How NBA Draft prospect Cedric Coward is modeling his game after Kobe Bryant
How NBA Draft prospect Cedric Coward is modeling his game after Kobe Bryant | The Kevin O'Connor Show
Yahoo Sports senior NBA analyst Kevin O'Connor is joined by the former Washington State guard to discuss the versatility in his game at the NBA Draft Combine in Chicago, IL. Hear the full conversation on 'The Kevin O'Connor Show' and subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube or wherever you listen.
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But how would you describe your overall overall basketball game to somebody who's never watched you play?
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Uh, versatile, uh, jack of all trades, Swiss Army knife, whatever term you want to use for all around.
And just overall winner, I think a lot of people when they see me play for the first time, understand the amount of versatility I have on the court.
When you watch me play, you can't look at him and be like, OK, well, he plays offense but not defense, because that's not what I predicate my game off.
He plays defense but doesn't rebound, like.
I don't think you can look at one area in my game, but he doesn't do that, like at all, you know, and there's, I gotta work on everything.
When you talk about what I can get better at, everything.
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You can always master and perfect everything as you, like you said, that goes to striving for greatness.
At the end of the day, when I describe my game to people and what separates me is It sure will and kind of dog mentality I have and being able to be all around.
We know you can shoot.
We saw you do that at Washington State.
We saw you do that at Eastern Washington, but the postgame shot 68% out of the post year last year at Eastern Washington, small sample last year at Washington State you were 8 of 9 from the post as well.
You're 6'6, you know, roughly with shoes, 6'7 with shoes.
Have you always had kind of a low postgame or is that something that coaches wanted to get out of you?
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I mean.
Not really.
I think like a little bit because my favorite player of all time is Kobe, you know, Kobe had a postgame, but Kobe, clearly practiced that but yeah, and I think that that's where it comes from, but I didn't really like add it to my game until I got to Eastern Washington because Coach Riley, like the way their offense runs, we predicate on hunting mismatches.
And for me, when I first got to Eastern Washington, I wasn't a guard.
I was more of a forward, you know, plugging guy, you know what I mean like.
I, I guarded, I played a lot bigger than what I was, I can say that.
But yeah, but what 67 rebounds a game.
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I don't know I don't know something like that, but.
I played more of a big man role, quote unquote, more of a like a 4 role, my first year at Eastern.
So when I was working out, I was up there with the bigs.
I was bruising the whole time.
So it taught me how to, you know, use finesse in the post, also use physicality.
So now when I go up against the guards, especially people smaller than me, it's, it's, it's, I'm not gonna say easy, but It, it is easy in a way, you know.
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San Francisco Chronicle
15 minutes ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Why Thunder vs. Pacers gives NBA a Finals matchup to embrace and enjoy
My thoughts as the NBA Finals play on? First, this is the series we needed to see. It's a look into the NBA's immediate future, one the Golden State Warriors will find difficult to negotiate, and Bay Area fans can only hope it prompts some major changes. The league's high-scoring hierarchy is moving on past Stephen Curry, in a manner dramatically exemplified by Oklahoma City's Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Indiana's Tyrese Haliburton, each a prime-of-life superstar with a ton of presence. Not that they'll ever be Curry, as a shooter or an influence, but they represent a dynamically youthful revolution in the backcourt, and the signs are just as ominous in the Finals frontcourt with the Thunder's Chet Holmgren and Indiana's Myles Turner, hardly an upstart but still shy of his 30th birthday. • What the Warriors are likely to encounter in trade talks: Jonathan Kuminga looms as a hidden gem, no guarantee to be a master of court vision but spectacular in the transition game. And that's it for high value outside the Big Three of Steph, Draymond Green and Jimmy Butler. The rest of the rotation players are strictly average by NBA standards. They fit into the league, they have their moments, and once again Warriors have a knack at bringing in character people. But on the scale of talent and track record: nothing special. Even the endearing Brandin Podziemski would be viewed by contending teams as a high-energy reserve. • As a bonanza for small-market teams, these Finals are hardly welcomed by the TV networks, merchandise outlets, ticket-revenue proprietors or sponsors. But as a fan, that's not your problem. Absolutely, Curry's Warriors