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New Jersey Nets

Great pass by Lance Stephenson to find a streaking-like-Victor-Cruz Paul George to put the exclamation point on a wonderful third quarter by the Pacers. George does the rest, catching the outlet in stride, taking one power dribble (which really ties the dunk together) before turning his back to the rim with disdain while bringing he ball down so he can better unleash some spring-loaded fury on the rim. Wowzers.

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Wanna know how tough the last five games were for the Pacers? Before those games stared, Indy had played the 3rd easiest schedule in the NBA. Adding those five games jumped them up to the middle of the pack (15th) – and the win in Orlando Sunday gave them a winning (3-2) record over the 5-game stretch. Tuesday night in Indy brings either a respite – or a trap – in the form of the New Jersey Nets. It’s time for another Twitter video preview – I’ll give you my thoughts in 140 seconds or less.

You can follow Jared Wade (@8pts9secs) and I (@TimDonahue8p9s) during the game on Twitter for the Pacers’ side. From the Nets side, keep up with Devin Kharpertian  (@uuords) and Justin DeFeo (@JustinDeFeo), and be sure to check out our True Hoop sister site: NetsAreScorching.com.

I’m gonna go ahead and apologize to Devin and Justin for butchering the pronunciation of their names. Also need to apologize for trying not to make it seem like a good thing that Marshon Brooks is injured, then doing it anyway.

Maybe I should write a script before I record these things. Naaaah.

For my fellow stat geeks and obsessive-compulsives, I give you the fact sheets.

Pacer Fact Sheet

Nets Fact Sheet

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It was a tale of two halves. And by that, I mean they played two halves of basketball. Twenty-four minutes each, which combined was roughly 45 minutes more than anyone watching should have been watching.

The last couple were interesting. I’ll give the game that. I wouldn’t go so far as to say they were good basketball by any means, but true to the calendar heading under which they were played, there was a decidedly March Madness vibe: scrappy, unpredictable and full of weird things that really shouldn’t be happening when two teams are playing high-level hoops.

Case in point: Sasha Vujacic hit 3 three-pointers in the final 3 minutes. Sundiata Gaines, who dropped a career-high 18 points on 11 shots, hit another. They watched an 11-point lead dissolve and while, sure, Sasha was in a zone, it really should not be that hard to make those desperation comeback shots a little more difficult given how poorly the Nets usually create open looks.

But while the Pacers almost coughed up the game in the final minutes, they won it in the third quarter, outscoring New Jersey 29-17 and holding them to 24.1% shooting (7-for-29). Danny Granger — finally — rediscovered his shooting stroke, making 2 of this 3 shots in the quarter and adding a few points at the line. Granger added 10 more in the fourth to give the captain 17 points in the second half. This was especially nice to see for Pacers fans considering that Danny missed his first 6 shots of the game, which at the time meant he had bottomed out at 14 for his last 48 field goal attempts. That’s a 29.2% clip over nearly 14 quarters. He eventually hit one before the half, foreshadowing his strong second 24 minutes, but when the team’s primary scorer comes out so flat and the entire team follows suit by managing a mere 15 points in the first quarter, there really doesn’t seem to be a lot of urgency to make it to this whole postseason thing.

Good work pulling away in the third and then not completely shooting yourself in the foot late, but, really, more than 70 games into the season this is more troubling than anything.

Looking back to the game’s beginning, there was very little quality basketball being played by Indiana, or New Jersey honestly, in the first two quarters. Vujacic was causing problems for the Pacers for one stretch early as well. That bad. Then Sudiata Gaines got in on the act. Kris Humphries was rebounding everything, snatching 10 boards off the window, including 3 on the offensive end.

It’s not like the Nets were doing anything spectacular. Indiana was just giving no resistance and certainly not putting forth the energy you would expect from a team in the Pacers’ position.

Defensively, Darren Collison spent much of the half much like he has spent much of the season: out of position. As Zach Lowe of SI’s The Point Forward noted, Dahntay Jones at one point left Anthony Morrow, a career 45.3% three-point shooter, to double Kris Humphries, a 34.5% shooter from between 10-15 feet this season, despite the fact that (a) Humphries wasn’t even in the paint, and (b) Tyler Hansbrough was in fine position to guard Humphries. And when guys weren’t doing things like leaving Morrow open for no real reason, Morrow stayed busy getting Paul George into foul trouble.

Really, the only thing that allowed Indiana to trail only 44-40 at the half was that the Nets are the Nets. They shot an ugly 1-for-9 from behind the arc in the first two quarters and it wasn’t as if there were any great defensive rotations or hard close-outs from the Pacers that caused the errant accuracy. Again, if the Nets weren’t the Nets, it could have been worse — and it was at one point when New Jersey was up 12 — given just how anemic indiana’s offense was.

The whole team shot an depressing-but-not-particularly-unusual 39.5% through the first two quarters, not to mention committing 9 turnovers, there was little proof of life early. It was starting to look like David Stern really should just let whichever deserving Western Conference team finishes 9th have the East’s final playoff spot.

I’m sure nearly every single player on this team is looking forward to playing in the playoffs — most for the first time — but at this point, watching a game like this, it’s hard to see anything but four blowouts happening when they get there.

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I’ve maintained the belief that the Pacers could not only still make the playoffs but also turn this mess around to the point that they might even seem like a decent basketball team come April. Sometimes when I type that or say it out loud it sounds completely foolish.

But there is one real reason for this.

@New York
vs San Antonio
@ Atlanta
@ Philadelphia
vs Dallas
vs Chicago
@ LA Clippers
@ Golden State
@ Portland
@ Denver
vs Orlando

That was their January schedule prior to the Conseco beat down they gave the Nets.

The only three non-playoff teams on that 11-team list are Philly, Golden State and the Clips —  and the Blake Griffin Show has made LA’s JV squad into a legitimate team that’s playing excellent ball of late so we can’t even really count them as cupcake city. Basically, Indiana started off the month playing four excellent teams and the rather-good Knicks with a road game in Philly being their only “rest” game. Then they had to go on a four-game West Coast road trip, which is not easy no matter how good you are. Then they get the nice home-coming gift of Dwight Howard and Orlando. Welcome home, guys.

There is no excuse for losing 9 of 11 games — particularly when you lose playing as poorly as Indiana did for much of that stretch. But that said. if a team is ever going to start spiraling the drain irreversibly for a stretch, you might expect a brutal schedule like this to be part of the equation.

Stomping the Nets doesn’t change anything. This was a very nice win that I think this team desperately needed. Mike Dunleavy Jr. scored a franchise record 236 points on 87-for-23 shooting and Paul George played basketball like the harp of an angel sounds. They can each be proud of those accomplishments.

But until they can do this (well … not this … but win) a few more times, they can’t think anything is better. This was essentially a no-win game: you lose to the Nets at home and you’re an even bigger laughingstock; you beat the Nets at home and of course you beat the Nets at home. They’re the Nets.

Tomorrow is another tough one in Chicago, but Derrick Rose is fortunately a little under the weather with some ulcers so maybe he will take the second night of a back-to-back off. Then it’s Toronto, @Cleveland, Portland, @New Jersey, @Miami, Charlotte, @Milwaukee, vs Miami and @Detroit leading into the All-Star break.

That’s not very daunting, and the team currently sits a game and half back of the 8th seed at 17-26.

If they can indeed start turning this around, they should go at least .500 over those next 1o games and maybe even win 6 out of 10. Who knows? After this blowout, I’m feeling irrationally generous.

The rough stretch of schedule is officially over.

Now we see what these guys are about.

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