POST GAME ATLANTA - AWAY
+2
Berlin-T
112288
6 posters
Page 1 of 1
POST GAME ATLANTA - AWAY
STUDS AND DUDS: NO DEFENSE FOR MARCUS SMART-LESS CELTICS
WEEI
By Ben Rohrbach
We knew Marcus Smart was key to the Celtics‘ success. We just didn’t know he was this key.
The Celtics entered Tuesday night’s game ranked fourth in points allowed per 100 possessions (96.6) and should be demoted 10 spots just for their effort in a 121-97 loss to the Hawks. This comes two nights after the Celtics (7-7) allowed 111 points in a loss to the lowly Nets.
After an R.J. Hunter jumper cut Atlanta’s lead to six two minutes into the fourth quarter, the Hawks outscored the C’s by a 38-20 margin on 14-of-18 shooting (77.8 percent) down the stretch.
Avery Bradley led the Celtics with 25 points, but the Hawks (10-6) countered with seven players in double figures, led by Paul Millsap’s 25 points and nine rebounds. If the playoffs started today, the Celtics would be on the outside looking in. They are as close to the third-worst record in the Eastern Conference as they are to the eighth seed, and Smart won’t be back for at least a week.
For a complete box score, click here. To go beyond the box, read on.
STUD OF THE NIGHT: Avery Bradley.
Bradley single-handedly kept the Celtics in the first half, shooting 8-of-12 from the field and 3-of-5 from distance. The rest of them shot 32.4 percent (11-34 FG) in the opening two quarters. Bradley scored 19 of the C’s 48 first-half points, keeping what should’ve been a blowout by halftime to a single-digit deficit (9).
DUD OF THE NIGHT: Kelly Olynyk.
Olynyk had as many combined personal fouls (2) and turnovers (1) as he did rebounds (2) and field (1) in 16 minutes of action. If he’s not providing offense, he’s not providing much of anything. The supposed floor-stretching 7-footer missed his only 3-point attempt.
VINE OF THE NIGHT: In the first of seven national TV appearances for the Celtics, we were treated to a rare mic’d up session with coach Brad Stevens. #keepgrinding
WHINE OF THE NIGHT: More R.J. Hunter, please. I know it’s early to be sold on a rookie, but I think I’m sold on this rookie already. Every time he’s on the court, Hunter seems to make a positive impact in limited minutes. With Marcus Smart sidelined, Hunter made the most of his increased playing time, scoring in double digits for the first time in NBA career — in his return to Atlanta, no less. The question is where the Georgia State product’s minutes would come from when Smart returns. Maybe Evan Turner? STAT OF THE NIGHT: 67.5. That was Atlanta’s true shooting percentage on the night. Essentially, the entire Hawks roster shot like Stephen Curry against the Celtics’ defense. Atlanta made half of their 24 attempts from 3-point range and 19 of their 22 free throws. Outside of the third quarter — the lone frame in which the C’s showed signs of life — the Hawks shot 61.7 percent. And when Atlanta finally missed a shot, they pounded the offensive glass and found Kyle Korver for a wide-open shot.
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Hawks coast to 121-97 win over Celtics
CSNE
A.SHERROD BLAKLEY
ATLANTA – Avery Bradley continues to have the hot hand shooting the ball for the Boston Celtics.
Unfortunately for the Celtics, the 6-foot-2 guard didn’t have much help on Tuesday against the Atlanta Hawks pulled away in the fourth for a cushy 121-97 win over the Celtics.
Boston (7-7) has now lost two in a row, but help may be on the way in the form of the Celtics’ next opponent, the Philadelphia 76ers.
But even the winless Sixers will give the Celtics a fight if Boston doesn’t figure out what’s wrong with its once-formidable defense.
The Atlanta Hawks are a good team, the kind of team that will challenge any defense good or bad.
But on Tuesday, Atlanta seemingly got any and every shot they wanted which more often than not, went in. They are simply too talented a team to allow so many ease-into-type shots.
Playing like that left Boston in catch-up mode most of the game, but there was never a sense that the Celtics were totally out of it.
That appeared to change in the fourth when Atlanta went on a 14-4 run capped off by a Mike Scott lay-up that made it a 95-79 game – their largest lead of the game – with 7:19 to play.
