The Zach Lowe Show

Eastern Conference Roundup and Trade Preview With Mo Dakhil

89 min
Dec 1, 20255 months ago
Listen to Episode
Summary

Zach Lowe and Mo Dakhil analyze a chaotic Eastern Conference where injuries and surprising performances have created a wide-open playoff race, with no clear favorites beyond Cleveland and New York. They discuss individual team trajectories, trade deadline implications, and emerging Western Conference contenders like Houston and Oklahoma City.

Insights
  • The Eastern Conference is genuinely wide-open with 8-10 teams capable of making deep playoff runs, contradicting preseason expectations of Cleveland and New York dominance
  • Health and injury management will be the primary differentiator in the East, with Cleveland's ongoing issues and the Knicks' Mitchell Robinson availability creating uncertainty
  • Offensive efficiency and defensive versatility matter more than traditional positional defense; teams like Boston and Atlanta are thriving with unconventional lineups
  • Trade deadline leverage favors teams with draft picks and salary flexibility; sellers without assets or picks have limited options
  • Young player development and role clarity are critical—teams with 10+ rotation players need to consolidate before playoffs to establish consistent lineups
Trends
Eastern Conference parity: Multiple teams (Celtics, Hawks, Magic, Knicks, Pistons) posting 7-3 and 8-2 stretches suggests sustainable competitiveness rather than fluky runsDefensive versatility over rim protection: Teams like the Knicks allow high three-point volume but control the paint through wing length and switchingBall movement and pace-based offenses outperforming isolation-heavy systems: Hawks and Celtics thriving with quick-decision, five-man movement principlesCrunch-time execution as playoff differentiator: Minnesota and other teams struggling in close games despite strong regular-season recordsGuard-heavy rosters creating depth challenges: Detroit, Philadelphia, and others have 10+ playable rotation guys, forcing consolidation tradesWestern Conference consolidation: OKC, Denver, Houston, and Lakers creating a four-team tier with significant gap to Spurs and WolvesInjury-prone stars requiring roster design flexibility: Kawhi Leonard, Jamal Murray, and others necessitating deeper benches and role-player depthDraft lottery uncertainty reshaping tank mentality: Teams like Dallas reconsidering full rebuilds due to recent lottery outcomes favoring mid-lottery teamsDistressed guard assets (LaMelo Ball, John Morant, Trae Young) creating trade market inefficiency with limited buyer interestShooting regression as sustainability concern: Multiple teams (Celtics, Hawks) shooting above career norms; regression could impact playoff seeding
Topics
Eastern Conference Playoff Race and ParityInjury Impact on Team Performance and Roster ConstructionTrade Deadline Strategy and Buyer-Seller DynamicsOffensive Efficiency and Ball Movement SystemsDefensive Versatility and Switching SchemesCrunch-Time Execution and Close-Game ManagementYoung Player Development and Role ClarityRotation Depth and Consolidation TradesWestern Conference Hierarchy and Contender TiersGuard Market Inefficiency and Distressed AssetsDraft Lottery Impact on Tanking DecisionsMid-Range Shooting Trends and SustainabilityRim Protection vs. Perimeter Defense Trade-offsSalary Cap Flexibility and Tax ImplicationsCoaching System Impact on Offensive Efficiency
Companies
Amazon Prime
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Shopify
E-commerce platform sponsor for entrepreneurs to start and run online businesses
People
Zach Lowe
Host of The Zach Lowe Show discussing NBA analysis and team performance trends
Mo Dakhil
Co-host providing detailed team analysis and player evaluation throughout the episode
Jaylen Brown
Boston Celtics player shooting 48% on mid-range shots and 53% on long twos this season
Donovan Mitchell
Cleveland Cavaliers star whose usage rate and offensive load has increased due to team injuries
Evan Mobley
Cleveland Cavaliers forward whose development and usage rate in fourth quarters is being monitored
Tyrese Maxey
Philadelphia 76ers guard averaging 32 points and 8 assists with low turnovers this season
Jalen Johnson
Atlanta Hawks forward making a significant leap with elite shooting and playmaking
Paolo Banchero
Orlando Magic player whose injury and eventual return will impact team's offensive flow
Peyton Pritchard
Boston Celtics guard shooting 62% on twos and providing strong defensive effort off the bench
Anthony Edwards
Minnesota Timberwolves guard ranked 6th in Ringer 100 but struggling in crunch-time situations
Kawhi Leonard
LA Clippers star with only 10% of shots at the rim, down from historical 20-30% rates
Reed Sheppard
Houston Rockets forward cracking starting lineup and providing spacing and defensive versatility
Trae Young
Atlanta Hawks point guard whose absence has led to improved team performance and spacing
Josh Hart
New York Knicks player playing at elite level after returning from injury
Mitchell Robinson
New York Knicks center whose health and availability impacts defensive rim protection
Joel Embiid
Philadelphia 76ers center returning from injury with concerning rebounding and movement metrics
Paul George
Philadelphia 76ers forward showing effort and fight after poor previous season
Luka Doncic
Dallas Mavericks star appearing lighter and less argumentative with referees this season
Jrue Holiday
Boston Celtics guard contributing to team's strong offensive efficiency
Janis Antetokounmpo
Milwaukee Bucks star recently returning from injury with team lurking in playoff race
Quotes
"I'm going to take the field and it's not a prediction that neither of these teams are going to make it, but if I'm making the bet, I'm going to take the field"
Mo DakhilEastern Conference Finals prediction discussion
"The Knicks, something always kind of comes together and weird forces and Halliburton's shot is the back of the rim pops straight up, waits in the air for 10 seconds and drops straight down"
Mo DakhilKnicks playoff history discussion
"I want to see Mobley tear the bunny up. And that's really what I want to see when he's on the court"
Zach LoweEvan Mobley development discussion
"This is the offense I feel like Quinn has been wanting to coach and run for an incredibly amount of time"
Mo DakhilHawks offensive system discussion
"I can't watch them play close games anymore. I just can't do it"
Zach LoweMinnesota Timberwolves crunch-time struggles
Full Transcript
All right, coming up on the Zaclos show, I hope you all enjoyed your Thanksgiving holiday weekend. There was a lot of basketball. There was a lot of Emirates Cup basketball. We binged a lot of games and we got a lot to talk about. And luckily we've got the one and only Moe to kill here for a Mondays with Moe bounce around the NBA. We're going to focus on the East. Holy smokes. How muddled is these from top to almost bottom? Everyone's jammed up. What's real? What's not real? How are the Celtics winning with the number four offense in the NBA? The Knicks are hot. What's up with the Cavs? 12 and nine kind of middling on offense. Is it all health? Is it all injuries or is there something else going on? Give some love to the Raptors, the Heat, the Magic without Ben Carroll, the Hawks without Trey Young. What's going on? They're Philly, got their team back minus Kelly Ubrey, but Embiid played, Edgecom played, George played. How'd they look in a crazy double overtime loss to Atlanta Hawks? Then we're going to talk a little rapid fire, Western Conference, trade season, not quite upon us, but we'll be coming soon. What does the trade market start to look like for some of the high value, high salary players that may or may not become available? Who's a buyer? Who's a seller? Moe and I will get into all of that coming up on the Zach Loh Show. This episode of the Zach Loh Show is presented by Amazon Prime. The holidays are here and they move quick. Luckily, Prime's fast free delivery is your miracle play, getting whatever you need there fast. Prime's fast shipping is always there for you during the holidays, especially when it's last minute and it just can't wait. From stocking stuffers to that perfect gift for the MVP in your life, it's on Prime. Head to Amazon.com slash Prime to shop now. Welcome to the Zach Loh Show. I hope you all had a great Thanksgiving weekend. Moe DeKielis here. I like this Mondays with Moe. I think we've got going on. We're going to bounce around a lot of teams. Are you ready, Moe? Did you have a good Thanksgiving break? I had a great Thanksgiving break. I got to give a shout out to my wife. She cooked an amazing meal for me, her, and me, my mother-in-law and herself. It was topped off, Zach, by my favorite thing that she makes, which is pumpkin pie. She makes the puree by scratch. She gets the pumpkin, does the whole thing, makes the puree by scratch. It's absolutely my favorite thing. It's like I look at it, I eat the whole meal, which is amazing. Then I just look at the pie. I'm just going to get the takes here. Thanksgiving takes is apparently a mandatory podcast segment that I did not do. I don't want to give them any time. I'm just going to say my takes. Number one, I went to a friend's giving on Thursday. The cook, I'll just refer to him as Nathan, went ham instead of turkey. Thumbs up. Didn't want to see a turkey again after having the Thanksgiving ham. Pumpkin pie, I don't get it. I never got it. It's not for me. Number three, I'm going to give a shout out to myself because I make a mean ass apple crumble and I made two batches over this weekend. Raver views. Look out. Look out for this guy. Okay. Love it. Love it. Mo, I have not done an episode since Wednesday because of the holiday, so that just means I bingeed a ton of games. A lot of stuff happened. I want to talk about the east because the east is getting wacky. I don't even know what to think. I don't even know what I think anymore about the east. We're going to hit some west stuff, but the east right now, Detroit still in first had a two game losing streak. They rebounded their 16 and four. After that, there are three games total separating the number two New York Knicks at 13 and six and the number nine Philadelphia 76ers who actually had their whole team minus Kelly Ubre for the first time all season in a double overtime crazy bananas lost to the Atlanta Hawks. Cacaw on Sunday night and you look at the state is like Knicks have won four in a row. The heat had been pretty hot. The Hawks are surging. The magic are eight and two in their last 10 games. The Celtics, we have to talk about the Celtics seven and three in their last 10 games. Toronto on a two game losing streak and yet they're eight and two in their last 10 games. The bucks are lurking below all of this at 11th. Just got Janice back. They were not surprisingly completely helpless and unable to win at any games without Janice, but he is back and they're lurking. The bulls in the words of, I think Dennis Smith, is that the name of the head coach? The bulls are who we thought they were. They may, it turns out that six and ones a long time ago, they're nine and 10. So the east is getting a little muddled. And so the general framing I would have, and I talked about this on prime on Friday, is if we fast forward six weeks, we came into the season. It was Cleveland and New York and then a big drop to everyone else. Well, the Knicks are 13 and six. They're second. We'll talk about them. Cavs are seventh at 12 and nine. Injuries have decimated them all season. If we fast forward six weeks, Mo, two months, whatever it is, do you think the east looks more like Cleveland and New York and everyone else than it does today that it begins to normalize? Or do you think this is just sort of the state of reality for the rest of the season in the Eastern conference that it's more wide open than people thought and perhaps the most wide open conference in the modern history of the NBA? So I think, yeah, if we flash forward, I think it's going to be