Game 44 Recap: Blazers 94, Hawks 93
Wow, talk about games we had no business winning...that was pretty much the definition of one. We'll take it, however. Hopefully this will be a boost to our confidence.
Team Observations
We'll follow the pattern set in the game itself and talk about what went wrong first.
We got off to another horrid offensive start. Why is this happening? Opponents have decided enough is enough and are burying Brandon Roy no matter what the cost. Atlanta had up to three guys shadowing him in the first quarter. They weren't all up in his face but all of them were watching him and reacted to his moves. Everybody on the opposing team knows where he is at all times. They have also figured out that Lamarcus doesn't really command a double-team. Nobody lets him free for open face-up jumpers anymore and that's their main worry. He can be guarded one-on-one in the post by most competent defenders. So they shadow Roy with half the team, they keep one guy on Lamarcus...what does that leave?
Steve Blake getting stuck in the lane with no outlet, Martell Webster trying to score off the dribble, and the ball being passed a bunch to Joel Przybilla.
There are your offensive difficulties in a nutshell. I guarantee every single opponent will take those options any time. If Brandon isn't setting up those guys they have real difficulty unleashing any offense at all.
As the Mikes have mentioned several times, when our offense isn't flowing our defense doesn't either. Opposing teams have taken a page from our own playbook: moving the ball around and forcing us to move and talk on defense. We had problems doing either tonight.
We don't talk about this much, but our starters are not exactly fleet of foot. Brandon is extremely tricky with the ball in his hands, but he's not blistering fast. Most of the other guys are of average speed. We were getting outrun like nobody's business. Sometimes nobody got back for us at all. Other times three guys got back but all were moving at a brisk jog, whereas the Atlanta guys streaked down the court for dunks.
The cherry on the top? They were grabbing all of the rebounds.
Eventually taking 24 seconds per possession only to get a tough shot on offense, having to run like crazy on defense, and being bounced around like a pinball underneath the glass took a toll. We started shooting jumpers like they were tin cans at a nearshighted NRA convention. They all fell short. At a certain point people will say to us, "Go ahead, shoot outside!" Even made jumpers look pretty impotent next to dunks and three-point conversions the hard way. The outside shot is the first thing to go when you're tired. Or when you lose even a smidge of confidence. Or sometimes just because they're harder. Dunking and drawing fouls, on the other hand, never grow stale.
The White Unit came in and provided a little bit of spark, especially Sergio. We started penetrating a little more in the second quarter. We didn't get back immediately but we stemmed the tide somewhat. We could have gotten back in the game quicker had the total lack of interior defense in the second unit not been brutally exposed by the Hawks. As Mike Rice pointed out, teams have caught on to our zone. Earlier they were shooting over the top of it. Now teams are starting to screen and cut baseline behind it. Atlanta did as good of a job as I've seen all year of penetrating against the 2-3.
In short, things looked dismal for a long, long time in this game.
So what happened?
First we got some energy from our forwards. Channing Frye, Travis Outlaw, and Lamarcus Aldridge came alive in the second half. These guys make a ton of difference for us. Brandon is universally great and there's not much more he can give us than he already does. The rest of the guards go up and down but they can't provide a lot of the things we need like interior defense, rebounding, and offense other than a long bomb. Those three taller forwards, however, are capable of lifting us up. The only question is whether they will. All three had vastly uneven energy games but really came through late when it counted. Roy's heroics won the game but they put us in a place where those heroics mattered by hitting some shots, clogging the middle, hustling, and rebounding.
And speaking of Roy's heroics...
Individual Observations
--Whoever had the brilliant idea of single-covering Roy during the last few minutes of the game needs their heads examined. Travis Outlaw and James Jones hit some long balls to free up the middle, granted, but that was still a foolish decision on Atlanta's part. Here's what happens when you cover Roy with one man up high:
"Is he gonna shoot? Dang, I think he's gonna shoot. Nope! He went left. Wait, left?!? I mean right. He's going right! I'll just reach and poke the...WHAAAA??? How'd he accelerate like that? I gotta block the...DANG! Foul! AND ONE??? Oh no!!!"
