Home > Thoughts on the Game > Thoughts on the Game: Nets Nearly Pull off a Stunner, Lose Anyway

Thoughts on the Game: Nets Nearly Pull off a Stunner, Lose Anyway

Yi at hornets

Hornets 247At The Hive

So you’re the New Jersey Nets. You’re 3-32 and fresh off two very embarrassing losses to the Milwaukee Bucks and Atlanta Hawks earlier in the week. You’re facing a team that’s a great home team and has won their last four games. You manage to hang around most of the game but are still down 9 with about three minutes to go. Then, through a series of bizarre calls and fortuitous bounces, you find yourselves up 1 point with about 12 seconds left. You look at the stat sheet and you realize two areas that have absolutely killed you all year – rebounding and three-point shooting – are in your favor.

And you still lose. You lose because one of the league’s best player’s made a bucket and a foul with 7 seconds left off a bread and butter pick and roll play, and you can’t even get a final shot off because of a nickel and dime offensive foul call off a “moving” screen by Yi Jianlian. Most of the time, I bet the refs ignore what Yi is doing on the screen, but when you’re 3-32, the refs are looking for you to shoot yourself in the foot.

So my question to you, the Nets, is how are you going to respond? Is this a team-building experience where you emphasize the fact that you came back and nearly pulled what would have been one of the best comebacks in the NBA this year? Or does this become just another demoralizing loss, a belt that already has enough notches this season?

With the 2009-10 New Jersey Nets, you just don’t know. I thought their gritty loss to Cleveland last Saturday was a turning point, and it set the stage for one of the most frustrating 5-day stretches for the Nets this season, which says a lot. Obviously, I hope last night’s 103-99 loss to the New Orleans Hornets is a stepping stone. The Nets were down 94-85 with 2:46 left in this game when Brook Lopez was fouled and hit a free throw. Devin Harris was actually taken out of the game and I had figured the Nets were going into shutdown mode, destined for another innocuous 12-point loss.

But I guess the Nets have a little spirit after all. With Harris struggling (4 points, 2-9 shooting), Brook Lopez and Yi Jianlian having so-so nights (14 and 8 points respectively), it was going to have to be one of the Nets wingmen who stepped it up, and Courtney Lee answered the bell. He had been deadly from long-range all game, finishing with 28 points including, 5-7 from three. But what was more impressive was how Lee just took over in the closing minutes. He hit a three to cut the Hornets’ lead to seven, and then was 5-5 from the free throw line down the stretch, finding his way there through bizarre circumstances.

First, with the Nets were inbounding the ball, down 3 with 20 seconds left, James Posey made a foul away from the play, giving the Nets a FT and the ball. A layup by Keyon Dooling, who also seemed determined to carry this team, scoring 21 points in 23 minutes on 8-11 shooting (4-7 three), cut the Hornets lead to 1. Then Lee made a steal off the inbounds pass. Was there a foul on the play? Who knows. Lee actually missed a makable layup, but got awarded FTs and hit them both.

Freeze it in time, and the Nets have an improbably comeback. Of course it didn’t work out that way. It never does. Now, I wait anxiously to see which Nets team show up on Sunday.

More thoughts after the jump.

