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Hornets 101, Nuggets 95: Actually Not That Scary

With a second straight win against a 2010 playoff team, New Orleans is off to a quick start. The road end of a back-to-back looms in San Antonio tomorrow, but for at least one more day, Monty Williams is undefeated.

Star-divide

Before we get into game specifics, I'll start off with this note: the 2010-2011 Hornets are playing fundamentally different basketball than their predecessors. It's not that it's better or faster or more fun to watch. It's just really different. The frequency and efficiency with which they score on plays not involving Chris Paul is terrific. Their swarming of the ball on defense is unlike any other Chris Paul-led Hornets team (including the '07-'08 version, which relied on directing offensive players towards preset help defense). I realize just two games are in the books and that the team could very well be short of energy tomorrow. But we couldn't have asked for a better mini-homestand to open a decidedly critical season.

The Denver Nuggets are always a tough matchup because of the way they play the Paul-West high pick. Chauncey Billups routinely goes over screens (where numerous teams opt to stay under and provide Paul additional space). The Nuggets' bigs don't allow West space on the perimeter the way other teams do. As we saw in the 2009 playoffs, that can be a lethal combination. The only way to combat such a defense is movement off the ball. If the shooters stay in their spots, the offense is bound to become stagnant. We saw a few symptoms of this in the third quarter, but in the first half, Ariza's movement off the ball kept things flowing.

Emeka Okafor

We don't win this game without Mek. As great as Trevor Ariza was on defense, Carmelo Anthony still weaved his way into the paint a few times. Okafor came up with two huge blocks with the game on the line- the first on a Chauncey Billups layup at 3:51 and the second on an open Anthony layup at 0:58. His most impressive stat tonight: the 2 fouls. Given how many shots he attempted to alter (final block count of 4), he largely avoided making lower body contact with offensive players. 

His contributions on the offensive end can't be overlooked either. He routinely made himself available to Chris Paul in the paint, and he put down a couple of nice lay-ins after establishing deep post position. I started writing a sort of "defense of Emeka Okafor" post this morning to publish on the weekend; Okafor's play tonight speaks for itself.

On Carmelo Anthony

Though Anthony's 10-17 line doesn't show it, Ariza did a terrific job on him. And if you're not convinced, check out Anthony's shot locations:

3b5d79a8f4084ee6ad0817e_medium

Eleven of his seventeen shots came from 17 feet or further. Every single one those came with a hand in his face. When a guy like Melo- who can get to the rim at will- takes jumpers all night, that's a victory for the defense. The way the refs called fouls tonight, Anthony could easily have had 10 to 15 free throw attempts if Ariza had allowed him into the paint more. Instead, Melo took just four foul shots.

David West's Offense

The Nuggets' commentators made an off-hand reference to the fact that Monty Williams has his team extremely prepared for each opponent's specific tendencies. A look at David West's shot chart tonight illustrates this perfectly. On the left, his shots against Milwaukee; on the right, against Denver:

5a0468f86eb4414e88b0222_medium  13ccd5e08bd04a579a8f1f6_medium

West didn't take a single shot tonight from outside 17 feet... a night after he absolutely torched the Bucks from outside that range. Not a single one! This was absolutely by design. As I mentioned earlier, Denver takes the 17 footer away from New Orleans through Billups' defense. Billups doesn't often lose Paul, meaning West's defender rarely has to rotate off to follow Paul. So instead of continuously running the high pick (a la Byron Scott), the Hornets ran the Paul-West pick and roll much closer to the hoop (most often at the left elbow extended). Additionally, West was freed to catch the ball at closer locations to the hoop. This allowed him to dribble into a post game. Throw those same passes to him at his normal 17, 18 feet from the hoop, and he has to kick the ball back out to the perimeter. The difference in the above shot location charts is one of the key ways New Orleans avoided offensive stagnation tonight.

Another Big Lead Disappears

For the second straight game, New Orleans took an early double digit lead, only to watch it fade. Via Popcorn Machine, here's tonight's game flow:

54ea708a93354ed1b3567ce_medium

And for the second straight game, the reason the lead disappeared was a flurry of silly fouls. Which leads to the next point...

Can We Play Aaron Gray? Please??

Jason Smith played 8 minutes tonight. In that time, he committed 4 fouls (all bad ones at that), and 2 turnovers. Sure, he knocked down an open jumper, but that really doesn't mean much. This team has plenty of offense; it needs rebounding, defense, and size. Pops Mensah-Bonsu can rebound. Aaron Gray can rebound. He's also huge.

I really hope we make the switch before it ends up costing us wins. 

Chris Paul

The time: 4th quarter, 8:51
The setting: 74-79, Denver starting to pull away. 

I'll let the play by play take it from here:

8:51: C. Paul enters game
8:40: C. Paul makes 17-foot two point shot [76-79]
7:35: E. Okafor makes slam dunk (C. Paul assists) [80-82]
6:56: C. Paul misses layup
6:54: C. Paul offensive rebound
6:54: C. Paul makes 7-foot two point shot [82-84]
6:22: C. Paul makes 11-foot two point shot [84-84]
5:46: C. Billups offensive foul (C. Paul draws the foul)
5:28: D. West makes 16-foot jumper (C. Paul assists) [86-84]
4:56: T. Ariza makes 24-foot three point jumper (C. Paul assists) [89-84]

In less than four minutes, against a team that knew exactly how to defend him, Chris Paul singlehandedly orchestrated a 15-5 run that took us from a loss to a win.

