Friday 4/22/16 service plays chatter/comps/requests & other stuff...

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Post your request, Comments or concerns here.
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German Bundesliga TODAY 19:30
HamburgvW Bremen
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KEY STAT: Hamburg have won just two of their last nine home matches

EXPERT VERDICT: Hamburg lost 3-0 away to an under-strength Borussia Dortmund and they could be drawn into the thick of the relegation scrap by a defeat at home to third-bottom Werder Bremen. Four defeats in five have seen Hamburg relinquish a secure mid-table position and they may struggle against Bremen, who won 3-2 at home to Wolfsburg last time out.

RECOMMENDATION: Werder Bremen
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Spanish La Liga TODAY 20:00
Las PalmasvEspanyol
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KEY STAT: Espanyol have won one of their last 15 away fixtures

EXPERT VERDICT: Las Palmas look safe from relegation but show no signs of dropping their standards and can increase the tension for struggling Espanyol in Gran Canaria. A four-match winless sequence leaves Espanyol eight points outside the drop zone and they could still be at risk after facing a decent Las Palmas side, who have collected 19 points from their last nine matches.

RECOMMENDATION: Las Palmas
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Premier League Sa 23Apr 12:45
Man CityvStoke
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KEY STAT: Man City have kept only five home Premier League clean sheets this season

EXPERT VERDICT: Before steaming into Manchester City to win this game remember they host Real Madrid in the Champions League just three days later, so team news will be important. Stoke can usually be relied upon to find the net, and they look decent value to get on the scoreboard.

RECOMMENDATION: Man City to win 2-1
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REFEREE: Andre Marriner STADIUM:

 

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Premier League Sa 23Apr 15:00
BournemouthvChelsea
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KEY STAT: Chelsea have kept one clean sheet in their last nine games

EXPERT VERDICT: Chelsea have started to look listless and have registered only one victory in their last five league fixtures. Bournemouth shocked the Blues in early December, winning 1-0 at Stamford Bridge, so it makes sense to expect the Cherries to produce another spirited display here.

RECOMMENDATION: Draw
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REFEREE: Roger East STADIUM:

 

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Premier League Sa 23Apr 15:00
LiverpoolvNewcastle
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KEY STAT: Newcastle have lost a Premier League-high 14 away games

EXPERT VERDICT: Rafa Benitez’s Anfield return should be entertaining with Newcastle needing to stay positive. Liverpool’s Europa League distractions haven’t stopped them focusing on Premier League matters and there are usually goals at both ends whenever they play so expect a high-scoring shootout.

RECOMMENDATION: Both teams to score
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REFEREE: Martin Atkinson STADIUM:

 

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Premier League Sa 23Apr 15:00
Aston VillavSouthampton
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KEY STAT: Southampton have scored 14 goals in their last 17 away league matches

EXPERT VERDICT: Aston Villa’s relegation has now been confirmed but their guests looked below par last weekend, failing to overcome a much-changed Everton. The hosts have scored only one goal in their last six games and may need to stay patient to collect maximum points at Villa Park.

RECOMMENDATION: Draw-Southampton double result
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REFEREE: Mike Jones STADIUM:

 

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I have purchased Ben Burns daily. I'm not doing it today. Can someone pick up his Blue Chip total?
 
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Preview: Flyers (41-27) at Capitals (56-18)

Date: April 22, 2016 7:00 PM EDT

The Washington Capitals will of course be happy heading to the Verizon Center for their next shot at advancing to the Eastern Conference semifinals. Given the cover they needed from their own projectile-happy fans, the Philadelphia Flyers might not mind the shift in venue as they try to extend the series.

Game 5 comes Friday night with the Capitals looking to crack Michal Neuvirth the way they got to Steve Mason in the first three games, and that all started with special teams.

No promotional wristbands were distributed in the Flyers' 2-1 home win Wednesday in Game 4 after being used as part of a pregame lights show for Game 3. Fans started tossing them onto the ice in the third period as Washington turned the game into a rout, eventually winning 6-1 to take a 3-0 series lead.

It's on to a second attempt at clinching, and the Capitals know a 3-1 lead is far from safe after dropping the last three games of their conference semifinal series with the New York Rangers last season.

"Every series is about getting the four. We need to get the four," coach Barry Trotz said. "The sooner you get the four, it gives you a couple opportunities to rest guys, heal guys (and get) a little mental break from the pressures of playoff hockey and a little more time to prepare."

The Capitals' special teams dictated the series through three games, going 8 of 17 on the power play before failing in two attempts Wednesday. They'd also gone 13 for 13 on the penalty kill before Shayne Gostisbehere's first-period goal gave the Flyers a 1-0 lead for a second straight game.

The 13-4 scoring advantage for the Capitals might not look so bad if the Flyers could stay out of the box. The series is at 5-3 in even-strength hockey.

"That was one of the reasons that we won the game," Neuvirth told the league's official website. "That was our goal. And we didn't take any stupid penalties. Just a great team effort for 60 minutes. That's the way we've got to play."

Another reason was Neuvirth, who made 31 saves after nine days off. He hadn't made a postseason start since 2011 with Washington, then faced the Capitals for 11 minutes of relief work with the New York Islanders last year. Overall, he's posted a 2.29 goals-against average and .918 save percentage on a 6-1-0 span, while Mason has 3.45 and .873 marks on a 1-5-1 slump.

Neuvirth, who spent five-plus seasons with the Capitals, is 2-0-0 with a 1.83 GAA and .941 save percentage in three games against his inceptive club.

Despite the win, Philadelphia is yet to really solve Braden Holtby, who has a .966 save percentage in the series. Dating to last year, he's 9-8 with a 1.55 GAA in the postseason.

Despite the lack of scoring, Philadelphia isn't dwelling on games past or those beyond Friday.

"We're not too worried about digging out a 3-0 hole right now," coach Dave Hakstol told the team's official website. "We came here (Wednesday) to win a hockey game. Now we've got to go on the road and to their building, we got to win a hockey game. It's pretty simple. We get one more and then we'll worry about the next one.

"Our team's had a real short-term memory and a real kind of mixed-up mentality all year long. I think that's part of the reason why our group has showed the resiliency that it has."

It might be that none of that matters if Alex Ovechkin gets back on the scoresheet. He has 10 goals in 10 games since last going multiple contests without scoring, and the Capitals are 35-5-2 this season when Ovechkin scores.
 
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Preview: Islanders (45-27) at Panthers (47-26)

Date: April 22, 2016 8:00 PM EDT

Florida remained steady no matter the pressure of a game situation during the regular season. Close games were common, but it relied more on puck possession than forceful attacks.

That's changed significantly during the playoffs, with the Panthers pressing more than any other team to get the puck on net. The New York Islanders have done enough to withstand that pressure, though, to have the series deadlocked heading into Friday night's Game 5 in Sunrise.

Florida's SAT Close rating (total of blocked and unblocked shots in one-goal or overtime situations at five-on-five) was a minus-99 in the regular season, ranking 18th in the league. It protected early leads plenty - 31 times it led after the first period, among the most in the NHL - by possessing the puck as much as possible rather than pressing to add more goals.

