a 39-28 lead into halftime before turning on the boosters in the third quarter and blowing out the Spurs 34-21 in that frame; the fourth saw Houston hold serve and win 98-76 in a game that saw Pippen and Payton shut down their matchups expertly; add in the duo of Moses Malone and Otis Thorpe holding David Robinson to just 19 points and Game 1 was a massive success.

              Game 2 was a more traditional Rockets game — at least in the sense that the team scored early and often. Houston led, wire to wire, in a massive blowout win that saw Pippen put up 28-5-8 and Horace Grant add 18-9-3. Robinson struggled to score again (only 16 points this time) and couldn’t get to the free throw line at all, bothered by Malone and Thorpe.

              San Antonio was down 2-0 heading back to their arena and it wasn’t a particularly close 2-0. “We felt awful,” said Robinson. “We wanted to steal one out in Houston and we ended up getting stomped … no one’s shots were falling.”

              Among those struggling the most was SG Jeff Hornacek — Hornacek, the big free agent acquisition, was a no-show in both games, scoring 8 points in each and shooting abysmally. “I was cold as cold got, I’ve seen frozen dinners warmer than my shot,” recalled Hornacek. “I knew I had to keep shooting, I knew I had to keep trying, but I felt like I was an anchor.”

              Game 3 saw Hornacek and the Spurs go down early again, thanks in large part to a big first quarter from Gary Payton, who gave as good as he got to the Spurs PG Darnell Valentine.




              Despite falling behind 34-25 at the end of the first, the Spurs hung around and made a big run in the fourth quarter to claw their way back into the game … but it was too little, too late — Hornacek’s shot finally started falling in the second half and the Spurs rode his hot shooting as far as they could, but while the guard finally had the basketball gods smiling on him, Robinson struggled to contain Moses Malone.

              Malone had a throwback game, reaching into the past and pulling out a 19-6 game that saw him be perfect from the field and miss only one free throw all game. “I played good,” Malone said succinctly after the game.





              The Rockets won Game 3, 122-112, and had taken a near-impossible-to-overcome 3-0 lead in a series that few expected to be quite so lopsided. Yes, much of the media had picked Houston to win, but not win like that; Robinson and Hornacek were both largely ineffective and in Game 4, things wouldn’t go much better.

              The Rockets got out to an early first quarter lead and despite the Spurs being close — at least on the scoreboard — the Rockets seemed to be way out ahead on the court, as proved by their final possession of the first.



              It didn’t seem like it mattered which Rockets were out on the floor — all of them were ready to hurt the Spurs. “We had no answers,” said Robinson. “We guessed a few times right, we got some plays, but at the end of the day we just didn’t know what the heck we were doing.”

              Houston won the second and third quarters, let the Spurs get a bit close in the fourth, but shut the door on San Antonio with a 123-112 win and the Rockets had — once more — made the WCF.





              Houston was the first one in but it wouldn’t be long before the Clippers — once more led by Bernard King — scored a major upset and sent the Suns home, 4-1. Out of the many teams the Rockets players and coaching staff expected to see, the Clippers were not among them.

              Los Angeles would prove to Houston, and the rest of the league, that they should have been paying attention; this Clippers squad wasn’t just lucky. These Clippers were dangerous.
              Any comments are welcome.
              Texas Two-Step (2K20 Alt History)
              Orange And Blue Forever (NCAA 14 Dynasty)
              You Don't Know Jack (2K18 Pacers Dynasty - Complete)
              Second Coming (2K16 Sonics MyLeague - Complete)
              The Gold Standard (2K13 Dynasty - Complete)

              Comment

              • trekfan
                Designated Red Shirt
                • Sep 2009
                • 5817

                #127
                Re: Texas Two Step: An Alternate NBA History (NBA2K20)


                NBA League Update: The Playoffs, Conference Finals
                By Sam Gray




                The Bracket:



                Round 2 Recap:

                The West saw the Rockets sweep the Spurs with little issue — despite San Antonio doing their best to rally, David Robinson was frustrated by the inside game of Houston and the duo of Malone and Thorpe. With the Spurs out, this time in even more embarrassing fashion, expect the San Antonio front office to consider a major shakeup in the offseason (Terry Cummings is a free agent and the Spurs may look for an upgrade).

