The Lakers showed their depth and superiority tonight, as they gradually built a big fat lead against the Hornets in the first half via their vast array of weapons. To the Hornets credit, they never really quit and battled back hard with a small ball lineup in the fourth quarter, trying desperately to deprive Laker fans of their free tacos. Unfortunately, New Orleans couldn't quite eclipse the century mark, thus failing to save downtown Los Angeles from a nasty bout of post-game flatulence.
110-99 the final score ( box | recap ). On to some notes...
Outmatched
To win this one, the Hornets would have had to play a near-perfect game while hoping the Lakers had an off-night. Unfortunately, neither of those things happened. The Lake Show was clicking on all cylinders. The looked inside to Andrew Bynum and Pau Gasol regularly and they both delivered more often than not. Kobe Bryant took what the defense gave him and finished with 18 points on 5-of-11 shooting. Phil Jackson ended up using eleven players and all of them got on the scoreboard. The Lakers got to the free-throw line with ease (33 attempts) and played great team defense for much of the game. They just did too many things well for the Hornets to have a chance.
It was nice though that the Hornets outrebounded the Lakers, 38-34, which reinforces the fact that New Orleans didn't lose this game due to lack of effort.
Devin Brown
There was plenty of criticism for Devin in the Game On comments, but I feel they were mostly undeserved. True, he's not a legitimate starter in this league, but the Hornets don't have much choice but to start him and he's been giving it his all out there. He was about the only guy tonight who was able to break through the Lakers' perimeter defense and make something happen. He finished an abysmal 1-of-9 from the field for 6 points, but he created a lot of easy looks for his teammates as his 8 assists can attest to. He also delivered a good hard foul on Kobe in the third quarter, and although Kobe often got the better of DB in this one, he certainly didn't have it easy.
Darren Collison
His numbers tonight: 20 points (7-14 FGs), 5 assists, 4 turnovers and 2 steals in 34 minutes. His jump shot looked shaky again, but I thought he played a solid game overall. He would have had a few hockey assists if anyone kept count, and he was pesky as always on defense. He had two nice plays against Kobe, first getting by him on the perimeter late in the third quarter, keeping him on his back and then using a hesitation dribble to open up a gap for the layup. About a minute later he shadowed Bryant brilliantly to slow down the break and help stop the Lakers getting an easy bucket at the end of the period.
Battle of the Bigs
Bynum and Gasol were excellent as usual, combining for 35 points on 16 shots, 14 rebounds and 5 assists. David West and Emeka Okafor battled hard against them but to no avail. West saw frequent double teams, rarely getting enough space to play his usual game. Easy for a team to slow him with Chris Paul and Peja Stojakovic out. West finished with just 8 points (4-9 FGs) and 3 rebounds in 27 foul-plagued minutes. That's the third time in less than three weeks that he's scored 8 points or fewer in a game.
Okafor had a much more productive night, tallying 17 points (7-10 FGs), 12 rebounds and 2 steals. He got his points in a variety of ways: rolling well to the basket and keeping his hands up, cleaning the glass and even a couple of jumpers.
Marcus Thornton
He's officially in a slump. He warmed up a little in the fourth quarter tonight to finish with 9 points on 4-of-10 shooting. In his last three games combined, he's shooting just 9-of-30 from the floor and 3-of-14 from deep. His aggressiveness is still there; those same looks just haven't been dropping, he's had trouble finishing inside and his passing and defense have been suspect.
Small Ball
The Hornets were able to finish the game strong and make the score look a little more respectable with a 28-16 run. For the vast majority of that, Jeff Bower went with the small lineup of Darren Collison, Bobby Brown, Marcus Thornton, Julian Wright and Darius Songaila. It was effective because they played with great energy and really pushed the pace, and perhaps also because the Lakers had Adam Morrison in the game.
Hilton Armstrong
Hilton played 13 minutes and managed to foul out. It was more of the usual from him, as he settled for weak shots instead of going up strong, blew an open put-back and got dunked on something awful by Lamar Odom. Of course, there were a few bright spots, too, as he boxed out well several times and grabbed six boards, played some solid help D and made a nice move late in the fourth to get a layup.
Chris Paul
The CST broadcast showed Chris running some light sprints, working on some spin dribble moves and shooting jump shots before the game. From that, I'd expect him to be back no later than the December 11th home game against the Knicks.
