The Hornets let the Grizzlies hang around and hang around until 4:33 was left on the clock, and then Paul called over Butler, West and Wright and said, "Hey, why are we letting them hang around? We're the cool kids!"
Three minutes later, the scrubs were in, the Hornets were up 16, and it was all giggles and champagne. I wish they had been able to do it earlier.
Observations:
- 2-11 shooting from deep. Outside of a Paul blitz to the hoop, there's little I enjoy more than the Hornet's three point shooting the past couple years: my breath catching as the ball goes airborne, the moment of sweet anticipation, and that little surge of triumph as the ball rips cord. Simply fantastic. Sadly, since Stojakovic has gone down the Hornets have shot 39-132 from deep, good for 29.5%. Those moments of sweet anticipation and triumph have become angst and frustration. Peja, come back, we need you.
- Paul and West carried the Hornets tonight, putting in just about 2/3rds of the total offensive output while playing 41 and 42 minutes respectively. West did the heavy lifting in the first half, scoring 17, while Paul took over in the second, pouring in 24. The only guy who put up any resistance against David West was Darko Milicic, and no one was really able to slow Paul at all when he decided he wanted to score.
- The Giraffe Calf was back with his full mojo tonight, stuffing the statbox like few can: 8 points on 6 shots, 7 rebounds with 2 offensive, four assists, four steals, a block and a single turnover. He started off the game a little rough against Gay who drilled two shots over him, but after giving up two fairly easy looks, Wright basically shut Rudy down. Wait, you say, Gay scored 23 on 14 shots? Most of those came against Posey, who couldn't stay in front of him to save his life. He also had two of those crazy passes that look like he simply lost the handle on the ball, and instead find their target dead on. West used to be as surprised as everyone else by those passes as they flew at his face at 90 miles an hour, but he's gotten used to Julian recently and started catching and finishing them with style the past few games.
- In the fourth, with Armstrong and Marks sitting with 9 fouls between them, Byron did the intelligent thing, going with the Hornet's best five players on the night, running Paul, Butler, Wright, Posey and West against a somewhat smallish Grizzlies team.(Other than Gasol) It really was no surprise that a minute after Wright was inserted for Marks that the Hornets ripped off their run.
- I'd love for the Hornets to be able to take credit for the 20 turnovers the Grizzlies had, but about 6 of them occurred without a Hornet in spitting distance of the ball. People always say that the Grizzlies need to run more, but tonight they simply couldn't complete good passes while moving quickly. Makes it kind of hard to have a consistent running game..
- Butler opened up shooting poorly, but as can be expected from the Phoenix, the nail in the coffin during the fourth quarter was him calmly drilling a three from the corner. He also did some nice work on OJ Mayo, who played 41 minutes and managed 2-5 shooting, 6 points and 3 turnovers.
- The bench scored 11 points, but I'm not too upset by that. Bowen, Peterson and Marks gave some nice minutes, and Posey was big during the fourth quarter, even if he was being destroyed the first three.
Golden State comes avisiting Sunday. This matchup just doesn't have the anticipation it once had. Seeing Baron Davis play hard is always a joy, and he always did against the Hornets. Now, he's gone, and it's just another game against a poor team. Have a good night.


6 magnificent comments post your own
JoJo
03/21/09 03:17 AM
Fun game. Nice to see Julian Wright doing his thing. Normally it upsets me when we play without a center, but tonight that seemed to be the right move.
#1
Niall Doherty
03/21/09 09:15 AM
I felt it was another disappointing performance overall, but then we were missing two starters. I like to assume that we would have demolished the Grizzlies if we were at full strength.
