Cnotes 2018 NBA Trends/Stats/Best Bets Thru The Playoffs !

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SCHEDULE FOR THURSDAY JUNE 13, 2019
Time (ET) Away Home Site
9:07 PM Toronto Raptors Golden State Warriors ORACLE Arena


SCHEDULE FOR SUNDAY JUNE 16, 2019
Time (ET) Away Home Site
8:07 PM Golden State Warriors Toronto Raptors Scotiabank Arena






*********************************






nba championship picks and best bets!




06/10/2019 1-1-0 50.00% -0.50
06/05/2019 0-2-0 0.00% -11.00
06/02/2019 1-0-1 100.00% +5.00
05/30/2019 1-1-0 50.00% -0.50




total.............. 3-4-1 42.85% -7.00




best bets


date.................ats.................units.... ..................o/u...................units...............total




06/10/2019........0 - 1..............-5.50.......................1 - 0..................+5.00..............-0.50
06/05/2019........0 - 1...............-5.50......................0 - 1...................-5.50...............-11.00
06/02/2019........1 - 0..............+5.00......................0-0-1.................+0.00..............+5.00
05/30/2019........1 - 0..............+5.00......................0 - 1...................-5.50...............-0.50




total..................2 - 2.............-1.00.......................1-1-1..................-6.00...............-7.00
 

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Tuesday’s 6-pack


Odds for the US Open this weekend:


15-2: Brooks Koepka


8-1: Dustin Johnson, Rory McIlroy


9-1: Eldrick Woods


16-1: Patrick Cantlay, Jordan Spieth


22-1: Justin Rose


25-1: Jon Rahm, Rickie Fowler, Xander Schauffele


Quotes of the Day
“Playing for the Warriors is just like playing for Team USA. When you play in the Olympics, you don’t even enjoy it. There’s the anxiety of ‘We have to win. We can’t lose, or we can’t go back home.’ We talk about it on the Olympic team: ‘We can’t go back home without the gold medal, fellas. Got to lock in. Let’s lock in.’ Then once you win, it’s like, ‘Yeah, we got it, we can go back home. Yay, we won, but we were supposed to.’”
Andre Iguodala


Tuesday’s quiz
Dodger P Clayton Kershaw played center on his high school football team; which NFL QB was the QB on that high school team?


Monday’s quiz
Home Run Derby at the All-Star Game began in 1985.


Sunday’s quiz
Barbara Streisand co-starred with Kris Kristofferson in the 1976 version of A Star Is Born.


****************************


Tuesday’s List of 13: Nobody asked me, but……


13) Warriors 106, Raptors 105— Toronto had a 6-point lead and the ball with 3:00 left, but couldn’t finish the job; Game 6 is in Oakland Thursday. Warriors were +6 in 12:00 with Kevin Durant on the floor; seriously doubt he plays again in this series.


12) Dallas Keuchel made his ’19 debut Monday, pitching for Rome in the Class A South Atlantic League; he allowed a single, a walk with nine strikeouts in seven scoreless innings.


11) Braves 13, Pirates 7— Josh Donaldson got drilled by a pitch in the first inning, the ump threw the pitcher out, and a high-scoring game broke out. Marte and Albies both homered twice in this game.


10) Former Auburn, Akron coach Terry Bowden is heading to the Clemson football staff as a 63-year-old graduate assistant; his brother Tommy was Clemson’s head coach for 10 years.


Bowden is going for a Master’s Degree in athletic leadership at Clemson, and his position on the staff is an unpaid graduate internship.


9) Auburn 14, North Carolina 7— Tigers advance to the College World Series; they scored 13 runs in the top of the first inning. Rough way for the season to end for UNC.


8) Wednesday’s Rangers-Red Sox game in Boston moves up from 7:00 to 4:00 because Game 7 of the Stanley Cup final is Wednesday night in Boston.


7) Baseball stuff:
— Pirates put P Jordan Lyles (hamstring) on IL.
— Cardinals put P Adam Wainwright (hamsring) on IL
— Angels’ P Matt Harvey aggravated his back injury on a rehab start.


6) Rained in New York City Monday night, so Subway Series will have a day/night twinbill on Tuesday, with games at 1:05, 7:05.


5) Tony Parker retired after 18 seasons in the NBA; he won four NBA titles with the Spurs.


4) Read online yesterday that El Cortez and Four Queens are last places in Las Vegas that deal low-limit single deck blackjack that still pays 3-2 on naturals. Most single deck games pay 6-5 now.


3) College basketball transfer portal:
— Grad transfer Isaiah Moss bolts from Iowa to Kansas.
— Grad transfer Tevin Mack bolts from Alabama to Clemson.
— F Eugene Omoruyi bolts from Rutgers to Oregon.


2) Arizona 13, Phillies 8— This was seventh time since 1914 that a team led off a game with three straight home runs; last time was in 2017, also the Diamondbacks.


Phillies’ Jerad Eickhoff didn’t allow a HR in any of his first five starts (30 IP); he’s allowed at least one homer in six straight starts (13 HR in last 24 1/3 IP).


1) Field for the College World Series is set:
Bracket One: Arkansas, Florida State, Michigan, Texas Tech.
Bracket Two: Auburn, Louisville, Mississippi State, Vanderbilt
 

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Analysis: Golden State won, but both teams lost Game 5
June 11, 2019
By The Associated Press



TORONTO (AP) The scoreboard said Golden State 106, Toronto 105.


The reality was that both teams lost.


It's almost unimaginable: an NBA Finals game where neither team felt like celebrating afterward. That was the bizarre reality on Monday night, after the Warriors staved off elimination by rallying in the final moments to beat the Raptors and send this series back to Oracle Arena for Game 6 - on a night when Kevin Durant's season came to an end.


Durant has an Achilles injury. The Warriors know it's bad. They'll find out how bad on Tuesday.


''It's devastating,'' Toronto forward Kawhi Leonard said.


He wasn't talking about losing the game.


He was talking about seeing Durant get hurt.


Leonard knows what it's like to have the game taken away by injury. He missed most of last season with a leg injury, one that limited him to nine games. He saw his commitment to the game questioned - the same way Durant had by some in recent days - and came out the other side an even better player.


That was the hope after Game 5 of the NBA Finals. The series truly seemed insignificant, with both sides aching over Durant's situation.


