Posts tagged as:

Eric Maynor

John Hollinger casually dropped this depressing sentence in a game recap about the Nuggets. (via @pacersdigest)

Multiple sources said Denver’s longstanding pursuit of Indiana’s Jeff Foster is over because he’s likely to require surgery for his injured back and miss the rest of the season.

More crappy news from a crappy season.

(UPDATE 2: A tweet from Mike Wells suggests that surgery is not imminent: “Foster to fly to LA later this week to get another opinion on his back.”)

(UPDATE 3: The next morning, Mike Wells had this add on his blog: “Foster, who hasn’t played since the middle of December, will likely need surgery at some point, it’s just a matter of when he decides to do it. Don’t expect to see Foster play again this season.”)

This also likely spells more bad news for any Pacer fans hoping that Troy Murphy will get dealt to the Cavs — or anyone else — since the team is now probably going to have an extended stretch without the services or either Foster or Tyler Hansbrough, whose bout with an inner ear infection has left him with a troubling case of dizziness/vertigo that is unlikely to subside any time soon. I don’t think anyone within Indy’s front office sees Murphy as long-term fixture of the franchise, but a front court decimated by injuries will make it a little harder to part with one of the two guys (Murphy and Hibbert) who have produced at the big man spot.

As for Jeff, this sounds like a tough recovery for someone his age (he just turned 33). Jeff signed a contract extension just before the start of the 2008-09 and will make $6.5 million next season, which is the last year on his deal. I’m not a doctor, but, presumably, if he does have surgery, he would be able to make it back in time for the start of next season. Depending on his ability to rebound and other teams’ concern about the injury, he might now be more difficult to put into any trade, but as long as he can be on the court, he will probably retain at least most of his uncanny ability to rebound. And regardless, he will be an expiring contract that should be movable in a Matt Harpring way at the very worst.

UPDATE: Here are the details on the Harpring deal.

By sending injured Matt Harpring’s expiring $6.5 million contract to Oklahoma City along with Maynor, who makes $1.32 million, for the draft rights to Peter Fehse (who likely never will play in the NBA), the Jazz saved $7.82 million in luxury tax for the season.

Had the Jazz not made the deal, the team would have paid a total of about $13 million for the salaries and luxury tax for Harpring and Maynor, which includes getting back about $2.6 million insurance on Harpring, out for the rest of the season.

By making the deal, the Jazz only is responsible for approximately $2.7 already paid to Harpring and Maynor and the amount paid for a 13th player the team must add to fill out the roster, With that player likely to make about $500,000 the rest of the season, which is the pro-rated sum of the $825,497 minimum, and then adding the luxury tax on the player, that’s about $1.3 million. Subtract $4 million from $13 million and the Jazz save about $9 million.

Something like that wouldn’t be ideal, obviously, but if owner Herb Simon is serious about staying well below the luxury tax next season, it would at least be one cost-cutting option.

{ 0 comments }

Game #36 Preview: Hopeful in OKC

by Jared Wade on January 9, 2010 at 5:43 pm · 0 comments

Indiana Pacers @ Minnesota Timberwolves
Saturday, January 9
8:00 PM EST
Ford Center
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma

————-

After somehow losing to the Timberwolves last night, the Pacers are now on an 8-game road losing streak that dates back to December 12. Those Indy fans who haven’t been paying attention, might think that Oklahoma City isn’t the worst place to try to break that stretch of failure.

And, on paper, it’s not. The Thunder are only slightly above .500 at home (9-8) and they’ve lost 2 of their last 3 overall (falling to the Bucks and Hornets while beating the Bulls).

Still, the Thunder are currently 19-16 overall and sitting in the highly coveted 8th seed in the highly competitive Western Conference. (They’re sitting there uncomfortably, with Nawlins, Utah and Memphis nipping at their heels, but they’re still sitting there.)

More relevant to tonight, OKC has made a habit of beating the teams they are supposed to beat. The Milwaukee loss they had to open the New Year the other day notwithstanding, it’s pretty hard to beat The Kevin Durant Army unless you’re actually a better team then they are — mainly because they play good defense almost every night and have enough weapons on the other end to outscore their opponent. The first piece of evidence for that proclamation is that they went 9-6 in December. Really though, that is about what you would expect from a team that is 19-16 for the year.