more of what we have now. I haven't seen enough where we look at Cleveland and say, okay, they're going to be healthy and ready to roll. And they're fully capable of going on a big run. And like you said, there's not a lot of games separating them, but everybody seems to be going on a run right now in the Eastern conference. Like everybody you lined up is eight and two, seven and three. And there's all of these runs there. I think we're going to see this thing be muddled. I think it's great that it is. This is going to be more fun. I don't think the Pistons are going anywhere. So I think they're going to be at worst case scenario at the reseed. This is being said literally November 30th, but December 1st, even I didn't even know we changed the calendar yet. But it's really early, but I still think they're going to be right in that mix with just the start that they have. And everything we've seen from these teams for the most part is sustainable. Like it's not like I look at these things and go, okay, that's not going to last. That's something that's a blip more than, than something that they're going to be able to do all season. I think a lot of the stuff we're seeing is sustainable. So I think we're just going to have a muddled Eastern conference and I love it because they've become so much more interesting when we're in this scenario than it's just these two top teams. I think when I look at it, it's going to be a fun one right now. I'm with you on Detroit. I actually think their last three games, even though they were one and two were healthy for them. Tough last second loss to the Celtics, nip and tuck the entire way in the cup game against the magic. One of my favorite games of the season, physical intense, close to whole time, a lot of back and forth. And then they rebound from their first taste of adversity with a win in Miami on a back to back. That's a good set of like a tester kind of games for them. I agree with you. I think this is just what the East is going to be. I think it'll probably, the wild card is Cleveland. I think we'll get healthy and normalize things a little bit. I just think the standings are going to be like this, the entire season with some teams rising, some teams falling here and there, but I'm not, I don't see this changing much in the regular season. Let me reframe the question for you. I looked up to Fan Duel Odds today just cause you know, you like to see what Vegas thinks. When the East Odds, Cavs plus 250, huge favorites still, Nix plus 390, and then a big drop to the Pistons and the magic at plus 650. I don't even really know what those numbers means, but low is good, high is bad. So Vegas still sees us as Cleveland and New York and everyone else. So I would reframe the question to you this way. And this is almost a more interesting question. If this were like an actual bet you can make and for all I know it is, would you take one of Cleveland or New York to make the finals? We're not talking about standings and muddled stuff anymore. Would you take one of Nix Cavs to make the finals or would you take the field over both of those teams to make the finals? I'm going to take the field and it's not, it's, isn't a prediction that neither of these teams are going to make it, but if I'm making the bet, I'm going to take the field for a couple of reasons. One, and this is a little bit apart from the, the, the, it takes us a little bit away from the question, but we've had so many surprises in the finals the past few years. And I don't think we're going to really have one in the Western conference that if we're going to have a surprise, it's going to come from the Eastern conference. And this could be a team like Detroit could be a team, you know, who knows who gets hot at the right time with, with everything there. So I'm going to, I'm going to take that there. Second, as much as I think once Cleveland gets healthy, they're going to be so much better. I'm not convinced this is a team that can get to the finals. I'm not sold on them right now. I have a lot of, I have questions now. I've, I'm, I'm almost in, in, in a, in alarm mode at this point. I think the Knicks have a better chance than the cab. So for me, it's almost more of like Knicks or the field. And I'm going to just take the field because it's the Knicks man. Something always happens. That's the analysis. Sorry folks. It's not like the most amazing analysis, but it's the Knicks. Something always kind of comes, comes together and, and, and weird forces and Halliburton's shot is the back of the, the rim pops straight up, waits in the air for 10 seconds and drops straight down. Like it's all those types of things that happen. It seems to always happen to the Knicks and the playoffs. So I did the thing where I made up a question and then I agonized over my own question for way too long self-inflicted torture. So, so here's how I would answer it. I picked the Knicks to make the finals at the start of the season. I am still picking the Knicks to make the finals now, as I said with Stan Van last Wednesday. I went, I flipped and I flopped on this, this field versus these two teams question. I almost went with the calves and the Knicks over the field because I do trust those two teams the most and we'll talk about the calves, but their lineup data is actually is pretty encouraging for the theoretical healthy version of them. I'm still taking the field. I just, I just don't trust the calves or the Knicks enough. I don't trust them combined enough to just, to take them easily over a bunch of good teams. The craziness factor, the Mitchell Robinson health factor, just there's too much going on. So I'm going to go with the field. Let's talk about the calves. You just said the phrase alarm bells, 12 and nine, 14th in offense, their schedule has not been very hard or very easy. Garland has only played seven games the whole season. He's shooting horribly impact a little bit. You did compare to how he was last year. Struz hasn't played at all. Jared Allen's was games here and there are hundreds of games here. There are Sam Merrill's, Mr. Bunch of recent games. You can just say, well, when they're healthy, we know what this team is. They're the best team because you look at the lineup data and there's not, there's not much of it, but Allen and Mowbly together, 120 points per hundred possessions, 109 allowed plus 11 similar when you throw Mitchell in. So they're three best players. Their big four has only played 57 minutes together the whole season. They're plus 35 in 57 minutes with a plus 29 net rating, which you can throw in the garbage if you want, because it's 57 minutes, but they were also very good last year. So you can just say once they get healthy, the team still is who they are. They haven't shot well from three yet and then they take a ton. They have not, their opponents have shot well from three. So you combine health plus that normalizing, this could still come out in the wash, the equivalent of last year's 60, whatever win team. All that's, and those numbers are encouraging to me and I would be encouraged by them if I were a Cabs fan. I just, something just feels off in the water there that part of it is, you know, the lack of rim pressure all season that people have talked about their 25th, I think in drives per hundred possessions after being top 10 last year, it's creeping up. It's creeping up now that Garland's back, but he doesn't quite look the same. Again, but he's still doing what the Toto thing. Mowbly has been good, but not great. And I was promised great mo. I was promised great. The hype machine promised great. Just good. And it just feels like the kind of verve they had last year where they would, the ball would just be flying or their passes are actually up. But at those sequences last year where the ball would just fly and they would score 15 points in like a minute and 10 seconds, be like, what the hell just happened? It just, it seems like there's a little bit less of that and a little bit more of like, all right, Donovan, we need 40 tonight, man. Just make a bunch of pull up threes for us to keep us in this game. I, I'm TBD on them, but I don't, I don't love the experience so far. Yeah. I don't love what I'm seeing in general when I'm watching them and the way that when I see them, it's like you're saying there, it does feel like something is missing and it goes beyond then just they're injured. We'll see what it looks like when everybody comes back. We know how good they were last year. So, you know, in theory, this should all be fine. Well, one, there's no guarantee these guys will be coming back and stay healthy. I mean, you talked about Garland, this whole thing feels like it's going to bother him and nag him all season. They were talking on the broadcast last, was it last night they played Boston two nights or whatever the last, about how he's, he's putting different inserts into shoes and trying to find the right thing. I'm like, this doesn't sound great. Like the guy is like, is the team going to like Foot Locker trying to find orth, are they going to like orthopedic surgeons trying to find orthotics? Like this doesn't sound super encouraging to me. No, it's, it's, it's, that's what scares me a little bit when we're looking at Garland is just like, this thing is going to nag him all year. It doesn't feel like, okay, this is just going to get better with time or if he sits out two weeks and rest, he'll be fine and then he'll be ready to go. It feels like this is just going to continue to bother him all year. And you're right. He hasn't looked like he's had the same spark and they think that's part of the problem for the team. I think the other side of it too is Evan Mowbly. Like this is a big one here. First off, I'll say it off the bat. Development's not linear. He made a big leap last year and a lot of it was Kenny Atkinson letting him kind of go and get on a run and get moving and, and, and do more with the ball. But this year it's, it's kind of just, all right, it's exactly what we saw last year, which was great, but not what we're hoping for. Like if this team is going to take that level and really jump to another notch, he's got to be your second best player. That's kind of firmly what I believe now is he's got to be your second best player. And we saw glimpses of this last night against Boston. That start in the third quarter was damn impressive. Starts out the third quarter. They run a little weave action. He pops out for a three next possession. Garland throws the terrible pass turnover. That's not, that's not on Mowbly. The possession after that, he gets it off a pop. Pump fakes on the three, drives down the lane, gets a, gets a bucket. Possession after that gets another three where he pops out, or excuse me, inverted pick and roll with Garland comes off. They go under, he drills the three right off the bat with eight points, had 15 points in the third quarter, the way he attacked over and over again in that third quarter. And then it disappears. Then it's gone. Nothing in the fourth quarter, two attempts. And one of them was, you know, a tip dunk, which, you know, nice, but like that's all we get, you know, from Gar, from Mowbly. We lose him in that sense. And if this guy's got to be your second best player, which is, if you're going to be that, that's my belief, you got to keep him involved all the way through. I looked at the numbers, his usage rate from the first quarter through the course of the game, first quarter, about 26% usage rate. After that, it drops to like 22. Then it's 20. And then 20. Like that's not going to work for you. This guy can really open up your offense in ways that attacks and puts pressure on defenses. And we're just not seeing it from Mowbly. So he is their second best player. I think what you're meaning to say, and what I would say is he's got to be like co-number one player with Donovan Mitchell or very close to it. If it's like Mitchell and then a big gap to everyone else on the team, I've seen that formula combined with the health issues that seem