Not an easy game for the Hornets. The Nuggets came out with a good defensive game plan and executed it well. With Chris Paul and David West on lockdown, we didn't have enough weapons to keep the offense going, while the Nuggets were able to keep pouring in points even when their leading scorer was on the bench. Denver gradually wore us down through the first three quarters, but that 14-5 run to start the fourth was the knockout punch. That stretch put us in an 18-point hole and there was no climbing out. 101-88 was the final. A good effort from the Hornets, but the Nuggets had everything clicking.
Bullets:
- Physical game. Might have had something to do with Jerry Springer being in the house. Lots of fouls and free throws. We were 25-of-30 from the line, Nuggets finished 23-of-24. They would have missed more but the Arena folks passed out those Geico caveman heads to the fans behind the basket, which are nowhere near as distracting as the balloons or the Mickey D's french fries.
- Believe it or not, the first half of the second quarter -- when we had mostly reserves in the game -- was our best stretch of the game. We outscored the Nuggets 15-7 in those six minutes. Antonio Daniels was making plays, Posey was posting and taking the ball hard to the basket, Hilton was taking charges and holding it down on the glass.
- As mentioned, the Nuggets defense was excellent tonight. They gave CP and West absolutely nothing easy. Chris was being trapped from the start and found the lane crowded whenever he tried to drive. Denver did a good job forcing West to catch the ball far from the basket, and also collapsed on him inside. Because of all that attention, neither of our All-Stars could get a good flow going. We sorely missed Peja to stretch the defense, and Tyson to catch lobs over the top.
- I'm proud of our guys though for constantly pounding the ball inside and getting to the free throw line. For as bad as we got beat, it would have been much worse if we had just settled for long jumpers all evening. If we had managed to make a game of it down the stretch, Denver might have struggled with guys in foul trouble.
- I'm loving the hair, Martine.
- Carmelo rained jumpers on us, finishing with 29 points on 10-of-24 shooting. I can live with that. JuJu and Posey had their turns guarding him, and I believe Rasual got some minutes on him, too. The vast majority of those J's Carmelo sank were contested. He just knocked them down anyway. He didn't get to the basket all that much.
- During that key stretch to start the fourth quarter, Denver rolled with a unit consisting of Billups, Anthony Carter, J.R Smith, K-Mart and Birdman. Most of the damage was done by the three guards, swinging the ball around the perimeter and nailing open looks. Byron would bring in Butler for Marks to try match up with them better, but that didn't help much. Later we went to a zone D with West at center. I wasn't a big fan of that at all. West isn't a shot blocker and he doesn't have quick feet. Recipe for disaster in that situation.
- Byron kept the starters in for most of the fourth, despite the fact that we were trailing by double digits the entire quarter. I agree that you should never give up on the game, but after our big guns gave up that run to start the quarter, their heads were down, they looked tired and defeated. Very little chance they were going to suddenly get energezied, start balling their asses off and overcome the defecit. I would have liked to see some of our hungry bench guys back out there, see if they can make a dent in Denver's lead, then throw the starters back out with fresh legs if it becomes a game again. Instead we end up with Paul and West playing a combined 82 minutes in a blowout loss.
- Numbers: Denver won the rebounding battle, 39-37. We had 17 turnovers to their 10. Fastbreak points were even at 17, while we led points in the paint, 38-30. 19 points, 13 assists, 6 boards, 6 turnovers for Chris Paul. 18 points for West on 6-of-19 shooting.
- So Ryan Bowen suffered a separated shoulder on Monday but was able to play today. Whatever medication/treatment enabled him to that, we need to try on Peja.
Overall, I can't be mad about this loss. The Nuggets just had more weapons than us on the night, and they executed well to boot.
In rival action tonight, the Spurs beat the Hawks, the Mavs beat the Warriors, and the Jazz will probably end up beating the Suns. Not a good evening for the Hornets. The brave among you can check the latest standings here.
Next up, the Hornets jet off to NYC for Friday's showdown with the Knicks. Myself and some buddies have nothing better to do with our lives, so we'll be there, too. We don't get to see enough Hornets games in New Orleans after all. I'll try post some notes and pics from the trip on the Twitter machine.


19 exceptional comments post your own
YoungFella
03/25/09 11:51 PM
I've made this post before, but as the sample size of "games without Tyson Chandler in the lineup" grows, the point becomes more and more relevant.
Hornets record with Tyson Chandler:
32-13 .711 (2nd in Western Conference)
Hornets record without Tyson Chandler:
12-13 .480 (9th in Western Conference)
The Hornets suck without Tyson Chandler in the lineup. They are 4-1 without David West and 2-2 without Chris Paul and 12-13 without Tyson Chandler.
