[TimesPicayune] Hornets' Magloire fulfills promise
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Hornets' Magloire fulfills promise
Breakout season no surprise to 'Big Cat'
Saturday, April 17, 2004
By John Reid
Staff writer
In front of 200 family and friends last fall in Toronto, Hornets
center Jamaal Magloire grabbed the microphone at his going-away
party before training camp started and made a promise: He would
have his best season yet and top it by participating in his first
NBA All-Star Game.
"At the time, I really believed that in my heart, or else I wouldn't
have put myself out there in front of all those people and said it,"
Magloire said.
"But if it didn't happen, the worst thing for me would have been
going home and hearing people say I underachieved."
He need not worry about that. Magloire enters Sunday's opening-round
playoff series against the Miami Heat as one of the top centers in
the Eastern Conference.
As promised, Magloire played in his first All-Star Game last February
and neither Lakers center Shaquille O'Neal nor 7-foot-6 Yao Ming of
the Houston Rockets could keep him from leading the East team with
19 points.
Since that accomplishment, Magloire's confidence has soared, along
with his scoring and rebounding. He's scoring from a variety of ways
-- spin moves, hook shots and short-range turnaround jumpers.
And it has changed his role on the team. Magloire has moved from
being a secondary scoring threat to a post player the Hornets'
plan to feature prominently, along with fellow All-Star Baron Davis,
in their attack against the Heat.
"He's been able to grow on the job and worked very hard before and
after practice on his continued post development," Hornets coach Tim
Floyd said.
Assistant coach Kenny Gattison, a former Hornets' post player, has
worked with Magloire before and after practices since training camp.
Their teaching sessions have included everything from developing a
variety of shots to handling double teams in the post.
"I know from experience that you can't give a guy too much, too
fast," Gattison said. "But he mastered that jump hook first and
now he's mastered the spin move on the baseline and reverse pivot
move.
"Big guys only have a split second to make a move. They're under
the microscope because they're three feet under the basket and
they're expected to make at least 52 percent of their shots. But
Jamaal is very coachable and he applies information and goes out
and does it."
During the final month of the regular season, no Hornets player was
more productive than Magloire, who averaged 21.7 points and 12.1
rebounds in the final seven games.
He finished the season with a team-leading 45 double-doubles, which
ranked third in the NBA. He led the Hornets in rebounding in 51 of
the 82 games played.
"Big Cat just wants to win," forward P.J. Brown said. "He's done
everything that can be done to help this team."
Maglorie hasn't let obstacles interfere with his progress. For two
weeks in March, he kept his right foot in a bucket of ice before and
after games to relieve pain from a sprained ankle. He said he never
considered sitting out.
For the past 15 games, he has played with a swollen left elbow that
has been drained once and might need it again before the first-round
playoff series ends.
But Magloire, nicknamed "Big Cat" from his college days at the
University of Kentucky, pushes on. He hasn't missed a game since
2000-01, his rookie season.
"When people say I can't do something, I like to conquer and thrive
on that," Magloire said. "I see myself as being a soldier on the court.
The road I had to take to get in the NBA from living in a different
country (Canada) has prepared me to deal with everything.
"I've played international ball with Team Canada and we played
oversees. I've been in a lot of different atmospheres where the
play was a lot rougher than what I go through now."
To many of his teammates, he is someone to be trusted because he's
going to battle the entire game.
"Jamaal is one of the best centers in the Eastern Conference," Davis
said. "Every year he's gotten better. He plays hard and really wants
to be successful. He doesn't want to let anyone down who believes in
his potential."
In his rookie season, Magloire averaged 4.6 points in 74 games. He
improved to 8.5 points in 2001-02 before finishing with a 10.3 scoring
average last season. His rebounding numbers have improved, too. He
has averaged 10.3 this season after grabbing 8.8 last season.
"He's confident because of all the work he put in this summer," said
Simeon Mars, Magloire's personal trainer and former high school coach.
"He did a lot of conditioning drills and stuff on the court. He's so
mentally tough. He has goals and aspirations that he wants to achieve."
That's why the Heat are embracing for a tough playoff series. They
know the Hornets' biggest advantage is their inside game featuring
Magloire.
"I expect nothing less than a very physical, all-out war," Miami Heat
center Brian Grant said. "I have a lot of respect for Jamaal because
he's aggressive, physical and I know that because I'm going to get
that every time I see him.
"Some guys, you might see it sometimes, but you always get it from
him. I think he's getting the ball a little more than he used to
when he first got into the league."
Magloire wants to continue what he started last October. No letdowns
and continued progress at making a high percentage of shots and free
throws.
"I'm just a lot more comfortable around the basket now," Magloire said.
"But what's most important is that I'm going to play how the defense
is playing me. If they play to take away my jump hook, I've worked real
hard to find ways to counter that. I'm understand more now how defenses
are playing me and I'm going to use that to my advantage."
. . . . . . .
John Reid can be reached at jreid@timespicayune.com or (504) 826-3405.
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