The Panthers have taken it to the Islanders in this tight series, though. Their SAT Close rating is a playoff-leading plus-46, and that aggressiveness paid off Wednesday as Alex Petrovic scored the lone goal of the third to give them a 2-1 victory.

"The teams are evenly matched, and it shows on the scoreboard," coach Gerard Gallant said. "I like the way the four games have gone for our club. I think we're getting a lot of scoring chances. Some of our key guys haven't put the puck in the net, but some other guys have. I think we have more to give."

The Islanders haven't deviated from their regular-season form of absorbing the attack in tight games and trying to pounce on mistakes. They ranked 20th in the league with a minus-160 SAT Close rating and are last in the postseason.

New York couldn't get one through, though, after John Tavares' power-play goal in the second tied the score. Both of its victories in this series have come by one goal - 5-4 in Game 1 despite being outshout 46-26 and 4-3 in overtime of Game 3 with the shots even.

Coach Jack Capuano's strategy has worked enough to head back to Florida tied, but he knows he needs more players to step up. The top line of Tavares, Kyle Okposo and Frans Nielsen has combined for six of the Islanders' 11 goals.

'You are not going to win many games when you score one goal and the same guys score,' Capuano said. 'We didn't create much. We got one line creating all of our offense right now. We have to find a way like we did in Florida when we had secondary scoring and (Game 3) when we had secondary scoring. If not, it's going to be tough.'

The Panthers' job now is to shut down that line just as it has the other three. Roberto Luongo made 26 saves in Game 4 and helped kill a 5-on-3 disadvantage late in the second period to preserve the tie heading into the third.

'What we talked about was making it real tough to score goals against us,' Gallant said. 'Don't give up second chances, don't give the Tavares line second and third chances. I wanted to make sure our guys played aggressive.'

Thomas Greiss faced fewer than 30 shots on net for the first time in Game 4 and should expect another barrage from the Panthers on their home ice. Florida is trying to get a leg up while seeking its first postseason series win since 1996, while the Islanders are hoping to end a drought that extends back to 1993.

"The games are so meaningful and certainly it was tight (Wednesday)," Tavares said. "I think that's only going to develop as the series goes on. There's less room for error for both teams."
 
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Preview: Wild (38-33) at Stars (50-23)

Date: April 22, 2016 9:30 PM EDT

The Dallas Stars bounced back from a loss behind a resurgent power play, leaving the top-seeded team in the Western Conference poised to advance to the next round of the playoffs.

Dallas can do so by winning its ninth in a row at home Friday night when it takes on the Minnesota Wild in Game 5.

Jason Spezza scored the go-ahead goal with his skate and the Stars converted on both of their power plays to defeat the Wild 3-2 on Wednesday. Fourth in the NHL in power-play percentage at 22.1 this season, Dallas had gone 1 for 13 in the first three games.

It also killed off all three Wild power plays Wednesday after Minnesota scored once each time with the man advantage in Games 2 and 3.

"We wanted to really focus on that special teams battle," forward Patrick Eaves told the team's official website. "I think going forward we've got to focus on winning that every night."

Eaves scored on a man advantage for his second goal of the series to tie it at 2 in the second period.

The Stars' strategy of rotating goaltenders also appeared to pay off in the final period. Antti Niemi, who assumed the net after Kari Lehtonen started the first three games, stopped all 14 shots in the last 20 minutes and finished with 28 saves.

'That's a luxury that we've had all year. You're starting to see the benefits of having fresh goalies all the time,' Spezza said.

Another luxury is the Stars' dominance on home ice. They posted the best home record in the West at 28-11-2 during the regular season and have given up eight goals in their last seven overall at the American Airlines Center.

Dallas allowed one goal in taking the first two meetings of this series at home.

'I liked our game. Hey, you know what? We've just got to go win a game in their building. That's the bottom line,' Wild coach John Torchetti said.

Minnesota scored five goals in its Game 3 victory but has totaled three in the other games. The Wild's Jason Pominville opened the scoring Wednesday, giving him a series-high three goals, and the club's third line of Pominville, Erik Haula and Nino Niederreiter have powered Minnesota offensively with 10 points.

That unit was shut out as Minnesota was outscored in the two games at Dallas, however.

"I'm not worried about us (at the American Airlines Center)," Torchetti told the team's website. "I'm looking forward to it. I'm looking forward to seeing who is going to step up."

Someone will need to with the Stars eager to close it out in and advance beyond the first round for the first time since 2008.

"This was a big game for us," Spezza said Wednesday. "We've been good in our building. We just have to get some rest here tonight, have a travel day tomorrow and then make sure we're ready to go. We're excited to get home again."

Niemi is likely to be in net again Friday after improving to 11-4-2 with a 1.94 goals-against average against Minnesota in his career. He's gone 4-1-0 with a 1.78 GAA in his last five starts overall.

The Wild could use an offensive boost from Thomas Vanek, but the forward is still day to day with an upper-body injury and sounds unlikely to play Friday. He has eight goals and 11 assists in 18 career games against Dallas.

'I really ramped it up the last few days here, and I feel good, but again, I just need time, and there's not a whole lot of it right now. I'll just keep pushing it and see where it goes,' said Vanek, who's missed seven straight contests.

Dallas will again be without All-Star center Tyler Seguin for this game. He played Game 2 on Saturday after missing a month because of a slight cut on his left Achilles tendon, but he missed Games 3 and 4.
 
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Preview: Sharks (46-30) at Kings (48-28)

Date: April 22, 2016 10:30 PM EDT

The San Jose Sharks have the Los Angeles Kings just where they want them - up 3-1 and headed back to Staples Center. Although an even more commanding lead didn't work out so well two seasons ago.

Nevertheless, a rare home win in the series has the Sharks a game away from advancing to the Western Conference semifinals Friday night, while the Kings need to fend off the best road team the NHL has seen in a decade to stay alive.

Wednesday's 3-2 win was the second by a home team in nine meetings this season, and both have been by San Jose. The Sharks have taken six of those games, including all four in Los Angeles after winning twice in their previous 14 visits.

San Jose has won its last five away games and is 10-1-1 over the last two months to get to 30-10-3 for the season. It's one victory from becoming the first team to top 30 road wins in 44 or fewer combined regular-season and playoff games since Detroit in 2005-06.

No team has bettered the Sharks' 28 regular-season road wins since that Red Wings team.

But San Jose won the first three games of the teams' 2014 first-round series before the Kings stormed back and went on to their second Stanley Cup title in three seasons.

That response when seemingly down and out was hinted at in Game 4 with the Kings nearly completing a comeback from three goals down. All four games have been decided by a goal.

"They don't quit," Sharks forward Logan Couture said. "We respect that about them. No matter the score, they're going to continue to push. That has something to do with their coaching staff all the way down to the last player on their team. ... They've won championships for a reason."

The Sharks changed their home fortunes by going 3 for 4 on the power play, and that's been a big part of the success over an 8-3-0 span dating to a 5-2 win over the Kings on March 28. San Jose has gone 12 of 44 (27.3 percent) with the advantage in that time and is also 6 for 21 (28.6) in Los Angeles this season.

Los Angeles was 0 for 2 on Wednesday and is 3 for 23 in a 3-5-1 span.

"That's the difference in the game, obviously," Kings forward Dwight King said. "The three goals, and they had a couple more looks. Things we talked about after, but things we've got to be better at and tighten up.

