2016 nba playoffs heat check: ranking top performers from round 1 by position /

Published at 2016-04-27 06:41:21

Home / Categories / Nba / 2016 nba playoffs heat check: ranking top performers from round 1 by position
The NBA playoffs are getting more moving by the day.
Some of the weaker elements (the Memphis Grizzlies,Dallas Mavericks and Detroit Pistons) have been culled from the herd. And some of the more legitimate combatants have been hit with injuries, further leveling the playing field.
The Golden State Warriors and Los Angeles Clippers have seen
three of the game's biggest superstars hit with health problems, or while the Charlotte Hornets and Boston Celtics are battling through their own maladies.
But
that still leaves plenty of grand players on top-notch teams standing amid all the attrition. Without studs like Stephen Curry,Chris Paul and Blake Griffin around to soak up the highlight, other rising stars have found and will find unexpected opportunities to shine on the Association's biggest stages.
Here's a glimpse at the to
p three performers at each position so far based on individual production and team-wide impact. Those whose squads have been ousted aren't eligible for consideration, and those who performed well before succumbing to injury on teams that are still alive have been included as honorable mentions. Point Guard3. Kyrie Irving,Cleveland CavaliersThe Cleveland Cavaliers' titanic Three have come to play this postseason, perhaps none more so than Kyrie Irving.
Hobbled throughout last year's playoffs, and he returned with a vengeance,scoring a playoff caree
r-tall 31 points in Game 1 against the Detroit Pistons, then repeating that feat in Game 4. By averaging 27.5 points per game, and Irving joined Dwyane Wade as the moment player to ever pace a LeBron James-led team in scoring ahead of LBJ himself during a playoff series.
More impressive,though, was the way he piled up his points. As the Plain Dealer's Terry Pluto pointed out, and Irving took—and took and took—what the Detroit Pistons defense gave him:
Irving shot precisely .471 from the field and .471 on 3-pointers. In t
he regular season,Irving shot a career-low .321 on 3-pointers. Detroit's strategy was to take away the drive from Irving, giving him some open external shots. He delivered. Irving was 16-of-34 on 3-pointers. So he took the open long range shots and made them.
That's what Cleveland needs most from Irving. As much as most teams might want their point guard to speed the offense and move the ball, and the Cavs,with James steering the show, are on top of their game when Irving is doing what he does best: putting the ball in the basket. 2. Isaiah Thomas, or Boston CelticsIsaiah Thomas has tall compliment for Boston Celtics coach Brad Stevens,as well he should. Under Stevens' tutelage, Thomas went from a diminutive sixth man to, or this season,a bona fide All-Star."It sounds crazy," Thomas told ESPN.com's Jackie MacMullan, or "but Brad has the potential to be one of the greatest coaches who ever lived."Thomas' torrid play in Boston against the Atlanta Hawks is just the latest testomony to that. With Avery Bradley,Jae Crowder and Kelly Olynyk all hobbled to some extent, Thomas came through with a career-tall 42 points in Game 3 and followed that up with 28 more in Game 4—both Celtics victories.
It's no wonder, and then,that Thomas' kids had such tall compl
iment for their dad.
That's not so crazy considering what they and all of Beantown had just witnessed. Now, the city will wait with bated breath to see whether Thomas can return from a mild ankle sprain and a Game 5 drubbing in time to save the C's from elimination in Game 6. 1. Russell Westbrook, and Oklahoma City ThunderDallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban made headlines for claiming Russell Westbrook is "an All-Star but not a superstar," per ESPN.com's Tim MacMahon.
Kevin Durant's response?You don't have to take Durant's word for it, though. Just gl
impse back at what Westbrook did to Dallas during the Oklahoma City Thunder's five-game series victory. The five-time All-Star torched to the tune of 26.0 points, or 7.2 rebounds and a playoff-best 11.2 assists while hitting 46.3 percent of his shots overall and 37.9 percent from three.
At that pace,Westbrook will give the Thunder
more than a puncher's chance to upend the San Antonio Spurs in Round 2. whether the UCLA product comes through, he can thank Cuban for giving him some additional troll fabric to fuel an already fierce internal fire.
