Monday: Atlanta @ San Antonio 8:00PM EST TNT, L.A. Clippers @ Denver 10:30PM EST TNT
Tuesday: Detroit @ Cleveland 7:00PM EST NBATv, Philadelphia @ Golden State 10:30PM EST NBATv
Wednesday: Portland @ San Antonio 8:00PM EST ESPN, Milwaukee @ L.A. Clippers 10:30PM EST ESPN
Thursday: Utah @ Cleveland 7:00PM EST NBATv
Friday: Chicago @ Washington 7:00PM EST NBATv, Minnesota @ Miami 8:00PM EST NBATv, Orlando @ Phoenix 10:00PM EST NBATv, Milwaukee @ L.A. Lakers 10:30PM EST
Saturday: Cleveland @ L.A. Clippers 8:30PM EST ABC
Sunday: Indiana @ Toronto 6:00PM EST NBATv
NBA News
D.A.'s Morning Tip: San Antonio Spurs flex tried-and-true stability as season wanes -- http://www.nba.com/article/2017/03/13/m ... wn-stretch
Flannery: How NBA partisans can enjoy March Madness -- http://www.sbnation.com/a/nba-guide-nca ... hootaround
How Black Utah Jazz Players Have Embraced Salt Lake City -- http://theundefeated.com/features/how-b ... lake-city/
Whitness this amazing game winner from "He Who Shall Not Be Named"... that shouldn't have counted. The Blazers are unhappy. -- http://www.sbnation.com/2017/3/12/14897 ... nds-reviewThe Demarcus Cousins Paradox
After this weekend's action, the New Orleans Pelicans are 3-6 since trading for DeMarcus Cousins. Their playoff hopes are basically dashed -- New Orleans had only a narrow margin for error when they made the deal, and nine games of mediocrity puts them too far out of the race.
What's especially unsettling is the nature of those three wins. One came in a game in which Cousins was suspended due to an overabundance of technical fouls. A second came in a game in which Cousins fouled out. And the third, on Saturday, happened as Pelicans coach Alvin Gentry benched Cousins (who had five fouls) for the final 10 minutes of the game. That let Anthony Davis cook, and led to a Pelicans win. Tim Cato breaks it down here.
Plenty of Cousins skeptics are using New Orleans' struggles as vindication for their judgment of Boogie. But then how do you explain the Kings' 8-game losing streak? Sacramento has been incapable of scoring against tough defenses late after having won a respectable number of comebacks before trading Cousins.
Fit is the answer: New Orleans will need more time than many of us believed to find out how to play Davis and Cousins together. In the interim, staggering them as much as possible seems like the best plan. The point now is no longer making the postseason, but working out as many kinks as possible, seeing who fits with the big duo and -- well, let's be honest -- preventing the Kings from getting two high picks in the draft.
Right now, Sacramento is on track to pick No. 6 and 7. If the Pelicans flail, that makes the trade look a bit more fair.
A thoughtful piece from Jeff Ziligitt on the whole starters resting and missing key games thing. -- http://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/nb ... d39eb51b27
For Saturday night’s ABC primetime matchup between the Golden State Warriors and San Antonio Spurs – the top two teams in the West separated by 1½ games – Warriors coach Steve Kerr rested Steph Curry, Klay Thompson, Draymond Green and Andre Iguodala.
The league’s TV partners are paying the NBA $2.6 billion per season to televise NBA games, and Disney can’t be thrilled about Saturday’s development. Same can be said for fans who invested in tickets for this matchup.
“I’m sympathetic to fans who turn out — whether they buy tickets to games or watching games on television and don’t see their favorite player on the floor,” NBA commissioner Adam Silver has said previously.
And yet, as Silver has pointed out numerous times, “We also have to be realistic that the science has gotten to the point where there is that direct correlation that we’re aware of between fatigue and injuries. And as tough as it is on our fans to miss one of their favorite players for a game, it’s far better than having them get injured and be out for long periods of time. So we’re always still looking to strike that right balance.”