"Obviously that group's been together probably for five or six years so they're familiar with each other, but overall we just need to refocus as a PK and bear down on our clears."

One of those guys is Joe Pavelski, who scored his fourth goal of the series and has six in his last six overall. Brett Burns' goal preceded that, and both have five points in the series.

Pavelski has eight goals and seven assists in the season series, while the defenseman Burns has eight goals and six assists in his last 11 against the Kings.

That's taken its toll on Jonathan Quick, who's 1-6-0 with a 3.31 goals-against average in the season series.

Martin Jones, Quick's former backup, is having no such troubles. The first-year starter has gone 4-1-0 with a 1.58 GAA dating to the regular-season finale. He's been in goal for all nine meetings this season, winning in his former building four times with a 2.00 mark.
 
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NHL Hockey Odds and Picks: Scouting the Week Ahead
by Alan Matthews

In my opinion, the big winner of the first week of the Stanley Cup playoffs was the Western Conference top-seeded Dallas Stars. The big loser? The greater Los Angeles area. I didn't give the Stars a great chance of winning the West because while it's a fabulous offensive team, Dallas wasn't great on defense during the regular season. But with has happened to the two L.A. teams thus far, now I'm rethinking that.

The Stars took a 2-0 series lead against Minnesota into Monday's game in Minneapolis. Kari Lehtonen has been great in goal, although it's against a Wild team missing two of its best forwards due to injury and that's easily the worst club in the postseason. My only worry about Dallas now is the status of star forward Tyler Seguin. He missed the final 10 games of the regular season and first of these playoffs with an Achilles injury. He did play 15:40 in Game 2 but apparently tweaked that injury. NHL teams are notoriously vague about these types of things. Seguin was to miss Game 3 and all Coach Lindy Ruff would say is that what Seguin is dealing with is "not his injury, but it is kind of related."

I don't think the Stars can win the Cup without Seguin at 100 percent, so I'd just sit him the rest of the Wild series to heal up for the conference semifinals. I do think they can win the West without him because now it looks as if Dallas won't have to deal with either the Los Angeles Kings, the Western Conference betting favorites entering the playoffs, or Pacific Division champion Anaheim Ducks in the conference finals.

I'm absolutely shocked that Los Angeles entered Monday's Game 3 of their series at San Jose down 2-0. True, the Sharks led the NHL in road wins during the season and set a franchise record, but I never saw them winning both games in L.A. It was a bad week in L.A. hockey as the Ducks also dropped their first two at home against Nashville, each by the same 3-2 score. John Gibson was in net for both of those, but I think you will see Coach Bruce Boudreau go with Frederik Andersen, who has much more playoff experience, in Game 3 on Tuesday. The Ducks' big guns, Corey Perry, Ryan Getzlaf and Ryan Kesler, have been held to three total points. Perry is minus-three for the series. The Ducks are also taking too many penalties. They have now lost four straight playoff games, three at home, since leading the Blackhawks 3-2 through five games of last season's Western Conference Finals.

Anaheim is a +100 underdog for Tuesday's game in Nashville, which has a 2-0 playoff series lead for the first time in franchise history. The new odds to win the West are: Stars at +250, Blues (+450), Blackhawks (+500), Sharks (+500), Predators (+600), Ducks (+950), Kings (+1000) and the no-chance Wild at +4000.

Chicago faces a near must-win home game on Tuesday against St. Louis, with the Hawks as -155 favorites. They totally let one get away in Sunday's Game 2, leading 2-1 entering the third but falling 3-2. The Blackhawks had been 70-0-4 since the start of last season when they had the lead at the beginning of the third. The Blackhawks had trouble scoring in 5-on-5 play during the regular season, ranking in the bottom third of the NHL, and that has carried over with just one goal at even strength. The Blues finished second in 5-on-5 goals allowed this season and they have outpaced the Hawks in high-danger scoring chances during 5-on-5 play 35-19. I wouldn't bail on Chicago yet as the Hawks typically play inconsistently early in series and then flip the switch.

My original Western Conference picks to advance were Dallas, Chicago, Los Angeles and Anaheim. Not looking great there at the moment.

In the Eastern Conference, Washington is now a huge -105 favorite to reach the Stanley Cup Finals. The Capitals looked to take a commanding 3-0 lead over the Flyers in Philly on Monday night. The Penguins are next at +500 to win the East, followed by the Lightning (+750), Rangers (+750), Islanders (+900), Panthers (+1100), Flyers (+3500) and Red Wings (+3500). I'm sticking with my first-round selections: Washington, the two New York teams and Detroit.

Easily the most interesting series in the East has been Pittsburgh and the New York Rangers, especially in net. Blueshirts star Henrik Lundqvist left Game 1 with an eye injury and New York lost. He was a game-time call for Game 2 on Saturday but was in net and led a 4-2 victory to even the series at one. The Penguins have played both games with third-stringer Jeff Zatkoff in net and he's expected to be in there against Tuesday with Marc-Andre Fleury and Matt Murray still recovering from injuries. It was because of Zatkoff that I liked New York in this series. The Penguins did welcome back star forward Evgeni Malkin in Game 2; he had been out since March 11 and was supposed to be out at least six weeks. Malkin played nearly 20 minutes Saturday and had an assist. The Rangers are actually +101 underdogs for Tuesday. On the series line, the Pens are -165 and Rangers +145. Blueshirts captain Ryan McDonagh hasn't played yet in the series and is doubtful for Tuesday. He did practice Monday for the first time since being hurt two weeks ago.
 
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Friday's NBA playoffs betting preview and odds

Friday night in the NBA features three matchups where teams are coming home with 2-0 series deficits. The Detroit Pistons, Boston Celtics, and Memphis Grizzlies will all be trying to avoid going down 3-0.


Cleveland Cavaliers at Detroit Pistons (+4.5, 200.5)

Cavaliers lead series 2-0

The Cleveland Cavaliers put on a spectacular shooting exhibition in Game 2 and attempt to take a 3-0 lead in the first-round series when they visit the Detroit Pistons on Friday. Cleveland drained 20 3-pointers in Wednesday's 107-90 victory over the Pistons to tie the NBA playoff record shared by the Seattle SuperSonics (1996), Dallas Mavericks (2011) and Golden State Warriors (2015).

The top-seeded Cavaliers received seven 3-pointers by shooting guard J.R. Smith and four from point guard Kyrie Irving in the 20-of-38 shooting effort. "I don't care if you're left by yourself, 20 of 38 is pretty good shooting," Pistons coach Stan Van Gundy told reporters of the Cleveland shooting. Eighth-seeded Detroit has its back against the wall after the two road losses and faces a must-win situation in Game 3. The Pistons let a fourth-quarter lead get away in Game 1 and saw its hopes in Game 2 fade away with a 15-point third quarter.

TV: 7 p.m. ET, FSN Ohio (Cleveland), FSN Detroit

LINE HISTORY: Cleveland opened as 4-point road favorites and after only a few hours of betting action the books moved the line up to 4.5. The total opened at 200.5 and hasn't moved since its release. View complete line history here.

