TOO BIG YO


Game Time Start: 7:00 PM ET
Where: The Fieldhouse, Indianapolis, IN
Officials: Derrick Stafford, Kevin Cutler, Rodney Mott
Media Notes: Indiana Notes, Utah Notes
Television: FOX Sports Indiana / ROOT Sports
Radio: WFNI 1070 AM, 107.5 FM / KZNS 1280 AM, 97.5 FM and KTUB 1600 AM
NBA Feeds:
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![]() PACERS Glenn Robinson III - sore right shoulder (questionable) JAZZ Dante Exum - ACL surgery (out) |
Mel Daniels Is Dead. Long Live Mel Daniels Tim Donahue Less than 24 hours before I started writing this, I saw Mel Daniels. In a scene so familiar, I canโt remember whether it happened before or after the game, the most important big man in Indiana Pacers history stood in the media room chatting with local reporter Conrad Brunner. Over the past four years, I witnessed that tableau dozens of times. Melโs regular presence in the media room had allowed me to largely suppress โ but not erase โ the โHOLY ****, thatโs Mel Danielsโ hindbrain reaction that arose whenever I saw him. The element of surprise was gone, and Mel Daniels sightings were largely expected. I didnโt know Daniels. He didnโt know me. We had said, โHi,โ in passing, but we had never exchanged more than a few words. As I walked around his conversation with Bruno last night, I felt a pang of regret about not taking advantage of the opportunities Iโd had to establish even the most platonic of relationships with someone who had meant so much to the Pacers franchise. After four years of walking around the halls inside The Fieldhouse, I thought I had earned the chance to strike up those conversations with the likes of Mel, Darnell Hillman, and Slick Leornard. There was so much to learn from them, but there was also plenty of time. These guys are always around the team. โPlentyโ isnโt what it used to be. With the news of Mel Daniels passing today, all of those future opportunities evaporated, while all of those missed opportunities came to sit on my chest. But, that is a tiny tragedy: a regret, a triviality. The real pain is felt by the people who really knew him, namely his wife, CeCe, and his family. By his friend of more than 40 years, Bob Netolicky. By Brunner, who could not possibly know that last night was to be truly the last night. By anyone with whom Mel Daniels shared some or all of his 71 well-lived years on this planet in personal relationships. The rest of us who follow the Pacers are largely left on our own to understand this loss. For old- time Pacer fans, Mel Daniels was a legendary stranger who we treated as a friend โ as family, even. For younger generations of Pacer fans, Daniels is a name and number on a banner. Regardless, we have all lost a little something today. Mel Daniels was an MVP, a champion and a Hall of Famer. I could enumerate his accomplishments on the basketball court, but I think today Iโll just tell you he was ****ing awesome, and Iโll fight anyone who says otherwise. But, far more important than that... CONTINUE READING ON 8P9S |
Bucking the trend: the Utah Jazz care not for your small ball Caleb Nordgren If youโve been following the NBA at all the past few years, you are well aware of the major trend toward going small and/or spacing the floor at all times. This has necessarily led to fewer and fewer teams sticking with two non-shooting bigs โ or two bigs period, in many cases. This summer, two of the major holdouts against the small-ball revolution, the Chicago Bulls and Indiana Pacers, bit the bullet and embraced spacing. The Pacers let Luis Scola and David West walk in free agency and traded Roy Hibbert for nothing, while the Bulls hired Fred Hoiberg to replace Tom Thibodeau and replaced Joakim Noah in the starting five with Nikola Mirotic. The Detroit Pistons also declined to die on the Two-Big hill and let Greg Monroe walk, leaving Anthony Tolliver, Ersan Ilyasova and Marcus Morris to play alongside Andre Drummond. Even the Washington Wizards, after riding Nene and Marcin Gortat to consecutive second-round appearances, appear to have somewhat pivoted away from the two-big model. But thereโs one team that does appear willing to die on that hill: the Utah Jazz. The Jazz enjoyed a second half surge last year, putting up incredible defensive numbers behind the emergence of Rudy Gobert and the continued excellence of Derrick Favors. Utah posted a 96.2 defensive rating in the 857 minutes when both Gobert and Favors were on the floor per NBA.com, a mark that would have bested the Golden State Warriorsโ league-best mark by a full two points if sustained over a full season. That 96.2 rating is also almost six points lower than the Jazzโs 102.1 mark for the whole season. Now, of course, the problem is... CONTINUE READING AT HARDWOOD PAROXYSM |
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Pacers Candace Buckner @CandaceDBuckner Nate Taylor @ByNateTaylor Jared Wade @8pts9secs Tim Donahue @TimDonahue8p9s Tom Lewis @indycornrows Whitney @its_whitney |
Jazz Aaron Falk @tribjazz Spencer Ryan Hall @saltcityhoops SLC Dunk @slcdunk Jody Genessy @DJJazzyJody Tracy Weissenberg @basketballista Amar @AllThatAmar |
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