Since I wasn't on recap duty, I spent the majority of this game with eyes fixed on either James Posey or Julian Wright. A few things I noticed:
- Wright and Posey took turns guarding Rudy Gay. I'm amazed at how few plays the Grizzlies actually run for him considering what a weapon he can be. Pretty much every offense, Gay would set up on the wing, below the free throw line extended, and he'd never touch the ball or get a screen set for him. He was just left to stand out there while the rest of the team played 4-on-4. Gay got some early scores off pull-ups and such, and he also got some points when he decided to take Posey/Wright into the post a little bit, seal them off and call for the ball. I also remember him catching JuJu on a back door cut, and beating Posey with the dribble. As Ryan mentioned, Gay finished with 23 points on 14 shots and got to the free throw line 12 times, but to me it really seemed like he was invisible out there for the majority of his minutes.
- Posey lumbers a lot, and every now and then he seems to be just going through the motions. He's not a guy who really cuts hard or does anything fast. He usually gets by on good positioning and smarts. He's very good at doing the ball-you-man positioning on defense, staying equidistant from his man and the ball. Trouble is that he's rarely quick enough to deliver good help on penetration (though he's quite adept at sneaking in and deflecting/stealing a pass), and he can be beaten off the dribble quite easily when he closes out on his guy. He's not at all lazy on the defensive boards, getting in there almost every time a shot goes up, but only after glancing back to make sure his guy isn't crashing. He doesn't try rebound much at the other end though because he's too old/slow to sprint back on defense if it doesn't work out. There was one time against the Grizzlies where he shot and missed a triple and watched helpless as Rudy Gay took off running and caught a long outlet.
- Offensively, Posey's role is mostly limited to standing on the three point line waiting for a kick out. He roams that arc and keeps the floor spaced nicely. Every now and then (usually when we have mostly reserves out there), Posey will post up, get the feed and try score down low. I've noticed over the course of the season that posting Posey like that is a pretty reliable way to get points when the second unit is struggling offensively.
- As for JuJu, I loved watching him. He was similar to Posey defensively, in that he positioned himself quite well between the ball and his man, and he would usually go to the boards after a shot went up, but not before stealing that glance to make sure his guy wasn't crashing. Obviously, Julian is much faster and more athletic than Posey though, and that showed in how well he could move over to help on penetration or close out on Gay when he caught the ball. JuJu is also active around the boards offensively, able to dive into the lane looking to feast on leftovers, but still well able to sprint back on defense if he needs too. As you'd expect, JuJu gets no plays called for him, but then the Hornets don't have much of a playbook to begin with.
- Julian made very few dumb mistakes out there. The only head-slapper I recall was when he passed up a wide open layup, passing to D-West instead. If I remember right, West wasn't expecting it and the ball went out of bounds. I thought Ju kept his spacing well offensively, not getting in the way of anyone, cutting through the lane when appropriate, staying patient and not moving for the sake of moving. He seems to have matured a lot in that respect.
- The biggest disadvantage we have offensively with Juilan on the court (as opposed to Posey), is that Wright is not a three-point threat at all. The defense can sag off him and not worry about having to recover and challenge the shot. However, this seems to aid Julian's slashing and crashing game, as the D often forgets about him and he can cut into the lane to receive a pass or follow a missed shot. He definitely needs to work on catching and finishing on the cut though, as he often seems unsure of whether he should take a dribble or go straight up.
www.ndoherty.com #2
Niall Doherty
03/21/09 09:17 AM
Also, I just posted the usual dose of links in our News and Lagniappe sections:
http://www.hornets247.com/news/articles
http://www.hornets247.com/news/lagniappe
www.ndoherty.com #3
StefanC
03/21/09 10:27 AM
I liked the minutes Mo Pete gave us. First two possessions: 2pts and 1 rebound.
#4
Gerry V
03/21/09 11:11 AM
It depends which Peja returns. In the previous 12 games he played prior to being inactive Peja shot the THREE at a 21/83 clip which is just 25%. return. Like all of you we want to see numbers like the 7 games prior to the 12 we just discussed where he was 24/53 from THREE for 45%
GV
#5
mW
03/21/09 01:53 PM
Second the comments on Mo Pete. Always like to see him out there. You start to remember that he was a former starter, and clearly has both the skills and smarts to make an impact on the second unit.
www.hornetshype.com #6