ABOUT THE CAVALIERS (59-25, 38-43-3 ATS, 42-42 O/U): Smith scored 21 points in Game 2 after struggling to nine points on 3-of-9 shooting in the opener. Consistent shooting from Smith would complement the trio of small forward LeBron James, power forward Kevin Love and point guard Kyrie Irving. "We have shooters and they are designated snipers and I'm not one of them," James told reporters. "I'm more like a tank or something like that."

ABOUT THE PISTONS (44-40, 43-39-2 ATS, 43-41 O/U): Detroit is playing a physical series with no interest in backing down and rookie forward Stanley Johnson mixed it up with James during Game 2. "Their whole team talks," Johnson told reporters. "All those guys on the bench, they're like cheerleaders. Only seven, eight guys are playing, but they're all talking. They might as well be in the stands." Starting forward Tobias Harris is struggling and averaging 11 points on 7-of-22 shooting in the series while forward Marcus Morris had just 11 points on 2-of-10 shooting in Game 2 after scoring 20 points in the series opener.

TRENDS:

* Cavaliers are 2-8-1 ATS in their last 11 vs. NBA Central.
* Pistons are 1-5 ATS in their last 6 Conference Quarterfinals games.
* Over is 4-0 in Cavaliers last 4 road games vs. a team with a home winning % of greater than .600.
* Over is 8-2 in Pistons last 10 Friday games.
* Road team is 4-1 ATS in the last 5 meetings.


Atlanta Hawks at Boston Celtics (-3, 200.5)

Hawks lead series 2-0

If the Boston Celtics hope to stay in their first-round series for more than two more games, they are going to need to solve the Atlanta Hawks’ stifling defense. The Hawks will try to build a commanding 3-0 lead in the best-of-seven series behind that defense when they visit Boston on Friday.

The Celtics shot 23 percent from the field in the first half of Game 1 before overcoming a 19-point deficit and falling just short 102-101. Atlanta put together the same early effort defensively in Game 2 and this time did not let up, jumping out to a 24-3 lead and stifling Boston the rest of the way in an 89-72 triumph. “I think that (Game 2) had a different feel than even the other night,” Celtics coach Brad Stevens told reporters. “The other night it was one of those nights where we didn’t shoot it (well at first), like we had done some really good things and then once we started making shots we felt really good about our chances. Here, it never felt like we were at their level.” Boston is also dealing with a series of injuries and does not expect Avery Bradley (hamstring) back for Game 3 while Kelly Olynyk (shoulder) is questionable.

TV: 8 p.m. ET, ESPN2, FSN Southeast (Atlanta), CSN New England (Boston)

LINE HISTORY: The Celtics opened as three-point favorites at home and the total opened at 200.5 - neither line has moved since hitting the betting board. View complete line history here.

ABOUT THE HAWKS (50-34, 43-40-1 ATS, 38-46 O/U): Atlanta recorded a franchise playoff-record 15 blocked shots in Game 2 and set an NBA playoff record by limiting the Celtics to seven first-quarter points. The Hawks weren’t as strong offensively – shooting 39 percent from the floor – but guard Kyle Korver bounced back from a 1-of-10 performance (0-of-7 from 3-point range) with 17 points in Game 2 on 6-of-9 shooting (5-of-7 from beyond the arc). Al Horford matched Korver with 17 points to go along with five blocks in Game 2 and is averaging 20.5 points in the series while helping Korver out beyond the arc, knocking down 4-of-6.

ABOUT THE CELTICS (48-36, 43-40-1 ATS, 39-45 O/U): Boston went 3-of-23 in that disastrous first quarter and was not much better the rest of the way. The absence of Bradley forced Marcus Smart into the starting lineup, and he went 1-of-11 from the floor while All-Star Isaiah Thomas regularly faced a swarm of defenders and seemed to have his shot swatted away every time he went into the paint. "There’s always two guys on me, at least, when I don’t have the ball,” Thomas told reporters. “They’re looking in my eyes, they’re face-guarding me. The best players figure it out. That’s just a sign of respect from (the Hawks), and I just gotta figure it out.”

TRENDS:

* Hawks are 0-4 ATS in their last 4 road games vs. a team with a winning home record.
* Celtics are 1-8 ATS in their last 9 games playing on 2 days rest.
* Under is 8-2 in Hawks last 10 Conference Quarterfinals games.
* Under is 4-1 in Celtics last 5 games playing on 2 days rest.
* Hawks are 4-1 ATS in the last 5 meetings.


San Antonio Spurs at Memphis Grizzlies (+6, 217.5)

Spurs lead series 2-0

The San Antonio Spurs mauled Memphis in each of the first two games and look to take a 3-0 lead in the first-round series when they visit the Grizzlies on Friday. Second-seeded San Antonio won the first two games by an average of 29 points and limited injury ravaged Memphis to an average of 71 points.

The Spurs were expected to roll over the seventh-seeded Grizzlies but All-Star small forward Kawhi Leonard made it clear the series momentum can still change hands. "Yeah, but that's the thing you've got to fight," Leonard told reporters. "We've still got to execute. We turned over the ball a lot (17 in Game 2). They're physical, and they have great hands. But this is still an opportunity for us to improve. They're still an NBA team." Memphis hasn't always resembled an NBA team since season-ending injuries to center Marc Gasol (foot) and point guard Mike Conley (Achilles) and small forward Matt Barnes isn't putting a lot of stock into getting the next two games at home. "It doesn't matter where we play, we've just got to play better," Barnes told reporters. "We can play (in San Antonio), we can play at the YMCA, we can play in Memphis; it doesn't matter where we play at if we play the way we've been playing. The court doesn't matter. It's on the players - we've got to do a better job executing."

TV: 9:30 p.m. ET, ESPN, FSN Southwest (San Antonio), FSN Southeast (Memphis)

LINE HISTORY: The Spurs opened as 10.5-point road favorites and the public dictated that wasn't enough - the books adjusted their line to San Antonio -11.5 fairly quickly. The total opened at 181 and was bumped up slightly to 181.5. View complete line history here.

ABOUT THE SPURS (69-15, 46-38 ATS, 35-47-2 O/U): Fast starts on the defensive end have fueled the two blowout victories as San Antonio held Memphis to 13 points in the first quarter of the opener and just 11 in Game 2. All-Star power forward LaMarcus Aldridge is playing with a dislocated right pinky finger and has been a big factor in why Memphis power forward Zach Randolph has been unable to get on track. "I just think LaMarcus played excellent defense tonight," Popovich told reporters. "We didn't double-team him or anything like that. If he got in the lane, we tried to make a play I guess, but mostly L.A. gets the credit for doing a fine job on a great player."

ABOUT THE GRIZZLIES (42-42, 42-41-1 ATS, 45-37-2 O/U): Randolph is just 8-of-30 shooting while averaging 8.5 points in the series and Barnes is averaging only 5.5 points on 4-of-18 shooting. Barnes wasn't pleased to play only 30 minutes in the Game 2 loss and publicly expressed his frustration. "I don't want to play 20 minutes getting beat so bad," Barnes told reporters. "I want to play 40-45 minutes and swing every second we can. I don't want to save nothing, nothing should be in the tank. I'm not even tired right now, it's frustrating."

