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Wave. Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the Right Time. A Wave original. My name is Bomani Jones. Thanks for listening wherever you get your podcast. Thanks for watching us on YouTube. Subscribe like, rate us, review us, give us five stars. You only give us four stars. I'm inclined to believe you are a hater. It is that time of week where we have a guest join us. Come coming to us live from San Antonio. You know the next line. It's just like Compton. Bruce Bowen. What's going on?
B
All is well. What's going on with you, Bomani?
A
Hey, man, I feel like we do it a little better over here than you supposed to do it in San Antonio right now. Like, y', all, y', all, y' all a little nervous after. Look, I was just telling Ryan before the show there's only two ways for that dude to get a concussion in an NBA game. And that's to hit his head on the basket or what happened right there. Otherwise, like, how does he ever get hit in the head? And he wound up hitting chin first. Victor Wyama, chin first on the floor. And was night night.
B
It was, it was a. Obviously it's a scary situation because he didn't have his hands to brace his fall. By the time he was already heading downward. It was. It was face first. And these are some of the situations that take place in the game that people don't realize. Like just in a pulling of the chair, losing your balance. It's a variety of things that can happen. We were just happy that. Okay, that was the least of it. I remember the last time I saw someone hit their chin. Well, it was more or less their mouth. And all you saw was a spray of Chiclets.
A
Yeah.
B
And that's what I was hoping I didn't see him doing. Like, oh, there's my tooth over there. There's another particle over there. Yeah.
A
Like that was. That is the part that I had not thought about. Cause you're right. I don't know exactly who that was, but I remember exactly what you talking about. That face goes into grass and then it's just teeth and you got. And you gotta go get em. You can't just leave them out there. There's still a chance to save them.
B
Right, Right. The one I'm talking about, it happened to be Doc Rivers. And so when that happened, it's already scary anytime you just. That, that, that sound only people understand that have either hit the back of your head on someone and like you're really like, whoa, whoa, whoa. What just happened here? And then to see him. This is where I think, not having a lot of experience going into the playoffs, how a certain scenario can happen where you're like, hey, this is why you respect your team. I'm not saying that the spurs didn't respect Portland, but this is why you have to talk about things in a way where nothing is guaranteed. The playoffs are a different animal. And we see so many different things that transpire during the course of that. This was one of those situations that if the spurs aren't playing with Victor, it's only because of something tragic happening. Yeah.
A
And this I. Concussions in sports outside of football and hockey to me are interesting because those are not great risk of head injury sports. Right. And so we don't think about concussions in the same way, but in the NFL, we see those dudes come back after a week. In the NFL, sometimes it might be two, but I think about a guy like Justin Moore. No, in baseball, and you see this in other spaces, people are typically way more judicious outside of football about bringing people back from concussions. Because a concussion, you know what a concussion is like in the NFL? It's like a snow day. If you live in Iowa, like, we can't be taking off, but so much time behind these snow days, man, we never get anything done. You know what I'm saying? Like, we just can't. We just can't be shutting it down every time it's a snowflake.
B
And to your point, Bomani. Yes. Football, every play is some type of head collision. You know, the helmets hit one another. It's part of their norm. It's just when it goes to another level that. Where it's like, hey, hey, we have to dial back, but excuse me. In basketball and baseball, all these different sports where you don't have the collisions quite like that, that's where it becomes a little more, as you say, judicial in how we handle these things.
A
Right. That's where I'm kind of torn. Cause on one level, it's like, hey, let's just be careful. Da, da, da. On the other, ain't nobody hitting that big motherfucker in the head, man. Like, his head is the safest head in the history of professional sports. When it comes to being at risk of somebody hitting him, Ain't nobody cleared no elbow through and hit him. None of that is.
B
It's intentional. If he get nail bowed in the head.
A
It requires somebody to like. You remember that time that Chris Paul tried to knock the ball out of DeAndre Jordan's head?
B
You Know. Okay, I was going to Isaiah Thomas with Rick Mahorn.
A
Yes.
B
And. And Isaiah, you know, he's. And Rick is like, stop it, man.
A
Rick said he had pillow heads, but it's like, if you're like a kid, like, hey, gimme, gimme, gimme, gimme. That's what it's going to take for you to hit that dude in the head. The other part of it is, though, he is the franchise in a way that nobody is the franchise.
B
So this is where players don't always like how they're handled. I remember a time when Manu. Manu did something and Pap was like, that's it. Nope, you're done. And no, Manu's a competitor. Victor's a competitor. But because of your value, and you never want a player to ever feel like you all don't value me. You guys put me out there too soon. We've heard many stories like that with this situation and what he's able to do for the organization. Yes. It's about his health, first and foremost. Now, I'm sure after a couple of days, Victor's going to be like, all right, let's go. I'm ready. And they're like, hold on. We need to make sure you are okay. Because it's not. Just for right now. We're talking about future.
A
Yeah. Let me tell you, I had this observation about him as they gave him the Defensive Player of the Year trophy before the game on Tuesday, right? You played with, for my money, the best defensive player of that era of Tim Duncan. Right. Best team. I don't know if anybody ever affected team defense quite like Tim Duncan did from the second he showed up in the league to the second that he left. Tim Duncan never won Defensive Player of the Year. I have no idea when anybody else is going to win Defensive Player of the Year with Victor out there. Just because nobody's going, nobody defense going to look like that ever. Did you see the shot chart from, like, what happened after he left while he was in the game?
