Through League Pass, I got to hear the game called by the Timberwolves announcers, and I thought they were a pretty solid pair. The color guy, in particular, uses efficiencies and pace factor and all the little stats I love. Early in the fourth, their color guy said "Chandler and Paul are out, West was ejected in the second quarter, and Peja and Posey have combined for 11 points. Can you believe we don't have a twenty point lead?"
Neither could I. Like in Portland when Chandler took the walk of shame, the guys stepped up with West being tossed, and came away with a hard fought win the Hornets desperately needed.
Tonight, I get the joy of recapping a win focusing a good light on Byron Scott, Sean Marks, Rasual Butler, Devin Brown, and in some ways, Julian Wright. How nice is that?
Observations
- First, give it up to Byron Scott, folks. The vaunted ball movement you were all hollering for? It was in full effect tonight. They opened the game cutting and moving, with Peja setting down screens for Daniels and Butler before fading high for open shots off of picks by West or Bowen. You'll also notice that of the 13 posessions David West had tonight, only three were in a basic low post situation. All the rest involved him cutting back to the free throw line, receiving the ball, looking for open shooters, and if nothing opened up, driving into the paint against Jefferson, who couldn't move fast enough to keep up with him. Peja and Butler were rolling off of curls all night, and though Devin brought back the old Pick-and Roll offense when he was on the floor, there was still a lot more moving around as he drove to get open.
- Oh, and those weren't the only good adjustments Byron Scott made. In the third, instead of having the point guard double the post, he had Peja, Posey and Wright take turns immediately doubling Jefferson when he touched it. That forced either a longer hook shot than normal, or a wing exit pass that rotated around the perimeter. Earlier Jefferson could pick his passing target by looking over the smaller guy, but all three of those secondary defenders were long, and made the skip pass across the court impossible. Result? The rotations were much easier and shots were contested. Also in the third, after Gomes repeatedly drilled threes, he shifted Peja onto him. Peja doesn't roam, and can be burned by fast guys, but that's not Gomes game. Peja's a damn tall fella, and Gomes didn't have another open three all night.
- At this point, the Giraffe Calf seems to have lost all confidence in his shot - and really most of his offense. Wright won't take open shots and instead keeps driving into the paint and losing the ball or forcing passes. Byron needs to make it clear to him his handle just isn't good enough yet to drive into the teeth of the defense. His own defense tonight was pretty standard for him. His energy is very high and can key some great defensive series, and when given a clear job, he excels. When left to his own devices, however he still roams and ball watches way too much. When his player had the ball, he was great at harassing them and closing out. When he was given the job of doubling Jefferson, he closed hard and those long arms were hard to ignore. When he was on the backside of a perimeter rotation, however, he left Carney and Gomes open three times in six posessions for threes. The potential is still there however. He's still our best X-factor - and I hope he starts taking that jumper again.
- Over the last three weeks, I have done a 180 on Sean Marks. When he was coming off the bench at the same time as Hilton Armstrong and playing the Power Forward position, he was terrible. Trying to be West and drain the long two is just not his thing - and it showed. The last three weeks, however, he's been coming in at center, and when you put him within ten feet of the basket, good things happen. Among our big men, he rivals West as our best finisher at the rim, as his ability to catch and explode with strength makes it hard to stop his dunks. His energy was great, he snagged 4 offensive boards, and had 18 points an a gorgeous block in the fourth. His early season defense, which was slow, has improved greatly as he's become more familiar with his teammates. I know there was some excitement a couple weeks ago when Hilton was able to score a little in the post - but I'd rather have Marks finishing and rebounding than Hilton or Melvin Ely any day. This little injury string has made it pretty clear our best big man options behind Chandler and West are Marks and Bowen - hands down.
- All that nice stuff about Marks aside, our MVP of the night was Rasual Butler. 23 points on 15 shots, 8 rebounds, three assists, 1 steal, 1 block, and several aggressive drives right into the teeth of the defense in the fourth. Telfair and Foye had trouble even bothering him - and Miller didn't even really try. His defense was solid as usual as well.
- Ryan Bowen had 5 fouls in 13 minutes, but I could care less. Two runouts for layups, a nice assist, a nice block, lots of energetic tips for loose balls, and generally a lot of great effort. He's worth two men while he's out there.
