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TJ Ford

Updating on the previous post of “serious” discussions between Indy and Charlotte that are now “close”…Here’s another tweet from Woj:

Charlotte and Indiana is close, but sources say not done. FIve players for now, including Ford and Rush for Augustine, Henderson and Nazr.

As reported here, this is a no-brainer for Indy.

Rush has been playing a little better since January started, but losing him isn’t a big deal. There’s not a chasm of difference between his potential and Gerald Henderson’s potential, although I have admittedly not watched a ton of Charlotte this year and you do have to wonder why Larry Brown would be willing to punt on a lottery pick so quickly. Perhaps they want to try to make a real run in the playoffs and think TJ can do more for them than DJ Augustin and feel, like I do, that Rush for Gerald is a wash at worst?

I don’t know. The whole thing seems dubious from a “why would Charlotte do this?” standpoint, frankly.

Regardless, I like DJ Augustin as a promising young PG with NBA starter potential. He suffers from some of the same size issues as TJ, but could at worst be a fresh face in Conseco and be a good option to run the team from a “change for change’s sake” perspective. He would immediately challenge Earl Watson for the starting role and, as a guy still on a cheap rookie deal through 2012, could likely remain a solid back court option that doesn’t really affect the cap for the next few seasons. Indy could let Earl Watson leave this summer and then have DJ and AJ Price as two PG options, which would lessen the urgency of drafting a PG, which is currently the major priority for the team. I’m not saying DJ Augustin is a guy you want running your team for the next five years and PG would still be the number one priority, but it would leave the front office less hamstrung to only focus on one position and give Indy some stability — which is exactly what TJ Ford was supposed to be, yet unable to be, when he was acquired for Jermaine O’Neal.

Nazr Mohammed is signed through the Summer of 2011 for $6.8 million, but that’s less than TJ would make anyway so the cap affect is a net (slight) positive for the Pacers — and obviously Nazr is a guy that Indy could desperately use immediately and next year in it’s MASH unit front court, whereas TJ is in the dog house.

Interesting stuff.

We’ll see…

UPDATE: Two new tweets from Woj:

Number One:

Indiana players believe trade is near, telling friends even that deal’s done. Front offices still talking. Charlotte may need convincing.

Number Two:

Charlotte has been insisting that they won’t do a deal here, and time is running out. One final Larry Bird-Michael Jordan showdown?

IT’S JUST LIKE THE MCDONALD’S COMMERCIAL.

UPDATE II:

…and Wells awakes from his slumber to squash all hopes and dreams:

Pacers-Bobcats tried to work out a deal, which was first reported by @WojYahooNBA, but they couldn’t reach an agreement

Well…that was fun.

Now you know why I think trade rumors are stupid and a waste of time.

UPDATE III:

…and just to give Woj a final word on all the commotion:

Indiana wanted desperately to move T.J. Ford — and loved D.J. Augustine — but it appears they’ve just run out of time, source says.

I still think they can move TJ this summer if they try hard enough, but, yeah, this deal seemed too good to be true from the very start. Oh well, back to reality.

Horrible, depressing, bleak, no-hope-for-more-than-12-months reality.

eeyore rain cloud

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UPDATE: Woo-hoo. I’m perhaps wrong about all the stuff I wrote below, and Charlotte may have some interest in TJ Ford for some reason. I’ll believe it when I see it, but says Yahoo’s Adrian Wojnarowski:

Charlotte and Indiana in serious talks on deal that would send T.J. Ford to Bobcats for package that includes D.J. Augustine, source says.

Stay tuned….

(And that “woo-hoo” will could definitely change to “oh poop” if the Pacers are taking on money in this deal. I like DJ though.)

————

As expected, it looks like nothing’s happening today in Indianapolis.

And really, it’s probably for the best.

Grabbing a late first-round pick and a low-level “prospect” (like a JJ Hickson-type young’n) would have been nice, and it could have helped to shed a contract (like Murphy) so as to proactively ease the potential luxury tax burden next year, but there wasn’t ever much chance of any major acquisitions coming in anyway. The players Indy (hopefully) doesn’t care about for the long-term (Murphy, MDJ, Ford, Foster, Watson, Diener, Solomon, Head) are simply not desirable to other GMs. Danny Ferry of Cleveland and perhaps a few others certainly had a little interest in Troy as a back-up plan to add a little more offense for a playoff run. And I’m sure some executives at least respect Troy’s high-level skills (shooting and rebounding) enough to have a conversation about acquiring him, but that $12.5 million salary he’s owed next year is a pretty big financial burden for anyone to accept. So it really shouldn’t come as a surprise to anyone that Bird wasn’t able to get anything out of Murphy. Not in this economic climate at least.