                In the other series, the Suns and Clippers got off to a promising start as both teams split the first two games, but then LAC took control — Bernard King continues to be huge off the bench, averaging over 22 points in the series in just over 25 minutes. The Suns could not play enough defense to slow down the Clippers — if one player was locked up, someone else got open, and the Clippers are now in the WCF for the first time ever thanks to a trade many saw as a desperate move.

                In the East, the Bulls put away the pesky Heat, who went down 3-1 before stealing Game 5 in OT. In Game 6, Miami entered the final quarter with a small 2-point lead but saw Michael Jordan take over; Jordan didn’t mess around, finishing the Heat off and sending them home, 122-109.

                In the other series, the Celtics sent Cleveland home after a tough, rugged seven game affair. Boston was down 2-1 before storming back in the series and then taking Game 7 at home, 111-109 thanks to a last second triple from center Jack Sikma — their veteran free agent signing last summer who has battled injuries all year.

                Conference Finals Preview:

                The WCF comes down to the league leading Rockets and the upset-minded Clippers. Houston has had its sights set on a repeat since day one while LA has gotten here thanks to stupendous play from Bernard King and their bench; if the Clippers can manage to upset the Rockets and make it to the Finals, they’ll have authored one of the most amazing playoff runs in NBA history (no matter the result of the Finals). Houston has been the best team all year and Pippen (who won MVP controversially over Jordan in one of the closest votes ever) will need to be his best in the WCF to potentially meet up with the Bulls in the Finals and deny his former teammates a title.

                In the East, the Bulls and Celtics are going at it in a series seemingly years in the making. A trip to the Finals is at stake for Jordan and Hakeem, two great players who united last year but fell short; in Boston, the Celtics are among the oldest teams in the league but still sport Bird, McHale, and Parrish, flanked with Danny Ainge and Reggie Lewis — Lewis has stepped up this season, assuming more of the scoring responsibility, and he will be the key player in this series — if Lewis can slow down Jordan and force the Bulls to play through Hakeem, Boston has a chance … if not, the Celtics road to the Finals is infinitely harder.

                (The random number generator has assigned me Games 4 and 7 of the series. Will the Clippers upset the Rockets or can Houston put them down?)
                Any comments are welcome.
                Texas Two-Step (2K20 Alt History)
                Orange And Blue Forever (NCAA 14 Dynasty)
                You Don't Know Jack (2K18 Pacers Dynasty - Complete)
                Second Coming (2K16 Sonics MyLeague - Complete)
                The Gold Standard (2K13 Dynasty - Complete)

                Comment

                • marshdaddy
                  MVP
                  • Mar 2017
                  • 1629

                  #128
                  Re: Texas Two Step: An Alternate NBA History (NBA 2K20)

                  Boston-Chicago is a historic dream. Prime MJ v late-prime Bird. Of course you want to see Chicago-Houston in the finals, which I think Houston will hold up on their end, but the East is awesome. A rematch of the previous Finals or a blood-thirsty MJ going after Scottie; incredible story.

                  Comment

                  • trekfan
                    Designated Red Shirt
                    • Sep 2009
                    • 5817

                    #129
                    Re: Texas Two Step: An Alternate NBA History (NBA 2K20)

                    Originally posted by marshdaddy
                    Boston-Chicago is a historic dream. Prime MJ v late-prime Bird. Of course you want to see Chicago-Houston in the finals, which I think Houston will hold up on their end, but the East is awesome. A rematch of the previous Finals or a blood-thirsty MJ going after Scottie; incredible story.

                    The playoffs out East have been amazing and I've been pleasantly surprised at how well late-era Bird has hung on; will he be able to get one more over on MJ or is he doomed to fall to His Airness? Gonna be a fun series.



                    Houston has been rolling but I had zero expectations that the Clippers -- with Bernard King, acquired at the deadline -- would be any good here. King, Danny Manning, Kendall Gill, and Charles Oakley are a fascinating matchup.
                    Any comments are welcome.
                    Texas Two-Step (2K20 Alt History)
                    Orange And Blue Forever (NCAA 14 Dynasty)
                    You Don't Know Jack (2K18 Pacers Dynasty - Complete)
                    Second Coming (2K16 Sonics MyLeague - Complete)
                    The Gold Standard (2K13 Dynasty - Complete)

                    Comment

                    • RolePlayer
                      MVP
                      • Nov 2015
                      • 1729

                      #130
                      Re: Texas Two Step: An Alternate NBA History (NBA2K20)

                      I'm actually pretty shocked you guys swept them, I thought this series would be a dog fight. Your star players really stepped up and played to the level you needed, however. Think this Clippers match up could be another easy one.

