Before I get into recapping this game, a few comments on how the Hornets have been handling the aftermath of the Tyson Chandler trade.
A "Season Ticket Holder Advisory" landed in my inbox a little after 2pm. The words of Jeff Bower as per that e-mail:
We were able to get great depth, leadership and experience by making this trade. We felt we needed to increase our overall play of the frontline and Chris Wilcox is a young, athletic player that can score and fit well in our system. We will be able to take advantage of his athleticism and style of play. Joe provides us with much needed depth and someone who can be an integral part of our rotation.
Fast forward to the CST telecast of tonight's game, and I hear Bob Licht and Gil McGregor gushing relentlessly about the players we acquired ("28 other teams wanted Joe Smith!!!"), how the trade improves the Hornets' offense, rebounding and depth, and how Tyson's departure should speed up the development of Hilton Armstrong. Then Byron gets interviewed by Jordy Hultberg and we hear Coach citing our shallow bench as the main reason for doing the deal with OKC.
No mention of by far the biggest reason the Hornets pulled the trigger on this trade, which was of course to cut salary. No mention of that by anybody. No mention of it at all.
I'm insulted.
We all know the truth behind this deal, so for everybody associated with the Hornets to emphasize the silver lining while ignoring the cloud is nothing more than a slap in the face to the fans. Worse still, refusing to acknowledge the real issues makes us wonder if you know what you're doing here. It breeds mistrust.
You traded Tyson Chandler because you're broke. That's okay. I can accept that. What's not okay and what's not acceptable is lying to everyone about it. We the fans deserve better than that.
On to the recap, and methinks I'll switch it up a little this time. Let's run through each quarter real quick, then wrap it up with a few bullets...
First Quarter
The Hornets came out on fire, running out to a 24-9 lead and finishing the period with a 32-18 lead. Rasual Butler had a couple of nice dribble pull-ups and rejected a three. Peja was really getting into it defending Durant, even got himself a bloody nose early when he got too close. He stayed in the game though. West looked sharp, no hesitation on his moves. Chris Paul toyed with Westbrook, luring him into a few cheap fouls and shaking up the rook with the run fast/brake hard routine. Peja knocked down a pair of triples off some nice CP skip passes. Paul picked up his second foul with four minutes left but told Byron to leave him in the game for a while anyways. Byron obeyed. Our rebounding was real good until Armstrong came in for Marks. Some ugly shots from Hilton, too. OKC ran a lot of pick and rolls and shot a lot of quick threes. Quarter ended with a running triple by Posey off a long inbound by West.
Second Quarter
Hilton got got blocked early, then missed a dunk two possessions later. Marks soon replaced him. For the most part our second unit played solid halfcourt D but the shoddy offense led to long rebounds and turnovers that OKC happily turned into fast breaks. Marks continued to set hard picks and rolling well to the basket. Rasual was rebounding, saving, assisting. Midway through the period and Devin Brown somehow blocked himself on a three-point attempt, got called for a double -dribble. It would have been funny if it wasn't so pathetic. Posey got his offense working before CP and D-West came back in, helped keep the lead at 10+. Our All-Stars then took over the scoring load. Late in the quarter Durant beat Peja back door and rammed home a nasty one on Marks. A little after that I realized he had 21 points already. Stealthy that kid be. A 9-0 run for the Thunder going into the half, and we led 53-47. Seven turnovers in that quarter alone for the Hornets.
Third Quarter
Pretty even scoring through this quarter. West helped carry us with a variety of moves, still decisive. Paul carved up OKC inside, but our shooters had trouble knocking down the kick-outs. The Thunder attacked the basket early, led mostly by Westbrook. They got a bunch of second chances too but rarely finished them. Byron wasn't happy and called a timeout five minutes in, our lead cut to four, put Bowen in for Marks. Mostly Rasual guarding Durant in the first half of the period, did a decent job slowing him. Mostly Posey and a little Peja doing that job later. Pick and pop game was working for CP and D-West. Peja exchanged triples with Jeff Green down the stretch. Hornets led 78-71 heading into the final frame.
