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Recap of Game 4’s fourth quarter

Tuesday, April 28th, 2009
by John

Before the Rockets’ Game 4 victory becomes a distant memory, I watched the 4th quarter again last night on my DVR to cover any ground I didn’t have time to recap on Sunday night.

You’ve got to give Lowry, Artest, Battier, Yao, Landry and Hayes props for all they did in that quarter — in other words, it was a complete team effort. I hope you enjoy this play-by-play as much as I did in writing it.

One thing I don’t mention in the summary below is the fact I thought earlier in the game, and the play at the 5:04 mark in the 4th quarter, the refs were way too liberal in calling fouls against Rocket players WHEN ROY WOULD RUN INTO THEM! That guy is already commanding way too much respect from the refs. Ridiculous. Look for more of that nonsense in Game 5.

Portland closed the third quarter on a 19-6 run to take a 70-64 lead entering the 4th quarter.

11:45 – Artest hit a big basket to start the 4Q to bring the Rockets to within 70-66

11:03 – Wafer penetrates into the lane, draws the defense, then dishes to Yao on the baseline for a dunk! Good maturity shown by Wafer! 72-68 Portland

10:23 – After a mad scramble for the ball, Wafer gets the ball in the corner and drains a HUGE 3-POINTER to bring the house down! 72-71 Portland

10:07 – Scola is called for a foul on Aldridge as he posts up. How can Scola be called for a foul when Aldridge is the one who made contact with Scola’s forehead? Aldridge scored and hits the free throw. 75-71 Portland

9:47 – Brandon Roy drives into the lane and charges into Scola for a turnover! 75-71 Portland

7:59 – Nice footwork by Yao in the post for a hook shot and score. 77-73 Portland. Yao got Pryzbilla behind him as Artest drew a double team.

7:36 – Artest knocks the ball off Roy’s leg for a turnover! Nice D, Ron! Still 77-73

7:20 – Oden fouls Yao as he goes up strong for a jump hook. Yao goes to the line and makes both FTs. 77-75 Portland

7:05 – Roy takes it strong to the hole and is stripped for a turnover! The defense has been great on Roy in the 4th quarter!

6:41 – Kyle Lowry skies for an offensive rebound and is fouled!

6:36 – Luis Scola hits a jumper from the top of the key to tie it! 77-77 TIE. 6-0 run!

Everyone in the building is screaming DEFENSE, DEFENSE as the Blazers bring it down the court! The Blazers miss, and Lowry skies for a defensive rebound with 6:13 remaining!

5:50 – Yao seals off Pryzbilla and scores on a jump hook in the middle of the lane! 79-77. Yao has 8 in the quarter!

5:32 – Scola picks up a foul.

5:23 – Outlaw drives the lane and loses the ball for a turnover. Landry picks up the loose ball.

5:04 – Artest is stripped of the ball, which leads to a fast break the other way, and Roy scores on a layup, BUT THE REFS CALL A BOGUS BLOCKING FOUL ON BATTIER. IT SHOULD HAVE BEEN A NO-CALL! Roy makes the free throw. 80-79 Portland

4:28 – Helter skelter play with lots of offensive rebounds. Eventually the ball gets to Battier for a wide open 3-pointer, AND HE HITS IT! 82-80 Houston

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Big shots and boards give Houston an unlikely win

Monday, April 27th, 2009
by John

The hard thing about trying to write a summary after a big playoff game like Sunday night’s Game 4 between Houston and Portland is that almost everyone saw it, so what else can I say about this one that you didn’t already see? It was an incredible 89-88 win that puts the Rockets on the verge of ending a first round playoff drought that’s lasted almost 12 years.


Yao throws one down on Travis Outlaw in a bounce-back game for Yao where he scored 21 points on 7-of-14 shots, grabbed 12 boards, had 2 assists, and 1 block. Click here for more photos from the game.

There were so many facets of this game too numerous to recap at this late hour, and it would probably be redundant because you know what happened – the Rockets overcame a 6-point deficit in the 4th quarter when they were hanging on a thread, and bucked a dismal 5-20 record they’ve had this season when entering the 4th quarter trailing.