Bullets to finish:
- I like how Phil Jackson let his reserves finish out the game despite the Hornets threatening to make a comeback. Most coaches in the NBA would bring back in a starter or two, just to be safe. Not Jackson. It's early December, but he's coaching for the playoffs.
- With Ike Diogu, Chris Paul and Peja Stojakovic all unable to play, I was surprised to see Sean Marks sitting on the bench in a suit. John Reid reports that Sean's right shoulder is still bothering him and that's why he was inactive.
- Always fun: watching Darius Songaila on both ends of the floor. He does so many of the little things that don't show up in the box score.
- As shown in last week's video breakdown, the Hornets have been moving the ball much better since the coaching change, but they often revert to old habits when the opposing defense steps up. We saw it a couple of times tonight. Hopefully time and discipline will minimize those lapses.
- Be sure to check Mr. Kennedy's post-game Journal report. As he points out, the Hornets have a pretty nice stretch coming up, starting with Friday's game against the lowly T-Wolves in New Orleans.
UPDATE: Game highlights...


11 super-fantastic comments post your own
JChangNZ
12/02/09 03:51 AM
Is Marks really injured, or is this another one of those things to keep him on the inactive list. During the opening games of this season, Marks was kept on the inactive list for an "injury" while Scott was around. As soon as Bower becomes coach, Marks is "activated".
#1
Niall Doherty
12/02/09 06:41 AM
Marks was taking shots to relieve pain in that shoulder, so I don't think it's a fake injury.
www.ndoherty.com #2
downtowndave78
12/02/09 07:52 AM
Is Thornton officially in a slump, or was his early tirade only a hot streak? Only time will tell, but it would be nice to see those shots dropping again.
I agree with everything you have said so far regarding D Brown. He is not a starter and he's difficult to watch at times, but I am also happy with the effort that he has given us so far this year. I think it can be said that he is giving it his all while he's on the court. That is all you can ever ask from any player.
However, I didn't watch the game last night, but I would prefer to see B Brown taking the backup point guard duties rather than D Brown. I think his ball handling skills outweigh his 4 or 5 wild man shots that he takes during the game.
#3
TopherPrice
12/02/09 08:41 AM
I would say slump. He historically, 20+ points a game in college for two years strait, is a scorer and a consistent shooter. He just seems stagnant. Almost all of his shots are not coming in the rhythm they were in the games he was shooting well in a couple weeks ago. There was a lot more ball movement and passing to him as an open shooter than we are seeing now. That is my main concern with what is happening in the last two games. The offense seems to have gone back to this one on one style of play more than the ball movement/spreading the defense style that was getting everyone involved. I am atributing that to the guard rotation, and the lack of Peja being on the court. He really does seem to give the offense some structure. He seems to be a case of you don't know what you have until it is gone. The offense seemed broken down without him under Scott and now under Bower in the two games that he is out.
I think it shows just how Marcus is not yet ready to be the second scoring option for our team, more than he is not ready to be a heavy minute starter. I mean if you look at the last 8 games leading into this road trip as a team scouting the Hornets for a game plan, you would say in order to shut down the hornets offense we have to shut down David West in the paint, Peja on the perimeter, and counter Marcus Thornton when he comes off the bench. Well then you get the news that Peja is out, you then can focus on just David and stopping easy shots for Marcus. That is an easy enough defense to set up, especially when no one else steps up and becomes a scoring threat in either game. You saw how Marcus heated up once the quality of defense guarding him dropped in the fourth. I just think he is not ready to handle being guarded by top defensive covers, it will just take time. With that said, I almost think that lends weight to him being a 6th man instead of the starting 2. However that dynamic changes drastically when an effective CP3 is out on the court with him and David West.
On another note, who else is getting a little giddy about the dynamic between Dwest and Okie! That looks like the beginning of a beautiful partnership. I see Davids assist numbers going through the roof. I am still quite optimistic with our prospects once CP3 gets back and shakes the rust off.
#4
LSUhornet
12/02/09 10:50 AM
I don't think the defense had as much to do with Thornton's slump. Maybe in this game, as he would have a tough time getting in the paint against the huge Lakers, but he is also missing open shots that he was hitting a week ago. Also I've noticed he's standing on the 3pt line in the Peja/MoPete style more and making less of those cuts to the basket that we were praising him for earlier. I think he'll snap out of this soon enough (Timberwolves seem like a good candidate to break any slump). Also, if he learns to finish at the rim with more consistency he'll up his scoring average significantly. He's missing 1-3 shots from the paint a game. Hopefully CP3 and Collison can teach him some of the finer points of the floater.