Fourth Quarter
Kevin Durant went off early. Two free throws, a layup, a triple, a 15-footer, another trey. All that in little more than the first two minutes. And all against James Posey, getting caught behind picks more than once. The CP came back in and Durant sat for almost three minutes. Posey missed a wide open three and launched another ill-advised one early in the shot clock. West and CP also forced shots. Midway through the quarter our guys got some sense and played with more control, but Green and Durant combined to get OKC the lead. It see-sawed the rest of the way. Rasual came up with a big three and West got us some buckets in old-fashioned ways. Posey still guarding Durant down the stretch, but KD had little trouble getting by him. Better help though. CP got us plenty of open looks from three but Peja was cold. A minute left and the pick and pop with West and Paul is money again. Hornets lead by three as OKC inbounds with 15 seconds left. Durant catches on the wing, turns and fires a three right away, over Posey. Bottom. Hornets don't call a timeout, CP comes down, uses the West pick for some misdirection and turns Kyle Weaver inside out, scoring on pretty much the same shot Weaver had blocked last trip. Two ticks left, no timeouts for OKC, and a Westbrook prayer goes unanswered.
Hornets 100, Thunder 98 is the final.
Other observations and notes
- Chris Paul was doing defensive slides across the lane right before the start of the third quarter as he waited for play to resume. Looked like he was trying to keep that groin loose.
- Great game by West, even though he went a little cold late. 37 points, 13 boards, 13-of-20 shooting, 11-of-12 from the free-throw line.
- Looks like Posey fared the worst guarding Durant. Bad timing or bad defense? All I know is that Durant is an incredibly well-rounded offensive player, and expecting one guy to contain him might be expecting a little too much.
- Durant finished with 47 points on 16-of-27 shooting. I believe that's a career high. Green chipped in with 24 points and the rest of the team 27 between them.
- OKC played just eight players.
- During an ad break in the third quarter, there was a commercial advertising the All-Star Game in Phoenix, being shown on TNT this February 15th. Can't wait.
- I know Byron gets criticized a lot for not always taking a timeout to stop an opposing team's run, but I've noticed that we almost always seem to end up with more timeouts than the other team down the stretch, which of course is never a bad thing. After West nailed that jumper to put us up 3 with a minute left, OKC burned a timeout. After that they had just one left, while we had three. Scott Brooks used his final timeout to get Durant that tying triple, then looked on helplessly after CP dropped the gamer with two seconds left.
- Some numbers: Thunder 46 points in the paint, we had 32. Thunder 13 fast break points, we had 3. Only 11 turnovers for the Hornets, despite coughing it up 7 times in the second quarter alone. OKC won the rebounding battle, 45-41, including a 13-6 edge on the offensive glass. Only 10 turnovers for the Thunder, despite leading the NBA with an average of about 17 per game. 6-of-23 shooting from deep for OKC, 49.4% field goals for the Hornets.
That'll do. Hornets back in New Orleans tomorrow to host the Orlando Magic. Not gonna be easy.


10 glorious comments post your own
ticktock6
02/17/09 11:39 PM
I am right there with you on Bob and Gil. And the email. I wanted to strangle them through the TV. And I'm horribly irritated and disillusioned that the organization feels like they can't even address us as intelligent people.
hornetshype.com #1
Mark
02/17/09 11:43 PM
Still trade talk on my mind, I don't think this was that bad of a trade, but that also factoring Ty's big contract (read: $$). I didn't keep up with the explanations by management, but it is quite frankly insulting when the underlying reason is finance. Had they stated 'money's tight, Tyson has value', at least we'd understand; not like fans are immune to the recession either. Plus while it gives us depth, but now we don't have "that starter". I think that's worse.
Tomorrow's going to be brutal. Godspeed guys.
www.dogpile.com/ #2
Andrea
02/18/09 12:29 AM
Nice to get a win. With Orlando, at LAL, at Utah, and even at Sacramento (where we've struggled over the years), it may be a minute before we see another one.
Orlando went into OT tonight and Dwight Howard went for 45-19-8. Hopefully, his arms have fallen off on the flight to the Crescent City and he can't play tomorrow.