There were big plays across the Rockets’ roster in the 4th quarter that were key for them in securing the victory:

Chuck Hayes, who only played 4 minutes in the game, drawing a charge on Brandon Roy with just 10.7 seconds remaining that gave Houston the ball back.
Shane “Big Shot” Battier (as opposed to “Big Shot” Robert Horry) hitting two back-to-back 3 pointers in the fourth to keep the Rockets afloat (I’ve never seen Shane so clutch these past 2 games)
Von Wafer hitting a big 3-pointer himself earlier in the 4th quarter, dishing to Yao for a dunk, and bouncing back from a Game 3 debacle to finish with 12 points on 4-of-8 shooting
– Yao hitting some big shots in the lane to prove my prediction correct that he would have a 20+ game in this series after only scoring 7 points in Game 3. He finished with 21 points on 7-of-14 shooting in a game-high 44 minutes of action.
Kyle Lowry and Carl Landry skying for big offensive boards late in the game to keep offensive possessions alive.

As thrilling of a victory it was for the Rockets, let’s keep things in perspective that before anyone thinks they have won this series, the bounce of the ball the wrong way or one shot made here or there by the Blazers over the last 2 games could have given Portland a 3-1 series lead, not Houston.

The main thought I have in my head as I look across the boxscore where 5 Rockets scored in double-figures is the same thing I wrote after Game 3: the Rockets no longer need to rely on a “Big 3” strategy to win a series. They are balanced across the roster to do it by committee such that even the national media (like TNT analysts Doug Collins and Kenny Smith) are starting to pick up on how balanced they are.

I remember saying several months ago even before McGrady went out that this was the strategy the Rockets should pursue: cultivate the talent they have on the roster to get them comfortable making big shots and big plays, rather than stand around waiting for a “go-to” guy to save them. I’ve always hated that approach because it’s relatively easy to shut down most “go-to” guys (especially McGrady who is overrated because he isn’t really that clutch in the 4th quarter anyway), it doesn’t diversify your offensive attack, and it doesn’t build for the future.

In a game where your starting backcourt is 6-for-25 (Ron Artest 5-for-20; Aaron Brooks 1-for-5), your point guards are 2-for-11 (Lowry 1-for-6), the team shoots only 40%, and it misses 8 free throws and your opponent misses none, you’d expect a nice fat loss.

But throw in those big shots and rebounds, including 10 offensive boards in the 4th quarter that led to 13 second chance points (out of 28 for the game), and you’ve got an astounding victory that shows the Rockets are gaining confidence, and they have the heart to pull games out they had a hard time doing before.

Although Artest shot only 25% from the field, it could have been worse, but he passed up several wild shots and got the ball to his teammates, including Yao, for a team-high 9 assists.

And the power forwards of Luis Scola (17 points on 8-of-18 shots) and Landry (4 points on 2-or-4 shots) has been one of the main missing factors over the past few years in the playoffs for Houston. I remember that Dallas series a few years ago that the Rockets lost in 7 games. The main thing they were missing in that series was Juwan Howard, out with a heart condition, and not having a power forward who could drain a jumper from 15 feet while Yao was commanding attention from double teams in the paint. Now a few years later we’re seeing just how valuable a power forward who can hit a jumper can mean to this team.

With all the Rockets who are getting great valuable playoff experience and delivering with big shots, you’ve got to feel really good that this experience is going to pay off big-time for future playoff runs.

They may not go very far in this year’s playoffs, but if they are able to win this series against Portland and most likely face the Lakers in the next round, the Rockets will have a lot of people around the country rooting for them since everyone loves an underdog, especially against the heavily favored Lakers. The Rockets need to capitalize on this golden opportunity to move past Portland so they can gain even more fans around the country when more people will start watching the games when there are only 4 teams playing in each conference.

All I know, though, is that Game 5 is obviously not going to be easy for the Rockets to pull off. They will have to play out of their mind to overcome a cornered Blazer team in Portland.

Because of the late ending of Game 4, I’ve got to shut this puppy down, but I plan to watch Game 4 again on my DVR Monday night so I can find other nuggets of information that might not have been picked up by the sports writers or TV analysts who have also commented about this game you most likely saw.

Balanced scoring and big shot by Battier beat Blazers

Saturday, April 25th, 2009
by John

Perhaps no other game on such a big stage demonstrated that Daryl Morey and Rick Adelman’s nirvana has finally arrived.

Remember all that “Big 3” stuff? Forget about that for now. That may be a good description of the top 3 U.S. automakers (hell, it doesn’t even count for them since the economy tanked), and it’s not the methodology that’s required of Houston teams to win big playoff games.