- West's Karate Chop in the second was one of his stupid frustration fouls we all know he's capable of. He felt he got fouled on the play before, Mike Miller was on a fast break, lifted the ball above his head as he went past West, and West chopped at it - with more force than was warranted. Of course, Miller also managed to trip over his own feet at the same time, so he dropped his hands to catch himself, and West's swing got him good, right in the back of the neck. Stupid Foul, West. You deserved to take the Walk. The foul is a Flagrant II, so he'll be evalauted for a suspension. Wouldn't be surprised - or particularly upset - if he got one.
- One good thing did come from West's banishment. Antonio Daniels decided he needed to start shooting. And shoot he did, repeatedly getting to the elbows for jumpers, and once delivering a nice, swooping layup over Jefferson. His aggressiveness, coupled with Bowen and Butler getting after it, brought the game to within 3 at the half.
- People are going to kill Peja about his inability to score tonight in a game where he was supposed to be our primary option. They will also probably kill Byron for leaving him out there for 40 minutes. I won't. There is a reason he had the second best point differential on our team - and that reason was defense. Like I said earlier, his doubles on Jefferson and defense of Gomes was not only instrumental to pulling this game out, but on offense, his presence on the wing or top of the arc allowed Devin Brown go one-on-one in his forays into the paint no less than seven times. McHale had clearly told his guys to never help off of Peja - and they didn't.
- That, of course, left the Human Pinball in his favorite situation - barreling into the paint at full speed with no one attacking his dribble until he had tucked it like a halfback. Devin Brown drew 8 free-throws and finished with 14 points on 8 shots. Very nice.
I hope Jefferson isn't hurt too badly. The guy is an offensive beast, and fun to watch.
We get Memphis tomorrow night. West usually lights those guys up, so it would be nice to have him. If we don't? I think we can still win.
UPDATE: West's flagrant foul on Mike Miller:


17 thoughtful comments post your own
Mark
02/08/09 11:37 PM
Jeez Louise, it only took a WHOLE SEASON for my words to fall on receptive ears. But credit past due, I hope coach Scott keeps said ball movement up: I might finally esteem him after I see more progress.
And I hate to say this, but ugh... FREE MIKE MILLER.
www.dogpile.com/ #1
chefcdb
02/08/09 11:39 PM
Has Sean Marks been given a nickname by Hornets fans yet? How 'bout "The Kiwi Dominator" since he's been blocking shots and dunking with authority.... Surely he deserves some rowdy appreciation, after posting a career high and dunking in the game-winner tonight. Maybe somebody out there can give Marks a better, fiercer Maori-inspired handle?
chefcdb.livejournal.com #2
Andrea
02/08/09 11:41 PM
Great game. I highly doubt West will play tomorrow, but I also hope that we still can find the energy to come out and try to get a W after a game that went down to the wire.
I think everyone (or most of us) did a complete 180 on Marks. It sucks when players try to do a lot of things that they aren't good at, get poor results once they do them, then proceed to do them again and again i.e. Sean Marks and his long jumpers. Maybe that was just his way of finding out what his game as a member of the Hornets is. He's put that behind him and found things that he's good at doing like rebounding, scoring inside, and occasionally blocking shots. Good on him.
What can I say about Sual? He has just had a phenomal season
As we talked about in the Game On post, I REALLY hope all the cutting and great ball movement doesn't disappear once we're healthy.
#3
chefcdb
02/09/09 12:35 AM
BTW, Ryan Bowen needed a stitch or three after diving to the floor after that loose ball, which resulted in a ??? call for Bowen's 5th foul. Bowen left, but while he could've returned, his absence set the stage for Mr. Marks' late game heroics.
Agree about the pleasures and efficiencies of better ball movement. Sometimes we are all just blinded by the light of CP's ball-handling prowess, so I thought all our talk about Princeton offense was the same sort of fake alibi as so many NFL teams succumb to in describing their "West Coast" offenses. Now we can see Coach Scott can get the guys to run a patient, cutting offense that pays dividends.
He won't get the recognition, but a very good case should be made for Rasual Butler as Most Improved Player.
