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Roy Hibbert

Last Thursday in Washington, the Pacers came out with no energy and were down 20 by halftime to the 11-win Wizards. Indiana managed just 31 points in the opening two quarters. This, especially juxtaposed with the Wizards 34-point first quarter, looked like the classic case of a more talented team that thought they could just show up and win. Somewhat ironically, they did, coming back in thrilling fashion to pull off a victory in the final minute.

Some Pacer fans’ fears may have been confirmed the next night, however, as the team went out and surrendered 113 points to the then-sub.-500 Phoenix Suns during an up-tempo loss in Indianapolis. Combined, that back-to-back series wasn’t exactly the finest two days of the year for this franchise.

No matter. All was again right soon enough in Pacer Nation, as the blue and gold beat the mighty Miami Heat by 15 a few days later. It was easily their best win since they beat the NBA champion Mavericks in Dallas in early February. Time to start saving up for those second-round playoff tickets, right?

Of course, these are the 2011-12 Pacers so no good times can last forever.

In this case, they didn’t even last 48 hours.

Tonight, the Pacers turned a should-be, mundane victory over the Nets into a 16-point blowout loss. For New Jersey, it was their largest win of the year. For the Pacers, it was, according to their most-experienced player, quite possibly their lowest moment of the season.

If Pacers fans are confused, they’re not alone. David West was genuinely flummoxed after the game, literally shaking his head in disgust while staring at a post-game stat sheet that he apparently kept thinking might change. “This is a rough loss for us,” said West. “I don’t know if we’ve had a worse loss for the year … There’s just no excuse for us to come out and play the way we played.”

He struggled to come up with words to describe his frustration, something that was as visible in the locker room after the game as it was on the court when he was whistled for a foul after needlessly pushing Kris Humphries in the back under the hoop after the Nets made — yet another — easy basket in the fourth quarter. “This is a hard one to explain,” said West. “We just didn’t play well enough. We had an opportunity to put some [wins] together here. We’ve got back-to-backs for the next two weeks … so we just can’t come out and play like this against a team like the Nets. We’re the ones fighting for playoff position, and we’ve got something to play for. That’s just embarrassing.”

The team’s coach didn’t try to sugar-coat the effort issues either. ”I think every team in the NBA has nights where the energy isn’t there — and that was certainly the case tonight,” said Pacers Coach Frank Vogel. “Am I concerned? Yeah. Any time you play like that, you’re concerned. But this team has played hard on most nights this season, and I expect them to play hard tomorrow night, too.”

Tomorrow, the Pacers play those Wizards that, as Vogel termed it, “gave us problems,” again. This time it’s in Indiana, but that might not matter if the team goes into auto-pilot like they did in the first half last week in DC or tonight in Newark.

Of course, it’s not just about energy. You can’t win in a league with this many great players if the effort isn’t there, but it’s rarely just about effort when you have actual talent, like this Indiana roster does. The coming-out-with-no-effort cliché is an easy excuse, even if it was certainly more of an actual explanation than an excuse this evening.

But the execution needs to be there as well. Trying won’t even win you a participation ribbon in the Association.

While I was looking at that same stat sheet that was so disturbing to West, I noticed that Roy Hibbert only took 7 shots tonight. Through my keen means of observation, I also noticed that the Nets start Sheldon Williams, who is listed at 6’9″, at center and were using Humphries at center late in the game at times to guard Hibbert. At the same time this was going on, Gerald Wallace was guarding West. Suffice it to say, the 7’2″ Hibbert should have had a decisive size advantage in the paint throughout his 29 minutes on the court.

I asked Vogel if Roy should have gotten more looks. Not necessarily was his basic answer, saying that the way New Jersey was defending him meant there were more opportunities for others. Unfortunately, he implied, Indiana didn’t exploit those chances.

“They made a decision they weren’t going to let [Roy] get going,” said Vogel. “When that happens, you can’t force it to him, you just have to swing the ball to the [weak] side and attack their weakness, where they’re bringing all the help from. We want to get Roy involved every single time we play, but if they’re going to take that away and make their weak side vulnerable then we’ve got to attack from the weak side.”

So while it’s easy to chastise an NBA team for a lack of energy and effort, it is often just as much a lack of execution that is a team’s downfall. These two are inextricably linked, of course, and — even on offense — you really can’t set the proper picks and flash to the right spots if you’re half-assing it. But proper execution can sometimes make up for a lack of effort.

