I’ll begin by saying this, because it needs to be said: The Houston Rockets have truly earned their spot in today’s Western Conference Semi-Final game seven matchup with the Los Angeles Clippers (3:30 p.m. ET, ABC). They deserve to be playing at home after a historic comeback on Thursday night, and they deserve to have all the momentum (whatever that means in a game seven) that they do heading into this afternoon’s battle.
Yet, they found a way. They grinded their way back with wins in games five and six, and now have game seven at home against a Clippers team with everything to lose and a curse hovering over their heads like thick, Los Angeles smog. They deserve to be here.
However, Basketball does not deserve the consequences that come with a Houston win this afternoon.
Here’s why:
1. The Clippers are this year’s feel-good story
Last spring represented both a pivotal and dark time in Clippers history, as the team’s playoff run was overshadowed by the Donald Sterling investigation. When Steve Ballmer (below), the chief executive officer of Microsoft whose net worth is an approximated $21.5 billion, took over in August, the franchise took a new identity. Ballmer sits behind the basket at every game; he is as emotionally invested in the team as a lifelong fan, he high fives his players on a regular basis (sometimes after big plays), and he is shamelessly in love with everything that the newly rebranded Clippers represent- exciting, emotional, fun basketball.
Most importantly, there is only one player on the Clippers’ roster that has a championship ring- Glen Davis. This is their year. They finally knocked the Spurs off their throne, Kevin Durant and the Thunder are out of the picture, and they seem to be emerging (along with the Warriors and Rockets) as one of the West’s best teams. They are the high-flying, passionate, island-of-misfit-toys-esque (see Matt Barnes, Glen Davis, Jamal Crawford, etc.) team that America can get behind. Why not pull for the Clippers?
2. Your kids should not watch Houston play
The Rockets’ offense thrives on transition points- Harden, Ariza, Brewer and Dwight Howard attacking the rim. However, when the opponent does get back on defense, most of the Houston offense revolves around Harden. They play isolation basketball- let Harden play 1-on-1 with his defender while Howard and Josh Smith brace themselves for the rebound. If the Spurs play with a scalpel, making multiple passes, setting off-ball screens and running precise offensive sets, the Rockets play with a hammer- attacking the rim, getting to the free throw line and grinding it out. At its best, Houston’s offense is ugly; at it’s worst, they look stagnant and uninvolved. Combine this with Houston’s defense, notorious for losing shooters in screens and simply looking disengaged, and you have a team that sometimes seems to be playing open gym.
That being said, this Rockets team is not one to teach from. The longer that Houston plays in this year’s playoffs, the more television exposure they will get. This means that kids, the next generation of basketball, will be increasingly exposed to Houston Rockets basketball: isolation offense, selective defense and moody body language. For the sake of youth basketball minds everywhere, I hope that the Rockets don’t advance.
3. Basketball needs the Clippers-Warriors rivalry to blossom
Slowly but surely, Clippers v. Warriors is becoming the NBA’s best rivalry. They are divisional foes, and last year’s first-round series (in which the Clippers won in seven games) sparked the rivalry. With the help of a piece done by SB Nation’s Liam Boylan-Pett, I have gathered some of the best moments from last year’s matchups.
First round of playoffs, 2014. Griffin fouls out, tosses water “unintentionally” at jeering Warriors fans clapping behind him. One of my favorite moments in this young rivalry.
What’s that? You want Blake vs. Draymond round deux? Here’s a taste.
Festus Ezeli also wanted a piece of Griffin last April.
Bogut told Griffin to STOP FLOPPING!!
And then, in an act of sheer mockery, the Warriors bench went crazy when Blake missed a three badly from the corner.
Come to think of it, most of these altercations are between Blake and the Warriors. Why do the Warriors hate Blake? Who will ever know. What we do know is that the Clippers-Warriors rivalry has all the pieces to become the league’s best.
Every rivalry needs a fair amount of agitators- this one has more than enough. In LA, Chris Paul, one of the league’s under-the-radar dirtiest players, leads the charge. He is flanked by instigators Matt Barnes (whose mug shot is actually side-by-side with the word “instigator” in the dictionary) and Austin Rivers (who just likes to talk). In Oakland, Draymond Green, who is a league-renowned trash-talker is joined by Bogut and Ezeli, making up one of the feistiest frontcourts in the NBA.
And finally, every good rivalry has the locational piece. The Clips and Warriors are the best basketball teams in California, they already play each other four times during every regular season, and they are just an hour away via plane. It’s L.A. versus the Bay: like Dodgers vs. Giants, except with more dunking. They are battling for West coast bragging rights, and there is no ‘California love’ to be found between them.
The Clippers-Warriors rivalry could take a major step with a matchup in the conference finals this season. All the Clippers need to do is beat Houston.
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Need I say more? While it may just seem like a big quarterfinal game to some, today’s Clippers-Rockets matchup is far more important. The health of the NBA, the future of basketball and the league’s next best rivalry hang in the balance. It’s Steve Ballmer’s Ballers versus James Harden’s Bearded Bullies this afternoon in game seven, and I think you can guess who I’m rooting for.