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Washington Wizards

Game #79 Recap: Playoff Bound

by Alex Yovanovich on April 6, 2011 at 11:52 pm · 16 comments

(Photo: Frank McGrath/Pacers)

For the first time in five years the Indiana Pacers are in the NBA Playoffs. The combination of the Pacers 136-112 trouncing of the Washington Wizards and Orlando’s 111-102 overtime victory over Charlotte clinched a spot for the blue and gold.

Wednesday night was as good as it can possibly get offensively for the Pacers. They shot nearly 60 percent for the game and 54 percent from three-point range with 13 trifectas to their credit. The offensive onslaught led to season-highs of 43 points in the first quarter and 75 points at halftime. After three quarters the Pacers had scored 108 points.

Danny Granger was an extremely efficient 7 of 11 from the field for 25 points to lead seven Pacers in double figures. When Granger takes good shots like he did against Washington he is a bear to stop. It’s hard to remember a forced shot. That’s a lesson for what will be needed in the playoffs. All seven players in double figures shot better than 50 percent. It was that kind of night.

The star of the game was Paul George, who shot 5 of 6 on three pointers to chip in a career-high 23 points. It couldn’t have come at a better time for the rookie. There have been many recent games where George looked lost offensively. His three point shooting has been abysmal and without it he hasn’t been able to contribute much in the way of scoring.

There were whispers that Mike Dunleavy should be put back in the starting lineup. After all, George was the one starter who hadn’t necessarily earned his role. His promotion was attained because Dunleavy was injured. On Tuesday Pacers coach Frank Vogel shot down suggestions that he make changes to his starting lineup. It’s hard to say if this vote of confidence helped the starters, but it sure looked like it against the Wizards.

George seemed like a new player. If he can build on this game the Pacers starting lineup becomes a matchup problem for most teams. Without a consistent threat at the shooting guard the Pacers become much easier to defend. For instance, if Roy Hibbert is posting up or Darren Collison is running a pick and roll with Tyler Hansbrough help is always there if George is not a threat to hit a three pointer. If George is a threat it becomes much harder for defenses to help and the offense opens up.

Against the Wizards Hibbert had 16 points, Collison 15, Hansbrough 15, Dunleavy 14 and Josh McRoberts 10. Perhaps even more important, Collison garnered a double-double as he dished out 11 assists in what had to rank as one of his better nights all season.

This was a game where little defense was played on either end of the court. The Pacers will certainly have to have to stiffen up on defense for what looks more and more like a first round matchup with the top-seeded Chicago Bulls. Giving up 112 points is not going to cut it.

One sequence that demonstrated the lack of defense on this night came in the first quarter when Hansbrough missed the second of his free throws then quickly knifed down the lane past three flat-footed Wizards. These three seemed mesmerized as they stared at #50 throwing down an uncontested dunk. It was like they were saying, “Yeah we’ll get you next time.” And get him they did. Later, as if to make up for the embarrassment, Andray Blatche committed an unnecessary flagrant foul as Hansbrough drove for a layup. This was a case where a clean, hard foul would have been called for… but that just demonstrates the ineptitude of the Wizards.

The Pacers now can turn their attention to the playoffs, where there will be no Washingtons on the schedule. Making the postseason, even with a losing record, is a big accomplishment for the Pacers. There were times in this uneven season that the task seemed too big for this team. The Pacers will surely make it their goal to beat their opponent in the series, but even one playoff win will go a long way towards building for the future for a team that hasn’t played in the postseason for half a decade.

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Indiana Pacers @ Washington Wizards
Wednesday, December 29, 2010
7:00 pm EST
Verizon Center
Washington, DC

OK, Roy. It’s time to get it together. Really, it’s past time to get it together. You have played atrociously for the better part of a month now, and your offensive performance since December 11 has been an utter joke. No guy with your size, footwork and touch around the hoop should be capable of shooting 34-for-107 (32%) over an eight-game stretch. Thirty-two percent. Seriously? Even John Salmons is laughing at you. (h/t Mike Wells)

Danny Granger, you haven’t been much better. Only twice have you shot above 40% in a game during December. Twice. Two times. Overall, you’re shooting 36% for the month and a miserable 27.8% from three. As with Roy’s shooting woes, such a number seems impossible for you to shoot for this long. Moreover, it is almost amazing in a you-ate-a-whole-wheel-of-cheese kind of way that you continue to launch so many treys even while converting at a Marquis Daniels-level success rate. But sure enough, only twice have you chucked up fewer than 5 three-pointers in your last 13 games (and make that 20 games dating back to November, during which you were admittedly shooting well). I will give you credit for attacking the paint a little more; you have gotten to the line an average of 8.5 times per night over your last four games. But you are also 26-for-83 (31.3%) from the floor over that same stretch, so let’s not break out the leftover spiked eggnog and start testing the New Year’s noisemakers in celebration just yet.

How about you, Darren Collison? What is it you would say you do out there? It’s December 28 and you haven’t even recorded 8 assists in a single game. Not one. Zero times. And you haven’t scored more than 18 points in a game since November 9. You had 12 games of 20 or more last year after the All-Star break alone. Are you OK? Would you like to talk about it?