I think of this as a stolen win, one we deserved but we were a little lucky, too. Hornets shot the 3 poorly, were out rebounded thoroughly, had no one all 2nd half to check Al Jefferson (who we all hope isn't badly hurt) but somehow he was held scoreless the entire 4th. We did manage to turn them over more and capitalize with a few more fast breaks, and that speaks to hustle and digging down deep. This was a satisfying team victory, but Minnesota is still a jagged team that hasn't forged a real identity (though with a better point guard and a more athletic shot blocker, they'd be pretty decent), so it would've been sad to give the Wolves another win at the Hive.
chefcdb.livejournal.com #4
JoJo
02/09/09 03:38 AM
After giving me material for about 2000 jokes so far this season, Marks finally shut me up tonight.
Who would have thought a 33 year old career backup would score the winning basket, let along be playing in the final minutes. Pretty impressive Mr. Marks.
As for Julian- If we make it to the WCF I think he will have to step up and play like he did last year. I'm not sure why he's regressed so much, but he needs to revery to his old self (as weird as that sounds). Last year he had a 13 point game followed by a 20 point game. This year he's scored more than 10 a grand total of one time. A quick check of his stats show regression in every single catergory. I'm not sure why Byron isn't getting more out of him, but we NEED him to make a splash in the playoffs.
#5
JoJo
02/09/09 03:40 AM
Excuse the terrible spelling and grammer please. I celebrated the win a little too much.
#6
byronscott4
02/09/09 06:56 AM
Tom Hanneman and Jim Peterson (former Rockets/Kings/Warrirors player) were the commentators for the Wolves. I thought their comment about the lead was very telling how hard the Hornets were playing and keeping it close. I have a feeling after a game like this, the nola.com boards won't be calling for Julian Wright this and Julian Wright that....
#7
Mikey
02/09/09 11:41 AM
You will not see a finer defensive performance from a bunch of nobodies than you saw from the Hornets in the 2nd half of that game last night. The Wolves scored 18 points in the paint in the 1st quarter, and got another 10 in the 2nd quarter. In the 2nd half, they only got 10 points in the paint, most off of fast breaks. The Hornets made life really difficult on their bigs. Yeah, sure, the Bugs gave up some 3's to Ryan Gomes, but I'd rather have Gomes beat me than Al Jefferson any day of the week. The Hornets also made an adjustment on that in the 4th quarter, and Gomes didn't get any more clean looks.
If there were any more questions as to who our best reserve big guy is on this team, it was answered last night. Sean Marks just plays harder, smarter, and finishes better at the hole than the other two guys. Props to Hilton Armstrong for his defense on Al Jefferson in the 2nd half though. He fronted Al very well, denying passing lanes, and when Al did get the ball, he kept Al from getting too deep into the painted area.
How about those backup point guards huh? Together, AD and DB put up a CP-like stat line: 26pts (9-10FT), 10ast, 2stl with just 3TO. Very nice work indeed. Devin, I'm loving how you get to the FT line. Keep it up.
#8
Niall Doherty
02/09/09 12:45 PM
I added some video of West's flagrant to the end of the post. There's also some discussion about it over at Ball Don't Lie:
http://sports.yahoo.com/nba/blog/ball_dont_lie/post/Video-David-West-s-dirty-flagrant-foul?urn=nba%2C139982
I don't think it was a dirty play either. It was incredibly dumb and he let his frustrations get the better of him, but I don't think he wanted to hurt Mike Miller. I can understand though if Minnesota fans feel different. I probably would too if I didn't watch West every game. The TWolves announcer brought up the incident with Nowitzki in last year's playoffs to backup his point that West is a "cheap" player. I don't see the relevance since that was just West making a stand and showing that the Hornets wouldn't be intimidated by Dirk and the Mavs. There were no blows thrown.
But yeah, definitely a dumb play and now that I've seen the replay I agree with the ejection and he should probably get suspended, too. Hopefully the whole thing will teach West not to bitch so much at the officials and to stop crying for foul calls when he misses or turns it over in traffic. I think Mikey made the point recently that in West's first game back from injury three Hornets got T'd up. He's looked to as a leader of this team and as such he needs to start acting like one in those situations.
www.ndoherty.com #9
Diane
02/09/09 01:41 PM
Good recap Ryan.