And while there was a lot of game still left to be played, the Hawks spent most of the game shooting better than 50 percent from the field in addition to winning the rebounding battle.
That was surprising when you consider the Hawks came into Tuesday’s game ranked 29th in rebounding percentage while the Celtics were 16th.
112288
112288- Posts : 7855
Join date : 2009-10-16
Re: POST GAME ATLANTA - AWAY
One thing is clear: Markus Smart is the heart and soul of this team. His intensity, his tenacity were sorely missed the last two games.
Tonight our front court was terrible. If Stevens can't find a combination that works maybe he should give the rookie Mickey a shot. R.J. looks awfully good on the court and if we're going to continue getting blown out What can you lose by giving Mickey a chance? What's up with Zeller and Jerebko? We have too many bigs who aren't cutting it.
And one more thing: IT is OK off the bench but is not a starting point guard. He dribbles too much and was abused all night much like in the playoffs against Cleveland. Danny still has a lot of work to do.
Berlin-T
Tonight our front court was terrible. If Stevens can't find a combination that works maybe he should give the rookie Mickey a shot. R.J. looks awfully good on the court and if we're going to continue getting blown out What can you lose by giving Mickey a chance? What's up with Zeller and Jerebko? We have too many bigs who aren't cutting it.
And one more thing: IT is OK off the bench but is not a starting point guard. He dribbles too much and was abused all night much like in the playoffs against Cleveland. Danny still has a lot of work to do.
Berlin-T
Berlin-T- Posts : 5118
Join date : 2010-02-01
Re: POST GAME ATLANTA - AWAY
Coach "furious."
http://nesn.com/2015/11/celtics-notes-furious-brad-stevens-blasts-team-after-lackluster-outing/
http://nesn.com/2015/11/celtics-notes-furious-brad-stevens-blasts-team-after-lackluster-outing/
steve3344- Posts : 4163
Join date : 2009-10-27
Age : 73
Re: POST GAME ATLANTA - AWAY
Anybody who thinks KO has made so much improvement cause of some stats should realize with his attributes he will always be a very limited player and I'm being kind, seeing this putrid effort defensively and the whole frontline playing so poorly both ends, now seems the perfect time for giving Mickey a shot, he couldn't be any worse than KO and Jerebko were last night. Turner and Crowder both play hard unfortunately they only give you offense every 4th game, guess kind of like Smart offensively too. Stevens is a great coach, but this team has limitations.
If it was me I woulda tanked for Porzingis, not getting a young franchise player like that is gonna set us back a few years....hes everything and more that we wish KO was, Phil Jackson not as dumb as press made out last year.
If it was me I woulda tanked for Porzingis, not getting a young franchise player like that is gonna set us back a few years....hes everything and more that we wish KO was, Phil Jackson not as dumb as press made out last year.
cowens/oldschool- Posts : 27195
Join date : 2009-10-18
Re: POST GAME ATLANTA - AWAY
And a child shall lead them. Unless he's out with a lower leg injury, in which case they will wander aimlessly in the desert for 2-4 weeks, maybe more.
When I go out for sushi at Ozumas I usually have 1-2 (usually 2) large hot sakes and relax. Take a load off. Watch some tube (I don't own a TV, so it's something different for me) and chitchat with the locals that come in and sit at the bar with me. Last night, I was two sakes in by half time and I was anything but relaxed. I had a dead zone radius of 2 chairs, like I was the epicenter of a tactical nuclear explosion, around me. The waitresses (by the end of the evening I ripped through 4 sakes and a couple of tequilas, so maybe "flight attendants" might be a better job description) who normally have no problem walking behind me to deliver food to other patrons, were taking the longer, safer route. I was, to say the least, a bit animated and that has some serious downside when you are carrying hot noodle soup. And that doesn't even count my reaction when I saw Craig Sager's outfit. You've heard the expression "he likes to make a big entrance"? Craig Sager's costumes (I have to believe he doesn't dress anything like that other than when it is Showtime) is the 800# gorilla you desperately wish you could ignore. An excellent reason for not blogging while eating sushi. I probably would have stuck the chopsticks in my eyes just to change the image I was seeing. Craig and the Amazing Technicolor Dream Jacket. Wow. I'm really, really happy that he's back on the job after his battle with cancer but damn, does he have to punish us like that? If there's a silver lining, and silver might be the only color NOT seen in that outfit, it's that he actually made those Celtic alternative uniforms look appealing by comparison and they are double-coyote ugly.
