The Hornets bounced back from Monday's loss in Atlanta by beating the Wizards in D.C. tonight, 109-98. Since the New Orleans bench has been the hot topic of conversation recently, I'll start out talking about the reserves in this one.
Byron did shake things up some. He subbed out three starters in the first quarter: Posey for Wright, Bowen for West, Brown for Butler. Our first unit got off to a slow, sluggish start at both ends of the floor, resulting in a 28-22 Wizards lead heading into the second. West was taken out with 3:27 left in the first, then returned less than two minutes into the second. Chris Paul sat out the first half of Q2 as usual, as did Tyson Chandler, and we didn't fare too badly during that stretch. I was happy with the defensive effort; we allowed the Wizards 10 points on just 4-of-12 shooting before all our starters were back on the floor. The problem was again the offense, as turnovers, rejections and plain ineptitude resulted in our guys scoring only 6 points on 2-of-5 shooting in the same stretch.
Of course Chris Paul and our other big guns then tore the Wizards a new one for the rest of the second quarter and all through the third. The 40 points we scored in Q3 were a season high, and we led 85-68 entering the final frame. Gotta be safe to roll with five bench guys when you have a 17-point lead, right? Wrong. The Wizards ripped off an 11-2 run in the first three minutes of the fourth, cutting their defecit to just eight. Byron called timeout, the starters came back in and after a few minutes of struggle to regain momentum they closed it out strong.
The five-man reserve unit that almost threw the game away consisted of Daniels, Brown, Posey, Bowen and Armstrong. I can't criticize them too much individually for what happend at the start of the fourth though. It looked like they were out there playing some kind of half-assed zone defense, which resulted in nobody following cutters or boxing out for the defensive boards. As a result, the Wizards got second chances and point blank looks. I'm guessing that was one of the "junk defenses" Byron spoke about before the game, the idea being to mix it up a bit and keep Washington on their toes, try to generate offense from the bench defense. Unfortunately, the guys we had out there trying to play that kind of defense need a lot more experience playing it to be effective. And they really need to work on their communication, because nobody seemed to know their role.
Even though his efforts failed tonight, I hope to see Byron experimenting with the bench some more in the coming weeks. I don't think there's one good solution that he's going to hit on. He just needs to adjust game by game depending on what the opposition is doing (not his strength, I know), and ensure that everyone knows their role in whatever offense and defense we decide to run.
Moving on to some bullets...
- Chris Paul's final line: 39 minutes, 30 points (11-of-16 FGs), 13 assists, 10 rebounds, 4 steals, 3 turnovers. Like every other Hornet, he struggled out of the gate, but really took the game by the scruff when he came off the bench in Q2. Gerry V on the radio broadcast made a good point about how Paul was waiting and reacting to the defense early instead of attacking and making the Wizards react to him. He started coming with that aggressiveness after his breather and never looked back. I'd love to see our team as a whole be more assertive like that, forcing the defense to make a mistake instead of waiting for it. We'd surely see less forced shots late in the 24.
- I thought Rasual Butler was finally snapping out of his hot streak when he dropped just 2-of-8 shots in the first half, but then he hit 5-of-10 in the second, including a bunch of big three-balls. Still not a great shooting night for him overall, but it's great to see how he can right ship so quickly these days, rather than sinking back into a slump like the Rasual of old. Sual was the primary defender on Caron Butler for most of the game, too, and he made life tough for his former teammate. Caron would finish with 23 points, but he needed 22 shots to do it.
- Rasual Butler's scoring totals tracking back to the Laker game in February: 21, 18, 20, 18, 16, 22, 17, 7, 12, 21, 31. And he's shooting 48.4 percent from the field in that stretch, 46.9 percent from three. And still, nobody's talking about him. Well, except for Hornets Hype. And At The Hive. And us here at the 247. Any day now, a non-Hornets blog might mention him.