In my opinion, the better mantra is great defense, and having balanced scoring and talent throughout the roster. With it you can still beat a good team, even if your two superstars in Yao Ming and Ron Artest score 7 points (2-of-7 from the field) and 9 (3-of-8), respectively.


Luis Scola delivered on a night when the Blazers’ defense on Yao gave his teammates lots of opportunities to score. Click here for more photos from the game.

No one would ever have thought it possible, but that’s what you now have in Houston, folks. I don’t know about you, but I’m perfectly fine with a few games where Yao scores very few points if the Rockets can win. Who can complain? It’s when they lose that everyone goes bonkers that Yao isn’t getting enough touches, or he’s not being aggressive enough.

But people must realize that Yao Ming isn’t being ignored or disrespected by his teammates if he doesn’t get the ball enough to get his points. What’s happening is that the Rockets are so talented that when Yao can’t fight for position to get open, or his teammates can’t get him the ball during that nanosecond when he may be open as the Blazers drape themselves all over him, the Rockets can still make the defense pay.

Yao not getting his points is only temporary. As is always the case, Yao will get his points once the Blazers start respecting the other threats on the roster, like Luis Scola’s amazing 19 points on 8-of-15 shooting, or Carl Landry (10 points on 5-of-7), or Shane Battier with an offensive explosion of 16 points and clutch shots (more on that later).

Besides, it’s not unusual for very good players to have scoring lulls and explode once they’ve made adjustments after seeing how their defense plays them. Just look at Brandon Roy. He scored 21 points in Game 1, destroyed the Rockets with 42 in Game 2, and in Game 3 Friday night, gets contained with 19 on Friday night on 6-of-18 shooting, and he had to work very hard to get those points.

I predict the same will happen with Yao. After scoring 24 points in Game 1 on 9-of-9 shooting, he’s like a Navy seamen who has been out-to-sea for a little too long, waiting for his opportunity to get to shore. When he “arrives,” I predict he’ll explode with another 20+ game in this series doing the things he’s accustomed to doing.

He will make adjustments as the defense gives he and his teammates the chance to do that. I think one way that Yao and Adelman have to do that is for Yao to come outside the paint more and take open jumpers. I say if the other Rockets are having a bad shooting night to burn the defense, then forget the mantra of forcing Yao to play in the low post. Let him play outside like Adelman’s former centers in Sacramento Vlade Divac and Brad Miller, and let him shoot more from the outside.

I actually saw Friday night Yao positioned more to do that. Other players would be working their way in the paint, and he’d have his hands up ready to receive a pass and shoot a face-up jumper. I say let him do that more so he doesn’t have to work so hard in the low post.

I can tell one of the reasons why Yao isn’t getting open down low is that he’s not doing something that Hakeem was so good at doing. As defenders like Joel Pryzbilla and Greg Oden have their arm extended across Yao’s body to try to keep the entry pass coming in cleanly, Yao should be coming TOWARD the ball more to break free from the defender. That means setting up lower in the post, coming out a couple of feet as the ball gets delivered to him, then going to work. It would still require a very accurate pass because chances are the player throwing the ball into him will have a defender who will try to collapse on Yao and deflect the ball. But it can be done if done with precision.

Even though Yao didn’t score that many points Friday night, I thought he did an outstanding job on the boards, grabbing many key rebounds that I don’t think he normally would have pulled down if he had been focusing on scoring so much. Grabbing 13 boards against a pretty good Portland frontcourt can’t be underestimated, especially that big tap-back offensive rebound with 2:12 remaining in the game that kept the possession alive while the Rockets were trying to run out the clock.

And defensively, he did an outstanding job clogging up the lane making it more difficult for Roy to get to the rack, including a sweet block of Roy at the 4:36 mark of the second quarter that showed Yao’s help defense has improved significantly this year. He did get into a little bit of foul trouble picking up some ticky-tack fouls, and he’ll have to cut down on that so he can spend more time on the court the rest of this series.

Artest passes the test

I am absolutely floored and thrilled with the restraint that Artest showed in this game. He didn’t take a shot in the first half, and instead focused on doing the little things to help his team, like focus on defending Roy, who scored only 8 points on 2-of-7 shooting in the first half.

