Posts tagged as:

New Orleans Hornets

Game #54 Recap: Faux, Faux, Faux

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

Indiana Pacers 101 – New Orleans Hornets 107

————–

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

{ 1 comment }

Game #54 Preview: Just Win a Game

by Jared Wade on February 19, 2010 at 6:44 pm

Indiana Pacers @ New Orleans Hornets
Friday, February 19
8:00 pm EST
New Orleans Arena
New Orleans, Louisiana

————-

The Pacers sure do need a win.

No deals were made before the deadline and the fan base seems to be as frustrated as I can remember. The past few years with the crime and off-court embarrassment were worse, sure, but this is a different kind of disillusionment and frustration. This is a fan base with no faith that the team can win a game. And with good reason.

There isn’t really a ton to say about tonight’s game specifically. The Hornets aren’t that good, and Chris Paul isn’t playing. The Pacers blew a decent chance to beat the Spurs the other night and can hopefully use that disappointment to knock off a non-threatening swarm of Bees tonight in New Orleans. Of course, the Pacers are horrible on the road (6-20 on the year), so every team not named the Nets is a heavy favorite in their own building, but theoretically, this is a very winnable game if Indy can make its shots.

That’s always the big if though, isn’t it?

But c’mon, Indy, let’s give the fans a reason to care — if only for one evening.

Pacers @ Hornets
18-35 (14th) Overall Record (Conf Rank) 28-26 (10th)
6-20 (Road) Home / Road Records 17-9 (Home)
3-7 Record Last 10 Games 4-6
Lost 3 Current Streak Lost 1
1-4 Last 5 Head-to-Head 4-1
-4.91 (28th) Avg Scoring Margin -1.26 (19th)
101.4 (28th) Offensive Rating 106.9 (13th)
43.7% (27th) FG% 45.5% (18th)
48.1% (24th) eFG% 50.0% (13th)
106.5 (14th) Defensive Rating 108.2 (18th)
45.2% (10th) Opponent's FG% 47.4% (25th)
48.8% (9th) Opponent's eFG% 51.4% (24th)
97.5 (2nd) Pace 92.3 (17th)

{ 1 comment }

Game #40 Recap: This One’s On Me. My Bad.

by Tim Donahue on January 17, 2010 at 12:34 pm

Hornets 101 – Pacers 96

————

Shoulda seen it coming.  I may as well have done a waltz with a black cat under a ladder while spilling salt.  Behold the carnage I brought forth:

T-Murda - Troy Murphy hung 21 points and 14 rebounds on the Nets last night.  Over the past 20 games, he’s averaged 16.5 points and 10.2 rebounds, while posting a ridiculous .611 eFG%.  He’s sixth in the league year-to-date at eFG% at .584.

Troy managed only 6 points and 9 rebounds on 2-of-9 shooting, including 2-of-7 from beyond the arc.  It marks the first time he’s recorded a double-single since December 29th against Chicago, and he left that game with an injury.

Don’t Tease – I mentioned this in the last recap, but I think we’re finally starting to see the Danny we were all hoping for this year.  Over the last three games, he’s averaged 28 points while shooting 49% from the floor.  His shot selection has been much better, as evidenced by his 11-for-23 from beyond the arc.  More importantly, he’s been playing the most complete basketball we’ve seen since last season.  This Danny is a difference maker.  Hope he’s here to stay.

In a season full of disappointing performances for Danny, this was, in my opinion, his worst.  Only a meaningless three with 0:02 left in the game spared him the ignominy of his first single-digit scoring outing since December, 2008.   Only one of his 13 shots came from inside of 10 feet – he missed it -and none came at the rim.  He only got two free throws and recorded no assists.  Just an all-around flat performance by Danny, in a five-point game where even just a mediocre performance possibly could have made the difference.

Live by the Three - Through December 31st, the Pacers had shot under 32% from beyond the arc, which goes a long way towards explaining their 9-22 record at that point.  In 2010, they’ve shot 39%, including 44% over the last five games.

