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New Orleans Hornets

On Wednesday afternoon, the Houston Rockets, New Orleans Hornets, Indiana Pacers, and New Jersey Nets pulled off a four-team blockbuster, swapping several key contributors.

Rahat Huq of Red94, Ryan Schwan of Hornets247, Sebastian Pruiti of Nets are Scorching and I all got together to provide assessments of the outgoing players from their respective ballclubs.

Rahat Huq of Red94 on Trevor Ariza

I’ve written a comprehensive series of essays on Trevor Ariza entitled ‘Assessing Ariza,’ evaluating his strengths, weaknesses, and player potential.  (Parts 1, 2, and 3)

In short, he’s an ideal role-player who thrives off the ball, spotting up or using his superior athleticism to slash to the basket.  Now having the benefit of playing next to Chris Paul, I expect Ariza to return to form from his playoff run with the Lakers – he really took off after the acquisition of Kevin Martin; Ariza is at his best playing next to dominant players.

If you’re hoping Trevor will grow into his physical gifts and emerge as a primary option, you’re going to be disappointed.  While a capable ball-handler against light pressure, he doesn’t have the handles to create for himself off the dribble.  He also has extremely poor footwork and body control.  Even worse, Ariza has an oddly inflated sense of entitlement–possibly due to his Lakers pedigree–leading him to force bad shots and make poor decisions; Ariza struggles when needing to think on the basketball court.

The issue of Ariza’s defense is a contentious one.  His reputation precedes him, but his is a reckless, instinctual approach, garnering him gaudy steals totals but often leaving his teammates scrambling to rotate after blown coverage.  Still, this manner can be conducive to forcing tempo if that’s your cup of tea.

All in all, assuming expectations remain reasonable, I think the Hornets will be very pleased next year with Trevor Ariza.  While his struggles with the Rockets are well documented, playing next to Chris Paul is a situation tailor-made for a player of Trevor’s skillset and abilities – in returning to his former role with the Lakers (next to a superstar guard), I think Trevor will really thrive.

Ryan Schwan of Hornets247 on Darren Collison

After watching him for a season, I’m comfortable claiming that Darren Collison is the proud owner of the “fastest man in the NBA” title.   When he played, the Hornets pace increased by five possessions, as he exploded up court every chance he could.  Considering the heavy-footed players he was dragging with him up the court, it is a pretty amazing feat.

Collison started off his rookie season pretty rough, shooting poorly from deep, and struggling valiantly to figure out how to score over the faster, taller athletes he met in the paint.  In fact, for the first month, a pick and roll run by Collison typically had very little going for it.  That all changed, however, when Chris Paul went down.  Given long minutes, constant coaching by Paul, and confidence that never seemed to waver, Collison started deploying a stutter step and mid-range pull up jumper that made him deadly on the pick and roll by the end of February.  His long-range shot, which was amazing in college, began to settle in, and soon he was deadly from three, both as a spot-up shooter, and as a guy who could pull up off the dribble and knock it down.

As a passer, Collison is excellent in the open court, solid at the pick and roll, but tends to struggle in the pick and pop.  He’s great at driving into the paint and laying the ball off to a big man for a dunk or finding the roller, but when he has to find the open men on the perimeter, he still can get into trouble.  As a result, though he gets a lot of assists, he also gets a lot of turnovers.  He also has the tendency to be called for a carry once or twice a game, though that was fading by the end of last season.

Defensively is where Collison has his biggest problems.  He makes Allen Iverson look fat – and unlike mighty mouse Chris Paul, he’s also not physically strong at all.  That leaves him to be exploited terribly in post ups, and because of his lightness, a good screen or series of screens can take him out the picture on defense despite his recovery speed.

As a team leader, Collison was remarkable.  He was barking commands to veterans like Okafor and David West from the start of the season.  On more than one occasion I saw him get on teammates for not being where they were supposed to be.  He’s intelligent, knows how to get a team into its offense, and it shows.  He’s also cold-blooded.  He had two game-winning shots last season, and another three that put a nail in a run the other team was making to come back.  He doesn’t shy from that big shot – and he has a decent track record of making it.

In the end, I feel Collison will be an exciting-as-hell, explosive scorer in the mold of Tony Parker, and most nights will outscore his opponent.  At the same time, I’d also expect his opponent to regularly score more than is usual.

