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New York Knicks

Danny Granger capped a big night for the Pacers with his game winner (Frank McGrath/Pacers).

Just when it was beginning to appear that everyone on the Indiana Pacers except for Tyler Hansbrough had forgotten how to play basketball, the team turned things around and beat the New York Knicks back-to-back. Sunday’s 106-93 win was impressive. Hansbrough continued his recent tear by scoring a career-high 29 points and the Pacers dominated the Knicks throughout the game for a 13-point victory. The problem with the game was that it led to more questions than answers since the team appeared to play much better without Danny Granger, who was out with the flu and strep throat.

Tuesday night’s 119-117 win was more impressive because the Knicks came to play. Granger returned to the lineup and he, Darren Collison and Roy Hibbert all came to play as well. Granger hit a sweet game winner with 0.3 seconds left, while Collison and Hibbert contributed numerous big baskets down the stretch. Granger ended up with 26 points, Collison 24 and Hibbert 15. It was nice to finally see the big three actually play well at the same time.

It was a nice redemption for all three players.

Granger had struggled mightily in recent games and his jump shot seemed to clang off the rim with such regularity, that the team just appeared to be much more settled without him Sunday. He attacked the Knicks by using dribble penetration and was particularly effective compared with his passive jump shooting of recent contests. Could the buzzer-beater be the ticket for a late season flourish?

Collison couldn’t buy an assist or a basket in several recent contests and the Granger and Hibbert struggles only exacerbated the problems. This is a young player that should be viewed along with Hansbrough and Paul George as a key component that will continue to grow for the future. Too often this season, Collison has been looked at as some sort of failed savior, which was too much pressure to put on a guy who had only 37 starts as a rookie last year.

Hibbert had come up so small that one was left wondering if he could ever regain his form. On Tuesday it all came right. When the team needed him most he responded with big buckets late. He had also played well on Sunday, so maybe he’s beginning to get out of his funk. The Pacers need their center to be effective down the stretch.

Surprisingly, in spite of these good performances, none of the big three led the Pacers in scoring against the Knicks.

That honor again went to Hansbrough, who followed up his career-high on Sunday with another on Tuesday, scoring 30 points. In fact, many of the good looks other Pacers were getting late in the game were made possible because the Knicks had decided to overplay and even double-team Hansbrough late. The choice had been made that if the Knicks were going down to the Pacers again it wasn’t going to be because Hansbrough had open shots in the fourth quarter.

Hansbrough has become more and more efficient offensively in recent games. Earlier in the season it was obvious that if he could hit his jump shot consistently he could really help this team. Now he’s hitting his jump shot consistently. Combine that with his ability to draw fouls and make awkward looking shots in the lane and you’ve got one unorthodox, but highly effective, offensive weapon.

The numbers over the past five games tell the story, with a 25.2 points per game average. In short, the qualifiers are over, five games is a trend and Hansbrough’s been terrific throughout this stretch.

In fact, this stretch reminded many of his play at North Carolina, where he was a dominant college player for four years. Most pundits said Hansbrough’s game would never translate to the NBA, which is why someone with his pedigree ended up being only the 13th pick in the 2009 NBA Draft. When he sat out most of his rookie season with vertigo, the chorus of critics grew only louder.

The critics were wrong. The guy is a player. His game has translated to the NBA better than the Pacers could have hoped for. He should be a key building block for the future of this franchise.

Now, if the Pacers can get Granger, Collison and Hibbert to play well consistently with Hansbrough, then you’ve got something.

Unfortunately, this is the same team that looked so dreadful in their recent six-game losing streak, capped by lifeless losses at Minnesota and Toronto. They have proven untrustworthy at best.

Three weeks ago, Frank Vogel looked like a genius. Three days ago, Vogel looked like he couldn’t coach his way out of a paper box. Now the pendulum has swung again. It’s the same maddening inconsistency that we saw under Jim O’Brien. It’s hard to believe that coaching is the issue.

Who is this team? How can they look so bad against the dregs of the league, yet beat Miami and L.A.? If I had an easy answer, I’d be the first one to volunteer it.

Maybe the Knicks are just a good matchup for the Pacers. They aren’t interested in playing any defense and that makes it easier on the Pacers. The only real defensive intensity over the past two games from the Knicks came when they decided that Hansbrough wasn’t going to beat them singlehandedly at the end of the game.

You want defense. It’s probably going to be a lot tougher Wednesday night in Boston.

Hansbrough is going to have a target on his back. Granger won’t get many open looks. Hibbert will have to be able to play getting bumped regularly. Collison won’t find a lot of open driving lanes. It will be critical to defend merely to stay in the game.

Last week I called this team soft. Two good wins over the Knicks has done nothing to change my opinion. If the Pacers beat the Celtics, I’ll be impressed.

