[TimesPicayune] Hornets have no faith in Floyd
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Hornets have no faith in Floyd
Friday, April 23, 2004
John DeShazier
The playoffs, more than any other time during the NBA season,
are an exposé of coaching. And so far what has been revealed
of Hornets coach Tim Floyd isn't the least bit flattering,
reassuring or inspiring.
Between Games 1 and 2 of New Orleans' best-of-seven series
against the Miami Heat, the Hornets startlingly regressed,
revealed they possess more questions than answers and appeared
to say, in body language and performance, that the few answers
they had are moot because Miami changed the questions.
"We sniffed out the plays they ran," Heat center Brian Grant
said after Miami's 93-63 victory in Game 2, when the Hornets
set or approached so many playoff marks for futility that it's
no use to list them. "We knew them before they ran them,
actually."
And really, there's nothing wrong with that. Generally, a team
isn't going to X-and-O its way past another at this stage of the
season, when personalities have been established and teams should
know each and every tendency of the opposition.
But when a team goes as flat as the Hornets did Wednesday night,
three days after falling 81-79 in the series opener, it screams
that it has lost its fire, probably because it has lost faith in
its coach. And that's taking the leap and assuming there ever was
faith.
The Hornets tossed away a chance to send Game 1 into overtime.
Though they had a foul to give, the Hornets didn't do so before
Miami's Dwyane Wade made the winner with 1.3 seconds left. It
didn't help that the player guarding Wade, star Baron Davis, had
five fouls and an aggravated ankle sprain at the time.
Act II was appalling. The Heat removed the drama in the third
quarter, when the Hornets shot 2-of-19. Miami always appeared a
step ahead in thought and deed.
The Hornets have been as predictable as Mardi Gras.
The Heat knows All-Star center Jamaal Magloire will set up on a
block, and will front him and double-team as soon as a lob pass
is thrown, even though Magloire is more than capable of stepping
out and making the 12-footer consistently.
When the Hornets set picks for Davis, it gives the Heat a chance
to double him, too, and force the ball out of his hands. They seem
aware the Hornets fear the fast break, which appears to give them
exactly that opportunity. Because while the Hornets retreat, the
Heat taps rebounds out toward the key, and its perimeter players
scoop up the gift and run like the wind.
No New Orleans player has openly questioned leadership, but reading
between the lines isn't difficult. Darrell Armstrong said Floyd
still is learning the team more than vice versa, though later he
apologized -- not for what was said, but for the way it sounded.
Davis, after Game 2, said the Hornets tried to take advantage of
the Heat inside and on pick-and-rolls and neither worked, yet New
Orleans "kept playing to the strength of their defense."
Even with the Jamal Mashburn soap opera, and sprained ankles and
stretched tendons, the Hornets had a chance in the Eastern
Conference. If they had lost 19 games to teams with losing records
instead of an alarming 22, they would have had home-court advantage
in the first round. But this season has been one lowlight after
another.
No, players can't be absolved of all blame. They play the game. If
energy and passion are missing, it's because they aren't using it.
But, too, it's true that a team takes on the personality of its
coach. Players don't mind leadership as long as it's strong and
competent. Heck, even Dennis Rodman shaped up long enough to listen
to Phil Jackson in Chicago, Rasheed Wallace has conformed for Larry
Brown in Detroit, Jason Williams holds off on the mustard for Hubie
Brown in Memphis.
The Hornets?
Where are the signs of belief in Floyd? Where is the evidence that
the Hornets have adjusted and adapted?
Where is the proof that the current exposé contains false
information, or the realistic hope that this act will play better
next season against better competition in the West? That the
dwindling fan base in New Orleans believes Floyd is the man to
revive the franchise and will show its support through ticket
sales?
No one can ignore what he or she has seen in the playoffs, or say
that it's not in the best interest of the franchise to sever the
relationship as soon as possible.
. . . . . . .
John DeShazier can be reached at jdeshazier@timespicayune.com or
(504) 826-3410.
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