作者BIASONICA (my desired happiness)
看板Hornets
標題[TimesPicayune] Frustratingly familiar feeling for this team
時間Thu May 6 00:56:29 2004
http://www.nola.com/hornets/t-p/index.ssf?/base/sports-1/108374934699090.xml
Frustratingly familiar feeling for this team
Wednesday, May 05, 2004
John DeShazier
MIAMI -- The New Orleans Hornets wanted the moment, openly
beckoned it, believed they could bask in it. And then they
failed to play up to it.
Game 7 on Tuesday night proved to be no different from any
other game the Hornets played in Miami in their first-round
NBA playoff series.
In the end there was the familiar frustration and defeat. The
85-77 loss Tuesday night in AmericanAirlines Arena was the
last for the Hornets this season, Miami's 4-3 series victory
sending the Heat into the Eastern Conference semifinals and
the Hornets into self-inspection and monumental disappointment.
"It's always tough," forward P.J. Brown said. "The end of the
season, once again, and all you can say is that you look forward
to next year. We had high hopes this season, to reach the Eastern
Conference finals. We didn't reach our goal. It's going to be a
bitter taste in my mouth the whole summer."
The Hornets could have avoided that with something historic:
winning Game 7 for the first time in franchise history, and
winning a seven-game series for the first time. The only playoff
series the franchise has won came when the NBA still played
best-of-five in the first round.
But no history was made, no heroes were created and no reputations
were enlarged in the finale. Those things can be achieved only in
victory, and New Orleans has been foreign to an excess of success
all season.
"We didn't get anything easy," New Orleans guard David Wesley said.
"They played a heck of a defensive game. We couldn't get any rhythm.
We couldn't make any quick runs."
The Hornets, who shot 40.3 percent from the field, committed 20
turnovers and were outscored 18-5 in fast break points and 17-5 in
second-chance points, couldn't do much of anything. Playing most of
the game without star guard Baron Davis didn't help.
Davis was limited to 20 minutes because of a bruised tailbone. But
the same Hornets who virtually burst with energy in victory Sunday
to force Game 7 were a step slow almost all night, with or without
Davis.
If 35-year-old reserve Steve Smith hadn't come to the rescue with a
game-high 25 points in 27 minutes -- after playing only 19 minutes
in the first six games of the series -- the Hornets wouldn't have
been in position to make a game-ending push, to make the final score
more respectable.
"I really thought we would find a way to win this game," Wesley said.
"I just figured we could win two in a row. They just played their a
-- -- off."
Thus a season that oozed with promise at the beginning is hollow at
the end. Was the loss Tim Floyd's last as head coach of the Hornets?
Is General Manager Bob Bass the man to oversee the rebuilding project?
How much can be obtained in a trade for disgruntled forward Jamal
Mashburn, now that it appears necessary? And will any moves be
substantial enough to make the Hornets competitive next season in the
Western Conference, where five of the best six or seven NBA teams play?
"We've got to find out what we need to do, and hope winning is on
everyone's agenda around here," center Jamaal Magloire said.
Otherwise, this season will be worthy of a parade compared to the
next one.
Four times, the Hornets stepped on the court at AmericanAirlines
Arena confident of finding the right weakness, exploiting it to the
max and walking off with a win. Four times, they walked away with
nothing.
The moment came and passed, and the Hornets' fingerprints were
nowhere to be found on it.
. . . . . . .
John DeShazier can be reached at
[email protected] or
(504) 826-3410.
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