The Western Journal

Brutal NBA Playoff Collapse Somehow Sparks Unprovoked Attack on President Trump

Teh article says that on Tuesday night the New York Knicks made a major comeback to beat the Cleveland Cavaliers in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference Finals. It explains that, during sports discussion on Wednesday, many hosts and pundits focused on whether the result was a Knicks win or a Cavs collapse-and how it might also relate to President Donald Trump.

It then criticizes former ESPN commentator Max Kellerman, who-while talking about the cavaliers’ star James Harden-made a political comparison, saying bringing in Harden to win a championship was like electing Donald Trump to fix the country. The piece notes that people on social media reacted negatively to the comment, arguing that sports should be separate from politics.

After calling out Kellerman for the political angle, the article returns to the basketball: it describes how Cleveland led by 22 late in regulation, but the Knicks took over defensively (especially against harden) and then dominated overtime, winning 115-104. It also claims this comeback was historically important for the knicks and among the largest in recent NBA playoff history.




On Tuesday, the New York Knickerbockers staged a historic comeback to steal Game 1 of the Eastern Conference Finals from the Cleveland Cavaliers.

Naturally, this led to most of Wednesday’s sports talk shows and podcasts to ask whether Game 1 was more of a win for the Knicks or a collapse for the Cavs … and how this somehow connects back to President Donald Trump?

Ex-ESPN talking head Max Kellerman was the pundit who made this a bizarre political statement on his “Game Over” podcast, according to Fox News.

Kellerman’s Trump dig came as he was denigrating Cavaliers star James Harden.

“Bringing in James Harden to win a championship is like electing Donald Trump to fix your country,” he said.

(For the unaware, Harden — a former league MVP — is one of the most talented players to ever set foot on an NBA court, but has a well-documented history of struggling mightily in the playoffs.)

Unsurprisingly, social media largely took a negative view of Kellerman’s wholly unprovoked shot.

Kellerman also appeared to do a disservice to himself by putting much of the focus on his political commentary, rather than any commentary he proffered about the game itself.

And what a game it was.

As mentioned above, it makes it all the odder that Kellerman felt compelled to focus on partisan politics when addressing the game, when the game itself had so much to dissect.

With less than eight minutes left to play, the Cavaliers held a sizable 93-71 lead over the home team Knicks. The crowd had been taken out of the game, the Knicks seemed listless and consigned to giving up the first game of the conference championship, and the Cavs were rolling — until they weren’t.

From that point forward, the Knicks would blitz the Cavs, erasing that 22-point deficit in regulation (largely by picking on Harden defensively), and outscored the Cavs 14-3 in overtime, leading to a harder-than-it-looked 115-104 win for New York.

And as Yahoo Sports pointed out, this was literally the biggest postseason comeback in Knicks history. It’s also the second-biggest comeback in the NBA playoffs over the last 30 years.

So there was clearly a lot to talk about without invoking the president’s name. But perhaps that wasn’t so clear for Mr. Kellerman.

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