B
They lived in the paint.
A
Exist.
B
They lived. Hey, hey, hey. Guess what, y'.
A
All.
B
He gone. Yeah, let's go. That's. That's what it was the equivalence of. You know, you just made a statement talking about Tim never getting the Defensive Player of the Year. I didn't like how at one point, it was just given to a guy who rebounded the basketball. When I believe Marcus Camby got it one year.
A
Yeah.
B
Are you kidding me? Now people going to say, ooh, he throwing shade at Marcus Camby? No, Because I look at defense not as a rebounding deal. I look at. At you limiting someone that's really good at a position. And there was no. I didn't look at Marcus Camby at that time as a stopper. It was a time when Ben Wallace was getting them. But you could. You could. You could validate that with what he was doing. He guarded Shaq by himself a couple of times during that series in 04. Right. So he's playing defense, he's blocking shots. We talk about Victor and what he's able to do. But Manny, he can stand in the paint and get a good contested three point. Somebody shooting a three pointer, he can contest it from the closing out from the paint. We've never seen something like that. When he extends his arms, it reminds me of that running rev team with that amoeba defense. They were so long. Stacy Altman arms long, Ackles long, Butler long. And so when we start talking about how someone impacts a game, it's not just the fact that he's blocking shots. It's the fact that every time you get in the paint, you. You don't know where he's coming from. And it's almost like. It's like, okay, go go Gadget arms. And he still. They try to get into his body. It's hilarious because now he understands, like, huh. When they try to feel where I am, they have a better opportunity and maybe scoring. But when they can't get into my body, they don't know where I am. And that's what you see him doing a lot when it comes to ball going in the paint. He's just there. He creates so much havoc on the defensive side, it will be hard to not necessarily say, all right, who's going to get second this year in defensive player of the year votes? Who's going to get second?
A
I don't see any way anybody could be more impactful because he's also out here sliding his feet with dudes on the perimeter, like, what are we supposed to do?
B
I saw him sliding them puppies one time and I was in my house like, ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh. Get him. It's such a pleasure to see because when it comes to the technique of it, he stayed in the defensive stance. He never allowed his feet to come together. He didn't open his hips and give way to the basket. All these little nerdy thoughts I have when it comes to those types of moments, that's what, you know, I can recognize on the fly and just marvel at it. Because of his size.
A
Yeah. Now, I also think this. I think even without him, they still win this series. Like, I mean, they had that game in the fourth quarter and then just kind of gave it away as it went. And Portland. Portland's not a bad team, but Portland's not a good team. Right. Like, I think San Antonio without Victor, and that's the biggest change from the beginning of this season to now is that before, this looked like a lottery team without him. Now they look like a team that wins this series.
B
Yeah. Yeah. I believe they. They were 12 and 6 without him this year. And what you. What you get a chance to learn in this moment, Bomani, for a young group that some of your key, key contributors don't have that experience. They can only get the experience by having the experience and going through whatever it is. This was a game where Mitch will go back in that film and say, fellas, look at what we're doing. We're up 14 with six minutes to go. What transpires after that is where coaches love to break the game down as far as showing the players their flaws or how they didn't continue on with whatever the play was. Get to the end of the play. Now that you don't have Victor, it's no longer about a quick shot. Now it's about making sure you can attack from certain areas on the floor and stay disciplined to it. During the regular season, you can skip steps and sneak out with a win. During the playoffs, it's not about skipping those steps. It's about really focusing on the part of who are we going to attack right now? And stay diligent in that and stay diligent to what you do. The biggest thing for me is that this younger group learned a valuable lesson of how important it is to stay locked in defensively because you got a lead and then all of a sudden you lost the lead. And it wasn't about necessarily the shots. It's about them getting to the basket. Now we got to stay in front of folks. These are things that it's just so hard to do on the fly. They're accustomed to having Wimby. They're accustomed to that. Oh, he's good. We. We got help there. Now we need to guard the yard a little bit more, do a better job of the rotations and just understand that even in the midst of things right now, it is a learning process, and it's so important that they absorb all of this, which they are. But it's just even more important that you realize that playoffs are different from the standpoint that you don't pack it in, you fight till the end. And if there's, if there's ever been a team that they can look at and say wow, look how they kept fighting was last year's Indiana's team. The fact that every game they were down, they beat, they beat the Knicks coming back from a deficit of 20 plus points. So it's still about the fight.
A
Yeah. Let me tell you this. I can't wait to see game three. And it's actually only minimally related to the spurs but cuz it's going to be weird vibes in Portland. Have you been reading these stories about their owner?
B
No.
