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John Salmons

The Pacers held off the Bucks 89-88 in Conseco last night, putting themselves within two games (Indiana wins/Milwaukee losses) of eliminating the Deer.  Charlotte lost in Orlando last night, meaning the “Magic Number” for a return to the Playoffs is down four with five games to plays.

So things are looking pretty…

… you know what …

… considering what happened immediately following the last two times I confidently projected the Pacers in the playoffs, I’m just gonna say that all is lost and these guys have no chance and they’ll lose out and I heard from a guy who talked to this woman who dated this guy whose cousin’s nephew’s uncle drives past Conseco on the way to work everyday that most of the players and coaches already have their vacations planned and have already purchased their airline tickets for the day after the last regular season game.

Anyway.

While watching the Pacers get a win that will in no way, shape or form make me say that they’re headed to the playoffs, I was struck by the opponent, and what the Blue-and-Gold could possibly learn from Milwaukee’s situation and experiences.

The Best Defenses are Systemic

Milwaukee has the fourth best defense in the Association, and they’ve done this despite the fact that virtually every key player has missed significant numbers of games this seasons.  They’ve done it despite the fact that their defensive anchor — Andrew Bogut — has been less than 100% while recovering from last year’s catastrophic arm injury.

Skiles’ squad has been able to do this because they play with intelligence, they play with tenacity but, most importantly, they play together.  Everybody knows where they fit and where to be, and that allows both a high level of trust and makes the “next man up” philosophy more workable.

The Pacers were showing signs of this early in the year, but it fell apart in January and hasn’t been back since.  If they truly want to become a top defensive team, then the players have to understand that it can only happen as a unit.

You Have to Play at Both Ends

Despite having a top defense, the Bucks will miss the playoffs and currently have only a .400 winning percentage.  The other nine teams that populate the top third in Defensive Efficiency have won at a .650 clip (53 wins over an 82 game season), and the second worst record is Philly’s .526.  This is because Milwaukee’s offense is abysmal.

The Bucks trot out the second worst offense in the league, barely scoring more than a point per possession.  Some of it is talent, but there really appears to be no semblance of a plan.  Skiles does a lot of good things as a coach, but offensive game planning isn’t one of them.  Milwaukee finished 23rd in each of their first two years under the Plymouth, Indiana, native, and no team coached by Skiles for a full season has rated higher than 21st in Offensive Efficiency.

The lesson here is that you simply cannot just give away one end of the floor.  The Pacers had first hand experience with this in December, when they went 5-10 despite the fact that they were in the top five in defensive efficiency for the month while scoring less than a point per possession.  However, it’s always good to have such lessons reinforced — particularly at the expense of others.

This should also be a consideration when looking at the next coach.  Mike Brown’s name has been bandied about, but this is a guy who freely admits that he spent zero time on offense in his first two years.  Granted, this was largely because of the luxury/limitation of having LeBron James, but a head coach’s primary job is the big-picture game plan.  He is the implementer (and sometimes architect) of the identity.  He must have clear, practical ideas at both ends.  Otherwise, he’s just a high-functioning assistant.

Past Performance Does Not Guarantee Future Results

This time last year, you needed to “fear the deer.”  Milwaukee finished the season 26-11 and were without question the feel-good story of the 2010 NBA season.  Even after losing Bogut to injury, they treated NBA watchers to some playoff excitement.  I found the atmosphere around Game 6 in Milwaukee eerily reminiscent of Game 6 of the 1994 Eastern Conference Finals.  There are really very few more exhilarating feelings in fandom than when your team surprisingly makes a leap into relevance.

Unfortunately, Game 6 in 2010 worked out the same way as Game 6 in 1994 — the upstart hosts fell, eventually losing the series.  Further, what felt like a launching pad turned into a short-lived peak that descended into the very disappointing valley this season has become for the Bucks and their fans.

Some of it is injuries.  Some of it was questionable offseason moves.  Some of it was just the fickle finger of fate.  What this underscores is the fragility of success — even progress — in the NBA.  When something is happening that seems special, or even magical, then it may very well be fleeting.

The 2011 Pacers have not been anywhere near as good or successful (or captured as many imaginations) as the 2010 Bucks, but they will make the playoffs, and that is important.  They cannot take that for granted.

