From the monthly archives:

February 2010

Game #55 Preview: Kevin Martin’s Debut

by Jared Wade on February 20, 2010 at 5:08 pm · 0 comments

Indiana Pacers @ Houston Rockets
Saturday, February 20
8:30 pm EST
Toyota Center
Houston, Texas

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For those of you living under a rock, the trade deadline featured two major deals.

The first was Antawn Jamison to the Cavs, which pretty much makes this season’s chase for an NBA championship a two-horse race between Cleveland and Los Angeles.

The second was a three-team trade that sent Kevin Martin to the Rockets, Carl Landry to the Kings and Tracy McGrady to the Knicks.

For our old friend Donnie Walsh in New York, this was an “all-in” move hoping to win the spoils of the free agent class of 2010. It’s officially “LeBron or Bust” for those in MSG, who desperately are hoping — nay — praying that The Chosen One for some silly reason decides that he wants to play in New York with one of his very talented friends (either Wade, Bosh, Joe Johnson, Amar’e or Boozer), Danilo Galinari, Wilson Chandler, Toney Douglas, Eddy Curry and a bunch of minimum-ish-level salaried guys. (Obviously any of Wade/Bosh or Joe Johnson/Bosh or Wade/Boozer or Wade/Amare or perhaps a few other combinations would not be a total failure for the Knicks either.)

For the Kings, they got a very good (and very cheap) low-post scorer in Landry as well as enough cap room this summer to perhaps offer some free agent the max. (Kevin Arnovitz breaks down all the 2010 free agency player very well here.) Or, since Tyreke Evans is a budding superstar himself, they might be wiser to bring in one $10 million guy and one $7 million guy who can play well alongside Evans, Landry, Thompson, Casspi and Spencer Hawes. Either way, Sacramento now has a lot of flexibility and a lot of young talent to build something.

For the Rockets, they got not just Martin, but two first-round picks from the Knicks, perhaps-promising rookie Jordan Hill and Jared Jeffries, who while seen as a salaray-cap albatross in New York will just be a good defensive specialist for Houston since they weren’t trying to get under the cap this summer anyway. Aside from Danny Ferry getting Antawn, this was the coup of the deadline. Daryl Morey, aka the guy Bill Simmons calls Dork Elvis, made a very shrewd play and has set his team up very well for the next few seasons. (He didn’t do quite as well in negotiations as some people expected, but it was still a stellar move.)

More important to the Pacers, of course, is not how the Rockets play in the coming years — but how they play tonight.

Hopefully for Indiana, Houston isn’t able to seamlessly integrate Martin and Jeffries (and perhaps even Hill) into the game plan and the result is a sloppy, lackluster, disjointed effort by Rick Adelman’s boys.

If so, the Pacers will probably only lose by six or seven.

Pacers vs. Rockets: By the Numbers

Pacers @ Rockets
18-36 (14th) Overall Record (Conf Rank) 28-25 (9th)
6-21 (Road) Home / Road Records 15-11 (Home)
3-7 Record Last 10 Games 4-6
Lost 4 Current Streak Won 1
2-3 Last 5 Head-to-Head 3-2
-4.93 (28th) Avg Scoring Margin +0.36 (15th)
101.4 (28th) Offensive Rating 106.7 (15th)
43.7% (27th) FG% 44.2% (26th)
48.1% (24th) eFG% 48.8% (22nd)
106.5 (15th) Defensive Rating 106.3 (13th)
45.2% (10th) Opponent's FG% 46.7% (22nd)
48.8% (9th) Opponent's eFG% 50.1% (19th)
97.5 (2nd) Pace 93.2 (12th)

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Game #54 Recap: Faux, Faux, Faux

by Jared Wade on February 20, 2010 at 4:24 pm · 1 comment

Indiana Pacers 101 – New Orleans Hornets 107

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Roy Hibbert played pretty well in the first quarter. No one else did. And the team for what feels like the 54th time this season got run off the court in the first half. You really start to wonder how these grown men who call themselves professional basketball players can collectively just not show up to play. The effort was horrible and the execution was worse. You would think the embarrassment of going down 11 points in the opening period would be enough to prompt some of these guys to drive to the hoop and try to make things happen. But apparently, even after a long All-Star break away from the day-to-day futility of being a Pacer, the motivation — and talent — is just not there.

