
ESPN's Stephen A. Smith and Bob Myers to be in OKC for Timberwolves-Thunder West Finals
ESPN's Stephen A. Smith and Bob Myers to be in OKC for Timberwolves-Thunder West Finals
As the Western Conference Finals are about to start, the NBA playoffs are down to four teams. The Oklahoma City Thunder will host the Minnesota Timberwolves for Game 1 on Tuesday. Only two days after their Game 7 win over the Denver Nuggets to advance.
It's ESPN's turn to broadcast the Western Conference Finals. The New York Knicks and Indiana Pacers will be TNT's last playoff series on its broadcast. That means expect the worldwide leader in sports to send out their biggest stars to OKC and Minnesota.
ESPN announced that their pregame show and NBA Today show will travel with the Western Conference Finals. Media personalities like Stephen A. Smith and Bob Myers will step foot in OKC for the first time in years as the entire NBA world shifts its attention to the playoff series.
As most know, Myers was the Golden State Warriors' general manager and helped build their 2010s dynasty. He left the NBA and transitioned to an ESPN role in 2023. Kendrick Perkins will also be in OKC. He was part of the Thunder from 2011-15.
"'NBA Countdown' and ESPN/ABC's NBA pregame show, will hit the road for on-site broadcasts throughout the Western Conference Finals," ESPN Press Room said in a release. "Malika Andrews hosts 'NBA Countdown' with analysts Stephen A. Smith, two-time NBA Executive of the Year Bob Myers, 2008 NBA Champion Kendrick Perkins and ESPNSenior NBA Insider Shams Charania."
Other personalities will also be in OKC through the first two games of the playoff series and a possible Games 5 and 7 if it reaches that point against the Timberwolves. ESPN will send its heavy hitters to cover the series.
"'NBA Today' – ESPN's weekday NBA studio show – is also hitting the road for live shows on ESPN, Monday through Friday during the Western Conference Finals," ESPN Press Room said in a release. "Malika Andrews also hosts 'NBA Today' with a cast of industry-leading analysts and reporters, including Kendrick Perkins, Chiney Ogwumike and Brian Windhorst. 'NBA Today' airs from 3-4 p.m."
Being a small market, Thunder fans are hopefully ready to be the center of the sports universe for a handful of days. If the Thunder beat the Timberwolves and make the NBA Finals for the first time since 2012, the attention will only multiply tenfold with media outlets across the globe gathered at OKC.
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Washington Post
18 minutes ago
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After Rick Carlisle adapted, his Pacers became a powerhouse
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Carlisle, who serves as president of the NBA Coaches Association, takes his role as elder statesman seriously. Before Game 1 of the Finals, he offered a passionate defense of commentator Doris Burke, hailing her trailblazing work as a female broadcaster amid speculation that she might be replaced on ABC's Finals broadcast crew after this season. And after the officiating during Game 4 of the Finals drew heavy criticism on social media, Carlisle vouched for longtime referee Scott Foster and decried the 'ridiculous scrutiny' as 'terrible, unfair, unjust and stupid.' Carlisle holds great respect for the NBA and its traditions, but he has avoided living in the past. When he began his first coaching stint with the Pacers in 2003-04, his defensive-minded team averaged 91.4 points and allowed just 85.6. Only three teams that season played at a slower pace. 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Carlisle and guard Rajon Rondo had a public falling-out during the 2015 playoffs, and Carlisle departed the Mavericks after a 2021 first-round exit in which Doncic repeatedly expressed frustration toward his coach during games. When he returned to the Pacers in 2021, Carlisle was prepared for an extended rebuilding effort and won just 25 games in his first season. But Indiana acquired Haliburton from the Sacramento Kings in February 2022 and Pascal Siakam from the Toronto Raptors in January 2024, giving Carlisle a trustworthy floor general and a versatile forward who was named Eastern Conference finals MVP last month. Haliburton's arrival positioned Indiana to have the No. 2 offense last season, and Siakam's addition helped convert the Pacers from a scoring machine into a two-way juggernaut. This year's Pacers neatly blend modern expectations with Carlisle's traditional preferences to form a complete team that reached the franchise's first Finals in 25 years. 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New York Times
24 minutes ago
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Cade Cunningham's strengths and weaknesses: Detroit Pistons player evaluations
Cade Cunningham is roughly a month and a half removed from his best professional season. He posted career-high numbers across the board in 2024-25, was an All-Star, made an All-NBA team and had 10 total triple-doubles, including the postseason. Behind the accolades Cunningham racked up last season was the growth of his game in a multitude of ways. Let's examine what led to this level of production. And, in the name of offseason improvement, let's identify areas of Cunningham's game he can ameliorate. Advertisement • 50-of-84 (59.5 percent) on hook shots • 36-of-73 (49.3 percent) on fadeaway jumpers inside the 3-point line • 17-of-33 (51.5 percent) on non-layup bank shots • 16-of-27 (59.3 percent) on turnaround fadeaways I've written many times about Cunningham's effectiveness in the post and midrange, and these regular-season numbers drive home that point. 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