We gave up 33 AND 40 point quarters. They shot 56% for the game, 50% from 3 and a lot of those 3s were uncontested. 33 assists on 45 fgm gives them a 73% ratio. Our previously vaunted defense became Swiss cheese.
We are a team of hard-working (usually) grinders on defense who are just God-awful finishers on offense.
1. Can't blame Bradley, though, can we? 27 points in the loss to Brooklyn and 25 last night. 10-17 and 4-8 from 3, his offense is smoking hot. He also had 3 steals and a block on 6'7" Kyle Korver. We've been seeing some championship heart from Avery this past week. It's too bad the rest of the team has been vacationing on the far side of the moon during that time. Bradley has been trying, singlehandedly, to carry this team over this bump.
2. Thomas was 3-11 for 14 points. 6-6 from the line after it no longer mattered. I will say one thing, he was playing hard on defense, and that is strange to say, but it's not why we have him. We suffer with his defense, as good as it ever gets, in order to get his offense. He had 2 assists and 5 TOs. What would a Boston Celtic game be without at least one (we had 2, that I remember) turnover that happens because Thomas' ego doesn't allow him to admit he cannot dribble in there and have a reasonable expectation of getting out of there still in possession of the ball?
3. Our front court of Amir, Crowder, Sully, Lee, Jonas, Zeller and Kelly were a combined 12-38 (32%) and 0-5 from 3 (a silver lining, such as it exists, is that at least they didn't take many). Crowder and Jonas, in particular stand out as being the worst offenders. Both of them threw up some horrendous shots that were more likely to hurt the backboard than they had of going in. Jae was 3-11 and 0-3 from 3. It's all fine and good that Brad wants them to play free and all, but shouldn't you be responsible for keeping your conscience? The First Rule of Holes is "when you find you've dug yourself into a hole, the first thing you should do is to stop digging". If it's not going in, stop taking bad shots. Jae's the league leader in steals/game. Last night he had zero. When it rains, the dam breaks. As long as the tires are coming off, might as well lose the doors too. 4 of Jonas' 6 shots were in the paint. All 4 were misses, as you would expect from a thoroughly execrable 0-6 shooting night. Yuck. I can't even say we were overpowered inside, we were out played. They out cut us, they out moved us, the out-executed us. It just wouldn't have looked so bad if we didn't continue to blow bunnies and shoot like we've never seen a basketball before.
4. The only front court player who showed up was David Lee. Only 10 points, but he was an effective 5-9 in his 25 minutes. 6 rebounds.
5. As far as I am concerned, there was only one other Celtic who showed up and that was former Georgia State Bulldog RJ Hunter. Part of me approves of him trying to stay within himself, play within the offense and all that and part of me is really wondering why Brad isn't running more plays specifically for RJ to free him up for a shot. That kid needs to be getting double staggered screens so he can come around those pindowns for a shot. He has his "rookie moments" like every other rookie, but more times than not he doesn't look like a rookie. Four Celtics were in double digits last night: Star of the Game Avery Bradley with his 25, Dud of the Night Isaiah Thomas with his 14 non-impactful points, Front Court Player of the Game David Lee and his 10 and The Entire Bench Not Named Lee Player of the Game RJ Hunter. 12 points (is that a career high for him?) on 5-6 shooting. We know about his absolutely sick range, but he also put the ball on the floor and had a beautiful floater from the wing. He had 2 steals. For someone who came in with the rep for being a shooter but wafer-thin and too weak to play defense in the NBA, he is getting his hands, fingers and fingernails on A LOT of balls. It's hard to find a real gem down in the final picks of the first round, all the obvious gems have already been harvested. In fact, a lot of teams would love to trade their 26-30 picks because they are high-cost crap shoots. As first round picks they are all but guaranteed a fixed rookie scale contract but may not be good enough to make the team and certainly not good enough to get regular rotation minutes. In my opinion, Danny found himself a diamond in the rough here. A #28 pick that is screaming for minutes. A #28 pick that leapfrogged over sophomore #17 pick James Young so quickly Young never knew what hit him.