Cap Space and Financial Flexibility Is Only As Valuable As What You Get With It

Though Milwaukee didn’t have nearly as much flexibility last summer as the Pacers will have after this season, they were still able to make some moves.  They traded to get veteran swingman Corey Maggette, added journeyman power forward Drew Gooden, and re-signed John Salmons, their deadline acquisition from the previous spring.

The problem isn’t so much that these moves are unexciting.  It’s that — with the exception of the Salmons re-signing — they don’t really make sense given Milwaukee’s apparent identity.  Maggette is a high-usage scorer and ball-stopper.  Drew Gooden is working on his tenth team, and his eighth in the last four seasons.  Neither has ever seemed integral — or even like a contributor — to their teams’ success.  Even Salmons is arguably problematic — a low-efficiency swing man who has shown flashes of winning basketball, but nothing he’s sustained.  Now, the Bucks are on the hook for a combined $80 million for these three guys in the seasons to follow this one.

Either Bird or his successor need approach the Pacers upcoming financial flexibility with a good understanding not only of who they want to be — their ideal identity — but of who they are now — their current identity.  It is imperative to comprehend the difference between the two and how to fill those gaps.

They can’t look at only at missing attributes and find players that have those skills.  They have to understand the attributes and the system that will give them their ideal identity.  The decision-makers will have to accurately decide who to keep and who to add and how those will all fit together within the framework of a team.

Milwaukee was looking for more offense, and they added capable offensive players in Maggette and Gooden.  However, those players, at least to me, are poor fits for the team.  They are disconnects in a game that is, at its core, about connections.

Again, the Pacers are experiencing “disconnects” of their own firsthand.  The current starting lineup of Collison/George/Granger/Hansbrough/Hibbert is arguably the most talented fivesome on the roster and would be considered the “line up of the future” by many fans and other observers.  However, it has been extremely unsuccessful.

Coming into last night’s game, that unit had been outscored by 45 points in their 245 minutes together.  They were poor defensively, allowing almost 111 points per 100 possessions.  Offensively, they only score only 100 per 100.

Their starts have been their downfall.  In 111 1st quarter minutes, they have been outscored by 59 points, “losing” 16 of the 24 1st quarter rotations they’ve played.  They score only 88 points per 100 in their stints at the start of the game, but they give up 116 per 100.

And it’s getting worse.  Looking at the seven games prior to the Milwaukee game (3/19 @ Memphis through 3/30 vs. Detroit), they’ve been outscored by 37 points in their 45 minutes on the floor in the opening stanza.  For every 100 possessions, they’ve scored 77 points while allowing 120.  Last night against Milwaukee, they had scored 10 points, made six turnovers, and trailed by two by the time Mike Dunleavy entered the game at the 4:18 mark of the first to break up the unit.

They simply don’t fit together.  Granger, Hibbert, Hansbrough, and Collison are all between 22% and 28% in usage, and Paul George largely stays out of the way.  Worst of all, they don’t have any connective tissue between their games.   When ISOs or mid-posts are called for Danny,  the other four stand and watch.  Same with post-ups for Hibbert or the pick-and-roll/pop action between Collison and Hansbrough.  They basically run one-option sets that are easily defensible.

The powers that be must understand whether this is a permanent issue or if it can evolve beyond the current state.  If it is more permanent — and I think there are limitations on how far these five players will be able to adapt to each other — then decisions must be made about how to adjust that situation.

This concept will be crucial in trades and free agent acquisitions.  The Pacers have issues at both ends of the court, but that doesn’t just mean that bringing in a scorer or a lock-down defender will fix the problem.  In fact, I’d argue that if you bring in another high-usage scorer, it will be absolutely necessary to move one of the current high usage players.

The Pacers have a lot of work to do, and a lot of decisions to make.

Though it’s crucial the front office, coaching staff, and players have a crystal clear understanding of themselves, they must not intently gaze at their own navels.  There’s a lot to be learned by looking up and around at what’s happening to other teams — and there may not be a better place to start than the once-progressing, now-stagnant Milwaukee Bucks.

