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Game 29 Recap: Blazers 109, Timberwolves 98

Ah yes...the sweet taste of victory.  Mmmmm...victory...  (drool)

Boxscore

Team Observations

The absolutely outstanding feature of this game was our rebounding.  We destroyed them by 15 overall, more than doubling their offensive rebounds, and we got 14 offensive rebounds to their 26 defensive.  When you're rebounding more than half as many as they are on your end of the court you're going to do well.  And all of this came on a night when no individual Blazer got more than 8 rebounds.

Outstanding feature #2 was getting 29 free throw attempts to their 15 and scoring +9 at the line.  Getting an extra 9 points will win you a ton of games.  We started out the game shooting from outside WAY too much but we adjusted and started drawing fouls late in the first half and throughout the second.  That's how we pulled away.

Also notice the game's leading scorers.  For Minnesota:  Jefferson with 22, McCants with 21.  For Portland:  Roy with 22, Aldridge with 21.  One of the big questions of the month is how much of this is sustainable, repeatable, or dare we say "real".  Here's one of the things you can take to the bank:  if our two main guys match your two main guys point for point our supporting cast is probably going to trump yours.  That's what we do.  This might not be true in every case, but in the majority of them it will be.  And this is not going to go away.  Our popcorn type of attack means somebody is going to come through big almost every night...often two or three guys.  Whether it's Trout, Webster, Jones, Blake, Jack, or Frye you're going to have a hard time keeping up.

As is our habit we took care of the ball and refrained from making Minnesota more of a scoring team than they are.  I will repeat this:  that is what gives us a chance every night.  We don't make it easy on the opponent or deprive ourselves of chances.  That makes our margin of error on the offensive and defensive ends wider, allowing us through the door.

Another clear mark of our "A" game is sharing the ball, which we did almost to perfection tonight.  A guy who can score on his own is dangerous, but a team that will get people open is dangerous times five.

The flow of this game was also interesting.  We played down to the competition through the first 21 minutes of the game or so.  As I said, we settled for jumpers.  We also played somewhat half-hearted on defense.  But in the last 2-3 minutes of the half we knuckled down, pumped it up, and pulled away.  We played around with our cushion in the third quarter and allowed Minnesota to creep back.  But when push came to shove in the fourth we hit the gas and left them in the dust.  Through all of this the game never felt much in doubt.  If this sounds familiar that's because it's what other teams were doing to us for the first few weeks of the season.  Apparently we learned our lesson and we're now acting like the poised, veteran team cruising to victory.  We're also going to learn that it won't work against many teams, notably the ones who are still better than we are.  Try that stuff with Dallas and they're going to be up 16 before the first quarter buzzer sounds.  But we're doing a convincing impression of a real, live NBA team with teams that aren't up to snuff.  Winning the games you should is another hallmark of a good team.

Individual Observations

--Oh man...I'm going to make sure my baby's first words are Brandon Freakin' Roy.  When we talk about accelerating away in crunch time you have to point to the way Roy DESTROYED the `Wolves singlehandedly.  Jukes, jumpers...JEEPERS.  He took the air right out of them.  He ended up 7-12 with 13 free throw attempts for 22 points, 6 rebounds, and 5 assists.  MVP indeed.  He may not deserve that award outright but he's certainly Top 10, and if this keeps up maybe Top 5-7 in the discussion for the year.

--The Blazers made a conscious effort to get Lamarcus Aldridge involved tonight, both in the post and from the perimeter.  This is smart, as our success depends heavily on him.  He looked pretty darn good with his back to the basket tonight too.  He shot 9-17 (great) and led the team with 8 rebounds.

--Martell continues to struggle from the offensive end.  He was part of the good ball movement tonight though and is not losing games for us or even hurting us that much.  I hope his up-and-down goes back up to where it was very early in the season.

--This was another game where Joel wasn't really the guy to man the center position.  Al Jefferson was a little too much offense for him, as he would be for anyone.  Still Joel had 5 boards in 20 minutes.

--Steve Blake shot well when open tonight and gave us 12 points on 4-7 shooting, 4-5 from distance.  We are very hard to stop when our auxiliary players hit from deep.

--Remember a couple weeks ago when Channing Frye couldn't find his way over Niagra Falls in an oar-less rowboat?  Now he couldn't miss if you blindfolded him and tied one arm behind his back.  Ladies and Gentlemen, Channing has arrived and the Buffet is open.   Tonight that looked like 50% shooting, 13 points, 7 rebounds, and some really nifty passing.  Every time he starts to shoot now I am saying, "Take it!"  Applause all around.

--Jarrett Jack looked like he was going to have a rough game for a while there, but he came back with more nifty drives, 14 points (leading the supporting cast), 5 assists, 4 rebounds, and only 1 turnover.  That's a winning line.  He also had a nice defensive stand or two.

--The Assassin James Jones gave us 12 points on 8 shots.  If you want to have a really great bench you need guys who can score points without taking 15-20 shots a game.  Meet James Jones.  Nights like this are commonplace for him, but they are extraordinarily important for us.  The minute he stops hitting we will have trouble winning consistently.

--Travis didn't come very far out of the phone booth tonight, but even in Clark Kent mode he still got 6 rebounds, 4 assists, and leaped tall buildings for a couple of SPECTACULAR blocks.  How can you not like the guy?

--This wasn't Sergio's night.  He only got 6 minutes so he never had a chance to redeem himself.  That's what the next game is for.

One-Sentence Game Summary:

When you used to win 12 games in half a season 12 in a month looks indescribably good.