After falling down 19 at the half, the Pacers did dust themselves off in the locker room and enter the third ready to make what we refer to around these parts as a “faux comeback.” (Hence the Tim Donahue-created, Moses Malone-inspired title for this post.)

Danny started showing why he should still be considered on of the better scorers in the league (despite his usual best efforts to be seen as rather overrated by the rest of the NBA fan base) and dropped 13 in the quarter, which surprisingly included 4 FGs that were not three-pointers. This and a pair of nice, yet unexpected, drives to the hoop from Brandon Rush and another couple of layups from Earl Watson helped cut the Hornets lead to 12 going into the fourth, giving Indy a puncher’s chance to win this thing.

And punch they did. Of course, it had all the hallmarks of a faux comeback as the Pacers, even after cutting the lead to 4 at one point, could not get the stops they needed after key buckets and couldn’t get the buckets they needed after key stops. Let’s give a bunch of credit to Mike Dunleavy who player his best offensive quarter since … since … I don’t even know. 2007 maybe. Anyway, he went 5/6 with two huge threes and a baseline layup that even had a cynical bloke like myself thinking Indy might be able to win this thing.

Alas, that obviously wasn’t going to happen.

A Granger jumper cut the deficit to just 4 with just over a minute to play, but on the next trip down, Dunleavy inexcusably let Peja Stojakovic drive right past him. The defense had to rotate to stop PEJA GODDAMN STOJAKOVIC from finishing with a layup at the hoop and the usual jump-shooting specialist turned into a play-maker, finding a wide-open David West at the top of the key. And David buried it. Of course. I mean, Chris Paul calls the guy the “17-Foot Assassin.” And Indy let Peja destroy their defense and find the guy for … wait for it … a 17-foot jumper.

Other than “Faux Comeback Ended by Key Breakdown on Critical Play of the Game” the only takeaways from this game are that Dannt had a good second half (8/12 from the floor, 1/3 from three, and 4/4 from the line) and that Junior has a pulse.

Good times.

Can’t wait to do it again tonight.

Pacers @ Hornets
101 Score 107
1 Largest Lead 21
97.1 Offensive Efficiency 104.8
47.3 eFG% 53.1
43.5% (40/92) FG% 50.7% (41/81)
36.9% (7/19) 3PT% 30.8% (4/13)
73.7% (14/19) FT% 69.7% (23/33)
44 (12) Rebounds (Off.) 44 (7)
16 (17) Turnovers (Points Led To) 16 (13)
47 Points in the Paint 42
12 Fast Break Points 20
17 Assists 16

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Game #54 Preview: Just Win a Game

by Jared Wade on February 19, 2010 at 6:44 pm · 1 comment

Indiana Pacers @ New Orleans Hornets
Friday, February 19
8:00 pm EST
New Orleans Arena
New Orleans, Louisiana

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The Pacers sure do need a win.

No deals were made before the deadline and the fan base seems to be as frustrated as I can remember. The past few years with the crime and off-court embarrassment were worse, sure, but this is a different kind of disillusionment and frustration. This is a fan base with no faith that the team can win a game. And with good reason.

There isn’t really a ton to say about tonight’s game specifically. The Hornets aren’t that good, and Chris Paul isn’t playing. The Pacers blew a decent chance to beat the Spurs the other night and can hopefully use that disappointment to knock off a non-threatening swarm of Bees tonight in New Orleans. Of course, the Pacers are horrible on the road (6-20 on the year), so every team not named the Nets is a heavy favorite in their own building, but theoretically, this is a very winnable game if Indy can make its shots.

That’s always the big if though, isn’t it?

