A poor start and a poor finish for the Hornets in Game 3, but they were able to do enough in between to ensure victory and get back in the series. The Nuggets unloaded a 10-0 run out of the gate, leaving all of us at the New Orleans Arena standing and scratching our heads. Sean Marks came in the game and woke the Hornets up, while James Posey also provided a spark off the bench. We outscored the Nuggets 29-21 in the second quarter, the first period we won in ten tries, and took a 50-47 lead into the half.
Chris Paul was pretty much the show in Q3, scoring 13 points and dropping 3 assists. Meanwhile, the Nuggets continued their balanced attack to keep it close. The New Orleans defense was the story for most of the fourth quarter, as the Nuggets managed just 5 points in the first 8 minutes. The Hornets led by 11 with 3:13 remaining but a sequence of unfortunate and sucky events got Denver to within one with 17 seconds left and the ball in their hands. Thankfully, Carmelo Anthony couldn't get a good shot off and the Hornets were able to persevere, 95-93. Denver now leads the series 2-1 with Game 4 in New Orleans on Monday.
Bullets:
- Chauncey Billups couldn't be contained in Games 1 and 2, but today the Hornets held him to 16 points on just 3-of-10 shooting. He also missed a couple of free throws and turned the ball over twice, proving that he doesn't have an invisible invincibility cloak after all. Chris Paul guarded Billups for most of the game, but he got plenty of good help defending him on pick and rolls. Bigs like David West and Tyson Chandler were effective in hedging up hard, cutting off the lane and forcing Chauncey to pick the ball up. We also seemed to force him to the sideline fairly often.
- As promised, Byron shortened the rotation for this one, with only Marks, Posey and Antonio Daniels getting off the pine. Marks gave us 26 minutes of the best basketball he'll ever play, finishing with 8 points (3-of-5 FGs), 6 boards, 2 blocks and a steal. The energy he brought to the floor in Q1 couldn't have come at a better time, with Denver looking like they were going to put the game and the series away in the first half.
- Meanwhile, Tyson Chandler played just 18 minutes, scored 2 points, grabbed 3 rebounds, turned the ball over twice and fouled out. He's a warrior for being out there when he's still obviously hurt, but it's to the point where we're better off without him on the floor. He can't be effective and so he gets frustrated, and that doesn't lead to anything good.
- Yes, the officiating was horrible. Both ways. It left a bad taste in my mouth. Reading back over the notes I jotted down during the game, it seems half of them were about poor, missed or inconsistent calls. It was so unbearable that Byron Scott dropped his poker face long enough to pick up a technical in Q3 (I can't remember the last time Byron got T'd up), and with about four minutes left in the game the whole Arena broke out into a "Refs you suck!" chant. But before anyone goes off on a rant about the refs in the comments, answer me this: what steps can the NBA take to significantly improve officiating? It's easy to point to something and say it's wrong, but I don't believe this to be an easy fix.
- Chris Paul was aggressive from the tip. When nothing else was working early, he resorted to going 1-on-5 to get us some much-needed buckets. He played all of the first half in this one and would get only two minutes of rest early in the fourth quarter. I loved that move he pulled with about 8:30 left in Q3, getting two trapping Nuggets in the air with the pass fake (visual aid here), then breezing into the lane to deliver the lob for Tyson. CP would finish with 32 points (11-of-20 FGs), 12 assists and 5 boards, but still high on the turnovers with 6.
- West struggled. He scored 19 points and grabbed 9 boards, but he shot just 7-of-18 from the field, coughed the ball up three times, missed some point-blank looks and fouled out late. Guys like Kenyon Martin, Nene and Carmelo Anthony continue to do a solid job on West in single coverage, and there's always a crowd waiting when he tries to get in the lane. It doesn't help that West is back to hesitating on his jumper. Those are the best looks he's going to get in this series; nothing to think about.
- Peja: 4 points on 1-of-9 shooting. But if he plays defense every game like he played it in this one, I'll live with that kind of offense. He gave Carmelo nothing easy in this one, using his length and smarts to cut off driving lanes and contest the jumper. Carmelo finished with 25 points but needed 24 shots to get them. I see Peja is also credited with 2 steals in the box score, but I could swear he came up with more than that.