''I love KD,'' Raptors coach Nick Nurse said. ''I love watching him play. When anybody goes down you're saddened by it, but when one of the great players like that goes down, it's almost shocking.''


Durant had missed the previous nine games with what the Warriors insist was a strained calf muscle. This is not a calf injury anymore. Warriors general manager Bob Myers gave a postgame news conference where he delivered the emotional news that Durant hurt his Achilles.


''Kevin takes a lot of hits sometimes, but he just wants to play basketball and right now he can't,'' Myers said. ''Basketball has gotten him through his life. I don't know that we can all understand how much it means to him. He just wants to play basketball with his teammates and compete.''


This should have gone so differently for the Warriors, the team that might be going for a fifth consecutive championship had it not wasted a 3-1 lead in the 2016 finals against LeBron James and the Cleveland Cavaliers.


They're the ones who were down 3-1 in this title series. All they did on Monday night was rally from six points down in the final 3 minutes, get a fantastic defensive stand on the last play of the game to deny Toronto a win and a championship, and send the series back home for one final game at Oracle before moving to San Francisco next season.


They have a chance at the ultimate comeuppance, a 3-1 finals rally of their own.


Maybe when practice resumes Wednesday, that will bring some joy.


There was no joy on Monday night. The Raptors weren't celebrating. Neither were the winners, who lost much more than Toronto did.


''Those talking heads who say we're better without him, that's just ludicrous,'' Warriors guard Klay Thompson said. ''Like, that's crazy. This is the best player in the world. You could put him on the 30th best team in the league, and that team will make the playoffs. That's how talented he is.''


The Warriors won the last two NBA championships largely because of Durant.


If they win the next two games for another championship, it'll be for Durant.


''It's a team full of heart,'' said Warriors center DeMarcus Cousins, who spent a year recovering from an Achilles injury that denied him a monster contract last summer and saw him sign with Golden State on a mid-level deal. ''It's as simple as that. We're fighters. It's in our DNA. We're going to go down fighting. Period.''


Durant would want it no other way.


''I'm just going to pray for the guy,'' Thompson said.


Leonard said he will be praying for Durant also.


''In this league we're all brothers,'' Raptors guard Kyle Lowry said. ''At the end of the day, we're all brothers and it's a small brotherhood and you never want to see a competitor like him go down.''


The atmosphere will be raucous for Game 6 on Thursday night. The Raptors are getting a second swing at winning a title. The Warriors are looking to make sure they end their Oracle era with a victory.


The joy that should have come out from one locker room on Monday night will, for certain, be exhibited by someone on Thursday night.


''We're going to give everything we got,'' Warriors guard Stephen Curry said. ''I would like to say I would guarantee the win - who knows how it's going to end up - but we're going to give everything we got. We're going to fight, we're going to compete, and I know if we get a chance to talk to him the next two days, that's what he would expect.''
 

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Wednesday’s 6-pack


Wagering matchups for the US Open:


— Dustin Johnson (-$170) vs Patrick Cantlay


— Brooks Koepka (-$150) vs Eldrick Woods


— Aaron Wise (-$125) vs Jason Dufner


— Henrik Stenson (-$115) vs Gary Woodland


— Ian Poulter (-$120) vs Bubba Watson


— Matt Wallace (-$130) vs Graeme McDowell


Quote of the Day
“Your indifference cost these men and women their most valuable commodity: Time! It’s the one thing they’re running out of.”
Jon Stewart, advocating for additional funding for the 9/11 victim compensation fund


Wednesday’s quiz
Who was the last President of the US who had previously been the Vice-President?


Tuesday’s quiz
Dodger P Clayton Kershaw played center on his high school football team; Lions’ QB Matthew Stafford was the QB on that high school team.


Monday’s quiz
Home Run Derby at the All-Star Game began in 1985.


**********************


Wednesday’s List of 13: Mid-week musings…….


13) Surprised to hear that the Oakland Raiders will be featured this summer on Hard Knocks; figured that they would wait until next year to feature the Raiders, when they move to Las Vegas.


12) Mets had two men on, no one out Tuesday with Jeff McNeil up; Bronx plays the 3B in for a bunt, and Mets’ TV guy Gary Cohen exclaims, “They’re playing in for a bunt!!! Doesn’t anyone scout?!?!?!”


Words aren’t out of his mouth and McNeil homers to right-center. I’m guessing Bronx coaches and staff won’t be too thrilled when they hear about Cohen’s comments- they are in first place after all, while the Mets are………the Mets.


11) There were 13 homers in the Arizona-Philly game Monday night, which is a major league record for one game.


10) Interesting to follow Twitter late Monday night and Tuesday with reaction to Kevin Durant’s injury; lot of people suddenly became medical experts.


Without knowing the inner workings of the Warriors, am guessing the decision comes down to Durant and the Warriors’ trainer, with Durant having the final say.


What follows now really could alter the NBA’s entire offseason; what teams will throw major $$$ at a big star with a very serious leg injury? Will he get a shorter deal and have to prove himself healthy before he breaks the bank again?


9) With Game 6 in Oakland Thursday, it bears repeating that Toronto had a 6-point lead and the ball with 3:00 left Monday with a chance to win its first title, but lost at home.


Crowd will be fired up for Game 6, the last NBA game ever in Oakland— the Warriors have a new arena for next year, across the bay in San Francisco.


8) Royals-Tigers are playing a game in Omaha, Nebraska Thursday, in advance of the College World Series. Teams played Tuesday-Wednesday in Kansas City.


7) Baseball stuff:
— Giancarlo Stanton homered (was 2-4) in a Class A rehab game.
— Orioles’ P Alex Cobb (hip) is out for the year.
— Tigers’ SS Niko Goodrum left Tuesday’s game (bruised knee).


6) Memphis Grizzlies hired Taylor Jenkins as their new head coach; he was Mike Budenholzer’s assistant in Milwaukee this season and in Atlanta for five years. Jenkins will the Grizzlies’ 4th coach in the last five years.


5) Saints signed DE Cam Jordan to a 3-year contract extension that is worth $52.5M with a maximum of $55.5M that includes $42M in guarantees.


4) FOX Sports produced its US Open promo, but didn’t include the person who won the last two US Opens, which was surprising to Brooks Koepka, who won the last two US Opens.


