This was from Dwight Jaynes, the old beat writer for the Blazers.
Picking through the Trail Blazer wreckage from Game 1
April 19th, 2009 by Dwight Jaynes | 8 Comments | Filed in NBA, Trail Blazers
A few thoughts after a rather embarrassing opening to the playoffs in the Rose Garden:
? One thing that happened right off the bat completely puzzles me. Portland had held Yao Ming to 42 percent shooting this season in three games. He really hadn?t hurt the Blazers much. Portland played in front of him and got weakside help.
But here we are in Game 1 of a playoff series and the Blazers are playing behind him. Folks, Bill Russell himself couldn?t survive playing behind this behemoth. He?s just too damn big. And he?s got the feathery shooting touch of an all-star off-guard. You?ve got to keep him from getting the ball. Or at least make him work harder than that to get it.
In fact, lately that?s the way everyone has been playing him. Dallas did it in the last game of the regular season. Yao doesn?t move well side to side. He doesn?t have quick feet. It?s tough for him to get the ball when he?s fronted.
But Portland opened the game playing behind him ? letting him have it where he wanted to have it. This was sheer craziness and I?m positive not what Houston expected, either. But what a gift.
I absolutely agree. Easy down low position, and he scored at will. He then got on a roll, and from there on out he was money. There is a reason he didn't miss a shot, he got lots and lots of easy shots. We also did a very poor job of giving Joel help. If Yao gets the ball down low you need to send a defender at him and double team him, try and force some turnovers, and make someone else shoot, rather than Yao from 3 feet. Also our pick & roll d was so poor it forced Joel to provide weak side help on the guard penetrating, that Yao was at the rim for easy offensive rebounds, or easy dunks.
? Please, I don?t want to hear about officiating. The Blazers did nothing to deserve to get to the foul line Saturday night. You don?t get fouled on 22-foot jump shots. That?s about all they took in the final three quarters of the game.
I absolutely agree. It was a physical game, but we did nothing at all to deserve to get to the line. Maybe teh officals cost us 6-8 points, maybe, but we effectively lost by 30.
? Please, I don?t want to hear about inexperience in the playoffs. Go tell it to the Bulls, who took a rookie point guard and a bunch of guys who?d never played a playoff game into Boston and whipped the Celtics. There are no excuses in the playoffs.
? I can go all the way back to the first NBA coach I covered, Dr. Jack Ramsay, and remember him preaching to his players, ?Against a shot blocker, you?ve got to take the ball right at him. Don?t take it away from him, take it AT him.? When Portland had success against Yao, Roy was taking the ball right into him. Don?t worry if he blocks a shot or two. He?s going to foul or let you go most of the time.
I absolutely agree. Same with Scola. You have to take the game at the defender, and force them to make plays. If you do you will get calls, they will get in foul trouble, they will get our of their rhythm.
? Just about every little thing that?s troubled the Blazers this season showed up Saturday ? and you have to give the Rockets? coaching staff credit for that. Defending the pick and roll? A nightmare again for the Blazers. Not getting inside? Yup, here we go again. Talk about a great scouting job . . . Luis Scola had a devil of a time containing LaMarcus Aldridge in the regular season but in this game he beat Aldridge to his spot time after time. He seemed to know exactly what the Portland forward was going to do all night long.
The Rockets were PREPARED. The Blazers were not, and they admitted as much afterward.
I absolutely agree. LaMarcus is far more athletic, and has a great shooting touch, but he did a horrible job of utilizing his entire repertoire. Scola beat him to the block, and then LaMarcus tried to muscle him, and Scola didn't back down. Aldridge needed to take 17-20 footer that Scola was giving him, which would have pulled Scola away from the block, and then LaMarcus could have used is athleticism to get to the rim.
? It seemed the Blazers didn?t get an easy shot through the first 44 minutes of the game. Not a one. Nothing inside and but two fast-break points. Meanwhile, in the first half the Rockets feasted on the Blazer defense. I mean, Houston had SEVEN layups or dunks in the first quarter. The Rockets were 15 for 20 in the first quarter and four of the five misses were three-pointers. So Houston missed just one two-point shot in the first 12 minutes.
That was not because they were hitting difficult shots. It was because they were getting great shots ? either at the basket or wide open from distance.
Houston played very good D, and we gave them easy positions to score. That is why we are the 16th rated defense in the league.
? Along those lines, if you think Houston?s due to cool off, I would say this: Not if they keep getting easy shots. They?ll keep shooting nearly 60 percent if they continue to get wide-open jumpers, dunks and layups.
? Likewise, unless the Blazers come up with some sort of inside game, they?re going to have a tough time scoring.
? Don?t forget what I said previously ? whoever wins the last game is always the immediate favorite. But the points don?t carry over into the next game. Part of having the homecourt advantage is this: If you lose a game at home, you have to win only one on the road to get it back. As we saw in Saturday?s games ? when three of the four road teams won ? getting a win on the road is not as tough in the playoffs as you might think.