A
Okay, so for people who do not know this, they, they were just bought by this dude named Tom Dundon. He is the owner of the Carolina Hurricanes, right? He's a billionaire from Texas. He is worth four and a quarter billion dollars. And John Canzano has already written the column asking whether this dude is trying to set it up to have the team leave Portland. Right. And it's because he's doing things like this. Your man Splitter, interim coach. Right. This should be a feel good time for the Trailblazers. Let us not forget their beloved head coach was indicted by the feds earlier this year. Right? They picked it up, they've made the playoffs. The word is out that their owner wants to see if they can get a head coach for between one and two million dollars per second season. And they are currently looking for other coaches while their season is still going on. Now, now, now, hold up, hold up. I got more for you. Right? That's the vibes when you're just talking about what might be going on around the team. Okay. I was told that with the Hurricanes, you know, the hockey team in Raleigh, that he has been heard complaining about the five star travel requirement and the collective bargaining agreement, for example. Like he is the guy that believes you could put a number on everything and that putting a number on everything includes the, the number for the T shirts in the arena. So in San Antonio where they did the whole thing where it looked like the old logo and the colors were going all around, brother, they ain't even giving the people T shirts. I'm dead. They are not giving the people T shirts. And look, it's one thing in L. A where they don't even want to wear the T shirts. You know what I'm saying, baby, this is Portland. You know what I'm saying? Saying everybody go have them T shirts on. They, they would not put the money on the T shirts.
B
Wow, that's. You know, it's unfortunate because I think if there's anything you can be doing, especially right around this time right now, is really marketing how great of a job Tiago has done, marketing how great of a group they have in Portland. You got Dane Lillard back. You got this vibe within the young culture there of guys doing their work and spending time in the gym and getting the extra shots. On top of that, we just had come out on Netflix, the whole Jailblazers thing. So why not really take this time to promote what your club is doing right now? Obviously, we don't know what's going on in his head, but it's just. It's a sad sight if the team is able to leave or if he gets rid of the team out of Portland. Because we. We went through that in Seattle. Yeah, And Seattle was a beautiful place to play. Just the atmosphere. I mean, they were champions years ago. They'd been to the finals in Gary Payton's era. Don't start. I guess it's not me, but it's like, don't start screwing up things that were implemented from a long time ago just to satisfy yourself. Think about others in the process.
A
Dawg, he just cheap. Like, it's just. It's flat.
B
One to two million. What is I. What I like to know is what's the average yearly salary for NBA coaches, head coaches?
A
I think it's now in the neighborhood. Like, I don't think you can get a coach, any coach now, for less than $6 million.
B
Yeah.
A
Like, you can't get a college coach for $2 million.
B
And, and yeah, it just sounds like to me, you need to have some people in your organization or some. Some confidants that will help him understand that this isn't what. This isn't what you want to do.
A
Yeah, like, this is. I just. I look at the league on this because this man gets down like this with his hockey team also. Now you can make the argument, and as Dundon does, that that team has been good since he got there and the results have improved. But this ain't the NHL. You know what I mean? Like, you can't. You, You. You can't play this game over here like this with the NBA. My guy Joe Gilio made that point. He's like, oh, unless you're going to draft a superstar, you're going to need to sign a superstar. You're going to need to do the things that make players want to play on your team, especially if you're Portland.
B
Look, there was an attraction in Portland other than Nike. Was the owner's plane. Yes. And I remember my first year in the NBA was with Miami Heat and we had our own plane. I went to Boston the next year and I was like, well, where's our plane? They're like, oh, we have the team charter. And man, when I tell you. My heart was hurt the first flight I took. And it had nothing to do with the amenities because it was fantastic. It was just. They were a little more special on Miami's plane. That's all it was.
A
Hey, man, you never know. How far did you feel for West Fresno when you started complaining about the play?
B
Oh, man, shoot. I rode that gray dog, bruh. So, hey, Bomani, let's not forget I played in the cba. When you saw the pilots going out there on them little crop dusters testing the. I looked out the window and I see a guy doing this test to the propeller. I'm like, okay, well, I used to ride buses and now. Now I'm on a pilot doing this to the propeller. Oh, Lord, you got something in store for me. I don't know what it is, but I'm a stay steadfast.
A
Oh, no, no. I was just saying. Cause this happens to people. I'm sure there's somebody that's out here listening, being like, oh, you could play it about the private plane. And you like, yeah, but things change as your life changes. Things change.
B
You know, I love the NBA. I love what it did for me. I love the places that I've gone because of the NBA. And, you know, there was a time, Bomani, where some teams didn't stay in Ritz Carlton's in Four Seasons. They were still at them Holiday Inns. And there's nothing wrong with that. But I'm glad that everybody seemed to have received the memoir about the. The. You want to be able to order room service sometimes at 2am and it's not a sandwich.
A
Hey, man, that's what they Look. That's what LeBron was trying to tell people. Nobody wanted to Hear it, though. LeBron, like that hotel in Memphis is not up to not be fitting of a man of my stature. Hey.
B
Oh, boy, that is kind of tough in Memphis. It's kind of tough, baby. I remember one time. So to your point, like, when teams lay the towels out or the T shirts. Well, in Memphis one year when they were still playing at the pyramid where the University of Memphis would play, they had these towels and so they're like, come on, everybody twirl Those towels, man, when I tell you I don't know where they got those towels from, but all the little lint particles that were floating during that game, you just see somebody do this. Is it a mosquito? No, it's that. It's from the towel. So it's all about the quality sometimes.