“We’re amazed that I wasn’t in it, just kind of shocked. Somebody probably got fired over it … or should.”


3) Most home runs, first 67 games of a career in Major League history:
1. Jose Abreu, 25 (2014), 2. Cody Bellinger, 24 (2017) 5. Pete Alonso, 22 (2019)


2) Detroit Tigers have Jack Morris as a TV analyst this year and he is very good, especially when he talks about pitching. Very honest; I learn something every game.


1) Zack Greinke has thrown 89 pitches this season that were under 70 MPH, 25 more than any other pitcher in the major leagues.
 

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Analysis: Even being injured Durant leads free-agent pack
June 12, 2019
By The Associated Press



OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) This was already going to be a summer filled with fireworks in the NBA.


Nothing has changed.


Kevin Durant's Achilles injury, the severity of which isn't yet confirmed, means he probably won't be able to play much - if any - next season. But this is a testament to how much he overshadows much of the NBA landscape: Durant will still likely dictate how the free-agency dominoes fall this summer.


Durant could exercise his $31.5 million player option and stay with the Warriors, and that's likely going to be his worst-case financial scenario. He could opt out and sign a longer deal to stay in the Bay. Or he could opt out, sign elsewhere and start collecting massive checks from either the New York Knicks or Brooklyn Nets or Los Angeles Clippers or someone else.


Kyrie Irving's decision could hinge on what Durant does. Kawhi Leonard's decision could be affected by what Durant does. How the Knicks, Nets, Clippers, Dallas Mavericks, Los Angeles Lakers, Atlanta Hawks and all the other teams who have cap space will start spending their money on June 30 ... it all will be determined, at least on some level, by what Durant does.


If he stays in Golden State, that's more money for everyone else.


If he hits the open market, it'll be about what team wants to gamble.


Here's a tip to those teams that wanted Durant before he got hurt again in Game 5 of the NBA Finals.


If the opportunity presents itself, sign him.


Free agency usually isn't about just one year. It's about the long haul. Durant is only 30 years old. He's not a high-flyer who plays above the rim all the time. He's not a plodding big man. He's not someone with a lot of gray in the goatee. He's a world-class scorer and jump-shooter in his prime. A year from now, if the recovery from the Achilles injury indeed takes that long, he'll be far from over the hill.


''This is a devastating injury for a basketball player, but Durant can return to be the same or very close,'' Dr. David Chao, a longtime NFL team physician, practicing orthopedic surgeon and now a sports medical analyst with a large following wrote Tuesday. ''This does not mark his downfall as an elite player.''


In the short term, it just means Durant's NBA Finals are over. Game 6 is Thursday night, and the Warriors trail the Toronto Raptors 3-2 in the title series.


In the long term, it might mean so much more - including the possibility that his time playing for Golden State is over.


Achilles recoveries for basketball players have typically taken about a full year. Even if it turns out to be a partial tear, it's still a tear. Some team was going to pay Durant a lot of money in 2019-20 and some team still will, probably without the immediate on-court services of perhaps the best player in the world in return.


The first decision is the medical course of action.


The financial course of action will be decided soon after.


All will not be lost next season for the team that has Durant on its roster. That team will apply for, and get, a disabled player exception that will allow them to sign someone else for probably about $9 million and not have that count toward the team's cap.


That player won't be of Durant's caliber, because so few players are. But a year or so later, the team would have Durant.


There's risk with any signing. And signing any player that will command so much of a team's salary cap while facing a grueling rehab would seem particularly risky.


''He's going to come back stronger though,'' Warriors guard Klay Thompson said. ''That's the kind of fighter he is.''


The Nets swung a trade earlier this month to clear enough cap space for two max contracts this summer - and there's no doubt that they would love Durant to take one of those spots, possibly alongside Irving. The Knicks have been mentioned as a hopeful in the Durant sweepstakes for months. The Clippers were expected to make a pitch for him as well. The Warriors surely want to keep him.


The chatter about Durant's injury indicates it's all a mystery now, although it really shouldn't be.


Players have made comebacks off Achilles surgery, with relative levels of success.


DeMarcus Cousins, Kobe Bryant, and Rudy Gay all came back; Cousins hasn't regained past form yet. Dominique Wilkins had an Achilles tear happen to him at the peak of his career and he arguably was good as ever afterward. Elton Brand, now leading the Philadelphia 76ers' front office, had it as a player and said he was never the same. Christian Laettner went from a star to a role player when his Achilles ripped.


''I've been there,'' 15-time golf major winner Tiger Woods said Tuesday at the U.S. Open. ''I've had it to my own Achilles. I've had it to my own back. I know what it feels like. It's an awful feeling. And no one can help you. That's the hard part.''


Woods fought his way back toward the top of his sport, and is the reigning Masters champion.


Durant isn't going to let an Achilles injury end his reign as one of the game's best. Teams would be foolish to think otherwise.
 

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Armadillo: Thursday's six-pack


Prop bets for the US Open:


— Over/under for winning score: 277.5: under -$120


— Lowest round by any player: 64.5: over -$130


— Will Brooks Koepka finish in the top 10? No -$135


— Will Dustin Johnson finish in the top 10? -$110


— Will Adam Scott finish in the top 20? No -$140


— Will Jordan Spieth finish in the top 20? Yes -$130




**********


Armadillo: Thursday's List of 13: Doing some thinking out loud……


13) Why does there always have to be someone to blame? People today always need someone to blame when something bad happens.


Kevin Durant got hurt Monday night; all I see on Twitter is “Whose fault is it?”


The Warriors trainer? Their GM? Durant? His agent? Russell Westbrook?


Sometimes stuff just happens, then people have to react/adjust to it. This was no one’s fault.


12) Durant already had his injured achilles tendon operated on; that was quick.


11) Of the top 100 top-rated TV programs of 2018, 64 were NFL games.


10) Tuesday night was the first time the Pittsburgh Pirates allowed four home runs in an inning since 1956, when the New York Giants did it, with a young Willie Mays hitting one of them.


9) This week at Westgate SuperBook in Las Vegas, a gambler bet $44,000 that Phil Mickelson won’t finish in the top 5 at the US Open at Pebble Beach; if he wins his bet, he banks $4,000.