6. Nobody could stop Paul Millsap. Millsap's a damn fine player but 10-14 good? Not against the #1 defense in the NBA! Time to wake up and smell the sarcasm. Only one of Millsap's 10 buckets came outside of the extended lane area (the lines that define the high and low boxes, out to the frito line). He had 4 offensive rebounds.
7. Evan Turner was 2-8. Both his buckets were at the rim but 7 of his 8 fgas were within the restricted area. So, he was 2-7 from 15' (the frito line) and in. Lousy finishing. As long as the doors and tires are already off there's no point in leaving the steering wheel attached too, right?
Here's some excerpt from the Globe's coverage of Brad's post-game interview:
Then he spent much of the next four minutes giving an uncharacteristically scathing evaluation of his team’s performance, effort, and cohesion. He did not raise his voice or swear or single out individuals, but his message was clear and serious and strong.
“We’re not playing basketball as a team on either end of the floor,” Stevens said. “We’ve had good quarters that have masked our deficiencies, and we need to get back to being a team. We need to get back in one direction. And I think the best way we’ll be able to recognize it is if we guard somebody once.”
Stevens later referred to the team’s defense as a sieve.
Here's the head-snapper, for me, "And I think the best way we’ll be able to recognize it is if we guard somebody once.”
Yeah, pick someone, anyone, and guard them. If you like the way it feels, maybe you could try doing it again. You know, as in "twice"?
After the game was over, I switched to the tequila (he can't sell it, his license doesn't allow it, but he can give it away). I thought some Patron and watching the GSW club the Los Angeles Lakers like a bunch of baby harp seals would improve my mood, but it didn't. Stick a fork in Kobe, he's done. He has lost that little lift in his shot because his legs are gone and he was leaving them all on the front of the rim. 1-4 last night. Byron Scott wants Kobe to be the "facilitator" on offense. The Facilitator had 2 assists and 3 TOs last night. I wouldn't walk away from $25M either, but he's paying the price now. Hate to see a warrior, small w, like Kobe go out like that. I left after halftime. 3 tequilas in a half. I don't like losing, which is why I am firmly in the anti-tanking group, but I understand nobody wins them all. I just go crazy when I watch us unravel to the point where we've completely disassembled ourselves.
Please Lord, don't let them lose to Philly tonight. I can't promise I'll be good, I won't even promise to be nice, but I promise I won't be a threat to innocent bystanders like last night. Think of it as "limiting collateral damage".
bob
.
When I go out for sushi at Ozumas I usually have 1-2 (usually 2) large hot sakes and relax. Take a load off. Watch some tube (I don't own a TV, so it's something different for me) and chitchat with the locals that come in and sit at the bar with me. Last night, I was two sakes in by half time and I was anything but relaxed. I had a dead zone radius of 2 chairs, like I was the epicenter of a tactical nuclear explosion, around me. The waitresses (by the end of the evening I ripped through 4 sakes and a couple of tequilas, so maybe "flight attendants" might be a better job description) who normally have no problem walking behind me to deliver food to other patrons, were taking the longer, safer route. I was, to say the least, a bit animated and that has some serious downside when you are carrying hot noodle soup. And that doesn't even count my reaction when I saw Craig Sager's outfit. You've heard the expression "he likes to make a big entrance"? Craig Sager's costumes (I have to believe he doesn't dress anything like that other than when it is Showtime) is the 800# gorilla you desperately wish you could ignore. An excellent reason for not blogging while eating sushi. I probably would have stuck the chopsticks in my eyes just to change the image I was seeing. Craig and the Amazing Technicolor Dream Jacket. Wow. I'm really, really happy that he's back on the job after his battle with cancer but damn, does he have to punish us like that? If there's a silver lining, and silver might be the only color NOT seen in that outfit, it's that he actually made those Celtic alternative uniforms look appealing by comparison and they are double-coyote ugly.
We gave up 33 AND 40 point quarters. They shot 56% for the game, 50% from 3 and a lot of those 3s were uncontested. 33 assists on 45 fgm gives them a 73% ratio. Our previously vaunted defense became Swiss cheese.
We are a team of hard-working (usually) grinders on defense who are just God-awful finishers on offense.
1. Can't blame Bradley, though, can we? 27 points in the loss to Brooklyn and 25 last night. 10-17 and 4-8 from 3, his offense is smoking hot. He also had 3 steals and a block on 6'7" Kyle Korver. We've been seeing some championship heart from Avery this past week. It's too bad the rest of the team has been vacationing on the far side of the moon during that time. Bradley has been trying, singlehandedly, to carry this team over this bump.