Simply put, outside of Danny, Hibbert, future draft picks and perhaps — to a much lesser degree — Rush, Tyler and (maybe) AJ Price, this franchise has nothing of value.

Well, that’s not exactly fair.

Conseco Fieldhouse is pretty sweet. Unfortunately, you can’t include buildings in trades under the current Collective Bargaining Agreement. Or at least I don’t think you can…

/runs off to email Larry Coon

Wait?!?!? We still have 41 more minutes. So … THIS IS ALL SUBJECT TO CHANGE**!!!!! (Don’t hold your breath)

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Milwaukee Bucks 93, Indiana Pacers 81

————

Look, I forgot they were playing last night.  I mean, I knew there was a game – even wrote about it in yesterday’s recap – it’s just that my awareness of it was swept away by the first strong breeze.  I wasn’t reminded of it until, while sitting at my nephew’s apartment watching Inglourious Basterds, I happened to check Twitter and see this:

ajconcussion

So, I wander over and check the score real quick, and see the Pacers down 7 going into the 4th.  I periodically check the box score, see them lingering just within reach before fading.  I didn’t see a single second of game action, not even highlights, but, really, would that even be necessary for me to know what happened?  Let’s run down the checklist.

Crappy start leads to early double-digit deficit – The Bucks bridged the 1st and 2nd quarters with a 29-10 run that put them up by 18.  Check

Pacers get pounded on the boards – The Bucks outrebounded the Pacers by 10, including 6 on the offensive glass.   Check

Pacers make a faux comeback, getting close enough to see where the hope dies, but not really close enough to threaten – The Pacers climbed to within three in third, then fell back down by 11.  Hope was still alive until two scoreless minutes in the fourth left them down 12 with 3:48 to go.  Check

Offensive stagnation and incompetence spelled their doom – The Pacers Offensive Efficiency was a putrid 90.  Sadly, that’s not even horrible by this team’s standards.  It does appear that they did choose the lesser used Option B – Turnovers as their means of achieving no achievement.  Twenty turnovers mortally wounded their hopes of success at the offensive end, and their typical passivity killed them off.  Indiana sits well towards the bottom in points in the paint per game at 37, but they could only wheedle their way to 16 points down there tonight.  Checkity-Check-Check-Check

I could talk about some other stuff, but really, is there any reason to waste any more of our time on this game?

Oh, and One Other Thing

Look, I know T.J. has played well the last two games, but nothing has really changed.  Unless A.J.’s injury is more serious than it appears – granted, a common occurrence with the Pacers – then Earl’s return will result in Ford’s return to the bench.  Watson was playing relatively well (”relatively” being the operative word), and he’s been good for Roy Hibbert.  There’s no reason to believe that A.J. will be sent to the bench, so, ya know, seeya, T.J.

Some argue that he should play in order to showcase him for a trade.  I’m sorry, but this is silly.  There isn’t in a GM in the league that will look at Ford over the next two games – four in total before the February 18th trading deadline – and say, “Wow!  I was wrong about this guy.  Let’s give the Pacers what they want (expiring contracts, prospects) and get him!”  The league knows exactly what T.J.’s game is.  They know his strengths and weaknesses.  “Showcasing” players for trades is really, in my opinion, a figment of the imagination of fans and the media.

The only time that seeing players before a trade is of some value is when you’re trying to prove the guy is healthy.  Ford was perfectly healthy when he fell out of the rotation, so that is not the case here.  If someone is willing to give us what we want for Ford, then they will whether he plays the next two games or not.  Or, more accurately, no one is going to make a sensible trade with us for T.J., regardless of whether he plays or not.

Been There, Done That: By The Numbers

Pacers @ Bucks
81 Score 93
1 Largest Lead 18
90.0 Offensive Efficiency 103.3
50.7 eFG% 48.7
46.4% (32/69) FG% 43.0% (34/79)
33.3% (6/18) 3PT% 34.6% (9/26)
84.6% (11.13) FT% 76.2% (16/21)
33 (4) Rebounds (Off.) 43 (10)
20 (25) Turnovers (Points Led To) 12 (11)
16 Points in the Paint 36
12 Fast Break Points 13
18 Assists 21

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

Follow us on Twitter for live, in-game Pacers coverage @8pts9secs and @toothpicksray.

reviewrevisioncycle

Yeah, I think I might have found a slight problem with the Pacers’ decision loop.

