I'm sure you all remember the Yahoo! article by Marc Spears about Okafor, alleging that he was not working hard at returning from his toe injury, and that at least one Hornet was saying Okafor could "lose the team" if he didn't work out last Sunday.
Well, Okafor worked out Sunday, and Jimmy Smith of the Times-Picayune asked him about the article. Here's Okafor's explanation of the situation:
"There were a couple of things in the article that weren't conveyed right as far as the doctors saying it was OK for me to (practice)," Okafor said. "The article almost made it seem like I wasn't playing for the sake of not playing. What was left out was that the doctors said it was OK for me to gradually do weight-bearing activities until I felt comfortable to play. The previous week I jumped out there and started running and felt the soreness and got set back.
"This time the game plan was to gradually build. That's what we've been doing and had success doing. Today was the first time I was on the court running, doing everything, the non-contact things, to try to gradually ease myself into the water."
Okafor said when he practiced for the first time Oct. 12 after missing the first three weeks of training camp -- planning to make his preseason debut Oct. 17 against Indiana -- he experienced soreness during and after the workout, which slowed his progress.
That explanation seems entirely reasonable to me, though I won't refute the fact that probably a few Hornets players may have felt frustrated by the slowness of his recovery.
Okafor also worked out Monday, including the 5 on 5 work he had excluded Sunday, and according to Jim Eichenhofer, the Hornets.com Blogger:
Scott said he is more optimistic about Okafor’s chances of playing at San Antonio than of Ike Diogu’s likelihood to make his Hornets debut in that game. If Okafor is available to play, Scott will likely wait until Wednesday to decide whether Okafor will start or come off the bench against the Spurs.
Regardless of whether Okafor plays or not, it'll be interesting to see how Okafor integrates over the first couple months. For a point of comparison, I went back and looked at Chandler's arrival in New Orleans to figure out how long it took him to get in a flow with Chris Paul, and this is what I found:
As could be expected, his rebounding numbers came in strong right off the bat. Rebounding doesn't change from team to team. Chandler's scoring, however, took a while to develop as Paul and the team figured out what they could do with him.
In his first month as a Hornet, Chandler averaged 5.9 points in 31.2 minutes. In his second month, he averaged . . . 5.9 points in 32.7 minutes. His scoring average, by month, then rose to 9.8, 13.2, 12.6 and 9.8 over the last four months of the season.
Now, I don't expect Okafor to produce numbers that low on the offensive end to begin with. His offensive talents are more generalized than Chandler's, and they don't revolve around one play. However, I do think that we'll need to be patient with him over the first month as the team gets used to having him roaming the paint. I think that is also a general statement we need to make about this team. There are 6 new players on the team. One will be a starter and three others are expected to be rotation pieces. Julian Wright is making the leap into a starter's role, and Morris Peterson is stepping back into that spot after essentially an entire year away.
Niall told me the other day he expects a rough start, but that the team will be clicking come January. I agree entirely. I feel there's a bit of a false urgency in the coverage of the team right now. Building a championship contender almost never happens overnight like it did with the Celtics. To me, this year isn't about contending for a title. It's about getting the front court re-established as a viable group, figuring out if Julian Wright is starting material, and establishing a couple useful bench players.
Next year, with Okafor-West-Paul and maybe Wright in rhythm together, all it will take is the addition of a single scoring wing for this team to be a serious contender again. With Peja, Peterson and Songaila being expiring contracts - picking up a good wing should be eminently possible.
So this year, I'm keeping my expectations around a 4-5 seed, hopefully a second round run in the playoffs, and the enjoyment of watching a bunch of guys figure out how to play basketball together. Anything else will be gravy.
What are your expectations, hopes and desires for the season?


11 glorious comments post your own
untitled1018
10/27/09 09:53 AM
I'm with you all the way. Now I have something reasonable to look for and to look forward too.
#1
SaveYourBoredom
10/27/09 10:06 AM
I'm with you too. And I sincerely believe Marcus Thornton could be the guy you're talking about, although ask me again in two weeks and I could have a completely different opinion.
By the way, I have a question for all of you in the blogosphere:
Am I crazy, or are NBA previews in the various magazines and websites the MOST half-assed of any sports league previews?
Look at Jalen Rose of ESPN.com's preview of the Indiana Pacers (This is his ENTIRE preview, keep in mind.):
"Danny Granger has emerged as a top small forward. Troy Murphy is automatic from 3 at or near the top of the key. Mike Dunleavy hopes to shake the injury bug."
That's some hard-hitting analysis there.
#2
LSUhornet17
10/27/09 10:09 AM
I'm surprised about the smaller likelihood of Diogu not playing. We've been hearing he might play in like the last 4 preseason games and he was back at practice much sooner than Emeka. Strange.
#3
Ryan Schwan
10/27/09 10:42 AM
I agree, LSU - Diogu sitting out is a bit of a surprise. Stupid nagging injuries.
SaveYourBoredeom - typically, I find TV previews of teams to be shallow and uninformative. NBA TV did a nice half-hour one of the Hornets, though.
www.hornets247.com #4
Niall Doherty
10/27/09 11:19 AM
I caught that NBA TV preview (hello TiVo!). Wasn't bad. I especially liked that they called Marcus Thornton "Ben Gordon lite." It's early days, but Lil Buckets might just develop into that type of weapon for the Hornets.
Shout out to Hornets Hype for Lil Buckets:
http://hornetshype.com/wp/2009/10/26/because-i-say-so-thats-why/
www.ndoherty.com #5
420ftJesus
10/27/09 11:46 AM
RE: What are your expectations, hopes and desires for the season?