2. Thomas was 3-11 for 14 points. 6-6 from the line after it no longer mattered. I will say one thing, he was playing hard on defense, and that is strange to say, but it's not why we have him. We suffer with his defense, as good as it ever gets, in order to get his offense. He had 2 assists and 5 TOs. What would a Boston Celtic game be without at least one (we had 2, that I remember) turnover that happens because Thomas' ego doesn't allow him to admit he cannot dribble in there and have a reasonable expectation of getting out of there still in possession of the ball?
3. Our front court of Amir, Crowder, Sully, Lee, Jonas, Zeller and Kelly were a combined 12-38 (32%) and 0-5 from 3 (a silver lining, such as it exists, is that at least they didn't take many). Crowder and Jonas, in particular stand out as being the worst offenders. Both of them threw up some horrendous shots that were more likely to hurt the backboard than they had of going in. Jae was 3-11 and 0-3 from 3. It's all fine and good that Brad wants them to play free and all, but shouldn't you be responsible for keeping your conscience? The First Rule of Holes is "when you find you've dug yourself into a hole, the first thing you should do is to stop digging". If it's not going in, stop taking bad shots. Jae's the league leader in steals/game. Last night he had zero. When it rains, the dam breaks. As long as the tires are coming off, might as well lose the doors too. 4 of Jonas' 6 shots were in the paint. All 4 were misses, as you would expect from a thoroughly execrable 0-6 shooting night. Yuck. I can't even say we were overpowered inside, we were out played. They out cut us, they out moved us, the out-executed us. It just wouldn't have looked so bad if we didn't continue to blow bunnies and shoot like we've never seen a basketball before.
4. The only front court player who showed up was David Lee. Only 10 points, but he was an effective 5-9 in his 25 minutes. 6 rebounds.
5. As far as I am concerned, there was only one other Celtic who showed up and that was former Georgia State Bulldog RJ Hunter. Part of me approves of him trying to stay within himself, play within the offense and all that and part of me is really wondering why Brad isn't running more plays specifically for RJ to free him up for a shot. That kid needs to be getting double staggered screens so he can come around those pindowns for a shot. He has his "rookie moments" like every other rookie, but more times than not he doesn't look like a rookie. Four Celtics were in double digits last night: Star of the Game Avery Bradley with his 25, Dud of the Night Isaiah Thomas with his 14 non-impactful points, Front Court Player of the Game David Lee and his 10 and The Entire Bench Not Named Lee Player of the Game RJ Hunter. 12 points (is that a career high for him?) on 5-6 shooting. We know about his absolutely sick range, but he also put the ball on the floor and had a beautiful floater from the wing. He had 2 steals. For someone who came in with the rep for being a shooter but wafer-thin and too weak to play defense in the NBA, he is getting his hands, fingers and fingernails on A LOT of balls. It's hard to find a real gem down in the final picks of the first round, all the obvious gems have already been harvested. In fact, a lot of teams would love to trade their 26-30 picks because they are high-cost crap shoots. As first round picks they are all but guaranteed a fixed rookie scale contract but may not be good enough to make the team and certainly not good enough to get regular rotation minutes. In my opinion, Danny found himself a diamond in the rough here. A #28 pick that is screaming for minutes. A #28 pick that leapfrogged over sophomore #17 pick James Young so quickly Young never knew what hit him.
6. Nobody could stop Paul Millsap. Millsap's a damn fine player but 10-14 good? Not against the #1 defense in the NBA! Time to wake up and smell the sarcasm. Only one of Millsap's 10 buckets came outside of the extended lane area (the lines that define the high and low boxes, out to the frito line). He had 4 offensive rebounds.
7. Evan Turner was 2-8. Both his buckets were at the rim but 7 of his 8 fgas were within the restricted area. So, he was 2-7 from 15' (the frito line) and in. Lousy finishing. As long as the doors and tires are already off there's no point in leaving the steering wheel attached too, right?
Here's some excerpt from the Globe's coverage of Brad's post-game interview:
Then he spent much of the next four minutes giving an uncharacteristically scathing evaluation of his team’s performance, effort, and cohesion. He did not raise his voice or swear or single out individuals, but his message was clear and serious and strong.
