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Thoughts On the Game: It’s Back to Reality for the Nets

Nash Over Brook

AP Photo/Bill Kostroun

Valley of the SunsBright Side of the Suns

To quote the immortal Axel Rose, “nothing lasts forever.” The good vibes from Monday’s infamy-avoiding victory against the San Antonio Spurs were not meant to spillover against another tough Western Conference foe, as the Phoenix Suns, the team with the league’s best record since the all-star break, seemed asleep at the wheel for the first half, before putting the screws to the Nets in the third quarter and beating New Jersey 116-105 at the Izod Center.

On the bright side, with win number 10 now in the books, the angst and anxiety that seemed to accompany all of the prior games where the Nets were in control at some point early in the game only to collapse thoroughly in the second half, is now gone. The Nets lost this game because they are one of the league’s worst teams playing one of the league’s best teams. As long as the Nets are no longer the worst of all-time, I can swallow these kinds of performances. These were the kinds of games, against teams like the Suns, I expected the Nets to lose before the season even started. Why should I change my tune now because the Nets had won three of their previous four games?

Actually, the Nets didn’t play all that badly last night, but the Suns are such a terrible match-up for them. All season, the Nets have struggled mightily against the league’s top offensive teams. Their win against the Spurs was actually New Jersey’s first versus a team that’s in the top 10 for offensive efficiency and San Antonio was missing two of their best offensive weapons in Tony Park and Manu Ginobli on Monday, so it hardly counts.  So here comes the Suns, leading the league in offensive efficiency, and it’s easy to see why the Nets just do not have enough firepower to match-up with Phoenix. The Nets led by three at halftime, but were hammered 38-23 in the third quarter, giving Phoenix some distance.The fact that the Nets effectively hung around for most of the game, is a credit to their improved performance for the season.

It’s no surprise that the Nets have been a better team in March as Terrence Williams has become a better player. In many ways, TWill’s up and down season really encapsulates the Nets’ journey all year. Both started off in November showing flashes of potential, but were too error-prone to be effective, before totally bottoming out in December and January. By February, the team and TWill began to redeem themselves with improved play, but still, little results, before starting to click in March. TWill and the Nets are now flawed, but respectable players/teams, demonstrating promise for next season once they’re surrounded with improved parts.  Last night, Williams led a charge in the second quarter that briefly put the Nets up by 7 with about 3:39 left when he sunk back-to-back three-pointers.  He went on to score 21 points, needing 20 shots to do it, but also dishing out 9 assists in the process. In the off-season, I would love to see TWill work on figuring out ways to draw contact and get himself to the free throw line more. He would easily score in double digits every game if he could get to the free throw line five or six times per game.

The other big performance last night came from an unexpected source. I’ve been down on Kris Humphries for the better part of March now, and deservedly so. I felt he had become too selfish offensively, and looked out-of-sync without the ball. Josh Boone, despite his numerous flaws as a player, looked more deserving of Humps backup PF/C spot on the roster, but Kiki Vandeweghe has stuck with Humphries, for better or worse. Hump looked to redeem Kiki somewhat on Monday, when he actually hit a couple of jumpers for the first time in what felt like weeks. But Hump took it one step further against Phoenix, by hitting some more jumpers but also taking advantage of the Suns’ sketchy interior D and adding some baskets at the rim en route to 17 points on 7-11 shooting.

But even with the strong performance from Hump and TWill, the Suns have so many weapons, the Nets just couldn’t compete for 48 minutes. The Suns had six players in double figures, and Steve Nash looked like the younger, less broken-down point guard when matched-up against Devin Harris, scoring 24 points and dishing 14 assists, compared with Devo, who went for 9 points and 9 assists, on 2-10 shooting. Harris also had one big wrap around his back, an ominous sigh for the oft-injured point guard.

