[PalmBeachPost] Game 4 Heat's chance to show it's quick study
看板Pelicans (新奧爾良 鵜鶘)作者BIASONICA (my desired happiness)時間20年前 (2004/04/27 11:14)推噓0(0推 0噓 0→)留言0則, 0人參與討論串1/1
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Game 4 Heat's chance to show it's quick study
By Greg Stoda, Palm Beach Post Staff Writer
Monday, April 26, 2004
MIAMI-- The proof of learning lies more in practical application
than simple comprehension.
So it is for the Heat, who can yap about the lesson taught it
Saturday afternoon in New Orleans until jazz leaves the bayou
and it won't mean a thing if Miami ain't got that swing.
Which suggests Tuesday night's Game 4 of the NBA Eastern
Conference, first-round playoff series between the Heat and
Hornets in New Orleans ought to serve as a very real test for
Miami.
The ridiculous aspect of the dynamic is that the Heat professed
to have been surprised by the Hornets' determination in Game 3
even though New Orleans was returning home after having lost the
first two games of the series. What did Miami expect? A spread
of chicory and beignets?
In convenient review of what turned out to be a 77-71 loss, the
Heat regarded the entire exercise as something of a study hall.
A study hall, that is, the Heat slept through except for, oh,
all but approximately the last half of the last quarter.
Which might be why first-year Heat coach Stan Van Gundy had his
movie men splice together film clips of the debacle for purpose
of Sunday midday instruction back in AmericanAirlines Arena. It
couldn't have been pleasant entertainment for the Heat, and
especially not for rookie point guard Dwyane Wade.
"Pretty much the whole game," Wade replied when asked whether
there was a particular point of reference.
Van Gundy was a bit more specific when he said there were
demonstrations -- many of them -- of Miami's failures to play
with any force either implementing or defending pick-and-roll
plays.
But that's X's-and-O's stuff.
The core explanation of what happened to the Heat is that the
Hornets played rough, and Miami couldn't or wouldn't do anything
about it.
It wasn't always intentional aggression on New Orleans' part.
Baron Davis, for example, accidentally opened a six-stitch cut on
Lamar Odom's left eyelid when he caught him with an elbow while
going up for a shot. But other tactics -- the bumping and
slashing at Wade, most notably -- were purposeful. The intent was
to shackle Wade, restrict his open-court movement and thereby slow
the Heat as a team.
It worked.
Now, the Heat either has to find a way to avoid the fight... or
stand up to it.
And, quite frankly, Miami isn't built to brawl.
Which is why things could get messy for the Heat way beyond
Tuesday night if the Hornets really have found a method of
making Miami hobble along at Davis' sometimes-wobbly gait.
Ah, Davis. The star.
It is he who has emerged as the series' centerpiece despite
frequently appearing to be in need of crutches. The Hornets have
zero chance of getting past Miami without Davis playing effectively
but every chance of doing so if he's dictating style while playing
on a sore ankle.
Not all the Heat players were Sunday afternoon buyers on the topic
of the severity of Davis' injury. Wade and reserve point guard Rafer
Alston were two doubters, and they're the ones who most often tangle
with Davis in back-court match-ups.
"He limps, he limps and then he dunks," Wade said.
Alston was even more skeptical.
"He gets the ball and explodes to the basket," Alston said.
Odom, though, simply offered his respect.
"(Davis) doesn't look like a guy who can go around you or through you,
but he can do both," Odom said. "He's a great, great player."
And smart enough, too, to know what works best against Miami: "We want
to make them shoot jumpers," Davis said in the wake of the Hornets'
win Saturday afternoon.
New Orleans wants to turn the series into a half-court tractor pull as
often as possible, which is why the Hornets' guards girded themselves
into defensive posture sooner rather than later as often as possible
on Heat possessions in Game 3 trying to make the Heat grind out points.
Again, though, that's X's-and-O's stuff.
The Heat must try to remove itself from the comfort zone accompanying
the knowledge it would win the series by doing nothing more than
winning its four home games. But it's difficult not to look down and
notice the safety net in the playoff's high-wire act, and even Van
Gundy took care to remind his team Sunday that it should consider Game
4 more about "opportunity" than "pressure" to win on the road.
"It's a very, very resilient group," Van Gundy said. "They bounce back.
They always come to work. They got caught (Saturday)."
If the Heat gets caught again Tuesday night, it's opportunity becomes
pressure Friday night when the series moves back to South Florida for
Game 5.
The game-start buzzer in New Orleans Arena? It'll mean study hall has
ended. It'll mean it's time for practical application of whatever
lessons Miami insists it has learned.
greg_stoda@pbpost.com
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