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Game #44 Preview: Donate Money to Haiti

by Jared Wade on January 23, 2010 at 6:00 pm

Philadelphia 76ers @ Indiana Pacers
Saturday, January 23
7:00 pm EST
Conseco Fieldhouse
Indianapolis, Indiana

————-

Samuel Dalembert comes to Indianapolis tonight, and a meaningless basketball game will hopefully provide him with a short distraction from real life. See, Samuel is Haitian and has struggled to sleep or concentrate on anything other than the tragedy that struck his country for the past 10 days, during which time he visited his country to see what he could do to help.

All this has pushed him to the front of the NBA’s admirable relief efforts since the quake (which TJ Ford and Josh McRoberts have contributed to), and his heartfelt remarks after his recent return from his demolished homeland provide the league with a first-hand account of the horror — and the unfathomable challenges facing those trying save lives and repair infrastructure.

“I’m doing my best,” he says. “I’ll take another trip with UNICEF. So we can try to get all those children out there … you know, we have parents who have been trying to adopt for two or three years.”

At this point, tears are streaming down Dalembert’s face. “You know and … that’s frustrating me … you’re asking people to help. And kids have parents over there who want to adopt them. I’ve got a hundred parents, and you have a bunch of guys sitting down with the freaking papers. All it takes is one hour to go over everything, you know what I’m saying?

“I saw somebody’s leg amputated in front of me. Surgeries performed on a kitchen table … I’m talking about a folding kitchen table … I have some disturbing pictures. And it hurts. … There was no surgery room … You heard him screaming. … Not enough alcohol. Things we take for granted, you know. They try to make one bottle of alcohol last …

“And I’m going to do something in Philly. I will have a plane come in here, in Philly, and collect stuff next week … and I will have the plane take the stuff over there. Also I will let people know that if doctors want to give their time, that plane can go over there bringing doctors over there. Hopefully we’ll make huge progress. Hopefully we’ll save more lives.”

Samuel’s ongoing efforts are truly noble.

And they make all efforts into anything related to sports and entertainment inconsequential. Even as I type this, for example, I feel worthless for spending so much time over the past two weeks going on about my merry life and putting time into writing about the Pacers while millions suffer unthinkable calamities.

But this is what I do, so it is what I have done.

In fact, last week marked the six-month anniversary of this blog’s existence and me having been doing this. I didn’t even notice until just now, and while six months certainly isn’t that big of a deal, it does present a small opportunity for me to urge you to help people in dire need of help.

I know we haven’t always provided the timeliest or greatest or funniest or consistentest or [insert superlative here] coverage of the Pacers. We’re still learning the ropes and have made a lot of mistakes over the half-year. But we have put in a lot of effort and, presumably, at least a few of you have enjoyed our coverage — our coverage that is free to you and for which I don’t get paid.

I’m fine with that. I would never ask for payment from readers for this drivel.

But if you have ever even for a quick second wanted to give us thanks for any of the content we’ve created for the Pacers community thus far, please give $10 to the relief efforts in Haiti. All you have to do is text “Haiti” to 90999 and $10 will go to the Red Cross and be added to your next phone bill. Or even if you think we are doing terrible, terrible work here — or have know idea who I am — and are for some reason reading this sentence anyway, please, still send $10.

It’s literally the least we can do.

Thanks for reading, and please watch the video below that shows how President Clinton has partnered with the NBA for relief efforts, which are also being greatly advanced by Dwyane Wade and Alonzo Mourning.

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[Ed note: Please welcome Alex Yovanovich as a first-time contributor to 8p9s ... and one who will hopefully be penning more of his thoughts in the weeks and months to come.]

mark_jacksons_best_pgs

It’s the 800-pound gorilla in the room. It’s the NBA’s express elevator ride to winning seasons, consistent play and an excited fan base.

What is it?

It’s not Mark Cuban.

It’s a top-flight point guard, of course.

Think about it. How many Kobe Bryants are out there for the taking? That’s right. Not too many, huh? But point guard is a different story. There are a handful of these characters that can make a big difference. Getting the right one can be worth his weight in gold.