He's back, y'all.

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with games and recaps like these, it’s looking like a good season to be an At the Hive fan …

by unnamed on Oct 30, 2010 3:36 AM CDT reply actions  

For his stalwart defensive efforts tonight, I say Emeka should be re-dubbed Oka4, at least until the Hornets tip off against the Spurs.

But in all seriousness, that was an impressive win for NO. Not exactly a Hornets fan, but I’m hoping that as a darkhorse team out in the West, New Orleans will get more quality wins throughout the season, and I think this team has the cast to do it.

With a solid and talented group of guys like West, Okafor, Ariza, Belinelli and Thornton, CP3 might just be convinced he’s got it good at the Big Easy.

by asdf213 on Oct 30, 2010 4:50 AM CDT reply actions  

aaron gray

I am with you…but need to find reasons for actions. nothing happens in a vacuum. gray must have done something to make a coach do this move. Tell the truth, mbenga is a stunning decision.
even in la coachedsdid every other player move before using him on the floor.
why here??

by ppellico on Oct 30, 2010 7:19 AM CDT reply actions  

I'd definitely much rather

see Gray on the court over Smith too but I thought I read someone say somewhere that maybe he’s still too slow for what Williams wants for the team … ?

by unnamed on Oct 30, 2010 8:37 AM CDT reply actions  

Yep

It has to do with the fact that he doesn’t get up and down the floor as well. Not a reason I like… but hey, at least there’s some sort of rationale.

by Rohan on Oct 30, 2010 2:00 PM CDT up reply actions  

aaron gray

ya…this is the stated logic.
But WTF!…He’s 7 FEET TALL!
You don’t teach 7 feet. Just like you don’t teach a lot of born with gifts.
But THEY signed him and thus prevented the kid from going elswhere.
And I know from the summer teams were talking to him and needed his size.
So to lock him up cause you wanted his size, then to not play him because of his size…
No, this is not right.

And like I spoke earlier, mbenga is a leagend in the NBA for his lack of BBall IQ.
Placing him in there stuns me.

by ppellico on Oct 30, 2010 7:47 PM CDT up reply actions  

Nervous Now

I haven’t been able to watch the first two games and they’ve won against good teams. I’m going to watch them live tonight. If they lose, I’ll be thoroughly convinced it’s my fault.

Either way, we’re in full agreement on Aaron Gray but you’ve known that already. All in all the team looked better against the Nuggets than they did against the Bucks. Chris Paul, himself, looks absolutely terrific thus far and at least they’re going into the second night of the back to back with some momentum. That means a lot to the team. I think they’re young enough where these kinds of games won’t hurt them this early in the season but we’ll see tonight.

I know I was one of Bower’s big advocates here, but goodness Demps has put together a fun roster. He’s done great. And little things like Okafor’s energy or Thornton being the first player off the bench in the 2nd half are good signs going forward. Once this team hits its stride, they’re going to be really good.

"You play to win the game."

by MrWayneKeller on Oct 30, 2010 10:26 AM CDT reply actions  

Situational roster

Definitely the best Hornets writing on the Interwebs!

I’d like to see a stable roster as long as we are winning and remain healthy. Hopefully the inactives can see that Monty is using the entire active roster each game, so they should stay motivated. I’d like to see Aaron Gray activated in place of Pops against teams with really big or deep front court rosters (Orlando, Boston, LA, Portland). I’d like QPon (if he is ready) to be activated in place of Pops or Peja when we play against teams with a high-scoring wing (LA, Portland, Miami). I don’t see a use for Alexander yet, and hope we don’t have enough injuries to need him. For me, it’s all about the defense. We need to allow Ariza and Okafor to defend freely without worrying about fouling out.

by NOEngineer on Oct 30, 2010 11:01 AM CDT reply actions  

Hmm

This is actually a strategy I had never considered that would be kind of cool. It would allow Monty a “running” center when he needs one, an extra defender (Q) against a team like Miami maybe. The fact that MW has been using 12 guys every game is surprising… but it has worked so far. I wonder if it’s more experimental until he nails down a rotation or if he’ll use it all year.

by Rohan on Oct 30, 2010 2:04 PM CDT up reply actions  

Brilliant Recap

Okafor’s defense, offensive utilization of DX, the big rotation, and the dominance of Chris Paul in a concise, on point summary. I just have nothing more to add.

by m-W on Oct 30, 2010 12:01 PM CDT reply actions  

nice win

A significant win. CP’s last playoff memory was getting completely blown out of the water by the Nuggets, with CBillups pumping three after three in his face. Short of a win against the Lakers or other top 4 team, I think this win would be psychologically meaningful for CP.