- Our interior D was key tonight. During that big run spanning the middle quarters, we did a great job limiting the Wizards to one jump shot per trip. Chandler's presence seemed to deter opposing drives. When the Wiz did venture in there, TC was either rejecting/altering the shot or helping well enough to force the ball back out to the perimeter. We didn't rush out on their shooters either, perhaps keeping in mind that Washington is the second-worst three-point shooting team in the league. Good game plan, well executed by the starters after that sluggish start.
- How about Chris Paul after the game, when Jordy Hultberg asked him about his triple double? Rather than talk about himself, CP immediately ran with Jordy's mention of Tyson (whose late block became Paul's tenth rebound), noting how the Hornets are 7-1 since the big man came back from injury.
- Nice game from Posey. He gave us 15 points (5-of-8 FGs), 6 boards, 2 assists, 2 steals, 3 turnovers. I didn't notice him getting beat badly on defense either, which has been my main complaint about him lately. That said, the Wizards have only two real offensive threats (Jamison and Butler), and I can't recall Posey guarding either of them for any significant stretch.
- Posey got to play the entire fourth quarter, taking Julian Wright's place with the starters. Only 17 minutes of PT for JuJu, resulting in 4 points (2-of-4 FGs), 5 boards and 2 turnovers. Byron wasn't happy when he turned it over late in Q2 on an ill-advised lob attempt to Chandler. Looked like he had a lane there but he passed it up. All that aside, Wright's recent performances have restored my hopes for him a little bit. He definitely needs a longer leash and court time with the starters, because that's the only way he's at all effective.
- Antawn Jamison started the game on fire but cooled off considerably. Credit should go to D-West who keep a good eye on him after the first quarter. West would finish with 13 points (6-of-12 FGs), 9 boards and 4 assists. Oh, and he got called for another defensive 3-second violation. That's seven of those for him in the last ten games.
- Numbers: Too many turnovers for the Hornets at 14. We started out with too few free-throw attempts, but finished up 19-of-26 from the line. We had a 45-36 edge on the boards, a 50-38 advantage in points in the paint, led 17-12 on the break, and we knocked down 10-of-24 from deep.
Next up, the Hornets are off to Milwaukee to meet the Bucks on Friday, then it's the Bulls in Chicago a day later. Leaving you with some bonus good news: the Jazz had their streak snapped in Atlanta tonight. That puts us back above Utah in the standings.


17 thoughtful comments post your own
420ftJesus
03/11/09 10:24 PM
Nice analysis.
Chris' left eye looked funny, but not serious. Thoughts?
I agree that Byron experimenting is a larger point than the result of the experiment. I think it shows that he's not just going to win his way or no way, which was starting to be a fear of mine.
My assumption (possibly poor) has been that he's going off of data from practice that isn't translating onto the court. I think he needs to try more single position subs through some of the `easy' games coming up to get some data so he's better able to put in the right Hornets at the right time, rather than sticking with a rigid rotation.
Someone told me long ago that a chess match can be broken into three phases, each with a different philosophy (obviously, I'm saying this applies to basketball, but i think generally to many endeavors):
You play the beginning like a book, the middle like a wizard (zing!), and the end like a machine.
He's got the book part down. He played with a team that wrote a large chapter of it, so that's a given.
He's pretty much a squib as far as wizarding goes, but trying counts for something.
Byron is more machine than man (Vader?), but he could use a tune-up. They are running the clock better though . . . maybe someone read my post about that . . .
#1
Mark
03/11/09 11:25 PM
SHH. We shant speak publicly of Phoenix, lest we forget what happened to DX: no hype, 2 all-stars. 17-foot assassin, indeed.
www.dogpile.com/ #2
Mikey
03/11/09 11:27 PM
Dallas just beat Portland in the Rose Garden. So after tonight, both Utah and Portland have 24 losses. A good night indeed.
#3
Mark
03/11/09 11:38 PM
I saw that win, Mikey. Very scary game upon seeing the Blazers active and effective on defense. Plus BRoy was making all these crazy shots too. Yeech.