against the Knicks — Games 1 and 2 at Madison Square Garden — would be sensational theater. But in terms of big names and traditional settings, what are we really missing? Once you grew tired of the aging LeBron James and the ceaselessly complaining Luka Doncic, the Lakers were no fun at all. Minnesota's Anthony Edwards found himself stepping aside once again. Kevin Durant and Giannis Antetokounmpo appear immersed in wanderlust. • Above all, share the Celtics' hurt over Jayson Tatum's Achilles tear, perhaps costing him all of next season. That was an absolutely brutal development, one we've shared locally with Klay Thompson. But the Celtics had been exposed as a lazy, tedious outfit long before Tatum went down. Running an offense that basically came down to five guys whipping passes around the perimeter — hey, one of these 3-point marksmen has to be open — they won a championship bearing no resemblance to the Celtics' finest traditions. This is the franchise that changed things: Bill Russell revolutionizing defense, Bob Cousy inventing the fancy fastbreak, Red Auerbach fielding the first all-Black starting five, John Havlicek setting the all-time standard for moving without the ball (like a blur, even if he was out there 48 minutes), and 3-point shooting rendered secondary by the 1985-86 frontcourt genius of Larry Bird, Bill Walton, Kevin McHale and Robert Parish. The modern Celtics haven't changed a thing, unless it's your viewing habits. After their Game 1 loss to the Knicks in the second round, Boston Globe columnist Gary Washburn claimed they were 'guilty of obscene arrogance, truly believing it's impossible to lose with their relentless long-range style.' 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Forbes
23 minutes ago
- Forbes
NBA Finals 2025: The Indiana Pacers Are Comfortable In Chaos
Any time there's a miraculous comeback or NBA playoff moment that leaves a national audience stunned, it's never just one play. It's never just one guy, and never just one bucket that matters. The Indiana Pacers, arguably more than any team this century, have proven that it takes an army to pull off the unthinkable. Above all else, that's what makes Indy special – Tyrese Haliburton may wear the cape on most nights. But when the game tightens, Indiana becomes the Avengers – everybody's got a superpower, and nobody is afraid to save the day. Digging deep as a collective unit is the only way a team overcomes the sloppiest offensive game of their season. Indy committed a turnover on 24.8% of their possessions, the team's highest rate of the entire season (99 games). It was the biggest reason they found themselves trailing by 15 in the fourth quarter. 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He was funneled directly into Siakam, who protected his yard with ferocity: The comeback victory also doesn't happen without Siakam's opportunistic mindset on this possession below. Capitalizing on the slight moment Gilgeous-Alexander turns his head, Siakam crashes the glass after realizing Nembhard didn't have the greatest shot selection. Having played in nearly 100 playoff games and surviving a long championship run with Toronto, Siakam is aware of the moment. He was fully aware OKC didn't have a center on the floor. And he knew how to exploit that weakness: Eight times out of 10, the Thunder grab that rebound, set up their offense while burning the clock, and put the opponent away. But not this opponent. Not in the year 2025. Equally as important was Nembhard's textbook defensive stop on Gilgeous-Alexander with 12 seconds left. As the Thunder were gearing up for the killshot, Nembhard stayed in front, got physical, and showed his hands. He wasn't allowing SGA to get any closer. He forced SGA to pull-up from 10 feet, which was still a terrific look for the NBA's scoring champion. But it was Nembhard stopping the drive short – along with Nesmith's gritty rebound to finish the possession – that gave Indy a chance to attack and steal the game: The only thing Haliburton needed was a chance. He knows the Pacers aren't perfect. He knows they don't fit the traditional or statistical profile of a Finals team. But he also doesn't care. Because he knows, with the game on the line, he's their unflappable leader with ice in his veins. It doesn't matter who is defending him – he's getting off a quality look and leaving fans breathless while the ball rotates in the air: The only thing the 2025 Pacers enjoy is cheating death. Each time they walk into enemy territory, they become the living embodiment of the 'Call an ambulance … but not for me!' advertisement. Indiana has now survived four separate games in which they appeared dead in the water. At least once in every playoff series, they've had a 5% win probability or lower in the final three minutes. Yet, it's the opposing team sulking and fuming in the locker room: All of those ended in Pacer wins. Three of them resulted in silent road crowds, walking to the exits questioning the meaning of life. At this point, you're more surprised when the Pacers don't pull off a miracle. They have made the extraordinary feel expected. And it appears this should no longer be considered luck. It's simply their identity – and they love it. Thursday was the fifth time Indiana has overcome a 15+ point deficit in this postseason, which is the most since 1997 when the play-by-play era began. Additionally, Indiana is now the fourth team in the play-by-play era to win a postseason game despite leading for 30 or fewer seconds. They joined the 1999 Spurs, 2001 Mavericks, and 2002 Lakers. Two of those three teams won the championship. Before last night, the record was 13 seconds. 