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Business Insider, a place that I have never known to break NBA news of any kind, is reporting that the Pacers have traded a first-round pick to the Knicks in exchange for Anthony Randolph, a much-ballyhooed power forward who has never actually done anything in this league.  It has long been rumored that New York had several suitors for the long, deerlike, athletic phenom who may or may not know how to play basketball, and were simply waiting for the best pick they could get, as they may want to include said pick into a deal for Carmelo Anthony.

The front-runners for Melo, the New Jersey Nets, yesterday pulled out of trade talks. Oligarch owner Mikhail Prokhorov has assured everyone that this isn’t some negotiation ploy; the Nets are done dealing with Denver. So the timing does make sense. New York would want to jump into the Melo sweepstakes immediately and thus a Randolph-for-a-pick deal with Indiana is logical.

But it’s all poppycock, says Mike Wells of the Indianapolis Star, the long-time NBA reporter we should be trusting right now. On Twitter, he has informed me that Knicks GM Donnie Walsh (and former Pacers GM who Wells knows well) is calling BS on the whole deal.

“Donnie Walsh has shot rumor down … He said Pacers have not proposed any offers to him for Randolph.”

More emphatically, he reported this:

Indy has NOT acquired Randolph. Pacers already have 15 players on the roster and they’re over the salary cap.

Well, there ya go.

Here’s another mitigating factor Wells notes.

Bird has always liked Randolph, but Pacers are looking to add veteran rotation players. They’ve already got enough youth on their roster.

Lastly, there is one more logistical hurdle of a Pacers/Knicks deal that makes Randolph-to-Indy unlikely. The Knicks don’t want a player in the deal; they just want a pick. And since both Indy and NYC are over the cap, the salaries would have to match. This means it couldn’t just be a pick for Randolph; the Pacers would have to add roughly $2 million to match what Randolph is making this year.

they would have to add a player. my man @alanhahn at newsday says knicks only want a draft pick. that eliminates indy

UPDATE: The Pacers do have a trade exception of $3.5 million that I forgot about, so may be able to get this done without sending any players to New York.

Probably for the best.

As mentioned, I’m pretty sure Randolph isn’t any good.

UPDATE: Business Insider is now admitting that they got this one wrong, adding this addendum to their original report.

Multiple reports say that Randolph is at practice [with the Knicks]. Appears as though our information is wrong. We sincerely apologize for the error. We’re reaching out to our source to find out what went wrong

So much for that.

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Pre-draft workouts are things that all teams do. They bring college and foreign players (and high school kids in the bygone times predating the “one and done” era) and run them up and down the court in a series of drills to assess whether or not their skills might translate to the NBA.

Simple stuff.

The only thing is that there are particular times, durations and other logistical considerations that the teams must abide by prior if they want to work players out. And according to Yahoo’s Adrian Wojnarowski, the Knicks have been running afoul of those restrictions — brazenly so if the facts in this story are accurate.

The reason this is “Pacers news” is because one of the major pieces of the puzzle uncovering the “scandal” is that Brandon Rush tore his ACL during one of these “secret workouts” held by Knick scout Rodney Heard. Rush originally claimed he hurt his knee elsewhere, presumably to do Heard a solid, but now he has admitted that it was during an unofficial Knick workout.

For the past four years, the New York Knicks may have circumvented NBA draft rules by conducting secret workouts of collegiate players throughout gymnasiums in suburban Atlanta, Yahoo! Sports has found.

Knicks director of East Coast scouting Rodney Heard coordinated and conducted the sessions, three players who were involved in some of the workouts told Yahoo! Sports – including one May 2007 session that resulted in a devastating knee injury to Kansas All-American Brandon Rush. A tear of the anterior cruciate ligament in Rush’s right knee forced him to withdraw from the 2007 draft and required surgery plus six months of rehabilitation.

In addition to the Rush session – which was an apparent violation of NBA bylaws forbidding teams from working out players before the annual predraft camp – Heard may have broken more rules by conducting predraft workouts with additional players during restricted time periods in 2007 and for excessive sessions in 2009 and 2010.

Rodney Heard denies that this occurred.

When reached on Monday, Heard denied he was present in suburban Atlanta when Rush suffered the knee injury.

“That’s so far from the truth,” Heard said. “Someone called me and told me he got hurt. I was in Florida at our staff meetings.”

When told that Rush said he was running the workout, Heard responded: “I wasn’t there. That’s a lie.”

Rush’s coach at the time, Bill Self, had the following to say, which Wojnarowski uses as a lead-in to insinuate that Brandon stuck to his initial story due to (likely unfounded) fears that he might lose his eligibility if someone found out where he actually was when he blew out his knee.

When reached on Monday night, Self told Yahoo! Sports: “Brandon initially told us he hurt his knee in Kansas City,” Self said. “And later, he told us that was inaccurate and that it happened the day prior, while he was in North Carolina. We heard about the workouts in Atlanta, and we asked Brandon if he had worked out there and he said, ‘No,’ that he was injured when he got there.”