A
Hey, let me give you a fun fact. Do you know what the pyramid is now in Memphis?
B
No.
A
They turn it into the world's largest Bass Pro Shops. I'm not lying. It's Bass Pro Shops.
B
That's. Yeah, I'm a. I'm a text you back on that one.
A
Yeah, yeah, right Fast, though. Before we get this break, I want to ask you. Boston lost the Philadelphia by 14 points. To me, it just feels like this is what happens when you decide to shoot 53s and you're not making them that night. Am I missing it? I mean, Edgecombe was great, but that seemed to be the biggest part of it, is this is just gonna happen when you play ball like this.
B
Well, part of it is, yes. We saw it last year, remember, especially in the Knicks series. They went on one of those cold sprees. But the other side is that you still got to play defense. And, you know, a couple of times I saw Pritchard isolated with Maxey or Edgecombe. And, like, you got to know, we got to rotate on that one. Those two. Man, I tell you, I used to hate stopping on a dime because, you know, your feet move in your shoe. You know, you're creating friction. The corns are starting to act up. And when I see Tyrese Maxey and he get to the hole and he do that snatch, dribble, because he stopped, like, skirt. And I feel like others are like dogs hitting that corner and maybe that they can't recover. So you gotta understand, when those two have the ball and they getting those ISO modes, you gotta send somebody, at least try to make it where you got Drummond shooting the ball or something. Cause those two, they quick with that ball.
A
I forgot Andre Drummond was in the NBA until I looked up and watched him play the other night. And that's crazy. Cause he's like 32.
B
Well, we just. Sometimes we need a program to get guys in better shape.
A
But also, the game evolves on dudes. Like, you remember, Roy Hibbert went from being a great defensive player to being unplayable for the whole league in three years.
B
And I think sometimes in those scenarios, Bomani. Part of it is the communication. And what exactly can I do? Because I think there was a place for Roy before he was out of the league, there was a place for him. It's just a matter of how do you figure it out? Or for Roy's case, how do you continue to add to whatever skill sets you have? We saw Brook Lopez. Yeah, he. He got to Milwaukee and next thing you know, he was no longer on the block. He worked on the shot. He could do other things as well as just shooting. He could clog the paint, he could rotate, he could switch out to guys. You have to reinvent yourself now. You really do if you want to continue to play the game. It's not. Nah. What I do is I get on that block. They're like, no, that block's for Giannis. What are you going to do? Okay, well, if he develops a touch shooting now, he forces a big outside of the paint and. And now Giannis has the operating area of the paint and it works. But to his credit, he continued to evolve. He changed his game to become something different, something that can be utilized on a team, whether it's in the east or the West. Now he in LA with the Clippers, able to do stuff. Now. I don't know how old he is, but he's getting up in age. But it's been a long time since I seen him on the block like he was in Brooklyn.
A
Brook Lopez just finished his 18th season in the NBA. And let me explain to you how long Brook Lopez has been in the NBA. First of all, you may not know this, but this is one of my favorite, like, trivia factoids in the NBA. Brook Lopez is the all time leading scorer in the history of the Nets.
B
He's there that long.
A
No, he was there that long and he's been gone from there for nine years. Ooh, like that's how long Brooke Lopez has been in the NBA. Long enough to become the all time leading scorer in a franchise's history and he's been gone for nine years.
B
And how many, how many years was he there?
A
Nine.
B
Okay, so you know where he's from, right?
A
Fresno.
B
Come on now. It's part of that water. That's that Central San Joaquin Valley water.
A
Yeah. See, I gotta. I got another thought on Brook Lopez that I will talk to you about also on text rather than on this show. But coming up next, go talk with Bruce about the Lakers Rocket series. Cause I got a feeling I know what he has to say about the Rockets. Find out coming up next. You can predict the playoff action all the way to the finals with FanDuel predicts. All you have to do is Sign up to get you a $25 bonus. Follow all the playoff dishes, swishes, wishes and misses. Every move is a potential plot twist. Predict the spread, the total points and even the game winning moments that make the playoffs where one run, one rebound, one shot changes everything from opening tip to the final buzzer. Stay locked in with every pass, every play and every moment that moves us closer to crowning a champion. Sign up now for your $25 bonus on FanDuel Predicts offered by FanDuel Prediction Markets LLC, a registered futures commissions merchant. 18 plus bonus is non withdrawable and expires 7 days after receipt. Trading derivatives involves significant risk and may not be suitable for all investors. Manage your activity with our consumer protection tools. Restrictions apply. See terms@fanduel.com predicts bonus offer terms offered
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A
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B
The, you know, it goes back to the youth. I'm, I'm gonna say the youth again. Bomani, you look at where they were during that playoff series last year or year before last against Golden State was the year before last
A
thing was year before last, okay?