                      Comment

                      • studbucket
                        MVP
                        • Aug 2007
                        • 4636

                        #131
                        Re: Texas Two Step: An Alternate NBA History (NBA2K20)

                        Catching up after not being able to read things much here for a few weeks.

                        Unbelievable how the Mavs and Rockets have gone two different directions. Getting swept by the Clippers in round 1 is completely embarassing.

                        Is this the first time the Bulls and Celtics have ever meet in the ECF? It's wild to think that may be possible.

                        The Clippers only losing once in the first 2 rounds is an upset on top upsets.
                        ?The Bulgarian Brothers - a story of two brothers (Oggy and Dinko) as they coach in the NCAA and the NBA.

                        ?Ask me about the Xbox Ally handheld - I'm on the team that made it.

                        Comment

                        • trekfan
                          Designated Red Shirt
                          • Sep 2009
                          • 5817

                          #132
                          Re: Texas Two Step: An Alternate NBA History (NBA2K20)


                          Ch. 23

                          The NBA was salivating over the potential Finals matchups — Boston was facing Chicago in the East, and in the West, the Rockets were taking on … the Clippers? Well, maybe the NBA wasn’t salivating over all the potential Finals matchups, but no one in their right mind was picking the Clippers — the Donald Sterling owned, woe-begotten, most forgotten team in LA, Clippers.

                          “It was like someone had given the Clippers one wish before they died and they wished for a long playoff run,” said NBA columnist Sam Gray. “It was a once in a lifetime thing … no one expected this team to be here and no one expected them to really challenge the Rockets.”

                          The Clippers were a smörgåsbord of talent … though fit was always a question. They had acquired Charles Oakley from the Knicks, who played as the Clippers undersized but extremely physical center. They had Danny Manning, a first overall pick in 1988 that had dealt with injuries off and on over his short career, but was having his best season as a semi-starter/sixth-man. There was Bernard King, imported from the poor Wizards and expected to contribute to scoring, not winning. They had Kendell Gill, a draft pick that looked solid but disappointing in comparison to Gary Payton. They had Ken Norman, who had spent a good portion of the year injured, and Gary Grant, a point guard whom many saw as a role player at best. It was a team hardly anyone had expectations for — minus appearing in the draft lottery after another disappointing year anyway.

                          Mike Schuler was the head coach and few thought he’d survive the season; now, here he was, after upsetting two teams that many believed were better than the Clippers. “I believed they were better, too,” recalled Schuler with a laugh. “We were a team that had a lot of ups and a lot of downs, but we were building something … and getting as far as we did, we were playing with house money.” Schuler’s team had many players who liked to play poker, so his message to them was simple heading into the WCF: all-in, no regrets.

                          The message resonated. The Clippers took Game 1, shocking Houston 101-96. Horace Grant fouled out facing off against Manning and his old teammate from his early Bulls days, Charles Oakley, and Houston’s interior defense was opened wide. The Rockets coaching staff and players publicly dismissed Game 1 as a fluke, a feel-out game that would give them the edge they needed in order to really take it to the Clippers in Game 2.

                          Instead, the Clippers stole another one on Houston’s home court — a 114-113 OT win that saw the Rockets stay out of foul trouble, but miss crucial free throws down the stretch. Free throws that, if they had hit them, would have won them the game in regulation … instead, Houston was forced into OT and the Clippers stole the game thanks to a desperation jumper from Bernard King that went in and gave LA the victory.

                          The Rockets locker room was stunned into silence. Coaches and players alike were now staring at a 2-0 hole that was going to be hell to climb out of, especially in LA — the Clippers home court wasn’t known for being great, but thanks to the Lakers being awful, all of LA was pulling for the Lakers little brother to get the upset. “We’re down,” Coach Kern told his team, “but we’re not out. Shower off and go home. We’re not dead yet.”

                          The words had a bracing effect on the team, but Kern himself wasn’t sure if his team could climb out of the hole. “We had two close games that we lost and that OT one … jeez, that one hurt. We gave them that damn thing and there was no way around it. We were playing down to their level, not up to ours.”

