Point Differential
There are a bunch of reasons why Byron was fired, but lets be real. The primary reason was the number -4.7. That's the Hornet's current efficiency differential, meaning that for every 100 posessions the Hornets play, they give up almost 5 more points than they score. 5 points doesn't seem like much, but it really is. As I've said before on this blog, efficiency differential has a very strong correlation to a predicted number of wins. At that differential, the Hornets are looking at 29 wins for the season. 29 Wins with an MVP candidate and two borderline all-stars.
Yes. It's early. Yes, the Hornets have played some very good teams on route to their 3-6 record (Celtics, Suns, Spurs, Lakers) but the losses have been disheartening. If the Hornets were 3-6 but competitive, only losing by 5-8 points or so per game, I'd feel comfortable with the team turning it around. But they haven't. During their six losses, they Hornets have trailed at halftime by an average of 11 points. That's not even staying in contact.
Now, I was already leaning towards wanting Byron to be let go over the summer, so me arguing that his dismissal was justified isn't surprising. However, I didn't come to that decision lightly, as you can see in this post. And that post doesn't even mention what happened during the Game that Shall Not be Named: A 58 point record-setting drubbing. At home. This isn't football, where three or four mistakes can lead to big plays that break a game open and cause a huge score differential. In basketball points are earned in 1's, 2's and 3's. It takes sustained suckiness to go down 58 points. Do the players take the blame? Yes. But so does Byron.
It's clear what probably saved him then was his relationship with CP3. Being close to an MVP candidate can extend your shelf-life.
Paul = Garnett
This has been eating at me a bit. In the past three months I've seen the Hornets compared over and over to the Timberwolves and Kevin Garnett's struggles to succeed there. I've now seen it in print four times mentioned in relation to this move. Let's get some perspective here:
Kevin Garnett missed the playoffs his first year, and then went to the playoffs and got bounced in the first round for 7 straight seasons. Paul got into the second round in his 3rd season. He already has more playoff wins(8) than Garnett had after his first eight years(7). The Hornets have had one "down" year(49-33) and struggle out of the gate, and suddenly Paul is in Garnett land?
There is also no relation between the Wolves owner Glen Taylor and George Shinn. Nothing in Shinn's makeup makes it seem like he'd be willing to sit around while his team is bad. It took Glen Taylor 10-11 years to make McHale coach the team he put together. Jeff Bower is being moved into that role a season and a half after their breakout season. Shinn will shake things up - and he's also already proven he's happy to blow things up if he thinks things aren't working - witness the Hornet's 2004-2005 season. You have to remember that this is George Shinn's one and only business. He doesn't have other business to help him out with his finances and to cover losses. He cannot sit on his hands and watch it struggle. He will make moves. Like he did yesterday.
Poor wittle Hornets
Another aspect of any coverage of the Hornets has been the continuous attacks on the Hornets financial viability. They've been accused of 1) having a podunk training facility, 2) being unwilling to pay money for coaches, 3) not being willing to pay for players, and 4) being slammed repeatedly for being cheap. Sigh:
- The Hornets had an agreement with Louisiana to have them build a 20-million dollar training facility. The Hornets was asked by the cash-strapped state, to change that agreement and traded the top of the line facility for a Hornets-only expansion to the Alario Center and finanical incentives. So the part of the Alario center where all those public events happen that several writers have gleefully pointed to? They don't occur where the Hornets practice. Oh, and the financial incentives have pretty much guaranteed the Hornets will stay in New Orleans through 2014. I'm sorry if I don't see that as a bad thing.
- Byron Scott was top-5 in the NBA in salary, making 5 million a year after his extension two years ago. So . . . not cheap.
- The Hornets currently carry the 12th highest payroll in the NBA. Yeah, they'd probably like to shed 4 million and get under the Tax. But ask any team over the Tax line and you'll hear the same thing. A $73 Million dollar payroll isn't something to turn up your nose at.
- There is a little merit in this last criticism. The front office is thinner than most other teams have. But the reality is the Hornets have always operated with a thin front office, and yet, if you ignore the initial three expansion years of the franchise, they have posted a franchise winning percentage of .531. Out of 27 teams that played during that same stretch (Raptors, Grizz and Bobcats are too new) that ties the Hornets for 11th best with the Heat. That small front office is hardly making the team unviable.
The Hornets play Portland tonight, and this little rant took up all my writing time today, so I'm sorry but I won't have a preview of the game up for you. Just know that Portland is always a tough game, and the Hornets would not have an easy time of it even if they weren't going through some up-heavel. I'm just hoping that it doesn't develop into another blowout.


9 intriguing comments post your own
Caleb462
11/13/09 02:35 PM
Hear hear.
I think I'll have to stop reading all the blogs and sports news outlets for a few days, because this nonsense is seriously bugging me, *especially* the CP = KG thing, like you said.
neworleansbasketball.blogspot.com #1
TheKeyMaster
11/13/09 02:39 PM
great post, sums up exactly everything i've been thinking. all these rubber necking NBA fans think New Orleans is some wasteland of a franchise when the truth is, it is almost exactly the opposite. everyone thinks shinn is cheap and will not pay for players and that they take cp3 for granted and try not surrounding him with talent. this is complete b.s. since cp3's 2nd season they have started to surround with proven veterans and role players and while they may have overpaid for a couple (peja, posey, mopete) they certainly have not sat on their hands idly. this is not to say there isn't any criticisms of this franchise i have poured my heart and soul into over the past 16 years, but sometimes things don't pan out the way you expect them.