- If I were a Nuggets fan, I'd get really frustrated with those ball-hog stretches Carmelo Anthony and J.R. Smith are so prone to. I understand that they've both very talented and can often get to the basket at will or hit a deep jumper, but I have to believe that the Nuggets would be much better off if those two guys checked their egos at the door like their teammates have.
- Posey came up big with 13 points and 9 rebounds in 23 minutes. He made some great defensive plays, but also had some costly turnovers. Bit of a roller coaster game for him, but the effort was definitely there throughout.
- Random stuff from the Arena: A couple of birds got in the buiding somehow (Chris Andersen's gym bag?) and were flying around throughout the game. Some funny videos on the big screen during game breaks, including one skit about trading Nuggets gear for small amounts of money (you'll probably find that over at Swarm City soon).
Alright, let's get to the real question: Does this win mean the Hornets are back in the series? A lot of folks here in New Orleans will be happy with the win, but I'm having a hard time getting excited about it. Does anyone think the Jazz are coming all the way back to beat the Lakers after barely winning Game 3 of that series Thursday night? Did anyone worry that the Mavs might come back from that 0-2 hole we put them in a year ago after they took Game 3 in Dallas?
I'm not saying it's impossible, but it will take more than a narrow victory like we saw today for me to believe that the Hornets can win this series. I don't think we saw any significant momentum shift in Game 3, and I can't imagine the Nuggets' confidence was eroded much by the result.
Of course, that's looking at the big picture and that's not what the Hornets should be concerned with. They need to stay focused on one game at a time, and so for now there's nothing but Monday night at the Arena.


25 masterful comments post your own
Mark
04/25/09 06:27 PM
Birds from Chris Andersen's gym bag? Ouch, very subtle low... blow. But I suppose that explains the... bricks he shoots. Yeeeah.
I've been thinking about the status of the reffing, but like I said on 'hype, it's the inherent nature of the game to miss calls. With all the supposed "game reviews" by the league, I would expect better consistency if they addressed it, both internally and publicly. Remember the whole 'we're going to fine floppers' situation? Well, there's less of a backlash on flopping now, at least in my opinion.
Another Niall recap, another win. Haha. But hey, Ryan said it first. I'm not too confident in winning the series, but I'm enjoying the energy we showed this game, especially Marks.
www.dogpile.com/ #1
Bee
04/25/09 06:33 PM
Imagine how frustrated we were when we had AI, Melo AND JR ball-hog stretches. It caused me great pain.
#2
Caleb462
04/25/09 06:35 PM
Re: reffing - you are right, it's not an easy fix. But surely something can be done? At the very least I wish the league would just publicly address it and not act like bad calls don't exist. Officiating will never be perfect, but it can be better than it is now.
I'm not sure what the answer is though.
neworleansbasketball.blogspot.com #3
Caleb462
04/25/09 06:37 PM
Oh and I totally agree on the ball-hog thing... I know some people think the Hornets should have never let go of JR - but I'm glad he's not on this team. I don't care if he drops 45 points once or twice a season, fact is the guy takes multiple bad shots every game and hurts his team- usually deep, contested threes. Every time he has the ball in his hands I'm thinking "Hoist it up JR! Help us Hornets fans out!"
neworleansbasketball.blogspot.com #4
Andrea
04/25/09 06:48 PM
about the officiating: There's nothing that can really be done to improve it. We can go straight streetball "no blood, no foul" type stuff lol but seriously nothing's going to be done to change/improve it.
If we have a game where David West plays horribly, Tyson Chandler gives us little or nothing and we still get a win? I gotta take it. I think most are excited about getting one in the win column but I too am iffy about what to say about this win. I really, truly want to believe that at some point David West will play like David West but I really don't know. How many times can you count on Sean Marks to do what he did for us today? Hopefully, this isn't fool's gold for our squad thinking that we can end things the way we did and legitimately be back in this series.