Artest’s decision to not jack-up bad shots was such a key to this win. He got a little trigger-happy after taking his first shot midway through the 3rd quarter, and would only make 3-of-8 shots overall, but I can live with 5 missed shots per game instead of 12 like in Game 2. Two of the 3 shots he made, of course, were down low when he took it aggressively to the basket. He only took one 3-pointer, and made that. If Artest continues to do that, and focus mainly on defense, the Rockets will be in extremely good shape to win this series.

Luis and Landry

I can’t tell you how much I loved seeing Luis Scola taking jumper and jumper as the Blazers’ defense left him wide open as they focused on covering Yao. And Luis made them pay with 13 points in the first half on 6-of-12 shooting. It’s one of the few times where I’m okay with a player taking so many shots from the same position (10 shots in the first quarter alone!), because Luis has proved he can hit them. And did you see that sweet shot he hit over Pryzbilla down low, and draw the foul? The guy’s moves down low in the paint continue to amaze me.

As long as Luis can stay out of foul trouble (he got into some Friday night that limited his second-half minutes), it’s going to be tough for the Blazers to cover him AND Yao.

I forgot to mention in a post before Game 3 that I thought Carl Landry could be a difference-maker in this series because he’s athletic enough to give the Blazers fits. He’d been kind of quiet all series long, but now with Dikembe Mutombo’s career over, I predicted Landry was not only going to have to play good defense, but he was going to have to start off-setting what Deke brought on the defensive end with some offense to make them pay. And boy did he deliver. He hit 5-of-5 shots in the second quarter alone and finished with 10 points, giving the Blazers yet another threat to think about having to cover.

Sure-shot Shane

Shane Battier is finally starting to understand that he has to be aggressive offensively if the Rockets are going to win this series. Three points a game on 3 shots like in Game 2 isn’t going to cut it. It looks like he finally realized that after scoring 16 points on 6-of-10 shots Friday night.

Shane has hit a few big shots in his career to win games, but no shot has probably been bigger than the 27-foot 3-pointer he swished with 4:33 remaining in the game to give the Rockets a 76-69 cushion they so desperately needed as the Blazers were making their run.

At that time in the game, the Rockets were struggling, and rather than run away and hide, Battier seemed to be thinking, “Screw this – I’m going to take over on this possession.”

Attribute that big bucket to hard work in the gym and getting comfortable taking what’s typically a low-percentage shot, and to do it after moving to that position above the 3-point line, stopping on a dime, and draining it. Hopefully that shot will give him the confidence to be more aggressive offensively and not go hiding again. If the Blazers have to think about Battier being an offensive threat in addition to Scola and Landry, it’s just about over.

I loved Battier’s reaction after he hit that trey – it still gives me goose bumps just thinking about it. Always the picture of composure, he never really gets emotional like that. That’s what I love about the playoffs – it brings out all the emotions in even the most composed.

Brooks & Lowry

Although Aaron Brooks didn’t have a big explosive game (only 3-of-11 for 11 points) like he had in Games 1 & 2 where he averaged 25 points, I was thrilled with what he continues to bring to the table: the Rockets’ best threat to get into the lane and create havoc with the Blazers defensively.

Time after time Brooks would exploit his advantage over Steve Blake, blow past him into the lane, then dish out to an open shooter or take it to the rack himself for a score. I really believe without that dimension, the Rockets would have become very predictable for the Blazers to defend in this game and they would have lost it.

And A.B. did his job as a point guard by hitting clutch free throws down the stretch as the Blazers were fouling him intentionally to try to stay within striking distance. Sure, he missed a couple of those free throws, but on the second one he missed with just a couple of seconds remaining in the game, he had the presence of mind use his quickness to go grab the rebound and close out the victory.

It really looks like Brooks is coming into his own and bringing more to the table than what Rafer Alston did. Brooks had 5 assists Friday night, too, so give him credit he’s not a one-dimensional player.

And his backup Kyle Lowry continues to impress, being aggressive himself pushing the ball on the fast break and forcing the defense to react. Lowry would finish with 8 points on 2-of-2 shooting from the field, and 4-of-6 from the line.

It was really the scoring of Lowry and his bench teammates like Von Wafer and Landry in the first half that were huge keys to the win. In that first half, that trio led the charge with 12-of-15 shooting (80%) and 19 points!