Lather, rinse, repeat.
Oh, and he defended the snot out of Joe Johnson too.
Travis' game-winners make better commercial copy but Brandon taking over and willing us to win like that is easily the most spectacular thing I've seen from anyone in a Blazer uniform since the days of Clyde Drexler. Brandon ended up with 24 points, 9-15 shooting, and 6-7 from the line.
--The guy who turned this game around in the first half when everyone else came out flat was Sergio. He had 6 assists and 0 turnovers in 16 minutes. He had the Hawks' defenders shaking their heads too. They never knew which way he was going to pass. He even made a couple of shots! Had he hit his long-range jumpers it would have been a legit star-type outing for him. As it was it was still pretty darn nifty.
--Lamarcus and Channing both started as flat as last week's root beer but came on strong scoring and rebounding in the second half. Lamarcus was 7-11 for 16 points and 8 rebounds. Channing shot 6-8 for 14 points and 6 rebounds. They did a great job stopping the leak but it would be even better if there had been no leak to begin with.
--Travis Outlaw helped save the game with a couple of three-pointers in (insert big echo effect here) THE FOURTH QUARTER. He was really the first guy the Hawks couldn't contain...the first drip that led to the dam breaking.
--Martell, Blake, and Jack all played short minutes and had isolated good plays but each one of them had a so-so outing. They'd be a lot better off if they hit their shots. Correction: we'd be a lot better off if they would hit their shots.
--James Jones was the other guy that came on late and hit some monster threes to give us hope. I don't think those shots alone really scared anybody, but Jones in combination with a lot of other offensive threats is a scary proposition.
--Joel was fine. He would have helped the interior defense of that second unit. On the other hand we were down so far it was hard to stick him in. He only got 14 minutes tonight as a result.
One-Sentence Game Summary
This game was like picking up somebody at closing time at the local watering hole: not a good idea every night, but thank God it worked tonight!
--Dave (blazersub@yahoo.com)
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24 comments
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I think the Hawks deserver a lot of credit
by Sabonis4Ever on
Jan 27, 2008 8:16 PM PST
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love the dialog for the poor guys who have to
by sergioFTW on
Jan 27, 2008 8:17 PM PST
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love the game summary
by BlazerBandit on
Jan 27, 2008 8:48 PM PST
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one of Dave's better recaps
The Hawks have all kinds of talent. I love Smith and M. Williams especially and Joe Johnson is a heck of a player. Al Horford is going to be really good as well. I don't think you can win a title with Joe Johnson as your go to guy though. Still, watching the first 44 minutes of the game it was hard to believe I was watching a sub-.500 team.
Nuggets lost, which was nice. Jazz beat the Rockets. Zbo and co. tried to help us out but couldn't hang on vs. the Warriors.
by jksnake99 on
Jan 27, 2008 8:57 PM PST
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Good points
by jayseyfield on
Jan 27, 2008 10:18 PM PST
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They did scout I'm sure
Now the Blazers are a target.
Now the games are getting fewer and more critical so progressively more attention will go into each one as the season progresses.
Now other teams are hitting their stride.
--Dave
by Dave on
Jan 27, 2008 11:39 PM PST
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Roy's heroics won, but Woodson help lose it...
by ryeguy on
Jan 27, 2008 10:29 PM PST
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THE FIX
-Starting Outlaw could be the spark we have seem to be struggling to find at the start of games.
Well That's the only Idea I have to fix the first unit's worries, but what will this do to our "white" unit?
Well personally I would LIKE to see a lineup of Sergio running the point sliceing the game open, while he can dish it out to a slashing Jack, or quick pass or work around to an open Martell or Jones to give us 2 legitamate 3 point shooters. (Channing can shoot also.) I don't know what to do about the weakness inside though? Well next year Joel Pryzbylla Will answer that.
Just my ideas what are your thoughts?
by littleharry on
Jan 28, 2008 1:38 AM PST
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I don't think one player
- We're not solid enough inside defensively even with Joel in there but especially with him out. Since we're not forcing turnovers and we're not running to get easy baskets we depend 100% on staying in front of people and making them miss. When people get inside and get easy buckets it just kills us. In order to play this style we have to intimidate them out of the lane.
