December 13, 2010

He's playin' bad, but don't stop playin' him!

Can you expect to win with a starter not scoring at all? Not really. Against an elite team? definitely not. That was apparent in the debacle in Dallas last night as Utah fell to the Mavs in a close heart breaker after trailing by as much as 25.


In the 103 - 97 loss, Dallas was just under 54% from downtown while dropping in fourteen 3’s for 42 points! They took Utah out to the woodshed early, jumping on them 21-2 in the first part of the first quarter. After a few time outs and a mouthful of four letter words, the Jazz settled down and were suddenly playing basketball. They closed the quarter, rallying a bit, to a 34-19 deficit. The loss of that quarter was the only one of the night for the Jazz - Utah went on to take the remaining three quarters; 23-20, 28-27, and 27-22.

A frustrated Sloan gave this obvious gem, “Fran was trying to guard Nowitzki. We don't have anybody who can really go out and stop the guy. Nobody does." Key word is TRYING. There was no answer for what he was doing last night, pouring in 31 points with 15 rebounds, I fully expecting to hear MVP chants. “TRYING” is as good as gospel when it comes to defending a red hot Dirty Dirk. He is blitzing the league right now in the midst of a 12 game winning streak for Dallas, and no one is cooling him off.

Even with the lights out, white hot start put up by Dallas, Utah had a shot at the end to take this one. It didn’t workout like Jazz fans are used to seeing this year, but it did end close. An impressive come back with a less than impressive finish.

So why? Why did this one run the way it ran? Out rebounded? Yes, but that's the dead horse that has been kicked all year. Couldn’t stop the superstar Dirk? Sure. But when have we? Dallas can lose with Dirk scoring 30. What I am looking at rhymes with Bordon Bayward’s broduction ...

Hint: 0 points from your starting shooting guard. Zero. Zip. Nada. With Raja out, Gordon was shoved into the starting 2 guard spot for the second strait time... and for the second straight time he went scoreless.

I understand that him scoring does not put the hot hand of Dallas on Ice, but when a zero is hung in the scoring column 2 nights in a row it’s time to worry.

Let me preface by instilling that I am a Hayward guy. I like his effort and the ability he has to pass out of the cut. But will he ever be NBA ready as a true sixth man or starting 2? Hard to see that happening... right now. The NBA is full of liability players; guys that get paid to fill a roster spot and take up oxygen... A Mr. Collins comes to mind. Those guys can find spots on bloated salaried teams like Orlando and L.A, but not on a budgeted Utah team.

For Utah to sniff a tittle run they will need a full second team that can score, defend, and fight harder than any other second team. Hayward wants to be one of those guys, but he isn’t even close right now. He is lacking. he is a liability. He is playing afraid and tight.

So how does a player get loosened up? How does he become an asset?

Consistent playing time.

It may seem like I am contradicting myself; I rip him and then call for him to get more P.T.? But it has to be that, or cut him loose. I’m not ready for that and I would bet a ninth pick that the Jazz talking heads aren't either.

Now he shouldn’t start when Raja comes back, but he needs to know one thing: I am gonna get my chance EVERY NIGHT. I don’t care if it’s 90 seconds, the kid has to know he is going to sweat a little every night.

This is my thought on every player that suits up. Especially on a thin team that doesn’t carry a big bench. If a 12th or 13th guy knows he is going in at some point, he will be that much more ready. He will watch the game a little closer. He will watch his position a little tighter.

Last night when Utah was being slapped around, Sloan mixed it up. He brought in some different guys to try at different line-ups. The Jazz came back. That isn’t going to happen every time, but one thing will happen every time; guys will pay attention. They will be ready. They will improve.

We all want to see the kid play GOOD ball... it starts with the kid just PLAYING ball.

1 comment:

Ice Man said...

Gordon is an impressive player that is for real, but as soon as he cut off his layered mane, he quit producing the numbers all Jazz fans fell in love with. We also have to remember that he is a Rookie and he is going to have a learning curve with the toughest offense in the league to grasp. Gordo keep your head high sailor and keep shootin!

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