作者BIASONICA (my desired happiness)
看板Hornets
標題[TimesPicayune] Hornets crash Heat's playoff party just in time
時間Sat May 1 02:31:36 2004
http://www.nola.com/hornets/t-p/index.ssf?/base/sports-1/108331731856460.xml
Hornets crash Heat's playoff party just in time
Friday, April 30, 2004
John DeShazier
MIAMI -- Better late than never that the real Hornets have
arrived and joined the playoff party, resembling a team capable
of kicking fanny and moving ahead.
Obviously, New Orleans isn't over the hump. If it fails tonight
in Game 5 at AmericanAirlines Arena, the team pretty much is back
where it started, desperately in need of a victory at home Sunday
and one on the road next Tuesday to eliminate the pesky Miami Heat.
But at least now this really can be called a series, the only one
in the playoffs in which the participants have split the first four
games, the only one that is guaranteed to reach six games and has a
good chance to go seven.
In Tuesday's 96-85 Hornets victory, which tied the series at 2-2,
it was Miami exhibiting the foul body language, showing the quick
temper, spending as much time or more begging/debating officials
as keeping tabs on the Hornets.
The pressure cooker that is the road -- with more intense defense
by the home team, and more physical play allowed -- seemed to spook
the Heat, which twice failed to match New Orleans' fortitude wire to
wire.
"That's the thing those younger guys are learning," Hornets guard
David Wesley said. "The series only gets harder. Right now, we've
figured out a few of their weaknesses. Now, we see how they react
to that, how they adjust.
"I think they may be a little unsure how to deal with some situations."
What the Hornets need, of course, is for that unsteadiness to carry
over to tonight. Miami has won 14 straight at AmericanAirlines Arena
and has home-court advantage in the series, in part because of a 3-1
regular-season advantage over the Hornets.
All the Heat has to do is twice recapture what it had in Games 1 and
2 and the Hornets, no matter how game and defiant, will pack for
vacation instead of a second-round series that'll begin on the road
against the Indiana Pacers.
But does anybody else get the feeling New Orleans took up residence
in Miami's cranium and could extend the stay a while longer? Ever
seen a team as preoccupied about whether an opponent (Hornets guard
Baron Davis) is as injured as he claims, as if playing up an injury
or an assortment of them really has a bearing on what happens on the
court? And, by the way, isn't a team supposed to be resourceful
enough to take advantage of injuries, or wise enough to ignore the
fabrications and pay attention to what's real on the floor?
"It's nice, because it means we're in this," Wesley said. "If we'd
lost either of those games (at home), it would have been a tough,
uphill battle. Now, the pressure grows."
As does the Heat's resemblance to the Hornets of a week ago.
The role reversal has been obvious, from one team strutting to the
other, from one boiling over to the other, from one seizing momentum
to the other.
The Hornets are on the roll now, looking something like the team they
said they'd be when the party started. But they still haven't done
anything beyond what they should've, winning two games at home to
counter the two Miami won on its home floor in the most even pairing
in the first round.
Something out of the ordinary is needed today, or on Tuesday, if the
series comes down to one game, winner take all.
Something like molding Miami into the team the Hornets want it to be,
the team the Hornets have made it be the last two games.
. . . . . . .
John DeShazier can be reached at
[email protected] or
(504) 826-3410.
--
※ 發信站: 批踢踢實業坊(ptt.cc)
◆ From: 218.166.77.108