Oklahoma City Thunder vs. Golden State Warriors
The Thunder surprised much of the basketball world by upsetting the Spurs in 6 games to set up this doozy of a series between these two Western Conference powers. The point guard matchup will be fun to watch, with MVP Stephen Curry, who returned after dealing with knee and ankle injuries in the first two rounds, to help Golden State finish off the Blazers in Games 4 and 5, against Russell Westbrook, who is coming off a series in which he averaged 25.2 ppg and 10.5 apg. Westbrook needs to continue to play smart in this series and not try to match Curry shot for shot, because he will lose if that happens. I think Kevin Durant will have his hands full this series as well, as the Warriors will likely throw Draymond Green, Harrison Barnes, as well as Andre Iguodala (all good defenders) at him. So to win, OKC has to get the ball inside and dominate the boards with Steven Adams, Enes Kanter, and Serge Ibaka like they did against the Spurs. In the end, I think the Thunder have a real shot, but Warriors advance to the Finals.
Toronto Raptors vs. Cleveland Cavaliers
LeBron and the Cavs three’d the Hawks to death in a sweep, while the Raptors won their second straight 7 game series in beating the injury-riddled Heat. I foresee another short series for Cleveland here, especially if Toronto can’t get center Jonas Valanciunas back 100%. Kyle Lowry and DeMar DeRozan both had strong series against the Heat and will have to continue scoring efficiently for the Raptors to keep up with all the three-point shooters the Cavaliers have (JR Smith, Channing Frye, Matthew Dellavedova, Richard Jefferson) around LeBron, Kyrie Irving, and Kevin Love. Inside, the Raptors’ Bismack Biyombo has been playing well, but the Cavs just have too many bigs in Tristan Thompson, Timofey Mozgov, and Love, that I think Toronto will struggle on the glass as well.
Cavaliers in 5