From the monthly archives:

February 2011

Larry Bird is now talking about what happened when his attempted trade with the Memphis Grizzlies for OJ Mayo fell apart just minutes before the trade deadline came and went last Thursday. UPDATE: And it is a different story from the one that Griz owner Michael Heisley was telling the other day. I’m not a logic major, but it seems as though someone here is either misinformed or has pants that are on fire. Apparently I was misreading this based on the Star’s “Bird claims Grizzlies pulled deal off table late” headline. Reporter Jeff Rabjohns has informed me that it was New Orleans that pulled the deal off the table at the last minute. Sorry for the confusion. Here’s the link to the more clearly presented Indy Star piece.

Jeff Rabjohns reported the following for the Indianapolis Star.

“I was on the phone with Memphis. We had a deal with five minutes to go. At two minutes, they (New Orleans) pulled the deal, and it didn’t happen,” Bird said, referring to the 3 p.m. deadline set by the NBA.

Larry elaborated further about the opportunity to get Mayo and “not give up a ton” — a characterization that must make Josh McRoberts, Brandon Rush and Solomon Jones (the three guys who would have been shipped out) feel all warm and fuzzy inside.

“We felt we had the opportunity to get a player who would help us and not give up a ton, even though I like Josh and Brandon,” Bird said. “It’s unfortunate it had to be a three-team deal because when you get more teams in it, anything that happen.

“It’s tough on me because we worked three days to get a deal done, and they (New Orleans) pull it off the table with two minutes to go. That’s pretty hard to take.”

Now the Pacers look ahead to the summer. Barring the new Collective Bargaining Agreement capping all salaries at “one peanut butter sandwich with a team option for jelly,” the Pacers should have plenty of money to target some free agents. We’ll see how that goes, but I’ve increasingly become enamored with the idea of Zach Randolph playing power forward for Indiana.

The only responses from Brandon and Josh on the matter were typical, “say the right thing” fodder, although Rush again dropped a similar line to the one he gave me last night regarding his thoughts on what the front office has in store for his future in Indiana.

“They tried twice. I’m thinking they’re going to try again. But it’s the NBA. Everybody gets traded.”

The only real surprise here is that neither Brandon or Josh used the phrase “it is what it is.”

Good call, Dime magazine. Also, I love how every other cover line is a person’s name aside from “Kenyon’s Ink,” which now that I think about it, should be something K-Mart can claim as a dependent on his tax return no matter what Ron Paul thinks. Also Part II, I bet reading this issue with posterity would be hilarious. Just look at those names.

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Pacers Ran the 1998 All-Star Game

by Jared Wade on February 26, 2011 at 11:50 am · 5 comments

Compared to the six seven combined players that the Celtics and Heat sent to LA this year, only having two guys might not seem like many. But they also had Bird, Carlisle and that guy who the photographer didn’t even notice behind Shawn Kemp. (via So What?)

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Gordon Hayward Dunks on Paul George’s Head

by Jared Wade on February 25, 2011 at 11:33 pm · 0 comments

Paul George’s take on Gordon Hayward’s dunk.

I’m not sure if you knew this, but former Butler star Gordon Hayward is sort of a big deal in Indiana. There were more Hayward shirts and jerseys being worn throughout Conseco Fieldhouse during tonight’s Pacers/Jazz game than I presumed were ever manufactured. And when he checked in to the game for the first time, Hoosiers went nuts. Throughout the game, mMany of the loudest ovations from the crowd, which had to be one of the largest so far this year, came from Hayward-related events.

At one point, he made a move with the ball, and it looked like he got fouled taking a shot but he actually traveled before the foul so it resulted in a Jazz turnover. Conseco erupted. My response to that on Twitter at the time was this: “Hayward travels. Conseco erupts. I’m not sure why. Not sure they knew why either.”

Basically.

But there was one highlight for which the rationale behind the ensuing bedlam was unmistakable. Gordon Hayward got the ball in transition and pushed it up the court. It looked like Dahntay Jones would slow him down, but that did not happen even remotely. (And why would it? It’s not like things like that are the only thing Dahntay gets paid to do or anything.) So Hayward was free to attack the rim. Hayward elevated. Paul George elevated. And just when I expected George to swat a cute little layup attempt into the third row, Hayward put him in a poster.