--Dave (blazersub@yahoo.com)

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Bigs passing + Roy-Bot cross overs
As you point out, Dave, we did so many things right tonight.

At the game, a couple things stood out to me, and got folks jumping out of their seats:

1- Channing and LMA making 'nifty' passes.  Channing's couple of back-door passes from the top of the key were the stuff of Sergio.  LMA's passes to cutters from the low block were friggin' surgical.  

It was our overall excellent ball movement, capped by inspired assists from our bigs, that made me believe that the streak is indicative of what we can do the rest of the way- we can play with anyone in the league.

2- Roy-Bot cross-overs were just jaw-dropping.  Plus that give n go with LMA for the dunk was awesome.

What I love about this streak, and this team, is that our squad continues to evolve before our eyes.  The terrific perimeter 'swing' passing has been there all year.  Suddenly in the last few games we've seen more back door passes from guards, and now terrific passing from the low and hi blocks from our bigs.  

I've read at BE and other places during this streak, the many comparisons to other teams.  The last two games, our motion offense reminds me of the Webber/Divac Kings teams, only not as soft, and more athletic.

This is not just a hot team.  This is a good team becoming great.

I'm giddy.

by royalridge on Dec 29, 2007 12:57 AM PST   0 recs

Frye
Channing was soooo passive to start out the season, now he is aggressive and hustling, mixing it up on every play.  At least that's my observation, and I think that is why he has been more succesful lately.

Maybe he just needed to find his spot on the team?  All I know is, he was driving me insane to start the year, by far my least favorite Blazer getting floor time, and I really regretted when they would put him in.  Its not that way anymore.

by Replacement Level Poster on Dec 29, 2007 1:07 AM PST   0 recs

Exactly
It has changed from, "Oh crap, Channing." to "Oh CRAP Channing!"

--Dave

by Dave on Dec 29, 2007 1:10 AM PST to parent up   0 recs

Depth
The depth of this team is the story of the year. The way our bench can kick your bench's ass no matter who you are. Because, our starting 5 is not as scary as a lot of starting 5's out there. But we can weather foul trouble, cold shooting nights, and even injuries better than most teams in the league. We even have two rookies who we haven't even seen yet. Who knows, they could be really dope too. And then there are all the foreigners! We've got like two full NBA teams worth of legit talent.  If the Sonics move to OKC, Pau Allen should just start a second Blazers franchise up there.

by Jumbo on Dec 29, 2007 1:27 AM PST   0 recs

Al Jefferson v. LaMarcus Aldridge
I was curious to see who I thought was better tonight-Al Jefferson or LaMarcus.  Jefferson has been putting up monster point/rebound numbers all year, but the T-Wolves record is obviously horrible.  After all was said and done tonight-I thought that Jefferson actually reminded me a lot of Zach Randolph.  Great post moves, smooth jumper to 17 feet, good free throw stroke, great position rebounder, although a better leaper.  He also reminded me of Zach in that he's not a great defender or shot blocker...at least he certainly wasn't tonight.  
LaMarcus may not be as good offensively right now, but his overall package including passing, defense and shot blocking is far superior to Jefferson.  I'm a homer, so I am curious what others thought!

by nedzadrules on Dec 29, 2007 5:38 AM PST   0 recs

travis
has anyone else been noticing travis has been making  some real nice extra passes the past few games?

i know he always gets bagged on for 'low bball iq' and only being good at looking to shoot, but i've been impressed at how he's been finding the open man (JJ33 in the corner if i correctly remember the one that stood out to me tonight as opposed to the other games)

by DominicanAvenger on Dec 29, 2007 6:25 AM PST   0 recs

Travis' stats Fri Night
Travis played 23 minutes.

He took 7 shots and made 3 of those. He could have taken a lot more but he chose to pass instead. 1/2 at the free throw line. Only 7 points total, but this is pretty good considering he took only 7 shots.

He had 4 assists -- the second highest assist total for the Blazers.

He had 6 rebounds -- all of them defensive. No offensive rebounds, kind of a disappointment.

2 steals, 3 blocks, 1 turnover.

I view this game as a sign that Travis is finding a comfortable rhythm. He's not over-reaching anymore, and not trying to be a volume scorer. He is executing the team offense better and choosing his shots more judiciously. In short, he is becoming a mature NBA player.

Nature bats last.

by fisheyes on Dec 29, 2007 10:27 AM PST   0 recs

Excellent point
Last night Travis demonstrated that he could potentially assume the same type of role that Kirilenko first played when he came into the league - a Swiss Army knife type of player who specializes in weak-side help "D."

Prior to AK's ascendancy, the terminology used to describe statistical dominance was generally limited to "double-double" and "triple-double." AK-47's unique skill set introduced a whole new term into the lexicon: 5 x 5, or at least 5 each of points, rebounds, assists, blocks, and steals.

In the ten years before Kirilenko came along, that feat had been accomplished only three times. Well, as fisheyes detailed above, last night against the T-Wolves, Travis almost pulled it off.

I'm not sure how many readers of this site realize what a significant step forward Travis took last night. Instead of taking more shots than the Hoops Family in a strip club parking lot, he let the game come to him and in the process showed that he could be that unique kind of player capable of putting up a 5 x 5. There is only one other player in the league besides Kirilenko who might accomplish this on a given night and that's Atlanta's Josh Smith. Only time will tell if Travis realizes that promise but - at the very least - the strides he made last night should hopefully silence all of the ridiculous carping around here about Outlaw's "low basketball IQ."

by knickfan on Dec 29, 2007 2:02 PM PST to parent up   0 recs

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