TRENDS:

* Spurs are 1-5 ATS in their last 6 games following a straight up win of more than 10 points.
* Grizzlies are 0-6 ATS in their last 6 home games following a road trip of 7 or more days.
* Under is 12-1 in Spurs last 13 road games vs. a team with a winning home record.
* Under is 6-1 in Grizzlies last 7 games vs. a team with a winning % above .600.
* Favorite is 7-1 ATS in the last 8 meetings.
* Warriors are 5-1 ATS in the last 6 meetings in Houston.
 
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Preview: Cavaliers (57-25) at Pistons (44-38)

Date: April 22, 2016 7:00 PM EDT

There have been quite a few armchair psychologists interested in dissecting every seemingly cryptic glance, glare or tweet LeBron James has offered up in Cleveland this season.

Leave it to a 19-year-old to settle on a diagnosis.

Stanley Johnson seems to think he's in the four-time MVP's head, but there's little evidence the Detroit Pistons rookie is doing anything but hallucinating as James' Cavaliers get ready for this series to shift to The Palace on Friday night.

Reading James' body language and social media habits has been a hot topic all season, but Cleveland has looked much more like a team capable of a second straight NBA Finals trip than a product of dysfunction through two playoff games.

The Pistons have outscored the Cavaliers by three in the first half, but Cleveland's 105-80 edge after the break has it up 2-0 after Wednesday's 107-90 victory. From down two midway through the third quarter to up 14 at the conclusion - a span which included five of their NBA playoff record-tying 20 3-pointers - the Cavs took control as James-led teams improved to 20-0 in their first two playoff home games since 2007.

"We did what we're supposed to do," coach Tyronn Lue said. "We took care of home court. ... Now we have to go to Detroit. We know it's going to be a hostile environment, and we have to play well."

Detroit fans surely will be trying to affect James' psyche in the team's first home playoff game since 2009, but Johnson thinks he's already done it. Johnson has 18 points in 38 minutes off the bench in the series, yet his most indelible mark has come in postgame interview sessions.

"I'm definitely in his head," Johnson said. "That's for sure."

The evidence says otherwise. Johnson held James to one field goal in three attempts in Game 1, but James torched Johnson by going 6 of 6 on Wednesday and scoring 13 of his 27 points when they were matched up.

James also delivered an intentional-looking bump to the rookie as the two passed each other during a timeout. Johnson called it a "cheap-ass shot," and he wasn't done talking about the future Hall of Famer.

'He jabbers, he moves his mouth some time. Their whole team talks,' Johnson said. 'All those guys on the bench, they're like cheerleaders. Only 7-8 guys are playing, but they're all talking. They might as well be in the stands.'

James was more concerned with a Marcus Morris elbow he took in the fourth quarter, though he downplayed his on-court reaction.

'There hasn't been one dirty play in the series,' James said. 'I will make sure my guys understand that we're here to play basketball, everything else is irrelevant."

Stan Van Gundy seems to grasp that his team doesn't have much of a chance if the Cavs are knocking down 20 of 38 3s again - J.R. Smith hit seven - but the Pistons haven't exactly been sticking to Cleveland's shooters. Detroit contested 35.9 percent of opponents' jumpers this season - second in the league - but that number is down to 29.5 through two games.

"I didn't think our closeouts were good and I didn't think we did a very good job identifying shooters in transition," Van Gundy said. "So there's no question that we could have done a better job, but they shot the ball very, very well."

That's a statement that almost never applies to Andre Drummond at the free-throw line, and Detroit's center went 4 of 16 from the stripe Wednesday as the Cavs intentionally sent him there multiple times. Van Gundy has removed Drummond at times because of it, but considering the Pistons are allowing 131.2 points per 100 possessions with him off the floor, it's risky either way.

"Honestly, I just think it's tough (to defend them)," Drummond said. "They can beat you inside and out. You've just got to do a good job of making it tough for them â?? trying to close out, making them run off the three and just keeping them off the glass."

Kyrie Irving has averaged 27.8 points in four games against Detroit this season.
 
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Preview: Hawks (48-34) at Celtics (48-34)

Date: April 22, 2016 8:00 PM EDT

Though short-handed and facing a team that's playing record-setting defense, the Boston Celtics are determined to avoid yet another early deficit.

After posting one of the league's best home records over the past three months, the Celtics look to begin clawing back into the series at home when they try to put a dent in the Atlanta Hawks' two-game advantage Friday night.

Boston needs to break free of the disturbing trend that took place early on in the first two games. It shot 23.1 percent while falling behind by 17 at halftime Saturday before a comeback fell short in a 102-101 series-opening loss.

The Celtics then turned in the lowest-scoring first quarter in a playoff game since the NBA went to a shot clock in 1954, trailing 24-7 on Tuesday. They were 3 of 23 from the field and 0 for 6 from beyond the 3-point arc.

Boston finished the game with a 31.8 field-goal percentage - including 5 of 28 from 3-point range - in an 89-72 loss that was its seventh straight in the playoffs.

"We just have to find a way to get over that hump," forward Amir Johnson said. "I don't know what it's going to take - extra warm-ups for the guys - but the first quarter has definitely hurt us."

Of course, the Hawks have had something to do with that. They've limited the Celtics to 34.2 shooting and 25.4 from behind the arc in the first two games after recording a team playoff-record 15 blocks Tuesday.

"Five guys on the same page covering each other - just good overall team defense," forward Paul Millsap told the team's official website. "I think that's what we've been striving for all year to get to this point."

All-Star center Al Horford has been a difficult matchup for Boston at both ends of the floor, scoring 41 points and hitting four 3s while adding 17 rebounds and seven blocks.

Kyle Korver had two points on 1-of-10 shooting in Game 1, but coach Brad Stevens' worst nightmare materialized Tuesday when Korver scored 17 and went 5 of 7 from 3-point range. The Hawks are 9-3 this season when Korver has at least 15 points.

"We know that we have to be in his airspace or else we're toast," Stevens said.

Stevens' club has gone 19-3 since Jan. 13, the fourth-best mark at home in that span behind San Antonio, Golden State and Toronto. Boston averaged 27.7 points and 46 percent shooting in the first quarter of those contests.

"They're going to come out and give us their best shot, and we know that we have to be ready for that," Korver said.

The Celtics, however, will be without starting guard Avery Bradley and possibly reserve center Kelly Olynyk. Bradley, one of the team's top defenders and second-leading scorer, is out for at least the next two games due to a hamstring injury.

Olynyk is questionable because of a sore right shoulder, though starting guard Marcus Smart is expected to play despite suffering bruised ribs in Game 2. Rookies Terry Rozier and R.J. Hunter have been forced into major roles in the backcourt.

'Those guys gotta step up - including myself - and we all just have to put one good game together to give us some confidence," said leading scorer Isaiah Thomas, who had 16 points - more than six below his season average - and shot 4 of 15 on Tuesday.

Atlanta may have to overcome a key injury of its own after backup point guard Dennis Schroder suffered a left ankle injury in the closing minutes of Game 2.

Schroder has struggled in this series with eight points on 3-of-12 shooting.
 
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Preview: Spurs (67-15) at Grizzlies (42-40)

Date: April 22, 2016 9:30 PM EDT

It's a matchup of the Western Conference's top-rated defensive team in more than a decade against a once-adequate roster's skeleton, and it's been even more lopsided than everyone expected.