Conseco exploded — with Hayward’s parents cheering the loudest of all. (Note: I have no decibel-related science to back this up. It’s just bad sportswriting that you’re supposed to accept sans evidence, OK? Deal with it.)

I asked him after the game whether or not he and George knew each other or if this was, for Gordon, a great introduction. “We have the same agency, so I was able to meet him during the pre-draft stuff,” said Hayward. “We keep in touch a little bit and it’s good to see him.”

My follow-up was to ask him if he thought that maybe Paul George expected him to lay it up. “Yeah, he might have thought that. I dunno,” said Hayward. “He smiled afterwards and said a little something.”

I’m not Hayward, but if I was, my response to George saying “a little something” would have been, “don’t talk about it, be about it, bro.”* And then I would have dove into my Scrooge McDunk money pit that I created the day I after I got a guaranteed $4.9 million NBA contract for being picked 9th overall in last summer’s draft.

* I would never say that. (video via @outsidethenba)

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While losing 95-84 to the Utah Jazz tonight, the Pacers tonight looked like a team full of young players who may have been less than prepared to play well just a day after their GM reportedly tried to trade two rotation players. Perhaps that wasn’t the case, but it’s hard to think that it was merely poor execution and an off shooting night that caused a 27.7% shooting first half.

That’s just really, really hard to do for a team not populated by a Joel Anthony clone army

And since there is almost nothing about this single game that is worth discussing nor remembering, I was curious as to whether or not the players thought it was just one of those nights or whether the trade talk was a factor.

I asked both Danny Granger and Brandon Rush, who was were reportedly minutes away from no longer playing professional basketball in Indiana, and each, as expected, said they just played badly. “We just got our ass kicked — didn’t rebound, didn’t shoot well,” said Granger. “That’s the recipe for a loss.”

Specifically, in terms of how a team can shoot below 28% for a whole half, Danny put the blame on the team not using an offense that had, before tonight’s 84-point outing, produced at least 100 points in all 12 games that Frank Vogel has coached. “We tried to go one-on-one too much and didn’t let our movement work for us,” said Granger. “We just didn’t execute our offense as we have in the past.”

More important than whether or not the team came out flat in one game after a crazy trade deadline Thursday — which, it should be noted, was insane leaguewide way more so than it was for Indiana — is whether or not the involved players will be affected.

For Rush, the worth-mentioning preface to all this is that it has been a hectic month.

First he sprained his ankle, which sidelined him for a while and allowed Paul George to get some extended shine. (George was already well-established in the rotation prior to the injury, but did get more time and, likely, leeway while the coach had fewer options available on the bench.) Then came yesterday’s report that would have had Brandon packing for New Orleans had Larry Bird been able to get everything in order a little more quickly. All that, and now he finds himself back in the Pacers starting lineup following Mike Dunleavy Jr. suffering a broken thumb that is expected to keep him out for the next six to eight weeks.

Still, he said he’s just ready to play ball. “I’m ready to help this team to win,” said Rush. “Being a part of this organization has been great. I’m just looking forward to [the rest of the season].”

As a third-year player who has had his name floated in deals before, he understands it is a business. “That’s the way I look at it: it’s a business,” said Rush. “You can’t take anything personal because everything is about business around here. You try not to get your feelings involved. I mean, everybody’s bound to get traded every once in a while.”

And despite the loss and the obvious frustration Rush showed about that, he has remained upbeat enough to even drop some jokes about his future in Indiana and what the front office has in store for him next. “What’s going to happen this summer?” he asked with a tongue-in-cheek grin. “Maybe they’re gonna try again.”

Josh McRoberts was quick to dismiss any impact that this week’s trade deadline may have had on him. “I’m frustrated we lost,” said a stoic McRoberts. After some prodding about him almost being sent to Memphis, he only offered that “it’s good to know that I’ll be here the rest of the year. That’s a good thing. That’s positive.”

Like Granger, he saw tonight’s garbage-scented performance as simply an on-court performance problem. “We got killed,” said McRoberts. “They killed us on the boards. We didn’t help each other on defense or rebounding. We got killed.”

You sure did, Indiana.

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