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Game #20 Preview: Buck Hunting

by Jared Wade on December 8, 2010 at 2:49 pm · 0 comments

Indiana Pacers @ Milwaukee Bucks
Wednesday, December 8, 2010
8:00 pm EST
Bradley Center
Milwaukee, Wisconsin

The 2010-11 Pacers look like the 2009-10 Bucks. Last year, Milwaukee was the darling team that everyone dug, mostly due to its quick, electric young point guard and its fundamentally sound, rapidly evolving center. Well, Brandon Jennings may have had more to do with the Bucks’ rise last year than Darren Collison has for this season’s Pacers, but the speedy floor general along with the still-improving Roy Hibbert have been the biggest factors.

And now, as Milwaukee tailspins amid preseason expectations, the Pacers have taken their moniker as Central Division surprise artists. Interestingly, they are also doing it the same way: with defense. The Bucks were the leagues 2nd best defensive squad last season, only allowing 103.1 points per 100 possessions and only allowing opponents to shoot an eFG% of 48.6% (good for 8th best in the NBA). This year’s Pacers are the 7th best defensive team in the NBA, allowing an even-better 102.8 points per 100 possessions while surrendering an eFG% of 46.8% (good for 3rd best).

This year’s Bucks team is similarly tough in terms of allowing buckets — they are 5th best with 101.8 points per 100. But the reason they are struggling so mightily to win games is that their offense has fallen off a cliff. In terms of both points per possession and eFG%, they are the worst offense in the NBA.

A lot of this can probably be attributed to the struggles of John Salmons. The great Bucks blog Brew Hoop had a good post detailing exactly why Salmons might be playing so much worse than he did for Milwaukee last season. For Pacers fans hoping their team wins tonight, this is the key takeaway.

What does seem clear is Salmons’ importance to the Bucks’ bottom line. The former Miami star has averaged 17.0 ppg, 3.7 apg, and 3.9 rpg on .467/.435/.758 shooting in seven Bucks wins, but just 10.2 ppg, 2.7 apg, and 3.3 rpg on some seriously terrible .318/.306/.771 shooting in 12 losses.

If Indiana can keep Salmons in check tonight in Milwaukee, that would seem to be the first step to beating the Bucks, something the Pacers couldn’t even do on their own court on November 5 — despite the fact that their best player, Andrew Bogut, didn’t even dress that night. In fact, beating the Bucks isn’t something the Pacers have done much of at all even dating back to last season. They were swept in their four meetings last season and are only 3-7 in their last 10 match-ups.

Of course, the November loss came before we knew that this year’s Indy team might be good and before we knew that this year’s Bucks team might be bad. Now, both teams are gleefully or painfully (respectively) aware of their current situations.

Whether this can reverse the recent fortune for Indiana vs. Milwaukee is unknown.

But we will find out in a few hours.

Pacers vs Bucks By the Numbers

Bucks vs Pacers
7-13 (10th) Record (Conf Rank) 10-9 (7th)
5-5 (Home) Home / Road Records 5-4 (Road)
Lost 1 Current Streak Won 1
5-0 Last 5 Head-to-Head 0-5
-2.00 (20th) Point Differential (Rank) +3.00 (9th)
99.6 (30th) Offensive Rating (Rank) 106.0 (18th)
44.1% (30th) eFG% (Rank) 50.8% (10th)
101.8 (5th) Defensive Rating (Rank) 102.8 (7th)
48.7% (11th) Opponent's eFG% (Rank) 46.8% (3rd)
90.8 (23rd) Pace (Rank) 94.6 (8th)

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Over on NBA Playbook, Sebastian Pruiti broke down a key play from late in Indiana’s loss to Milwaukee yesterday. Honestly, when a team that has won 11 of its last 12 games has a home date with the Pacers, the real “game clinching” play is probably the opening tip, but Sebastian does give us a nice look at how the Bucks pounded the final nail into the coffin.

Here’s the set-up:

When the Bucks entered the fourth quarter against the Pacers, it looked like it was going to be an easy 12 minutes.  The Bucks were leading by 14 at the start of the fourth, and have only allowed 62 points to the Pacers.  However, the Pacers decided to make things interesting in the fourth quarter.  In fact, with 2:19 left a Solomon Jones dunk made the score 90-94, cutting the lead to 4 points.  The Bucks were reeling and they needed a bucket to try and put the game away.

