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Tracy McGrady

Player Pinpoint: Tracy McGrady

by Jay Ganatra on February 23, 2011 at 7:02 pm · 1 comment

Tonight, the Indiana Pacers face off against their old rivals, Tayshaun Prince and the Detroit Pistons.  One newcomer to the team, however, has experienced quite the basketball resurgance in recent weeks, and so today on Player Pinpoint, we detail Pistons guard Tracy McGrady.

During the years of 2000 through 2008, Tracy McGrady was a perennial All-Star.  From seven All-NBA selections to two scoring titles, an argument could be made that, for that eight year stretch, McGrady was one of the best players in the Association.

In the last few years, however, McGrady has been, to put it nicely, “written off” by critics and fans alike.  His public perception into mediocrity culminated this past offseason, as, on account of the apparent back surgeries, only a handful of teams were interested in the free agent forward.

For some teams, their concern was that McGrady simply was not as talented as he was in years past.  Others had the viewpoint that even if he had recovered nicely from surgery, he would not be able to play a supplementary role as a potential bench player.  In the end, these two concerns greatly clouded the decision-makers’ perception of McGrady, and by the time August 2010 rolled around, only three teams had brought him in for an official workout.

One of those teams, however, was the Detroit Pistons, who today face off against the Indiana Pacers.  Coming off a disappointing season, the Pistons’ brain trust of Joe Dumars and John Kuester viewed the addition of McGrady on a minimum salary as a low-risk, high-reward proposal.  Would the addition of a potential superstar alter their internal dynamic of the team for the worse?  No, agreed Michael Rosenburg of the Detroit Free Press.  “They can’t mess up their championship chemistry, because they don’t have championship chemistry”.  On the other hand, what if McGrady did indeed exceed expectations and return to form?  Well, then, he would happily be added to Dumar’s long list of successful reclamation projects.  With such a mindsight, the Pistons signed McGrady on August 10th, hoping for the best.

Fast forward seven months later, and it is clear that the situation has indeed been a veritable win-win for both parties.  The road to redemption, however, was wrought with initial struggles.  In the 15 games he played in during the month of November, for example, McGrady averaged just 4.9 points per game in less than eighteen minutes off the bench.  As the season has wore on, however, his game has slowly returned to its brilliance of years past.  In December, he averaged nearly twenty minutes per game, and in January, he increased his monthly minutes to an extremely respectable 31.3 per game.  As his playing time has increased, so too has his production:  In January, he averaged a miniature triple double, putting up the guady line of an average of 11 points, 5 rebounds, and 5 assists per game.  His resurgence has progressed even further in February, as he is currently averaging 12.6 points per game, and has even managed to get to the free throw stripe thrice a night.

McGrady’s return to prominence, however, cannot be expressed through statistics alone.  Rather, he has reinvented his role, relinquishing the role of scoring forward for that of a cerebral floor general.  Although the Pistons’ lack of a top-notch passing point guard contributed to Kuester’s decision to play him at the point position, McGrady has managed to play his new role in a fashion that has attracted the praise of many.  As Kuester puts it, ““His basketball IQ is off the charts.  He’s done a real good job of distributing the basketball the right way. It’s very impressive some of the things he sees on the basketball court.”

Onlookers have also noticed the play of McGrady.  “For him to become such a rock for this team at point guard was more than I ever envisioned”, praised Pistons broadcaster George Blaha.  “To see him make the transition to point guard has been equally amazing.”  Indeed, the statistics also support this, as he has had logged five or more assists fourteen times this team, and in fact has turned the ball over at a quite a low rate.

So what’s next for the revived McGrady?  Dumars has mentioned that McGrady has been ”extremely good” and that the team would “like to have him back”.  At the same time, McGrady will be a free agent, and figures to command far more than the relative pittance that he is currently earning.  Nevertheless, it is evident that McGrady is not a player who plays for the money, but rather, for the love of the game.  Concurs Blaha, ”I’ll bet you that making more money next year or the year after hasn’t really crossed his mind.”  Moving forward, thus, it is unclear whether he will return to the Pistons next season, but one thing is clear: T-Mac is Back.

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The first quarter of the Indiana’s pre-All Star Break showdown against former arch rival Detroit sure brought back memories.

Allow me to explain.

Years ago, I worked for a website that often sent me to high school girls basketball games. The early stages of this game brought back all kinds of nostalgia: a barrage of missed shots, stands completely devoid of spectators and general confusion as to my purpose for watching.

Fortunately, after a sloppy beginning, things did start to pick up and resemble a professional basketball game. Unfortunately, Tayshaun Prince was the main reason for this as he nailed his first 7 shots in a perfect first period (one missed free throw notwithstanding). By the end of the opening quarter, the Pacers had allowed 33 points and nearly revived the careers of both Prince and Tracy McGrady.

In a game on the brink of turning ugly, the Pacers went to their new go-to guy: Dahntay Jones, who had the team’s first 11 in the second quarter to keep Detroit within arm’s reach. By halftime, Indiana had to have felt fortunate to be down by just 5 considering the broadcast included the phrases “Detroit has shot 65% from the field in this quarter,” “Paul George has been taken to the locker room” and “Yes, that is Solomon Jones in the game.”

It was a contest of Detroit’s what once was vs. Indiana’s what could be. Tonight, the Pistons were a team of former stars showing flashes of brilliance in an otherwise lethargic environment. It’s like a series of reunion shows for an old rock band used to touring the world — except now they’re playing in bars in Omaha rather than sold-out forums in Oslo.