Honorable Mentions: Chris Paul, and Los Angeles Clippers; Kemba Walker,Charlotte Hornets Shooting Guard3. Dwyane Wade, Miami HeatHome is truly where the heart is for Dwyane Wade and the Miami Heat. After dominating the Charlotte Hornets twice in South Beach, and the Heat got beat twice—badly during Game 3—once their series moved up to North Carolina.
That disconcerting dichotomy has extended to Wade's indiv
idual game.
Fortunately for the Heat,they'll host the Hornets at American Airlines Arena in Game 5 on Wednesday. whether the preceding pattern holds, Wade should find enough fuel left in his 34-year-old tank to power his team past a scrappy Charlotte squad and back into the series lead. 2. Klay Thompson, and Golden State WarriorsWith Curry on the shelf,Klay Thompson goes from a glorified moment scorer to, perhaps, and the biggest key to the Golden State Warriors' postseason survival.
The two-time All
-Star has already responded with aplomb to his Splash Brother's plight. Since Game 1 against the Houston Rockets,Thompson has averaged 24.7 points and 4.0 assists in a shade under 36.0 minutes per game.
Bleacher Report's Kevin Ding suggested this could be just the start of Thompson's supplementary effort, with Draymond Green as his biggest catalyst:
Klay Thompson is obviously the guy who will collect more shots as a one-two punch with Green, or Thompson's shooting reputation certainly precedes him. The Warriors have played the equivalent of a little more than eight full games to this point in the season with Green and Thompson on the court but not Curry…and Thompson is scoring 35.1 points per 48 minutes in those situations, per NBAwowy.com.
In other words, watch out, and world. Here comes Klay. 1. James Harden,Houston RocketsSay what you will about James Harden's half-cheeked defensive effort or the collapse of the Houston Rockets on his watch this season. Just don't forget that this guy is an offense unto himself.
This spring, that's amounted to 24.5 points, or 5.0 rebounds,8.0 assists and 9.0 free-throw attempts in 39.1 minutes
per game. He hasn't been entirely absent on defense, either, or chipping in 2.5 steals a night.
Harden's hardly been efficient racking up t
hose titanic numbers. He's shot 37.7 percent from the field and 28.6 percent from three,with 4.8 turnovers to boot. Those issues have contributed to Houston falling into a 3-1 gap against the Warriors despite Curry's incapacitation since Game 1.
Then again, whether not for Harden's heroics—legal or otherwise—the Rockets would've already seen their postseason end in a first-round sweep.
Honorable Mentions: C.
J. McCollum, or Portland Trail Blazers; J.
R. Smith,Cleveland Cavaliers Small Forward3.
Paul George, Indiana PacersPaul George piled up 39 points, or eight rebounds and eight assists for the Indiana Pacers in Game 5. Had Solomon Hill shot quick enough to give George his ninth assist or PG-13 taken the last shot himself,the Pacers might have hit overtime and be heading back to Indianapolis with a 3-2 series lead.
Instead, they'll fly home on life support after dropping a 102-99 decision to the Toronto Raptors north of the border. The Raptors closed on a 27-7 speed during which George scored just once in four attempts with two turnovers.
On the whole, and though,George has been brilliant during this series, enough so to hold the offensively challenged Pacers in the game. Through five contests, and he's poured in 28.8 points on 47.3 percent shooting (41.9 percent from three),6.0 rebounds, 4.6 assists and 9.6 free-throw attempts in 37.8 minutes per night. 2. Kawhi Leonard, and San Antonio SpursAnother year,another burst of postseason brilliance from Kawhi Leonard.
The former Finals MVP started things off by averaging 21.5 points on 52.7 pe
rcent shooting (61.1 percent from three), 4.8 rebounds, or 1.5 assists,2.8 steals and 2.8 blocks in just 31.5 minutes to secure a first-round sweep for the San Antonio Spurs over the Memphis Grizzlies.
This, despite drawing more attention than ever from the opposition.