8) Reds opened the first inning Wednesday with back/back homers (Senzel/Votto), first time they did that since 2001, when Alex Ochoa/Barry Larkin did it.


7) Baseball stuff:
— Padres sent P Chris Paddack to Class A ball, just to rein in his innings.
— Arizona put P Jon Duplantier (shoulder) on IL.
— Marlins put P Jose Urena (back) on IL.


6) Something you don’t see much anymore; a defensive tackle on the Baltimore Ravens was so out of shape at minicamp that the team set him home, basically after stretching exercises. With so much money at stake nowadays, players get tend to stay in shape year-round.


5) Tennessee Titans will retire Steve McNair’s #9 and Eddie George’s #27 this fall; McNair’s #9 will be the first #9 ever retired by an NFL team.


4) Back in January, the St Louis Blues were having a bad season and fired their coach; a gambler in Las Vegas wagered $400 on them to win the Stanley Cup, at 250-1 odds. Probably seemed like throwing money away to most, but today the guy cashes a ticket worth $100,000.


3) Braves 8, Braves 7 (11)— Game ended around 12:30 am; teams have a 12:10 first pitch today, so lot of people better sleep fast.


2) Brewers 6, Astros (14)— Mike Moustakas hit the deciding home run in the 14th inning. Milwaukee batters walked once, struck out 24 times in this game, and still won.


1) Wednesday night, a person paid $69,287.21 each on the Warriors’ website for two courtside seats (total: $138,574.42) for Game 6 of the NBA Finals.


Someone should tell this person that the games are on TV.
 

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<a href="http://www.freeimagehosting.net/commercial-photography/"><img src="https://i.imgur.com/UFlcK9y.png" alt="Commercial Photography"></a>
 

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531Toronto -532 Golden State
TORONTO is 8-0 ATS (8 Units) in road games versus very good shooting teams - making >=48% of their shots over the last 2 seasons.








NBA
Dunkel


Thursday, June 13



Toronto @ Golden State


Game 531-532
June 13, 2019 @ 9:00 pm


Dunkel Rating:
Toronto
131.528
Golden State
127.559
Dunkel Team:
Dunkel Line:
Dunkel Total:
Toronto
by 4
207
Vegas Team:
Vegas Line:
Vegas Total:
Golden State
by 3
211 1/2
Dunkel Pick:
Toronto
(+3); Under









NBA
Long Sheet


Thursday, June 13



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


TORONTO (73 - 32) at GOLDEN STATE (71 - 32) - 6/13/2019, 9:00 PM
Top Trends for this game.
TORONTO is 218-271 ATS (-80.1 Units) when playing against a team with a winning record - 2nd half of the season since 1996.
GOLDEN STATE is 44-57 ATS (-18.7 Units) in all games this season.
GOLDEN STATE is 36-51 ATS (-20.1 Units) as a favorite this season.
GOLDEN STATE is 19-31 ATS (-15.1 Units) in home games this season.
GOLDEN STATE is 12-22 ATS (-12.2 Units) in home games when playing against a team with a winning record this season.
GOLDEN STATE is 36-52 ATS (-21.2 Units) versus poor defensive teams - allowing 106+ points/game this season.
GOLDEN STATE is 21-31 ATS (-13.1 Units) versus poor defensive teams - allowing 106+ points/game - 2nd half of the season this season.
GOLDEN STATE is 37-46 ATS (-13.6 Units) versus good offensive teams - scoring 106+ points/game this season.

Head-to-Head Series History
TORONTO is 6-4 against the spread versus GOLDEN STATE over the last 3 seasons
GOLDEN STATE is 6-5 straight up against TORONTO over the last 3 seasons
6 of 10 games in this series have gone OVER THE TOTAL over the last 3 seasons

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------








NBA
Armadillo's Write-Up


Thursday, June 13



— Toronto had the ball up six with 3:00 left at home in Game 5, but lost.


— Toronto is 5-2 vs Golden State this season, 3-0 in Oakland.


— Road team won last four games in this series.


— Warriors were +6 in 12:00 that Durant played in Game 5; he is out now.


— Over is 5-3 in last eight Raptor-Warrior games.


— Four Raptor subs who played in Game were a combined -14.


— Golden State’s three starters other than Curry/Thompson shot combined 16-40 from floor last two games.


— This is the Warriors’ last game in this building; they move to SF next season.








NBA


Thursday, June 13



------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Trend Report
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Toronto Raptors
Toronto is 7-2 ATS in its last 9 games
Toronto is 7-2 SU in its last 9 games
Toronto is 11-5 SU in its last 16 games on the road
The total has gone UNDER in 8 of Toronto's last 11 games on the road
Toronto is 4-2 ATS in its last 6 games when playing Golden State
Toronto is 5-2 SU in its last 7 games when playing Golden State
Toronto is 7-18 SU in its last 25 games when playing Golden State
Toronto is 5-1 ATS in its last 6 games when playing on the road against Golden State
Toronto is 5-11 ATS in its last 16 games when playing on the road against Golden State
Toronto is 3-13 SU in its last 16 games when playing on the road against Golden State
The total has gone OVER in 9 of Toronto's last 12 games when playing on the road against Golden State
Golden State Warriors
Golden State is 2-3-1 ATS in its last 6 games
Golden State is 8-3 SU in its last 11 games
Golden State is 1-4 ATS in its last 5 games at home
Golden State is 11-4 SU in its last 15 games at home
The total has gone UNDER in 14 of Golden State's last 21 games at home
Golden State is 4-8-1 ATS in its last 13 games when playing Toronto
Golden State is 18-7 SU in its last 25 games when playing Toronto
Golden State is 2-5 SU in its last 7 games when playing Toronto
Golden State is 11-5 ATS in its last 16 games when playing at home against Toronto
Golden State is 1-5 ATS in its last 6 games when playing at home against Toronto
Golden State is 13-3 SU in its last 16 games when playing at home against Toronto
The total has gone OVER in 9 of Golden State's last 12 games when playing at home against Toronto
 

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Thursday's Top Wager
June 13, 2019
By Bookmaker
by Kyle Markus



NBA Finals Game 6 Preview


Toronto Raptors at Golden State Warriors



It has been a roller coaster of emotions for the Golden State Warriors the past couple of days. They extended the NBA Finals with a one-point win in Game 5 but learned after the contest that Kevin Durant likely tore his Achilles. Golden State will head home for Game 6 without the superstar forward but needs to re-focus and play well in order to knock off the Toronto Raptors and force a do-or-die Game 7 back in Toronto.