to hit this team at the wrong time every year and I've seen what it does to them in the playoffs. I just, I'm not alarmed. I'm just a little like, eh, something's on this team. The Knicks, but we're just going to bounce around. Well, one quick thing with just Mowbly, because this did occur to me on an analogy. I don't know if you saw the movie, Swingers, but all I did for it. Okay, stop. Mow, I'm a 48 year old middle-aged man. I played, I played Sega Genesis hockey with my friends and Jeremy Ronick was a huge character in my Sega Genesis hockey life. Have I seen Swingers? Yes, I have. But this is Mowbly is Mikey and I just feel like everybody else has got to give him that speech at the bar where it's like. Literally, I just, you said the word Mikey and I got uncomfortable thinking about the voicemail scene. I got physically uncomfortable. Yeah, I mean, Vince Vaughn, I say this lovingly, has been playing the same guy in almost every single movie he's been in since then. And I just, I don't want anything else. Like it was cool that you tried to be Norman Bates and Psycho remake. Like I don't need to see that. Just be like the arrogant jerky guy in every single thing. I'll watch it every time. But he's got to be like, that's Mowbly, right? You got these big claws, you got these big teeth, you know, and you're just kind of playing with the bear, like with the bunny. Like you need to go, I want to see Mowbly tear the bunny up. And that's really what I want to see when he's on the court. And I want to see him do it for an entire game. Then I'll start to feel better about the calves. The Knicks, my pick to make the finals. Trending well, have won four straight, not great competition and got the Raptors on a back to back after an overtime game for the Raptors the night before in Charlotte. By the way, random hot take number one, I might as well get out on the way now. It's not a hot take. The orange Charlotte uniforms, I don't know what we're doing here. I don't know when orange, I'm sure there's some backstory like, well, there's a local orange grove that somebody who's a big Hornets fan. I don't like, I'm sure there's some stupid backstory that all these uniforms have. No, hard no, light them on fire. I never want to see them again. Okay. The Knicks 13 and six, third in offense, 11th in defense. If you stopped right there and we're like, what is the roadmap for the Knicks making my finals prediction come true? That's it right there. Elite offense and good enough defense. Josh Hart has been playing out of his freaking mind for the last three weeks, finally got healthy. Mike Brown has all but said that when Anno B comes back from injury, they're going to go back to last year's starting five, which was a sort of a controversial lineup. I think the controversy was a little overblown, but we'll get there and still bring Mitchell Robinson off the bench. And I think that will be interesting to see, can you do that and still get enough cat, Mitch combined minutes with the double big lineup when it's needed. The bench guys are starting to show some life. McBride shooting 43% on three, his Colix had some nice minutes, Shamit, although he's injured now, is kind of carved out a real role. Clarkson is Clarkson. He's up and down. I think the offense is 100% real. I have no notes. They're going to be a great offensive team. 11th in defense is interesting to me. And I want to know how real you think that is after I read you these stats. Only one other team in the entire NBA allows more threes than the Knicks and only seven teams allow more shots at the rim than the Knicks. That's normally a recipe for a very bad defense and the Knicks are not a very bad defense. How are they doing it? And what about it is sustainable? Well, I think to start with, you know, when they're giving up shots at the rim, it's also, you know, most of these are going to be contested, right? You have Mitchell Robinson there. You know, sometimes, sometimes, yeah, sometimes you got Mitch there. You know, you have guys, you know, when you have OG on the floor, these are going to be tough. It's tough routes to get to the rim and then have to finish that stuff. And I think that's an important distinction there. And I think that's an area where like you, you wish it was a little bit better when you don't want to give up that many shots. But I think that's, I can live with that if I know, and that's a scary proposition, knowing I'm going to have Robinson around and healthy for most of the season. I can live with that because I got a rim protector that I can trust when we're giving up all of those things. So I think that's something they can kind of live by. And I think when OG comes back, they're going to start to see, maybe they do a better job of cutting down on that a bit more. We'll see the defense kind of lock in a little bit better when they have him on the floor. I think the three point shooting, the shots they give up scare me because it feels like a lot of them are just kind of open. Right. And it's like overrotations or getting sucked into the paint on those shots that they give up at the rim and that leads to kick outs or offensive rebounds, skip pass, boom, open three. Like those are the shots that scare me with this team. And that's the thing. If I'm Mike Brown, I'm probably looking to try, I got to cut down on the attempt somehow. You want them to live in that middle range, right? Or the mid range, exactly that. Like we want them to play in there. So we got to close out harder at three. I think that's something that they got to be a little bit more, not just have more awareness, but more urgency to, we got to cut down on the number of threes that we're giving up and that we're allowing. We got to run guys off the line. One of these has to give either we give up more threes and that means we give up less shots at the rim or the other way around. But that's where I think at some point they got to make a decision, Zach, and it's got to come down to one of those. And then, then I think it's more sustained. I don't think it's sustainable giving up this many threes and this many shots at the rim, even with as good as I think their rim protection can be. I don't think it's going to be sustainable because at a certain point the dam's going to break. And when it does, you're over. They're giving up so many threes because, and the coaching staff has talked about this publicly, they're prioritizing protecting the paint. I do think baked into that is you just have to allow fewer shots at the paint, even though they're allowing one of the lowest shooting percentages at the rim in the entire league because they have Mitchell Robinson, because they have big wings who will challenge shots at the basket and CAD is standing around nearby at times. But the eye test says to me, I think in their effort to execute this, protect the paint or bust mindset, they're over helping a little bit from the perimeter and they're over helping off of good shooters and they're over helping in ways that I don't even consider very useful. So you can find a whole reel of threes against the Knicks this year that are like, guy drives into the middle, defender on the strong side wing. So one pass away, just sort of like lurches into the paint. He's not really helping. He's just kind of reaching. He's not going to stop anyone. He's not doing anything. And then his guy relocates three feet and is suddenly wide-hopin. I think they need to sort of be a little bit more controlled and precise with that kind of stuff, be a little bit more controlled and precise about who gets a flyby closeout and who gets a short closeout. I think that they can control some of that a little bit better in a way that's almost encouraging to me. What's also encouraging to me is they're not getting lucky on three-point shots. Opponents are lighting them up from three. They have like the fourth or fifth highest opponent three-point field goal percentage in the league. So they're not getting lucky. And they're controlling what they can control pretty well. So second and defensive rebounding, big strong team, they should be. That's great. Not giving up second chances. Thirteenth and opponent free throw rate, like that's pretty good. It's not great, but you're not giving them a lot of extra chances at the rim either. And their tenth and fourth thing turnovers, which again, they're not bad at any of those non-shooting things. In fact, they're pretty good at most of them. I'm just interested to see where this goes. But if I were a Nix fan overall, I'd be pretty encouraged 13 and six with this start given Ananobi's been out for a while and Mitch is always in and out of the lineup. Offense, I think will be good no matter what. They got to figure out the Towns thing a little bit better. Defense, we know teams are going to go out to Brunson Towns combination. How do you mitigate that? It's just, that's just part of the team. The Zach Lowe show is brought to you by Fandall. Hey, Missouri, the wait is finally over. Fandall Sportsbook is live in the show me state right now. New customers can bet $5 and get 300 in bonus bets, win or lose. Plus this week only every customer gets a no sweat bet every day. So even if your bet doesn't hit, you'll get the bonus bets back to keep the action going. So download Fandall today and head or head to Fandall.com slash Lowe and join the excitement because Missouri, it's time to play your game with Fandall. 21 over and president of Missouri gambling problem called 1-800-GAMBLER. For new customer officer, first online real money wager, only $5 positive required. Bonus issue does not withdraw, but bonus bets that expire 70s after a seat for all customer offer opt in required each day. Refund issue does not withdraw, but bonus bets that expire 70s after a seat max refund $20 restrictions apply, including token expiration, see terms at sportsbook.fandall.com. This episode is brought to you by Amazon Prime. The holidays move quick like a fast break down the court. Luckily, Prime's fast free delivery means everything arrives on time. We use Amazon Prime all the time. We have a kid. Anyone with a kid is using Amazon Prime all the time. Halloween costumes on the last minute planner, you order a costume, you have no good idea. You need it by October 31st. Otherwise there's no point. Amazon Prime gets a job done. That's happened for me multiple times, multiple Halloween's. Prime's fast shipping is always there for you during the holidays, especially when it's last minute and just can't wait. Need some holiday magic? It's on prime. Head to amazon.com slash prime to shop now. Okay, let's bounce around some other East Teams. We have to talk about Philly because they got their team back. Embiid came back last night, Edgecom and missed a couple of games. He came back last night. We finally got McCain is back and playing a little better. Paul George is back. He played last night. We finally got to see a somewhat real Philly team and they lost a crazy double overtime game to the Atlanta Hawks. The sixes are 10 and nine, 16th in offense, 20th in defense. Tyrese Maxi is averaging 32 points in aid assists a game and most remarkable of all has kept his turnovers low and that's one of the secret sauces of why he's so good. By the way, I saw a lot of Philly fans upset with the ringer 100 placement of Tyrese Maxi. He was 15th. I'm just throwing it out there. My ball had him 11th. I'm just throwing it out there. That's how good this guy has been. I don't know. Did you see this game? Yes, I did. What did you think? One, I was focused a little bit more on Embiid. The one thing I found encouraging was he looks like he was moving well. The thing I found really interesting was he was on the floor and it wasn't Embiid focused, which I think is an important thing in terms of like, this is Tyrese Maxi's team. There's no question about it. Even when Embiid's on the floor, it's Tyrese Ball. There'll be times where we're going to give it to Embiid. We're going to give him some post-ups. We're going to give him opportunities to