Sebastian then shows exactly what happened in full detail, but the gist is that Solomon Jones and Brandon Rush collectively misread/mishandled a simple up-screen from John Salmons that freed Andrew Bogut for a wide-open bucket at the rim.

Rush, by an large, is a pretty good defender — especially by this roster’s standards. He guards his man rather well when he has the ball and, as we saw in the Laker game during the last West Coast trip, he definitely has the chops to slow down even elite scorers.

But he still does slip up on a lot of the more nuanced stuff. He doesn’t fight through screens consistently and often gets caught napping or just out of position. Veterans are all too often able to find free space while he is guarding them by employing some relatively run-of-the-mill cuts. Sometimes, they don’t even need a screen to get open for a good look.

Of course, this probably isn’t the best representation of Brandon failing in this regard — Solomon simply cannot allow a guy like Bogut to get that much separation so close to the hoop. Most of this bucket is probably on Mr. Jones. Still, Brandon is too often involved in multi-player defensive break downs like this, and his defensive development is not going to progress much beyond where it currently is if he cannot make better off-the-ball decisions/reads.

He seems to have all the foot speed, strength and soft skills to learn how to do everything on the defensive end better. He looks like he may have the potential to be a key perimeter presence in a very good defense some day. That, combined with his shooting and his ability to get to the hoop on occasion is what made a lot of Indy fans glad that the rumored deadline deal with the Bobcats never happened.

The rest of this year and the 2010-11 season will be all about him putting it all together.

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Game #30 Recap: Pacers Play the Heel

by Jared Wade on December 30, 2009 at 12:27 pm · 0 comments

Pacers @ Bulls
95 Score 104
2 Largest Lead 19
100.0 Offensive Efficiency 109.5
46.1% eFG% 56.9%
41.1% (37/90) FG% 52.8% (38/72)
37.5% (9/24) 3PT% 60% (6/10)
66.7% (12/18) FT% 91.7% (22/24)
31 (8) Rebounds (Off.) 47 (7)
11 (7) Turnovers (Points Led To) 21 (17)
30 Points in the Paint 20
11 Fast Break Points 11
27 Assists 24
6 Steals 4
1 Blocks 6

Post-Game Essentials: Box Score | PM Game Flow | Play-By-Play | Shot Chart | Behind the Box Score | Indy Star Recap | Cornrows Recap | AP Recap | Pacer’s Digest Post Game

It was another ugly one, folks.

The Pacers came out missing everything and dug themselves a 19-point deficit by the end of the first quarter. Improved accuracy, better defense and an impressive-as-hell Josh McRoberts cameo in the second cut the lead to 4 at the half, and Indy even managed to thief the lead momentarily in the third quarter. But that house of cards was quickly blown down by the sonic boom left in the wake of Derrick Rose — and, oddly, Brad Miller — as they continually got by defenders and scored easily in the final 12 minutes.

More than anything, this game felt like a lot of the undercard wrestling matches I watched as a kid. On Saturday afternoon (or whenever these shows used to be on before the whole Monday Night Raw thing took off in primetime), there would only ever be one or two matches that were actually interesting (much like how last night in the NBA only Cavs/Hawks and perhaps Rockets/Hornets were marquee match ups).

But they still had an hour to fill. So, early in the show, someone like Jake the Snake would square off with an also-ran like The Brooklyn Brawler just to kill 10 minutes in between Cocoa Pebbles and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle action figure commercials.

Jake the Snake would come out to much fanfare and quickly start pounding away on the Brawler. A few punches to the face, a clothesline, a body slam and maybe even a supplex or two. Then, out of nowhere, the Brawler would catch Jake with a nutshot that turned the tide. He would pick Jake up, give em an eye gouge and throw in off the ropes before slamming him to the canvas. He would work Roberts over in the corner for a while, pummeling away on his skull until it looked like we might actually have a legitimate fight on our hands.

But, of course, that was all a ruse. The Brawler was never going to win that fight.

Jake got up, landed a few punches, swept the leg and then waited for the Brooklyn Brawler to get up before unleashing the match-ending DDT to put the lights out.

1-2-3.

Jake the Snake wins. Play the music.

