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Utah Jazz

While losing 95-84 to the Utah Jazz tonight, the Pacers tonight looked like a team full of young players who may have been less than prepared to play well just a day after their GM reportedly tried to trade two rotation players. Perhaps that wasn’t the case, but it’s hard to think that it was merely poor execution and an off shooting night that caused a 27.7% shooting first half.

That’s just really, really hard to do for a team not populated by a Joel Anthony clone army

And since there is almost nothing about this single game that is worth discussing nor remembering, I was curious as to whether or not the players thought it was just one of those nights or whether the trade talk was a factor.

I asked both Danny Granger and Brandon Rush, who was were reportedly minutes away from no longer playing professional basketball in Indiana, and each, as expected, said they just played badly. “We just got our ass kicked — didn’t rebound, didn’t shoot well,” said Granger. “That’s the recipe for a loss.”

Specifically, in terms of how a team can shoot below 28% for a whole half, Danny put the blame on the team not using an offense that had, before tonight’s 84-point outing, produced at least 100 points in all 12 games that Frank Vogel has coached. “We tried to go one-on-one too much and didn’t let our movement work for us,” said Granger. “We just didn’t execute our offense as we have in the past.”

More important than whether or not the team came out flat in one game after a crazy trade deadline Thursday — which, it should be noted, was insane leaguewide way more so than it was for Indiana — is whether or not the involved players will be affected.

For Rush, the worth-mentioning preface to all this is that it has been a hectic month.

First he sprained his ankle, which sidelined him for a while and allowed Paul George to get some extended shine. (George was already well-established in the rotation prior to the injury, but did get more time and, likely, leeway while the coach had fewer options available on the bench.) Then came yesterday’s report that would have had Brandon packing for New Orleans had Larry Bird been able to get everything in order a little more quickly. All that, and now he finds himself back in the Pacers starting lineup following Mike Dunleavy Jr. suffering a broken thumb that is expected to keep him out for the next six to eight weeks.

Still, he said he’s just ready to play ball. “I’m ready to help this team to win,” said Rush. “Being a part of this organization has been great. I’m just looking forward to [the rest of the season].”

As a third-year player who has had his name floated in deals before, he understands it is a business. “That’s the way I look at it: it’s a business,” said Rush. “You can’t take anything personal because everything is about business around here. You try not to get your feelings involved. I mean, everybody’s bound to get traded every once in a while.”

And despite the loss and the obvious frustration Rush showed about that, he has remained upbeat enough to even drop some jokes about his future in Indiana and what the front office has in store for him next. “What’s going to happen this summer?” he asked with a tongue-in-cheek grin. “Maybe they’re gonna try again.”

Josh McRoberts was quick to dismiss any impact that this week’s trade deadline may have had on him. “I’m frustrated we lost,” said a stoic McRoberts. After some prodding about him almost being sent to Memphis, he only offered that “it’s good to know that I’ll be here the rest of the year. That’s a good thing. That’s positive.”

Like Granger, he saw tonight’s garbage-scented performance as simply an on-court performance problem. “We got killed,” said McRoberts. “They killed us on the boards. We didn’t help each other on defense or rebounding. We got killed.”

You sure did, Indiana.

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Nothing like a swift kick in the reality to deflate the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade-sized balloons that have been trailing the Pacers bandwagon all week. Sure it was the second night of a back-to-back during the tail half of a West Coast road trip, but Utah just sent Indiana a clear, 110-88 message about the difference between a borderline contender and an up-and-coming team with some moxie. (I use the term “moxie” only because I bet that’s how Jerry Sloan would describe this squad.)

It wasn’t all bad. There was the second quarter. But the rest was indeed bad. Really bad.

Indy started off the game looking like they had just stepped off a plane. They turned the ball over repeatedly, didn’t close out on shooters and could not keep the Jazz off of the offensive glass. Even while letting Utah score basically at will early, Indiana did manage to keep up … for a while. Less than four minutes in, the Pacers tied it up at 12-12. Soon after, it was 12-23. And the Pacers would only score 5 more points over the next 8:30. Deron Williams set the tone with 9 points and 9 assists in the initial frame.

At that point, with the Jazz finishing the quarter more than doubling up the Pacers at 35-17, the game looked all but over. To their credit, however, Darren Collison and Danny Granger showed some good on-court leadership, pushing the team to such a good quarter that, at the half, Indy actually was out-shooting Utah 47.1% to 46.9% — this despite the fact that the Jazz posted a video-game-like rate above 60% in the first quarter.

But the Jazz would blow it open again in the third, flushing any hopes the team had down the toilet. DWill continued his good play (overall, he dropped 24 points and 16 dimes with 0 TOs while shooting 10-15), but the second half belonged to Utah front court, with Paul Millsap and Al Jefferson torching whoever was standing in between them and the hoop. AK-47, if inefficiently, even got in on the action. Millsap, Jefferson and Kirilenko finished with 16, 17  and 18 points, respectively, to go along with a combined 25 boards.

There were no real standouts individually for the good guys.