“We’re not playing basketball as a team on either end of the floor,” Stevens said. “We’ve had good quarters that have masked our deficiencies, and we need to get back to being a team. We need to get back in one direction. And I think the best way we’ll be able to recognize it is if we guard somebody once.”
Stevens later referred to the team’s defense as a sieve.
Here's the head-snapper, for me, "And I think the best way we’ll be able to recognize it is if we guard somebody once.”
Yeah, pick someone, anyone, and guard them. If you like the way it feels, maybe you could try doing it again. You know, as in "twice"?
After the game was over, I switched to the tequila (he can't sell it, his license doesn't allow it, but he can give it away). I thought some Patron and watching the GSW club the Los Angeles Lakers like a bunch of baby harp seals would improve my mood, but it didn't. Stick a fork in Kobe, he's done. He has lost that little lift in his shot because his legs are gone and he was leaving them all on the front of the rim. 1-4 last night. Byron Scott wants Kobe to be the "facilitator" on offense. The Facilitator had 2 assists and 3 TOs last night. I wouldn't walk away from $25M either, but he's paying the price now. Hate to see a warrior, small w, like Kobe go out like that. I left after halftime. 3 tequilas in a half. I don't like losing, which is why I am firmly in the anti-tanking group, but I understand nobody wins them all. I just go crazy when I watch us unravel to the point where we've completely disassembled ourselves.
Please Lord, don't let them lose to Philly tonight. I can't promise I'll be good, I won't even promise to be nice, but I promise I won't be a threat to innocent bystanders like last night. Think of it as "limiting collateral damage".
bob
.
bobheckler- Posts : 61054
Join date : 2009-10-28
Re: POST GAME ATLANTA - AWAY
Berlin-T wrote:One thing is clear: Markus Smart is the heart and soul of this team. His intensity, his tenacity were sorely missed the last two games.
Tonight our front court was terrible. If Stevens can't find a combination that works maybe he should give the rookie Mickey a shot. R.J. looks awfully good on the court and if we're going to continue getting blown out What can you lose by giving Mickey a chance? What's up with Zeller and Jerebko? We have too many bigs who aren't cutting it.
And one more thing: IT is OK off the bench but is not a starting point guard. He dribbles too much and was abused all night much like in the playoffs against Cleveland. Danny still has a lot of work to do.
Berlin-T
See how fast the world spins around? A few games ago we were praising them for the quality of play now they look like a very average team at both ends. The Celts definitely miss Smart's defense and it shows. I agree with the comments about IT and would add that he not only fiddles and diddles with the ball too much (Thanks Johnny Most) he takes too many 3 pointers (6.7 per game, most on the team and only shooting a putrid .319 for his efforts) There is a reason why he has been a backup PG and not a starting PG. He is a tough little player but he is also a liability. So maybe Rosier gets some run.
The Celtics will not be winning a championship this year so why not play the rooks more? Let's see what Rosier can do with more minutes. Would like to see Mickey get in the game given the overall average production by our deep front line.
One thing is clear... the Celtics did not lose the last two games because Marcus Smart was not there. His play has been up and down just like most everyone on the team. His defensive play however has been very special in conjunction with Bradley and Crowder and Amir.
dboss
dboss- Posts : 18636
Join date : 2009-11-01
Similar topics
» NBA PLAYOFFS 2016 POST GAME ATLANTA - HOME GAME #4
» 2016 NBA PLAYOFFS POST GAME ATLANTA - HOME GAME #6
» 2016 NBA PLAYOFFS POST GAME ATLANTA - HOME GAME #3
» NBA PLAYOFFS 2016 POST GAME ATLANTA - AWAY - GAME #5
» 2016 NBA PLAYOFFS > POST GAME ATLANTA - AWAY GAME #2
» 2016 NBA PLAYOFFS POST GAME ATLANTA - HOME GAME #6
» 2016 NBA PLAYOFFS POST GAME ATLANTA - HOME GAME #3
» NBA PLAYOFFS 2016 POST GAME ATLANTA - AWAY - GAME #5
» 2016 NBA PLAYOFFS > POST GAME ATLANTA - AWAY GAME #2
Page 1 of 1
Permissions in this forum:
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
|
|