Tyson's absense has the most impact on the team of anyone statistically (although I will cede that Paul is more important - it is closer than you might think).
Tyson's intangibles are numerous. His hard screens on the Hornets' bread and butter play cannot be replicated by Armstrong or anyone else. His defensive presence in the lane cannot be fully appreciated or measured as it is impossible to determine how many easy drives the basket by opposing guards and forwards are not attempted when a healthy Chandler is in the lane.
Chandler singlehandedly guarded Duncan in last year's playoffs and held him below his points per game average and his shooting percentage. The number of players in the entire NBA who can accomplish this feat without significant help from a 4 can be counted on one hand. He gave the Hornets an opportunity to knock out the Spurs, and if not for horrible bench play and God-awful shooting by Peja Stojakovic and Bonzi Wells the Hornets would have advanced to the Western Conference Finals.
My point is this: Without Tyson Chandler the Hornets are not a playoff team. A 25 game sample is enough to determine this. If the Hornets really dump Chandler this offseason to get under the luxury tax, it is imperitive that they dump David West too, get young talent and draft picks and rebuild in earnest while Chris Paul is still young enough to reload around.
If the Hornets go into next season with a starting 5 of Chris Paul, Butler, Peja, West, and Armstrong/Comparable talent, they will be at best a 7 seed and at worst a 10 seed. Worse, they will have a malaise setting in that "this incarnation" of the Hornets will not win. It is the stench that has plagued franchises like the Nets over the past few season and is currently plaguing the Suns and Pistons.
#1
ticktock6
03/25/09 11:59 PM
I am not brave enough to look at the standings. I'm also not brave enough to go back and double check the 6 minutes in which the Nuggets shot 100% on every single jumper they took. I counted 6 minutes at the game. I could have missed a miss somewhere in there. But as I said, I'm not brave enough to look.
hornetshype.com #2
Mark
03/26/09 12:10 AM
I think Ryan Bowen is powered by his own greatness. Unfortunately, that's non-transferable to Predrag.
Didn't watch, but with our rather injured status, the fact that we came out and did anything (i.e. tried) is acceptable for me. Nugs are scary on all pistons, so they did what they were supposed to do. But with that said, get healthy bugs.
www.dogpile.com/ #3
Niall Doherty
03/26/09 07:32 AM
Having just scoured the web for the latest news and blog posts, there seems to be a very sour mood after the loss last night. People are jumping on the "Fire Byron" bandwagon. Check out the News and Lagniappe sections for more:
http://www.hornets247.com/news/articles
http://www.hornets247.com/news/lagniappe
www.ndoherty.com #4
Niall Doherty
03/26/09 07:33 AM
@ YoungFella: Agreed on Tyson. His value is much more than statistics can measure, and we really really missed him last night.
www.ndoherty.com #5
MonstaBee
03/26/09 08:40 AM
While I totally agree on how important TC is to this team, I think Peja would have changed the game last night. It was clear that Denver didn't respect our perimeter shooters last night. They were trapping CP3 last night every time he strayed from center court knowing that he would likely swing it to Butler or JuJu outside the arc. They cannot do this if Peja is there. They also cannot allow defenders to play so much helps side on D. West if they have to worry about Peja and his abilities. I also think that Peja's height would have allowed him to get the ball down low much easier...how many times did we try to pass the ball into West or Hilton and have the defender tip the ball and create a turnover? Peja at 6'11 has a much better ankle to make that pass.
And please, can we rewind and review why we need Posey last year? And why we got rid of Pargo? I want to like Posey, but at this point, he is giving us very, very little. He hasnt been the shooter we thought he would be since the beginning of the year.
I am depressed after that beating. Can someone please write and article that focuses on the positive...perhaps a link to Martine's new hairdo?
#6
YoungFella
03/26/09 09:05 AM
Posey's 26% shooting on three-pointers in March (14-53) coupled with his timely fouls and combined 35% shooting in January-March will be invaluable once the playoffs start.
"Big Game James" pities the fool who questions him, ya heard?
#7
YoungFella
03/26/09 09:08 AM
@ Monsta
I agree that Peja is very valuable on offense. The combination of no Peja threat and no pick and roll from Tyson is two huge blows to what is already a predictable Hornets "offense" to begin with.
Maybe one of the reasons Byron wanted Peja so bad is that having a world-class sniper masks what a horrible coach he is? I've seen Wile E. Coyote make better improvisations and decisions on the fly.
#8
LSUhornet17
03/26/09 09:59 AM
I miss Birdman. Definitely wish we would've given him a shot this year.