Those throwback performances coupled with solid play from the Pistons’ young players had Detroit in control for most of the game. Pacers play-by-play TV announcer Chris Denari even commented that the team “never made Detroit feel uncomfortable” in the first three quarters.

In the final period, Roy Hibbert and Josh McRoberts certainly made things a little tenuous. Down 98-88, the two big men sparked a 9-0 run to bring the Pacers within 1.

But Prince answered.

After the Pacers played nearly a full-possession of tough defense, he nailed a 20-footer to beat the shot clock before drawing a foul on Danny Granger on the next possession and sinking 2 free throws, doing nearly everything besides putting on the choke sign for the 350 fans in the arena.

This would have been enough to send the young Pacers reeling just a few weeks ago. Instead, Indiana relied on their stars down the stretch. Granger banked in a 3, Hibbert scored on a short hook and Collison scored on a fast break to tie the game.

The Pistons had one last possession to win. Tayshaun was given carte blanche to create in isolation and got to near the foul line before being thwarted by some tough Granger defense that included up to three fouls. No matter. Detroit didn’t score and the refs didn’t blow the whistle so the two teams were forced to play another five minutes.

But in the overtime, the mistakes were just too much down the stretch. The slow start defensively caught up, and the second chances given to Detroit piled up. Two turnovers (one a McRoberts palming violation and the other an offensive foul called on Hibbert when he was battling for position and Ben Wallace was flopping) and two offensive boards given up were just too big of a hurdle to overcome. And when Prince grabbed an offensive board on a Ben Gordon airball and put it in with 1:34, a straw broke the camel’s back.

As Prince probably didn’t say, “Game, blouses.”

The league now enters the All-Star break (or as I like to all it “Now What the Hell Should I Do Between Work and Sleep?” time). Tonight, a winnable game slipped away, and if the Pacers give those up like they allowed offensive rebounds tonight, it could be another pick at the end of the lottery and another season over too soon.

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Game #55 Preview: Kevin Martin’s Debut

by Jared Wade on February 20, 2010 at 5:08 pm · 0 comments

Indiana Pacers @ Houston Rockets
Saturday, February 20
8:30 pm EST
Toyota Center
Houston, Texas

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For those of you living under a rock, the trade deadline featured two major deals.

The first was Antawn Jamison to the Cavs, which pretty much makes this season’s chase for an NBA championship a two-horse race between Cleveland and Los Angeles.

The second was a three-team trade that sent Kevin Martin to the Rockets, Carl Landry to the Kings and Tracy McGrady to the Knicks.

For our old friend Donnie Walsh in New York, this was an “all-in” move hoping to win the spoils of the free agent class of 2010. It’s officially “LeBron or Bust” for those in MSG, who desperately are hoping — nay — praying that The Chosen One for some silly reason decides that he wants to play in New York with one of his very talented friends (either Wade, Bosh, Joe Johnson, Amar’e or Boozer), Danilo Galinari, Wilson Chandler, Toney Douglas, Eddy Curry and a bunch of minimum-ish-level salaried guys. (Obviously any of Wade/Bosh or Joe Johnson/Bosh or Wade/Boozer or Wade/Amare or perhaps a few other combinations would not be a total failure for the Knicks either.)

For the Kings, they got a very good (and very cheap) low-post scorer in Landry as well as enough cap room this summer to perhaps offer some free agent the max. (Kevin Arnovitz breaks down all the 2010 free agency player very well here.) Or, since Tyreke Evans is a budding superstar himself, they might be wiser to bring in one $10 million guy and one $7 million guy who can play well alongside Evans, Landry, Thompson, Casspi and Spencer Hawes. Either way, Sacramento now has a lot of flexibility and a lot of young talent to build something.

For the Rockets, they got not just Martin, but two first-round picks from the Knicks, perhaps-promising rookie Jordan Hill and Jared Jeffries, who while seen as a salaray-cap albatross in New York will just be a good defensive specialist for Houston since they weren’t trying to get under the cap this summer anyway. Aside from Danny Ferry getting Antawn, this was the coup of the deadline. Daryl Morey, aka the guy Bill Simmons calls Dork Elvis, made a very shrewd play and has set his team up very well for the next few seasons. (He didn’t do quite as well in negotiations as some people expected, but it was still a stellar move.)

More important to the Pacers, of course, is not how the Rockets play in the coming years — but how they play tonight.

Hopefully for Indiana, Houston isn’t able to seamlessly integrate Martin and Jeffries (and perhaps even Hill) into the game plan and the result is a sloppy, lackluster, disjointed effort by Rick Adelman’s boys.

If so, the Pacers will probably only lose by six or seven.

Pacers vs. Rockets: By the Numbers

Pacers @ Rockets
18-36 (14th) Overall Record (Conf Rank) 28-25 (9th)
6-21 (Road) Home / Road Records 15-11 (Home)
3-7 Record Last 10 Games 4-6
Lost 4 Current Streak Won 1
2-3 Last 5 Head-to-Head 3-2
-4.93 (28th) Avg Scoring Margin +0.36 (15th)
101.4 (28th) Offensive Rating 106.7 (15th)
43.7% (27th) FG% 44.2% (26th)
48.1% (24th) eFG% 48.8% (22nd)
106.5 (15th) Defensive Rating 106.3 (13th)
45.2% (10th) Opponent's FG% 46.7% (22nd)
48.8% (9th) Opponent's eFG% 50.1% (19th)
97.5 (2nd) Pace 93.2 (12th)

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