We can keep piling on the coach. He deserves a lot of criticism. Bob Kravitz just handed out a bunch and it’s hard to come up with many counterpoints. God knows a lot of the things the coach of this team does seem nonsensical.

But at the end of the day, if you three guys don’t play better on offense — scoring points, shooting at at least league-average rates, set up your teammates for buckets, create easy points at the line — this team just is not going to win many games. There isn’t any coach that can do anything about how your playing other than, “Hey you … yeah, you three guys … the best three players on my team … stop playing unfathomably terrible basketball.”

Tonight — and again on Friday — you play the Wizards, the worst teams in the Eastern Conference. If you can get things back on track in these two games, fans will be able to regain some of that early-season hope that had you looking like a team that might be a tough out in the first round of the playoffs.

If not?

Well, I’m not 100% sure you guys will even make the playoffs anymore.

Pacers vs. Wizards By the Numbers

Wizards vs Pacers
7-22 (15th) Record (Conf Rank) 13-16 (7th)
7-7 (Home) Home / Road Records 5-8 (Road)
Lost 3 Current Streak Lost 2
1-4 Last 5 Head-to-Head 4-1
-6.97 (28th) Point Differential (Rank) -0.41 (17th)
102.1 (25th) Offensive Rating (Rank) 102.4 (24th)
47.1% (26th) eFG% (Rank) 48.7% (20th)
109.5 (24th) Defensive Rating (Rank) 102.9 (8th)
51.2 (25th) Opponent's eFG% (Rank) 47.2% (4th)
93.2 (10th) Pace (Rank) 94.6 (7th)

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Josh McRoberts: Ankle Breaker

by Jared Wade on April 22, 2010 at 1:21 pm · 5 comments

We have a lot of things to talk about this summer. A lot went wrong this year, ownership is saying some troubling things and none of the key players that Bird has assembled improved considerably aside from Roy Hibbert. I mean, even Larry himself is publicly calling out Granger for taking a step back. (I don’t necessarily believe that and don’t really think Larry really does either, but Danny obviously didn’t have nearly as good of a year this season as he did in 2008-09 even if he was able to right his ship over the last 20 games.)

I promise that we will soon be back to more regular posting to break down all that stuff and weigh in on everything from individual player assessments and the ongoing “they need guards—badly” concern to the perhaps-seriouser-than-ever financial problems for the franchise and how the team can improve this summer through the draft/free agency.

But, frankly, after such a terrible year, I think we’re all a little burnt out and need, like, two weeks away from Pacer Nation (starting retroactively from the end of the regular season apparently). 82 straight games of almost unbroken negativity will do that.

One positive thing about the season, however, was Josh McRoberts.

His emergence as a potential rotation guy was, to me, very unexpected and, at times, very fun to watch — both because this roster lacks much in the way of athletic finishers other than him and because, let’s face it, this team needs as many low-salaried-yet-productive players as possible given how much of the cap is monopolized by middling, overpaid vets. (Looking at you, TJ, Lil Dun, Foster, Troy and Tinsley’s buyout.)

Thankfully, Kyle Weidie of the Wizards blog Truth About It was able to track down two sweet gifs of what was my favorite Josh McRoberts play of the season and probably one of the better Pacer moments of the entire year. A few of Josh’s dunks/alley oops were more productive from a basketball sense, sure, but I’ll always have an affinity for ankles getting broke. So I like this the best.

Kyle was nice enough to point out two other interesting facts about the play.

In other news, McRoberts kinda-sorta looks like a much taller Charlie from “It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia”.

Also notice — in the first GIF — how Al Thornton was duped by McRoberts, meaninglessly sprinting to an irrelevant spot on the floor.

Enjoy.

(And don’t worry … we’ll be back to our regularly scheduled posting in, I dunno, 10 days or so. I’m going to Boston all next week for a work conference so I’ll be back on my grind shortly thereafter. There will be some stuff before then, but don’t expect a huge windfall of content, from me at least, in the interim. I will, however, continue to cover the NBA Playoffs over at Both Teams Played Hard and Hardwood Paroxysm, so stop by and say hello.)

Josh McRoberts Javale McGee

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Game #82 Recap: Yeah, About That

by Tim Donahue on April 15, 2010 at 12:05 pm · 3 comments

Washington Wizards 98 – Indiana Pacers 97

————–

In the last recap, I wrote this:

So do we wad up the previous 17 games and throw them in the trash?  Nope. We don’t. That all happened. It may not have been great for the franchise in terms of draft position. In fact, it almost certainly wasn’t.

But it had to have been good for these players individually — and collectively — on some level. It gave them some idea that they are (OK, at least some of them are) legitimate NBA players. And while last night’s game was an obvious reminder that they aren’t great NBA players, hey, at least it wasn’t the last game of the season.

They will have one more opportunity to wash that terrible taste out of their mouths and go into the Summer with some semblance of confidence that this team, while by no means good, may not be as bad as they were for the first four months of the season.

That doesn’t say a lot, no … But it does say something.

Bring on the Wizards.

I may have been wrong about all or part of that.

Tombstone

This was fun. Let’s do this again next year.

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