The Pacers did an admirable job of keeping the game close last night during the middle portions, but the beginning and the end all belonged to the Bulls. And I don’t think anyone in the building really thought the Pacers were ever going to seize enough control of the game to take it over and win — even during the brief stretch in the third quarter when they took a 70-68 lead.

In fact, that was the exact moment the wheels fell off as quickly as it inevitably did for the Brooklyn Brawler.

John Salmons, a guy who had recently shot his way out of the Bulls starting lineup by going 26/81 (32.1%) in his last 8 games, hit a three. Dahntay Jones answered with a bucket of his own but the Bulls came back with a flurry of jumpers and free throws that fueled the 16-2 run over the final 6 minutes of the third quarter that ended Indy’s slim chance at a comeback win.

While the defensive lapses that allowed threes/long jumpers to Salmons, Brad Miller and Luol Deng were disheartening, it was the Pacers inability to put up any points up on the other end that all but determined the final outcome before the third quarter even ended. How an offense can so often go so long looking so inept, I’ll never understand, but, sure enough, the Pacers once again managed to go 6 minutes and 51 seconds without making a single field goal. (Two Earl Watson free throws were the only points Indy put up during the 16-2 run.)

The stretch just featured too many wasted possessions for me to recount. Too much standing around. Too many useless dribbles (I’m looking at you on that one Luther Head). Too many non-advantage creating swing passes (I’m looking at you, Coach).

Ultimately, too many bad shots.

And after that futility, all it took was a DDT from Derrick Rose in the form of his 11 fourth-quarter points (on an easy as Sunday morning 5/5 shooting) to complete the predetermined outcome that we all knew was coming even in the first quarter.

My advice to Pacers fans: Eat your vitamins and say your prayers, brother.

Five Bright Spots

(1) Josh McRoberts had a stellar second quarter and a good game overall. His alley-oop/three-pointer/alley-oop sequence was perhaps the highlight of the season. I really wish I was kidding, but I’m not even sure that I am. (OK, the Boston game was the highlight, I suppose, but this was certainly top five.)

(2) DUNKS. There were a bunch of them. Like, to the point Indy looked like a normal NBA team in terms of athleticism and getting easy buckets even. Unfortunately, dunks in the this league are often seen by fans more as signs of flashy, highlight reel decadence than what they really are: Easy shots to make. I’m not saying you can’t win if you can’t dunk (just ask Gregg Popovich how that is done), but those extra 5-6 dunks most teams other than the Pacers seem to get each night equal 10-12 points. That’s a big deal, particularly since guys like TJ Ford and Jeff Foster seem to miss so many layups — layups that many of the other players in the league would be dunking. As far as the Bulls game specifically, the two aforementioned McRoberts oops were the marquee ones, but Roy had a few and so did Solomon Jones. Speaking of…

(3) Solomon Jones. He looked good in his first-ever Pacer start. Only 3 rebounds in 23 minutes is Hibbertesque bad, but 6/9 shooting for 13 points is more than expected. Particularly since he didn’t seem to blow as many defensive assignments as usual, and he actually looked comfortable catching and shooting without hesitation (something that still eludes Tyler and Brandon Rush). Hopefully this endorsement from Coach O’Brien will give him a little confidence and keep him more engaged out there going forward.

(4) Pump fakes. I’m not sure whether it was just the fact that, as Tim Donahue tweeted during the game, “the Bulls are long on stupid,” but they sure did fall for a ton of shot fakes. Dunleavy had a few effective ones, Murph — per usual — did as well and Luther Head had one that just embarrassed the defender. Even Hibbert had some nice little up-and-under thing that I don’t really support him doing since he’s, ya know, 7 foot 2, but was nonetheless productive. I suppose most of this can just be attributed to Chicago employed Tyrus Thomas, but it might have been the best skill I’ve seen the Pacers master so far this season over a 48-minute stretch.

(5) There is no five. Sorry for lying, but I like round numbers. OK … here’s something: We got to see former Pacer fan favorite Brad Miller go by someone off the dribble on multiple occasions for the first time since, let’s say, 2006. Thanks for instigating some nostalgia, Roy Hibbert. And while I’ve got you here, please stop having nights where you miss 60% of your shots, please and thank you. You’re 7’2″, dude.

the brooklyn brawler

He even dresses like Josh McRoberts.

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