[新聞] West helping lead Hornets' rise
West helping lead Hornets' rise
By Adrian Wojnarowski, Yahoo! Sports, January 4, 2008
from: http://0rz.tw/653vV
As a young star at Wake Forest, Chris Paul would listen to his coach, Skip
Prosser, raise his name over and over. Here's how David West played the game.
Here's how David West worked. Here's how David West acted.
"David West," Chris Paul sighed on a cell phone Thursday. 'He was all I ever
heard about."
Prosser had moved to the ACC out of the Atlantic 10, but his heart was
forever with a self-made player who stayed four years at Xavier and made
himself the National Player of the Year. A different breed of college coach,
the late Prosser was a sincere, self-deprecating high-school history teacher
who never played the part of the used-car salesman. When a kid connected with
Prosser, it spoke something of his soul.
"When Coach Prosser first got to Wake, he kept telling me about the young guy
he got there," West said Thursday. "And I know the kind of guy that Coach
recruited."
Once Paul had been drafted to the Hornets in 2005, West had already been part
of the worst team in the NBA. New Orleans had won 18 games. Hurricane Katrina
had chased the franchise to Oklahoma City. The prospects of climbing into the
Western Conference's elite felt like scaling Everest.
For West, he was still waiting his turn on the Hornets bench. New Orleans had
an old sage, P.J. Brown, starting at power forward. He took time to teach
West to be a pro. Once Paul arrived in his third season, Hornets coach Byron
Scott moved West into the starting lineup. They clicked. Part of it was the
connection to Prosser, part of it was childhoods spent growing up in small
North Carolina towns, and part of it just was just two young players resolved
to transform a loser into winner.
These days, Paul is unstoppable, a force of nature that has the Hornets on
their best start in franchise history at 21-11. He has that gift of elevating
everyone in his presence, which is why after one season with West, with the
rest of basketball still suspicious, Paul told him, "I wouldn't want to play
with another power forward in the league."
Deron Williams had Carlos Boozer? Good for him, Paul insisted. He watched the
way that West worked, the way he never cared about stats, about credit, about
anything but what Scott kept preaching for the long run. He watched it all
and knew that they didn't need go get him his Boozer, because they were
developing one at 6-foot-9, 240 pounds.
"All we've talked about the last few years here, is 'Close the gap,' " West
said. This was a mandate to creep closer and closer to San Antonio, Dallas
and Phoenix. One by one, they're climbing over teams and delivering notice.
This goes for West, too.
As discreetly as West's disposition, he's playing the ball of his life,
scoring (19.3 points) and rebounding (9.6) at career-high clips.
"He's going to be a 20 and 10 guy," Paul said. "Anything less from him and he
knows I'm going to be upset."
Around West, the talent has slowly and surely assembled. It is no coincidence
that West's offensive game has blossomed – Paul calls him, "The 17-foot
assassin" – because Peja Stojakovic and Mo Peterson are deep perimeter
threats. Tyson Chandler has developed into a menace in the middle that they
expected back with the Bulls. Yes, the Hornets’ bench is killing them and
general manager Jeff Bower needs to be active on the trade front because
there are too many teams with too much depth in the West.
Payroll is always a concern with the cash-strapped Hornets, but Bower has
done a marvelous job constructing these Hornets with a small scouting staff
and limited resources. Bower has turned the Hornets into one of the can-do
franchises in the sport, a culture that commands his locker room.
Before he gets too busy making deals, he warns, "One of our strengths of our
group has been shared experiences and that's worth something."
Here's what Bower is talking about: The toughness bred into these Hornets
across several seasons of nomadic basketball. Between New Orleans and
Oklahoma City, they've been torn between two towns, two homes. When they
played four home games in New Orleans a season ago, they had to travel into
town the night before like the opponent. Essentially, they were away games.
No one in the NBA has had to run a franchise out of moving boxes, like
they've done from Charlotte to New Orleans, New Orleans to Oklahoma City.
Nevertheless, the Hornets don't make excuses. They make progress.
Now, they're back in New Orleans and the market, the economy, makes those
empty seats tougher on a team that's closed within one game of the
first-place Spurs in the Southwest Division. These vagabond Hornets have a
fantastic spirit. This goes to Scott, a hard-ass, truth-telling coach and
trickles to Paul and Chandler and, yes, West, who is the X factor in a
conference of potent power forwards.
The accumulated mettle of these Hornets has lot to do with a 12-5 record on
the road, best in the conference on the way into Golden State on Friday
night. "We don't complain about situations," West said. "We handle them."
West is the one Hornet still around to remember a playoff season, an '04 run
with Baron Davis as a teammate. Funny, but West remembers what they were
saying about him in those days. Few had much faith in the possibilities of
four-year college players in the pros. He doesn't get indignant because they
said he wasn't tough enough to play down low, nor athletic enough to play
outside.
So, West listened and learned, worked and worked, and got a little lucky when
Prosser, the late coaching angel, delivered him a heavenly point guard.
Together, they traveled to North Carolina to bury their old coach this
summer. They play the game, the way Prosser lived: with sincerity and
resolve.
"I was one of those guys who needed four years of college, and I was so lucky
to have really good veteran guys when I got into the league who taught me to
be patient, to learn to play the game, learn to act the right way," West
said. "I learned that if you're willing to work in this league, there are no
limits on you."
The Hornets are closing the gap in the Western Conference, and so much of it
surrounds the development of the one player who was there when this team was
the worst, when the climb was the steepest. Chris Paul had been hearing about
David West for a long, long time, and maybe this is the year when everyone
else finally does, too.
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