This has been a fascinating series and Game 6 promises to be more of the same. The Warriors are the slight favorites but the Raptors won both games in Oakland earlier in the NBA Finals so they will be feeling confident that they can pull off another upset and clinch the championship in NBA gambling.


Game 6 of the NBA Finals between the Golden State Warriors and Toronto Raptors will be held at Oracle Arena in Oakland, California at 9 p.m. ET on Thursday, June 13th, 2019. The game will be nationally televised on ABC.


We'll have NBA basketball odds at BookMaker.eu available for every game of the 2019 NBA season.


Odds Analysis


The Warriors are listed as the slight three-point favorites to win this game and extend the series to a winner-takes-all Game 7. Golden State is -148 on the moneyline while the Raptors are the +123 underdogs. The scoring total is listed at 211 points, with the “over” currently getting more of the action in NBA gambling.


The road team has won the past four games of this series and Golden State needs to halt that trend to keep its hopes of a three-peat alive in NBA odds.


Last Time Out


The Raptors led by six points with only a couple of minutes left, but Klay Thompson and Steph Curry both connected on some huge three-pointers to lift their team to a 106-105 victory in Game 5. Raptors point guard Kyle Lowry had a shot to win the game at the buzzer but Draymond Green blocked it to secure the win.


Curry had 31 points, eight rebounds and seven assists while Thompson added 26 points, including seven three-pointers. Center DeMarcus Cousins gave the Warriors a nice boost off the bench, making some big plays in both halves that were sorely needed.


Kawhi Leonard started the game slowly but had an unreal run in the fourth quarter to pit his team to the lead. However, Leonard couldn’t get his shot off in the final couple of minutes and his teammates went cold from the floor.


Injury Report


Durant had 11 points in 12 minutes and seemed poised for a huge performance in Game 5 but he injured his Achilles early in the second quarter and left the game. Durant is obviously done for the rest of the NBA Finals and now there is concern that the injury will affect a big chunk of the 2019-20 season.


The Warriors are hoping to have center Kevon Looney, who re-injured his chest in Game 5 and sat out the final part of it. Looney isn’t the most skilled player but he helps with defense and rebounding and is a key piece. Keep an eye on his status for Game 6.

Free NBA ATS Picks



The Warriors have been through a lot and will need to regroup for this one. While this one should be close throughout, it is hard to imagine Golden State losing a third game at home in the NBA Finals. Look for Curry and Thompson to score at a high level once again. The Raptors will stick close but will falter down the stretch.


The Warriors are the pick to win this game and cover the spread in NBA betting lines. The “over” is the better call on the scoring total.


NBA ATS Pick: Golden State Warriors 109, Toronto Raptors 104
 

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THURSDAY, JUNE 13
GAME TIME(ET) PICK UNITS



TOR at GS 09:00 PM


GS -2.5


O 211.5
 

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Warriors' reign ends as injuries pile up
June 14, 2019
By The Associated Press



OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) In the end, they were just battered and broken.


And now, they're beaten.


The Golden State Warriors are champions no more.


The reign ended Thursday night in the last game they'll ever play at Oracle Arena, one where they entered without Kevin Durant and left without Klay Thompson. The roster depletion was just too taxing, even for warriors like the Warriors to bear, and they lost Game 6 of the NBA Finals 114-110 to the Toronto Raptors.


Toronto won the series 4-2, finishing it off a few minutes after Thompson used crutches to hobble out of Oracle and into perhaps an uncertain future. He got hurt in the third quarter, fouled on a dunk attempt and landing awkwardly on his left knee - which buckled in a manner that's often a telltale sign of big trouble.


He left the game, then limped out of the tunnel and returned to the court - drawing raucous cheers - so he could shoot his free throws, allowing him to possibly return after being evaluated. He made both shots, the Warriors then took a foul a few seconds later and Thompson retreated toward the locker room again. A few minutes later, the word came: Thompson was done for the night.


The reign was done not long afterward.


Golden State still had a chance, even in the final seconds. Stephen Curry missed a 3-pointer with about 6 seconds left that would have given the Warriors the lead. The actual ending came several minutes later after long delays following a technical on Golden State for calling a time-out it didn't have and then a long review of a foul on Toronto's inbounds pass with less than a second left.


The Raptors didn't mind waiting.


And for the Warriors, it just prolonged the inevitable.


Thompson finished with 30 points, even missing the fourth quarter. Andre Iguodala scored 22 points, Curry had 21 and Draymond Green finished with 11 points, 19 rebounds and 13 assists.


It wasn't enough.


It was a sad farewell to Oracle for so many reasons. The 2,070th and final game in that building that the Warriors called home for 47 seasons. The first game since Durant had surgery to repair his ruptured Achilles. The last loss of the season. The end of the quest for three straight championships. And if all that emotion wasn't enough, now there's fear for Thompson's future.


Thompson will be a free agent on June 30. The Warriors have said they want to keep him, and they likely still will. But if he has a major knee issue now that would be on top of the injury that will likely keep Durant - another probable free-agent-in-waiting, maybe the biggest domino that will fall this summer to start an expected player-movement bonanza - off the court for all of next season.


The irony with Thompson's injury is he doesn't get hurt. Thompson one of the most durable players in the league. He strained a hamstring earlier in these finals and missed one game. He may have done a number on his knee on Thursday and was still lobbying to stay in the game.


He was gone before the Raptors' celebration. When the Warriors start play next season at the new Chase Center in San Francisco, there will be no banner to raise, no rings to hand out. An era is over. A new one will have to begin.
 

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King of the North: Kawhi Leonard wins Finals MVP
June 14, 2019
By The Associated Press



OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) Kawhi Leonard's first season with the Toronto Raptors started with his now-infamous laugh.


It ended with him getting the last laugh.


The best player on the league's newly crowned best team is an NBA Finals MVP for the second time. Toronto finally sits atop the basketball universe, with Leonard averaging 28.5 points in a six-game finals victory over the Golden State Warriors to lead the Raptors to their first championship.


He arguably ended any debate about who the best two-way player in the sport is at this moment.