face up because when it's on, it's on and that's really a difficult weapon for most teams to deal with, but he's still working his way back into it. They lost this game, but I was encouraged with a few things. One, Paul George's fight on that rebound off the miss free throw was huge to me because that's effort. That's stuff where it's like, he's coming back from injury. He had a bad season last year. It's a terrible year last year. And now you're just seeing effort and fight from him in that sense. He's not fully where he needs to be if this team is going to be jumping in and battling it out in the Eastern Conference. And we're really going to go nuts about them. But like those encouraging signs is what you have. I love Maxi. I love the way VJ Edgecomb started this season. We need to get him. It's going to be a bit of an adjustment for him now, right? Figuring out how to fit in now. There's a lot more guys than when he started the season. It's Embiid. It's George. Grimes is still going to get his touches. You're going to have to figure out where you kind of fit in all of these things. McCain is back and beginning to play well. You got to start finding your way as a rookie and figuring all this stuff out. I just overall like where this squad is heading. And I think if they can just stay healthy, and I know that's the biggest freaking if that's out there, I think by the end of the year, we're going to look at this team and they're going to have kind of a full understanding. Everybody's going to have an understanding of their roles. I think Nick Nurse did a great job with this team. I thought offensively running a ton of stuff, different things. Iverson actions, a lot of movement, which is something that we haven't seen a lot from the Sixers in the past. And I was really kind of like, this is an offense, I think that's going to work for their guards. And I think Embiid's going to find his touches in between and there. And I think this is going to be great for Paul George. We just got to see more of it on the floor and see how it builds out. But I love that everybody's roles are beginning to fall in place. Tough loss last night. Jaylen Johnson was incredible. But like, I think that's the starting point. Like right here is we're going to look at this and I see where they're beginning to build. I like what they're doing offensively. I think we're going to be going in a good direction if you're Philly. I got no idea what to think, Mo. I got no idea. I disagree with you about Embiid. I don't think he looked very good. He doesn't want to move on defense, which is fine. He's a big guy. He wants to be around the rim. Offensively, he looks just okay to me. He's certainly not hungry for brutalizing physical contact yet, which is he's coming back from injury. He's trying to feel out his body and see what he can handle and what he can't handle. But he's always coming back from injury. This is just a permanent state of affairs. We're always going to have this qualifier of, well, he just needs to get his legs under him. He needs to come back from injury. We're going to say the same thing again in a month when he's coming back from another setback of some kind. I don't mean to make light of it. It just is what it is. I don't think he's moving particularly well on either end of the floor. His rebounding numbers are straight up alarming, career lows by so much. It's not as if this is like, well, there are other guys grabbing rebounds on this team because he's boxing out. They're bottom five in defensive rebounding. They're a bad rebounding team. Now they are small and they're about to get smaller because they have all their guards healthy. So they're going to play combinations of three of these five guys and they're all good. They all should play between Maxi, Grimes, McCain, Edgecomb, and I'm forgetting somebody because that's what happens. And then Paul George at the four and that's just what it's small lineups. And Bean will look better if he plays more. And there's a lot of talent here. All these guards are good. Like you said, they can move the ball, they can drive, they can attack gaps, they're fast, and Maxi is absolutely unbelievable. I just don't know what to think anymore. I don't know. And they are over the tax by enough that you could see Darryl Mori in ownership. He's like, can we get under this thing without hurting our team? But they do have picks to trade too. I don't know. I just felt like we should talk about them because they actually had their team. By the way, I think Edgecomb is great. I think he has a chance to be a really good defensive guard, like super active, super smart, physical, rotates with urgency, has good hands. I just don't, I'm like a shrug emoji with this team. I don't know. It's tough. Just their situation, it's tough to really, they are the team that I felt like going into the season had the wildest variance. Like it's, we had no feel for where they could be. Could be one of the worst teams in the league, or it all plays perfectly. They get all the breaks they need, and they're in the top three in the east. See, I don't even think that that's true anymore about the variance. That was a fun thing to say before the season. I said it, everyone said it. I think what's happening right now is just about what they're going to be. Like I don't see a world where they're like, oh, this is a 50 to win team anymore. But I don't know. Again, shrug, shrug, shoulder shrug. We'll see. Everyone's doing the best they can over there. Let's talk about the team that beat them last night and their division mate, the Orlando Magic, two teams who are thriving without foundational players. Let's start with the Hawks. 13 and eight, I don't even know where does that place them in a log jam, but technically fifth in the east. 15th in offense, 11th in defense. Their schedule has been pretty easy. Since Tre Young went out very early in the season, they are 11 and five, 11th in offense, 10th in defense, 11th in net rating in that stretch, 11th, 10th, 11th. That's good. It's not gangbusters. It's not great. It's not contender profile, but it's good. G. Allen Johnson, 23, 10, and seven on elite shooting from all over the floor. Nikhil Alexander Walker is averaging 20 points per game. That's like double what he usually averages in the season. The ball is absolutely flying, and it's not the raw number of passes that I care about. Every decision is so fast. Every cut, every random screen, every, like Dyson Daniels has become one of the best cutters in the entire league. Every just, okay, I'm going to like inverted pick a roll for G. Allen Johnson. Let's see if we get a mismatch. I'm going to roll out of that. I'm going to cut over here. Everything is like so fast that, yeah, they don't have a traditional sort of like number one ball handling option anymore, but the collective speed at which they're making decisions kind of compensates for that and opens up all these cracks in the defense that they just exploit. I love the way they're playing. I have always been of the mind that their highest ceiling and the ceiling they should aim for is reintegrating Trey Young into a team that continues to play like this with Trey Young and the threat that he poses as the head of the snake when they need him to be the head of the snake. And they may not have any choice but to do that this year because he's under contract and he has a player option for next year. I will say, Moe, I'm beginning to reconsider my, the hawk should extend Trey Young on a fair and I remember pitching like four years, 190 or something extension because this looks pretty real to me. What's happening here? Defensively, we knew they'd be better without him. Offensively, 11th in a 20 game span almost without him is super encouraging. It looks real. I think it'd be harder in the playoffs against playoff defenses without an A plus number one option, but A, G.L. and Johnson is something getting something, getting somewhere close to that. And B, I said before this 11 and five stretch with these net ratings and all that, good, but not great. But that's all they've ever been with Trey Young to begin with. And I'm starting to look at this stretch and recalibrating my thinking into not necessarily like I'm going to shop Trey Young and try to move him and whatever, but just like imagining what my team could look like if I took that $50 million dollar salary slot and it was suddenly $0, whether he opts out, I don't think he's going to, whether he's off the books in two years. What could I do with that combined with the pick I have coming from New Orleans, my own draft assets? Like how could I reorient this team? I'm starting to trend more that way. That doesn't mean better without Trey. It just means maybe I'm recalibrating my team. I haven't made a final decision, but I'm trend, I'm recalibrating. It's different without Trey is the way I would say it, right? And I think what you're talking about, when you talk about the offense, that's Quinn Snyder's offense. That's what he wanted in Utah, right? And then when they got Donovan Mitchell, eventually it became more slowed down and more pick and roll and ISO heavy. This is the offense I feel like Quinn has been wanting to coach and run for an incredibly amount of time. All the thing, quick decision making, 0.5 seconds. Remember all that stuff that we were, they were always talking about in Utah, about being quick and making the decisions. We're seeing it come to fruition with this Hawks team in this way. And then this is a Jalen Johnson leap. He started it last year, got hurt, missed a whole bunch of time. It just never paid off. We're beginning to see that now where I don't think he's a number one guy, but he's making that leap of like, yeah, I can help carry a team for a good run. We need one more guy to help stir the drink. And I think that's going to be extremely important for them. I don't know if it's going to be Trey, because I think, and it's like you're saying, if he's going to come in and they got to run more offense just around him and kind of go away from what's working, that's a massive problem for them. That's a red flag. That's something they have to kind of nip in the bud right away. I think for them, when they bring Trey in, and it's like you're saying, reintegrate him into it. And he's got to have the understanding of like, I got to do all these other things. I can't just be on the ball, run pick and roll. Yeah, I'm going to drop a great corner pass. It's going to knock people's socks off, but we got to find more ways to use him and maximize him. It's a five person unit on the floor on offense. So all five guys got to be moving and cutting, setting screens and whatnot. Sometimes we're going to have the ball in our hands. Sometimes we're not. That's what Trey's got to lock in on. If you're the hawks, this is a fun position to be in, because I really think they should be trending more towards what you're saying, Zach, of like, maybe it's time we politely move off of Trey and then start figuring out what we are and how we can kind of re-orchestrate it. Because we've kind of seen it with Trey, and it's not going to take you far enough. And this is a squad where you need to have more guys that can move the ball, keep it going. You just need to have that one, just one elite, elite score that at the same time, and I know I'm asking for a miracle, that's not going to be a guy that needs to have a 30% usage. 