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Game #16

Game #16 Recap: 8p9s Goes Swinging

by Zach Harper on December 3, 2009 at 1:13 pm

(Ed note: We’re trying something different here today. We’ve essentially gone “swinging” with one of our favorite NBA writers, doing the blog equivalent of wife-swapping by trading sites for the IND/SAC recap. Zach Harper of the ESPN TrueHoop Kings blog Cowbell Kingdom wrote the recap below, and I’ve written the one for his site. Zach knows his stuff about Sacramento, obviously, so he has a good perspective on last night’s game. But, more importantly, he follows the entire league about as close as anyone can, so I thought ye Pacer fans could get something useful out of hearing an educated outsider’s thoughts on the Indiana franchise at large. – JW)

So this is the life of an NBA swinger? I’ve been eyeing this blog for a while, and I’m very happy that Jared decided to swap with me for a night. So let’s ease into this with a nice cognac and turn on a nice romantic comedy to set the mood…

These are not the Pacers that I remember.

I mean, they still have a really good wing scorer. And they can rebound inside with some size. But there isn’t much in the way of substance with this team. Where are the guys that kill themselves to win? Where is the solid starting lineup? Where is the grit and determination that bred successful night after successful night for more than a decade?

Instead, I watched a team against the Kings that had Jeff Foster, Dahntay Jones and Earl Watson play the role of players who wouldn’t be intimidated by a hostile environment (even if there were only 7,000 people in attendance). They were the ones that wouldn’t be bullied. Guys like TJ Ford, Mike Dunleavy, Troy Murphy and Roy Hibbert, on the other hand, came out and played a nice 18 minutes — then got smacked in the mouth and wilted.

When the Pacers played a scrappy version of this game, they looked like they were ready to upset a team on the road. For the first quarter-and-a-half, the Pacers double-teamed with a purpose. They swarmed the Kings ball-handlers, swiped at the ball and forced turnovers. In fact, in the first half of the game, they forced 14 turnovers. On offense, they moved the ball well, found open jumpers and put the Kings defensive rotations on their heels. They made the Kings indecisive, which is the best thing you can do against a young team. And the Kings are very young. Seven of the ten guys that played in this game for Sacramento are 23-years-old or younger.

With a young team, you need to get them frustrated early, maintain a manageable deficit or flustering lead at halftime and then come out in the third quarter and bury them early to get them yelling at each other and playing selfishly on offense. You have to turn them into a collection of individuals instead of letting them come together as a team. This is what the Pacers started to do.

Unfortunately for the Pacers, they allowed the Kings second unit to take over this game in the second quarter and rescue Sacramento from this plan. Beno Udrih came in and continued his hot shooting. They let Jason Thompson dominate inside in the second quarter. The Pacers got lazy on offense and stopped moving the ball around the Kings defense. Instead, they force-fed Danny Granger and made him try to win this first half rec-league style. But that doesn’t work in the NBA.

The rest, you know, is pretty much history. The Pacers made one big push in the third quarter to get back into the game. After Tyreke Evans picked up his fourth foul, Indy went on a 15-2 run. The Kings effort became stagnant while the Pacers rode the hot hand of … this can’t be right … Earl Watson?

Seriously, Earl Watson?

Now this is the problem with this Pacers team that I mentioned before. Sure, Granger is great. I mean, he’s really impressive. I watched Kevin Durant torch this Kings team for 37 points a couple of weeks ago. Last night, I watched Granger go off for 33 points against the Kings. And I honestly can’t tell the difference between the two talents. They’re basically the same skill-set with the exact same abilities. The difference is that Granger settles for jumpers more often than he should, and Durant settles for nothing but his opponent’s soul.

My guess on the reason for this is the malaise that hovers around this team. Mike Dunleavy is supposed to be the second or third gunman on the Conseco knoll. However, he moves like his dad. Maybe his knee is healed and maybe he just needs to get back in shape before he gets his quickness back, but neither of those things have happened yet. He moves slowly and is a liability on the court because of it. Troy Murphy looked like one of the more useless power forwards you could find. He didn’t look like he could create a single basket on his own.

And then you have guys like Roy Hibbert and T.J. Ford.

I actually like Hibbert a lot and think he can be a nice version of Rasho Nesterovic (that’s a compliment, not an insult). But he’s not a good option to guard guys like Jason Thompson and Spencer Hawes. When they pull him away from the basket, his usefulness plummets.

roy hibberts value around the hoop

But I’d still take Roy Hibbert away from the basket over what I saw from TJ Ford. Mostly, it’s unfair to criticize him because he was going against someone twice his size in Tyreke Evans. Evans obliterated him on the court to such an impressive degree that he wasn’t seen from in the final 20 minutes of the game. Not only that, but he also attempted just four shots the entire game. And didn’t hit any of them.