But c’mon, Indy, let’s give the fans a reason to care — if only for one evening.

Pacers @ Hornets
18-35 (14th) Overall Record (Conf Rank) 28-26 (10th)
6-20 (Road) Home / Road Records 17-9 (Home)
3-7 Record Last 10 Games 4-6
Lost 3 Current Streak Lost 1
1-4 Last 5 Head-to-Head 4-1
-4.91 (28th) Avg Scoring Margin -1.26 (19th)
101.4 (28th) Offensive Rating 106.9 (13th)
43.7% (27th) FG% 45.5% (18th)
48.1% (24th) eFG% 50.0% (13th)
106.5 (14th) Defensive Rating 108.2 (18th)
45.2% (10th) Opponent's FG% 47.4% (25th)
48.8% (9th) Opponent's eFG% 51.4% (24th)
97.5 (2nd) Pace 92.3 (17th)

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Updating on the previous post of “serious” discussions between Indy and Charlotte that are now “close”…Here’s another tweet from Woj:

Charlotte and Indiana is close, but sources say not done. FIve players for now, including Ford and Rush for Augustine, Henderson and Nazr.

As reported here, this is a no-brainer for Indy.

Rush has been playing a little better since January started, but losing him isn’t a big deal. There’s not a chasm of difference between his potential and Gerald Henderson’s potential, although I have admittedly not watched a ton of Charlotte this year and you do have to wonder why Larry Brown would be willing to punt on a lottery pick so quickly. Perhaps they want to try to make a real run in the playoffs and think TJ can do more for them than DJ Augustin and feel, like I do, that Rush for Gerald is a wash at worst?

I don’t know. The whole thing seems dubious from a “why would Charlotte do this?” standpoint, frankly.

Regardless, I like DJ Augustin as a promising young PG with NBA starter potential. He suffers from some of the same size issues as TJ, but could at worst be a fresh face in Conseco and be a good option to run the team from a “change for change’s sake” perspective. He would immediately challenge Earl Watson for the starting role and, as a guy still on a cheap rookie deal through 2012, could likely remain a solid back court option that doesn’t really affect the cap for the next few seasons. Indy could let Earl Watson leave this summer and then have DJ and AJ Price as two PG options, which would lessen the urgency of drafting a PG, which is currently the major priority for the team. I’m not saying DJ Augustin is a guy you want running your team for the next five years and PG would still be the number one priority, but it would leave the front office less hamstrung to only focus on one position and give Indy some stability — which is exactly what TJ Ford was supposed to be, yet unable to be, when he was acquired for Jermaine O’Neal.

Nazr Mohammed is signed through the Summer of 2011 for $6.8 million, but that’s less than TJ would make anyway so the cap affect is a net (slight) positive for the Pacers — and obviously Nazr is a guy that Indy could desperately use immediately and next year in it’s MASH unit front court, whereas TJ is in the dog house.

Interesting stuff.

We’ll see…

UPDATE: Two new tweets from Woj:

Number One:

Indiana players believe trade is near, telling friends even that deal’s done. Front offices still talking. Charlotte may need convincing.

Number Two:

Charlotte has been insisting that they won’t do a deal here, and time is running out. One final Larry Bird-Michael Jordan showdown?

IT’S JUST LIKE THE MCDONALD’S COMMERCIAL.

UPDATE II:

…and Wells awakes from his slumber to squash all hopes and dreams:

Pacers-Bobcats tried to work out a deal, which was first reported by @WojYahooNBA, but they couldn’t reach an agreement

Well…that was fun.

Now you know why I think trade rumors are stupid and a waste of time.

UPDATE III:

…and just to give Woj a final word on all the commotion:

Indiana wanted desperately to move T.J. Ford — and loved D.J. Augustine — but it appears they’ve just run out of time, source says.

I still think they can move TJ this summer if they try hard enough, but, yeah, this deal seemed too good to be true from the very start. Oh well, back to reality.

Horrible, depressing, bleak, no-hope-for-more-than-12-months reality.

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