#5
mW
04/25/09 06:54 PM
@ Niall: I think you really understated Posey's influence on this game. He hit two 3s and another 2 FTs on a 3 attempt during the streak when we were down by line 15, and came back to tie it up. TT6 turned to me and asked if a guy can earn $5 million in one game. Her point is well taken. Posey was huge, along with Marks, and the bench, limited as it was, kept us afloat in this game when the starters floundered.
Great win.
www.hornetshype.com #6
Dmon3k
04/25/09 06:58 PM
So how did Game 4 get pushed on to NBA Tv, and does anyone know a website or anything that can broadcast the game?
#7
Niall Doherty
04/25/09 07:04 PM
I think much of the inconsistency with the calls has a lot to do with having three different officials out there. Not that there should be any less than that, but if the same pair of eyes were seeing every part of the game, the calls would probably be more consistent.
One thing I think might improve officiating somewhat: have a fourth official in a replay booth somewhere, and he can communicate with the guys on the floor via those earpiece thingys. That fourth ref could check the controversial stuff within 10 seconds of it happening and advise on the correct call.
www.ndoherty.com #8
Niall Doherty
04/25/09 07:11 PM
@ mW: Good points on Posey. He really helped turn things around in the first half.
@ Dmon3k: I believe Game 4 got relegated to NBA TV because the Lakers-Jazz series will have a Game 5 that night, and TNT wants Kobe.
www.ndoherty.com #9
Juncti
04/25/09 08:11 PM
"what steps can the NBA take to significantly improve officiating? It's easy to point to something and say it's wrong, but I don't believe this to be an easy fix"
I've said it for a while, and Niall is onto it as well. A booth ref at the least, 2 would be better. If you could get 2 good angles on both baskets and have 1 ref watching nothing but that angle all game, I think they could chime in and help clear up some of the calls.
The refs already come together and confer on some calls, what would be the harm in a booth ref calling down what they saw? If it boosts the integrity of the game it has to be done.
As to the win, doesn't give me any confidence. The start and finish are the main concerns. We still haven't put out a solid 4 quarter game this post season, or hell, even in the month leading to the post season.
If they could win game 4 while controlling the tempo and playing 4 quarters of Hornets ball, that would give me some faith. Win, make it 2-2 and put the pressure on the Nuggets to hold onto home court after losing 2 in a row.
I definitely felt like we were in trouble against the Spurs last year after we let them tie it up 2-2, and I think Denver might struggle with that added pressure.
Go down 3-1 and it's time to look toward next season.
#10
commentcava
04/25/09 09:55 PM
I think they should've handed out techs to Billups for chucking the ball into the stands and k-mart for slapping chris paul's post-buzzer shot into the crowd.
#11
saltandcarbon
04/25/09 11:09 PM
I think uncertainty in a handful of officiating calls has a ripple effect to the rest of a game. If a ref makes a bad call on the floor, they might call it confidently to cover their uncertainty, but they are humans and it plays on the mind, and you get to situations like make-up calls. The most glaring rule problems at the moment are the travel rule, the definition of flagrant fouls, the deference to superstars getting away with more, and flopping.
(I would also add this bulls*#t idea of 'playoff basketball' equating to completely redefining what is and isn't called a foul. A foul is a foul from the season opener to the championship series. The Lakers lost that game in Utah because Pau couldn't catch a feed to the post because he was consistently mugged. Players play one way and develop their skill set all year only to be taken out of that in the playoffs. How are they supposed to adjust?)
Anyway... Making these calls consistent isn't necessarily the whole solution, but I do believe that once the rot sets in it spreads to the whole game. Rather than looking for a panacea, fix what is obviously broken. I think it would give the officials more confidence in what they're doing and have a ripple effect to better calling all around. Maybe...
BTW, this is going seven. Then, who knows... GEAUX BEES!