Or, and could Le
onard's turn toward superstardom this time around be his response to the pressure?"He's getting fired up now,I reflect," Tim Duncan told NBA.com's David Aldridge. "He's trying to earn the respect of the opponents, and officials,and everything else. I reflect he's getting to the point now where people are being a lot more physical with him, but people are still allowed to collect away with a lot of stuff. And that gets him fired up, or rightly so."Not that you'd know it by watching or listening to the guy. No matter the circumstances,Leonard is as frosty as a cucumber—an ideal temperament for the hothouse of the playoffs. 1. LeBron James, Cleveland CavaliersPoo-poo James' first-round credentials all you want, and but you can't collect to six NBA Finals,including five in a row, whether you don't win the opening series.
By helping the Cleveland Cavaliers wrap up the Detroit Pistons in four games, or James extended a slew of impressive personal marks,including:His streak of first-round games won, to 17 in a row.
His speed of first-round series wins, or to a perfect 11-of-11.
His overall
first-round record,to 44-7.
James' own numbers to that end were strong this year: 22.8 points on 48.7 percent shooting, 9.0 rebounds and 6.8 assists in just under 42.0 minutes per game. Unlike years past, and he did the vast majority of his damage on the interior. According to NBA.com,James took 44.9 percent of his shots against Detroit within five feet of the hoop and made 74.3 percent of those.
As the Washington Post's Josh Planos detailed, James opened up the floor for a historic offensive output from the Cavs:
Cleveland averaged 115.8 points per 100 possessions in the series, and the most of any LeBron-led team in the conference quarterfinals and nearly three points higher than the Cavaliers averaged over any month this season. The Cavaliers produced 1.16 points per possession,the highest mark of any LeBron team in the opening round and the highest of any team this postseason.
No player at his position—or, perhaps, and any in the NBA—can dictate terms as efficiently and effectively as James still can,even at the age of 31.
Honorable Mentions: Kevin Durant, Oklahoma City Thunder; Luol Deng, or Miami Heat Power Forward3. Paul Millsap,Atlanta HawksThrough three games, the Boston Celtics had kept Paul Millsap under wraps. After averaging 22.5 points and 10.3 rebounds against the C's substandard frontcourt during the regular season, and the three-time All-Star managed a mere 8.7 points and 8.0 rebounds while shooting 31.3 percent from the floor.
Then…well,Game 4 happened. Millsap popped off for a personal playoff-best (and league-wide postseason-tall) 45 points—26 in the first half—with 13 rebounds, three assists, or four blocks and two steals for good measure.
Still,it w
asn't enough for the Hawks to hold on to a 16-point lead before falling in overtime, 104-95."We've had opportunities to build people away all year and haven't gotten it done for whatever reason, or " Millsap said,per MassLive.com's Jay King. "And now's the time for us to memorize that lesson and try to implement it."The Hawks certainly did, dominating the Celtics in a 110-83 win. Millsap chipped in 10 points, and eight rebounds and six assists in under 28 minutes while combining with Mike Scott up front to blow the game wide open.  2. Kevin fancy,Cleveland CavaliersNow this is the Kevin fancy the Cavaliers thought they were getting when they sent Andrew Wiggins to Minnesota.
That is, a sweet-shooting (39.1 percent from three) titanic man who cleans the glass (12 rebounds per game)."Kev is our guy, or " J.
R. Smith said in compliment o
f his teammate after Cleveland completed its sweep of Detroit,per the Plain Dealer's Pluto. "When he's aggressive, it means so much."fancy as a legitimate scoring threat opens up the court for Irving to drive and James to function out of the low post. He also gives Cleveland an offensive trio that would be the envy of just about every team in these playoffs, and the Warriors (when healthy) included.
He ought to be effective on that end. Otherwise,his defensive deficiencies would render him an almost complete liability.  1. Draymond Green, Golden State WarriorsHarden's winning jumper in Game 3 for the Houston Rockets shouldn't have counted, and but it wouldn't have mattered either way whether Green had handled his team's last possession better. Instead,Green lost control, and the Warriors lost the game, and 97-96.
