The secrete to Dame's late game magic

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By Joe Freeman

CLEVELAND — After Damian Lillard hit yet another game-winning shot to deliver the Trail Blazers yet another victory on Tuesday night, I asked him when he knew he was having a special night, when he knew he was “feeling it.”

“When he got off the bus,” Wesley Matthews shouted from a nearby locker.

Not quite. But Lillard sure seems born to makes special plays in special moments. His dagger three against the Cleveland Cavaliers on Tuesday was his third game-winner this season — if you count that driving layup against the Suns — and fourth in his brief career, and he says the secret to his late-game success dates back to when he was a kid.

When Lillard was growing up in Oakland, he and his older brother, Houston, played basketball constantly. And after every game — whether it was a game of HORSE, a game of 21 or an outing with friends — he and his brother always ended things the same way.

“Right before we left, before we put the ball down, it would always be, ‘3 … 2 … 1 …’ and we’d shoot that last shot,” Lillard said. “That was the best part. We’d play for three hours and that last three seconds was the most fun to me. I would never leave without hitting the game-winner and we always did it.”

So when Lillard burned Rodney Stuckey with a game-winning fadeaway jumper in a win over the Detroit Pistons, when he froze Alonzo Gee with a dramatic pull-up three-pointer in a win over the Cavaliers, it was just like those times when he and Houston ended their games as children.

“That’s the same feeling I get at the end of games (in the NBA),” Lillard said.

He loved the end-of-game moments with his brother. He lives for them now.

“I think for a lot of players, that’s kind of what you live for, that moment to kind of rise to the occasion,” Lillard said of taking game-winners. “That’s my favorite part of the game. When it’s game on the line, coming down to that last possession, that’s my favorite part of the game.”
 
J/K Mags. Loved the read, thanks for posting the link. My brother and I used to do the same thing when we were kids. Obviously, it worked better for Lillard. Helps if you have talent, I suppose.

BNM
 
J/K Mags. Loved the read, thanks for posting the link. My brother and I used to do the same thing when we were kids. Obviously, it worked better for Lillard. Helps if you have talent, I suppose.

BNM

It's amazing how things you do at such a young age molds you into the person you are today.
 
It's amazing how things you do at such a young age molds you into the person you are today.

Or not, in my case.

Actually, I have hit many game winners in my lengthy career, just on a much, much smaller stage. So, maybe practicing those last second shots as a kid with my big brother helped take me as far as my limited talent would allow. Who knows, it was still a good read.

BNM
 
Nice story, but who didn't do that as a kid? My driveway was home to many Jordan vs Drexler last second game 7 shots, then when I missed I had just barely enough time to get the rebound for another last second shot.
 
Nice story, but who didn't do that as a kid? My driveway was home to many Jordan vs Drexler last second game 7 shots, then when I missed I had just barely enough time to get the rebound for another last second shot.

Only in my case, growing up in small town Indiana about a billion years ago, it wasn't Michael Jordan, it was Bobby Plump.