                          The flight to LA saw Kern review film with his team on the private plane and make a key lineup change; out went Tim Legler, who was seeing around 10 minutes in the playoffs off the bench, and instead Kern was going to give those extra minutes to Scot Roth. “I told Roth that we needed him out on the floor to smother King … so he was going to get a lot of work,” said Kern.

                          Legler took the demotion well in front of team, but privately he felt betrayed. Kern had believed in him enough to bring him this far, to allow him to play this long … he wasn’t at fault for this. “I felt singled out,” said Legler. “I felt like he was pointing at me and saying, ‘Look, we need him glued to the pine so we can win.’ I felt awful.” Like Derek Strong earlier in the season, Legler found himself with a spot on the bench and feeling like an outsider.

                          Game 3 saw the Rockets get out and start fast in LA — the Clippers didn’t stand a chance. Early on Pippen and Payton got going, connecting on multiple plays, and Roth did his job well — though the SG fouled out early in the fourth, he had exerted a heavy toll on Bernard King, who only shot 43% from the field. The Clippers got buried in the first and third quarters, couldn’t dig themselves out of the hole the rest of the game, and lost 104-93 in a statement win for the defending champions.

                          Pippen, in particular, had a big bounce-back game as he notched 31-4-5-2-2, filling up the stat sheet and sucking the soul out of the building with every point he scored. “We really brought it that game and Gary was just toying with Grant all night,” said Pippen. “They were so busy with him, they left me easy looks.”

                          The Clippers walked away with a 9-point loss, but it was a loss they felt wasn’t bad. “We knew we started slow and, if we hadn’t, we’d have gotten in their heads,” said Charles Oakley. “They were sweating, they were feeling the pressure, and they weren’t ready to do battle in a tight game. We just had to keep close.”

                          Game 4 saw both teams come out and look nervous — lots of misses, lots of turnovers, lots of chances for either side to take a lead. Neither did until a big run occurred midway through the first, where the Rockets broke a 7-7 tie and went on an 8-0 run over the next three minutes. With just a little over four minutes in the first quarter left, the Rockets continued to throttle up — and they were led by Pippen, who took over.



                          The Clippers, in an effort get more scoring early, put King in the starting lineup — and that let Pippen cook. King was a great scorer but a so-so defender and Pippen was unleashed. The Rockets finished the first quarter up 32-16 and never fell behind again — the Clippers were run off their court as Pippen demolished them almost single-handedly, both offensively and defensively.





                          Moving King into the starting lineup had backfired spectacularly and, though the Clippers reverted to bringing King off the bench the rest of the series, the damage was done. “Bernard went out there and got lit up and wasn’t the same the rest of the series,” said Oakley. “Schuler *ucked it up.”

                          The Clippers lost Game 5, 114-104, in a game that wasn’t as close as the score suggested. In Game 6, back in LA, the Clippers needed to win to force Game 7 — instead, they folded in the second half after battling the Rockets to a 48-47 lead. The third quarter was all Houston as Pippen took over with a 28-4-5-5-4 line, his defense wreaking havoc on the Clippers, and he got a big helping hand from Horace Grant (21-5-8) and Payton (20-3-12-4). The Rockets won 109-101 and punched their ticket back to the Finals.

                          Their opponents? Winners of the East … the Boston Celtics.

                          For the second year in a row Boston had bested a team many believed would beat them and sent the Bulls home, 4-1, in a series that saw Michael Jordan relegated to second-best player on his team. Boston and Chicago split the first two games (a Game 1 Boston 104-102 victory and a Game 2 109-103 Bulls win) but Game 3 saw Jordan revert to some bad habits — mainly, taking his own shots and not trusting his teammates. Jordan shot 30 times, hitting only 14 of them, and only Olajuwon scored in double-digits (a ridiculous 24-19-1-3-8 line). But the rest of the Bulls were frozen out — the Celtics had dared Jordan to beat them alone and he didn’t, as the Bulls lost Game 3 by a score of 103-94.

                          Game 4 saw Jordan get smothered by Reggie Lewis (Lewis only allowed Jordan 14 points) and the Celtics won 107-98. Game 5 saw both teams battle in a close game that came down to the final minutes of the fourth, but it was in those minutes where Reggie Lewis shut down Jordan, then proceeded to score on the other end, allowing the Celtics to advance with a 125-122 win on the Bulls home floor.