Also, I never fault Devin Brown's effort, just his decision-making. I wouldn't have as much of the problem if he didn't dominate the ball as much and take it out of Collison's hands so often. I don't think it's helping Dimes' development if as soon as he crosses half court, he passes to Devin to initiate the offense instead of doing it himself. Let Devin play the 2 not PG.
#5
Mikey
12/02/09 10:53 AM
Regarding Thornton, we also have to give som credit to teams like the Lakers (Kings too) for studying film. The reasons for his "slump" are varied, but can be narrowed down to three areas. Teams are cutting off driving lanes to the basket, taking away his baseline movement to the basket without the ball, and taking him off his comfort spots from behind the arc by putting more pressure on him to push him off the 3-point line and take longer shots. Also, they are making him work much harder on defense, which he is not accustomed to doing. Lastly, teams are taking advantage of his lack of size on both ends of the floor. This is what being a rookie is about though. Teams will see what you do well, and try their best to take that away. Now it's time for the coaching staff and Thornton to make some adjustments and bounce back. I just like the fact that his struggles haven't hurt his confidence or aggressiveness.
I can't believe this, but I'm actually gonna talk good about having Devin out there doing what he does. You need SOMEBODY to take the ball to the basket, might as well be him, although you'd wish it was someone with talent. Unfortunately, the only other guy on the roster that can do that is too green to just throw to the wolves like that. Still, you can't fault the guy for his toughness. Also, his rebounding numbers are way up, and he's the only perimeter guy consistently getting to the freethrow line.
#6
ticktock6
12/02/09 11:14 AM
I do like Devin Brown's toughness and rebounding. But I feel like he dominates the ball too much sometimes. There are numerous fast breaks where he has a guy open, who he ignores. I don't like guys ignoring the high percentage plays so they can play hero and take iffy shots. Bobby... ugh... I actually can't wait to see Collison and Thornton together off the bench when CP gets back. They play off each other a lot better-- you can tell they've had practice time together.
Thornton... oh, my poor rookie. I love that he still looks confident out there. I don't like him in the role of a camp and shoot guy, though. He needs to figure out how to free himself against larger guys for those baseline cuts that were so effective for him.
hornetshype.com #7
LSUhornet
12/02/09 11:22 AM
I don't know what to think about this quote from David West:
"Right now, we're just not playing team basketball and we're going to need to define some roles,'' West said. "Right now, we've got nine or 10 guys trying to score basketball.'
If he is talking about improving ball movement and getting better shots, that's fine. However, this could also be interpreted as "I want more shots." Those kind of statements scare me. We haven't heard anything from West like that before, and it will be moot once CP comes back, but it still got me thinking.
#8
Niall Doherty
12/02/09 12:17 PM
Yeah, interesting quote from West. I doubt he was complaining about lack of shots for him since the Lakers doubled him frequently last night and made him give it up.
www.ndoherty.com #9
Diane
12/02/09 01:23 PM
First, I have to say I hate playing The Lakers - way too much circus, Hollywood stuff.
I agree with Mikey - teams are watching tapes and they are figuring out the best ways to contain guys. Everybody knows that David West is an MVP so they really keep him covered.
I think Devin Brown is getting better at passing the ball to Collison. He reminds me alot of Pargo - just shooting up wild shots - everytime I see him getting ready to shoot a 3 pointer - I start yelling - no no no - your're not a 3 point shooter!!! Like I said he is doing better.
I think Collison is doing great, he seems like he really has the knack - Thornton needs alot experience, no doubt his hot streak is over.
#10
dchoops
12/02/09 09:58 PM
Good synopsis of the game. I definitely think Hilton is never going to develop into anything special, not that anyone really thought he ever would. Collison has been coming on strong lately though - I really like the way he attacks he just needs to limit turn overs. Noticed the next game and the 11th (Pauls supposed return) are blacked out and only on League Pass - anyone use NBA League Pass Broadband? It says you can DVR live and archived games...seems pretty sweet. Anybody try it yet? http://www.nba.com/leaguepass/online.html?cid=624
#11