BNM
 
The King of Clutch

http://hangtime.blogs.nba.com/2013/12/18/damian-lillard-the-new-king-of-clutch/

Get this: When Steph Curry buried a buzzer-beater to lift Golden State over Dallas last week, it was the first time the surest shooter in the league had collected a game-winner since … high school? At least that was the last one the fifth-year Golden State Warriors point guard who spent the previous three seasons shooting the lights out at Davidson, could recall.
That puts into perspective what Lillard, the Portland Trail Blazers’ dazzling second-year point guard, has done in the last two games: Consecutive buzzer-beating game-winners.
At Detroit on Sunday with the game tied in overtime at 109, Lillard, with about 12 seconds on the clock, went one-on-one with Pistons guard Rodney Stuckey. Lillard dribbled up top, came around a LaMarcus Aldridge screen but it didn’t free him up. He kept dribbling, spun at the free-throw line to get inside the paint and drained a fallaway with 0.1 seconds left. He finished with 23 points, eight in overtime.
At Cleveland on Tuesday, the Cavs made a furious comeback from 10 down in the final 2:15 to tie the game at 116-116 with 7.1 seconds left in regulation. This time Lillard lulled Cavs defender Alonzo Gee several feet beyond the top of the 3-point arc. With Gee allowing space presumably to protect against the dribble-drive, Lillard rose up and splashed the 3-pointer as the horn blew. The official play-by-play called it from 30 feet. He finished with 36 points — 12 in the fourth quarter — 10 assists and eight rebounds.
“You’re watching a superstar being born right in front our eyes,” were the in-the-moment words spoken by Cavs color commentator Austin Carr, who has the nightly privilege of watching another cool clutch performer in Kyrie Irving.
And just like his stoic reaction at Detroit, Lillard acted as though he expected no other outcome. And why not? He’s now pocketed four game-winners on the season and has established himself as the game’s top clutch-time performer:
 

OK first, repped for sharing this. Second, it's so good it bears repeating!

Get this: When Steph Curry buried a buzzer-beater to lift Golden State over Dallas last week, it was the first time the surest shooter in the league had collected a game-winner since … high school? At least that was the last one the fifth-year Golden State Warriors point guard who spent the previous three seasons shooting the lights out at Davidson, could recall.
That puts into perspective what Lillard, the Portland Trail Blazers’ dazzling second-year point guard, has done in the last two games: Consecutive buzzer-beating game-winners.
At Detroit on Sunday with the game tied in overtime at 109, Lillard, with about 12 seconds on the clock, went one-on-one with Pistons guard Rodney Stuckey. Lillard dribbled up top, came around a LaMarcus Aldridge screen but it didn’t free him up. He kept dribbling, spun at the free-throw line to get inside the paint and drained a fallaway with 0.1 seconds left. He finished with 23 points, eight in overtime.
At Cleveland on Tuesday, the Cavs made a furious comeback from 10 down in the final 2:15 to tie the game at 116-116 with 7.1 seconds left in regulation. This time Lillard lulled Cavs defender Alonzo Gee several feet beyond the top of the 3-point arc. With Gee allowing space presumably to protect against the dribble-drive, Lillard rose up and splashed the 3-pointer as the horn blew. The official play-by-play called it from 30 feet. He finished with 36 points — 12 in the fourth quarter — 10 assists and eight rebounds.
You’re watching a superstar being born right in front our eyes,” were the in-the-moment words spoken by Cavs color commentator Austin Carr, who has the nightly privilege of watching another cool clutch performer in Kyrie Irving.
And just like his stoic reaction at Detroit, Lillard acted as though he expected no other outcome. And why not? He’s now pocketed four game-winners on the season and has established himself as the game’s top clutch-time performer:

Man, we are SO lucky to have him on our team. Between Lillard, Aldridge and company, is it any wonder this team is 17-1 in games decided by 12 points or less? This team just does not lose close games. The only close game we've lost was to Dallas on Monta's buzzer beater, and I honestly believe if we would have had time for one more possession, we would have won that one, too. Seriously, give us the last possession and we're going to win. It started last year as Lillard, Aldridge, Batum and Matthews all hit buzzer beaters, and has carried over big time to this season.

This is such a refreshing change from Nate's last season and a half here where the team was something like 1-13 in close games. Of course, he didn't have Damian Lillard, but something tells me even if he did, he would not be able to take full advantage his options the way Stotts does. That's the thing, as good as Lillard is, he's just one of four options we have with the game on the line. By sharing the ball, you force the defense to play straight up. Notice last night Cleveland didn't double Lillard to force the ball out of his hands, because if they would have it would have left one of Batum, Matthews, Aldridge or Mo Williams wide open - and Lillard would have found that open man.

BNM
 
This story is disappointing. I thought it was going to be an anecdote about Paul Allen setting up a play date with Lillard and Lynch, and Lynch giving Lillard a bag of Skittles to eat during clutch situations.
 
Mags would pull an Isaiah Thomas.

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