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Wednesday Picks Preview Article

VirginiaCavs

CTG Super Moderator
Staff member
Basketball Betting Analysis: Top NBA Picks for May 5

Memphis Grizzlies vs. Minnesota Timberwolves
Wednesday, May 5, 2021 at 8 p.m. ET at Target Center in Minneapolis

Memphis’ Improved Perimeter Defense

Throughout large segments of the season, perimeter defense has been a problem for Memphis.

Memphis’ season-long three-point defensive numbers reflect these large problematic segments.

But these season-long numbers do not reflect the strong improvement that Memphis is experiencing.

One myth is that Jaren Jackson Jr.’s return to the lineup is responsible for this improvement.

Jackson Jr. returned on April 21. He wants to use his length and athleticism to inject a solid presence into the interior defense.

With Jackson Jr., the Grizzlies supposedly lose the need to send excessive help inside. With the interior hopefully secure, they can then focus more strongly on defending the perimeter.

While Jackson Jr., is supposed to bring this benefit, his stats say otherwise. In particular, his defensive rating is appallingly bad.

Moreover, he has missed two games since April 21. In those two games — including one against a Portland squad that loves to shoot the three — Memphis remained solid in limiting opposing wide open three-point attempts.

If you were to look at Memphis’ season-long opposing rate of wide open three-point attempts, you would see that Memphis allows one of the higher rates of these uncontested shot opportunities.

But for weeks now, the Grizzlies are allowing by far the lowest rate of wide open three-point attempts.

So do not worry — and maybe even be glad — that Jackson Jr. is resting tonight. His absence will allow stronger defenders like Xavier Tillman to gain playing time.

Minnesota Offense vs. Memphis Defense

It’s important to be aware of Memphis’ improved perimeter defense because the Timberwolves are rather reliant on converting three-point opportunities.

They attempt the seventh-most threes per game. It is true that Minnesota is rather inefficient from deep. Minnesota ranks 24th in three-point percentage.

A lot of Minnesota players who are normally inefficient from deep attempt a lot of threes. But even Minnesota’s stronger shooters will struggle against Memphis’ strongly improved perimeter defense.

The Timberwolves also love to attempt field goals inside. Karl-Anthony Towns will try to provide a mixture of driving and post-up scoring.

Teammates like Anthony Edwards drive a lot inside. Overall, Minnesota attempts the third-most field goals per game within five feet of the basket.

But this reliance on scoring inside will be problematic against a Grizzly defense that allows the eight-lowest field goal percentage within five feet of the basket.

Center Jonas Valanciunas brings stout rim protection and elite rebounding ability — he ranks third in rebounds per game — that limits opposing second-chance opportunities.

Memphis Offense vs. Minnesota Defense

There isn’t much to like about a Minnesota defense that, throughout the season, has been one of the worst. Currently, the Timberwolves rank 28th in limiting opposing scoring.

But Minnesota’s offense — which is often inefficient and prone to turning the ball over — bends its defense into even worse shape.

Memphis loves to turn defense into offense. It will make Minnesota pay for bad offense by creating more transition opportunities, which speedsters like Ja Morant excel at taking advantage of.

Morant helps his Grizzlies rank fifth in transition points per game. They will thrive in transition against a Minnesota defense that allows the second-most points in transition per game.

Bounce-Back Spot

The Grizzlies are in a great betting situation tonight.

They are on a 4-0 ATS streak in the game following a two-game SU losing-streak.

Memphis will be confident tonight in its ability to bounce back because it faces a Minnesota team that it regularly beats.

Currently, the Grizzlies are enjoying 5-0 SU and ATS winning streaks against the Timberwolves.

Best Bet: Grizzlies -3.5 at -110 with BetOnline

San Antonio Spurs vs. Utah Jazz
Wednesday, May 5, 2021 at 9 p.m. ET at Vivint Smart Home Arena in Salt Lake City

San Antonio Offense vs. Utah Defense

Utah’s defensive focus is predicated on the realization that many NBA offenses are driven by analytics.

Many NBA offenses consider layup attempts and three-point attempts to be the most worthwhile ways of attempting to score.

By worthwhile, I mean in terms of assessing risk versus reward.

So Utah’s defense primarily wants to stop easy layup attempts and to guard the perimeter closely.

But there’s one big problem: there are still some teams that do not focus on scoring at the basket or from behind the arc.

Phoenix, which has given Utah’s defense recent trouble, is one team whose offense thrives in the mid-range.

San Antonio is another. The Spurs attempt the third-most field goals from 10-14 feet from the basket. They also attempt the most field goals from 15-19 feet from the basket.

DeMar DeRozan is San Antonio’s leading scorer largely because of his prowess in the mid-range, for which he has been known since his days as a Raptor.