The coup de grâce.  It was as if they were trying to balance the scales.  Indiana’s 6-for-29 shooting performance was a harsh reminder of how errant their marksmanship could be.  The bad part is that most of the shots were pretty good looks.  As spstevenson of Indy Cornrows noted, New Orleans opted to give the Pacers the three, and Indy just couldn’t capitalize.  Danny, Troy, and Mike Dunleavy combined to go 4-for-18 from beyond the arc (and 8-for-30 overall).  It’s hard not to look at this area as the key difference in the game.

Five (Three, Sire) Other Things

  • Offensive performance on the Defensive Glass – The New Orleans Hornets scored every single point they has last night on second chance points.  OK, that’s not true, but it sure felt that way.  The Pacers were slaughtered on the boards, grabbing only 43% of the total rebounds available.
  • The Joy of Roy - I’m going to go ahead and risk the jinx, because Roy Hibbert’s performance deserves praise.  A career high 27 points to go along with 10 rebounds and 3 blocks is probably the main reason the Pacers were in this game.  The biggest obstacle for Roy remains his fouling, but he’s reduced his fouling rate by 27% this season.  More importantly, you can begin to see why both Bird and O’Brien targeted him in the 2008 draft.  He is a smart, coachable kid with classic post skills, and he can potentially be a huge asset on an uptempo team.  Everyone (Roy, Jim, and his teammates) will need how to use those skill properly, but coupling his 27 points on 19 shots last night with a more normal shooting performance will be good enough to beat a lot of teams.  As a note, the average pace in his six 20-point games was 98,  and in his seven double-doubles was just under 99.  Playing fast and utilizing Hibbert are not mutually exclusive.  In fact, as someone who grew up with the ABA, the Showtime Lakers, and Bird Celtics, I’ll tell you that doing both successfully can be something very special indeed.
  • Wasted Opportunities -There are always moments in games where, as a fan, you think, “That’s gonna come back and bite us on the ass.”  The Pacers had a few of those last night.  Two came at the hands Solomon Jones, who mishandled two set ups at the rim.  One came when Brandon Rush failed to finish on a beautiful drive, only to have the ball hang on the rim juuuuuust long enough to screw up the timing on Roy’s easy follow.  Finally, Mike Dunleavy, an 88% FT shooter, missed three of his seven freebies.  These little missed chances added up to one big wasted opportunity:  a winnable game at home.  Now, our fearless lads must travel to Miami, Orlando, and Detroit this week to try to take one they wouldn’t normally.

…And One More Thing

The Colts defeated the Baltimore Browns 20-3 last night to advance to the conference finals.  Offense was OK, running game horrid, but the Defense was all kinds of nasty.  Now they wait to see whether the Chargers or the Jets will be the next guest.

Die by the Three: By The Numbers

Pacers vs. Hornets
96 Score 101
4 Largest Lead 12
97.0 Offensive Efficiency 102.0
46.6% eFG% 45.1%
43.2% (38/88) FG% 42.9% (39/91)
20.7% (6/29) 3PT% 26.7% (4/15)
77.8% (14/18) FT% 82.6% (19/23)
37 (5) Rebounds (Off.) 49 (11)
11 (8) Turnovers (Points Led To) 10 (7)
44 Points in the Paint 46
7 Fast Break Points 10
17 Assists 18

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

futurethinking_oct08_main

Yeah, he’s open, and he’s ready for the catch, but perhaps the Pacers would have been better off not passing to this guy so much for the threes.

{ 2 comments }

Exiting the Tinsley Bear Trap

by Tim Donahue on July 24, 2009 at 8:58 am

They finally did it. The Pacers finally “freed” themselves of the steel bear trap that is Jamaal Tinsley’s contract. They spent more than a year desperately trying to find a trading partner for the mercurial point guard, but to no avail. So, with an arbitration hearing to formally resolve the issue less than a week away, Indiana’s leadership elected to be done with the matter once and for all. Wednesday afternoon, they gnawed through their ankle to escape and bought out Jamaal’s contract.

