Bullets Forever: An SB Nation Community

Navigation: Jump to content areas:





I'm so tired of this [stuff]

With 2:48 left to go in the game, Eddie Jordan decided to take Brendan Haywood out.  Normally, I would have jumped all over Eddie for this decision, but after a strong first three quarters, Brendan had faltered a bit in the fourth, allowing David Harrison (who?) to do whatever he wanted on the offensive glass.  So while I don't think it's wise to get rid of your best defender, I sort of understand where Eddie was coming from.

It was when he came back with Darius Songaila, though, that makes me think nothing is going to change.  From that point on, Songaila was a total nonfactor in the game.  He missed both his shots (one of which didn't really count because it was at the end of overtime), didn't grab a rebound, committed two fouls, and generally wasted space out there.  Meanwhile, Andray Blatche, the guy who this organization has invested in so much, lounged on the bench, with nary a thought of putting him in.

Look, I understand that Blatche is very inconsistent, but you just don't put a lineup in at the game that has no rebounders.  What exactly is the purpose of playing Songaila when the game is on the line.  If it's offense you're looking for, then that's why you play Antonio Daniels with Gilbert Arenas.  If you're looking for rebounding, go elsewhere.  If you're looking for someone to screen for Gilbert, you have Antawn Jamison and even Blatche.  If you're looking for a defender, well, obviously you look elsewhere.  It just seems like Songaila is on the floor because of his "intangibles," and, quite simply, that crap isn't going to fly.

I thought this issue was done without Jarvis Hayes and Michael Ruffin, Eddie's "pets," but yesterday gave me very little hope in that regard.  Either Blatche or Haywood has to be on the court at the end of the game.  Enough Songaila.

This wasn't the only reason the game was lost, to be fair.  After three encouraging quarters, the defense stunk in the fourth.  There was too much sagging in the paint and too much of Brendan Haywood trying to hedge on screens, and that led to penetration and open three pointers.  That's on the players, not Eddie Jordan.  Offensively, it was a mess, with way too many quick contested jumpers and too little of the Princeton offense.  Those problems scare me, and I always preach that you don't lose a game in the final minutes of play.  But this game could have been won, despite all that, if Eddie Jordan stopped resorting to Songaila-ball at the end.

Other assorted thoughts:


  • Mostly liked Gilbert's game last night, though there were far too many times he had tunnel vision and didn't run the offense.  He also stunk in the fourth quarter against Jamaal Tinsley, but that's to be expected.  Overall, he wasn't why we lost.
  • Antawn Jamison ended up with very good numbers, but I think he had a very bad game.  Too many quick shots, and not enough running the offense like Gilbert.  Gilbert's not the only one who sabotages the Princeton.
  • Brendan Haywood's line looked good, but a lot of it was fools gold.  We know he can board on the offensive glass, it's on the defensive boards that he struggles.  Last night did little to change that.
  • Overall, the ball distribution was really bad.  Gilbert and Antawn absolutely must find run the offense and give other guys their open looks.  This isn't going to work if every possession is ending in a Gil or Jamison contested 20-footer.  

It's still one game, so things can definitely turn around, but last night was not encouraging in any way.  Get ready for another rollercoaster of a season, folks.

0 recs | Comment 8 comments

Read Related

Story-email Email | Print |

Comments

Display:

Don't Blame the Lineup
The rotation is really not the problem especially in the last game.  The Pacers were missing Jermaine O'Neal and Troy Murphy, and killing us with their guards.  It was perfectly reasonable for us to go small at the end.  Everyone complains that going small sacrifices rebounds, but at that stage of the game, we needed to make shots and avoid turnovers.  Not the specialty of Blatche or Haywood.  As mentioned in the post, Haywood didn't actually have a very good game.  I think he had two defensive rebounds.  Blatche has looked tremendous in preseason and summer league, but has done little to earn clutch playing time.  I think he will eventually, and frankly I would like to see more of him too.  But you have to remember how little experience he has, and how often he makes mistakes.

