What a game. After the Kings abused us all night long from three-point range, it was only fitting that a buzzer-beating triple by Rasual Butler would be their undoing. Live by the three, die by the three.
It was one crazy finish in Sacramento. In the final three minutes, we had Hilton Armstrong and Devin Brown miss four free throws, Rashad McCants and Francisco Garcia hitting long J's to keep the Kings in it, a fit-for-a-wheelchair David West converting a three-point play off a bullet feed from Chris Paul, an amazing block by Garcia on CP's fast break layup, followed by some awesome transition defense by Julian Wright to prevent an easy two by Andres Nocioni. The Kings then reset and Beno Udrih threw in an off-balance, sideways runner to put them up two with 1.7 seconds left. Plenty of time for Garcia and Nocioni to miscommunicate on a switch and leave Butler all alone for three. I'm not sure my elderly neighbor on oxygen support appreciated me screaming Rasual's name and jumping around my living room at 11:45 p.m. on a Tuesday night.
111-110 Hornets the final.
Bullets...
- Gotta start with David West. He tweaked that left ankle midway through the second quarter. It didn't look like he turned it that bad, but he was in obvious discomfort for the rest of the game. He couldn't even walk without a noticeable limp, let alone run. Still, he played the entire second half and finished with 40 points (15-of-25 shooting), 9 rebounds and 6 assists. 24 of his points came after he got hurt. Mostly he burned the Kings with his jumper, but he also wasn't shy about posting up and getting in the lane. Gutsy performance by the big guy.
- That said, I have to play devil's advocate here and question why West was even out there in the second half. I realize every game is big right now, but if the Hornets really are determined to be healthy for the playoffs -- as they claim to be by giving Tyson and Peja extended time to rest and recuperate -- then playing your second-best player for ~30 minutes on a bad wheel isn't the way to do it, especially against a bad team and on the first night of a back-to-back. And although West came through huge for us offensively tonight, we got burned numerous times because he couldn't rotate at all on the defensive end. I was hoping Byron would take him out and go small ball on the Kings, try run them off the floor.
Yeah, I know, I shouldn't complain too much. We did get the win, West probably told Byron to keep him on the floor, and he might be fine by tomorrow's game against the Clippers. Still, risky move.
- It seems Francisco Garcia is quite the superstar in his own mind. He did actually play a good game today, scoring 19 points on 11 shots and playing some nice D despite having to guard Paul for significant stretches. I was just bothered by his high-stepping and mug-flashing antics throughout. Do that when you're a key player on a playoff team, fine. When you're coming off the bench for the worst team in the league? Not so much.
- Byron went to a zone defense for the fourth quarter, mostly with Paul and Brown up high and Sean Marks at the center. It worked surprisingly well, helping us turn a 4-point deficit into an 8-point lead. Marks made up for the gimpy West and was able to deter and challenge the Sacramento drives, and everyone did a nice job getting out on the shooters. It also led to some steals and fast break opportunities which we took advantage of.
- The Kings were on fire from deep in the first quarter, ending up with 38 points in the period. I didn't mind so much because I felt we challenged a lot of those shots, while our guys were busy getting and hitting much better looks at the other end. I was impressed though that Sacramento were able to compliment their three-point shooting by getting to the free throw line a bunch. The were 18-of-21 from the line in the first half, but thankfully we were able to cut down on the fouls and give them only 6 free throw attempts after halftime. That was key.
- Some other numbers: The Hornets shot 18-of-27 from the free throw line, West sinking all ten of his freebies. We had a 41-29 advantage on the boards, and a 44-24 edge in points in the paint. Both teams took care of the ball, the Hornets turning it over 7 times, Sacto 8. Last time the Hornets scored 100 points was 11 games ago against the Wizards.
- Chris Paul struggled with his shot, finishing just 5-of-15 from the field. He did of course offset that with 15 assists and only one turnover. He seemed to settle for the jumper a lot tonight, even with guys like Hawes switching onto him on the pick and roll, and Garcia manning up on him for a while. To me it seems like we're seeing less of Chris Paul's aggressiveness late in the season, and you have to wonder if he's saving some for the playoffs or if maybe all these minutes are taking their toll.