35% usage rate. You need to have a guy that can score and not kind of completely derail your offense. Here's the difference between the Orlando and Atlanta situations. I think it's much easier for Bankero to dial back his shot usage in the ways that the magic probably need him to, the way they're playing without him, because of his size and positional versatility and all the different ways he can impact the game on offense post-up, set screens, roll, make plays out of the roll, all of that. I think it's easier for, and he's not a defensive liability. I think it's much harder for Trey Young because no matter how much he tries to diversify his game on offense, and he has, ad nauseam said this stat that he set more screens, more ball screens last season than he had in his entire career combined, low bar, but he did it. A, I just think, I don't know what the ceiling on that is. I don't know that he's ever going to commit to, yeah, all average 19 a game and run around and do all these other things. It's just not possible for him to be anything but a defensive liability. There's no chance of that. Now, we'll get into the trade universe later. I don't know what the market would even be for Trey Young. There are all these distressed guard assets around the league, like John Morant, Lamello Ball. I think the Lamello Ball situation is simmering a little bit. He got benched in late in their game against Toronto the other day. That's happened before. Trey, and then you have all the Sacramento guys, Zion, I don't know what the hell you do with Zion, got Michael Porter Jr. is not distressed, as he's actually had a great season, but some team take a swing at him. We'll talk about the buyer, seller thing later, but I don't even know what the market would be. I really like the way they're playing. I have a dream of Trey Young fitting into it. I just don't know how realistic that is. They do need, it does make me nervous when Quinn Snyder goes full four bench guys plus one starter on the floor when all of Keaton Wallace is playing great. Luke Conard, Moe Gaye is making a little leap. And Vic Creci, who's turned into Clay Thompson in the last three weeks, when all four of them are on the floor, I'm like, can we get one more starter in there? Now, part of that is Porzingis has been, as always, in and out of the lineup. And that cap space scenario that I laid out before, cap flexibility scenario, also like KP is a free agent after this season, and it would require moving on from him too. And they don't have a ton. They're playing Moe Gaye's, they're back up five right now, and he's doing fine. But I don't know, I like this team. Orlando, let's see where they are. 12 and eight, eight and two in their last 10 have played a very tough schedule. Ninth in offense, eighth in defense, top 10 on both ends of the floor. Without Bancaro, or since Bancaro's injury, they are sixth in offense and 10th on defense, plus six for the season with Bancaro on the bench, six points per 100 possessions, plus 2.5 with him on the floor. And it should be noted that this hot stretch, which is now a sustained stretch, started with Bancaro in the lineup. I feel like this happens all the time. It reminds me of a couple of seasons ago, the Rockets finished really strongly with Shangoon injured, and everyone was like, oh, Shangoon's injured, I'm in Thompson's taken off. What does that mean? And I would always say like, they were, I'm just making this up, but they were like, five and one in their last six with Shangoon, like it started with Shangan. Well, they were, the magic were five and two in their last seven games before Bancaro got hurt. Not great competition, but it's not like they were losing games. This is getting interesting though, not the, not the Bancaro thing, because to me, the answer to that is not complicated. But after a sluggish start where like the Jamal Mosley noise started murmuring a little bit, maybe the magic are who we thought they were too. Maybe they're just a really good team that is actually a threat to make the conference finals. And if like everything explodes into chaos, who the hell knows? Maybe they're just that team. What do you think of them? Yeah. I mean, I probably jumped the gun the way I was killing them at the start of the season with how frustrated I was with their offense. Last 10 games, they're beginning to find, Bane's beginning to find his way more, just looking at the last 10 games, he's averaging 22 points a game. You know, it's three point shots, not falling as much as we would like it to. But I guess once you go to Orlando, you can't make threes. Just a thing that's, we'll just have to accept it as, as a fact now at this point. But I liked the way they're playing a little bit more on offense. They're finding more fluidity, they're finding more flow with how they look to attack, where they're looking to attack the, trying to pick at defenses, weak points and trying to get going. Franz has been really good. I think the other guy that's kind of been an underrated guy for them has been Anthony Black, has been phenomenal, right? Like the way he's kind of coming out, he's one of the few guys knocking down threes for them, shooting almost 39% from three hit. This is the last 10 game stats, you know, averaging 15 points per game. And I just feel like again, the one thing I love about all their guys, none of them really take anything off the floor defensively. Complete competitors on the defense event. So when you put them out there, you're not worried about them kind of like, Oh no, now our defense is going to go to the crapper. No, it's, we're going to still be solid defensively. I love the fight that they've had in the way that they've kind of persevered through all of this stuff. Cause the noise was getting there for Jamal Mosley. It was getting really loud. And I feel like they're beginning to find their way on offense. Once Paolo comes back, it's like you said, I think it's just going to be an easier transition for him to reintegrate them into the offense and get him and keep this momentum going offensively. I'm not worried about them in that regard. I just want to see them knock down some threes, Zach. It's just too long now. We just can't see them make anything. Well, what would really help is if Paolo could become a reliable three point shooter, because the track record is getting worrisome career, 31.7% and about there every season, 30% is a rookie, 34% 32% 25% so far this year. They're starting Tristan De Silva in his place. I think Tristan Silva is a really nice all around sort of Swiss Army knife as a role player. The lineups really sing when they take De Silva off the floor and put another guard on the floor. So three guards plus Franz Wagner at the floor plus a center. You feel both the speed, but that like the elbow is much, the elbow area is much less occupied and much less cluttered and everybody has more space to attack. And that is the part of the paint, that part of the court where Paolo really lives and Franz lives there a lot too. And it just becomes a little clunky and they've done well with that space being blown open a little bit. And I'm curious to see sort of how Paolo fits into that because he's still going to be the focal point. He's still the best offensive. Well, he's still the best player on the team probably although Franz is nipping it. And the other thing that should be mentioned to Paolo's credit, I said this before is Suggs is playing awesome on both ends of the floor on both ends of the floor. He's making his threes. He's running a little more pick and roll. He's ice-o-ing now and then and making pull-up threes. He really appears to be the skeleton key that unlocks the best version of this team. And because his injuries at the beginning and Paolo's injuries now did not overlap, like they've barely seen the floor together. And when they have seen the floor together, they are blitzing opponents in terms of scoring margin. So maybe it's just as simple as Paolo plays more with their best and most important players is another way the situation resolves itself. But I love the way this team is playing. One more team that we have to hit before we move on out of this chaos of the East. And Toronto, Detroit, Miami, I fit you all. All your teams hard in the past. Great stuff, everybody. Wonderful. Enjoy it. Boston is just way better than I thought they would be. I took the under on them. I don't remember where it was. Is it around 500? You might still get there. They're only 11 and 9. They've played an average schedule all the way around. 10 home games, 10 home games, average schedule. The thing that is absolutely crazy to me is if you told me 20 games into the season, they would be the number four offense in the NBA. Despite Derek White not shooting great, Peyton Pritchard not shooting great for the first 10, 12 games of the season. He's starting to normalize. He had 40 something last night against Cleveland. I just would not, I would have been like, that's insane. Fourth in offense, fourth, they're fourth in offense, Mo. It's like, and we know how they're doing it. They take a whole ton of threes. They're fourth and three point rate. They do not turn the ball over. They are first with a bullet in lowest turnover rate in the league. And Jalen Brown, I mean, the mid-range game right now is absolutely on lock. 52% of his shots have come from the mid-range this year. That's by far a career high. 28% of his shots, according to cleaning the glass, have been long twos. That's double his career high rate. He is shooting 48% on mid-range shots, 53% on long twos specifically. And that may not be sustainable, you know, totally, but he looks so comfortable and so powerful and puts more arc on that jumper when you need to put more arc on that jumper. His assists are a little bit up. His turnovers are a little bit up too, but I just, I love the way he's played. And yet I still don't understand how they're fourth in offense. It's crazy how good this team is offensively. Yeah, I think offensively they've just kind of found their flow with where they're going. First off, I think Brown, as you highlighted, is, I think he's showing even more improvement as a playmaker. Last night, 11 assists, making sure he was dropping some good dimes. There was a great baseline cut from Prichard. Brown's about to go into his mid-range shot, finds him right underneath the rim. It was a critical possession late in the fourth quarter where he does that. And it's just being more comfortable and trusting his teammates and understanding too that like, yo, I got to be the guy that kind of creates for everybody else. But then the ball kind of does a good job moving. I mean, when Prichard goes off the way he did last night, it's just going to be extremely difficult to deal with. But they get downhill, they do a good job. The one thing I found really impressed, I've been most impressed with Boston was early in the season, it didn't feel like they could get a rebound to save their lives. And now they've kind of become a very strong rebounding team in the way that they're doing it. And the guy I really want to highlight more than anybody else, Jordan Walsh has been phenomenal for them. And I think that's something that helps across the board, you know, not like scoring or whatnot, but he's going to get the hustle place. He's going to battle for boards. He's going to get opportunities. And because he's battling for boards, he's going to get to the free throw line, have opportunities at that end. It's just doing all the small things that they're doing. And then you just have guys like when Brown's going to shoot the way he's shooting at the mid-range and more aggressively, I feel like you're going to start finding more opportunities because you got to put more effort in defending him. And that opens up guys. And then when Derek Weitz on the floor, it's a guy that can knock down shots and then kind of create his own shot. Then you have Simons coming in off the bench. And that's just a dude that's just going to get downhill and look to attack over and over again. And he's going to be really fast. They put a lot of pressure on you defensively with just their individual talent, like how good these guys are. And I think that's what defenses are dealing with. And Simons impact has been up and down and almost more down than up. I mean, a lot of games where it's like 14 minutes, two of nine, like, whoa, that's all. They're getting out of him. I thought it, and look, we all know his defensive limitations and Joe Missoula's standards for getting on the floor. You still would think he'll just come and be a microwave scorer every game for 25 