You mention that Songalia didn't do anything in the last leg of the game except get two fouls.  This is misleading. Compare it to what the other players did in this same period.  From the last 2:48 of the 4th and OT: Gil had 1 rebound, 1 assist, 1/5 FGs, 1 foul.  Butler had 2 rebounds, 2/3 FG, a foul, 1 turnover, 3 missed freethrows.  Jamison had 2 rebounds, 1/2 FG.  I think AD was in at this time period too, but did literally nothing to show up on the stat sheet.  What exactly did you expect Songalia to do?  Do you honestly think Blatche or Haywood would have done better?  Enough to win the game?  The entire team stunk in this period.  To blame it on Songalia, or Eddie Jordan for putting Songalia in, is ludicrous.  

Eddie Jordan put Songalia in there to make good passes, play component defense, and hit open jumpers.  It may not have been the best decision in retrospect, but it was definitely reasonable and not blameworthy.

Blaming Jordan for being in love with Hayes and Ruffin is one thing.  But that's over.  Songalia is loads better than them.  So let's get over it.

by Aldo on Nov 1, 2007 5:28 PM EDT   0 recs

We agree on one thing
It didn't "cost" them the game.  Lots of things went wrong yesterday, let's be clear.  And I don't mean to suggest that everything gets cured if Songaila doesn't play the final three minutes.  It's not a one way street with the blame...everyone gets it, coach, player, etc.  I just chose to focus on Eddie because it's the one angle that concerns me the most.

Let's think about this for a second.  After three decent quarters defensively, the Wizards were faltering in the fourth.  They scored enough, but Indiana was getting whatever they wanted offensively.  The game was neck and neck, it wasn't like the Wizards weren't creating offense.  Even with all of Caron's missed free throws, the fourth quarter was their most productive stretch of offense.  

So with the game on the line, Eddie decides to get another offensive player in there, one that won't rebound, is too slow to play good position defense, and generally isn't going to be anything more than a guy who moves the ball.  That's fine if you're losing by 10, but the Wizards weren't losing by 10, they were losing by 2.  They needed someone who could bring something new to the game, especially defensively.  

The problem is that Songaila's strength isn't with things that don't show up in a traditional stat sheet.  He's a good scorer and passer, but those things show up in traditional stats.  What doesn't show up is defensive rotations, or box-outs that allow someone else to get the rebound, or offensive rebounds against, all of which he continually falls short with.  

What more must Blatche do to earn time down the stretch?  Last year, the problem was he didn't practice well, which is reasonable in retrospect, but this year, he came into camp in excellent shape, and was generally the team's best player in the preseason.  If that's not enough to play down the stretch, what is?  If the argument is that he hasn't proven that he can produce in that type of situation, then keeping him on the bench when those times come is awfully counterproductive.  

If Blatche plays, and the team still loses, that rant changes.  The reason I focused on this was because I'm not sure it's an angle most will consider.  They'll point to Caron Butler sucking, Gilbert and Jamison shooting poorly, and the lack of bench production, which all mattered.  But one thing that killed this team last year was the bench wasn't cultivated, and I place the blame on Eddie Jordan.

The point wasn't to say Songaila=Ruffin/Hayes.  It was to say that this is the latest example of Eddie preferring the known quantity that can't change the game over the X-factor that might provide a different look.  

You don't develop your young talent by sitting it on the bench in key moments.  Just see how Chicago handled Tyrus Thomas last year.

(Yikes this was long).

You know you'll get devoured by Cheaney, Wallace, and Juwan Howard.

by Pradamaster on Nov 1, 2007 10:26 PM EDT to parent up   0 recs

I appreciate the thoughtful reply
Actually, the reason why I was ready for with a response to the rotation complaint was because that is all anyone on the Wizards Insider blog is talking about.  (The level of discourse on that board is awfully low.)  Surprisingly little of the blame seems to be placed on the poor shooting of the big three.  

I agree that Blatche and the rookies need to get playing time this season.  We still don't really know they're strengths and weaknesses until they get thrown in there.  That's not going to happen at this point in the season when the game is close, though.  A tight game in the 4th quarter is not the time to experiment by risking the game on an X-factor.  Blatche might have made a difference in that game with more playing time, but my point was unambitious: that Jordan wasn't unreasonable in the rotation he used.