- Rasual finished with 18 points on 7-of-16 shooting. After making just 3-of-19 shots for 13 total points in his previous two games, it was nice to see him knocking them down somewhat consistently in this one. Defensively, he got burned several times by Kevin Martin, who was able to blow right by him and get in the lane. I would have liked to see Julian Wright get that assignment for a stretch, see what he could do. Although knowing Martin's ability to draw fouls, it might not have been pretty.
- JuJu was great in the first half, knocking down jumpers, running the break, grabbing rebounds. He finished with 14 points (7-of-8 FGs) and 5 boards. Byron seemed to sour on him in the second half after a bad post feed to Hilton and a couple of defensive lapses. As a result, he didn't play most of the fourth quarter, but he was out there for the final 90 seconds of the ball game.
- Hilton. Foul trouble. Pity. Good positioning, rolling, finishing, rebounding. 9 points, 7 boards, 22 minutes.
- According to Gerry V, referee Monty McCutchen turned to Chris Paul and exclaimed "You don't know my profession!" after CP questioned him about a non-call in the second quarter.
- Great job once again by the reserves at the start of Q2. They stepped up the defensive intensity, limiting the Kings to just 7 points in the first six minutes. The offense was pretty stagnant, but Wright and Daniels were able to knock down some jumpers to keep it rosy.
In all, we outscored the Kings 14-7 with Paul on the bench in the second quarter. Better yet, in the last five games combined, the Hornets have outscored opponents 73-34 sans CP in Q2. Interesting to note that Morris Peterson has been on the floor for all but about three of those minutes. Coincidence?
The standings are worth a look after this one. In other action tonight, the Spurs lost at home to the Thunder, the Mavs beat the TWolves, the Nuggets beat the Knicks and the Blazers hammered the Jazz. Put it all together and it means that we've leaped Utah and now have the 6th seed in the West. Somehow we're just 1.5 games behind the Spurs and Rockets for the division lead.
Late game again tomorrow night, as the Hornets take on the Clippers in L.A. Let's hope D-West can borrow Tyson's good ankle for that one.
UPDATES:
Frank Knezic twittered a nice new nickname for Rasual Butler after this one: Regicide. From Wikipedia:
The broad definition of regicide is the deliberate killing of a monarch, or the person responsible for the killing of a monarch. In a narrower sense, in the British tradition, it refers to the judicial execution of a king after alleged due process of law.
Also, video of Rasual's buzzer beater:


11 mighty comments post your own
Roc217
04/01/09 01:49 AM
If West didn't keep playing they would not have won. He will not play tomorrow I'm sure so I understand not wanting to lose both tonights and possibly tomorrows game. Then you have GS on Friday who play everybody tough no matter their record. It just seems these injuries won't quit until they've claimed every player this season.
#1
Niall Doherty
04/01/09 07:30 AM
@ Roc217: We may still have won without him, since he wasn't able to do much at all defensively. My point though was that I'd rather lose a game like this and not risk West being seriously injured, as opposed to running him into the ground trying to win it. But like I said, he probably opted to stay in the game, and he knows his body better than anyone. Hopefully he'll recover quickly.
www.ndoherty.com #2
saltandcarbon
04/01/09 07:42 AM
Sual looked so much like Peja on that last shot, catching the ball in rhythm and stroking it. That is as good a play as the regular season gets.
#3
MonstaBee
04/01/09 08:37 AM
I think West told Byron that he wanted to finish the game and was confident the injury wouldnt get worse by playing on it. I am okay with it based on my belief that he wanted to get the win and then begin his rest and rehabilitation on the foot. If you have ever hurt your ankle really bad, you know that you cant run and jump on it at all...my point...it wasnt so bad that he was concerned. Also, helped that he couldnt miss all night and is a competitor.
On Juju...that is one of the best offensive games I have seen from him. First time since last season that he looked 100% confident in his shot. Sometimes, Juju aims the ball rather than shooting it and last night, he was a shooter.
I am in somewhat of a different corner Nial regarding the defense last night. Without a presence in the middle to focus on last night, we should have been much quicker to close on the shooters around the arc. I get that DWest was hurt for much of the game and perhaps that is why they were crowding the middle to compensate for his gimpness (that a word?).