minutes and that hasn't been the case. It was last night in Cleveland. He went off a little bit. Minot has given them good minutes. Baylor Scheierman has cracked the rotation again and has been pretty good. And you mentioned Walsh, like it's 37% on threes, wide open, but he's making enough of them to be playable and defending the best perimeter guy on the other team every game. Massively valuable player. And they won last night without Kata and Kata has been incredible for them. They'll play five wings at the same time and just say to hell with it, good luck guarding us. We'll switch everything and play super fast. And Peyton Prichard after a rough start, 17 and a half a game, 46% overall, 34% on threes. He's shooting 62% on twos. He shot 64% on twos last year and 59% on twos the year before. And, you know, I remember talking about this with the Malik Beasley, Peyton Prichard, six man debate last year. I voted for Peyton Prichard. And to me, it wasn't a particularly close discussion. It's just like those twos are not easy baskets that he's making. Like he's wriggling his way into the mid range, cutting to the rim, getting offensive rebounds. And defensively, he's tough as shit. Like he's a little small, but you can't mess around with him. You can't back him down. He doesn't make mistakes. He is a what like I said last year, just a better all around basketball player than Malik Beasley. That's why I voted for him. He's just a really good player. Like just, and the decision to start him has really paid off for the Celtics. Yeah. I mean, it's just, when you go back to it, when you first kind of look at him, you're just like, all right, you know, even when he first came in the league, like, okay, this is a dude that's going to be kind of a TJ McConnell type guy, you know, and he's going to come in off the bench and bring a little juice and that's about it. No, he's a bona fide baller. Like he just plays at the end of the day. And I love the fight that he brings on the defensive end, because he's not going to shrink in the moment. He actually plays bigger than what he is. And he's going to kind of battle with you. He's going to be physical with you. He's going to bump you. He's going to give you a forearm, you know, sort of a bump there and here or there. Like he's going to take on the challenge. He's not going to be afraid. And I think that's just a big part of his game, right? In a weird way of like fearlessness of like, I don't care how big you are. I'm just going to try to go at you and do my job. And then when he gets again, he got so hot last night from three, it was ridiculous. Just the way he was playing and was knocking down deep threes. And then it opens up the stuff for them offensively for the Celtics. When you have a guy going off like that, just you have to put more, you have to ship your defense more that way. And with that shift, it opens up other opportunities. It's just like when he gets going and stuff, I got to get, Boston's way better than I thought they would be. I'm with you. I wasn't, I didn't think this was going to be a great year, but I also made the mistake. I should have also known that there's no way Joe Missoula was going to allow this team to lose a lot of games. Like he's just not, it's just no way he was going to be okay with that. And he's got to give him credit. He's put a lot of work on this and paying off. I still, I mean, there are a play in team right now, but as I said, everything is bunched. I still think they're probably a play in team. Now, they do have a lot of interesting plot twists to navigate in the next three to four months, the trade deadline, their ability to potentially cut their tax bill or get under it all together with a, let's call it maybe a lose now trade or a talent out, less talent in trade. And they just, the Tatum noise won't die. The Tatum wants to come back noise. The Tatum has a date in mind noise. The, is this going to be a tug of war between the Celtics and Tatum, depending on where they are in the standing's noise. Like, I don't know. I mean, I don't know. But, and, and beyond that sort of what does he look if he came back this season, we cannot just project like, oh, yeah, first team, all NBA Jason Tatum is coming right in for the playoff race. That's not realistic at all. But this is a better team, certainly that I expected it to be in way better on offense. Ready to launch your business, get started with the commerce platform made for entrepreneurs. Shopify is specially designed to help you start, run and grow your business with easy customizable themes that let you build your brand, marketing tools that get your products out there, integrated shipping solutions that actually save you time from startups to scale ups online, in person and on the go. Shopify is made for entrepreneurs like you. Sign up for your $1 a month trial at Shopify.com slash setup. Can we go through just a couple random notes from, from the weekend? Yes. Detroit. Look, I've beaten the market and drum a lot. Let's just leave him out of it. You know, Mark Stein reported over the weekend that the Jazz would prefer to keep him and build around him. Like, I'm sure they would. Like, that's great. We'll see what happens when a real offer comes to their door if there is one. Mark and an aside, Detroit does feel a little bit right for a consolidation trade. They have a they go 11 deep in actual rotation guys before you get to Paul Reed or Marcus Sasser who's been hurt or Chas Lanier who's given them good minutes, like 11 legit guys who have earned time. And you can already see JB Bickerstaff now that Ivy's back and Harris is back, being like, man, how do I get Dennis Jenkins into here? Like, oh, Givante Green, I kind of forgot about him is, but it's Ron Hollander back up power forward. Keras Levert and Jaden Ivy are like pretty similar players in some ways. Both need the ball. Ivy's minutes have been kind of limited to past few games. And it just feels like something is potentially it's ripe for something. But again, maybe the right as Simmons talked about last week when we did a pod together, like standing Pat, perfectly defensible, maybe the absolute right thing to do, maybe good enough to win this muddle decenter conference without doing anything. I lean more to the strike while the iron is hot and really, really go for it and add some shooting that inoculate you from playoff defenses a little bit more. But that perfect player may not be there. But I just I'm monitoring the minutes distribution mode. That's all. Yeah, it's tough. Right. Like this is a tough situation when you're a coach and you have a lot of talent and it's not just that you have to manage these guys in the locker room as well and keep them engaged. And how do you keep them going in terms of doing that stuff? To your point, though, of like, do you strike when the iron's hot or do you stand Pat? I think we've seen over the past few seasons that if you just assume we'll be better next year, it doesn't always work out that way. Right. And try to kick the cans. Like there's certain situations where that makes sense. But at a certain point, you have to recognize when it's your window or when it's an opportunity, you got to go for it. The other side of is the trade actually has to be there. You don't just make the consolidation trade to make the trade because we have too many guys and too many minutes and not enough minutes and got to figure this stuff out. You don't want to kind of just make a throwaway trade and then it ends up hurting you in this stuff. It's a great problem to have your JB Vickers staff. Right. Oh, no, I have too many good players. How am I going to find all these minutes? Like we know there are quite a few teams that would love to have this problem. I think over time, we're going to see this kind of settle out. You know, and he's going to have to kind of stick to a rotation. 11 deeps too much. You know, maybe during the season you can get away with it, but once you get to the playoffs, we know your rotation is true and you need to kind of start preparing guys for their roles now. I think it'll be interesting to see like the first half of the season to me is that because always experiment, figure out what we have, what rotations, whatnot. Second half of the season, everything has to be dialed in by then and you have to be ready to roll because now you got to go to work. I mean, it's nice if you can win games early on like the Epistons have, but you need to have your rotations and have a full understanding and the players need to understand their roles by maximum halfway through the season. And I think it's really important at this point. Now, with Ivy coming in, what is Ivy? They got to figure out what lineups does he work with, what lineups does any work with, what pairings work for him and don't. It's going to be really important to figure that stuff. And if the answer is he's just not going to fit, then you start to say, okay, well, this might be something where maybe we can use him to buy his Harris. And then if there's something out there, we can make a trade. Other random weekend observations. I've talked a lot about the Lakers. I don't want to talk about them too much, but does it seem to you like Luca is whining to the refs less this year? Little bit. Little bit. I've kind of noticed it a little bit where it's, it also looks like he's just goofing off a little bit more. Like they had a fun little thing with Austin Reeves at the, in between quarters and stuff like that. And so it looks like he's almost kind of a little lighter as a personality. Well, he is literally lighter. Yeah. But I feel like he's personality a little bit more, more playful. I should say that then we've seen in the past. And I think maybe that's why we're also not seeing him market the refs as much. Sometimes you don't notice it's harder to notice the absence of something than the presence of something. And I was just watching the Lakers over the weekend, a couple of games and he whined to the refs at some point. And then he ran back on defense and part of being in better shape is you don't, you're not playing four on five as much anymore. And he's chased, he's like chasing guard, Clay Thompson around screens. He's really guarding this year, but he did argue with the ref over an on call. And I was like, Oh boy, I don't feel like I've seen that nearly as much this year. And it's not lasting as long. It's not like knee capping their entire defense possession, just something Minnesota. I can't watch them play close games anymore, Mo. I just can't do it. I mean, they lost those games against Sacramento and Phoenix and somebody else I'm forgetting. And it was like, you could not possibly melt down like this. If you wrote a movie script of how a team blows the game, five second violations, pick six hit ahead passes, fouling other people 90 feet from the basket. Excuse me for no reason. Possessions where there are no passes and someone just takes a jump shot. Ant is, look, Anthony Edwards is amazing. I had him six in the ringer 100. Absolutely amazing. I've talked about point ant already on this podcast two or three weeks ago before a lot of people started writing about it. I think a leap in terms of his just, I don't even want to say playmaking ability to helm an effective offense is in progress, even though the assists stats don't know it. He's missing box outs late in these games over and over again and really causes situations. And he's just got to dial that in a little bit more. Just, just, just please get it out of your system now. And the one other Minnesota note I have is the last couple of games they have started messing around with opening the second and fourth quarters with Randall on the floor after spending most of the season resting ant and Randall at the same time. And they have a lot of offensive talent in those groups that they have Nasred and Divin Chenzo and Conley and McDaniels, but it's always been this sort of thing in my brain of, do they need to just keep one of them on the floor at all times? That's