Collison definitely looked really good in the second quarter, but he faltered at times later, turning the ball over six times. It wasn’t just the total either; a few came just as the team was starting to put a few good possessions together and hoping to crawl back into the game in the late third. Danny Granger was an all-too-willing shooter early, several times using a few mere inches of space after a dribble hand-off to launch a three. One of his attempts from behind the arc fell. Five others did not. He finished 5-for-16 with 14 points. Pretty gross.

Roy Hibbert’s 6-for-8 line looks better on paper. He probably should have gotten more looks, and I’m sure people will be upset that the team didn’t go to him more down low. The thing is, though, he had trouble really getting good position, often being forced to a less-than-ideal spot to receive the ball in a good place for him to do much. He didn’t really force the issue either, which is odd considering that he has size and strength on Al Jeff, a guy not known for being a formidable post defender by any stretch of the imagination. Hard to pinpoint what went wrong. Roy looked a little tired perhaps. Long road trip and all maybe.

Mike Dunleavy, Brandon Rush and Josh McRoberts each had their moments of good and bad play. James Posey and TJ Ford were largely a waste of post-game-uniform-detergent.

But it really wasn’t about the individuals so much as one team aggressively hammering the glass and making a lot of mid-range shots. At first, it just seemed as though Utah was hot. But after a while, the more and more quality looks they had, you could see their confidence grow as they realized they had jumpers available whenever they wanted — and quite possibly a second or third chance if they missed. 19 offensive rebounds by a team that missed 53 shots is simply unacceptable. Tough to win that way — especially if you’re also going to turn the ball over 18 times (most of which came before the fourth quarter garbage time began).

Ultimately, this was all to be expected. It would be absurd to expect a team unaccustomed to having the label of being good to win three straight out West. Not in Utah against a Jazz squad playing as well as this team has been.

The best thing to takeaway from this is the second quarter, during which the Pacers didn’t lay down and die when they easily could have, and part of the third, when they also cut the lead down to single digits for one stretch that made it seem like the game was not already over.

On to the next one.

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Indiana Pacers @ Utah Jazz
Wednesday, December 1, 2010
9:00 pm EST
EnergySolutions Arena
Salt Lake City, Utah

If you want to beat the Jazz, it seems like the best thing to do is not take a double-digit lead during the game. From November 6-13, Utah won five straight games in which they trailed by more than 10, coming back to defeat the Clippers, Heat, Magic, Hawks and Bobcats.

It was pretty insane.

And they haven’t slowed down since. After dropping two of their next three games, they have since won six in a row, including wins over Western Conference heavyweights New Orleans and Los Angeles (you know of which one I speak). If the Pacers recent success has made the league stand up and take note of them as perhaps the most overlooked good team in the preseason, the Jazz’s winning ways have made people begin to think of them as the most underrated title contender.

Deron Williams is the main reason. Averaging 22 pts and 10 assists per game, he — as he has done for years — makes the offense work. He lost long-time running mate Carlos Boozer to the Bulls in the offseason, but no matter; Paul Millsap has stepped in seamlessly, Al Jefferson brings even more scoring to the frontcourt and Andrei Kirilenko fills in the cracks, mainly providing versatile defense at any number of positions but also helping out with some scoring or shooting if need be.

All in all, this is going to be a tough game for Indy to win. It’s a back-to-back on the road in a tough building to play against a very good team. Still, fans should be less concerned with the final score than how the team plays. If they can just go out there and execute, not letting themselves get dominated by a better squad, that will be encouraging.

Then again, beating Utah tonight and then finishing off Phoenix on Friday to go 4-0 on this West Coast swing would be pretty nice today

Pacers vs Jazz By the Numbers

Jazz vs Pacers
14-5 (3rd) Record (Conf Rank) 9-7 (5th)
7-3 (Home) Home / Road Records 5-2 (Road)
Won 6 Current Streak Won 2
4-1 Last 5 Head-to-Head 1-4
+4.21 (7th) Point Differential (Rank) +3.94 (8th)
109.4 (7th) Offensive Rating (Rank) 105.8 (18th)
50.3% (12th) eFG% (Rank) 49.8% (14th)
104.9 (10th) Defensive Rating (Rank) 101.6 (5th)
46.0% (1st) Opponent's eFG% (Rank) 46.4% (2nd)
91.3 (21st) Pace (Rank) 94.2 (10th)

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Game #73 Recap: Beat Down

by Jared Wade on March 28, 2010 at 1:46 am · 2 comments

Indiana Pacers 122 – Utah Jazz 106

———-

Obviously, a lot of Pacers fans don’t like to see all these late-season, (probable) draft-pick-lowering wins. But, come on, every Pacer fan had to enjoy this one.

Down 12 in the middle of the third quarter, the Pacers flipped the switch. I honestly have no idea how, considering how well Utah has been playing for most of March (they had won 9 of their last 12 coming into the game) and how well they had been player even earlier in this match-up. Deron, Boozer, Okur and even Wesley Matthews were all been playing well.