I wont be surprised if West is out for the next one...god help us. Who starts in his place? Can we win without 4 of our top 6?
#4
Mikey
04/01/09 09:13 AM
I've said this before, but I think teams game plan to shoot more threes against the Hornets. They have seen something in our defensive rotations when watching film, and know they can get a quality shot off. Of course that still doesn't excuse Garcia from stunting every time he makes a shot. Francisco, listen to me, you're a good player; you can shoot the hell out of the ball. This is a big-boy league though, Francisco. Play with a little more poise and defensive discipline, like, I don't know, calling a switch or fighting through a screen on a last second, game-winning shot. And for God's sake, act like you've been there before.
Chris Paul is going to have to bring out one of those video-game type of performances tomorrow night in order for the Hornets to pull it out in LA. I don't think D-Weezy will play.
#5
ticktock6
04/01/09 10:02 AM
Yeah, WHAT was that thing he was doing? It was quite possibly the dumbest pose/dance/whatever I have seen. I laughed AT him.
hornetshype.com #6
Ryan Schwan
04/01/09 10:14 AM
That was one of those games where I just kept saying to myself "There is no way they can keep hitting those shots all game."
For most of the first half - they were drilling every three and long two, contested or not. In the fourth, their shooting crashed just long enough at the beginning to let us come out and win when the Hornets went Zone.
I was horrified by the zone when we went to it - since generally zones give up long range shots, and that's what they wanted all night long. However, it allowed us to put West in the corner, which meant he only had to contest guys taking shots in the corner, which meant his limited mobility wasn't a major issue. I also loved every minute of West gutting that game out. I loved it. What a warrior.
@Mikey - one of the earlier interview I remember with Byron had him describe his philosophy on defense: Pack the lane, let them take perimeter shots, try to get out and contest when they do, but shutting down penetration is the primary focus. We saw that last night. Typically it doesn't result in that kind of shooting though.
Julian was yanked out because he consistently left Nocioni open for three point shots. I can see him hedging a bit if the guy isn't hitting, but Noc ended up with like 5 threes. Byron inserted Devin because while Brown can't stop Kevin Martin, he didn't let the guy go uncontested ever. That also allowed him to shift Butler onto Nocioni for that brief five minute stretch at the end of the third when Noc was playing small forward, not power forward.
www.hornets247.com #7
bigindian15
04/01/09 11:28 AM
No West = no win against the Clips. Zach Randolph might be clinically insane, but he's still a beast down low.
#8
Mikey
04/01/09 11:43 AM
@ Ryan: I'm not disagreeing with the philosophy per se, but it did lead to our ultimate demise last season in the playoffs, when the Spurs just started dropping bombs in game 7.
Also your point on Devin Brown over Ju Ju is right on. Ju Ju got caught following the ball on multiple occasions, and it probably cost us 12 points in 3-pointers made by the Kings, namely Nocioni. Once DB got in the game, I thought he did a fantastic job getting in Kevin Martin's face above the arc, thereby limiting his shot attempts. As I recall, Martin only got one real good lok in the 4th quarter, which he made of course. Butler also played good D on Nocioni in the 4th. The only real mismatch was having CP guarding Garcia, but Garcia didn't really take advantage of the mismatch. He decided to jack up shots all night long, but he was making them so I can't blame him. That defensive matchup killed us, but i'll take the win.
#9
Ryan Schwan
04/01/09 12:20 PM
I agree, Mikey. The "pack the lane" philosophy usually works alright, but against teams that can shoot really well from deep like the Spurs? I'd rather we shift out of it. I also thought it cost us last year - I'd have preferred our guys stayed home on the Spurs perimeter and we take our chances most posessions with Timmy trying to score on Chandler.
www.hornets247.com #10
Mark
04/01/09 01:05 PM
Ryan, glad to hear your take on JuJu's premature benching. I know we're very 'anti-statistics' for the most part on these parts of the board, but really, JuJu had some great stats. So it's good to hear Scott is getting on the units for effort (with a little bit more leniency this time, thankfully. No one-mistake-benching, thank you).
Rubu. I like his swag.
www.dogpile.com/ #11