It’s also significant because I have a feeling that, at the end of the season, we’ll need to be counting every victory. so every early victory counts in this season.

Still, Hornets have won 2 at home against teams that, although they were playoff teams last season, they have obvious issues. Denver flopped in the playoffs last season and Anthony attempted his own version of the ‘panic and flee’ in the offseason. Now, he talks about the fact that he is “still” a Nugget while at the same time saying that it’s “time for a change”. In the game recap (network news version), he’s quoted repeatedly, and it’s always about how great a basketball player his buddy, Chris Paul, is. I can’t help but wonder what Denver fans think about all this. Then there’s the injured Kenyon Martin recently officially anouncing that he’s going to take his sweet time to return from injury because the acquisition of Harrington makes him feel less than loved.

Overall, it looks like those long-dormant chemistry issues are bubbling up at Denver again, which is too bad for Denver—though it’s definitely a gain for the Hornets from the playoff picture perspective. Depending on how that inevitable Anthony trade plays out, I could even see this ending up as a rebuilding year for the nemesis Nuggets.

That’s good for the Hornets from the playoff picture perspective, but on the other hand, it also puts a slight damper on the objective value of this victory.

Both teams we’ve played have also had significant injury issues as well (No KMart or Birdman for Nuggets – no Michale Redd and less than 100% Bogut for the Bucks).

We’ve got 2 home victories. The second even better than the first. But the real tests are still to come.

Rohan did a great breakdown of the game as usual, but I’ll also add a few more notes from my end:

1. David West. Another solid game and I also want to add that I think he passed Larry Johnson on the Hornets scoring list during this game. A significant accomplishment. Since Larry was such a fan favorite, DWest can now really be considered as being in the history books for the relatively young Hornets.

2. Good defense down the stretch though in my opinion only so so defense overall. Carmelo Anthony’s go to shot is really the 17-19 foot jumper from the wing, so, even though Ariza did have a hand in his face many times, that is a shot that Anthony often makes with ease.

3. Thornton is showing signs of life now that the season has started. Still it’s not yet clear whether we have a serviceable starting shooting guard or an appropriate backup point guard, despite adding a ton of guards in the offseason. These two positions remain question marks.

Go Hornets!~

by MZURK on Oct 30, 2010 12:18 PM CDT reply actions  

In the game recap (network news version), he’s quoted repeatedly, and it’s always about how great a basketball player his buddy, Chris Paul, is.

Yeah, I found that a bit strange too. Maybe it was just the AP emphasizing it and players always give these type of quotes, but it seemed different.

Then there’s the injured Kenyon Martin recently officially anouncing that he’s going to take his sweet time to return from injury because the acquisition of Harrington makes him feel less than loved.

Hilarious.

That’s good for the Hornets from the playoff picture perspective, but on the other hand, it also puts a slight damper on the objective value of this victory.

I mean, I do agree that there’s the potential for turmoil in Denver, and to an extent, some currently existing issues. But this is still a team that absolutely destroyed Deron Williams’ Jazz (game was over in the 2nd quarter basically) and one who stylistically has given New Orleans many problems. I was, quite honestly, expecting us to go 1-2 or 1-3 against the Nuggets, and while that still may happen, I’m pretty happy with the win.

2. Good defense down the stretch though in my opinion only so so defense overall. Carmelo Anthony’s go to shot is really the 17-19 foot jumper from the wing, so, even though Ariza did have a hand in his face many times, that is a shot that Anthony often makes with ease.

The defense really does seem to come and go. There are points where we just allow a flurry of points… happened against MIL and again against DEN. RE: Anthony: I think you live with those shots. To me, Anthony is the second-best difficult shot maker in the league, behind only Kobe.

by Rohan on Oct 30, 2010 2:13 PM CDT up reply actions  

all true

And in fact Denver came back with a good win last night as well, so maybe it’s early to write them off just yet. Plus, today’s win against the Spurs was quite spectacular.

by MZURK on Oct 31, 2010 11:02 AM CDT up reply actions  

Really satisfying....

…. to beat a physical Denver team. I hope
MWK doesn’t jinx us by going to the game.
LOL…great post game write up as usual!

by 3ptace on Oct 30, 2010 1:47 PM CDT via mobile reply actions  

Funny stuff from Adande at ESPN today:
And now, a J.R. Smith interlude.

In one first-half sequence Smith drove into the lane, launched a shot that missed, and grabbed the rebound. Despite a Nuggets assistant screaming "Move the ball!" Smith dribbled and dribbled, then put up another shot. At least he was fouled and got two free throws out of the deal.

The next two times Smith had the rock he did try to move the ball. Both passes resulted in turnovers.

In my favorite moment, the Hornets public address announcer handed out candy to the Hornets mascot and a couple of kids who were trick-or-treating during a timeout skit. Some of the candy dropped on the sideline. When the players returned to the court Smith noticed a packet of candy, picked it up, poured some into his hand and ate it.

Smith also wound up as the most productive reserve for the Nuggets, with 12 points and three rebounds.

Ladies and gentlemen, J.R. Smith.

by Rohan on Oct 30, 2010 2:21 PM CDT reply actions  

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