#12
Mitch Davison
04/26/09 12:10 AM
I'm a Nuggets fan, first off, and I want to make an observation. This series feels a lot like our previous Nuggets vs. Spurs series, except that this time we're the Spurs, and the Hornets are the old Nuggets. In this series, the Nuggets are dealing the punishment, not absorbing it, and the Hornets are crying and losing their composure (see last paragraph), and even in a bad performance like today's, it still feels like the Nuggets are in control.
We won games against the Spurs in SA, but they never lost control of the series, and we were stuck complaining about Bowen's "dirty" play (Dahntay Jones, anyone?) and the horrible officiating. Obviously the Nuggets are not yet the 2005 or 2007 Spurs, but in this series it feels like it's the Nuggets' to lose.
Losing composure: There have been several flagrant and hard fouls in this series, and I would analyze them thusly:
Billups on Butler: hard foul to send message, prevent easy bucket - in control (looked worse than it was)
Billups on CP: hard foul to prevent easy bucket - in control
Birdman on CP (gm 2): inadvertent, looked worse than it was
Chandler on Jones: cheap shot to send message - lost control (maybe he had it coming, but if Chandler would've kept his cool, he would've chopped him from the top, making it at least look like he was trying to block the shot)
CP on Birdman: cheap shot on a former teammate (shoulder in the gut) - either CP is an a**hole or he lost control
Posey on Birdman: just tried to make sure he didn't make the shot, looked worse than it was
#13
Roc217
04/26/09 01:17 AM
Lol Mitch your take on the hard fouls are so biased toward your team its ridiculous.
#14
The_big_H
04/26/09 02:32 AM
@Mitch: Worse analysis i've ever read.
Popcorn machine's game flow shows a huge game from Posey, especially in the first quater. Great game from the man and really saved this season.
Every one but Chandler, and a lesser extend Daniels had a decent to great game.
West had a crap 1st quater but score 6, 6, and 7 points in the next 3 and have 8 rebounds after the 1st quater
http://popcornmachine.net/cgi-bin/gameflow.cgi?date=20090425&game=DENNOR
Hornets have to keep Denver under 100 to have any chance.
Go Hornets
#15
bigindian15
04/26/09 02:41 AM
@Mitch: you're forgetting the 5000 no-calls when Jones was harassing CP in game 2.
Chandler's flagrant was a kinda cheap shot (there was no way he could have hurt him though), and he definitely didn't lose control, he was just frustrated
CP on Birdman: Birdman cheap shotted CP earlier in case you didn't notice with no pretext.
#16
Dariusz Ejkiewicz
04/26/09 02:42 AM
Ok so Ryan will Niall make all of the recaps from now on ? Dont you dare to touch the monday game recap!
www.ejkiewicz.com #17
chefcdb
04/26/09 06:36 AM
This game meant the Hornets took a step toward getting their mojo back. CP thoroughly outplayed Billups, our bench was more effective than the Nuggets, and the physical play was slightly tilted to the Hornets as we were more aggressive at home. I'm not talking about hard fouls, more about the way our bigs hedged hard on the perimeter, the way we played tougher, tighter defense. After the opening minutes, the Hornets limited the explosive scoring threats of those game-breaking runs by Denver.
Even though our offense is a very mixed bag, at least we were able manufacture some surge, and seizing the lead basically the entire second half was important. It served notice that Denver may not be as in control as they want to be. If the Hornets play with an equally rugged efficiency and stay up in Game 4, then the pressure swings. Right now, the pressure remains on the Hornets to defend home court, to play better. We won with subpar games from every starter not named Chris Paul and really good play from Poz & Marks (and consistent no mistake ball from AD who may not have made big plays but he was never exploited either).
The question is now will our defense continue to show and slow Billups and make Melo and JR inefficient scorers, or does Denver rediscover their loose and free ways of creating transition offense, hitting enough jumpers, and getting to their offensive glass?
I still think it's loser basketball to complain about the refs. Yes, I was yelling at them during the game, but that's game atmosphere. I don't think a booth system, a la the NFL, is useful for basketball although I do think the refs should be able to review any shot clock violation on the monitor (to see if the shot was late, or if the ball grazed the rim). Is there a problem with blown calls in the NBA? Absolutely, but I don't see how having an uber-ref on the sidelines who can overturn bad calls helps the situation because the refs working the floor would have less incentive to call it right in the heat of the moment, and you can't just go back and correct no calls by stopping the game and saying, "Oops, that was a foul."