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He's breaking statistical models and surpassing all-time playoff legends in Clutch Win Probability Added: Haliburton might just be the NBA's clutch king Inpredictable If you didn't believe in the phrase Team of Destiny before this year, it's time to start buying in. This might just be the season Indiana breaks through and claims its first championship. There's no other logical explanation to their shooting surges, particularly from Nembhard, who has lifted his 3-point efficiency by nearly 18 percentage points compared to the regular season. All of their role players have taken leaps forward during the playoffs and contributed star-level moments, which is all a team needs in order to make a run. At the same time, labeling the Pacers as the Team of Destiny actually does them a disservice. Because this is not a new trend. This isn't a random eight-week hot streak. In reality, this is who Indiana has been since the calendar flipped. The Pacers are 47-18 over the last six months, which translates to a 59-win team over the course of a full season. So not only does Indiana belong on this stage – they are showing why any discussion of this being a lackluster NBA Finals matchup was disrespectful. All it did was shine a light on who hasn't paid attention to the progress Indiana has made on both sides of the ball. For all 48 minutes, the Pacers and Thunder proved (market) size doesn't matter, and neither do regions. Small markets, large markets, coastal city or Midwestern communities, the basketball will always be thrilling in June. Especially when it includes a group like the Pacers, who fully lean into the underdog story and experience a frightening level of comfort while on the doorsteps of defeat.


New York Times
37 minutes ago
- New York Times
How the Pacers pulled off another dramatic comeback
It wasn't looking good for the Indiana Pacers in Game 1 of the NBA Finals on Thursday night in Oklahoma City. The Eastern Conference champs had nine turnovers in the first quarter and then topped that by committing 10 in the second quarter. It was the most turnovers by a team before halftime in a postseason game in the league's play-by-play era, which began in 1997. Advertisement Indiana's defense couldn't contain NBA MVP and Thunder star Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, who was doing whatever he wanted offensively. The Thunder were dominating the Pacers in the paint. Indiana trailed OKC by 15 points with 9 minutes, 42 seconds remaining. So what happened? How did the Pacers stun the Thunder with a 111-110 Game 1 win? Here's a look at some of the key fourth-quarter moments: • After a Jalen Williams dunk at 9:42, Pacers coach Rick Carlisle calls a timeout and subs in Tyrese Haliburton, Andrew Nembhard, Aaron Nesmith, Obi Toppin and Myles Turner. • Immediately after entering, Nembhard scores and is fouled by Alex Caruso. Nembhard makes the free throw. Thunder 94, Pacers 81. • At 8:47, Toppin makes a 3-pointer to make it 96-85. • Turner hits a 3-pointer with 7:47 left, cutting the lead to 96-88. • Toppin and Turner make 3-pointers on consecutive possessions to pull Indiana within 98-94 with 6:16 left. • Gilgeous-Alexander and Williams each make free throws to increase the lead to six points (102-96) with 5:25 remaining. • Gilgeous-Alexander's two free throws with 2:52 left push the Thunder's lead to 108-99. • Nesmith and Nembhard hit back-to-back 3s. The Pacers now trail 108-105 with 1:59 left. • At 1:07, Pascal Siakam blocks Gilgeous-Alexander's layup attempt. • Nembhard misses a stepback 3, but Siakam grabs the offensive rebound and scores with 48 seconds left. Thunder 110, Pacers 109. • With 12.3 seconds remaining, Gilgeous-Alexander misses a short jumper just outside the paint, and Nesmith grabs the rebound. • Haliburton hits the game-winning 2-pointer with 0.3 seconds left. For the winners, Indiana outscored OKC 32-16 in the final 9:42. The Pacers only used six players in those minutes, with all of them scoring. 'When it comes to the moments, he wants the ball,' Turner said of Haliburton. 'He wants to be the one to hit that shot. He doesn't shy away from the moment, and it's very important this time of the year to have a go-to guy. Advertisement 'He just keeps finding a way, and we keep putting the ball in the right positions. The rest is history.' For the losers, the Thunder shot 4 of 16 in those closing minutes. Gilgeous-Alexander went 2 of 4 from the field (with a big miss at the end), but everyone else combined to shoot 2 of 12. (Photo of Aaron Nesmith, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Tyrese Haliburton: Jesse D. Garrabrant / NBAE via Getty Images)