作者BIASONICA (my desired happiness)
看板Hornets
標題[SunSentinel] SKOLNICK: Jones and Grant must get a grip
時間Tue May 4 12:25:08 2004
http://www.sun-sentinel.com/sports/basketball/heat/
sfl-skolnick04may04,0,7134581.column?coll=sfla-sports-heat
SKOLNICK: Jones and Grant must get a grip
Published May 4, 2004
MIAMI -- In the summer of 2000, Pat Riley arrived at "the
moment of truth," when Eddie Jones seemed as if he might
escape to Chicago. So Riley, already spurned by Grant Hill
and Tracy McGrady, sweetened the deal with the Hornets,
adding P.J. Brown to Jamal Mashburn to net Jones and Anthony
Mason in a franchise-shifting sign-and-trade.
He filled Brown's void by landing Portland power forward Brian
Grant in a three-way swap. He committed more than $170 million
to Jones and Grant for the next seven years.
Tonight, those 32-year-olds finally arrive at their own 48
moments of truth. Or 53. Or whatever it takes. While it's too
late to prove they were worth every dime, they can still prove
their worth.
As assistant Keith Askins said of Game 7, "This should be fun.
This is like no limit, Texas Hold 'Em. Ante up."
This is high-stakes stuff, and the Heat can't win if its four
oldest hands tremble. Jones and Grant have played one
winner-take-all game between them -- Grant's Game 7 loss to the
Lakers -- but their 1,455 total NBA appearances are more than
double the count of the rest of the eight-man rotation.
They need to show why they're still here. They need to be the
rocks, poker-faced, calm, cool and composed against an opponent
trying to rattle with elbows and expletives, gamesmanship and
mind games.
They need to ace this final test in this testy series, with Stan
Van Gundy even calling the Hornets out for "cheap" play Monday.
There's no real hate here. Jones and Baron Davis are buddies and
the Heat staff still holds the suddenly belligerent Brown in high
regard.
But after spending 17 days together -- longer than the Olympics or
Wimbledon or the average celebrity romance -- the Heat and Hornets
are edgy.
"The team that keeps their composure to play the game through the
hot spots will win," Grant said.
The Heat is the younger, jumpier team, and Jones and Grant are not
natural leaders. But they'll have to do.
Jones is not a forceful personality, more likely to pull players
aside than call them out. Grant can be overly emotional. After
talking about Heat players keeping their heads through the "hot
spots," and in "the hurricane," he laughed. "I might not be the
best example."
But he needs to set one tonight. Just as Jones must do more of what
he did Sunday.
"Calm yourself down, and just show the younger players, Forget what
they're doing, play through it,'" Jones said. "Like in Game 6, Lamar
[Odom] made a basket, but he gets a technical. And as soon as he did
it, I ran to him, `Yo, this is Game 6, baby.'
"We're trying to win a game. We're not trying to give them points.
We got to make them earn everything that they want. Calm down and
play the game.' That has to be our approach."
One attacking the basket and boards instead of officials and
instigators. By driving more, Jones has raised his series scoring
average to 16.2.
Grant is averaging 9.2 rebounds, while neutralized by the taller,
quicker Jamaal Magloire.
$170 million performances? No, but money has never been the fairest
measure. Even while overpaying them, Riley viewed each as they viewed
themselves, as satellites not superstars, as complementary pieces to
Alonzo Mourning.
Mourning's presence was one reason Grant declared, "This team is a
perfect fit for me," better than the one in his adopted home of
Portland, better than the one in his original home of Cleveland.
For Jones, South Florida was home. "I'm here to help Zo, ride his
coattails some nights, and he can ride mine some nights," he said
then, "but I'm going to ride his a lot more."
We know what happened next. Mourning, carrying a bad kidney, couldn't
carry Jones, or anyone else, anymore. The "Ed-die, Ed-die" chant that
carried the day during Zo's Summer Groove 2000 quickly faded, building
again only for a reserve named House.
Jones and Grant, oddly, got too much responsibility and then blame for
their contracts, as if Riley offered them at gunpoint, and they didn't
offer the corresponding effort.
The Heat got irrelevant fairly quickly.
This season the franchise got back up, with Grant and Jones back in
roles closer to what Riley envisioned. Tonight, it gets a Game 7. "It
doesn't get any better than this," Van Gundy told them as they broke
practice Monday.
You couldn't get the grin off Jones' face. He spoke of giving
"everything that we have in us," of never having been more exhausted
than after somehow winning Game 5, of understanding "what it means to
really leave yourself out on the floor," of needing to feel that way
again.
"Hopefully somebody will drag me off the floor," Jones said.
Or carry him on their shoulders. That's a moment we've been waiting
for.
Copyright c 2004, South Florida Sun-Sentinel
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