A few more thoughts after the jump:

  • Not a great game for Yi Jianlian to add to his highlight reel, especially in the third quarter where Yi made two plays that would have been funny if they didn’t negatively affect the Nets. At around the 3:20 mark, he grabbed the offensive rebound and missed a wide open dunk under the rim, and with less than a minute to go, a pass, that was a bit low from Courtney Lee granted, bounced off Yi’s knees, causing a turnover. Yi’s bad play is accentuated by the fact that a potential replacement of his next season, Amare Stoudemire, scored 15 points on 7-12 shooting in only 27 minutes. I still have questions about Stoudemire’s commitment on the defensive end, but that’s a debate we’ll likely all be having in a few months.
  • It’s getting to the point where Courtney Lee is now quietly putting decent games together. He finished with 17 points on 7-13 shooting, along with 5 rebounds and 3 assists. He’s doing this all within the flow of the game now, not in bunches like in the beginning of the season. Besides the 10th win, Lee and TWill’s maturity as players this season, have been some of the few bright spots.
  • Was I the only one thinking of Rocky IV every time I heard Goran Dragic’s name?
  • Loved that during the “Meadowlands Moments” segment, props was given to that epic double overtime game between the Nets and Phoenix in December, 2006. That was one of those games where I had put the Nets on just to check the score and intended to either go out or put something else on, and I ended up being glued to the set from the third quarter on. I forgot that Jason Kidd had a chance to win the game in OT and the ball rimmed out. I’m also shocked that the 42 points Nash scored, remain his career-high.
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First, I love T-Will and think that he'll not only make the soph team (and dunk competition) at next year's all-star weekend, but will have a real shot at 6th man of the year next season. Who, in the league, starters included, averages 7 boards and 5 assists per? And the kid's just getting going.

I've actually been thinking about a backcourt of Wall and DH, with Lee and TWill of the bench. That would have to be the deepest, fastest, and most versatile backcourt in the league, any two or three of the four could play together, and they could come at - and run past - teams in waves.

Would guys have to sacrifice a bit of PT to make it work? Yes, but, the payoff is to work with a consistent group for years to become dominant. And, since with an owner that is likely to spend to keep talent, it would be well compensated. Plus, with a guy like DH, playing 28-30, rather than 40 minutes per is likely to keep him on the court more often, and for more years, than he will at his current pace.

Put Rudy Gay in the frontcourt next to Lopez, (with that backcourt, Gay's new nickname could be "wide open") and you're exactly one (big) piece away from a team you can ride deep into the playoffs for years. They don't even really have to go get that big this year (though they could take a couple of shots at it with the Dallas pick and their second rounder). With two first rounders, plus cap space, plus Brooklyn a year closer, they ought to be able to find a very good-to-dominant 4 the following summer.

Tell me, is it bad that I spend this much time obsessing over a team this terrible?

DH didn't have it last night, Lee had to guard Nash.
My question is. Why leave DH in the game when he is having back problems.
TWill should have been running the point in the 2nd half. CLee could have stayed on Nash and TWill could have guarded the taller JRich.
TWill is lookin more like a real PG than DH. He has a bigger body and can absorb more contact than DH ala Tyreke Evans. JWall will have the same problems in the NBA as DH. He's thin and will get beat up inside. Also Wall has no jumper yet. So I ask why would the Nets draft JWall?
To have 4 PGs?
The NBA is full of little pgs right now.
If I was GM...
I would trade DH and Yi for Odom
Draft Turner, Johnson, or cousins
Sign DLee for 10-12 million
Pitch a tent on Lebrons lawn on July 1st
If Lebron doesn't want to leave Cleveland
Proky can send the Yacht to MIA
Or try to get AK47 this summer
The Nets don't need a big time scorer at the PF position. The Nets need defense and toughness.

Nash really made us look retarded defensively. When it comes to helping on Nash he really makes you flip-flop back and forth in your head. What he was doing to Yi and Lopez on the all around the world dribble was the perfect example

"Was I the only one thinking of Rock IV every time I heard Goran Dragic’s name?"

Not any more, damn you!

I missed the double overtime Phoenix game they showed last night. It was one of the few games I missed that season. My best friend went by himself, but called me from the game and told me I had to get to a TV and watch the end of the game. I caught the 4th quarter on - I'm still pissed I wasn't at that game. Wrong game to miss that season!

Right on with your point about TWill finding ways to draw contact and get to the foul line. His game is really coming along, but some more trips to the line would really help make him a consistent scorer. He seems to use his freakish athleticism to avoid contact and try to get clean shots off - a few head fakes here and there and he'll get his 5-6 free throws per game.

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