Undefeated MOB, Darius Clark Headline Series 6 Playoff Semifinals
MOB went 16-0 and earned a semifinal bye while Darius Clark's 257 points and 77-for-100 dunk rate headline a Series 6 playoff field fans should not miss.

MOB closed the regular season as the dominant force in Series 6, finishing 16-0 and claiming a semifinal bye behind the scoring and finishing prowess of Darius Clark. Clark finished the regular season with 257 points and converted 77-for-100 on dunk attempts, a conversion rate that turned transition and halfcourt opportunities into a reliable scoring engine. MOB’s smallest margin of victory was 13 points, underlining a season-long gap between MOB and the rest of the league.
The semifinal bracket features MOB and Buzzsaw as the top seeds with byes, joined by quarterfinal winners Slashers and Lava. The Slashers advanced with a 64-57 victory over the Gryphons, paced by Tony Crosby II and Alonzo Scott Jr., who each scored 19 points. Crosby II finished the regular season with 230 points, 38 assists and a league-leading 48 hits, a stat that quantifies his physical, high-impact style. Lava eliminated Wrath 64-40 in the quarterfinals as Bryce Moragne scored 21 and Jihad Shockley added 20, setting up a semifinal field that mixes high-flying offense with hard-hitting slamball grit.
Defense remains a defining storyline. Gage Smith paced the league in steals, loose ball recoveries and stops, providing MOB with a defensive backbone that turns turnovers into dunkable possessions for Clark and others. That combination of finishing efficiency and defensive disruption explains much of MOB’s undefeated run and represents the kind of two-way identity that other teams will need to crack in the playoffs.
Series 6 continues to showcase slamball’s unique product and growing media profile. The league’s 56-player roster includes 26 former Division I players, reflecting a deep talent pipeline and giving the semifinals both athletic legitimacy and narrative appeal. Production choices and star power are also expanding the sport’s reach: a major addition to the playoff broadcast booth in Marshawn Lynch adds mainstream resonance, while highlight reels and marquee plays have amplified social engagement throughout the season.
Rules and structure keep the spectacle grounded in sport. Games run 20 minutes across four five-minute quarters on courts equipped with springbeds and trampolines, with protective equipment and standard positions ensuring player safety and role clarity.
With MOB carrying momentum and a cast of proven scorers and impact defenders waiting in the wings, the semifinals promise high-flying plays and tactical matchups. Fans should watch how teams counter Clark’s finishing and how Buzzsaw, Slashers and Lava deploy their own stars as slamball moves from regular-season spectacle to playoff intensity.
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