KEEPING SCORE
by: J-DIZZLE
What the Spurs need to do to quiet Hornets' Buzz
May 04, 2008 | 11:25PM | report this

If Gregg Popovich and the San Antonio Spurs want to make a series out of this, he obviously has some adjustments to make.

 

The Spurs were slow in defensive rotations in the second half of their 101-82 loss to the Hornets, causing David West to pick them apart at the seams. The All-Star power forward scored in all ways imaginable. Mid range jump shots. Left handed hook shots. Dribble Drives. Turnaround 17-footers with a hand in his face. And-ones. West, and not Chris Paul, was the key to the whole game.

Had the Spurs doubled West early in each of the Hornets' possessions, it would have forced Paul, who had an off night shooting, to make other decisions. Decisions that may not have panned out for New Orleans. Keep in mind that San Antonio was up by 11 early on. So how come they could not maintain the lead?

Because while West was warming up, they did nothing to make sharpshooter Peja Stojakovic take tough shots. Stojakovic had open looks all night. The defending champions need to stick Bruce Bowen on Peja because it's the threat of Peja that opens up the entire game for CP3 and the rest of the team.

Popovich erred by putting Bowen on CP3. You can't treat New Orleans like the Suns. The tactic worked on Steve Nash because Nash is not as great as everyone thinks. Nash is soft and he gets rattled easily in the playoffs. So it's a tremendous advantage to put a physical player like Bowen on him. But on a player like Paul, it won't matter because Paul is too quick and too good a player to let Bowen frustrate him.

Pop should stick with the basics. Let your best counter weapon Tony Parker guard CP3. Parker is quick enough on his feet to keep up with him. Plus Parker makes CP3 work on the defensive end. He scored 23 on him so that should tell you something.
You keep Bruce on Peja so he can be physical with him and wear him down. That's how the Lakers kept beating Sacramento between 2000-2003 when Peja was in his prime. L.A. used Rick Fox to outmuscle him, frustrate him, and take him out of his comfort zone. San Antonio should do the same.

Then you take the same tactic that NO is using on Tim Duncan and use it on West. Double him with Kurt Thomas/Fabricio Oberto and Manu Ginobili, who is good at stripping the ball. You can afford to use Manu to sag off of Morris Peterson or Bonzi Wells because I don't think either of those guys can be consistent enough to be a threat all series. This allows Duncan to stay on Tyson Chandler, thus preventing any CP3-to-Tyson alleyoops.

 

And once Duncan starts to find his groove, Chandler will be neutralized and will probably be in foul trouble. At the same time, Chandler won't be putting up numbers like he did on Saturday. Because West was basically going nuts, Tyson pulled down a quiet 15 boards.

Let Chris Paul score 35 because he won't beat you by himself unlike the great Kobe Bryant can. Paul scored 32 against the Lakers in January at New Orleans and the Lakers blew them out by 29! West shot 7-17, Peja shot 4-11 and they combined to score only 28 points. This is how you beat the Hornets.
You have to wear down the Hornets physically. You have to make West and Peja work for tough shots. You have to make the Hornets defend, and you have to get them in the penalty early in the quarter. 

If the defending champions want to have the right to play the Los Angeles Lakers in the Western Conference Finals, they have to take a page out of the Lakers' scouting report in order to make their series against New Orleans a competitive one.

 

Otherwise, Coach Byron Scott is going to make a trip back to his hometown in a couple of weeks.

8 Comments | Add a comment   categories: San Antonio Spurs, New Orleans Hornets, Los Angeles Lakers, Tim Duncan, Chris Paul, Manu Ginobili, David West, Tyson Chandler, Steve Nash, Bruce Bowen, NBA, NBA Playoffs
 
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nwhatdheck
May 5, 2008
12:43 AM
A very good thesis of defensive rotation the Spurs should have employed in the match with San Antonio. Stojacovic's sniping will always be a hazard that will blow San Antonio’s defense into pieces when uncheck.

teacher54
May 5, 2008
8:36 AM
Good job. But the word "IF" comes to mind. The Spurs are just to old to keep up with N.O. The Spurs lose this is 6 or less. The Hornets are not the Suns with their old nash,They have a very young star names CP3.He will kill your Spurs in 6.

Tom7
May 5, 2008
8:37 AM
FANTASTIC job, J. It really was. Maybe Pop used Bowen on CP3 so that Parker wouldn't get into foul trouble? I don't know, but I know I like Bowen on Peja more. Don't let Peja be a factor.

By the way, did you know that the New Orleans Hornets lead the ENTIRE NBA in least number of fouls called against them?

Chris Paul and the Hornets are the most coddled team in the NBA.

NiqueDodson
May 5, 2008
8:39 AM
Hi again

Which do the Lakers want to play?

J-DIZZLE
May 5, 2008
10:42 AM
NWHATDHECK: I can't agree with you more regarding Peja being a "hazard" to the Spurs.

TEACHER54: My Spurs? I don't think so. I'm a Lakers fan. I'm just trying to help Spurs fans to understand what their team needs to do in order to remain competitive in the series.

TOM7: I didn't know that Tom. But I tell you what, if the Hornets play the Lakers that statistic is thrown out the window because Kobe will take it to them. Yesterday's free throw extravaganza is a sign of things to come for ALL Laker opponents.

NIQUE: Hello.

The Lakers want to play anybody that stands in the way of a title. That's the mentality.

NiqueDodson
May 5, 2008
12:20 PM
Understand the mentality J-Dizzle. I'm asking you who do you think would be the easiest for the Lakers?

J-DIZZLE
May 5, 2008
1:11 PM
The easiest matchup for the Lakers would probably be Utah, then San Antonio.

New Orleans is tough. Detroit is tougher. Boston would be the toughest.

BleedPRPL&GLD
May 6, 2008
10:07 AM
Looks like the Spurs might want to buy some Raid bug spray, because the swarm is overwhelming them at the moment.



LAKERS IN JUNE.

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ABOUT ME


J-DIZZLE
UC IRVINE graduate and proud to be an ANTEATER. My claim to fame is having played against the likes of Tayshaun and Tommie Prince, Jacque Vaughn, and Charles O'Bannon, plus getting dunked on by Schea Cotton in a CIF second round match in the nineties. WIDELY KNOWN on FOX as one of the most biased LAKER HOMERS in blog history, highly criticized for hating on the PHOENIX SUNS fan base, and has been told on more than one occasion that LAMAR ODOM isn't worth the suit he's wearing. Believe that "excellence is not an act but a habit." Believe that the things you do and the things you don't do, they all send a message. Believe that in order to know the world one must first know thyself. And believe that it's the journey not the destination. Finally, as the great Bruce Lee once said, "Man - he is constantly growing and when he is bound by a set pattern of ideas or way of doing things, that's when he stops growing." This is the Way of the Dragon. Embrace it.
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