                          It was a surprising result, but it had set up a rematch between two franchises that had developed an intense dislike for one another. It wasn’t on the level of Lakers and Celtics, but it wasn’t far off. “We didn’t hate them … but we didn’t not wish for them to fall down some stairs,” said Larry Bird.

                          It was Rockets versus Celtics, the sequel.
                          Any comments are welcome.
                          Texas Two-Step (2K20 Alt History)
                          Orange And Blue Forever (NCAA 14 Dynasty)
                          You Don't Know Jack (2K18 Pacers Dynasty - Complete)
                          Second Coming (2K16 Sonics MyLeague - Complete)
                          The Gold Standard (2K13 Dynasty - Complete)

                          Comment

                          • trekfan
                            Designated Red Shirt
                            • Sep 2009
                            • 5817

                            #133
                            Re: Texas Two Step: An Alternate NBA History (NBA2K20)


                            NBA League Update: Finals Preview
                            By Sam Gray



                            The Bracket:




                            Conference Finals Recap:

                            The West saw the Rockets and Clippers in a game of chess for six games — Houston shockingly lost the first two games of the series (Game 2 being a 113-112 OT loss) before bouncing back in a big way in Game 3, then winning Game 4 in a blowout. The Clippers played Bernard King often early in the series, but by Game 3 Houston had him figured out and benched Tim Legler and gave more minutes to Scott Roth — Roth helped slow King down when Pippen was resting and the Rockets are back in the Finals for the second year straight.

                            In the East, the Celtics didn’t have nearly that same kind of tense series despite the Bulls possessing the younger and — in theory — superior talent. The two teams split the first games before the Celtics seized control, as Reggie Lewis shut down Jordan and forced Hakeem to win it alone; that didn’t work as the center, for as great as he was, couldn’t slow down the rest of the Celtics (Bird and McHale primarily) and Boston took the series 4-1, further fueling fears in Chicago that both Jordan and Hakeem — free agents next summer — will take their services elsewhere if they can’t win a title in the Windy City.


                            Finals Preview:

                            It’s a rematch of gargantuan proportions. Houston, with home court advantage, added Moses Malone to help offset their weak rebounding last year and Malone has given them everything they could have asked for. Boston brought in new veterans (most importantly the shooting of Jack Sikma) to help them stretch the floor and slow Houston’s inside game down.

                            If Houston can win it all, again, then they’ll be able to quell the doubts about last year’s run, which some have attributed to luck or other factors. If Boston can win it, it’ll prove that Bird and company still matter — and this one might be the last chance they have to get a title with this veteran core.


                            (The random number generator has assigned me Games 2 and 5 of the series. The Rockets get Larry Legend again … can Houston beat him twice in a row or will the veteran Celtics get one more?)
                            Any comments are welcome.
                            Texas Two-Step (2K20 Alt History)
                            Orange And Blue Forever (NCAA 14 Dynasty)
                            You Don't Know Jack (2K18 Pacers Dynasty - Complete)
                            Second Coming (2K16 Sonics MyLeague - Complete)
                            The Gold Standard (2K13 Dynasty - Complete)

                            Comment

                            • kibaxx7
                              キバレンジャー
                              • Oct 2018
                              • 2027

                              #134
                              Re: Texas Two Step: An Alternate NBA History (NBA2K20)

                              Wow what an all-around game by Scottie, that's exactly what you needed. These Finals look superb!
                              #AllRed | Club Atlético Independiente
                              (best viewed on the "vB5" style)
                              × Watched: Bring Her Back (2025), Amarcord (1973), The Old Man & the Gun (2018) ×

                              Comment

                              • studbucket
                                MVP
                                • Aug 2007
                                • 4636

                                #135
                                Re: Texas Two Step: An Alternate NBA History (NBA2K20)

                                Wow, the Clippers really blew that one. They have to feel good about what they accomplished, but being up 2-0, they have to feel they have more.

                                As much as I'd like to see Larry get one last title, I just don't think they can handle this younger and more athletic Rockets team.
                                ?The Bulgarian Brothers - a story of two brothers (Oggy and Dinko) as they coach in the NCAA and the NBA.

                                ?Ask me about the Xbox Ally handheld - I'm on the team that made it.

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