Overall I'm sad to see byron go but it was time for a change (although in the offseason would have been better). byron never changed any of his coaching strategies since the great 08 season, and has shown time and time again a lack progressiveness and patience for young players, choosing instead to play over the hill veterans who make the same mistakes rookies would. However i think the best the hornets can hope for now is to possibly make the 7 or 8 seed in the playoffs and thats looking on the bright side, unless we can make some waves in the trade market which is very unlikely i fear at best we will be .500 team throughout the rest of the season. I am open to the possibility of trying to trade for iverson (mopete, d. brown, hilton) bc i believe he could solve some of our sg issues and how much worse could it be? even though iverson is the antithesis of "team player" i think he could benefit our team. hey and maybe the grizzlies GM would be stupid enough to trade iverson and rudy gay for mopete, hilton, d. brown and posey?
sorry for the rambling just wanted to put my two cents, i just hope we arent sending cp3 all the wrong messages. love reading the site, keep up the great work.
#2
corndeaux
11/13/09 03:14 PM
second on everything, ryan.
you could say the money was not spent well, but you cannot say money was not spent.
#3
Diane
11/13/09 04:12 PM
Many of you old time readers of this blog know I am a big Chicago Cubs Baseball fan. It has always drove me crazy cause I swear they always traded some of their best players away and just can never make it to the top.
You all know that I have been a big fan of Chris Anderson, Jannaro Pargo, Brandon Bass, and JR Smith and I know their not the best but I swear these are guys that could surround Chris Paul for great supporting cast.
Now if my teams would just ask me?!!
Anyway I'm all for Allen Iverson - I think he would be just great playing along side Chris Paul. They would have to work out some bumps but I think it might be just what the team ordered.
I think the style of play will change but I think they will come out okay, maybe even the playoffs. My nightmare - Hornets vs. Thunder in the playoffs.
#4
downtowndave78
11/13/09 04:35 PM
Great post!!!!!!!!
Don't worry about the playoffs Diane, the Thunder wouldn't stand a chance against CP3- even Scottless.
"I think I'll have to stop reading all the blogs and sports news outlets for a few days, because this nonsense is seriously bugging me, *especially* the CP = KG thing, like you said."----Read it all...just don't believe everything you read!
#5
Caleb462
11/13/09 04:56 PM
Yeah I hear you downtown, but its not a matter of believing/not believing. Its just a matter of being sick of hearing all the negative hypothesizing.
neworleansbasketball.blogspot.com #6
Tobi
11/13/09 05:17 PM
I'm not more optimistic right now. I wanted a coaching change all the time, but now I know that nothing will change. The team was build up completley wrong. And the one who is in charge for that will coach that team right now (without any coaching experience??) So what am I talking about? Team goal: Be a contender in the long run. That's not a foolish wish for this franchise, because of that stunning talent, which Paul unquestionable is. So far so good. But with a PG like that, you better play an up-tempo offense like the Suns are again doing right now, you need guys, with the ability to move well without the ball, so CP can feed them with the ball. Guys who cut to the basket, shoot immediately on the move or both. Ok who is fulfilling that criterions? Okafor has good hands and moves pretty fluid for a center, but he is a downgrade to Tyson Chandler in that department. Peterson, Posey and Devin Brown are completely useless, as they don't like that running thing a lot, plus they are pretty slow, especially in comparison to a NBA 2-guard! Peja is slow, too, but I'm still convinced, that he likes that shooting after moving around screens, cutting or on the break more, that being a spot-up-shooter. And Peja likes up-tempo, look how quick he plays outlet passes after a rebound. I don't like to say that, but D-West is slow, or became slow, even for a PF! He likes set-offense. JuJu and Hilton are not able to play to their potential, maybe there's no potential, but I still believe in JuJu at least. Songaila is made for a set offense, against a zone defense and what's left is a couple of rookies, who could probably fit that style in two years. That's it. People who like to look for interviews of team representatives via internet definitely heard Scott, Bower or some players talking about the goal of playing more of an up-tempo-style or push the ball more often to win games. So I guess Scott exactly knew and still knows how that team should play, but it's like wanting a blind man to judge colors. The team needs guards out there. There is one shooting guard, one undersized shooting guard and two point guards on the roster. How, for heavens sake, could that team ever push the tempo and score some easy buckets??? They don't play pensioners.
#7
Caleb462
11/19/09 10:21 PM
Tobi - "But with a PG like that, you better play an up-tempo offense like the Suns are again doing right now"
Why, exactly? Does Paul thrive in the open floor? Yes. But he's also masterful in half-court sets. Paul can lead a succesful team no matter the tempo. The 56 win team was not a uptempo team, they were only marginally quicker than last year's slow as molasses team.
The problem with Scott's offense was not pace, atleast not in my opinion, it was a lack of creativity and lack of movement. The fact is... since Scott has gone and Bower/Floyd have taken over, we *have* seen a quickening of pace and we have certainly seen a lot more movement and creativity in the offense. We all know the roster limitations, so I'm not quite sure what point you are trying to make.
neworleansbasketball.blogspot.com #8
Caleb462
11/19/09 10:26 PM
Haha, I totally thought Tobi's post was a new one on the Suns/Hornets game thread. Wow, I got mixed up.
neworleansbasketball.blogspot.com #9