  • So off my post yesterday, here’s a little look at two point guards struggling with their shots. One helps his teammates win, and one may have been off the court in the closing minutes if an eye injury to Chris Douglas-Roberts hadn’t forced him back in. He may have hit the game winner, but Chris Paul was just not in any kind of offensive groove all game. He was 4-9 from the field, and a surprising 2-5 from the FT line to finish with 11 point. But he still helped his team by collecting 18 (!) assists. The Nets as a team only had 22. Devin Harris was just a total non-factor. He was 2-9 from the field, didn’t attempt a single free throw, and had 4 assists. Kiki Vandeweghe’s substitution of Devo towards the end of the game raised my eyebrow a bit. Was he just trying to give his “star” player a breather? Was he getting him out because he was struggling? Is Devin hurt? I could be making excuses, but I wondering if Devo is still struggling with his groin issues, and it’s going to affect him all season.
  • For the record, Yi Jianlian was carping a lot out there tonight. With about 3 minutes left, Yi corralled a rebound, and was then stripped by Emeka Okafor, who he proceeded to foul. Yi complained the whole time, claiming he was fouled on the stip, but on replays, I didn’t see what the issue was. Yi botched the play. I bring this up, obviously, because of the offensive foul call on Yi at the end of the game. It was clearly a ticky-tack foul, one that’s more likely to be called 10 seconds into a game, rather than with 10 seconds left in the game. But I’ve noticed since his return from injury, in addition to being aggressive with his shot taking, Yi’s been aggressive with the refs. And I wonder if it bit him and the Nets in the rear here. Payback’s a you know what…
  • It was a little dispiriting how the Nets were hitting the threes last night, but still couldn’t utilize it to get any kind of a post game going for Brook Lopez. There was a great play towards the start of the second quarter where Yi was getting double in the post while Dooling had the ball up behind the three-point line on the right wing. After trying to get the ball to the post, Dooling calmly shot the ball and hit the three. I would have liked to see the Nets run that play more often, rather than force the ball into the paint, or see Brook or Yi kick it back up and, repost for a change.
  • David West (32 points, 10 rebounds) was just dominating the Nets on both ends all night. He was definitely taking it to Yi early in the game, and Yi earned a spot on the bench despite not picking up any fouls. There was a stretch in the third quarter where Trenton Hassell was at the four where West picked it up again.
  • Trenton Hassell had an under the radar night, scoring 8 point son 4-7 shooting, seemingly hitting shots in the third quarter when the Nets were on the verge of being put away.
  • DNP – Coach’s Decision for Terrence “Sleepytime” Williams.
Categories: Thoughts on the Game
Post comment as twitter logo facebook logo
Sort: Newest | Oldest

I think the raptors will try and keep bosh and see if they can make the playoffs now that there playing better. They obviously want to keep him happy and get an extension which probably won't happen but they'll try. As for Bosh playing anywhere honestly Bosh has always strook me as a guy influenced by money no matter what he says.

Trading for Bosh is the dumbest thing ever when he already outright said he doesn't want to play here. And he's not going to agree to a sign and trade when he can just walk uninhibited.

Rudy Gay is probably our best shot since the Grizzlies are really cheap and we're probably not getting Wall so we might end up with Favors in the draft which would give us two PFs already that management wants to give a chance to.

Here's a realistic trade.
Chris Bosh for Yi and BS
Toronto has 1 million chinese, and 1 more year under contract
The Nets could get Bosh and that might help get Lebron and in turn keep Bosh happy enough to re sign.
If Bosh doesn't resign, the Nets could still hold the rights to him and can get something I a sign and trade in the off season

There is enough choices this year.

Yi's contract is 3 times what i thought it was that still would add roughly 8 million however and I don't see the point in sacrificing for two years and then getting another old player less effective. Granted the nets may have trouble atracting talent if their record conitunes like this and the front office need to consider this but I still think money talks and the nets will have enough of it to get somone good. I'm not talking about Lebron or D Wade but somone good all the same.

When i said pick, i meant 1 of their league-leading 10 over the next 3 years. Trading next years lottery pick after this season would be pure lunacy considering that even #4 would yield a great prospect.

Magette is tens times less selfish than Yi and if you peep hoopdata, he has top 5 PER for small forwards. Randolph is a pure stud, the type of player Yi should be actually. Point is Warriors aren't giving anyone away with Mags contract. And the best FA we're likely to land next year is D Lee. If we do that trade, we,re actually only slapping another 5-6 mil because of trading Yi.

Bottom line is we can't get 10+ wins this year with this team. But i think we could moving CDR to 2 spot (he's drowning at 3) and get ourselves a real SF along with a PF who can rebound, block and play with efficiency (again check hoopdata). Mag would be a sacrifice, no doubt, but 1 a 3-33 team is justified in taking if it still leaves us top-4 pick and 20 mil.