Blatche has crazy skills, but you have to keep in mind how little experience he has.  He turns the ball over a lot and makes dumb fouls.  I think Blatche will be crucial to the success of the team this season, though.  And I get excited when he comes on the floor.  I think he'll get a lot of time matched up against KG tomorrow. He really bothered him last year.  Should give us something to talk about.

by Aldo on Nov 1, 2007 11:10 PM EDT to parent up   0 recs

Whew
That was a lot.  

I can't wait for the Wiz to beat the Celtics so we can all be friends.

by Aldo on Nov 1, 2007 5:30 PM EDT   0 recs

Assigning the blame
Actually, I put this loss on the Big 3 (Earth, Wind, and Fire). They have to hit a better percentage to make up for their lack of defense. And the missed free throws down the stretch were killers. The defense in the 4th quarter was disappointing, especially the open 3 pointers. Gil and Antawn got their points but shot less than 40%. And Caron was awful. 8 turnovers!! If we're going to play poor to mediocre defense, we need to convert a much better percentage on offense.

Also, if a guy has already made 3 3-pointers, how about trying to guard him?

by hotplate on Nov 1, 2007 6:25 PM EDT   0 recs

Blatche
I'm with prada, let the boy play!

by Wooz on Nov 2, 2007 5:26 AM EDT   0 recs

Eddie's "pets,"
I am just happy that Eddie's Pets is embeded into the Bullets Forever lexi con.

Eddie does not like Blatche for some reason. He would not play him in the playoffs last season at all.  

I was in Gtown, partying for Halloween so I missed most of the game except for the ending.

I think we need to chalk it up as a bad road loss. We can not really start to evaluate(worried, upset) with this team until after the first 10 games.

What? They don't have TV in the D-League? Don't watch me, watch TV.

by Mac G on Nov 2, 2007 10:25 AM EDT   0 recs

Blatche's new position
I'm not positive of this, but my recollection in the game is that Blatche was only playing center.  We expected he'd be the backup center with Haywood out, but that leads to two issues:

  1. If Haywood gets more minutes, Blatche gets fewer (no excuse for going small here, though).

  2. Even if he's improving in all categories, the guy has just started playing the 5.  Doesn't surprise me that he isn't getting game-on-the-line minutes when he's only really been playing the position since Etan's heart problem.

I'd like him to still play the 4, but this does make the whole rotation more complicated.  If you make Blatche the backup 4, what's Songalia?

Then again, EJ was saying during preseason how they just have "bigs" and "smalls."  So maybe the whole learning-the-five thing isn't an issue.  Anyway, thought I'd bring it up, because it seems like he's competing with Haywood for minutes and we're all in agreement that both of them should be getting more PT.

Oh, and as an aside, I was thiiiiis close to saying "Dunleavy will have a career night" instead of Diogu in my over/under post, but decided it would be funnier to mention a total no-name player.  Damnit, always trust your first instinct!

by sierradave on Nov 2, 2007 11:57 AM EDT   0 recs

Comments For This Post Are Closed


User Tools

Welcome to the SB Nation blog about Washington Wizards.

FanPosts

Community blog posts and discussion.

Recent FanPosts

Small
Trade proposal - Vince Carter
Small
Brand to the Warriors?
Small
James Posey
Nick_nolte_small
"Mr. Pollin, I love you," Jamison replied.
Kid_says_fuck_u_small
This is the last season
Proofavy1_small
DAVIS TO THE CLIPPERS... WHAT HAPPENS TO LIVINGSTON??
Big_small
So much for pay cuts....the salary cap is shrinking.
Gugliottawas_small
Kings Want Gilbert Too!!
Nick_nolte_small
slow and steady wins the ring?
Small
2009 Trade thoughts

Post New FanPost All FanPosts Carrot-mini


Head honchos

Gheorghe_small Pradamaster

Gmulogo2_small JakeTheSnake

Big_small Truth About It

ad

Site Meter