Probably the weakest link on the floor in the second half was Wafer. He took it strong to the hole a couple of times for amazing dunks, one on a fast break after a steal, and another on a Lowry-led break where he threw one down that brought the house down and made me have to rewind my DVR 5 times to soak it all in!

But outside of those 2 dunks, he made only 1-of-7 shots, becoming a ball-stopper and Artest/McGrady-like jacking up too many jumpers. Stick to your game, Von: take it to the rack and save the jumpers for less important games in the regular season.

Defense delivers

After being torched by Roy and Lamarcus Aldridge in Game 2, the intensity the Rockets had defensively to start the game was a joy to watch as they clamped down and held the Blazers to 37% shooting in the first quarter, and 42% overall. They out-rebounded them 42-31 and blocked 7 of their shots, with 4 coming from Battier! Another reason why I love the intensity of the playoffs!

Even with the great D, though, the Blazers showed why they are one of the best comeback teams in the league by hitting lots of 3-pointers down the stretch to make it very close. Rudy Fernandez and Blake were 5-of-7 and 4-of-7 from 3-point land alone, something they hadn’t done at all in Games 1 & 2. But I’m not as mad about how they came back like that. Hitting 3-pointers consistently in a series is tough to do, and if they do it again starting out in Game 4, I have faith the Rockets’ defense will adapt.

We’ll miss you, Deke

Friday, April 24th, 2009
by John

Before Game 2 of the Rockets-Blazers game is long forgotten, I decided to watch a little bit of my recording of it again, namely the part where Dikembe Mutombo got injured, and more importantly, the respect his teammates paid coming over to where he was injured as he put on the stretcher. It was sad to watch it again, but I felt it was necessary to soak in that moment one last time before moving on with the series. I went to Nolan Ryan‘s last game (which was also George Brett‘s), and I remember it like it was yesterday. I think it’ll be the same for Deke because you don’t come across legends that often where an entire team will show respect like that right in the middle of a game.

I was lucky to have witnessed his banter in the locker room the media and players talk about. I also had the opportunity to meet him a couple of times. The first time was in 2006 during training camp in Austin outside the team’s hotel (I lived right around the block). It was right after practice, and he was outside the front of the Four Seasons with big ice bags strapped to his knees. I talked to him about that, and he said he did that after every practice and game as a precautionary measure to keep the swelling down. Those knees and that precaution took him a long way in the NBA — 18 years.

The other time I met him was during the NBA All-Star break when I ran into him in New Orleans outside Cafe du Monde with his family. I said hello and told him I had just seen former LSU coach Dale Brown, at which time Deke rushed over and talked to him like he was an old friend.

You can check out the story at the bottom of this post.

Now I understand Dikembe has delayed his knee surgery until Monday so that he can be in attendance for both tonight’s game as well as Sunday night’s. What a class act (contrary to McGrady, who is still in MIA from the bench). Thanks for the memories, Deke. Hopefully your teammates will go out there and win a ring for you this season.

Reasons why Rockets lost Game 2 to Blazers

Wednesday, April 22nd, 2009
by John

Everyone knew Game 2 between the Rockets and Blazers was going to be a much closer game than the blowout win by Houston in Game 1. The question was who would make plays down the stretch and who wouldn’t. That’s really the main question in a series where the teams are evenly matched like they are in this one.

As expected, the game was tied 72-72 entering the fourth quarter. Houston made 9-of-18 shots in that quarter, which isn’t bad, but it really boiled down to a few possessions down the stretch. It also came down to Brandon Roy and Lamarcus Aldridge, who carried the load with 42 and 27 points respectively, making plays when Houston didn’t. Result: Blazers 107, Rockets 103.


Yao Ming was one of several Rockets who tried to slow down Brandon Roy, but to no avail. Roy would light up Houston for 42 points. Click here for more game photos.

I don’t know if you would call this a collapse by Houston as much as it was just not playing smart and making mistakes down the stretch. A collapse sounds so much worse because it makes you think they blew a big lead, which they never really had. Anyhow, I think this loss came down to a few important factors:

– Obviously not being able to stop Brandon Roy ALL GAME LONG. Before the series started, Houston fans had to feel good that their team supposedly had the two best defenders you could hope to find on one team to defend him: Shane Battier and Ron Artest. It didn’t matter. 15-of-27 from the field for 42 points is a good old-fashioned torching, and he was consistently doing it all game long, scoring 9 to 12 points each quarter.