Then the Pacers took over and, as Tim put it, “just peeled back the top of Utah’s skull for the last 17 minutes or so.”

A driving lay-up by AJ Price and steal of the ensuing in-bounds pass seemed to get things going. The theft didn’t directly lead to points as AJ passed off to Brandon Rush, who dribbled around awkwardly before finding McRoberts in the post for a missed turnaround. But it seemed to be the catalyst for the Pacers onslaught.

Soon after, Indy came out of a timeout and Danny Granger went hard to the hold, getting himself to the line for some easy points. Josh McRoberts adeptly swiped the ball from Boozer on the next defensive possession, and the Pacers were back on the attack. AJ went to the hole aggressively, but still had his head up to find Roy on a dump off. Hibbert missed the finish, but got to the line anyway. On the other end, Granger just straight took the the ball from CJ Miles more easily than that guy in the hoodie stole Tim’s gun in last week’s episode of Life & Times of Tim and got back to the line when CJ fouled him in frustration. (I would have been frustrated and embarrassed as well if I had my lunch money taken like that.) After another Pacers stop, AJ stuck a wide open trey. Then McRoberts got another steal. Then AJ found himself open for another jumper out of it, but missed.

Still, the floodgates were open.

Josh swatted the bejesus out of a Jazz attempt from the paint on the next trip down, which he followed up with an offensive board and nice little sweeping jump hook putback of offense. The Pacers were beyond that “we smell blood in the water” part of the run. A full-on shark attack was in progress..

The degree to which Indiana could do no wrong was best displayed when Hibbert made a mid-post move and hit a jumper with the shot clock running out. I feel like the Pacers have missed end-of-the-shot clock attempts to an almost-impossible-from-a-mere-probability-standpoint level all year. Really, it’s been uncanny. They just never get those “terrible possession saved by a made low-percentage shot” bailouts that other teams seem to get like six times per game and Jamal Crawford makes in his sleep.

But Hibbert made this one.

And got fouled to make it a three-point play.

By the time McRoberts (whose third quarter in this one was easily one of the top 10 quarters any Pacer has had this year) was dunking on the Pacers’ last possession of the third, it really seemed like the Pacers had taken over. They were only up 5, but it truly felt like Indy was the better team. And that other team was the Jazz, who are, oh-by-the-way, quite possibly on their way to a number two seed in the Western Conference playoffs.

Danny put the punctuation on the ass-kicking. He started the fourth with a “BOOM. ROASTED” four-point play and never looked back on his way to a career-high 44 points (on 14/23 shooting and 11/15 from the line). Everything that Pacer diehards have come to love about Danny when he plays as his peak was on display for the final period, as he dropped 14 points on 6/8 shooting, snatched 6 boards and doled out 2 assists. That 2 number doesn’t even tell how well he was facilitating the offense, however. He was doing great stuff with the dribble almost every time he touched the ball, forcing the defense to react to his movement and then either doing something productive himself of whipping the rock over to someone in a good percentage to make a move.

It was perhaps his best game of the year. (And we’ll get into this in even more depth tomorrow on Monday.)

The only thing left to say about the game came from one of the a Jazz broadcasters: “The jazz are being run out of the building.”

Yes. Yes they were.

Some other notes:

  • Brandon Rush is being much more active off the bounce of late. We saw it all game long from him here, and even though it didn’t always lead to points (in the first half alone, a kick-out resulted in a missed jumper, he missed a lay-up and was once forced to pull it back out after Korver recover), attacking off the dribble is a great thing. It’s like making a 70% play in Texas Hold ‘Em poker. You’re still going to lose the hand 30% of the time, which is a lot, but it is still a good move. Lately, Brandon is doing things that more often than not help lead to points. Sure, it took him 60 games to start doing much on offense aside from make wide-open jumpers (and as we saw on the last play of the first half, he still has a long way to go before he can become a guy that you want to give the ball, too), but better late than never.
  • Earl Watson got absolutely clocked right after half time when Deron Williams ripped the ball across his body on a drive attempt and caught Earl with an elbow to the nose/mouth. Blood spewed, and play stopped for a minute before Watson had to head to the bench with a towel sopping up the drippings. He returned later, so no worries, but that sure did look like it hurt. He’s been great on the court of late (as Indy Cornrows details very well here and also gets into somewhat here as well), and it was excellent to see him shake off this blow to get back out there.
  • With about 7:30 to go in the 3rd quarter, the Conseco DJ played the Chicken Dance song, clearly in an attempt to get Deron to forget that he was supposed to be running the offense and once again bust a move.
  • Roy protected the rim very well in the fourth, unleashing a two-handed block that would have made Karch Kiraly stand up and cheer. He followed that up soon thereafter with a layup-altering challenge of a Deron Williams attempt that turned a nice drive from the point guard from a would-be bucket into a desperate heave at the rim.
  • A Jazz announcer said this about Josh McRoberts: “He’s a hard-nosed player. I guess anyone who wears his socks up that high is.” I subsequently chuckled.

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