Friday was all or nothing.
The Memphis Grizzlies were going to either finish in disappointment again, or they were going to return to the playoffs after missing it last season.
They were determined to reach the next step. Ja Morant played through another play-in game with an ankle injury. Marvin Bagley III had an illness that forced him to miss practice Thursday, April 17. He nearly threw up at halftime on Friday while fighting nausea, but he put together 16 productive minutes off the bench.
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The Grizzlies weren’t going to be denied. They pulled out a 120-106 victory against the Dallas Mavericks to clinch their spot in the NBA playoffs.
This win was satisfying, in front of a raucous FedExForum crowd, something that interim coach Tuomas Iisalo called “special” to experience.
But now, they must turn the page. And fast.
The Grizzlies will take on the top-seeded Oklahoma City Thunder in Game 1 of their first-round series on April 20 (noon CT, ABC). And games against the Thunder didn’t go well for Memphis during the regular season, which lost all four meetings by double digits.
“They’re probably the best team in the league, or they have been for however many months,” Grizzlies forward Santi Aldama said. “They play really well. Selfless team. A lot of talent. When a team shares the ball like that, it’s tough to guard because everyone becomes involved.”
‘Focus on us’
Plenty of attention will be on the Thunder, who won an NBA-best 68 games — 16 more than the next best team in the West.
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But after Friday’s game, there was a similar message among most Grizzlies players.
“Focus on us,” guard Desmond Bane said. “If we do what we’re supposed to do, it’ll be good enough.”
The message of internal focus was shared particularly by the Grizzlies’ big three of Bane, Ja Morant and Jaren Jackson Jr. So how does Memphis focus on itself? For Bane, one of the main keys is taking care of the ball.
Morant, when asked about the Thunder, focused on defense.
“Guard the ball,” Morant said. “That’s pretty much it. Guard without fouling, keep your guy in front, rebound. Offensively, be us.”
“We just need to follow our game plan,” Jackson said. “Make things simple, limit our turnovers. Try to take away their strengths and focus on ours.”
The Shai Gilgeous-Alexander challenge
After Bane mentioned limiting turnovers, he then pointed out that the Grizzlies must do their best in trying to contain MVP candidate and league-leading score Shai Gilgeous-Alexander.
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That will be a focal point leading up to Game 1. Gilgeous-Alexander averaged 36.3 points in four regular-season wins against the Grizzlies. With Jaylen Wells out for the season with a broken wrist, Scotty Pippen Jr. has assumed the role of top perimeter defender for the Grizzlies. He’ll be mostly tasked with guarding Gilgeous-Alexander.
“I’m just going to try to make it difficult for him,” Pippen said. “Try to limit him as much as I can, and try to do everything I can to win.”
Damichael Cole is the Memphis Grizzlies beat writer for The Commercial Appeal. Contact Damichael at damichael.cole@commercialappeal.com. Follow Damichael on X, formerly known as Twitter, @DamichaelC.
This article originally appeared on Memphis Commercial Appeal: Ja Morant, Memphis Grizzlies discuss playoffs series vs OKC Thunder