Sebastian Pruiti of Nets are Scorching on Courtney Lee

Courtney Lee is a guy I like and with Avery Johnson coming to New Jersey, I thought he was the perfect Avery Johnson guy.  He shoots the three ok (last years numbers are too low for his shooting ability in my honest opinion), he can penetrate and get out and run, but where he is most valuable is on the defensive end.  Courtney is both a very good one on one and team defender, and he works very hard on that end.  Lee doesn’t have a high ceiling  (and that is why I suspect that the Nets held onto Terrence Williams), and the player he is now is the player he will be years from now.  That’s not a bad thing, but there is very little room for him to grow.

Me on Troy Murphy

Offensively: The short answer is that Murph is a 6′11″ Steve Kerr.  He is an extremely efficient scorer, and serves as a safety valve for the offense.  I can see him being a very nice player with your personnel, offensively, as he is a low-usage guy.  The Pacers use him to float at the top of the key, and he took all but like 10 of his three’s from the arc (very few corner threes).  He has no post game to speak of, and he’s a solid passer, but not a great high post guy.

He does a good job of reading his defender, and is very good at reading the closeout, putting the ball on the floor and finishing at the rim.  He doesn’t get many offensive rebounds because of (a) where he plays and (b) his lack of footspeed, but could get more if he played closer to the basket.  However, I think you’d be an absolute fool to play him — offensively — in any other way than the way O’Brien used him.  Look at his eFG and TS numbers the last three years under Obie vs. his time in GS.  He plays completely within his skill set (almost to a fault), and I have never — never — seen a guy with better shot selection than Troy.  Very, very nice complementary shooter to have on your team.

Defensively: He is definitely a liability, and that is because he’s slow and physically weak.  He gets lots of defensive rebounds, but he doesn’t really control the glass the way most guys who pull down the volume of boards he gets.  He is not a block out guy, but has a good nose for the ball.  One-on-one he will never be better than, well, bad, but he can learn and will follow team defensive concepts.  In other words, if the opponent decides to target him, then he’ll get beaten, but he won’t blow defensive team schemes.  Overall, your team’s defensive performance will drag when he’s on the floor.

Lockerroom and Fit: He appears likable enough, but not really a presence.  Seems to get along with everybody well enough.  There were rumors last year that he wasn’t happy about Hansbrough eating into his playing time, but they were way external to the organization and I never believed them.  As far as fitting with your big guys, he should be a great fit with both Lopez and Favors offensively, and probably a poor fit defensively with Lopez, but pretty good with Favors – assuming I’ve got a reasonable handle on their respective games.

Here’s the most important part – you can’t look at the 14 & 11 and think he’s that traditional double-double guy.  He is very much someone who accentuates his positives, but doesn’t improve on his negatives.  He is not a physical player, at all.  He is who he is, but that can be a good thing.  Assuming Avery doesn’t choke on his defense, I suspect he’ll love the guy because he is perhaps the most reliably consistent player I’ve seen in three-plus decades of watching the NBA.

He will hit shots, he will get some boards, and he will suck on defense.

He will score, but he is a safety valve – not a primary or secondary option.  It sounds strange, but I think coaches like that because it’s something they don’t have to worry about.  They put him out there, and work on everything else.   This is why he can have some big games and not really make a difference.  He’s kind of a like an offensive lineman.  He can have a great  individual game, but if the rest of the line sucks, it won’t matter.  At the same time, if he’s great and the rest of the line is great, nobody will notice him.

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At noon, I was hoping the Pacers would be able to re-sign Earl Watson.  By 2 pm, I was absolutely giddy over the fact that Darren Collison was going to be a Pacer, and all it cost us was Troy Murphy and the willingness to absorb the last two years of James Posey’s contract.

Collison had been a target for the Pacers most of the summer, and prior to the draft I had contacted Ryan Schwan of Hornets247 to get his take on the rookie PG from UCLA.  Here’s what he had to say:

The Good: Collison is a cold-blooded killer.  He doesn’t get flustered, doesn’t make mistakes at the end of games, and he leads his team vocally.  Put him in a pick and roll, and you’d be hardpressed to find a guy as good as him at getting to the hoop and finishing or dumping off to bigs in the paint.  Early in the season, he was a turnover waiting to happen as he drove into trouble and lost the ball a lot, but then he started to use a mid-range pull-up in march and april – and his shot was golden off of that.  He’s an excellent shooter from anywhere, and Chris Paul calls him the fastest man in the NBA.  As you’d expect, in transition he can’t be caught.