Game 3 shifts back to Memphis on Friday night, but it's going to take a lot more than home-court advantage for the Grizzlies to play with the San Antonio Spurs.

The second-seeded Spurs' 96.6 defensive rating during the regular season was the best in the West since 2004-05 NBA champion San Antonio (95.8), and it's only improving in the postseason.

After Tuesday's 94-68 final in San Antonio, the series' first two games have been decided by an average of 29 points. It was the seventh-seeded Grizzlies' lowest postseason output ever and came two days after a 106-74 loss went down as their largest postseason defeat.

Memphis is the first playoff team held under 75 points in consecutive games since Milwaukee scored 69 and 74 in a 2010 first-round matchup with Atlanta. The 1954 Syracuse Nationals - now of Philadelphia 76ers infamy - were the last to top that with no more than 68 points in three straight against the Minneapolis Lakers, though no team scored 90 points in that seven-game NBA Finals series that ended the pre-shot clock era.

At 35.8 percent, it's not hard to get on board with Matt Barnes' somewhat extreme analogy.

"We're coming to a gunfight with some spoons," he said. "We've got to do something to try to switch this up at home next game."

San Antonio, meanwhile, is resting its starters plenty. On Tuesday, LaMarcus Aldridge, Kawhi Leonard and Tony Parker sat out the entire fourth quarter, while Tim Duncan and Danny Green made brief appearances.

The Spurs are hitting 48.7 percent from 3-point range, their reserves are outscoring the Grizzlies' starters by an average of 50-34, and San Antonio is left nitpicking what it needs to do better.

"You've got to fight," repeat Defensive Player of the Year Kawhi Leonard said after the Spurs committed 19 turnovers, though only seven came from the starters. "We've got to still execute. (We) turned over the ball a lot today. They were physical. They've got hands, but there's still opportunity for us to improve. They're still an NBA team."

That's been debatable at times over the course of the season for an injury-ravaged roster still playing without two of its three top scorers in Marc Gasol and Mike Conley. What's left of the trio - Zach Randolph - has been limited to 8.5 points on 26.7 percent in the series.

"I just think LaMarcus played excellent defense (Tuesday)," Spurs coach Gregg Popovich said. "We didn't double-team (Randolph) or anything like that. If he got in the lane, we tried to make a play I guess, but mostly L.A. gets the credit for doing a fine job on a great player."

To be fair, Randolph has little help. Memphis' starting five of Randolph, Barnes, Chris Andersen, Jordan Farmar and Vince Carter totaled 126 starts - 53 from Randolph - in the regular season, and their collective age is 175.

That average age of 35 is surprisingly the one category in which they're topping San Antonio, which comes in at 30.8.

While the Spurs have won four straight overall with opponents shooting 38 percent and never more than 40.3, the Grizzlies have now lost six straight and 12 of 13 over the past month. Four of their meetings with San Antonio this season have come in that time as part of the Spurs' seven-game winning streak in the series, and the two in Memphis coming by a 102-85 average doesn't have the Grizzlies speaking of new life at home.

"It doesn't matter where we play, we've just got to play better," Barnes said. "We can play here, we can play at the YMCA, we can play in Memphis; it doesn't matter where we play at if we play the way we've been playing, the court doesn't matter.

"It's on the players. We've got to do a better job executing."
 
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Friday's Tip Sheet
By Brian Edwards


**Cleveland at Detroit**

-- As of late Thursday afternoon, most books had Cleveland (59-25 straight up, 38-43-1 against the spread) listed as a 4.5-point road favorite for Game 3. The total was 200.5 points, while the Pistons were +165 on the money line (risk $100 to win $165). For first-half bets, the Cavaliers are favored by two with a total of 102.5 points.

-- Tyronn Lue’s squad took a 2-0 series advantage by winning a 107-90 decision over Detroit on Thursday night at Quicken Loans Center. The Cavaliers took the cash as 10.5-point home favorites, while the 197 combined slithered ‘under’ the 202-point total. The Pistons led nearly the entire first half but trailed 55-53 at intermission, only to start the third quarter with a 7-0 run to take a five-point advantage. However, the Cavs outscored them 27-8 the rest of the stanza and coasted through the fourth quarter. LeBron James scored a game-high 27 points, but J.R. Smith’s long-range shooting was the difference in Game 2. Smith buried 7-of-11 from 3-point range in a 21-point effort. Kyrie Irvin finished with 22 points and four assists compared to one turnover. Kevin Love added 16 points and 10 rebounds.

-- Detroit (44-40 SU, 43-39-2 ATS) had all five of its starters in double figures in the Game 2 setback. Andre Drummond scored 20 points and grabbed seven rebounds, but he was limited to five points in the second half and was an atrocious 4-of-16 from the free-throw line. Reggie Jackson finished with 14 points, four rebounds and six assists compared to only one turnover. Tobias Harris contributed 13 points, eight boards and four assists, while Kentavious Caldwell-Pope had 13 points, eight boards, two assists and one rejection.

-- Detroit is 26-15 SU and 24-15 ATS at home this year, while Cleveland is 24-17 SU and 17-21 ATS on the road this year.

-- Cleveland reserve guard Mo Williams is listed as ‘questionable’ for Game 3 with a sore knee. The University of Alabama product hasn’t played since April 6. Williams averaged 8.2 points, 2.4 assists and 1.8 rebounds during 41 regular-season games.

-- Detroit has no fear of Cleveland with three outright wins in four regular-season meetings. The Pistons are 3-3 SU and 4-2 ATS against the Cavs this year after dropping Games 1 and 2 (but covering in the series opener). They won 104-99 in the first encounter at The Palace in Auburn Hills back on Nov. 17, earning the upset scalp as 4.5-point home underdogs. Cleveland won the second meeting on the road by a 114-106 score.

-- I’m not a believer in the whole ‘bulletin-board material’ thing, especially in the NCAA Tournament and the NBA Playoffs. In other words, if an individual isn’t playing at the highest intensity level one can produce, then that individual doesn’t have any business competing this time of year. Therefore, I don’t think Detroit rookie Stanley Johnson committed some sort of cardinal sin with his postgame comments Thursday night. In fact, if the stats didn’t tell a different story, I would like it – a lot! However, according to ESPNStatsInfo’s twitter account, James went 13-of-15 from the field with 28 points in the possessions in which Johnson was his primary defender in Games 1 and 2. So Johnson’s comments are far from accurate, but they are bold and audacious nonetheless. Here’s what Johnson said after Game 2 when asked about a bump delivered by James as both teams were walking to their respective benches for a timeout. “That was fugazi (a slang term for fake). He didn’t bump me. I just didn’t move out of his direction. I don’t know what ya’ll take from that. I don’t take anything from it. But a cheap-ass shot, a cheap-ass bump. I’m definitely in his head, that’s for sure. He jabbers. I wish he would just talk when the game is 0-0, not when he’s up 16. He moves his mouth sometimes. Their whole team does, kind of like their little cheerleaders on the bench.”

