[外電] Artest, Kings beat up Hawks
Artest, Kings beat up Hawks
By SEKOU SMITH
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Published on: 02/13/06
Sacramento — Ron Artest is supposedly still working his way into
game shape nine games into his tenure with the Sacramento Kings.
But if this is the way Artest plays when he's not in shape, the
Hawks should thank their lucky stars they faced the NBA's patron
saint for odd behavior now rather than when he really rounds himself
into game shape.
Because it was Artest, all burly 6-feet-7 and 260 menacing
pounds of him that engineered the Kings' 109-84 smackdown of
the Hawks Sunday night before a rowdy Arco Arena crowd of 17,317.
"I just think Artest brings a different demeanor to their
team," Hawks coach Mike Woodson said. "He definitely makes
them abetter team. They feed off his energy."
Formerly a pass-happy outfit with little to no interest in
playing defense, the Kings defended like their recently
anointed leader and defensive tone-setter.
The NBA Defensive Player of the Year two years ago and the
scourge of the league last year after inciting a brawl between
Indiana Pacers players and Detroit fans at the Palace of Auburn
Hills in November of 2004, Artest put a halt to his redemptive
season sixteen games in.
He stunned the Pacers with a trade request, having grown tired
of the constant scrutiny from fans and the media that accompanied
him every step of the way. The Pacers placed him on the inactive
list and searched for the right trade partner, they contacted the
Hawks but were rebuffed.
Six wildly speculative weeks later, on Jan. 25, he was dealt
to the Kings for Peja Stojakovic.
So he's just three weeks removed from being the most talked
about inactive player in recent NBA history.
Three weeks too soon for the Hawks (15-34), who lost their
second straight game after a stunning win over league-leading
Detroit last Wednesday at Philips Arena.
"They just physically outplayed us in every way," Woodson said.
"They outplayed us. And I can't say that's happened too many
times this season. We've got to go back to the drawing board."
Artest finished his night with 20 points, six assists, six
steals and three rebounds in 38 maniacal minutes. But he did
so many more valuable things that don't have a statistical
category.
He also helped apply the defensive clamps on both of the
Hawks' best scorers, co-captains Joe Johnson (13 points) and
Al Harrington (10 points). And he did it all while playing on
a hip nasty hip pointer that caused him to grimace with every
step he took.
"He didn't do anything out of his character," Johnson said.
"And he definitely makes them a better team. Their bench also
played really well. I thought those two things combined really
made the difference."
Artest had plenty of help, as a total of seven Kings reached
double figures in scoring. Kevin Martin matched Artest's 20
points while Kenny Thomas (17), Brad Miller (15), Mike Bibby,
Francisco Garcia (10) and former Hawk Shareef Abdu-Rahim (10)
all joining the party.
Hawks reserves Josh Childress (13), Salim Stoudamire (12) and
Marvin Williams (11) all reached double figures in scoring.
But the Hawks had other problems.
They got worked over inside for the second straight game,
getting outscored 48-34 in the paint and getting outrebounded
46-35.
But they really lost control in the second quarter when they
couldn't contain Artest. He scored 13 straight points during
a seven-minute stretch when the Kings took total control of
the game.
"He's a beast," Harrington said. "A beast."
資料來源
http://www.ajc.com/hawks/content/sports/hawks/stories/0213hawks.html
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