- We don't have enough (OK...right now ANY) inside presence on offense either. We're shooting jumpers which run hot and cold. They also produce long rebounds leading to transition opportunities for the other side. We need to get higher percentage (i.e. closer) shots with consistency.
That said, Oden's rebounding and defense should eventually let us run more too, which would suit a quicker Travis/Sergio lineup.
--Dave
by Dave on
Jan 28, 2008 1:51 AM PST
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pryz
i would like to see martell or the coaching staff shake things up with him. martell creating his own shots off the dribble hasnt been all that effective. i know he has a ton of athletic ability, and its a shame to not let him use it, but martell seems to be best used as a spot up shooter when he gets set up with the ball or running off of screens.
someone mentioned putting trout in the starting line up....lets try it out if we continue to go flat. lets give trout a few mins in the first to see how he does.
i'm happy to see sergio showing a lil more consistency in terms of his play lately.
by Philthyanimal on
Jan 28, 2008 2:02 AM PST
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Another thing I loved
On another subject, before this game I was 10-1 wearing my newly made Arvydas Sabonis jersey. When we were 19 down, I realized that I wasn't wearing it. I put it on, and the rest, as they say, is history. 11-1.
by robrun2 on
Jan 28, 2008 2:13 AM PST
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coaching
"The Blazers also were aided by McMillan's decision to alter his second-half player rotation, inserting Frye and James Jones into the lineup earlier than normal -- at the 8:45 mark of the third quarter -- and playing point guard Sergio Rodriguez alongside Roy for the first time this season.
It all added to a second-half surge, a slump-averting victory -- and more. "
I'm glad the sports writers were taking note of that and giving nate his credit. I hope nate continues to do this. I dont think I'll have anything to complain about Nate if he does this regularly.
ALSO- OH man did u guys see how hard JJ33 'horse collared' the guy going for a layup?!? OH man Seahawk scouts are gonna be trying to steal away JJ from the blazers. lol...that was a brutal foul tho.
by Philthyanimal on
Jan 28, 2008 2:16 AM PST
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Was that REALLY the first time?
Sadly, there is no way to check to see if I am right :-( It will be a mystery for the ages, the answer lost in the whispers on the winds of history.
Someday Jason Quick will write a book called "The Roy Rules", blasting Roy and showing what a jerk he really is. My sources tell me he's out to destroy Sergio, not allowing him in the locker room the same time as him let alone the court. Roy is also responsible for The Mikes infatuation with faux-hawks, and added 3 extra inches to the back heel of Jacks shoes, causing our favorite daily turn over.
That Roy is a real piece of work, I tell ya. But as long as we're winning, it'll be just like the Bonzi and Sheed days all over again.
Mortimer
by Mortimer on
Jan 28, 2008 3:04 AM PST
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Sergio & Roy
by jscot on
Jan 28, 2008 4:39 AM PST
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yes
i dont remember if they played together or not last year.
by Philthyanimal on
Jan 28, 2008 10:33 AM PST
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csn
Well i guess its cuz i'm catching the replay on CSN and not the post game report after the COMEBACK WIN!
by Philthyanimal on
Jan 28, 2008 2:42 AM PST
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Jones for Martell
by barryj on
Jan 28, 2008 8:41 AM PST
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Good point
by jamon51 on
Jan 28, 2008 1:57 PM PST
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13 in a row was great...
by barryj on
Jan 28, 2008 9:09 PM PST
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My favorite shot
Great recap, thanks Dave.
by tominhawaii on
Jan 28, 2008 11:58 AM PST
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Isn't this interesting?
Classic Brandon Roy--giving the credit to Outlaw even though it was obviously Roy who defended Joe on the last shot. Outlaw helped some, but it was Roy that put him in the position to help.
by jamon51 on
Jan 28, 2008 1:56 PM PST
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Travis defended
Roy had the huge defensive stop on the 2nd to last possession, when the game was tied. Roy also had a huge block on Smith and caused a turnover by Johnson in the last few minutes.
by jksnake99 on
Jan 28, 2008 6:06 PM PST
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