DeRozan will lead a Spur offense against a Jazz defense that struggles to limit field goal attempts or make opponents uncomfortable in the mid-range.

Utah Offense vs. Spur Defense

Utah really misses Donovan Mitchell, its top ball-handler along with fellow guard Mike Conley, who is also injured.

Both players were strong on the ball and used their solid ball-handling to drive inside.

Without their driving ability, the Jazz miss crucial sources of inside scoring.

They are already heavily reliant on their three-point shooting. They attempt by far the most three-pointers per game.

But this reliance on three-point scoring is problematic against a Spur defense that is one of the best teams both at running opponents off the three-point line and at limiting opposing open three-point attempts.

San Antonio’s attentive perimeter defense will punish Utah’s increasingly one-dimensional offense.

Best Bet: Spurs ATS (Odds TBA)
 
I appreciate getting BAR's input but there seems to be like a 4 a.m. submission deadline for it lol
 
Like always very well written and persuasive. But I think there is kind of an elephant in the room here, maybe better if it is addressed: all of your points were also true a couple of days ago when the Jazz beat the Spurs by 11, no? Not that that necessarily negates all your points, but maybe you could slip something in with them to explain why the game 2 days ago worked out like it did...Like maybe DeRozan the mid-range maestro, didn’t play or something like that (not a great example because he actually did play)...
 
You're right, Pip. I appreciate you bringing that up. Honestly I was kind of in hurry mode since I had three other articles to write. I was hoping to just cast that game as an anomaly. After all, i'm not arguing that the Spurs will cover every time, just that the Spurs are more likely to cover. I was irrationally glad that that game played out as it did because it seems harder to expect the same result twice in a row. But I should have taken the time to address it.
 
Well I don’t even really know your target audience so for all I know they would already assume anomaly like you are saying, so you wouldn’t need to explain further.

On another track, I‘m wondering if you have ever come across this thing I have been thinking about off and on. You seem to write in the classic style of assert-your-point, then follow-up-with-a-paragraph-of-evidence-supporting-your-point. I appreciate that. But nowadays in a web-oriented environment, I am wondering if you have seen any/many instances of writers writing the assert-your-point-part, and making that entire assert-your-point part a link, linking to the follow-up-with-a-paragraph-supporting-your-point text. The purpose of this, if it worked correctly, would be that the reader sees your assertion, and then says, “oh yeah, of course, everybody would agree with that”, or they say, “no way, why do you say that?” So at this juncture the reader who totally agrees with you already could just read on to the next assert-your-point. And the reader who is skeptical about your assert-your-point can click the link to go over your supporting evidence in detail. A reader who agreed with all your main points from the outset could read through your entire article pretty quickly, to come to the juicy conclusion. Does anybody ever write stuff like that?
 
Well I don’t even really know your target audience so for all I know they would already assume anomaly like you are saying, so you wouldn’t need to explain further.

On another track, I‘m wondering if you have ever come across this thing I have been thinking about off and on. You seem to write in the classic style of assert-your-point, then follow-up-with-a-paragraph-of-evidence-supporting-your-point. I appreciate that. But nowadays in a web-oriented environment, I am wondering if you have seen any/many instances of writers writing the assert-your-point-part, and making that entire assert-your-point part a link, linking to the follow-up-with-a-paragraph-supporting-your-point text. The purpose of this, if it worked correctly, would be that the reader sees your assertion, and then says, “oh yeah, of course, everybody would agree with that”, or they say, “no way, why do you say that?” So at this juncture the reader who totally agrees with you already could just read on to the next assert-your-point. And the reader who is skeptical about your assert-your-point can click the link to go over your supporting evidence in detail. A reader who agreed with all your main points from the outset could read through your entire article pretty quickly, to come to the juicy conclusion. Does anybody ever write stuff like that?
I'm supposed to assume that my audience is beginner-ish, which is why I'll write things like "Pelican point guard Lonzo Ball" instead of just "Lonzo Ball." The argumentative standard is also lower...I basically just need to be logical. But I get the most joy out of posting these things on CTG and interacting with you guys. So the temptation can be there in a busy evening to slack off a bit since the people I write for will still applaud my stuff. But I do want to maintain a higher standard for you guys.

The kind of writing that you describes reminds me of the sort of texts that I dreamed of encountering as an MA student in History. We had to read so many books that the time simply wasn't there to read every word. So we read topic sentences. If the topic sentence contained a main idea that was already obvious, that I already agreed with and understood how the author would support it, then I would skip the rest of the paragraph. I haven't seen anything like you describe with a link but the underlying concept as I described it might be evident in different places. For us, we assume that the reader will read every line. To facilitate that, we write these choppy one-liners that should make reading easier on people who might be on the go.
 
Sheesh alright this is a blowout... there must be something i'm missing about this San Antonio - Utah match-up?
 
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