B
So you look at that time and you say, ooh, they're on the cusp, they're on the cusp. And then Fred goes down. Van Fleet, the importance of a floor general. You just can't make somebody a point guard. We talked about this at the beginning of the season when they played okc. They played okc. And the last so many minutes, KD didn't even get a shot. A floor general recognizes when that boy that, that, that can score in his sleep, they recognize that he needs a shot. Now you try different pieces there. And what it just seems to boil down to is that this era of basketball where we're talking about, oh, he's a two way guy, I'm sick of that term. This ain't football. A player should be able to play offense and defense. Maybe not as grand as others, but you should never be solely out there just for one aspect of it. So you have a big man that can score like it's nobody's business. But it's the other part of the game that you worry about. Where were the defensive rotations when LeBron drives by KD? I didn't see any. He, he 40, 40 years old, doing a reverse.
A
Yes. In a game, not on a breakaway. In the half court.
B
In the half court. This is where I say sometimes teams give in. They don't look like they're happy with one another. You can tell team camaraderie, especially in adverse situations. These situations. Sometimes it's like you think, going back home, okay, now we're going home for two. We're going to get to. No, all it takes is game three for you not to come out the right way. And it's disappointing because what we've seen with IME as a coach. I heard Perk talking about IME got out, coached. I have this thought process is that when players are not accountable and they're being held accountable, usually what they do is pout. The first thing they do is pout when they're held accountable. Instead of being coachable, being coachable is still listening to what a coach's constructive criticism is and going out and executing what it is that he has given you words of wisdom to do. But when you're not coachable now, your mind is somewhere else. You now you all of a sudden forgot to rotate. And when this guy that's been in the NBA for 40 years, I mean 20 something years is driving to the lane and I mean, not just one time, Bo, it was multiple times finished with the left one stretch dunk. It's like, come on, fellas, what's going on here? This is where I hate to say when coaches no longer have a. Have an ear to the players, this is what they do. But others blame coaches. They're going to blame IME who has been to the finals, and they're going to blame IME who took, who had a team against a veteran team, Golden State, take them down to the wire. Like, it's not the coach. We need to start talking about the players and their ability to be held accountable.
A
Now, I'm interested in hearing you say that. Now you play with Ema in San Antonio, right? Like, what worried me about that in terms of coaching is what IME is going to give you, no matter what your expectation when you hire him is these dudes are going to play hard, right? Like he's the accountability guy. That's what everybody loved about him in Boston. It's like that idea I have questions about, like schematically off his. To be fair, the teams that we've seen him coach with primarily have not had point guards, right? But it gets, you know, we've seen offenses slow down with him, all of those things. Kevin Durant is too hurt to really be playing. Like, no matter like the nine turnovers. That seemed to be because nobody else is moving without the ball as much. You know, getting, getting to places where he could help. But where, where LeBron went by him and did that reverse dunk. Durant couldn't move. And that's not because Kevin Durant isn't trying, right? He really, really clearly is trying hard to play when I don't know if he is able to. But I was stunned by the way that those dudes just didn't seem to be playing hard in that moment, and they gonna come home, they gonna mess around and get swept. And that's, that's, ooh, that's a bad look for everybody.
B
It's a bad look for everyone. It's not just, oh, IME did this like the, the athletes on that team. You mean to tell me that the best option was a player who's coming who didn't play in the first game? Gongar, LeBron, come on, you, you made a statement about Ime and his. The first thing is a guy's going to play hard for him. One of the most frustrating things in life is as a coach is when you realize that athlete may not be able to shoot when he was attacking in transition. I'm talking about when you get these guys that can finish above the rim. But when it comes to a basic play, like a catch and shoot, or in order for them to be successful, someone has to dominate the ball. So the ball's not moving, which in essence allows the defense to be set. In this day and age, you want to create movement, you have to create movement. And in that movement, you want whoever has the ball to be a threat. And the team has to adjust to that. But if they don't have to adjust, they'll just pack the paint. That's where frustration truly sets in, in the head coach's perspective, because he's not working with pieces that can necessarily benefit what he wants to do.
A
They lost to a team that played Luke Kennard for 42 minutes in a playoff game. They had 85 combined minutes between Luke Kennard and Ru Yachamur. And that's not to say those guys aren't NBA players. Right? It's not to say that they're bad, but they're not supposed to be playing 40 something minutes in an NBA playoff game. One that you win.
B
And one of. There was, there was no doubt, but you know, they're having their way out there during the course of the game. Luke Canar. You know, this is where I think about these moments where guys aren't necessarily given a lot of credit, that don't play a lot during the regular season or because someone, someone got hurt, he needed to step up. This is where you start the process of saying, hey, that's a professional NBA player. Because a professional NBA player just wants the opportunity when his number is called, he's not going to come in and blame, oh, well, I didn't get reps. I didn't get this. I didn't get that he's doing A tremendous job of staying ready, even though now practices in the NBA are not at a level of college and high school. So you have to figure out a way to get your win right. And for him to play all those minutes, Bomani, it just shows you that he was prepared for this moment.
A
Yeah. I'd also make this point, too, that. Get off my Dickerson. The account that people say may or may not have been the Kevin Durant account. Get off my Dickerson's criticisms of the Rockets appear to be quite present. Just about everything that account was saying is coming to bear in the playoffs. All of it.
B
But Bomani, are you really surprised with. With the way that they're handling the adversity? From what we've seen. From what we've seen this season from the Rockets.