If Houston had at least contained Roy, it would have been a W for Houston. Sorry, but I still think Battier’s defense is overrated. He’s a good defender, but I don’t think he shuts down his opponents as much as he used to be able to do. That’s another topic for another day.

– Not being able to stop Lamarcus Aldridge, either. He scored 27 points on 11-of-19 shooting.

– Five turnovers in the fourth quarter, including crucial ones in crunch time (as described later on at the bottom of this post).

– As Rick Adelman said after the game, Houston wasn’t “patient” all game long, jacking up “flyers” and not trying to get a better shot by getting the ball into Yao. Main culprit: Ron Artest, who was 2-for-12 after the first quarter, and missed all six of his 3-pointers after the first quarter. For example, late in the 2nd quarter, the Rockets led by 6 points, but then Artest jacked up two bad 3-point attempts in a row that helped Portland go on a 10-2 run while Houston went scoreless the last 3 minutes of the second.

Then in the fourth quarter, Houston went almost 7 minutes without hitting a field goal because of bad shot selection and turnovers, which helped Portland go on a 19-7 run to take a 98-90 lead with 1:03 remaining .

– Terrible calls by the officials, especially the terrible call on Yao from referee Joey Crawford, who fell for a flop by Joel Pryzbilla with 6:50 remaining in the 3rd quarter who flailed his body wildly on an offensive rebound while he was lightly entangled with Yao, handing Yao his 4th foul. That forced Yao out of the game, and the Blazers would make a run as the Rockets’ offense struggled. Thankfully Brooks would come through with 7 points late in the 3rd quarter to help keep the game tight at 72-72 entering the 4th quarter.

This was the second game in a row where Yao picked up his 4th foul on a bogus flop call midway through the 3rd quarter. It’s almost like the officials are looking at their watches saying, “It’s now time to give Portland a better chance to win this game by handcuffing Yao.”

– Adelman said after the game they need other players to step up when Yao can’t get touches. But I think he kind of hindered their chances when Adelman himself decided to pull Von Wafer, who was having a great game with 21 points, for Shane Battier with 2:47 remaining and the Rockets down 93-90. Of course, Battier didn’t take a shot, only taking 2 shots for the game and only scoring 3 points. I have a feeling when Adelman says other players need to step up, Battier is one of the players he’s talking about.

I predicted before this series that if the Rockets lose it and Battier doesn’t amp up his scoring output, the Rockets have got to think about trading him. He’s just too much of an anvil around their neck for other players to make up for his lack of offensive production.

– The Rockets missed 10 free throws, with Luis Scola missing 4 of them. They shoot around 80% as a team, but only shot 69% Tuesday night.

– Adelman also said they needed to have more presence at the rim. Having Dikembe Mutombo go down late in the first quarter with what’s probably a career-ending knee injury was very depressing to watch. Not having him in there to contest shots hurt things as they suddenly became much smaller inside the paint where the Blazers scored 40 points.

– With 1.5 seconds remaining, Aaron Brooks hit the 2nd of two back-to-back 3-pointers which closed the deficit to only 2 points. On Portland’s inbound pass, Rudy Fernandez fell down, and the refs called a foul on the Rockets just because they thought he must have been fouled! The replay clearly showed he wasn’t. If the refs had called that play properly, the Rockets would have had the ball and would have had a chance to win the game! Jeez!

Yao only scored 11 points on 3-of-6 shooting (5-for-5 from the line), but it wasn’t like his teammates completely ignored him. Artest scored 15 points on 6-of-9 shooting in the 1st quarter, so you can’t be too upset when another player is being that productive. You go with the hot hand while you can. Then once he cools off, you go back to Yao once he’s back in the game.

In the second quarter, Yao rested most of the quarter like he normally does, and the bench of Wafer (10 points), Kyle Lowry (6) and Carl Landry (4) scored 20 points collectively, especially Wafer and Lowry who continually attacked the basket all game long. Not bad, and the Rockets were competitive, only trailing 53-51 at the half.

That 3rd quarter was where Yao could really inflict some damage, but he was robbed from being able to do that when Crawford fell for Pryzbilla’s flop, forcing Yao out of the game. By the time he came back early in the 4th, the team chemistry was out of whack.