But if you look deeper and examine their actual opponents in those losses, you see what I’m talking about.

The only teams that beat OKC in December were Boston, Cleveland, Denver, Dallas, Houston and the Lakers. All six of those teams are in the Top 11 in the NBA recordwise, (ranking 3rd, 2nd, 7th, 4th, 11th and 1st, respectively), and all but the Rockets are considered likely Conference Finals participants.

The hope for Indy comes in that the Thunder, in 2010, have already stumbled against the Bucks (15-18, which is good for 19th in the NBA) and the Hornets (18-16, good for 14th in the NBA).

Does this mean they will lose to a Pacers team that has the 26th best record (11-24) in the NBA? Particularly considering that Indy is on the second night of a back-to-back and just flew in from Minnesota? And considering that the Thunder haven’t played since Wednesday and have been sleeping in their own beds at home since Tuesday?

I’ll just play the objective journalist card on this one and leave the speculation up to you.

(And if you need anything else to think about, consider that the Thunder are the 3rd best team in the NBA in terms of FG% defense, only allowing 44.0% shooting by the other team, and the Pacers are 27th in the league in shooting at 43.2%. Those two facts combine to heighten the chances that we see — yet another — sub-40% shooting night out of Indy.)

Five Other Things

(1) Kevin Durant is 4th in the league in scoring at 28.4 ppg. Who are the three guys ahead of him? Kobe, Carmelo and LeBron. And KD has a better FG% and RPG number than two of them. Then again, he also averages more turnovers per game than all of them with 3.9 an outing, which makes him 3rd overall in the league in that category behind only two guys who have the ball in their hands waaaay more than he does (Steve Nash and Monta Ellis). Still, Durant is on the cusp of being in that Top 5-8 in the league discussion. Not quite there (without looking, I would slot him around 12th best in the NBA), but getting there. Also, 22 years old.

(2) Aside from one monster game in a win against Chicago where he dropped 29 points on 13/24 shooting, Russell Westbrook has been in a huge slump over the last few games. Take that game out and he is otherwise shooting 32.9% and going 23/70 from the field in his 5 last games. Meanwhile, he has still taken at least 12 shots in all of those games, so the Pacers should hope that he starts shooting — and missing — early and often.

(3)  I don’t have any stats for this one, but Thabo Sefolosha is one hell of a defender. He doesn’t do anything flashy, but he denies the ball well, chases around screens and the guy he’s guarding tends to miss a lot of shots. (Because of that and since he’s from Switzerland, I call him Swiss Miss.) He’s everything that Brandon Rush is not on the defensive end. (See also: Milwaukee’s Luc Richard Mbah a Moute. Love that dude. And, yes, I know both of these guys are a little bigger than Brandon.) Getting better perimeter defense is a quick way that a team can get a lot better. Wonder what haven’t good perimeter D is like? I sorta remember the Derrick McKey years, I guess.

(4) The Thunder just acquired Eric Maynor from the Jazz by essentially just agreeing to pay Matt Harpring not to play. The Jazz needed to cut payroll and the under-the-cap Thunder were the beneficiaries of a nice young PG who I really wanted the Pacers to go after in the Draft. (Disclaimer: I barely watch any NCAA hoops.) Eric is still assimilating into his back-up PG role in OKC, but he looked pretty good last time he played the Pacers with 6 assists in 14 minutes off the bench for Utah.

(5) James Harden has perhaps the second best beard in the league behind only Baron Davis. Pretty impressive debut for a rookie.