The saving graces from this game were Jeff Foster’s work on the boards, Dahntay Jones’ aggressive nature on offense (that was weird to type) and Earl Watson making the Kings pay for trying to guard him with Sergio Rodriguez.

If you heard before this season started that a Kings blogger would feel sorry for you around the beginning of December, you would have assumed there was either a lethargic feel to this team or a Larry Bird stroke that made him decide to re-sign Jamaal Tinsley.

I don’t know what to say about this Pacers team to cheer you up. You have Granger who is a phenomenal talent but even he looks downtrodden after a month of play.

Ugh.

Imagine what he’ll be thinking about his teammates come March…

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Indiana Pacers @ Sacramento Kings
Wednesday, December 2
10:00 PM EST
Arco Arena
Oakland, California

Pacers vs. Kings
6-9 (9th) Record 8-8 (10th)
Lost 2 Streak Won 3
-3.60 (20th) Avg Scoring Margin +0.31 (16th)
98.9 (19th) Points Per Game 104.6 (5th)
101.3 (26th) Offensive Rating 109.6 (8th)
105.0 (11th) Defensive Rating 109.3 (22nd)
47.4% (24th) eFG% 51.4% (9th)
48.2 (10th) Opponent's eFG% 50.2 (22nd)
97.6 (2nd) Pace 94.8 (8th)

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

Five things to know about the Kings.

1. As discussed earlier, Tyreke Evans has been sensational. 18.8 ppg, 5.0 rpg, 4.5 apg and 1.3 spg along with 44.6% from the field. Who does that as a rookie? Some people will claim he is really just a combo guard masquerading as a point, and his shot selection as well as his not-ready-for-primetime jumpshot have been been negatives at times. But he has definite playmaking ability and can run the offense in lieu of calling his own number. Chris Paul and Steve Nash he is not. Think closer to Derrick Rose and Tony Parker — a point guard who will hurt you more with penetration than anything else. Plus, Ben Udrih has been playing high-caliber ball so far this season. And trust me, that previous sentence is something I never thought I would type.

2. The Kings, a team many predicted to finish with the worst record in the NBA, are now 8-8 overall and a silly 7-2 at home. The Arco Arena crowds might not be full or back to CWebb-era levels of uproarious. But much like Oakland the other night, Sacramento is once again re-gaining its rep as one of the tougher places in the league to play. And if the team gets off to hot start this evening, expect the fan noise and energy to become a factor.

3. The Kings have been doing all this overachieving without the services of Kevin Martin, the team’s best player over the past three years and a guy who could be considered the Danny Granger of the Western Conference. Both play on teams that garner almost no national interest aside from their individual scoring abilities. Both are long-range assassins. And both are guys who continue to get praised by those who don’t follow their teams closely (i.e., most people) even when they’re scuffling. Look, I know Danny has been having issues with first his heel and now his knee. And I’m more than aware of how poorly the offensive “talent” surrounding him has been for most of this season. But none of that is reason to hoist up nearly 9 three-point attempts per game — especially when you’re not even making them consistently. This was discussed in more depth earlier today, but it bears repeating. Get to the hoop more. It will be glorious.

4. Sacramento looks a little bit like Indy in its front court in the sense that they have some young, inconsistent bigs with promise. I liked Jason Thompson last year, but I wasn’t positive he would develop into NBA starter material — at least not this quickly. Well, he certainly looks to be more than capable of manning the PF spot in Sacto these days, piling up double-doubles and even throwing up the occasional eye-popping 22/14-line like he had the other nigh against New Orleans. Spencer Hawes, on the other hand, has been good, but shaky … sort of like Roy Hibbert. It’s always troubling to see a guy put up 24/9 one night and then only 4/5 the next. But he is still only 21 and terms like “Brook Lopez-level upside” have been thrown around. Is he still evolving at a steady pace? Watch for that tonight. They also have another guy named Jon Brockman, who is a fan favorite throughout the Great Northwest after playing college ball at Washington, but I’m not even sure he is worth caring about at this point. Just and energy/hustle guy, who probably won’t hurt the Pacers tonight. If he does, Indy might have more problems than I thought.

5. The Kings made headlines when they drafted Omri Casspi this summer, making him the first Israeli-born player to ever play in the NBA. That was a great story to hear, sure, but I never figured this guy could actually ball. Not like this anyway. Turns out, however, that he’s beyond solid. Love his game and, at only 21-years-old, he has the presence and demeanor of a six-year vet. His future looks bright long-term and, in the short-term, he is also having a big impact. He can do a lot of those tough-to-define things that Mike Dunleavy does in terms of facilitating fluid motion and creating offense. And he can also call his own number. From what I’ve seen, Omri should probably be a bigger part of the Kings offense. Let’s hope it doesn’t start tonight.

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