''This is what I play basketball for,'' Leonard said. ''This is what I work out for.''


The King of the North, as they've been calling Leonard in Toronto, was King of the Playoffs. He's the third player to win Finals MVP with two franchises, joining only Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and LeBron James.


''I think he's the best two-way basketball player in the NBA,'' Raptors guard Kyle Lowry said. ''He just goes. You know, I've seen some stuff from him this year that you just say, `Wow.' You do. You say, `Wow.' You appreciate the work that he's put in. He works extremely hard at his game and works extremely hard on his body. And he loves this basketball thing. Loves it.''


Perhaps never more so than Thursday night.


After missing most of last season with a leg injury, after having his commitment questioned, after getting traded to Toronto, Leonard returned to basketball's mountaintop. He thrust both arms high into the air when it was over, letting out a scream of joy. He even allowed himself a tiny smile when he hoisted the MVP trophy.


''He's just a competitor,'' Warriors guard Stephen Curry said. ''We respect that, for sure. He's shown that again this entire playoff run.''


Giannis Antetokounmpo will probably win the NBA's MVP award in a couple of weeks. James Harden and Paul George are the other finalists. And while all three of those players had marvelous regular seasons, the postseason was Leonard's personal showcase.


He scored 732 points in the playoffs. Only Michael Jordan (759) and LeBron James (748) ever scored more in a single postseason. Leonard finished with 14 games of 30 points or more in these playoffs. The only players with more in a single postseason are Jordan (16 in 1992), Hakeem Olajuwon (16 in 1995) and Kobe Bryant (15 in 2009).


''Without a doubt, the best thing about this thing is that somehow I wound up on the sideline getting to watch this guy play up close,'' said Raptors coach Nick Nurse, who won an NBA title in his first season as a head coach in the league. ''It's really cool.''


Leonard was the unquestioned leader. When the Raptors lost Game 2 of the NBA Finals at home and surrendered home-court advantage in the series, Nurse walked into a very glum locker room and reminded his team that it merely needed to win either Game 3 or Game 4 at Oracle Arena to reclaim control of the series.


Some nodded in agreement.


Leonard was not one of them, saying, ''Let's go get both.''


They got both.


And then, on their return trip to Oracle for Game 6, they got one more. They closed Oracle with a title-clincher.


''I don't know that any people will argue with me that he's the best two-way player in the NBA,'' Raptors President Masai Ujiri said.


Getting Leonard was just one of a bold series of moves Ujiri made in the last 12 months. He fired last season's coach of the year in Dwane Casey and hired Nurse. He traded away three players at midseason for Marc Gasol. And he took the risk that Leonard would be both happy enough and healthy enough to take the Raptors to the newest and highest of heights.


The trade that sent DeMar DeRozan to San Antonio for Leonard was high-risk, high-reward. Leonard was acquired on July 18 and formally introduced as training camp was beginning on Sept. 24. He can become a free agent on June 30 and he'll almost certainly make in excess of $32 million next season no matter how long a deal he ends up signing - and whether that's in Toronto or someplace else.


''This is the place for him,'' Ujiri said.


Regardless of what's next, Leonard's memorable postseason won't soon be forgotten.


There was the four-bounce-off-the-rim, at-the-buzzer jump shot from the corner to beat Philadelphia in Game 7 of the second round. A 15-point fourth quarter to lift the Raptors past Milwaukee in the pivotal Game 5 of the Eastern Conference finals. A 17-point third quarter at Oracle Arena in Game 4 of the finals, as the Raptors took control of the game and the series.


''You can always see in his eyes that at any given time he can kind of take over,'' Pascal Siakam said.


Leonard can be thought of as enigmatic or anti-social.


He's not really either of those things. He's just quiet.


His path has not been an easy one. He wasn't highly recruited in high school. By the time bigger colleges were calling, he was committed to San Diego State. He wasn't even a lottery pick, getting taken No. 15 in the 2011 draft - behind the likes of Derrick Williams, Tristan Thompson, Jan Vesely, Bismack Biyombo, Jimmer Fredette and Alec Burks, none of whom averaged 10 points per game for their NBA careers.


He rarely opens up about anything. He doesn't talk about his private life. He hardly ever discusses the murder of his father, which happened when Leonard was playing in high school. He scored 17 points in a game the day after his father was shot and killed, perhaps the ultimate proof that he's always been capable of blocking out everything else when he steps onto a court.


''Once it happened, I thought about it a lot,'' Leonard said. ''But as I got older, I pretty much just really stopped thinking about it. I think it just gave me a sense and feel that life and basketball are two different things and just really enjoy your time and moments. Like I always say, this is basketball; just go out there and have fun. These are going to be the best years of my life, playing this game.''


The best year yet just happened.


And with Leonard just entering his prime, there might be much more to come.
 

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Analysis: Anthony Davis trade a win-win for both sides
June 15, 2019
By The Associated Press



The saga is over.


When this trade is done, everybody can say they won.


The Lakers, the Pelicans, Rich Paul, LeBron James, they all can take a victory lap. The trade that will be official in the coming weeks sending Anthony Davis from the New Orleans Pelicans to the Los Angeles Lakers for Brandon Ingram, Lonzo Ball, Josh Hart and three first-round draft picks - first reported by ESPN, later confirmed to The Associated Press by several people with knowledge of the matter - is perfect for both sides.


James gets the superstar teammate he wanted. Paul, the agent James and Davis share, pulls off a power move. The Lakers instantly become major players in a suddenly open Western Conference. Davis finally gets his wish to leave New Orleans. The Pelicans don't begin Zion Williamson's era with a disgruntled superstar in the locker room. They load up on young players and have tons of draft chips to play around with.


For the Pelicans, it's a new beginning.


For the Lakers, it's about winning now.


Draft picks, including No. 4 in this year's class, smartly were not overvalued by the Lakers - a team with a superstar who is turning 35 in December and should be doing anything necessary to help him win a fourth championship before his window closes. The Lakers have tons of money to spend starting June 30 and the sales pitch to Kemba Walker, Kyrie Irving or anyone else changes mightily after this move.


Before Saturday it would have been Lakers general manager Rob Pelinka saying, ''We're trying to get Anthony Davis.''


Now it'll be Pelinka saying, ''We've got Davis, we've got LeBron and they want you with them.''