Rush told Yahoo! Sports that the Knicks never asked him to change his story about the injury happening in Atlanta with Heard, but multiple sources said his family and advisers worried about his college eligibility and believed he needed to keep the story quiet until he left Kansas for the NBA.

The NCAA’s rules extend to a player’s predraft workouts, but sources said any issue with Rush’s eligibility upon his return to Kansas would likely center around whether an agent paid for his travel to Atlanta. The NCAA declined comment on Monday.

Regardless of the he said/she said and whatever punishment may perhaps be handed down against the Knicks and/or Heard, this whole thing honestly isn’t a particularly big deal for the Pacers and Rush.

Sure it involves a guy who has been in the news for the wrong reasons of late, but it was a long time ago and he was just a college student trying to make it into the league. It’s wasn’t his job to care who was conducting the interview or to understand the NBA’s fine-print rules about the whole thing.

The story features Brandon prominently and I’m sure it will continue to be a topic of discussion, but it is more about an NBA team coloring outside the lines and trying to gain an unfair advantage than it is any sort of indictment of any player — and there were many, many others aside from Rush, it sounds like — who received a call to go play hoops somewhere and said “sure” before eagerly lacing up his sneakers and heading off to run some drills with visions of fulfilling his NBA dream.

And for Brandon, while the injury and rehab were undoubtedly horrible experiences and his draft position (read: paycheck) might have suffered since he had to withdraw from that year’s draft, the outcome was him returning to Kansas and winning an NCAA National Championship.

Not the worst thing in the world.

(Pacers fans may also be interested to hear that former Pacers GM Donnie Walsh, who has been manning the ship for New York since April 2008, had denied any knowledge that his scouts were conducted workouts that violate league rules.)

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Game #75 Recap: Not Really a Recap

by Jared Wade on March 31, 2010 at 1:21 pm · 2 comments

I didn’t break down the Kings game today so much as just discuss the consequences of the Pacers late-season winning ways, but here are some thoughts on Indiana from me today on the Daily Dime.

For Indiana, every win is bittersweet. Danny Granger is again looking like the unstoppable scorer he was last season, and after posting 33 points Tuesday in a 102-95 win over Sacramento, he has now put up at least 29 points in six of his past seven games. Furthermore, the franchise’s young talent, Roy Hibbert and Brandon Rush, are now producing consistently. And the whole team is finally playing the hard-nosed, fun-to-watch brand of basketball that made the state famous.

On the other hand, each win is lowering the Pacers’ hopes to draft the franchise-altering, blue-chip rookie that the team so badly needs to pair with Granger if it wants to return to respectability.

There are a few more paragraphs for you to check out over there on the matter, including a staggering comparison of the Pacers’ record over the past 10 games (7-3) to that of the seven other teams it is fighting with for a good draft pick (a collective 16-54 in their past 70 games). Yikes. One of these things is not like the other. (Only the Knicks and Warriors have even 4 wins in their last 10.)

Maurice Brooks also gave Danny his “Tuesday’s Best” award, which includes another little morsel of Pacers info.

UPDATE: Tim drops some knowledge and lends precise facts about the Pacers change in the standings over the past few weeks.

At the end of play on 3/15 (or morning paper, 3/16), the Pacers stood 5th in the Central (worst), 14th in the East (2nd worst), and 27th in the NBA (4th worst).

They’ve gone 7-2 since then, and, as of this morning, they stand 4th in the Central (2nd worst), 10th in the East (6th worst), and 21st in the NBA (10th worst).

During that stretch, they’ve gained 3 games against Philly, 3 1/2 against NYK & LAC, 5 1/2 against DET & SAC, and 6 1/2 against the Wiz.

Since that date, only PHO (7-0), CLE (6-1), ORL (5-1), and POR (4-1) have better records.

My more nuanced take on the whole matter is here if you missed it.

But my only real reaction to all this is “Yikes.”

UPDATE II: Chad Ford did a chat for ESPN today and had a few comments on the Pacers and tanking:

Tiffany (Indianapolis)
Is Jim O’Brien on the hot seat?

Chad Ford (1:17 PM)
As for O’Brien, he should be after killing the Pacers shot at John Wall. I’m all for playing hard every game. But, clearly he and the rest of the Pacers aren’t on the same page.

Dan (MN)
Based off of your Pacer’s comment, are you a supporter of teams intentionally tanking late in the year?

Chad Ford (1:20 PM)
Yes. The NBA gives them an incentive to do so. If tanking now gives me the chance to win MORE games next year, of course you do it. And I think the fans understand. What do you think Pacers fans want? Another three or four meaningless wins in late March/April or John Wall or Evan Turner?

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