Coaches Doc Rivers and Michael Malone take playoff challenge a possession at a time
On one socially distanced bench Wednesday: Doc Rivers, coaching his 177th NBA playoff game.
On the other, Michael Malone, coaching his 25th.
Malone — 12-12 in the postseason entering Game 4 in the Western Conference semifinal series — said he’s come to appreciate the intense rigor of playoff basketball.
“It’s the level of competition,” said Malone, whose Nuggets bowed out in the conference semifinals last season, his first taste of the playoffs as a head coach. “Obviously, the further you advance in each playoff round, you’re playing against really good teams. During the 82-game season, 29 other teams, you’re not going to be playing the level of competition that you may play each game in the playoffs.”
That’s why attention to detail is paramount, said Rivers, who’s in the midst of coaching in his 16th postseason, after playing in 10 of them.
“You just take every single game and it’s a single game, single-possession game,” said Rivers, 58. “When you look at all the close games, you go back through the game and look at all those single possessions, you can find the results in that.
“For us, single possessions for 48 minutes, the more realistic we can do that, the better chance we have of winning games.”
That’s perspective that Malone can appreciate, he said.
“Obviously, Doc has been around for a long time,” said Denver’s 49-year-old coach. “Like last year, we played San Antonio, coaching against a guy like Gregg Popovich, who’s arguably the greatest coach in NBA history. But I don’t get caught up in that, I don’t get caught up in my record, his record. I get caught up in Game No. 4 and trying to help our guys win this game to even the series up.
“It’s a heck of a challenge and I hope I can coach as many playoff games as Doc because that means I’m able to do this for a long time.”
JAMYCHAL GREEN UPDATE
Clippers forward JaMychal Green appeared to hurt his knee in the fourth quarter of the Clippers’ victory Monday, leaving the floor with 10:54 remaining. The Clippers said he was cleared to return, though he didn’t.
Before Game 4, Rivers was vague about the extent of the issue, except to say that he expected the Clippers’ valuable contributor off the bench — 5.9 points on 55.3% shooting, to go with 4.0 rebounds per game entering Wednesday — to be in the thick of the action, as usual.
“I don’t know if anyone is feeling 100% at this point in the playoffs,” Rivers said. “So I think that is the best way to answer it. I think all of us, Mike Malone, myself even, have our own bumps and bruises right now. It’s the playoffs.
“JaMychal is a tough guy and obviously he’s going to give it a go.”
FAMILY MEN
Many of the Clippers’ players have welcomed family members into the bubble in Lake Buena Vista, Fla., in the past week — lending a tiny slice of normalcy to the absolutely abnormal setting.
Rivers said he’s glad for his players who have loved ones on the the NBA campus now.
“I like them here. I think it’s been good,” he said. “This is not normal. When you get deep in the playoffs, especially here in the Western and Eastern finals, you usually bring your families.
“People forget, during the regular season, you go home to your family. So families are around and families are important for these guys to get away from what we are doing. Just like it is in any other work. So I think it’s all good.”
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