A
No, no, no. There was a line once, way back when about the Yankees. One Yankees team that said 25 players, 25 cabs. Right? Like, that was. That was the impression of that team. And that. That seems to be the case here. And especially with. What I find interesting about that is it's with really young guys. Right? And not just young guys. A lot of them lost together. And my buddy Vinnie always makes the point because he covered the Pistons a lot when they were terrible. And he was like, winning teams, everybody's got somewhere to be when you win. And. Right. You hide over here. You hide over here. But losing teams are normally the ones that are hanging out and playing PlayStation all the time. You know, like, not even so much to say that the losing gives them a bond as much as it creates circumstances where they spend more time around each other. These dudes look like they look like they just met. Like they shot for teams.
B
Yeah. And even the welcoming of, like, shepherd, you know, we. We knew he wasn't a point guard when he first got there. Right. And this is a guy. He has a skill set that you can utilize. Sometimes it's about, hey, well, if I'm not getting this from this individual, let me, Let me, Let me do this with him. Just to give us something from an. From a threat perspective of shooting. Because I don't. I don't. I don't remember exactly what they shot from, from the field in this game, but that's the biggest thing that stands out to me is that ball dominance. And where is the outside shooting coming from?
A
Right, right. The Lakers. I mean, look, I'm sure there are lots of things to talk about. In the end, it is LeBron James, like, let me get the keys. Nobody has ever been able to get More out of other dudes. For him to be so excellent as he has been for his career, but then having that other superpower. Nobody's winning playoff games with these dudes that way but him. And he's doing it. And he's damn near my age.
B
Great statement. I think about 07. He took a team to the finals. Oh, let's. Let's go. Before we get to the finals. Let's say that game in Detroit, when he scored 25 straight.
A
Yes.
B
You know, you had a bunch of role players out there. I should Not a bunch. But Booby Gibson. Booby Gibson was not a household name.
A
Right.
B
You know, they had Eric Snow on that team.
A
Touche. Jeff McInnes was the backup point guard.
B
Yeah, yeah. You had Big Z. You had Boozer.
A
No, he wasn't. He. He had. He had. He had. He had run that game on them, by them. I think it was an old Ben Wallace that was on that team.
B
No, Ben was on that team.
A
I think the. I think he had left Detroit, but, like, if he wasn't, it was that caliber.
B
Yeah. But you. You look at what he's been able to do. He's not out of practice. This is not out of character. This is what he's been accustomed to dealing with. Okay. This player is good when he's in this spot. Let's make sure I have him over there where he can succeed. That player is good in the pick and roll I can give him. I can set things up where guidon looks really good right now. And that's the. I think that's the beauty of what LeBron has been able to do for his career is not just be the dominant person of just scoring, but really galvanizing a group to make sure that they can have looks, they get out in transition. All those things that are necessary to build victories within a group and also to build them up. Because this is very different than when Luka's on the floor. Luka's going to have the ball quite a bit because he's special that way. But look at how they can make this change. And now LeBron has the ball, but he's dominating the ball to get others involved.
A
Right. And by the way, it was not old Ben Wallace. He got there the next year. But. But Drew Gooden. Drew. Drew Gooden was. Was big man on that team.
B
I knew. I knew it was someone like.
A
The particulars, honestly didn't matter at that point. It was some cats that was in the NBA and they put them in. In calf suits, and LeBron made that happen. I want to switch up though, to a series we talked earlier this year and you were really. You talked specifically about like YIC and leadership. Right. They're playing against Minnesota and it is very clear that Minnesota hates their guts. Right. That, that, that about Jaden McDaniels, about him. We're going at all their poor defenders, all of every single player, like he went too far. But year 11, YIC is looking like more of a defensive liability than before. But I wanted to talk about the leadership that I don't think gets enough credit, which is they keep giving Anthony Edwards all these guys that other people don't really feel like with. Right. You give Anthony Edwards Carl Anthony Towns. Did you switch him out for Julius Randle in a trade where I think both teams concluded that you couldn't win with that guy and they switched him off to the other squad, Rudy Gobert. Right. The. The least respected player that good in the history of anything. And whenever they play against Denver or just anybody else, they go. And it is clear that that guy by force of personality raises the level of all these other dudes and they have a chance to win this series when the other team has the best player in the world.
B
Also, the dynamic playmaking skill of Ant. Yeah, you know that. That's the part whenever you have that guy. We've seen it with Jordan. I mean, Jordan had. No, he didn't have Concat. He had Cartwright. He had Cartwright for quite some time. And you know, if anything, he learned to get out of his way on them driving lanes. Yes, but. But the beauty of Ant, I feel is that that time off that he had with the, with the knee issue, that time off allowed him to rejuvenate. It allowed his body to rest and heal a little bit. And he was already an individual that we're well aware of in his work ethic and figuring out other ways to score the basketball. It takes me back to the LA Clipper game when he doesn't make the pass and then, you know, coach is saying, swing it, swing it. And he ends up taking the shot with two guys on him and he makes it. This is what I do. I think media made more of that, what coach is saying, because he's going to ask someone during the game to make that next pass. So this is only him holding Ant accountable to the same standards of everyone else. Now, Ant is special. So that's why you didn't see the coach going back and forth with him, because that is what they want from him. But now that he's had this time to heal, this time to rest up and get better physically. Who's going to, like a lot of times we like to cancel out. Who cancels out someone? Well, okay, Rudy Gobert cancels out somebody from that team. Jamal Murray cancels out someone from that team. But now, once you start doing that, who cancels out Anthony? Ant, man, right? There's not even someone that you can necessarily say, okay, he gives him a hard time scoring. That's the part when a player understands that you guys can try whatever you want, but you won't stop us. That's when you in trouble. And Rudy, as much as we see the meme of him being choked by Draymond, he's effective there. And Ant appreciates him because of what he does.