While recent history suggests that having a solid point guard alone does not win you championships, it does tell you that it is often the simplest and quickest way to turn around a bad team. Look at recent examples like what Chris Paul, Deron Williams and Steve Nash did to improve the fortunes of New Orleans, Utah and Phoenix. Going from 50 losses to 50 wins can happen in a big hurry with the right point guard.

Conversely, there is no quicker way to blow up a good team than to foolishly let a good point guard go. Look at Detroit’s quick plunge from their long run of 50-plus-wins-per-year to their abysmal 11-25 record this year. The Bad Boys Part II used to inspire fear. Now they inspire pity.

Think they miss Chauncey Billups? Yeah, me too.

The Pacers have needed a point guard since Mark Jackson left for Toronto following the team’s lone NBA Finals appearance at the end of the 2000 season. Despite some early flashes, Jamaal Tinsley was never the answer. In fact, Tinsley may have been the single most limiting factor to the Pacers playoff fate in 2003-04, the year they raced to a brilliant 61-win regular season and saw it all come crashing down in the Eastern Conference Finals. I am certainly not alone in thinking that if you simply swapped the point guards the Pacers would have dusted off the Pistons in six games instead of the other way around.

As for the most recent attempt to fill the point guard vacancy, all you have to do is watch a few games to see that TJ Ford has no business starting in the NBA. And Coach Jim O’Brien obviously agrees as TJ went from starter to out-of-the-rotation in only 30 games. He’s probably best suited as an instant offense guy off the bench where the coach can judge by his first shot whether to play him his 15 minutes or sit him or the rest of the game. A taller, less-explosive Nate Robinson, perhaps.

Earl Watson is serviceable but little else, and while rookie AJ price has looked good in limited time, I’ll have to see more to believe he the long-term solution that Indiana has been seeking since Mark Jackson.

When you really think about it the Pacers have had two point guards that were difference makers in the entire team history. One was Jackson. The other was Freddie Lewis, who regularly lit up opponents in the Pacers’ ABA glory days. That’s two guys in 43 years!

Kentucky point guard John Wall looks to be the next star NBA point guard in waiting. But it will take the number one overall pick in the next NBA draft to nab Wall. The Pacers are bad, but they are still 8 games ahead of New Jersey with only 46 games to go, and the Nets show no signs of turning things around any time soon. Even if the Pacers were to start dumping players — like trading Troy Murphy to Cleveland for Zydrunas Ilgauskas’ expiring contract — they still probably aren’t bad enough to pass the Nets for the league’s worst record. Unfortunately, even then the top pick is not guaranteed, still hinging on the fate of a fickle ping pong ball.

My guess here is that with Danny Granger back the Pacers will begin to win more often and perhaps even crest the 30-wins plateau, which will leave them once again in no man’s land — not nearly good enough to make the playoffs but not nearly bad enough to get the NBA’s next star point guard.

But let’s say that all the bad karma that has befallen the Pacers since the brawl in Detroit suddenly does an about face and the Pacers get lucky — very lucky. John Wall is the type of point guard that you can build an NBA team around. Suddenly, players like Granger, Roy Hibbert and Tyler Hansbrough would likely look like they have clue and become more effective. Add in a veteran player at shooting guard and things could get really exciting in a hurry at Conseco Fieldhouse.

You remember those days, right?

You know, when Mark Jackson would give Reggie Miller a great look at a last second shot. The crowd would hold their breath. The ball would tickle the twine. The crowd would erupt into an absolute frenzy. Those days could happen again — with just a little good fortune.

Now, about replacing that Miller guy…

There aren’t 10 human beings alive that could make the pass Mark makes at 1:32.

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Game #24 Recap: Mauled

by Tim Donahue on December 19, 2009 at 1:03 pm

Pacers @ Grizzlies
94 Score 107
9 Largest Lead 18
97.9 Offensive Efficiency 111.5
42.4% eFG% 51.7%
40.7% (35/86) FG% 47.2% (42/89)
14.3% (3/21) 3PT% 57.1% (8/14)
77.8% (21/27) FT% 71.4% (15/21)
42 (14) Rebounds (Off.) 48 (14)
13 (18) Turnovers (Points Led To) 16 (19)
44 Points in the Paint 52
16 Fast Break Pts 17
15 Assists 23
7 Steals 7
1 Blocks 5

Post-Game Essentials: Box Score | PM Game Flow | Play-By-Play | Shot Chart | Behind the Boxscore | Indy Star Recap | Cornrows Recap | AP Recap | Pacer’s Digest Post Game

In the summer of 1975, the movie “Jaws” hit the theaters to huge box office success.  It was no longer safe to go in the water.  Since this is a “me, too!” society, the natural result was a flurry of copycat Man-vs.-Beast flicks, mostly varying degrees of schlock.