That'll be a tough offer for anyone to ignore.


James is going to get another Big Three out of this: It was Dwyane Wade, Chris Bosh and him in Miami; Kevin Love, Irving and him in Cleveland; Davis, him and TBA with the Lakers. Clearly, the focus will be on a guard, which is why the rumor mill will be all about either Walker or Irving going to Los Angeles in free agency.


The offseason is already in high gear.


Hard to believe it really just got started.


This deal got agreed to before the newly crowned NBA champion Toronto Raptors - this is true - hoisted the Larry O'Brien Trophy on Canadian soil for the first time. They won Thursday night at Oracle Arena to end Golden State's reign, then stopped for a party in Las Vegas before the parade in Toronto on Monday.


Not even 48 hours after they popped corks, the Lakers were starting their own celebration.


Williamson will get drafted No. 1 overall on Thursday night, and he'll go to New Orleans in the awkward spot of being an 18-year-old (he doesn't turn 19 until July 6) with a franchise on his shoulders. The Lakers will still be drafting No. 4 overall, though they'll be doing so on New Orleans' behalf because the trade cannot be consummated beforehand. The Pelicans need a center, and will likely look at the trade market.


The Pelicans have to watch an incredible player, one of the league's very best, leave. But David Griffin - the man tasked with rebuilding the Pelicans - clearly had concluded that there was no way of convincing Davis to not leave as a free agent next summer anyway. Had Griffin waited to make a deal in-season, there's almost no way he could have pulled off this kind of haul in return. The longer he waited, the less the value. So they push the reset button and move on, which was the most prudent play.


Let the ripple effects begin.


The Warriors not only have to figure out what to do if Kevin Durant leaves, but how to contend next year without the Achilles-rehabbing Durant and the ACL-rehabbing Klay Thompson (for at least much of the season). Other contenders in the West - Houston, Denver, Portland - will be viewing the Warriors' woes as opportunity, so they'll be looking at ways to get better as well. And Boston will be dealing with the reality that not only are its hopes of landing Davis gone, but that Irving is likely leaving as well.


There will be countless big moves in the coming weeks. The Lakers, who have missed the playoffs in the last six seasons and have been stuck in dysfunction mode for the last couple months following the resignation of Magic Johnson and soap opera that followed, got the first one of the offseason to go their way.


Welcome to summer. Game on.
 

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Injured Warriors brace for unclear summer
June 14, 2019
By The Associated Press



OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) Steve Kerr still considers Golden State an ideal fit for Kevin Durant.


Whether Durant sees it that way going into free agency next month, Kerr isn't about to guess. Especially now that the two-time NBA Finals MVP is headed for what could be a yearlong recovery from surgery for a ruptured right Achilles tendon.


''Well, the injury kind of throws everything for a loop, so I have no idea what Kevin's going to do,'' Kerr said Friday. ''I know that we all want him back, and we think this is a great situation for him and vice versa. So, hopefully we get him back and keep this thing going with the understanding that he's a free agent and we want what's best for him, and he's free to make any choice he wants. Hopefully he's back, and we will all give him any advice, any counsel that he needs. And ultimately he's going to make his own decision. He's earned that.''


A day after losing Game 6 of the Finals to the champion Toronto Raptors, Kerr and general manager Bob Myers braced for an uncertain summer while still trying to cope with the heartbreak of seeing Durant go down in Game 5. Then Klay Thompson tore the ACL in his left knee during the third quarter of Thursday night's 114-110 loss in the final game at Oracle Arena. Durant was injured in Game 5 on Monday night in Toronto, then underwent surgery Wednesday in New York.


''This year more than any other tested the fabric of our team,'' Myers said. ''It's hard to not value a championship as much as I value short of winning a championship, and in some ways more than winning a championship, this year I might have been the proudest of our resolve. I don't know if that's evident. I hear that from people in the Bay Area, the support we've gotten, the things people say about kind of conducting ourselves as champions. That stuff matters. Winning matters, too, obviously. It all matters. Try to continue to hang onto that culture.''


In February, Durant became frustrated over all the fuss and speculation about where he might play next season, and said ''I'm trying to play basketball.'' He signed a two-year contract last summer that includes a player option for the 2019-20, so Durant can become a free agent to pursue a maximum five-year deal. The Warriors are expected to try to sign both Durant and Thompson to those max contracts.


Asked how optimistic he is about bringing back Durant, an emotionally exhausted Myers said, simply, ''I don't know'' while noting of free agency ''it's never what you think.''


''He's a guy who's been, like I said, what more can we ask for from him?'' Myers said. ''He's been everything to us, the guy has been everything that we could have ever dreamed. He's been an awesome member of this organization. There's so much he does in the community that probably doesn't get as many headlines, things he's done in D.C., his foundation, how he kind of lives his life. We're lucky to have been around him. Hopefully we'll keep doing that.''


All season, the Warriors were determined to cherish this ride together knowing the roster could look far different once training camp rolls around in September - along with the venue as Golden State moves across the bay to the new Chase Center in San Francisco. Golden State's players also insist they have never taken for granted the special five-year run featuring three championships and five consecutive Finals berths.


''In the history of this NBA you could highlight every team that was supposed to win or had the best team and all the different story lines. And 82 games and a full playoff run, a lot can happen,'' Stephen Curry said. ''It's just a matter of how much you fight and just leave it all out there on the floor. I think the way that we have talked and described this journey and whatnot, I don't think there's ever been a situation where we have taken anything for granted. And that's something I can look back and just hold.


''We all can hold our head high that we gave it everything we got. ... Two guys who go down and the game's kind of taken away from them in those moments, it's not a good feeling at all. And it's kind of a helpless feeling in terms of two freak plays that send these guys back to the locker room. So it's tough, but it's part of basketball, it's part of the game. Again, I just hope their recoveries are strong and they come back better than they were before.''


Thompson's knee surgery has not yet been set. Kerr doesn't expect to ever see two injuries this severe in consecutive Finals games again.


He was still stunned a day later, and Myers, too. Now the GM must immediately turn his focus toward next week's draft and then free agency. Both expressed their tremendous pride in how the Warriors fought despite being denied a three-peat.