all. I can't, I, you have any Minnesota notes? I can't watch this crunch time stuff is like just outrageous. Missed free throws, go bare, missed a couple big free throws. It's everything. Well, it's a couple of things too. I mean, one shout out our buddy, John at the athletic wrote the, wrote about this. Point ant. Literally just point ant, but also wrote about their crunch time issues after they beat Boston and how they kind of got over it a little bit in their win against Boston down the stretch. I think a lot of it had to do with, it's also just attention to detail, understanding situations, when to make the right read. You know, ant talks about a play where he should have probably kicked it off to Randall, but he felt good about where he was and, and, and, and got a three off and he had enough space for three. He let it fly. But when you watch the stuff that he does, he makes a lot of smart reads in that game against Boston. It's tied one, 10, one, 10. They run a high picking role. They double ant. He hits Randall on the short roll and it's highlighted in the story. And then it's an immediate kick to a wide open Mike Connolly, Jr. who drills the three. And I feel like you're, you're, you're beginning to see that kind of evolution a little bit in their, their process. I think by the end of the season, we're going to feel better about their crunch time offense. I just think this is the growing pains of point ant at crunch time. When do I make the right path? When do I, when do I hold on to it? One, you know, one, do, you know, and it's going to come down to Randall also making plays is going to come down to guys knocking down shots, but it's good. Those two guys having to make the right decision. And I think now that he's more and more in that position, we're going to see it get better by the end of the season. Love to have this conversation at the end of the season when we look back and go like, you remember those games? They blew like, we're not seeing that anymore. I think they're going to find that flow. The other thing I found interesting, did you watch any of their game last night against San Antonio? I did not see that game. They went on a massive run midway through the third quarter, maybe towards the end of the third quarter, just put Rudy on the bench. Let's just spread it out. And then they just torch the Spurs after that. I mean, the Spurs were up at that point, and then they end up taking this game. They didn't even have to, we didn't have to worry about crunch time. They just made sure they didn't even get to that point by playing small. That's something I'm going to keep an eye on a little bit to see how they handle Rudy towards the end of games. I'm looking at the lineup data now. Read Randall Connelly, McDaniel, Steven Chenzo. It's one of those lineups early fourth quarter that I talked about where Randall is on the floor. I always have liked, to your point, about the difficulty of not difficulty. It's a great problem to have of juggling these three very good bigs. I always like when they flash in there one big four smalls, put Jaden at the power forward spot. And they've done that a little bit more in the last week or so. I just, I like that look for them. I think they have the wing players to do it. I understand it's hard to get there when they have three big guys who are all worthy of heavy minutes. It's just flagging it. Steph Curry got hurt. He's not going to miss a lot of time. Kaminga's back. The warriors are still afraid to shoot at the rim. I'm still afraid that the warriors are teetering a little bit at 11 and 10. No notes. Oh, I mentioned to you, I wanted to talk about a couple of players who were sort of under the radar helping round out their teams. Just, I just want to note it. Terence Shannon Jr. for the Wolves had a bad game last night, a couple games before that. If it's not going to be Dillingham and he's been wildly up and down, I like Terence Shannon Jr. I have faith in him earning a rotation role. Jacobi Walter in Toronto starting, he's kind of nailed down the starting spot with RJ Barrett hurt. I just think a very good defensive player making enough threes big and rangy. I just like the way he looks with their core lineups. And I'm interested to see his role when Barrett comes back, but he's leapfrogged, Grady Dick, he's leapfrogged, Agbaji is sort of like the best fitting of those two guards. I'm just monitoring it. That's almost. Yeah. I mean, those are the guys to keep an eye on in terms of that stuff. You need to be able to round out your rotations and things like that, having that on the bench. And then when RJ comes back, you know, you have a guy off the bench that just makes your team deeper when you're going through these situations. I'm with you on Shannon. Shannon's going to be so important for the Wolves just because that's why they let Nikki Alexander walk or walk, right? Like was the thought was he'll be able to provide a lot of what Nikki was for us. And I think that's going to be important to see how that kind of continues to play itself out through the season. Zach Eadie has joined the party with some absolutely monstrous games for the Memphis Grizzlies who are starting Vince Williams Jr. at Point Guard in John Moran's place. The Grizzlies are part of what I have started calling in my own notes, the Western Conference pentagram of hell, which is the five teams who are designed to win now and all facing various degrees of catastrophe. And ironically, the Grizzlies are in that group. And ironically, every single win in their current five and one stretch has come against other points of the pentagram. They beat the Kings twice, including once by 41 points. They beat the Clippers once, and boy, do the Clippers stink. And they beat the Pelicans and the Mavericks once a piece. That's the five, the circle of hell of five teams, which brings me to, and Zach Eadie's looks great, and I can't wait to see how it all looks. And the Grizzlies have played themselves into the play-in tournament at ninth. And that brings me to the end of this. By the way, a couple of Clippers notes, minus nine total points, so not bad with Kawhi and Hardin on the floor, but that's a bad sign. Kawhi, has it felt to you like you look at the numbers, like, yeah, it looks like Kawhi Leonard. And there'll be some mid-range jumpers and a defensive highlight where you're like, that's Kawhi Leonard. But you get to the end of these games, and maybe you're just projecting the feeling of a loss onto everything. But I don't get out of these Clippers games feeling like, man, that was a dominant perform. Like, Kawhi Leonard asserted his will on that game and bent it to his will. And I think part of it, very simply, Moe, 10% of his shots are coming at the basket this season. That is like alarmingly low for any kind of wing player, let alone one of his power. And you're going to tell me like, yeah, you know, that's Kawhi. His game is, you know, mid-range and shooting threes. And he does all that stuff well. This is a guy who would get to the rim at a reasonable rate. And that is a marker of, I'm just going to bring it up now. Last year, it was 20% of his shots at the rim, 22%, 25%, 30%. Like, normal-ish numbers, still below average for his position, but normally 10% is like, whoa, what's happening here. And that's a marker of, is there, I mean, obviously he's been in a line-up, just missed a bunch of games with foot and ankle stuff. Is it health? Is it age? Is it just, he's not feeling it? But that's a stat I'm going to now be checking every week or two. Yeah, you have to keep an eye on it. And because also the aspect of it is, when you attack the rim, that also opens up your mid-range game, makes you difficult to guard a little bit. They got to be worried about that. They got to worry about you attacking again when you're at the three-point line and things like that. If his percentage is dropped drastically, and that's a drastic drop, and maybe it gets better, maybe it doesn't, my feeling is, I won't be surprised if we don't see that improve much this year. And I think that's going to be a big thing with what we have going forward with him. It's just him with all the injuries and everything. Maybe he's going to be a little bit more reluctant to attack the rim. It's also a little bit more crowded down there. It feels like, depending who he's on the floor with, so he's not as inclined to get in that paint and do that battle. But that's going to be a big one to watch for because the Clippers are a complete shit show. It's a disaster when you watch them. The defense is terrible. Turn the rock over over and over again. It's pretty frustrating to watch this team because we saw what we saw last year. I thought they'd be at least on that level this year. And it's like they've just completely given up here at this point. Let go of the rope and let's see what happens. And it's pretty frustrating. You can watch it. You see Ty looks extremely frustrated on the bench. And that's a dude that doesn't usually show a lot of emotions, but you can sense it from them. It's just not fun times right now in the Intuitome. This is not reporting anything. Aggregators, whoever. This is just me saying something that is in my brain. The Clippers and the Bucks loomed to me as two of the most interesting trade deadline teams because they're two of the only currently bad teams whose all of their incentives, almost all of them, would align towards we have to save this season. The Clippers, because they are beyond pot committed to this aging, expensive core and they don't control their own draft pick and they have an owner who wants to watch wins and nothing else. The Bucks, because they're be honest. They both have sort of recollected some draft picks that are available to trade. I don't, I mean, the Clippers can trade draft picks until they can't. And I'm not sure what will happen with this whole Kawhi thing, but they have draft picks to trade. And that's what makes the trade deadline stuff as it comes into focus. Very interesting. There are sellers, like even in the play in world, there are sellers. There are obviously bad teams who would like to trade players for draft picks. There are three major issues though here. Number one, some of the sellers just don't have anybody that teams want to trade real stuff for. I would put Washington and Charlotte in that bucket. I don't think the Wizards are getting like real stuff for Chris Middleton or CJ McCollum or the Hornets for Grant Williams who hasn't played, Josh Green who hasn't played, Colin Sexton who's been okay, but like these are not game changing kind of deals. Then you have sellers who don't have their own pick. And so you wonder how incentivize is a team like New Orleans to sniff around design, Williamson trade market when they don't control their own pick. How incentivize is a team like the Clippers, you could argue should actually be sellers. Like would they actually cross the Rubicon with Harden and Kawhi? Would anyone touch Kawhi with a 15 foot pole when Uncle Dennis is attached to? The Grizzlies with John Morant, but they've played their way into the play intern, but the Grizzlies control their own pick. I shouldn't lump them in there. And then you have a third category of sellers who do have players that people might want, who do control their own pick, but also might look at the standings currently and look at the recent history of the lottery and be like, we're actually kind of cool trying to compete. Like I could see Dallas saying, if we don't have a great market for Anthony Davis or maybe we don't even want to trade them, we want to keep them. We're going to be, we're six and 15. We're not going to catch Brooklyn and Washington and maybe Indiana and maybe New Orleans and the tank standings, no matter what we do. And our chances are pretty good at moving up in the draft. If we're eighth or ninth in the lottery, maybe we'll do nothing. I think they fall into that category. Some of these other teams too do as well. And you know, but that's why I look at