I thought the reactions to the trade today (in the media) were...interesting. Tim Legler from ESPN said it's the Hornets basically packing it in which I agree with. TNT's David Aldridge said the trade gives us more depth (true) and in not so many words that it was made because it'll help us in the postseason (lol). Avery Johnson, also of ESPN, said that the Hornets organization must know something that we don't know. He said maybe the trade was made not only for financial reasons, but because Chandler hasn't been able to stay healthy and hasn't done much when he was (true). Seems to me like he was implying that they're may have been something going on between TC and the org. which I don't believe
Are more trades on the way for us? Anyone hearing anything?
#3
LSUhornet
02/18/09 01:57 AM
I'm way more excited about West's 13 boards than his 37 points. If he hits the glass this hard every night, this trade would not be so bad basketball-wise. Wilcox is definitely a better offensive player than Chandler, and maybe that will help our offensive problems whenever we can't hit the 3. Watching Dwest and Rasual hit the glass tonight makes me feel a tad optimistic that this team can still compete. However, for some reason I feel like West always plays better in other facets of the game when his shot is on. I can't recall him ever having a great rebounding total when he has a sub-par scoring night.
#4
LSUhornet
02/18/09 02:15 AM
Any possible chance of the new guys playing tomorrow? We're gonna need as many big bodies as possible to throw at Howard. The highlights from tonight made me pee my pants a little.
#5
HornetSaint83
02/18/09 04:37 AM
I'm MAD ABOUT THE WHOLE DEAL. It's pretty ironic we're playing the Magic tonight... my favorite Eastern Conference team. I'll root for the Hornets tomorrow night, but I'm pissed at them right now. I don't have any Magic gear, but I do have a blue shirt from a local bar that has "Orlando, Florida" written on the back. I think I'm going to leave my Hornets clothes at home for one night.
#6
thekourt
02/18/09 07:27 AM
I listened to Byron's comments on the 106.7 pregame show last night, and he was giving a lot less of the company line. He mentioned "business reasons" and "basketball is a business" at least three times, and he sounded pretty depressed about the trade. I didn't see the TV interview, though, so maybe he sold it a little harder there.
#7
Niall Doherty
02/18/09 07:32 AM
@ louisianagyrl: I haven't heard about any other trades. I'd love if Bower pulled off something else, making the OKC deal part of some genius masterplan.
@ LSUhornet: I haven't heard anything about the new guys playing tonight. Even if they're available Byron might not play them many minutes. Might be nice to have 12 extra fouls ready for Howard though.
www.ndoherty.com #8
djtoneyblare
02/18/09 09:37 AM
Byron wanted to call a timeout and Chris waved him off, which was the smart play against a younger team that was caught up in Durant's great shot, not getting back on D. So on one hand we seem to save 'em up for some reason, and on the other, we almost use them at the wrong time. Once again, the Coach of the Year wears #3.
I guess I think this trade could've waited until the offseason. TC is too valuable to panic-trade. We're not beating the Lakers with him or Wilcox vs. Smith, so why not wait until he's healthy and commands more? For chrissake, the kid practiced with the Redeem Team this summer, should've been an all-star last year, and we don't even get a #1 pick (tho I guess whoever that is would end up in the doghouse, too)? And I like Joe Smith, even.
They're not broke. I just don't buy that.
All I can hope is that we're aiming for 2010 with the confidence that guys want to come play with Chris. I guess this means Mel Ely can settle in and chill the year out and we've seen the end of Ry-Bo's playing time. All seems a little rushed to me.
#9
DemonDeaconHead
02/18/09 10:09 AM
Re: Dwight Howard. I'm a NC guy, and watched the Bobcats-Howard game last night (it really was mostly 5-on-1), and the scary part is that I thought Emeka Okafor played terrific defense on Dwight. The thought of Sean Marks, Ely, even D-West or the Thunder Expirings trying to stop him if he's on a roll like that...we might be better off having CP3 strip him every time he tries a move. And I don't mean just the ball. His shorts if need be.
#10