We saw this just last week from this very Pacers team in Washington.

A key factor in their comeback win last Thursday was a series of offensive rebound tip-outs by David West. He continually kept the ball alive and on the Pacers offensive side of the court in the final minute of the game. It was all effort. But that likely would have all been for naught had they team not executed properly on a key, much-less-exciting possession about a minute earlier.

Indiana trailed by 4 with 1:53 left in the game and had the ball coming out of a timeout. Darren Collison dribbled it up to initiate the offensive set, which featured West setting a down-screen from the left elbow to the block for Granger. David caught Granger’s man, and Danny popped to the top of the key to easily catch a swing pass. As his man recovered, Hibbert came up to set a ball-screen and Granger drove into the lane. With his man again struggling through a pick, he was able to get the advantage and draw a foul from Chris Singleton. He made two free throws to cut the deficit to 2, in the process setting the stage for the dramatic, go-ahead Paul George three-pointer, Collison’s unlikely steal and West’s even-more-unlikely offensive rebounds.

After the game, West emphasized the importance of that play Granger made, in addition to some other nice sets that got Hibbert points in the paint, in the comeback win. “I thought that’s what was the difference,” said West. “We made the plays. We wanted to get Danny in that pick-and-roll up top. He was able to make a good play. Just executing with screens, motion and movement. Running your plays like that makes them have to collapse and shift.”

After that win, Danny echoed his teammate’s sentiments. “It was just execution,” said Granger. “We ran the play for me, I go attack … it was just simple. I get to the free-throw line and make two free throws.”

Granger was especially pleased by his team’s ability to convert down the stretch when they needed every bucket they got — plus a little luck — since this isn’t always the case throughout the game. “The last few minutes, our offensive execution was pretty good,” he said. “A lot of times, offensively, we’re not really in sync. But in crunch time, which is really important, it was good.”

All combined, this starts to paint a pretty clear picture: the Pacers often come out flat energy-wise against teams they think they should beat and expect to make enough plays to win. Perhaps it was early-season success making them over-confident. Perhaps it is the grueling — and it is grueling this season — “marathon,” as Vogel called it, of a schedule they are playing that causes lapses. Or perhaps it is just the natural inclination of the guys on the team.

Regardless, this seems to be a team whose two elder statesman completely understand the value of in-game execution, a team whose coach preaches “smash-mouth” effort as a mantra and a team that we’ve seen is capable of making enough plays to beat any team in this league. But it is also one that can’t be always bothered to show up enough even to best, as West said, “a team like the Nets.”

Ultimately, that should concern Pacers fans who are hoping to see this franchise win a playoff series for the first time since 2005. ”We’ve got to figure out our identity,” said West. “We’ve had too many games like this. We’re setting ourselves up for failure in terms of just thinking that we can just come in and just basically lay an egg but play well enough to get a win.”

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Sweatin’ Bullets will be a recurring feature in which I provide a few bullet points on general theories, comments and observations on the most recent game. 

  • Miami’s retro jerseys are significantly uglier than Indiana’s retro jerseys.
  • Am I the only one that just noticed that Chris Bosh and David West are eerily similar players? Would you rather have a just-past-his-prime David West at two years/$20 million or an in-his-prime Chris Bosh at six years/$110 million? Seems like a fair question on both sides.
  • Is it just me or would a three-legged race between Udonis Haslem/Ronny Turiaf and Louis Amundson/Tyler Hansbrough be Pay-Per-View worthy? It would certainly get physical. What would be a fair price to charge?
  • Inactivity by Hibbert can’t be blamed completely on him. If you don’t feed your big man when he works to get position, he will lose confidence and motivation as the game goes on. Hibbert’s touches in the first half were few and far between.
  • Despite limited touches, Hibbert still managed to put up 11 points and 9 rebounds to go with his 3 blocked shots. It might be a sign that the offense should run through Hibbert first on a higher percentage of plays.
  • If you are the type of fan to take Darren Collison for granted then take a moment to think about how much Miami would love to have him as their point guard.
  • The Pacers bench should get a lot of credit for making Miami work all game. It never felt like there was unproductive unit on the floor.
  • Those few moments in the start of the fourth quarter when you want to see Barbosa and Wade keep going at each other should be more than enough to make every Pacer fan say, “Yeah, I’m pretty sure we won’t be missing that second round pick…”
  • Having three superstars is great and all, but when you can spread the scoring out to nearly the whole team like the Pacers did against Miami it is always more entertaining.
  • The national headlines will talk about Miami’s struggles and their two-game losing streak, but this was without a doubt a sign of the Pacers’ true potential when everyone plays unselfishly and executes to their fullest potential. It wouldn’t be hyperbole to say that the Indiana dominated this game after the break. They were in control for the entire second half.