''You're talking about two career-altering injuries to two of your best players in back-to-back Finals games. Unheard of. It will probably never happen again,'' Kerr said. ''We're in new territory now and you just have to keep moving forward.''
 

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Raptors' title sees Canada set records
June 14, 2019
By The Associated Press



LAS VEGAS (AP) The final numbers are in, and the NBA Finals were a smashing success for Canada all the way around.


The NBA said Friday that 56% percent of the Canadian population watched at least some part of the NBA Finals, with an average viewership of about 8 million for the Toronto Raptors' title-winning victory over the Golden State Warriors in Game 6.


The league also said the total combined U.S. and Canadian audience for the finals was up 11 percent over the combined viewership of the 2018 title series between Golden State and Cleveland.


Thursday's game was the most-watched NBA game in Canadian television history, a record that was toppled several times during this postseason because of the Raptors' popularity. Viewership for each of the six finals games rank among the 10 most-watched television programs in Canada so far this year.


''Everybody who supported us during the season, all the fans in Toronto, everyone in Canada - this is for you,'' Raptors forward Serge Ibaka said after Toronto's first NBA championship. ''This is for Canada, baby. You should be proud.''


And not only were Canadians watching, but they were buying.


The NBA said that online sales through the league's official portals smashed records for the day following the end of a championship series, up more than 80 percent from the previous mark (set when Cleveland beat Golden State in 2016) and were more than 100 percent over sales on the day following the Warriors' sweep of the Cavaliers last season.


The Raptors are planning a parade in Toronto on Monday, one that will likely take more than two hours.


''This means so much to our city and to many in Canada, and we are looking forward to showing everyone the Larry O'Brien Trophy on Monday,'' Raptors president Masai Ujiri said. ''Bringing the NBA championship to Toronto is the realization of a goal for our team and for our players, and we are thrilled to be able to celebrate together with our fans.''


The newly crowned NBA champions, who won the title in Oakland, California on Thursday night, are expected back in Toronto on Saturday. They were planning to spend Friday night celebrating in Las Vegas.
 

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Draft, free agency...and lots of questions
June 14, 2019
By The Associated Press



OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) NBA Commissioner Adam Silver is expected to open next week's draft by announcing that Zion Williamson is the No. 1 overall selection headed to New Orleans. And four months after that, Silver will be in Toronto on opening night to help the Raptors hand out championship rings and watch them raise a banner.


There are few other certainties in the NBA right now.


The league has a new champion and a new landscape. Toronto has climbed to the mountaintop, defeating a Golden State team that lost All-Stars Kevin Durant and Klay Thompson to major injuries toward the end of the NBA Finals. For the first time in a half-decade, the Warriors won't be the overwhelming favorites to win it all next season. They might not even be favored to win the Western Conference.


''I think true champions like we are, we should be able to adapt and keep this same kind of DNA no matter what our roster looks like next year,'' Warriors guard Stephen Curry said. ''And have high hopes about being back on this stage, whether it looks the same or not.''


It won't look the same. Not much will next season.


The champion Raptors don't know if they'll be keeping NBA Finals MVP Kawhi Leonard, who becomes a free agent in a couple weeks and one that every team with lots of spending power will want. Danny Green, who went to Toronto in the deal that brought Leonard, is a free agent. Marc Gasol, a huge midseason pickup, is a free agent. There are even reports that Raptors President Masai Ujiri may consider leaving.


''I was focused on the now, and I wanted to make history here and that's all I did,'' Leonard said. ''I'm still playing basketball no matter what jersey I have on.''


Durant won't be playing on opening night next season, and almost certainly not on any night next season because of his torn Achilles - though he'll still be highly coveted if he hits the free-agent market as expected. Thompson will miss, at minimum, most of the regular season with his torn ACL. The Warriors may lose DeMarcus Cousins in free agency and Shaun Livingston to retirement.


The team going to San Francisco might look much different than the one that ended this season in Oakland.


Longtime NBA stars like Dwyane Wade, Dirk Nowitzki and Tony Parker will be gone, enjoying retirements. Vince Carter plans to be back for a 22nd and final season. Leonard, LeBron James and Andre Iguodala - if he returns, which is expected - may be the only three players on the court to start the season with an NBA Finals MVP trophy in their possession.


There will be new coaches taking over in Sacramento, Phoenix, Cleveland, Memphis and with the Los Angeles Lakers. The makeups of the front-office teams in Washington and New Orleans will be different.


And then there's all the player movement, which could be seismic.


Anthony Davis may be traded by the Pelicans, as the soap opera there continues. Kyrie Irving, who told Boston fans before the season that he'd re-sign with the Celtics, is going to be a free agent. Durant might change teams. Thompson may as well, though that seems unlikely. Kemba Walker is dropping every hint that he wants to stay in Charlotte.


''I don't know if I'll sign back with them,'' said Walker, who is eligible for a supermax contract worth $221 million over five years. ''I'm not sure. But they are my first priority. ... We'll see when the time comes.''


There's going to be a lot of ''we'll see'' over the next few months.


Milwaukee had the NBA's best regular-season record at 60-22 and will likely enter next season with the MVP - if Giannis Antetokounmpo walks away with that trophy on June 24. He's vowing to improve and that might make the Bucks, who have some free-agent decisions to ponder, better as well.


''Giannis is going to get better,'' Bucks coach Mike Budenholzer said. ''To be excited about his future at 24 ... the thing that makes Giannis unique and exciting is in our minds, we feel like he's going to get a lot better. Giannis, we feel, has got a lot of room to grow.''


Philadelphia gave Toronto all it wanted in a seven-game series, and seeing the Raptors win the title might convince the 76ers that they're right there as far as being a championship-ready club. In L.A., James missed the finals for the first time since 2010 and will surely be motivated for better things - if the Lakers can escape the dysfunctional rut that they've been in for the past few months. Houston may sense opportunity with Golden State ailing. Oklahoma City has two elite players in Russell Westbrook and Paul George, both coming off surgeries. Perhaps it's time for a team like Denver or Portland to take another big step forward.


At this time last year, few thought the Raptors would win the 2019 championship.


Everyone should stay tuned to see who wins in 2020 - there are no guarantees.


''I know how hard it's been, how hard it is to get here,'' Raptors guard Kyle Lowry said, a few minutes after he became a champion for the first time. ''And it takes some luck.''
 

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