Per policy, neither the Pacers nor Tinsley’s agent commented on any terms of the deal. Both sides were cordial and resolute not to discuss anything publicly. This, of course, prevented anyone from knowing how much the Pacers paid — for nearly 12 full hours.

Mike Wells of the Indianapolis Star soon reported that the buyout agreement will pay Tinsley approximately $10.7 million of the $14.7 million remaining on the last two years of his contract.

When a player is bought out, the amount of the buyout replaces the original salary on the team’s payroll for salary cap purposes. It is spread over the remaining years with the same timing as the original contract. So in buying out Jamaal’s contract, the Pacers were able to immediately reduce their cap figure by roughly $1.9 million this year and $2.1 million next season. (Or, if Jamaal signs with another team for greater than the veteran’s minimum, which is $1.2 million for a player of Tinsley’s age and experience, the Pacers’ cap hit will be reduced by one half of the difference between the contract signed and the minimum.)

That’s what happened. But what does it mean?

The Bloody Stump

There’s very little question that the resolution of the “Tinsley question” was vital to the Pacers future. There is a sense of overwhelming relief flowing throughout the Pacer faithful. With Jamaal’s departure, the team is rid of the last of the players identified with the utter embarrassment that has befallen this franchise in the five years since the infamous Malice in the Palace in November 2004.

Furthermore, both the $4.0 million savings and clearing roster spot are going to be very valuable to this team over the next two years. These both give the team flexibility, and there are few more precious commodities for a team operating in such tight fiscal quarters. This move has allowed the Pacers to move forward.

But while they have freed themselves from the bear trap, they’re not entirely out of the woods yet. While the team did save $4.0 million, it’s important to remember that they really did have to “gnaw off an ankle” to get it. Indiana will still be paying $10.7 million to a player who is likely going to be wearing another uniform. That’s close to 10% of their total cap going to dead salary.

While the $14.7 million owed to Tinsley seemed particularly onerous given the fact that he won’t play, it should be noted that it pales in comparison to the $23.0 million owed to Troy Murphy over the next two years. Mike Dunleavy is similarly owed $20.3 million over the next two years, and even the most optimistic estimates don’t have him returning to the lineup before the January, 2010. And TJ Ford and Jeff Foster are still under contract for $17.0 million and $12.7 million, respectively, over the next two years.

As everyone knows, this franchise was dealt a severe blow by the brawl all those years ago. Just as much damage has been done by desperate reactionary moves since then, however.

Follow the bouncing ball:

(1) Ron Artest burns his Indianapolis bridge by demanding a trade and is traded for (2) Peja Stojakovic, who gets a ridiculous offer from (3) New Orleans, who agrees to do a sign-and-trade deal that gives the Pacers front office (4) a “trade exception” that they use to acquire (5) Al Harrington — who comes over from the Hawks to begin his second tenure as a Pacer, aka, Al Harrington Part Deux, aka, 2 Al 2 Harrington — but he flops both critically and commercially at the box office and gets lumped into another deal with Golden State as a sweetener so that the Pacers can unload (6) Stephen Jackson (who, believe it or not, was a bigger pariah in the community than either Ron Artest or the bear trap in question here) in a trade that nets a return of (7) Mike Dunleavy, (8) Troy Murphy, and (9) something on the order of $33 million in additional salary, which virtually guarantees that there is no way that the Pacers would be able to offer a significant extension for the 2009-2010 season to (10) Danny Granger without unloading the $23 million salary owed to (11) Jermaine O’Neal at that time.