Anyway, I never understood this whole playoff seeding. Is it something like 1-4 Conference seeds are guaranteed by the #1 seed of each division? Whatever it is, it's ridiculous that NBA.com has NOLA below Utah based off win percentage.
www.dogpile.com/ #4
Mikey
03/11/09 11:49 PM
@ Mark: They were in the Rose Garden, that's nothing unusual. I fully expected Portland to go on some crazy run in the 4th and score like 46 points, but I'm glad it didn't happen. Apparently Dallas plays well there, which is wierd because they suck everywhere else when they play good teams. Regarding the seeding, I don't look at winning percentage. Instead I look at the number of losses a team has. In the end, everyone has to play 82 games, and with each additional loss a team has, that's one more game they have to count on someone else to lose.
Ryan Bowen is Byron Scott's wake-up call to the rest of his team. He got the perfect amount of burn tonight, 10 minutes. He had 4pts, a board, a steal, and injected a little life into the fellas while out on the floor.
#5
Andrea
03/12/09 12:39 AM
Our win combined with losses by Por, Hou, and Utah really did make for a goodnight.
I disagree about Rasual being mentioned in anything that isn't affiliated with the Bees. As far as anyone outside of Louisiana is concerned, Chris Paul is our team and David West along with Tyson Chandler were so horrible that they were about to be forced into retirement until CP came along and saved their careers. Even with David's all-star appearances, he still doesn't truly get his due. Long story short, no one other than CP is really important.
I agree the turnovers have been up a bit. I'd definitely like to see that number go down.
Yes, there is hope left for Julian Wright. I have slim hope for him, but hope all the same. JuJu's too much of a thinker at this stage in his young career. When he makes a decision and sticks with it, he's fine; it's when he's indecisive about whether he wants to shoot it or pass it, lay it up or shoot it, alley oop or throw it out of bounds, etc. I may be in the minority but I've always felt like basketball is a mental, physical, and reactionary sport. He's not too keen on the reactionary part sometimes.
#6
Gerry V
03/12/09 01:55 AM
On one of our topics on " 6 ON 6" ( Thursday and Sunday nites on WDSU TV 6 New Orleans and wdsu.com) we spoke about Butler and his numbers and what a vital role he has been playing. Tonite he hit 3 late three's that were imapct threes....Clutch shooting tonite as he has become a legit " drive and kickout to" shooter. Plus he's added a few bounces to his game that gets him to the rim or a med range jumper....we also discuss the bench and reboundinig in the segement
GV
#7
NOEngineer
03/12/09 06:00 AM
Experiment 1: Bowen and Devin mixed in with starters. This was a qualified success, as we went from 12 down to 8 down by the end of the quarter. Bowen slowed down the defense and made hustle plays. (I have "Do the hustle" playing in my head now. Aargh!!) Energy returned to the team. Devin shot free throws. If Hilton could catch the ball and be manly with it we would have been tied.
Experiment 2: Tossed salad of 5 bench players on the floor int he 4th with a 17 point lead. Epicurean Fail. This is less of an experiment, because we have done this all year with similar bad results. Let's stick with no less than two starter-quality seasoned players at any time, unless the ratio of lead to minutes left is > 10. There is no law that says we have to put a lineup of pure "bench" on the court.
CP3 was playing in a slight fog in the first quarter, and has been in several recent games especially Atlanta. His handle has been non-super and he has made a few bad passes that humans might make. However, when he came back out in the 2nd all was (extremely) well for the rest of the game. Perhaps they removed a tiny piece of kryptonite that was stuck in his elbow sleeve.....
Props to Tyson. He was the only player we had for the first 5 minutes, and kept it going in multiple ways all game. Let's not trade him, okay?
#8
Niall Doherty
03/12/09 07:35 AM
@ Gerry V: I got your latest segment right here:
http://www.wdsu.com/video/18890836/index.html
I'll keep an eye on WDSU.com and link up the 6 on 6 stuff.