As a skittish 9-year old, the flurry of commercials not only made me afraid of the water, the woods, and basically any living thing that inhabited them, they also made me deathly afraid of commercials.  I learned the opening tones of all the commercials, instinctively bolting from the room, diving under the covers, or screwing my eyes shut as tightly as I could.

If you’re wondering why I’m babbling on about this, there are a couple of reasons.  First,  the longer I talk about this, the longer I can delay talking about the game.  Second, one of the copycat movies was a particularly large turd called “Grizzly.”

As I watching the end of the second quarter last night, I was reminded of  that movie, those commercials, and that sudden urge to hide my eyes and plug my ears.  The signs were there.  The Pacers, on the verge of taking control of the game, started to make those little mistakes that are equivalent of the opening strains of the commercials’ theme.

Dahntay Jones steps to the line to take two free throws that would have given the Pacers their first double digit lead.   It would have represented a 22-point turnaround in a little less than 18 minutes of game time.   After falling behind 19-8, the Pacers had outscored the Griz 48-28.  The momentum was theirs, and they had a chance to get a stronger grip.

Instead, for the second time in as many games, Dahntay misses both and leaves the Pacers exposed.  Sixty six seconds and two putrid offensive possessions later, Indiana heads to the locker room up only five and looking decidedly shaky.

My inner 9-year old was telling me to cower under the covers, but the infinitely more delusional inner Pacer fan kept me with it.  Any of the linked recaps above will detail what happened next.  Brand new nightmares were created as the Pacers opened the third by basically puking all over their shoes.  Mike Dunleavy missing three straight free throws was the gratuitous “jump out of the shadows” scare, but the real gore was at the 5:48 mark.

Exhibiting a voyeuristic bent, nine NBA players (5 Grizzlies and 4 Pacers) stared with the same slack-jawed, glassy-eyed expression evident of a horror movie patron as Jeff Foster received the ball above the top of the key.  The Pacers offense seemed frozen, like so many victims of movie monsters, (though honestly, it could be argued that the Pacer Offense’s natural state is frozen) leaving Jeff to desperately heave a 20-foot jumper before he was eaten by the shot clock.   The results were predictably tragic – a mother and her two small children in the first row were maimed by the errant projectile.

It was at that point, with the Pacers down 12, that my inner 9-year old had finally bludgeoned the starry-eyed Pacer fan into submission and took control of the remote.

The 9-year old switched to something much more cheery and less gruesome:  the second season of “Dexter” on DVD.

So, I’d love to deconstruct what happened the rest of the game, but I only watched glimpses after that.  I tracked it on the box score for a while, then foolishly returned to see Buckaroo Banzai hit three freebies to cut it to six.  Naturally, the monster was not really dead, and the delusional Pacer fan in me died screaming as Zach Randolph blocked Buckaroo’s shots not once, but twice on the same possession.

In any case, the game was informative in terms of warning signs, so I’ll give you a few, so you can watch for these in future games:

  • Pacer players making “iffy” shots – Both Dahntay Jones and T.J. Ford were getting buckets last night, but they were the type that any defense would will live with them taking.  Ford was making challenged pull ups, just a couple feet outside of his comfort zones.  Dahtnay dropping J’s from just inside the arc.  Defenses will win in the long run, if that’s how the Pacers are scoring.
  • Low assist total – In the first half, the Pacers were assisting on fewer than half of their makes, and T.J. Ford had none.  For the game, they had only 15 assists on 35 FG’s, and Ford finished with only one in 23 minutes.
  • No Joy for Troy – Over the last four games, T-Murda has shot just over 60% from the floor, including 10-21 from three.  Last night, Troy got collared on five shots.  With Troy, his bad shooting nights are almost always mechanical.  It’s true with both his three’s and his free throws.  His timing gets off, and he ends up putting too much wrist into the shot, making it flat and short.  In other words, you an usually tell early when he’s going to have a bad night.
  • High number of “Oh, man” plays -  These are those plays where success for the Pacers is tantalizingly close, then just slips away.  The dagger three that rims in-and-out.  The great defensive possession that ends in a cheap foul or somebody making an impossible shot.  The crazy bounces on the loose balls that always go to the opponent.  There were a ton of these in the second quarter last night.
  • That “nagging” feeling – Yeah, it’s nebulous, but you know it.  It’s the sense that the Pacers should be leading by much more than they really are…or, you can’t figure out why they aren’t down by more.  That’s a sure sign that they aren’t getting enough mileage out of their play.  It almost never turns out well.