-- VegasInsider.com’s Chris David has these thoughts on Game 3: “Outside of the second half of Game 2, Detroit has gone toe to toe with Cleveland all year, and you have a club that can be very competitive at the Palace on Friday, especially since the locals haven’t had a playoff game in over six years. However, I can’t ignore the track record for the Pistons as home ‘dogs this season and this was one of the few teams to beat Golden State, too. Overall, the club has gone 4-7 SU and 4-6-1 ATS when catching points at home and that includes a split against Cleveland.”

-- The ‘over’ is 4-2 in the six head-to-head meetings between these Eastern Conference rivals this season, going 2-0 in the pair of contests at Detroit.

-- Totals have been an overall wash for the Cavs (42-42), but they have seen the ‘under’ go 22-19 in their road contests.

-- The ‘over’ is 43-41 overall for Detroit, 24-17 in its home games.

-- Tip-off is slated for 7:05 p.m. Eastern on ESPN.

**Atlanta at Boston**

-- Atlanta (50-34 SU, 43-40-1 ATS) took a 2-0 series advantage by winning Game 1 by an 89-72 count as a 6.5-point home favorite. The 161 combined fell points ‘under’ the 205.5-point total. Mike Budenholzer’s squad raced out to a 24-3 lead to start the game and had a 24-7 advantage at the end of the first quarter. It was the lowest-scoring quarter for the Celtics in their franchise’s storied postseason history. The Hawks easily covered the number for first-quarter and first-half wagers.

-- Kyle Korver missed all seven of his 3-point attempts in Game 1, but he drained 4-of-5 from beyond the arc in the first quarter of Game 2. He and Al Horford shared team-high scoring honors with 17 points apiece Tuesday night at Philips Arena. Horford had five rebounds, five blocked shots, two assists and one steal, while Korver had seven boards and two assists without a turnover. The Creighton product went 6-of-9 from the field and 5-of-7 from downtown. Jeff Teague added 13 points, six assists and a pair of steals, while Thabo Sefolosha had 12 points, six rebounds and two blocked shots.

-- Atlanta won easily in Game 2 despite getting meager production out of leading scorer Paul Millsap. Millsap went 1-of-12 from the field and missed all five of his launches from 3-point range. He did have seven rebounds and four blocked shots, but he committed five turnovers compared to just one assist. In the series opener, Millsap was much better with 14 points, seven boards and three blocked shots, but that was still below his season averages of 17.1 points and 9.0 rebounds per game.

-- In the Game 2 setback, Boston (48-36 SU, 43-40 ATS) made only 28-of-88 shots from the field (31.8%) and was 5-of-28 from long distance (17.9%). Isaiah Thomas scored a team-high 16 points, but he went 4-of-15 from the field and 1-of-6 from 3-point range. Thomas had more turnovers (three) than assists (two). Amir Johnson had a solid game with 14 points and eight rebounds in just 20 minutes of playing time. Evan Turner and Terry Rozier also scored in double figures with 12 and 10 points, respectively.

-- As of late Thursday afternoon, most betting shops had Boston installed as a three-point home favorite for Game 3. The total was 200.5 points, while the Hawks were +140 on the money line (risk $100 to win $140). For first-half wagers, the Celtics were listed as 1.5-point ‘chalk’ with a total of 97.

-- Sportsbook.ag has Atlanta as a -700 favorite for the updated series price, leaving the Celtics at +500 on the comeback (risk $100 to win $500).

-- Atlanta has won five in a row over Boston this year, going 4-1 ATS. The Celtics won the first game these clubs played, but it’s been all Hawks since then. The ‘over’ went 3-1 in the four regular-season meetings, but the ‘under’ has cashed in the last two encounters here in the postseason.

-- Boston will be without Avery Bradley again in Game 3. He remains unlikely to return at all in the series due to a significant hamstring strain sustained in the second half of Game 1. Bradley, who was the Celtics’ second-leading scorer (15.5 PPG) during the regular season, had scored 18 points in the series opener before sustaining the injury. Center Kelly Olynyk didn’t play in Game 2 due to a shoulder injury and is ‘questionable’ for Game 3. Olynyk averaged 10.0 points and 4.1 rebounds per game during the regular season.

-- Atlanta back-up point guard Dennis Schroder is ‘questionable’ for Game 3 after spraining his ankle in Game 2. Schroder averaged 11.0 points, 4.4 assists and 2.5 rebounds per game in 80 regular-season contests.

-- Boston owns a 28-13 SU record and a 23-17 ATS mark at home this year. Meanwhile, the Hawks are 21-20 SU and 20-20-1 ATS on the road.

-- Atlanta owns a 9-8 spread record with eight outright victories in 17 games as a road underdog this year.

-- The ‘under’ is 45-39 overall for the Celtics, 21-20 in their home games.

-- The ‘under’ is 46-38 overall for Atlanta, going 22-19 in its road assignments. The ‘under’ has cashed in four consecutive games and six of the last seven for the Hawks (regardless of the venue).

-- VI’s David is bullish on the Celtics going ‘over’ their team total. He said, “Since Mike Budenholzer took over the Hawks, the ‘under’ in home playoff games has produced some great results (11-2). Unfortunately for ‘Budz’ and Atlanta, those great defensive efforts at Philips Arena haven’t carried over to the road and that was evident last season when the club allowed an average of 103 PPG in the postseason, which helped produce a 5-3 ‘over’ record. Plus, you have to believe Boston rebounds after being held to a season-low 72 points in Game 2. Including that dreadful offensive performance, the C’s have been held under 90 points three times this season and they’ve rebounded with 98, 111 and 116 points in the following games. Even though Boston is short-handed, I’m going to buy its team total ‘over’ (101 ½) on Friday.”

-- Tip-off is scheduled for 8:05 p.m. Eastern on ESPN2.

**San Antonio at Memphis**

-- San Antonio (69-15 SU, 46-38 ATS) took a 2-0 series advantage with a pair of blowout wins (and covers) against a depleted Memphis squad. Gregg Popovich’s team captured a 94-68 win in Game 1 as a 17.5-point home ‘chalk.’ The 162 combined points easily stayed ‘under’ the 186-point tally. The Spurs cruised to a 106-74 triumph as 17-point home favorites in Game 1, with the 180 combined points dipping ‘under’ the 188.5-point total.

-- As of late Thursday afternoon, most spots had San Antonio installed as an 11.5-point favorite with a total of 181.5 points. The Grizzlies were +600 on the money line (risk $100 to win $600). For first-half wagers, the Spurs were favored by 6.5 points with a total of 84.5.

-- In Tuesday’s Game 2 victory, all 13 San Antonio players scored and four were in double figures. Patty Mills had a team-high 16 points thanks to 4-of-6 shooting from downtown. Kawhi Leonard scored 13 points, while Kevin Martin and LaMarcus Aldridge finished with 10 points apiece. Aldridge had eight rebounds and four blocked shots.

-- Tony Allen scored a team-best 12 points for the Grizzlies in Game 2. Zach Randolph had 11 points and 12 rebounds. Allen and Randolph are being forced to play this series without their long-time starting teammates in Mike Conley (Achilles) and Marc Gasol, who both went down with season-ending injuries after the All-Star break. Without another post threat, Randolph is being greeted with double-teams galore. The Spurs held the Michigan St. product to six points in Game 1 on 3-of-13 shooting from the field. Randolph was 5-of-17 in Game 2, leaving him shooting at a 8-for-30 clip (26.6%) for the series.

