作者BIASONICA (my desired happiness)
看板Hornets
標題[TimesPicayune] Ice-cold offense burns Hornets against Heat
時間Thu May 6 21:01:46 2004
http://www.nola.com/hornets/t-p/index.ssf?/base/sports-1/1083839619115330.xml
Ice-cold offense burns Hornets against Heat
Thursday, May 06, 2004
By John Reid
Staff writer
What happened to the constant movement, screen-setting and
repeated ball-sharing? That offense was perfected by the
Hornets earlier this season, but when it counted most -- in
their best-of-seven playoff series against the Miami Heat
that ended with Tuesday's Game 7 loss -- it wasn't seen
enough, and in some games not at all.
For the second consecutive season, the Hornets are home
watching the second round of the playoffs instead of
participating.
They scored more than 90 points only once and shot a lackluster
38.4 percent for the series. That's not the full scope on why
they were beaten by a younger team.
It happened because too many of Coach Tim Floyd's play sets
featured Jamaal Magloire as a stationary post player underneath
the basket, instead of having him positioned at the top of the
free-throw circle or on the baseline, away from the post. He
needed to drive to the basket to get a better shot. If nothing
else, it would have gotten him to the free-throw line more.
But with Magloire's back to the basket and stuck in the post like
he was standing in sand, the Heat easily surrounded him with three
players just about every time the ball went to him.
Give Miami Heat coach Stan Van Gundy credit. His plan worked.
Magloire averaged 11 points after averaging 21.7 in the final seven
regular-season games. Regular season is not playoffs, so it should
have been the objective from the start to show variations in the
Hornets' offensive sets. It didn't happen, though.
Something else that didn't happen enough was inserting backup point
guard Shammond Williams in the game. Williams appeared in just three
games and averaged six minutes.
And Williams was healthy; backup point guard Darrell Armstrong wasn't.
Armstrong's sprained right ankle limited him from being able to stop
Heat backup guard Rafer Alston from repeatedly driving past him to the
basket. Armstrong's ankle problem also kept him getting any lift to
make jump shots. He shot 23.5 percent in the series, and went 5-of-25
from behind the 3-point line.
Williams isn't a scorer, but he penetrates. He throws beautiful passes
just when his teammates break open. He breaks down a defense, and on
several occasions late in Game 7, that ability was apparent as he went
right through the middle of the Heat's defense. In eight minutes in
Game 7, Williams scored seven points, had four assists and a steal,
despite having not played in 13 days.
While we're on the backups, what about veteran Steve Smith? Those 25
points he scored in Game 7 came from making tough perimeter shots
against tight pressure. Just think of the possibilities if Floyd would
have given him more playing time instead of the 9.2 minutes he averaged
in five games.
Shooting is what Smith does best. Having him in the game more would
have limited the need for George Lynch to make so many jump shots,
when his primary strength is defending.
Something else the Hornets didn't do was win Game 1 in Miami. That
game probably would have given the Hornets the momentum for the
remainder of the series. The biggest coaching blunder of the series
came in that game on the final play. Floyd's mistake was having Baron
Davis defend Dwyane Wade with a foul to give, but Davis couldn't give
it. He had five fouls and would have fouled out with the score tied
and overtime looming. In that situation, Davis should have been on the
bench or away from the action, allowing someone else to foul Wade and
most likely force overtime. Wade easily ran around Davis untouched to
make the winning shot with 1.3 seconds remaining to lift the Heat to an
81-79 victory.
Another reason the Hornets are at home for the remainder of the playoffs
was because of their dismal third-quarter play. Only in Games 6 and 7
did they score more than 18 points in the third. They were held to 10
points, tying a playoff record, during the quarter in Game 2, and they
lost by 30 points.
At New Orleans Arena, the Hornets were tough defenders. They pressed
their will on the Heat and forced the Miami players to miss shots. At
AmericanAirlines Arena, the Heat got its desired fast-break shots and
just about everything else. The Heat scored 18 fast-break points in
Game 7 and averaged 18.0 in the first two games. All those games were
played at home, where the Heat went unbeaten.
. . . . . . .
John Reid can be reached at
[email protected] or (504) 826-3405.
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