Aaron Brooks played well, except for two crucial turnovers late in the game. He led all Rockets with 23 points on 9-of-12 shots, including those 7 points in a row late in the 3rd quarter to get them back into it. He also hit a couple of spectacular 3-pointers when the game was basically decided, but it shows he’s a competitor. Just as important, you can tell his speed is being respected by the Blazers, who are making sure they send help to defend him when he drives toward the basket. He made them pay by dishing 5 assists, but those two TOs late in the game were killers.

Wafer was super-aggressive, attacking the basket consistently that led to 21 points on 7-of-13 shots, and 6-of-7 free throws. Wafer was one of the players Adelman must have been referring to saying that they weren’t patient, especially late in the game, by launching “flyers.”

Looking ahead to Game 3 Friday night, the Rockets should be pissed they let this game get away, not helped at all by the refs calling bogus fouls throughout the game, especially that 4th one against Yao. Having that chip on their shoulder will help. Also, playing at home is huge, especially since Portland is only 2-11 on the road against the other 7 Western Conference playoff teams. And when two players like Roy and Aldridge have to score 69 points collectively to win a playoff game, your chances of winning a series go down. Remember the past two Rockets-Jazz playoff series when the Rockets didn’t have enough firepower across their lineup to win those series?

Now without Dikembe, Carl Landry, Chuck Hayes and Luis Scola are going to have to step up their defense, and Yao is going to have to log a few more minutes than he normally would to give them some size. That’ll mean staying out of foul trouble, and for the league NOT to assign Joey Crawford to officiate that game.

It also wouldn’t hurt if the players dedicate themselves to try to get their fallen teammate, Dikembe, a ring in his final season as he watches the remaining games of his storied and illustrious career from the sidelines.

Okay, here’s a review of the how the final minutes played out down the stretch that killed the Rockets…

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Blazers blistered as Rockets take 1-0 series lead

Sunday, April 19th, 2009
by John

Not much could have been as devastating as the loss the Rockets had against Dallas Wednesday that dropped Houston from maybe getting the 2nd seed all the way down to the 5th seed and losing home court advantage. All the fans were down on them, I was down on them, and Portland had tons of momentum heading into the playoffs after beating their last 6 opponents at home by an average of 22 points per game.

But give the Rockets all the credit in the world for believing in themselves, coming out with a vengeance, being resilient like they have shown all season long, and thrashing Portland 108-81 to take a 1-0 lead in the series. Just like that, the Rockets have gained home court advantage.

This game tells us the Rockets have the talent and athleticism to win this series, and that it all comes down to their mental approach to the game, starting with Yao. He delivered Saturday night.

Yao came out focused and determined from the beginning of the game like he was trying to throw the monkey not only off HIS back for not ever winning a first round playoff series, but also McGrady’s, Steve Francis’ and every other teammate he’s had since 2002.



The power of Yao: Joel Pryzbilla had a hard time stopping Yao on Saturday night. It was perfection for #11: 9-of-9 from the field for 24 points as the Rockets rolled. Click here for more game photos.

Yao would score 9 of the Rockets’ first 11 points, 14 of their first 18, and had 24 by halftime on 9-of-9 shooting. He was unstoppable with his signature shots: the turnaround jumper and jump hook. I can’t remember a game in Yao’s career where he was so dominant from the get-go.

Give him credit for shouldering the load and taking the number of shots you’d expect your franchise player to take if he’s open. Even a terrible blocking call by the refs on Yao while he was stationary and standing OUTSIDE the semicircle when Rudy Fernandez barreled into him couldn’t stop him.

At halftime I thought there was no way he could keep up the pace he had set. Yao rarely plays two phenomenal halves together in one game. He’ll either get defended more aggressively, get tired, lose concentration, or a combination of all three.

One reason for his success in the first half is because he was played 1-on-1 by Joel Pryzbilla, not fronted. Portland probably did that so they could surprise him with a fronting defense in the 2nd half, like Dallas did the other day, so that he and the coaches wouldn’t have as much time to make the necessary adjustments.

But after Yao picked up his 4th foul 5 ½ minutes into the 3rd quarter, it really didn’t matter because the Rockets had such a commanding 74-53 lead, there was no way even the Rockets could blow a lead that big.