Phew…

Now, Jamaal’s buyout basically ensures that the Pacers will not only stay under the luxury tax threshold this season but probably still have $2 to $3 million of wiggle room once they fill out their roster. This helps in a number of ways, the first of which aligns with the rumored Pacers/Celtics sign-and-trade deal that will send Marquis Daniels to Boston. The buyout and the resulting wiggle room makes almost any of the proposed scenarios with Boston doable without a threat of exceeding the luxury tax limit. (The popular speculation has the Pacers acquiring one or more of Bill Walker, Eddie House, Tony Allen, JR Giddens or Gabe Pruit if the deal goes through.)

That breathing room will evaporate next summer, however. With doom-and-gloom projections coming from the NBA corporate office, it is likely that the luxury tax threshold will drop from $69.9 million this year to no more than $65.0 million next season — and people are saying it could drop as low $62.0 million if the NBA’s overall “basketball-related income” drops by a scary-but-possible 5 percent.

Meanwhile, the Pacers are already committed to over $62.5 million in guaranteed contracts next season for only nine players. If you include the partially unguaranteed contract of Josh McRoberts and the guaranteed contract of the team’s first round pick next summer, they would already eclipse the potential $65 million luxury tax ceiling — and they would still need to fill three or four roster spots.

The Shining Beacon of Hope

The Pacers have paid the luxury tax in the past – and spent several years with one of the higher payrolls in the League – but they have been absolutely committed to avoiding it over the last two to three years. This financial philosophy makes perfect sense given the team’s current level of performance both on the floor and on the bottom line. Fiscal prudence isn’t exciting, but it’s a necessary quality if the franchise is to survive these rocky days of sparse attendance and apathetic public support in Indianapolis.

As the ship gets back on course, the summer of 2011 is the shining beacon for both Pacer ownership and Pacer fans. It is the hope held in the distance — the day Indiana can finally be back on track to make the bold, aggressive moves necessary to improve this franchise’s lot.

The Pacers have over $43 million in contracts that expire in the summer of 2011. These can be used either to create cap space to acquire free agents or as trading chips before the trade deadline in 2011. Given the Pacers history on the free agent market — or, more accurately, the lack thereof — the popular assumption is that major talent acquisition must be done through trade or the draft.

Thus, it will be very important to watch how the Pacers organization, and specifically its ownership, approaches the 2010-2011 luxury tax issue. Recent history says they will do what they can to get avoid the tax. But clearing salary will be difficult and Indiana will have a tough time finding takers for contract dumps. They face two separate issues that preclude teams from wanting to take on salary: (1) the declining, Leaguewide basketball-related income and salary cap structure, and (2) the rapidly approaching, much-ballyhooed and long-dreamt-about summer of 2010, the year for which many teams have been specifically clearing space to lure big fish free agents like LeBron James, Dwyane, Chris Bosh, Dirk Nowitzki and Carlos Boozer.

There are two crucial questions here:

1.    Can the Pacers find a way to avoid the luxury tax for the 2010-2011 season?
2.    Can they do it without severely undermining their opportunities for the following summer?

Hoping the Wound Will Heal

The Pacers are certainly not in an enviable position. The relief gained from the Tinsley buyout, while fantastic emotionally, is limited financially. It continues to be a step in the right direction, however. The team seemed to not understand how to cut their losses, as evidenced by the Artest to Peja to Harrington to Holy-Mary-Mother-of-God-who-gave-them-those-contracts routine.

Tinsley’s buyout may have been a blow to the pride of Bird and the Simons, and I’m sure it gives plenty of Pacers fans heartburn. Still, it was the prudent thing to do. Bird, Morway, et al, face a grueling uphill climb to get a competitive team on the floor while straightening out the finances.

I guess we’ll find out if they’re up to the job.

bear trap

Eight years ago as a rookie, Jamaal Tinsley averaged 9.4 ppg and 8.1 apg and looked like one of the most promising young players in the game. After a long-term contract extension and a series of off-court problems, however, the Pacers are now viewing the reality of paying him to not play for the team as a relief — even if the actual cap relief of the buyout is minimal.

{ 8 comments }