#9
bigindian15
03/26/09 10:06 AM
Glad to see the Fire Byron bandwagon is moving again after one injury-riddled loss to a good team...
#10
mW
03/26/09 10:47 AM
Denver tried for three quarters to give us this game and we missed shot after shot that we normally make. Cp with the layup before the half? Dx with several close runners? Injuries or not, we should have won this game. It infuriated me that we didn't.
www.hornetshype.com #11
nikkoewan
03/26/09 11:38 AM
i hope the nba makes ways so that the team can know what the fans think(like the blogs and discussions at the hive and hornets 247). it would really really help if byron was able to read all of our suggestions(and bower and shinn). i mean, can't they see how much we love this team? i still remember the days of davis, mashburn, magloire, pj brown and wesley. we were legit contenders. but everything got sour and everybody split up. that shouldn't happen to the hornets today. paul is a once in a genereation type of player. god help us
#12
NOEngineer
03/26/09 12:46 PM
We need to get rid of that Chris Paul guy. He was a team worst -19, while Antonio Daniels was a +6. For the sarcasm-deficient, I'm just kidding.
Without Tyson, many unsuccessful attempts to deny the ball to a hot outside shooter ended up in an uncontested layup. We have nobody else inside with the combination of recognition and speed to consistently stop penetration or alter shots on a drive to the basket. West didn't even pretend to try on several of these when he was our "center". I hate lack of effort, and I'm seeing it too often from West on both ends.
#13
Niall Doherty
03/26/09 12:50 PM
Thinking about how West lumbers a lot, there are a lot of other power forwards out there who would be better suited to playing with Chris Paul. Not to rag on West, because he does give us a lot, but pretty much the only play which he and CP can run together is the pick and pop.
www.ndoherty.com #14
Andrea
03/26/09 01:13 PM
I only followed the game on game channel but we had a shot at winning this game regardless of how bad we played. Not to mention that's another tied season series. It would be nice to win one of those with a good team. Obviously we've had injuries this season but when we've been healthy, I haven't seen anything that would make me think that we're actually going to do well when it matters (playoffs). We're just another inconsistent team in the West.
I'm not exactly on the "Fire Byron" bus, but I do think B.Scott needs to step his coaching up or he needs to go. I'd prefer a coach who could get the absolute best out of his players and he's just not that guy but if he stays, obviously there's nothing we can do about it.
I'm on Hornets Hiatus (it's not a website; i'm on actual hiatus) after today
#15
420ftJesus
03/26/09 02:02 PM
Turnovers . . . how you like them apples? Eh . . . I had to . . . it's a weakness . . .
I'm not too worried about the playoffs since the only other team that really matters in determining if we go to the playoffs is Phoenix. They probably will not pass the Hornets in the standings. We have 12 games to play and they have 11 games to play and the record difference is 4.5 games. If we win 50 percent of our games, they have to win at least 10 depending on tie-breakers etc. So I feel good about having to plop down cash from my playoff fund.
I'm not too worried about the playoffs since we can't win the title. We get some bonus basketball played at a high level right in our home. I welcome that.
#16
Dub Dubs
03/26/09 04:40 PM
Nuggets fought hard last night. Wish we would have hit more shots and somehow freed up Paul, but without Peja we seemed unable to spread the floor like we normally do. That probably hurt West as well. Oh well. We can take these guys in the playoffs hopefully.
Where is the Nuggets blogs? Roundball? Pickaxeandroll? Denver Stiffs?
Wonder how they feel about their chances against us if we meet again at full strength. 2-2 ... with out Chandler or Peja.
#17
bigindian15
03/26/09 04:56 PM
What would be cool is if Rick Adelman gets the axe from Houston if they don't make it past the first round. I think Rick Adelman could make us great again...
How much time does Byron have left on his contract? The Hornets aren't going to cough up a lot for a buyout to fire a coach who brought his team to 50 wins this season, it just won't happen
Let's be honest, here: how much does the seeding really matter? We aren't a great home team anyway, I'd feel a lot better with the 6 seed and a healthy team than the 2 seed and Peja and Chandler having nagging injuries in the playoffs
#18
Diane
03/26/09 08:35 PM
Sorry - I'm going off topic here a little but I am going to repeat the exact same comments I made about the Thunder-Laker game.
They came in - gave us respect - and then beat us like a red-haired step child. Our shots wouldn't drop they hung their head and the game was over. - early.
But I do want to ad some thing here (the same I would say to The Thunder). When a team comes in and throws up some off the wall defense -- why can't we make adjustments at half time?! And I agree with the comment - try some other players they might surprise 'em.
#19