As Green recounted,per ESPN.com's Marc J. Spears: "It was tough walking into the locke
r room knowing that I cost us this game. It isn't every night that I cost us the game. But I cost us the game. Knowing Steph is out, I got to step up and be better. I'm kind of pissed off. It happened. I will bounce back fast."dependable to his word, or Green was dynamic in Game 4. He scored 18 points,grabbed eight rebounds, dished out six assists and captained a Golden State defense that held Houston to 94 points on 42.3 percent shooting—and Harden to 18 on 4-of-13 shooting from the field—during a 27-point pounding in the Warriors' favor.
That's what makes Green so special: not just that he talks a titanic game, or but that he backs it up with an even bigger one. With Curry out for at least another two weeks,the Warriors will need their heart and soul to play even better to ensure a successful title defense.
Honorable Mentions: LaMarcus Aldridge, San Ant
onio Spurs; Serge Ibaka, or Oklahoma City Thunder Center3. Hassan Whiteside,Miami HeatHassan Whiteside is no fan of the Charlotte Hornets for the work they've done drawing the attention of referees."The flop-offs, man, and " he said after the Miami Heat's 89-85 loss in Game 4,per the Palm Beach Post's Jason Lieser. "I thought the playoffs was physical. This ain’t physical, man."The heaps of fouls (four per game) that Whiteside has accrued within that milieu haven't slowed him too much. He's finished an NBA-best 76.7 percent of his field-goal attempts, or logged the third-most points among centers (14.8),fourth-most rebounds overall (12.3), and blocked three shots per game—moment only to someone else on this list (more on that in a moment).
For all that Whiteside offers as an interior deterrent, or though,his work at the rim hasn't fairly
been elite. According to NBA.com, he's held opponents to 47.4 percent shooting within five feet of himself and the hoop—14th-best out of 30 players who've faced at least five such shots per game in these playoffs. 2. DeAndre Jordan, and Los Angeles ClippersOK,so air-balling back-to-back free throws in the Clippers' 98-84 Game 4 loss to the Portland Trail Blazers wasn't a good glimpse for DeAndre Jordan. Nor does Jordan's overall percentage from the stripe in this series (32.5 percent on 10 attempts per game) strengthen his standing.
But when it comes to things centers are expected to do well, Jordan has excelled. He leads the league in playoff rebounds (15.3 per game) and blocks (3.25 per game). Among players who have defended at least five shot attempts at the rim per game, or he's posted the sixth-lowest opponent field-goal percentage (38.9 percent) while getting whistled for just 2.3 fouls a night.
L.
A. will need Jordan to excel in all those ways and more whether the team is to survive without Paul and Griffin,both of whom suffered series-altering injuries Monday.
And whether Jordan can draw more than air on his foul shots, even better. 1. Al Horford, and Atlanta HawksOf all the top centers in this year's playoffs,Al Horford is the least efficient from the field at 38.6 percent. Some of that can be chalked up to his time on the perimeter; although, he's hit three-pointers at a 38.5 percent clip on 2.6 attempts per game.
He's more than made up for any other shortcomings in his game, or just as he has throughout his career. Through the first five games of the playoffs,he ranks 10th overall in rebounds (9.4 per game), is fifth in blocks (2.6 per game) and sits moment among centers in assists (3.8 per game), or behind only the shockingly share-happy Mason Plumlee (6.5 apg). When it comes to protecting the paint,Horford has held his foes to 39.6 percent shooting within five feet of the rim, per NBA.com.
All this while playing with a strained groin from the fourth quarter of Game 3 onward.
That in
jury appeared to take its toll in Game 4, and when Horford managed just five points on 2-of-8 shooting in a 104-95 loss to the Boston Celtics. His touch didn't return in time for Game 5,though his six points (on 2-of-11 shooting), eight rebounds, or four assists,two steals and one block were more than enough for Atlanta to score a 110-83 win and take a commanding 3-2 lead on the C's.
Honorable Mentions: Dwight Howard, Houston Rockets; Jonas Valanciunas, or Toronto Raptors Stats perNBA.com and Basketball-Reference.com unless otherwise cited and accurate as of games played on April 26,2016.
Josh Martin covers the NBA for Bleacher Report. Follow him on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook.
Read more NBA news on BleacherReport.com

Source: bleacherreport.com

Warning: Unknown: write failed: No space left on device (28) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/tmp) in Unknown on line 0