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Golden State Warriors 104, Orlando Magic 95

Dwight Howard turns the ball over
Dwight Howard loses control of the ball in the Magic's 104-95 defeat at the hands of the Golden State Warriors on Saturday night. "Superman" was responsible for 4 of the team's 20 miscues on the evening.
Photo by Phelan M. Ebanhack, the Associated Press

I guess it's a good thing we're setting the clocks forward tonight. It puts this loss that much further behind us.

There isn't much to say about tonight's game apart from the following: Golden State wanted it more than we did. The Warriors were playing their fourth game in five nights, and we were coming off a nice two-day break. You would have thought the roles were reversed given our poor effort this evening.

At halftime, we lead by a score of 55-47. A graphic on the Jumbotron "Magic Vision" showed each team had 7 fast break points. By game's end, Golden State had bumped its total to 27 fast break points, while we remained stuck on 7. They forced us to commit 20 turnovers by playing the passing lanes well -- they guessed correctly each time they gambled, it seemed -- and by swatting at the ball whenever anyone took it to the basket. The officiating crew of Ken Mauer, Brian Forte, and Pat Fraher was content to let plenty of contact go uncalled, which benefitted Golden State. I'm not saying the referees were biased toward the Warriors; rather, I'm saying the Warriors took advantage of the physicality the officials allowed, whereas the Magic played their usual soft, uninspired, hands-off defense. Still, because the Warriors were so cold (38-of-94) from the field, we held them to a pedestrian offensive rating of 102.

And that's what's so frustrating. Any time a team holds Golden State to such a low total, at home, on two days of rest, it should expect to win. However, any team that turns the ball over 20 times and lets its opponent hold a plus-19 edge in field goal attempts, it should expect to lose and get booed, which is exactly what happened. It seemed to me that there were at least 5 or 6 times when one of our guys merely had to reach out and grab a Golden State miss for an easy rebound and fast-break opportunity, only to let a Warrior race in at the last second and snatch it from them. That laziness cannot be tolerated.

As much as I'd like to say this game doesn't matter in the Grand Scheme of Things, the fact is it does. Sure, it's our final meeting with Golden State this season (unless we meet them in the Finals. HAH!) but the fact that we turned an eight-point lead into a nine-point deficit in the span of one [third] quarter [collapse] is cause for concern. Golden State played with the sort of energy and heart we can expect to see in the Eastern Conference playoffs, and if we continue to take entire quarters and halves off then, as we did tonight, our championship run will end before it really begins.

Uh, I feel obligated to say something positive, so here it is: Rashard Lewis looked sharp tonight. The 4 turnovers certainly hurt our cause, but he showed an increased willingness to take the ball to the basket, which is nice. He didn't take any bad shots; they were all good looks, but some of them rimmed-out. I loved seeing him post-up Stephen Jackson, an excellent defender, and routinely fake him out of his sneakers with crafty up-and-under moves. Let's hope he does that more often.

Final thought: Put the Warriors' Mickael Pietrus on the shortlist for free agency targets this summer, especially if we're foolish enough to let both Keyon Dooling and Maurice Evans get away. The 6-6 swingman is unhappy with his role in Golden State and would really fit in well here, especially with his strong defense and three-point shooting skills. He's only 26, and although he shot poorly (4-of-11) this evening, he still contributed 11 boards, 4 of them on the offensive glass. Daddy like.

0 recs  |  Comment 4 comments

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I would gladly take Pietrus as our starting SG. No questions asked. He is the player we need... but at the price we want? Thats the problem. He wants out, but will we have the money to make it happen here? Don't think so.

by MagicManEvan on Mar 9, 2008 12:30 AM EST reply actions   0 recs

Re: MME

There will be a lot of interesting options out there this summer, and I hope Otis can upgrade the 2 through free agency. I like Lewis and Turk at the 4/3 and think that brining back all three of Dooling/Bogans/Evans makes sense. That will be expensive but if Otis has the green light to spend he could do that and still use the MLE on a FA. Draft another PG to fill Arroyo's spot (third string pg) and this team will have had a solid summer and be ready to contend.

by Eyriq the Red on Mar 9, 2008 10:24 AM EDT up reply actions   0 recs

A snapshot

This game was a simple snapshot of how bad the Magic can be for us fans who dream of a title run. Detroit’s weakness is its cockiness, Boston its (former) lack of a bench, and Cleveland its lack of offensive consistency outside of LBJ. For us? Lousy guard play, lots of turnovers, and no offensive rebounding. We have been doing a good job covering up those weaknesses most of the year but when they are uncovered, yikes. The good thing is that more likely than not one of Nelson/Dooling are playing good and the same with our Mogans tandem. It is just that it is not guaranteed...

by Eyriq the Red on Mar 9, 2008 10:18 AM EDT reply actions   0 recs

Im just glad we don't have to play the Warriors (or anyone in the West for that matter), in the playoffs because we would be screwed. We took a big lead and squandered it. Its so easy for them to come back from being down early because than can run you till you drop, which is exactly what happened.

by MagicManEvan on Mar 9, 2008 11:25 AM EDT reply actions   0 recs

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