I fall on the side that he didn't mean to do it like that. I still say he was trying to knock the ball out of his hands or block the shot and Miller's movement made the blow land as it did. Only God and David knows for sure. He did take it like a man and just walked off the floor.
#10
Jeremy
02/09/09 02:03 PM
Personally I don't think he warrants a suspension for tonight's game. Yes, it was a hard and stupid foul. However so was K. Perkins against Maxeil in Det. and Bynum against Wallace (he is still out with lung and rib injuries) and neither lost a game. Bynum didn't even get ejected. It may have been frustation but there was no malicious intent so he shouldn't lose a game because of it. As for the Dirk issue; that was a message to the mavs and the rest of the Western conference that we may have been young, but we wasn't going to be punked. We may be doing the pushing around here.
#11
Andrea
02/09/09 02:22 PM
I read the post over at BDL and it definitely wasn't a dirty play. West is a pretty tough guy (who boxes in the offseason) who could have and would have hurt Miller if he really had some ill intent but didn't. It was just one of his many frustrations fouls (which I wouldn't be disappointed if he minimized the amount of). I don't see the relevance of the Dirk thing either. Most ppl's response would be a lot worse if a 7 footer threw an elbow at his face than a little hokey-pokey on Dirk's cheek.
#12
Mikey
02/09/09 02:36 PM
This just in, Al Jefferson has a torn ACL. Out for the rest of the season. Tough blow for the Prentiss, MS kid. I wish a speedy recovery for Big Al. Hopefully he can make a full recovery and return to dominance.
#13
Niall Doherty
02/09/09 03:12 PM
@ chefcbd: Good point about Rasual as Most Improved. Who else is in the running for it this season?
www.ndoherty.com #14
Andrea
02/09/09 03:24 PM
@Mikey: :-( for Al. I, too, wish him a speedy recovery. That really sucks.
@Niall: A few others that I can think of for MIP:
Danny Granger
Kevin Durant
Devin Harrison
Paul Millsap
Rajon Rondo
#15
Caleb462
02/09/09 04:39 PM
Dumb play... stupid play... but not dirty. Why would West intentionally knock the crap out of Mike Miller's head? He's a smart guy, and a generally nice guy from what I understand... he's not going to do that.
He was frustrated and was going for the ball... and it ended badly. That's it. Ejection was warranted... suspension (if it occurs), I don't believe is.
neworleansbasketball.blogspot.com #16
chefcdb
02/09/09 05:11 PM
The LG list above is a great start for MIP:
add:
David Lee, Knicks
JJ Barea, Mavs
Andres Biedrins, Warriors
Rodney Stuckey, Pistons
Mickael Pietrus, Magic
To me, Granger was already an All-Star ready to happen and his new contract reflected the Pacers' confidence in him. We knew Durant would be a George Gervin type of ruthless scorer. Biedrins remains underrated; however, he has added some offensive moves beyond his rebound stick-backs, but his numbers might not have improved quite enough. I like Rondo, but he is still a major liability as a shooter for the Celtics. Barea played lights out when Josh Howard was hurt, now he'll get another showcase while Terry is out, but he hasn't been consistent. Stuckey has made great strides, but all the questions in Detroit make it seem like elevating him and trading Chauncey was a mistake. Pietrus has been injured twice, but he has become a fearsome threat for a deep, tall Magic team -- can he help them not miss Jameer so much?
For those reasons, I'd put Rasual ahead of those guys, with Pietrus rising. I also think we need to explain that the Hornets are 18-5 when Butler gets 10 points or more because that illustrates his value to us winning games. That means we're about 12-13 when Butler doesn't get 10. He keeps scoring and we keep winning will give Rasual a legit chance at the award.
Right now, I'd give MIP to David Lee as a kinda crappy consolation prize for not making the All-Star squad, with Millsaps right on his heels. Devin Harris hurt his case a little recently with his benching and terrible play here in New Orleans, but he scores a lot. If the Nets make it to the playoffs over the Knicks, he might win.
Of course, we've likely overlooked a couple promising guys, like Marvin Williams of the Hawks, but when you're the 3rd pick you are 'sposed to be real good, right? On that young Portland team, I'd pick Bo Outlaw as MIP, and he deserves some attention, too, although his role is seems to be that of a heat-seeking scorer.
chefcdb.livejournal.com #17