@ 420ftJesus: I imagine CP's eye problem was just a stinger, nothing to worry about. Of course, if the reserves had held on to the lead he wouldn't have had to go back out there and get popped in the eye. That should be the biggest concern with the poor bench play. CP and West are capable of playing big minutes (with careful rest on non-game days), but the more minutes they play, the greater the likelihood of picking up an injury.
www.ndoherty.com #9
commentcava
03/12/09 08:59 AM
I'm sure someone posted it or most of you have seen it, but I wanted to put up a link to an espn article about Chris Paul's possibly being the best point guard ever.
http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/columns/story?columnist=hollinger_john&page=PERDiem-090311
#10
Gerry V
03/12/09 09:52 AM
Thanks Niall ! We're on tonite in the 10pm news hour during the sports segement ( sunday & thursday in the 10pm news in the sports )
gv
#11
Ryan Schwan
03/12/09 10:12 AM
Heh - this is priceless. It's from the dcexaminer's game recap. We have the full article linked up in the News section:
Paul finished the period with a flurry, feeding Posey for a layup, then stripping Nick Young (14 points) off the dribble, retrieving the ball, and driving for a shot in the lane as he drew a foul. As the ball trickled off the rim and through the hoop, Paul playfully raised a hand to Tapscott on the Wizards bench, asking for a high-five. When none was returned, Paul patted Tapscott on the shoulder.
“[It was like] keep trying coach, you might find something else to stop me,” said Tapscott. “I’m looking in my pocket saying, ‘Chris, it’s just about empty right now.’”
www.hornets247.com #12
stormsurge
03/12/09 10:22 AM
"Let's stick with no less than two starter-quality seasoned players at any time, unless the ratio of lead to minutes left is > 10. There is no law that says we have to put a lineup of pure "bench" on the court. "
I wholeheartedly agree with this statement, NOEngineer.
www.stormsurgephoto.com #13
Mikey
03/12/09 11:04 AM
During NBATV's gametime telecast, Steve Smith gave props to Rasual Butler. So, just so everyone knows, basketball people are noticing what this guy is doing this year.
#14
420ftJesus
03/12/09 12:42 PM
About Ju:
Juju is probably the best hope we have to improve the team from within now that Bop is Playing (yes, I captialized it). That is why he's important to me.
I agree with those who say his issue is confidence, which results in him `thinking' (I don't know a way to say that so that it doesn't sound worse than I mean; all apologies). His interviews are often the equivalent of those Ricky Williams gave wearing his football helmet. They are even moreso when they are complimentary of his play it seems. While this is adorable, it's a possible indicator of a deeper problem.
The Ricky thought makes me think even worse thoughts: Aaron Brooks (your ex-Saints starting QB, not the Rocket). He's got the talent, but couldn't get his head right and QB's `worse' than him have jobs, and soon his cousin Michael Vick will.
Ponder this when no one can see you.
Juju has gotten over his string of missed dunks (I can't believe I had to type that) and is certainly `in the game' more, so there's hope. I have hope, at least. I'd say optimism even, and that's a rare find in my twisted soul.
Please, Juju, please . . . you can do it . . . .
I'm reminded of some wisdom:
Daniel Larusso: I can't do it! I can't do this! Why can't we just leave? I'm afraid! Why can't we just go home? I'm afraid!
Mr. Kesuke Miyagi: Daniel-San! OK to lose to opponent. Not OK to lose to FEAR!!
Daniel Larusso: I'm afraid! I'm afraid of this guy! What am I supposed to do about it?
Mr. Kesuke Miyagi: Use focus! Your best karate still inside. Now time let out!
Your best karate still inside. Now time let out!
#15
djtoneyblare
03/12/09 04:31 PM
I'm sure you guys will cover this, but I'd like to say to no one in particular, WHAT! WHAT! WHAT! (pops CP3 jersey)
http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/news/story?id=3973622
#16
MoPeteCP3
03/12/09 05:41 PM
I hope chris's eye is alright.
#17