If there was a monitoring ref, he's still not gonna be able to catch the way Melo hooked & pinned Posey late in the game to get into the lane, despite the ticky-tack time Poz was called earlier in the 4th for a much less obvious offensive elbowing foul. Refs need to have their authority respected for the game to function, and we as fans will never know how the refs grade out. I know pro refs can take the heat of fans booing, but it makes me sad how much disrespect refs get at all levels of sports; sometimes playing through a bad call is a very important part of dealing with life.
I will say it was good to see Coach Scott get so animated to protect Tyson. I had a bad angle on the play, but it was time for Coach to show some passion. It helped that Billups blew the FT, too!
A win again on Monday night will erase all that Denver blowout momentum.
www.greengoddessnola.com #18
saltandcarbon
04/26/09 07:49 AM
Well said Chef. A part of life it is indeed - get on and grind it out.
#19
Niall Doherty
04/26/09 08:20 AM
A couple of things I forgot to mention about the game:
The voodoo dolls. Those were a great idea. You could hear the whole Arena squeaking when a Nugget stepped to the free throw line.
Lil Wayne. He was sitting along the baseline near the Hornets bench and got animated quite a few times. At one point he was up screaming at Melo for a couple of minutes. Dude was into it. Oh, and Reggie Bush was seated four seats away from him.
www.ndoherty.com #20
QueenBee
04/26/09 01:17 PM
@commentcava, I'll bet if a Hornet player did that (ball into the stands) they would've received techs.
#21
mW
04/26/09 02:13 PM
Chauncey firing the ball into the crowd at halftime was weird. Didn't someone get tossed for throwing a towel into the crowd earlier this year? Never seen anyone do that. I'd love to hear an explanation from the refs on how that wasn't a tech.
www.hornetshype.com #22
Niall Doherty
04/26/09 05:09 PM
Regarding Chauncey firing that ball into the crowd (and this is my best guess because I didn't see a replay), I think he might have been trying to heave it at the basket but it slipped out of his hand and went way off right and into the crowd. It was a big one-handed side hook shot. If I recall right, Billups and the nearest ref looked at each other for a moment right after it, and in my head I imagine Chauncey shrugging it off and telling the ref it slipped.
At least that's the best explanation I can come up with for why Chauncey didn't get T'd up. If a guy throws a ball into the crowd like that out of frustration, the refs should show no mercy.
www.ndoherty.com #23
chefcdb
04/27/09 06:24 AM
My bad, Coach got T for protecting Poz on his "flagrant" on Andersen.
The dolls were pretty funny, and the Nuggets did blow more FTs. My section says the big fries work the best as distractions and the Geico caveman heads the worst, but the squeaky dolls performed admirably.
Instead of a T on Billups, I'd have liked to get the ball back on our side of half court with all of the .6 seconds left. The heave wasn't malicious, but it was an indicator that the captain of the Nuggets was frustrated; to me, that was enough of a good sign by itself w/o making a bigger deal from the refs.
www.greengoddessnola.com #24
chefcdb
04/27/09 06:43 AM
@mW
twas Sheed Wallace of the Pistons who was tossed for firing towels at both the refs and into the stands, but he was showing up the refs by disagreeing with a foul that sent him to the bench. Billups was just lazily heaving the ball, and his frustration was at his team starting to falter, not in response to anything in particular, not really like he was dissing fans -- the ball slipped because he was not really paying attention to the heave.
BTW, I can't give Poz all $5 million for one game, but if this is the beginning of his clutch run, he's well worth it. I thought he might have to bury himself alive after making the bad pass that Melo stole (Yo James, we had timeouts to burn!), but his big rebound at the end (and Marks denying the pass, too, which made Melo scramble to hurry his shot) saved the day.
www.greengoddessnola.com #25