So that was it for Yao: Rick Adelman opted to rest him the remainder of the game, finishing with the same points (24) made on 9-of-9 shooting, 6-for-6 from the line, and 9 rebounds. He also was focused defensively, blocking 2 shots in his 24 minutes of play.

Dikembe Mutombo picked up most of his minutes the rest of the way, logging 18 for the game, probably the most time he’s spent on the court in one game in months, if not a year. Perhaps Adelman had been saving him all season for the playoffs. I loved Deke’s block of Brandon Roy at the rim with 1:17 remaining in the 3rd quarter. The Rockets need more of that.

The other player who really stepped up who everyone has been doubting lately as Houston’s answer at point guard was Aaron Brooks. Without him complimenting Yao in the scoring column (27 points), this game might have had a different outcome.

A.B. had the game of his life in front of fans from his Oregonian days: aggressive all night long, attacking the basket knowing the Blazer guards can’t keep up with him, and Adelman deciding to spread the floor to give him, and other Rockets, bigger lanes to the hoop.

Brooks scored 13 points in the first half on 5-of-8 shooting, hitting cold-blooded shots like we hadn’t seen from him in quite some time — all of which we had wish he had done on a more consistent basis this season.

The play that best typified Brooks’ speed and talent occurred at the end of the first half. With 4.4 seconds remaining on the clock, he took the ball from the opposite end of the court, weaved through defenders, and scored a runner off the glass at the buzzer to make it 62-44! That play got he and the entire bench fired up as they headed to the locker room for halftime.

In the past, only OTHER teams’ point guards seemed to be able to do that, but now Houston’s can.

Brooks’ 27 points came on an efficient 10-of-17 shooting, including 5-of-8 swishers from 3-point land. He’s young still, and he’ll continue to have ups-and-downs, but time will tell if he’s just a little better than Luther Head, or he’s on his way to Tony Parker-like status.

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My OFFICIAL prediction for Rockets-Blazers series

Friday, April 17th, 2009
by John

I was asked by a certain basketball publication (online version) which I won’t name (yet) to provide my prediction for the Rockets-Blazers series. I was flattered they asked, and I sent it to them yesterday.

Well, I just found they posted it…but guess what? They changed alot of my words around to fit what they think I SHOULD have wrote to fit the theme of their article! WTF? Unbelievable! So just in case you’re coming over from that site (which I won’t reveal because I don’t want to give them ANY pub until they fix it), here’s what I wrote ORIGINALLY:

Before the Rockets blew their 14-point 3rd quarter lead to Dallas in the regular season finale, Houston was headed for a dream setup in the playoffs as the #3 seed: Home court advantage, a series against the Hornets/Spurs/Blazers, and they were out of the Lakers bracket for the next playoff round. Under that scenario, I predicted the Rockets would go all the way to the Western Conference finals.

That all changed with their choke job Wednesday night against the Mavs.

Now after dropping all the way to the 5th seed, no home court advantage, and having to play against a tough and athletic Portland team, the Rockets are psychologically damaged, dreaming about what could have been.

Meanwhile, they are also still trying to figure out how to win tough games on the road against good teams, and will continue to fail to exploit the defense when Yao is fronted, for some dumb reason.

As a result, I predict they’ll make a series of it against the Blazers, but will ultimately lose once again in the first round. The monkey will still be on their back for not winning a playoff series in over a decade.

After that, the off-season will be interesting with major changes expected. Except for Yao who is still untouchable, I expect Artest will not be signed, and Shane Battier, and maybe even Aaron Brooks, will be traded. They’ll do that in pursuit of trying to acquire a scorer who can complement Yao, and who can deliver with clutch performances late in games to put them over the top.

So there you go, my official prediction. [UPDATE: to their credit, the publication ended up updating my post to my original version right here. One of the commenters criticized the incorrect version posted because it didn’t make sense]. It ain’t pretty, but in order for the Rockets to get to the next level, they will have to go through a little more pain on their way to finding the right players. I really think they’re only 1 or 2 players away.

The only way I see Artest coming back is if there is NOT enough money for him to make elsewhere through free agency (in this economy, the $ may not be there), and he accepts a mid-range offer from the Rockets that doesn’t bust their bank so they can sign that big-time scorer I mentioned earlier. The decision for Ron to come back to the Rockets will be on him, but only at the right price for the Rockets.

Enough of the off-season talk: let’s see if the Rockets can go out there and prove me wrong!