[MiamiHerald] Heat awakes to a cold playoff reality
看板Pelicans (新奧爾良 鵜鶘)作者BIASONICA (my desired happiness)時間20年前 (2004/04/26 14:49)推噓0(0推 0噓 0→)留言0則, 0人參與討論串1/1
http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/sports/columnists/greg_cote/8514384.htm
Posted on Sun, Apr. 25, 2004
Heat awakes to a cold playoff reality
Can this be the same Heat?
GREG COTE
gcote@herald.com
NEW ORLEANS -- They weren't ready for this.
As simple and flabbergasting and excuse-defying as that sounds, Heat
players were not prepared on Saturday for the rugged intensity --
the raw desperation -- of the New Orleans Hornets.
The scoreboard screamed it, especially in a first half as awful as
any NBA playoff team should ever be permitted to play without being
subject to arrest.
The coach said it afterward, softly, but with a certain hiss.
Stan Van Gundy was not happy. Incredulous would be more like it.
It wasn't so much the 77-71 loss that halved Miami's series lead to
2-1 entering Game 4 here Tuesday.
It was the way it unfolded.
The sluggish Heat surrendered the run of play to the home team from
the start. It was as if Miami expected Hornet players to enter the gym
with hands raised, conceding the series, begging political asylum.
Their fans were like that. The arena was one-third empty. But the
Hornets were full of fire.
"We were a little bit shocked by the intensity, and that's a little
bit crazy," Van Gundy said in a quiet, emptying locker room, as a
waiting bus idled outside. "That's what frustrates me the most. I
don't know who they were listening to. We'd been telling them [to
expect this] for three days."
Club president and former coach Pat Riley briefly visited with the
team afterward, showing support: Pat Rally. This was after one of
Riley's favorite pearls of wisdom had played out with such gruesome
accuracy.
"The playoffs," Riley liked to say, "will humble you."
And astound you, sometimes.
Makes you wonder if the team that rollicked to a 30-point rout in
Game 2 could possibly be the same Heat team that slogged and clanked
through too much of Saturday.
Can the road and a hostile crowd change one team's psyche so profoundly?
The Hornets got back on defense so quickly and aggressively that Miami
could not unleash its preferred running style. Confined to half-court
sets, the Heat then shot horribly, except when frequent turnovers
prevented the indignity.
Except for Caron Butler (24 points, 15 rebounds) and sparks off the
bench from Rafer Alston, awfulness displayed itself over most of the
Heat roster.
Lamar Odom, Dwyane Wade and Eddie Jones were a combined 8-for-39
shooting. Odom and Wade combined for 13 turnovers, and the latter
scored (shhh!) two points, his Game 1 heroics suddenly seeming
distant.
"Dwyane made some very bad decisions," said Van Gundy, "and really
struggled with the pressure they put on him. And we had a couple guys
who can run a lot harder."
The veteran Jones simply blamed the fact "key guys like myself didn't
make shots," but it was more than that. Worse than that.
The Heat got beat up. Out-worked. Out-wanted.
The perfect face of the team in the postgame locker room was Odom's.
He had six stitches sewn above his left eye after taking an accidental
elbow from Baron Davis early in the fourth quarter.
"I feel like it is swelling as you talk," he said.
"Offensively, we came out flat," added Odom -- and how is that possible?
The Heat played cautiously with the ball. Timidly, almost.
"We stopped ourselves," Wade said. "We didn't run because guys were
not wanting to turn the ball over. We didn't have no reason to be tight.
But when you don't play as free as you normally do and think about
turnovers, that's when they happen."
The real miracle of Saturday is that -- for all of that sluggishness
and miserable shooting and inexplicable laissez faire -- the Heat still
trailed by two points and had possession with 1:47 to play.
Had a real chance to win. Despite all of the rampant awfulness.
Take that as the good news, Heat fans, if you're of a mood. Miami
remains the better team and, even with a loss in Game 4, still would
have two of the last three games at home.
Hey, maybe the Heat lost in deference to the Dolphins on NFL draft day,
not wishing to divert attention from the first-round selection of UM
guard Vernon Carey. Basketball folks know football is king. It sure is
in New Orleans, too, where fewer people were interested in the Hornets
on Saturday than in whom the Saints were picking or what was happening
with local hero Archie Manning's kid Eli.
And how about the juxtaposition as that draft began, huh? You had a
moment of silence in honor of Pat Tillman and his ultimate selflessness
and sacrifice . . . followed immediately by Manning being disgruntled at
the prospect of accepting millions of dollars from a team not of his
choosing.
Sorry for that brief tangent into football, but the Heat's 32.9 percent
shooting makes a guy want to forget what he's just witnessed.
Now, at least, the series gets good.
"They're a young team," said the Hornets' Davis of the Heat "They're
cocky. They back it up."
Van Gundy called Saturday a lesson, the proverbial, ever-ready
"wake-up call."
Like he had a choice?
"This was our first playoff game in my opinion," he said. "First one
on the road, with people getting into them. Now they've got to go learn
from it."
They'd better. And that learning needs to be at the same pace as the
Heat's offense needs to be.
Fast.
--
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