Milwaukee and the Clippers is super interesting. Are they willing to take a flyer on a longer term expensive contract to help them win? Like if I'm Brooklyn, Michael Porter Jr. becomes an interesting trade candidate for me because obviously I'm not trying to win now. He's been great, but if I can flip him into another thing and sort of double down on that trade, that's an interesting one to me. And it's going to be, it's going to be a very interesting trade season from that regard because I do think there are all these sort of distressed asset kind of players that people don't know what to do with. I mentioned all the point guards and I do think we are going to hear some Lamello noise. He rebutted a report that he wanted out of Charlotte. I actually believe him that he doesn't want out of Charlotte. I think the more interesting question is what does Charlotte want? He's got three years left on his contract after this year. It's a tough one to move. That's what I mean by distressed. It's going to be a tough one to move. It's a point guard. Not everyone needs a point guard. The Kings guys, like I'm sorry to the Kings, you're not getting a Kings ransom, no pun intended for any of them. You'll get something for Sabonis, the others, Levine, Deros, and Shruder, who knows, but they're open for business, I'm sure. It's just, I don't know how all this is going to work out, but just a lot of stuff to keep your eye on. The lottery odds have really changed teams thinking on a lot of this. Yeah. Well, because you've seen the results over the past few years, right? Teams that were the worst teams in the league didn't end up winning the draft, and it becomes a problem for them, right? So it's like, why should we be the worst team? Like a Dallas in their situation. Let's just try to play it out and we'll see what the odds are for us and how that kind of works out and where we're at. I agree with you. The Clippers and Milwaukee will be the most interesting come trade deadline because it's going to give us insight into maybe how the front office is thinking and what they're hoping for going forward and how they're going to kind of build out this team beyond this season. Sacramento is just Sacramento, Zach. I throw my hands up. I'm not trying to figure them out. So we needed just a moratorium on talking about the Kings. I can't do it anymore. But I just think it's going to be interesting. I think trade season, there's going to be a lot of teams that are going to be buyers. I just don't know if we're going to have enough sellers. Like Lamello ball situation, who needs a pointer at this point? Who are you looking at that's going to go and give up stuff for Lamello? And if you're Charlie, yeah, like why, you have to really ask yourself, is this a guy we can win with? It's going to be interesting to see how his kind of career plays out. Somebody texted me this over the weekend about Lamello asking me, is he like Jason Williams? Like is he going to be a guy who's all flash, no substance that has to get traded and eventually find his way, lands in the right spot. And then he kind of gets it because he's a play. I mean, his appetite for defense does not exist. And I think that's a massive problem. But he has the tools, I think, to be a pretty good defender, at least in the sense of not being as bad as he is. If you just cared a little bit, I will be very curious to see who is going to take the chance on him. And I don't know if it's going to happen this season at the deadline. It's just going to be an interesting thing to watch for and see how that plays out. Well, and I don't really believe in any of these, you take my point guard, I take you point guard, musical chairs, fake trades with Marant and Tray Young and Lamello. I don't think really that makes a ton of sense. I do think there are trades that make sense between bad teams. Like the Pelicans could use another point guard. I mean, you could say just hand the whole offense to fears, I don't know. Certainly the Kings could and I'd be trying to fleece the Kings every chance I could. Look, as one of the last people swimming in the Lamello Lagoon, this season has been very tough for me. His water is getting a little murky. He's missed half the games almost like usual. He's shooting 38%, 28% on threes. Just got to make more baskets. I just haven't loved what I've been seeing. On the clip, as I should mention, there's another variable where they're like, I think, six or seven million over the tax. Is there a world where they can get under the tax? Because you shouldn't, they didn't pay the tax last year and they shouldn't pay it for this team. Can they do that without kneecapping their current team as much as the tax dump deal normally would? How does that even look? Someone mentioned to me like, well, I think they're probably just going to run this back for one more year and then rebuild properly in the summer of 2027. Like run what back? This team looks absolutely dead. It's morose. What are we running back? Are we going to, it's like jogging back at the very best? I don't know, any concluding thighs. Oh, the other random Western conference note, Reed Shepard cracked a starting five for the fully healthy other than Tariq Eason Rockets over the weekend, taking the Josh Akogi slash Steven Adams spot, Durant returned. Reed Shepard's good. He certainly adds a fair bit of dynamism and spacing to an offense that needs both along with its crazy offensive rebounding. I've said all year, I think the league and the West is Oklahoma City, small drop, Denver, drop, everybody else. Houston, I think even more than the Lakers, is making a case that they belong right next to Denver. They are a very, very tough team to play against and have a bunch of trade assets too. Yeah. I mean, that game, Denver, Houston, great game. It was awesome. Two Fridays ago, I think. Yeah, two Fridays. I was trying to figure out what exactly it was, but that was an awesome game and just watching them kind of duke it out. Start as a season with them and OKC, right? And I know Jaylen Williams and all this stuff, but double overtime. Like this team is on that level and I've been blown away with Reed Shepard. Maybe that's because my expectations were so low on him, but like I've been highly impressed with how he's kind of come in. He's at least competing defensively. We know teams are trying to pick on him. You know, when he's on the floor, he's been holding up pretty well for the most part. Granted, he's got so much length and size behind him. It helps, but he's also delivering on the offensive end. And even in that Denver game, like he had moments where he really got them, kept them in that game for a long stretch in the second quarter, in the third quarter. Like I'm pretty impressed with him. I'm with you. They're right up there with Denver. Like I think the breakdown there. And then to me, it's the Lakers after that because their defense is so rock solid. It's that's just going to sustain from them. They're going to be able to eat off that for an extremely long time. And then if Shepard is going to continue to shoot the way he's shooting, you get Katie and Shengun down the stretch. That's a scary ass team to deal with, man. The top six in the West right now. When I was with Mahoney in Minnesota for the live show, we did it with the, with the graphics. We did a power ranking of the Western Conference. We had the same top six and it's the same top six that's in position now in order of standings. Oklahoma City, Lakers, Rockets, Nuggets, Spurs, Wolves. So the first round, the two set series would be three Rockets versus six Wolves. And the Wolves are always sort of cast aside in these discussions. The Wolves have been at the last two conference finals. If they can figure out this crunch time shit and get anything out of their young guys, like they can beat almost, I mean, they go toe to toe with Denver. Like they could beat the Rockets in a playoff series. They could definitely beat the Spurs. They could definitely have and have beat the Lakers as amazing as the Lakers were. Oh, and by the way, another top 100 thing, someone, I saw some angst them on Lakers Twitter about where Reeves ranked in the top 100. I think it was 32nd in the ringer 100. I had them 21st, direct to rank, direct to angst elsewhere. But so the first round matchups would be Nuggets, Spurs in a four or five matchup of Yolkic, and Rockets, Wolves in a three, six matchup. And then, you know, Thunder, Lakers at one and two play whoever gets in the Thunder just don't lose anymore. I just another thing I'm going to be monitoring all year mo and maybe I'm over overdoing it with this. Maybe I'm placing too much importance on it. But right now at this very moment with the Nuggets missing two of their five starters, the Nuggets are fourth and the Thunder are first. And if I'm every other team in the West, I'm hoping like hell that that stays into the playoffs. So I don't have to face both of them to get out of the West. They have to face each other theoretically in the second round. It seemed far fetch when Denver was lighting the world on fire and winning every game. They seemed like they were going to lock in at one and two. Maybe they will. Right now they're not. I think the funnier side of the two is both, I think, OKC and Denver at the same time are just like, come on, man, we don't want to face each other in the second round. Like I think that's kind of, you know, that plays perfectly for Houston. Right. Of all the teams, I feel like that plays perfectly for them. You know that's going to be something that everybody's going to be monitoring as we get closer to worrying about playoff seeding and things like that. I think Denver is going to be fine. I think once they get healthy, it's going to be, they'll get back to where they're at. And they're getting great minutes from guys right now. Like valuable development. We're going to need you in the playoffs to play like this minutes right now. And I think that's going to be really kind of a big thing that pays off for them once they get to the playoffs. Motekil, what do we need to promote this week? Let's see. I have Double Dribble podcast with my buddy Jared Dubin. That's an independent podcast between Jared and I. Please support us. Check us out there. It's on everywhere you get podcasts. We usually record on Wednesdays and then get it out to everybody. Make sure you are following me on offside, uh, followed on all the socials. That's where I'm doing all my videos. We got great creators. We got Jason Concepcion, Kirk Henderson. We got everybody, Michelle Beedle. We got a fun group, Zach Harper, whole squad over there. Make sure you're checking us out. That app is going to be ready soon. And we're going to open it up for everybody to kind of join the platform and, and, and enjoy it. The app's fun. We got stats in there. We got a bunch of story links and things like check it out. You'll, you'll enjoy it. If you're a basketball fan, you'll love it there. And then you'll see me in my videos. And then just, I'm on NBA TV every other weekend or so. Uh, you know, usually on Sunday nights, check out the association weekend editions. I think that's about it, Zach. Well, Mo, I'll say what I always say. If you want to know what happened in the basketball game, why one team won and one team lost, what one coach tried to do, what one coach should have tried to do, but didn't. Mo DeKiel is one of the guys who knows what happened in the basketball game. Mo, I always appreciate your time. I like Mondays with Mo. We'll see you around the corner. Thank you. All right, that's it for a crowded Monday. Thanks to Mo DeKiel for his time, as always, and his insight. Thanks to Jesse, Jonathan, and Mike on production. Thanks to you for listening to Andor watching the Zach Lo Show wherever you get your podcast. We'll see you later this week for another episode. Who knows what will happen in the NBA between now and then. You never know. Thanks for listening. I'm going to choose this or call 1-877-8-HOPENY or text HOPENY in New York.