The Pacers are not a very good team.  They still don’t have anyone who can protect the rim defensively, and without Danny Granger, they are down one of the few guys who can actually hit shots on a semi-regular basis.  Mike Dunleavy has played well, but you can see the conditioning is still not there yet.

For as long as these facts are true, they will remain a team walking through a league full of carnivores wearing uniforms made out of pork chops.  They’ve got to learn that their only hope of survival is to keep moving.

Grizzly2

The Pacer offense has turned many games this season into gory horror flicks.  Until they figure out to keep the motion constant, we should probably expect more sequels.

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Indiana Pacers @ Utah Jazz
Friday, December 4
9:00 PM EST
EnergySolutions Arena
Salt Lake City, Utah

Pacers vs. Jazz
6-10 (10th) Record 10-7 (6th)
Lost 3 Streak Won 3
-3.69 (20th) Avg Scoring Margin +3.59 (11th)
99.3 (18th) Points Per Game 101.5 (11th)
101.7 (26th) Offensive Rating 110.6 (5th)
105.5 (11th) Defensive Rating 106.7 (18th)
47.4% (25th) eFG% 52.3% (5th)
48.7% (13th) Opponent's eFG% 49.6 (17th)
97.6 (2nd) Pace 91.2 (24th)

Glossary: Offensive Rating | Defensive Rating | eFG% | Pace

What do you get when you cross a streaking home team that has a good offense and an average defense with a scuffling road team that has a terrible offense and an average defense?

The Pacers at the Jazz.

Utah has won it’s last three games and six of its last seven. Their slow start out of the gates is over. And on the other side, we have Indiana, which has lost its last three and six of its last seven. Their slow start out the gates has returned and essentially erased any modicum of hope that the team’s earlier five-game winning streak may have given fans.

How should we expect tonight’s game to go? You do the math.

As for personnel, Carlos Boozer has reverted to the 20/10 beast he was two/three years ago (and he’s again doing in on 55+% shooting). You can say he’s playing for a contract, you can say he’s abandoned lower-percentage fadeaways … but whatever you say, the message is the same: Boozer is a problem on the block, and the Pacers have no one outside of Jeff Foster, who is reportedly again nursing a banged up back after his other-worldly 18-rebound game on Wednesday, who can even consider stopping him.

Speaking of unstoppable players, Deron Williams certainly won’t be phased by TJ Ford. And after Monta Ellis strung him up for a career high and Tyreke Evans abused him all night despite foul trouble in the Pacers last outing, TJ better hope that Jim O’Brien finally realizes that Dahntay Jones and Earl Watson need to be the ones tasked with guarding the other team’s best penetrator. Ford just can’t do it, for reasons that have to do with both his size and his technique.

Unfortunately, that leaves Ronnie Brewer as the guy TJ would need to defend. Yeah. Good luck with that. Thus, it seems TJ will be left on an island with D Will, where his best strategy might be finding an empty bottle, writing a note and sending out an SOS.

Throw in a three-point shooting center in Mehmet Okur (currently shooting a Troy-Murphy-from-last-year-esque 45.2% from long range) who will give Roy Hibbert fits, and the Jazz are just a really tough match-up for Indiana. Remember that time last year that you tried to never think about again when Memo dropped a career-high 43 points on the Pacers? Hate to break it to you, but it actually happened. And, as I recall, he didn’t even have a particularly good second half that night.

Even when the defense does force a miss, the Pacer bigs will need to keep Paul Millsap off the offensive glass. A silver lining for Indy in that regard is that Millsap hasn’t been getting to the boards that much this year, but he remains capable of creating 5 to 6 extra possessions for his team on any given night.

The last thing I’ll be watching is Utah’s rookie reserve point guard Eric Maynor. I admittedly stopped having the time to watch NCAA hoops like four years ago, so my opinion on draft stuff isn’t particularly educated, but I saw Maynor play quite a few times at VCU and really wanted to see him in a Pacers uniform. And his per-minute numbers in this young season while backing up Deron have looked very good, so it will be interesting to see him up close for the first time.

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