I hope to win 82 games, take the title in straight wins, then dunk Boston into the ocean and have the NBA renamed the CPBA (Chris-Paul-Ball Association) in the same way I want $1,000,000.
I hope to see a couple of nice finishes (a la MLK game last year), some solid basketball by the rooks, some Chris Paul highlights, Peja not going gently into that good night, D West smiling a few times from the bench, and Julian learning to fly.
The wins will come. We need to be on the path to get to a championship while we have players who can lead a team to one (and who deserve to win one), and a nice journey would be nice. We have something special regardless of where it takes us and I'm so enjoying watching it.
I'm taking a long view on this . . . I have cheap seats . . .
I see the Hornets and the Saints on similar trajectories. I've waited, been realistic, and learned. The Saints are making a good run for it. Until 2006, I had not idea how much of a difference Passion could make in football. Until 2009, I had no idea what a difference a coordinator and a savvy veteran could make for the Bless You Boys.
I'm not smart enough to know what the piece is for the Bless You Bees, or if it's missing at this point, but Niall and the Illuminati seem to think it's a wing, and that we'll get that next year. The bottom line is we have real hope (not like my Boston hope), and that's more than alot of other teams, and their fans, have.
#6
SavageHenry
10/27/09 12:15 PM
I tend to fall in line with those thoughts. I'm hoping to see Byron give the young guys plenty of PT, and not jerk them around too much when their inexperience inevitably surfaces. On the flip side, I hope to see JuJu, Thornton, and Collison take advantage of those opportunities, and give Byron more incentive to play them, instead of bench them.
Also, no 58-point losses at home in the playoffs, please.
#7
NOEngineer
10/27/09 10:36 PM
I hope for more passion from someone other than Paul and West. I expect too much Devin Brown, not enough Darren Collison, and too many nagging injuries. I hope to go undefeated at home and win half on the road, edging the Spurs for 2nd place. I expect to lose half the games in November and December, then squeak into the playoffs with a strong run in 2010. I hope and expect us to win Round 1 in 6 games to advance to the second round. I hope that one game the cameras will point up to Section 325 so my kids can be on the big screen.
#8
chefcdb
10/28/09 02:31 AM
It could be a slower process integrating Okafor into the lineup, but he is smart enough and a veteran, so maybe, just maybe all the practice walk thru with Emeka down in the low post will have a more immediate effect. After all, he has gone against everybody in the NBA (except rookies) who will be guarding him, and Okafor knows his own skills around the basket, so his game shouldn't be that rusty. With Tyson, his confidence on offense had been depleted by his time in Chicago and he just doesn't have much shooting touch. I expect Okafor to show what he can do sooner than the process TC went through.
I'm a little worried about the Hornets this season. If they dog paddle near .500 ball early, technically they should be okay to build momentum as the season goes along. I hope for some early signature "upsets" like beating the Lakers once of our two early games this year in Staples, surprising the Spurs tonight, or taking it to Boston. I hope that they don't get discouraged if the beginning of the season starts ragged. There will be comparisons to the Saints, and football fever could mean the Hornets struggle to gain traction with homecourt advantage, but they didn't let that stop them before.
I expect this team to develop their bench, steadfastly, NO MATTER WHAT! CP3 and DX need some rest and we have to take our lumps to get a 2nd unit that can change momentum. Of all the variables that will determine the success of this edition of the Hornets, bench development (which also ties into giving Juju time to earn & keep his starting job) is paramount. It's a proven fact that teams cannot go deep in the playoffs if they don't have solid role players who are consistent playing off the bench, and a mediocre bench magnifies the suffering when injuries occur since nobody steps up.
I expect this team to make some noise in the playoffs. If they gel faster than we anticipate, they could be a threat. There are so many new roles on the team, with Peja coming off the bench, new rotations, ballhandlers besides CP, and if Songaila and Diogu can effectively spell West, with all the other new stuff, maybe the Hornets become a tough team to scout and they sneak away with some surprising victories early. My main expectation is to see the team determined to capture their mojo. I know preseason doesn't count for a fig, but I was disturbed by the large leads the team kept giving up in most of the games and worried that the Hornets need to hunt for their swagger. Let's just say that while I have high expectations, I have them with my fingers crossed for good luck because it looks to me that this team needs some positives early in the schedule this season for them to grab their team potential and build momentum. I worry about a rocky start these first 20 games sabotaging the rest of the season.
chefcdb.livejournal.com #9
DrewS
10/28/09 11:24 AM
Making it to the playoffs in the Western Conference will be even more difficult than it was in 07-08. I think the last 3-4 playoff spots in the West will come down to the final two weeks of the season. After the Lakers, Spurs, Mavs, Nuggets (and maybe the Blazers), the remaining playoff contenders all seem about equal: Jazz, Hornets, Rockets (count out Adelman's wily crews at your own peril), Clippers (even without Griffin until mid-December, Camby/Craig Smith are more than serviceable backups), and Suns. That being said, I expect the Hornets to battle valiantly into the first round with CP's point production increasing from the past couple years while his assist numbers slip a little. I hope JuJu averages a double-double every game with the only consistent half of the double being points and a different other half of the double every game. If he can do that while Okafor, Paul, and West maintain around their career stats and Mo-Pete hits a couple threes and plays defense, we'll be in good shape.
#10
ticktock6
10/28/09 11:38 AM
Based on what we saw last night, I would NOT say the Rockets and Clippers are equal. Now, maybe that will change, but... HOU's offense was a mess and the Clippers in general was a mess. That game was as close as it was because the Lakers were being lazy. I do expect the Jazz and Hornets to surprise some people, since both teams were ridiculously injured last year.
hornetshype.com #11