The Bad: Outside of pick and rolls, he’s not the best at improvising, frequently making a decision before his drive, and then not adapting well when something unexpected occurs.  His defense is abysmal.  He’s fast, and he gets some steals while staying in front of his man, but he can be outmuscled easily, shot over, and it’s not hard to rub him off with a solid screen.

Summary:  Collison is exciting as hell, and just based on what I saw over the course of last year, I expect him to become a major offensive wrecking ball – his FG% essentially increased every month as he figured things out.  In fact, I tend to refer to him with my friends as a team-oriented version of Allen Iverson.  I also fully expect him to be exploited defensively by the other team every game – and I’m not sure there’s anything anyone will be able to do about it.

So, plenty to be excited about offensively, and some to be concerned about defensively.  Still, he’s young, and we got him for a great price.  His overall Synergy defensive numbers are comparable to guys like Ty Lawson and Eric Maynor, and I suspect Pacer fans will find him an improvement at the defensive end over all of the Point Guards we’ve played over the last three years – with the exception of Earl Watson.

Thanks again to Ryan for his input.

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Game #54 Recap: Faux, Faux, Faux

by Jared Wade on February 20, 2010 at 4:24 pm

Indiana Pacers 101 – New Orleans Hornets 107

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Roy Hibbert played pretty well in the first quarter. No one else did. And the team for what feels like the 54th time this season got run off the court in the first half. You really start to wonder how these grown men who call themselves professional basketball players can collectively just not show up to play. The effort was horrible and the execution was worse. You would think the embarrassment of going down 11 points in the opening period would be enough to prompt some of these guys to drive to the hoop and try to make things happen. But apparently, even after a long All-Star break away from the day-to-day futility of being a Pacer, the motivation — and talent — is just not there.

After falling down 19 at the half, the Pacers did dust themselves off in the locker room and enter the third ready to make what we refer to around these parts as a “faux comeback.” (Hence the Tim Donahue-created, Moses Malone-inspired title for this post.)

Danny started showing why he should still be considered on of the better scorers in the league (despite his usual best efforts to be seen as rather overrated by the rest of the NBA fan base) and dropped 13 in the quarter, which surprisingly included 4 FGs that were not three-pointers. This and a pair of nice, yet unexpected, drives to the hoop from Brandon Rush and another couple of layups from Earl Watson helped cut the Hornets lead to 12 going into the fourth, giving Indy a puncher’s chance to win this thing.

And punch they did. Of course, it had all the hallmarks of a faux comeback as the Pacers, even after cutting the lead to 4 at one point, could not get the stops they needed after key buckets and couldn’t get the buckets they needed after key stops. Let’s give a bunch of credit to Mike Dunleavy who player his best offensive quarter since … since … I don’t even know. 2007 maybe. Anyway, he went 5/6 with two huge threes and a baseline layup that even had a cynical bloke like myself thinking Indy might be able to win this thing.

Alas, that obviously wasn’t going to happen.

A Granger jumper cut the deficit to just 4 with just over a minute to play, but on the next trip down, Dunleavy inexcusably let Peja Stojakovic drive right past him. The defense had to rotate to stop PEJA GODDAMN STOJAKOVIC from finishing with a layup at the hoop and the usual jump-shooting specialist turned into a play-maker, finding a wide-open David West at the top of the key. And David buried it. Of course. I mean, Chris Paul calls the guy the “17-Foot Assassin.” And Indy let Peja destroy their defense and find the guy for … wait for it … a 17-foot jumper.

Other than “Faux Comeback Ended by Key Breakdown on Critical Play of the Game” the only takeaways from this game are that Dannt had a good second half (8/12 from the floor, 1/3 from three, and 4/4 from the line) and that Junior has a pulse.

Good times.

Can’t wait to do it again tonight.

Pacers @ Hornets
101 Score 107
1 Largest Lead 21
97.1 Offensive Efficiency 104.8
47.3 eFG% 53.1
43.5% (40/92) FG% 50.7% (41/81)
36.9% (7/19) 3PT% 30.8% (4/13)
73.7% (14/19) FT% 69.7% (23/33)
44 (12) Rebounds (Off.) 44 (7)
16 (17) Turnovers (Points Led To) 16 (13)
47 Points in the Paint 42
12 Fast Break Points 20
17 Assists 16

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