A
Like, I, I. What I love about Edwards is he looks at a dude. You remember that year where they had like, the pickup draft for the all star game and LeBron and I can't remember who was the other guy where nobody wanted to take Rudy. And they just clowning him, basically on national television. And at every turn, Anthony Edwards is like, nah, man, you cool with me. We need you, Dog. And Rudy, I don't know if you'll ever admit it out loud, you could tell he needs that. You know what I mean? Like, you could tell because he's always, nobody want to give me the ball. Rudy, right? Like all that sort of stuff. And Ant is kind of like, man, just give him the ball right there. Yeah, yeah, cool, man. Give him the ball. I'll talk to him after that. We'd be fine. We be fine.
B
Hey, but that's what the greats do. The greats understand that kind of stuff. There were times. There were times Tim could have shot the ball, but he passed it to me. Cause he knew it was a higher percentage shot. I mean, he knew that I needed a touch. Yeah, but no, in all seriousness, that is the beauty of leadership as well. Recognizing what someone does and what they do. Well, for you, if Ant was on top of Rudy Gobert that way, as far as being negative, then they wouldn't be able to utilize his skill set. And at the end of the day, say what you want, he still controls that paint, and he's not afraid to get dunked on. He is going to battle. And unlike some of the other French guys that played in this game, he got a little heart.
A
That was his best Jokic performance ever. Cause Jokic used to eat his ass up that fourth quarter. He played better against Jokic than I think I've ever Seen him play against
B
Jokic, and it makes you wonder, too, you know, the makeup now of. It's just so interesting. Bomani. When a certain coach leaves, when there's a new coach or new ownership, things change because that voice is gone. They won an NBA championship. Now, I get it. This coach was on the staff then, but it wasn't about what he was doing. It was what the head coach was doing. Now that he's gone and he's a uncle now, it's a different voice. It's a different swag. You know, I remember one time I was talking with him, and I said something, and he went straight to accountability. He was like, bruce, you know, I don't want to talk to agents because one of their players got in their feelings because I looked at them funny at practice. He said, but when you keep it straight, it becomes a lot easier for. For that player not to want to pick up the phone and more or less have a conversation.
A
Yeah, I want to get one last thing with you before we get out of here. Did you have C.J. mcCollum being the Madison Square Garden villain on your bingo card? Like, you tell me if I'm wrong, but it looks very clear to me, and it would not surprise me. CJ McCollum is like, Explain to me why Jaden Jalen Brunson is better than me. Like, tell me what the difference is between me and Jalen Brunson. Because one thing I know is Jalen Brunson can't guard me right. He said that basically after the game, and they're like, are you targeting him? What do you think? I'm like, oh, hey, hey, cj. I. I ain't even. I ain't know you had it in your game like that, Big dog.
B
Really? Yeah. Boman, he's cj. CJ has been special with. With that rock a long time, man. He. He just happened to hit a growth spurt, I believe, late high school and then at Lehigh. So his ability to get to spots on the floor. His brother played overseas, so his brother would come back home and they would get to work. They would get to work, and he's always had that. What became an issue was, okay, who's going to be the person to start this and. And finish the game? Between him and Dame Time, Damon Lillard, when they were in Portland, it was a great one, two punch, but then CJ wanted his own, and that's when he departed for New Orleans. But this is not anything that I'm surprised or shocked by. It's. You got to have someone that's creative in an elite level because he's an elite scorer before, who was a player like in the playoffs years past for against the Knicks that you would have worried about when it came to Jalen Brunson guarding them, it wasn't Halliburton, really. He wasn't necessarily. I don't remember that matchup so much, but it was someone else that was guarding him, guarding Halliburton. And so it took the onus off of that. Now, it's not to say that Jalen can slide his feet, but he hadn't had the chance to guard someone quite like CJ in the past because, remember, Jalen went to Villanova. They played defense at Villanova. So it's there. I'm just saying it's never been isolated like that. Like a searching like, oh, no, here you go. Here's the one we want. And he went to work when he had them. He got busy, got downhill real quick.
A
There's my man. Bruce Bowen, San Antonio. You know what I'm saying? Just like, okay, he got poses. All right, I see you ready. You ready for your close up. That's what's up. I feel you, Wes Fresno. See, I got you notice. I got Wes Fresno right this time.
B
Yeah, look, hey, Bomani, you've wronged me so many times. I just. I just, you know, I want to keep it going. I want to keep this relationship the right way because, you know, I know a lot of people that enjoy us getting together the way we do. So I'm just trying to keep that going and not allowing something as tacky as, you know, he didn't say West Fresno. He didn't say it right. You know,
A
we good, baby. My brother, I appreciate you, babe.
