[TimesPicayune] A win today just delays inevitable for Hornets
看板Pelicans (新奧爾良 鵜鶘)作者BIASONICA (my desired happiness)時間20年前 (2004/05/04 19:30)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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A win today just delays inevitable for Hornets
Sunday, May 02, 2004
John DeShazier
Today's game will be the Hornets' last of the season or their
last at home this playoff series.
It doesn't require genius to know that the Hornets prefer the
latter scenario, because it means they'll move to the next
round. And no abundance of smarts is needed to know that more
likely, the other scenario reveals the more realistic picture
-- the Hornets will lose today or Tuesday night in Miami.
Having been repetitively disciplined into obedience like
Pavlov's dog by letdown after letdown, we understand that
there must be parameters accompanying the enthusiasm and
expectancy with which New Orleans is met.
The season is 87 games old -- 82 regular season, five postseason
-- and still, all that is certain of a team so experienced that
Ben Gay should be as prominent on the training table as Gatorade
is that it can't be awarded unending hope, that its successes
must be approached tepidly because they have been fleeting.
There's not a sense of "if" the season will end, but "when."
Maybe it's today or Tuesday night against the Heat or, if it
comes to it, Indiana gets to administer the whacking in the
Eastern Conference semifinals.
Either way, there seems to be a feeling of inevitability to it,
and it's a feeling that has been created and fostered by the
Hornets.
New Orleans is in deep trouble against the Heat, trailing 3-2,
needing two games against an opponent that must feel if it can't
close today it surely can at home Tuesday. And, really, it's more
than a little unnerving to acknowledge it has come to this.
Miami has tried to give the advantage, if not the series, away.
The Heat had a drought in Game 1, scoring two points in a span of
7:26 in the fourth quarter before pulling out an 81-79 win. In Game
5, Miami was rattled, nervous and uncomfortable for the first three
quarters. And still, the Heat managed an 87-83 win.
The Hornets' brain cramped in those games the way you'd expect of
teams not often described as clear-minded, with high basketball IQs
and willpower.
They flat-lined under the stress of faulty direction or execution
or both, and it's disheartening that 87 games deep into the season,
we still are discussing the Hornets' propensity to melt under
pressure.
C'mon, folks. With all due respect to the gentlemen from Miami, it's
not as if the Hornets are folding against the Lakers or Spurs, who
have combined to win the last five NBA championships. Or the Nets or
Pacers, who have represented the Eastern Conference in the NBA Finals
three of the past four years.
This is the Heat, a team so young it wears a milk mustache and smokes
bubble-gum cigars.
A team whose best players, power forward Lamar Odom and point guard
Dwyane Wade, play out of position -- Odom had been a small forward
before this season, and Wade will be a hellacious shooting guard
when he moves to his more natural position.
A team that finished in sixth and seventh place in its division the
two seasons prior to this one, almost never beats good teams on the
road and spasms when lured into a half-court game for more than two
or three consecutive possessions.
In other words, a team that finds itself matched against an opponent
that seems to be the perfect tonic for Miami, which returned to the
postseason after a two-year drought.
Today's game will be the Hornets' last this season or their last at
home this playoff series.
Honestly, based on all the evidence New Orleans has presented, which
scenario appears least likely?
. . . . . . .
John DeShazier can be reached at jdeshazier@timespicayune.com or
(504) 826-3410.
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