For the first time Oklahoma City and Memphis will host a second round series. Oklahoma knew they would be here, Memphis shocked everyone eliminating the #1 seed San Antonio Spurs
The Oklahoma City Thunder and Memphis Grizzlies possess two of the youngest playoff rosters in history. If coach Scott Brooks were to replace Sefolosha with James Harden (21) — which won’t happen — Thunder starters would have an infantile average age of 22.4.
The Grizzlies got the better of the Thunder in the regular season, winning the series 3-1 as Randolph averaged 26.5 points and 13 boards.
Tony Allen will be have the assignment of slowing Kevin Durant down. Durant has great respect for Allen as a defender, but Durant also averaged 30.5 points against the Grizzlies this season. Allen hurt the Thunder more with his offense, which was unexpected. Allen averaged more points (18.8) against OKC than any other team this season and shot 57.1 percent from the field.
Allen will have reinforcements with Memphis’ addition of another top perimeter defender, Shane Battier, at the trade deadline. And similarly, the Thunder have something new to throw at Randolph: deadline pickup Kendrick Perkins, Allen’s teammate on Boston’s 2008 championship team with the same tough-as-nails demeanor.
Perkins didn’t play in any of the four regular-season meetings, but should allow Serge Ibaka — the NBA’s top shot blocker — to slide over and defend Randolph.
The two may be labeled the NBA’s teams of the future, but there’s no reason they can’t be successful in the present. Ahead in the Western Conference finals would be a matchup against one of two veteran-laden teams — the Dallas Mavericks or the two-time defending champion Los Angeles Lakers.
“We’re both bad teams that have risen up and become good teams,” Memphis coach Lionel Hollins said Saturday. ” … Our transformations started the same way, and they actually were ahead of us. We’re here, and they’re here.”
SCHEDULE:
Game 1: Sun., May 1 in Oklahoma City, 1 p.m., ABC
Game 2: Tue., May 3 in Oklahoma City, 9:30 p.m., TNT
Game 3: Sat., May 7 in Memphis, 5 p.m., ESPN
Game 4: Mon., May 9 in Memphis, 9:30 p.m., TNT
Game 5: Wed., May 11 in Oklahoma City, Time TBD, TNT
Game 6: Fri., May 13 in Memphis, Time TBD, ESPN
Game 7: Sun., May 15 in Oklahoma City, Time TBD, Network TBD