-- Not only are the Grizzlies playing without Gasol (16.6 PPG, 7.0 RPG) and Conley (15.3 PPG, 6.1 APG), but they are also sans Mario Chalmers, who was waived after injuring his Achilles just seven games after being acquired from the Heat. Chalmers was averaging 10.8 points, 3.8 assists and 2.6 rebounds per game. Brandan Wright (6.9 PPG, 3.6 RPG) is also out with a knee injury that’s further depleted Memphis’s frontcourt.

-- San Antonio is 27-14 SU and 21-20 ATS on the road. The Spurs have been double-digit road ‘chalk’ eight times, producing an unbeaten SU record and a 5-3 ATS ledger.

-- Memphis (42-42 SU, 42-41-1 ATS) owns a 26-15 SU record and a 23-18 ATS mark at home in the Grind House. The Grizzlies have been home underdogs 15 times, compiling a 9-6 spread record with seven outright wins. They covered in the lone double-digit home ‘dog situation, a 100-99 loss to Golden St. while catching 13 points.

-- Memphis has lost 12 of its last 13 games dating back to March 22, going 4-9 ATS during this miserable stretch. However, we should note that the Grizzlies have covered the number in three straight and nine of their last 12 games as home ‘dogs.

-- San Antonio has won seven in a row over Memphis, including all six encounters this year. The Spurs are 6-1 ATS in those seven victories. Five of this year’s six wins have come by double-digit margins.

-- The ‘under’ has cashed in five consecutive San Antonio games to improve to 47-35-2 overall. The Spurs have watched the ‘under’ go 24-16-1 in their road assignments.

-- The ‘over’ is 45-37-2 overall for Memphis, cashing at a frenetic 25-14-2 clip in its home games.

-- The ‘under’ is 4-2 in the six meetings between these teams this season, 6-2 if we go back to last season.

-- ESPN will have the telecast at 9:35 p.m. Eastern.
 
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NBA Odds: Friday, April 22, 2016 Opening Line Report and Handicapping
by Alan Matthews

The Minnesota Timberwolves hired former Bulls coach Tom Thibodeau as their coach and team president on Wednesday, and now I fully believe this team can get into the playoffs in 2016-17 as a No. 7 or No. 8 seed with all that young talent and another lottery pick on the way. When Thibodeau took over the Bulls for his first NBA head coaching job, he led an immediate 21-win leap in the standings. Minnesota has plenty of offensive talent but played terrible defense this season. That will be the biggest change. The next coaching domino to fall likely will be in Washington, with the Wizards closing on a deal with ex-Thunder coach Scott Brooks. The importance of that being Brooks is still tight with free-agent-to-be Kevin Durant. Sorry Wizards fans, that's not happening.


Game 3: No. 1 Cavaliers at No. 8 Pistons (+4.5, 200.5)

Detroit played a bit over its head, especially from long range, in keeping Game 1 close. And it was competitive for a while in Wednesday's Game 2 before the Cavs pulled away and covered (as I projected) in a 107-90 victory. Cleveland pulled away by winning the third quarter by a score of 27-15 and hit a franchise playoff record 20 3-pointers in the game (on 38 attempts). LeBron James had 27 points, six rebounds, three assists and three steals. The Cavs were plus-10 with him on the court but actually were outscored by one point when Kryie Irving (22 points, four assists) was on the court and when Kevin Love (16 points, 10 rebounds) was.

Detroit had all five starters score in double figures but hit just 4-for-17 from 3-point range this time. Rookie Stanley Johnson led the Pistons with nine points off the bench and after the game stuck his foot in his mouth. Apparently Johnson believes he's playing some good defense on LeBron as Johnson said: "I'm definitely in his head, that's for sure." Ah, rookies! James has scored 15 points on 7-for-9 shooting against Johnson as his primary defender in the series. James was 6-for-6 against Johnson for 13 points in Game 2. So other than that...

Series line (BetOnline): None

Key trends: The Cavs are 1-5 against the spread in their past six following a win of at least 10 points. The Pistons are 11-5 ATS in their past 16 home games vs. teams with a winning road record. The over is 5-2 in the past seven meetings.

Early lean: Pistons and over.

Game 3: No. 4 Hawks at No. 5 Celtics (-3, 200.5)

Think the Celtics missed Avery Bradley and Kelly Olynyk in Game 2 of their series with the Hawks on Tuesday? Atlanta won 89-72 thanks to holding Boston to just seven first-quarter points, a franchise playoff low for the C's, who have played a few postseason games in their history. It was also the lowest-scoring first quarter in a playoff game in the shot-clock era. The previous record for fewest points in an opening quarter was eight. It also tied the fewest points allowed in any quarter in Hawks playoff history. Boston was just 3-for-23 from the field and 0-for-6 from 3-point range in that quarter. It was 24-7 after one and that was it. The Hawks blocked a franchise playoff-record 15 shots in Game 2, including 10 in the first quarter.

Bradley and Olynyk are two of the team's top 3-point shooters. Boston was just 5-for-28 overall from there in Game 2. Marcus Smart started in Bradley's place and was awful, going 1-for-11 from the field and 1-for-6 from 3-point range for three points. The Celtics were minus-20 when Smart was on the court. Bradley's out for this series, but Olynyk might return for Game 3. Smart suffered some bruised ribs in Game 2 but should play.

Series line: Hawks -725, Celtics +560

Key trends: The Hawks are 0-4 ATS in their past four road games. Boston is 15-7 ATS in its past 22 at home. The under is 9-4 in the Celtics' past 13 at home.

Early lean: Boston is a very good home team and the Hawks aren't that trustworthy on the road Celtics and under.

Game 3: No. 2 Spurs at No. 7 Grizzlies (+11.5, 181.5)

This series simply needs to go away. I love NBA playoff basketball but I'm not watching this series. It's like watching Kentucky play my high school JV team. Reggie Miller said a group of TNT analysts (him, Charles Barkley, Shaq, Kenny Smith, Chris Webber to name five) could beat the Grizzlies right now. I tend to agree. Memphis managed all of 74 points in a Game 1 32-point loss and then scored just 68 in a 26-point Game 2 loss. The Spurs closed the first quarter on a 9-0 run for a 22-11 lead and it was over. It was the fewest points for the Grizzlies in team playoff history. The Grizzlies' Matt Barnes said that his team is "coming to a gunfight with spoons." That's pretty good. Pretty accurate.

That No. 1 San Antonio defense held Memphis to 32.6 percent shooting. It tied for the third-lowest field-goal percentage ever allowed by a Spurs team during the Gregg Popovich era of playoff games. It was the lowest by a Spurs postseason opponent since April 2000. San Antonio wasn't perfect in Game 2. The Spurs turned it over 19 times, their most in about six weeks. You have to give some credit to the Grizzlies in that they are still playing hard, especially on defense. But other than Zach Randolph, and he's done little in this series, it's a bunch of scrubs.

Series line: None

Key trends: The Spurs are 2-5 ATS in their past seven road games. The Grizzlies are 1-6 ATS in their past seven following a loss of at least 10. The under is 6-2 in the past eight meetings.

Early lean: Spurs and under.
 

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