Pacers vs. Loud Noises During a Storm

Pacers @ Thunder
11-24 (13th) Overall Record (Conf Rank) 19-16 (8th)
3-15 (Road) Home / Road Records 9-8 (Home)
2-8 Record Last 10 Games 6-4
Lost 1 Current Streak Lost 1
3-2 Last 5 Head-to-Head 2-3
-5.91 (28th) Avg Scoring Margin + 1.97 (12th)
97.9 (21st) Points Per Game 98.1 (18th)
100.6 (27th) Offensive Rating 106.0 (20th)
43.2% (27th) FG% 45.5% (17th)
47.3% (25th) eFG% 48.7% (22nd)
103.8 (24th) Opponent's PPG 96.1 (6th)
106.7 (16th) Defensive Rating 103.9 (7th)
45.3% (12th) Opponent's FG% 44.0% (3rd)
48.8% (11th) Opponent's eFG% 47.6% (4th)
97.3 (2nd) Pace 92.0 (19th)

{ 0 comments }

Indiana Pacers @ Utah Jazz
Friday, December 4
9:00 PM EST
EnergySolutions Arena
Salt Lake City, Utah

Pacers vs. Jazz
6-10 (10th) Record 10-7 (6th)
Lost 3 Streak Won 3
-3.69 (20th) Avg Scoring Margin +3.59 (11th)
99.3 (18th) Points Per Game 101.5 (11th)
101.7 (26th) Offensive Rating 110.6 (5th)
105.5 (11th) Defensive Rating 106.7 (18th)
47.4% (25th) eFG% 52.3% (5th)
48.7% (13th) Opponent's eFG% 49.6 (17th)
97.6 (2nd) Pace 91.2 (24th)

Glossary: Offensive Rating | Defensive Rating | eFG% | Pace

What do you get when you cross a streaking home team that has a good offense and an average defense with a scuffling road team that has a terrible offense and an average defense?

The Pacers at the Jazz.

Utah has won it’s last three games and six of its last seven. Their slow start out of the gates is over. And on the other side, we have Indiana, which has lost its last three and six of its last seven. Their slow start out the gates has returned and essentially erased any modicum of hope that the team’s earlier five-game winning streak may have given fans.

How should we expect tonight’s game to go? You do the math.

As for personnel, Carlos Boozer has reverted to the 20/10 beast he was two/three years ago (and he’s again doing in on 55+% shooting). You can say he’s playing for a contract, you can say he’s abandoned lower-percentage fadeaways … but whatever you say, the message is the same: Boozer is a problem on the block, and the Pacers have no one outside of Jeff Foster, who is reportedly again nursing a banged up back after his other-worldly 18-rebound game on Wednesday, who can even consider stopping him.

Speaking of unstoppable players, Deron Williams certainly won’t be phased by TJ Ford. And after Monta Ellis strung him up for a career high and Tyreke Evans abused him all night despite foul trouble in the Pacers last outing, TJ better hope that Jim O’Brien finally realizes that Dahntay Jones and Earl Watson need to be the ones tasked with guarding the other team’s best penetrator. Ford just can’t do it, for reasons that have to do with both his size and his technique.

Unfortunately, that leaves Ronnie Brewer as the guy TJ would need to defend. Yeah. Good luck with that. Thus, it seems TJ will be left on an island with D Will, where his best strategy might be finding an empty bottle, writing a note and sending out an SOS.

Throw in a three-point shooting center in Mehmet Okur (currently shooting a Troy-Murphy-from-last-year-esque 45.2% from long range) who will give Roy Hibbert fits, and the Jazz are just a really tough match-up for Indiana. Remember that time last year that you tried to never think about again when Memo dropped a career-high 43 points on the Pacers? Hate to break it to you, but it actually happened. And, as I recall, he didn’t even have a particularly good second half that night.

Even when the defense does force a miss, the Pacer bigs will need to keep Paul Millsap off the offensive glass. A silver lining for Indy in that regard is that Millsap hasn’t been getting to the boards that much this year, but he remains capable of creating 5 to 6 extra possessions for his team on any given night.

The last thing I’ll be watching is Utah’s rookie reserve point guard Eric Maynor. I admittedly stopped having the time to watch NCAA hoops like four years ago, so my opinion on draft stuff isn’t particularly educated, but I saw Maynor play quite a few times at VCU and really wanted to see him in a Pacers uniform. And his per-minute numbers in this young season while backing up Deron have looked very good, so it will be interesting to see him up close for the first time.

{ 1 comment }