B
Same here, baby. You enjoy this, this playoffs. And lastly, last thing I'm gonna say is that it's the right time.
A
See, I see. There we go, man. We'll talk to you again soon. And ladies and gentlemen, thanks so much for joining us here on the right time. We do this four days a week. Ryan Brumley handed everything behind the scenes. Thank you, sir. Hit the voicemail line. 323-59-67767. Remember, follow the right time. Subscribe like, rate us, review us, give us five stars. You only give us four stars. I'm inclined to believe you are a hater. And. And we'll talk to you guys in a couple of days. Take it easy.
Episode: Bruce Bowen on Rockets Quitting vs. Lakers, Victor Wembanyama’s Concussion, Portland's Cheap Owner | 04.22
Date: April 22, 2026
Host: Bomani Jones
Guest: Bruce Bowen
This episode, Bomani Jones and Bruce Bowen dive deep into NBA playoff storylines—discussing Victor Wembanyama’s concussion and impact, the San Antonio Spurs’ growth, the Portland Trail Blazers’ ownership controversy, the Houston Rockets' apparent lack of effort against the Lakers, and leadership lessons across the league. The tone is candid, insightful, sometimes humorous, and rooted in both experience and basketball nuance.
(00:40–10:39)
Wembanyama's concussion:
“Ain’t nobody hitting that big motherfucker in the head, man. Like, his head is the safest head in the history of professional sports.” — Bomani (04:28)
“If the spurs aren’t playing with Victor, it’s only because of something tragic happening.” — Bruce (02:00)
Concussion protocols:
“A concussion, you know what a concussion is like in the NFL? It’s like a snow day. If you live in Iowa, like, we can’t be taking off, but so much time behind these snow days...” — Bomani (03:32)
Wembanyama as a Defensive Player:
“I have no idea when anybody else is going to win Defensive Player of the Year with Victor out there.” — Bomani (06:31)
“He can stand in the paint and get a good contested three-point... We’ve never seen something like that.” — Bruce (08:27)
(10:39–13:38)
“The biggest thing for me is that this younger group learned a valuable lesson of how important it is to stay locked in defensively...” — Bruce (12:23)
(13:38–19:19)
“They would not put the money on the t-shirts. And look, it’s one thing in LA where they don’t even want to wear the t-shirts. ... This is Portland.” — Bomani (15:37)
“Don’t start screwing up things that were implemented from a long time ago just to satisfy yourself. Think about others in the process.” — Bruce (17:13)
(28:18–43:36)
Rockets’ Poor Effort:
“I think personally that this is embarrassing. Embarrassing for the Rockets in every way.” — Bomani (30:18)
Youth and Accountability:
“This era of basketball where we’re talking about, oh, he's a two-way guy, I'm sick of that term. This ain’t football.” — Bruce (31:15)
On Ime Udoka’s Role:
LeBron James as a Playoff Force:
“Nobody has ever been able to get more out of other dudes. ... And he’s damn near my age.” — Bomani (41:00)
Notable Role Player Moments:
(43:36–49:16)
“These dudes look like they just met. Like they shot for teams.” — Bomani (40:09)
(43:47–49:16)
“That guy by force of personality raises the level of all these other dudes and they have a chance to win this series…” — Bomani (44:48)
(50:34–53:14)
“Explain to me why Jalen Brunson is better than me. Like, tell me what the difference is...” — Bomani quoting CJ (50:39)
Victor Wembanyama risk:
“Ain’t nobody hitting that big motherfucker in the head, man. Like, his head is the safest head in the history of professional sports.” — Bomani (04:28)
On Defensive Player of the Year legacy:
“I have no idea when anybody else is going to win Defensive Player of the Year with Victor out there.” — Bomani (06:31)
On Portland’s owner:
“They would not put the money on the T-shirts...this is Portland...They, they not even giving the people T-shirts.” — Bomani (15:37)
NBA player amenities evolution:
“I rode that gray dog, bruh…Now I’m on a pilot doing this to the propeller. Oh Lord...” — Bruce (19:25)
On Rockets' lack of effort:
“He 40 years old, doing a reverse. In a game, not on a breakaway. In the half court.” — Bomani (32:31)
On holding players accountable:
“When players are not accountable and they’re being held accountable, usually what they do is pout.” — Bruce (33:13)
On LeBron’s leadership:
“Nobody has ever been able to get more out of other dudes...And he’s damn near my age.” — Bomani (41:00)
On modern losing teams:
“These dudes look like they just met. Like they shot for teams.” — Bomani (40:09)
On Ant Edwards’ leadership:
“That guy by force of personality raises the level of all these other dudes and they have a chance to win this series…” — Bomani (44:48)
CJ McCollum’s confidence:
“He went to work when he had them. He got busy, got downhill real quick.” — Bruce (52:56)
The episode is sharp, candid, and fully invested in the nuances of NBA culture—from team chemistry to organizational priorities and individual moments of greatness or disappointment. Bomani and Bruce mix humor, technical breakdowns, and storytelling, giving listeners a rich understanding of what’s happening on and off the court this playoff season.