Trust me when i tell you a squad of DH, CDR, Mag, AR, BLo with Dooling, Lee, Twill, Boone off bench will yield at least 10 wins this year, necessary to attract anyone better than a mid-level FA.

Man, one sequence I'll never forget. I think it was against the raptors in the playoffs, Jason Kidd grabbed a long rebound at the free throw line. Then as soon as his feet touched the ground, jumped back up to throw a long two handed pass to Richard Jefferson who was already on the other side of the court. They were perfect together.

Like what I said earlier, we can't be a full on push the tempo team because Brook Lopez is a half court back to the basket scorer. But at the same time he is our best scorer. And Devin Harris isn't exactly Jason Kidd on running fast breaks

Plus he's on 10 million for the next few years and 30 years old meaning he's only getting worse. Making the Vince Carter trade pointless....no thanks.

Yi + potentially John Wall for selfish Maggette and ARandolph? No thanks. Maggette'll get you 15-18 points a game while contributing nothing else, stalling the offense, and not passing the ball.
I know TWilliams turns the ball over and isn't a great shooter but he can make things happen. He'll get better as the season goes on. We're 3-34, we have no room to play people like Hassell who contribute only with average defense. Terrence is gonna make mistakes but he's a playmaker. I'm personally a fan of letting young players grow and have the freedom to make mistakes especially on a losing team as long as he's playing hard and aggressively.

Twill is currently a malcontent turnover machine who looks completely lost or not confident in offensive sets. I think he has huge upside, but only under a coach with brilliant offensive sets.

Speaking on which, if i gotta watch another iso play or poorly executed pick and roll i'm gonna choke. Where are our screens? And can somebody tell brook it's okay to box out on the offensive boards when we're shooting, he looks like a giant spectator.

And i know yall will call me crazy but we need to trade Yi + pick for Magette and Anthony Randolph. Yes we take a hit in salaries buts Nets have little attraction next year no matter how great our rebuilding scheme is (and it is), nobody is going to come to a team that finishes with the worst record in history. Most have already stated as much.

TWilliams needs to start playing. Kiki did a good job benching him until he stopped taking dumb jumpers but its time to let him play again. Hassell played okay but he can't score, create for others or spread the floor. His defense isn't that great. Play the youngster before we ruin him.

I think the nets can win more games if they played like they did a few years ago(pushing the ball up once they get the rebound.) I see the nets now as if they had lost their identity and the nets were successful if they had an uptempo style of play while the knicks have a slower halfcourt offense identity.

The "offensive foul" call against Yi probably balanced off the "no call" when Courtney Lee pushed Chris Paul on the inbounds pass and knocked him down. Its no wonder he got a steal and a shot a FTs. As for CP3 not being in the groove, if you go back to 2007-08, when the Hornets won 56 games, Paul is at his best when he doesn't have to carry the scoring load. Earlier this season he was having to score 25-30 a game to keep them close. With 18 assists, it means his teammates are finishing, therefore he doesnt have to take it upon himself to score. Now, as for the FTs, I can't explain that. He's still an 80% + shooter from the line, but recently has been struggling.

I really hope we find a way to keep Dooling after this season. His leadership and court ability are definitely worth it. There are definitely times where I prefer to see Dooling out there instead of Harris.

Hassell is really surprising. He's supposed to be a defensive stopper but yet I often see him in an iso and pull up to hit the jumper. I'm glad he's not buried at the end of the bench like Alston and Najera were.

Which big man hasn't dominated the Nets for the past few years? Really, Sebastian or Mark, could you do a study on this? Like, how many 20 rebound games have we given up to Dwight Howard? We've given up 2 20 rebound games against Gerald Wallace this year and at least one or maybe two 20 rebound games against Dwight this year. Really, this would make a really interesting blog post, and has this sort of phenomenon happen to anyone else? It's already a fantasy strategy for a while that when a big man goes against the nets, you know he's gonna have a big night and is a must start.

div#middle div.inside #livefyre { display:none !important;}