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Just one All-Star dunking on then swatting another. No big whoop. Roy Hibbert also had a sick block on some weak LeBron James sweeping-layup-in-the-lane nonsense in the second half. (Waiting on video of that.) UPDATE: Here is the block. Ooo-wee.

And just for good measure, here’s Indy’s center finishing a sweet alley-oop pass from David West. Pacers bigs put their mark on the paint this evening as the Pacers beat the Heat 105-90.

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Roy Hibbert did more than just survive the Pacers’ three games in three nights, he thrived. NBA teams playing on three consecutive nights is one of the novelties to this condensed season — and one that has brought on a fair amount of negative attention. It is so grueling and demanding on the body that in a normal season, it happens exactly zero times.

But this is not a normal season and no matter what team you play for you have to pack a lot of games into a short amount of time. According to some critics, this has led to a lot of poor performance, specifically crappy shooting and scoring. When fatigue really starts to kick in, the shot is often the first thing to go. When you have played intense games for three straight nights even the most conditioned athletes will start to feel that “fourth quarter fatigue” some time closer to the second quarter.

So apart from the Pacers’ 2-1 record over the the three-game stretch, the stat that stuck out to me the most was the fact that Roy Hibbert shot over 50% in all three games. Having a center that is so well-conditioned that he can put up efficient numbers in a back-to-back-to-back, as if it didn’t even effect him, is a huge commodity and adds to the value of a player like Hibbert.

Here are the stat lines for Hibbert in the three-game stretch:

Thursday @ Washington
19 points, 8-for-14 FG (57.1%), 9 rebounds, 2 steals, 1 block

Friday vs. Phoenix
19 points, 7-for-12 FG (58.3%), 7 rebounds, 2 assists, 3 blocks

Saturday @ Milwaukee
16 points, 7-for-11 FG (63.6%), 9 rebounds, 1 assist, 2 steals, 3 blocks

Three-Game Average
18 ppg, 59.5% shooting (22-for-37 FGs), 8.3 rpg, 1 apg, 1.3 spg, 2.3 bpg

That is a model for consistency. On a game-by-game basis, these stats won’t blow anyone away, but you have to factor in the context. Any team in the league (except perhaps the Magic) would take those stat lines from their center during a back-to-back-to-back in a heartbeat. Over the course of the three games Hibbert shot 59% from the floor. That’s higher than his field goal percentage for the season. This is not normal stuff, people.

It should also be noted that for two of these three games he put up these numbers while having to defend the rim against two highly skilled offensive centers in Nene and Marcin Gortat. In the last game of the three (logically the most difficult on the body), Hibbert faced a less difficult matchup with Drew Gooden. Without the burden of guarding Nene or Gortat, he put up his most efficient night, shooting 63.6% to go with his 9 boards and 3 blocks.

The only matchup that you could say Hibbert “lost” was against Gortat (also the game that the Pacers lost) when the “Polish Hammer” put up 23 points off of 8-for-13 shooting. While some of that can be chalked up to Steve Nash’s 17 assist night, the key word here has been consistency. We have already seen what Hibbert did in three straight nights.

Now, if we take a look back to the most recent Suns’ game prior to their matchup with the Pacers (two nights earlier against the Magic), Gortat struggled mightily with just 4 points off 1-7 shooting. Consistency wins out in the end.

Of course, we should also credit coach Frank Vogel’s choice to monitor Hibbert’s minutes to avoid fatigue or break down as well as the reliability of Hansbrough and Amundson when they come off the bench. Hibbert never reached 35 minutes played in any of the three games.

Hibbert’s play has underwhelmed generally since he played in the All-Star Game. He has scored just 11.6 ppg on 46.9% shooting compared to 13.8 ppg on 51.2% before the break. But now, at a point when NBA players should be starting to hit a wall or go into slumps, Roy seems to be catching a second wind. To put it in the simplest of terms, he’s down in the paint making his shots.

This is exactly what the Pacers should be hoping for because, after a well needed day off, they will take on the Miami Heat on Monday. If the Heat have a weakness it’s a strong interior presence. Mr. Hibbert will have to go to work.

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