Cavaliers 105, Pacers 95: Pacers Come Up Short In Second Half Again
These 34-point second halves just aren't cutting it for the Pacers.
For the second loss in a row, the Pacers came up impotent at winning time, matching the paltry 34-point second half from their loss to the Knicks on Wednesday. This time, however, the Pacers didn't cough up the ball repeatedly, instead they just couldn't shoot it straight. Plus, LeBron James was ready, willing and able to close out the win for the Cavaliers, 105-95.
The game went from a fast, paced bucket fest in the first half to a tough grind for the W in the second half. The Cavs led at the half 66-61 which included both teams lighting up the nets for 38 points in the first quarter. Talk about fun and exciting. It was simply too good to last.
The Pacers came out with a much better defensive mindset in the third quarter, holding the Cavs to a mere 11 points. But they failed to take advantage and build a big enough lead to hold off the inevitable run by the visitors. Then clanking up their own 13-point fourth quarter officially made this a tale of two halves that the Pacers would just soon forget.
Another thing we learned was the difference between an All-Star and a superstar in the NBA. The Pacers' All-Star, Danny Granger came up well short in his duel with LeBron tonight. You need only look at winning time in the fourth quarter to see the difference.
Granger was 1-8 in the final quarter, missing all five of his 3-ball attempts and finishing the quarter with three points and three fouls. With the game still in the balance, Granger had a pair of open threes and a layup attempt miss the mark. Plays he's been known to cash in, simply came up short. He also, passed up a three earlier to pump-fake and dribble in for a two, but that was short as well. Just couldn't find the rhythm when he needed it most. Granger finished with 17 points and 9 rebounds which came up short on this night.
Meanwhile, LeBron finished the fourth quarter with 10 points, all in the final 4:46 of the game. He made all of his free throws and stomped the last breath of air out of the Pacers with a long three-point dagger with 52 seconds to put the Cavs up seven and seal the deal. The bucket drew cheers from his local admirers and sent the Pacer faithful heading for the exits. 40 points, 7 assists and 9 rebounds will usually get it done for LeBron and tonight it was more than enough.
Despite Granger's struggles to keep up with LeBron, the Pacers actually had several players step up with solid contributions. In fact, the production the team received from T.J. Ford and Brandon Rush are usually solid indicators of a winning formula. The two back-court starters combined for 30 points and two turnovers. That has to be a record.
In the front court, Tyler Hansbrough and Troy Murphy pitched in heavily off the bench. Murph's return from injury could only have been better were there a win attached to the final score. He was able to play almost 24 minutes and logged a double-double with 12 points and 10 rebounds. In fact, it took Murph exactly 22 seconds to grab his first rebound during his first appearance to start the second quarter.
Hansbrough played over 20 minutes as well and brought his text-book hustle to the scrap. He finished with 7 points and 3 rebounds, also snaring 3 steals and fueling one of the better Pacer highlights of the night, when he arrived out of nowhere to swat away a Mo Williams floater in the lane. The block was quickly turned into a flying Brandon Rush dunk at the other end.
Hansbrough was caught in a humorous moment shortly after he checked into the game in the first quarter. The rook found himself with the ball 18 feet away from the bucket with LeBron James sizing him up a few feet back. No doubt, James figured Hansbrough may attempt one of his patented bull rushes to the hoop. Instead, Hasnbrogh coolly knocked down the 18-footer and LeBron turned and just stopped dead in his tracks for a second when he saw the ball go through the hoop, like it was the last thing he expected.
So even with all of that good going on for the Pacers, the Cavs had too much for the home team. Anderson Varejao and J.J. Hickson were extremely active compliments to King James, keeping possession alive in first half and combining for 25 points on the night.
The losing indicator for the Pacers was definitely in the post, where foul trouble kept Roy Hibbert tethered to the bench. Solomon Jones didn't do anything spectacular in his 15 minutes and the coaches went with several lineup combinations that had Murph playing some center. Hibbert's offensive presence in the low post was sorely missed.
A few other quick points:
- Jim O'Brien was tossed out of the game about midway through the first quarter, a first for JOB as coach of the Pacers. He couldn't believe that all three refs swallowed their whistles after LeBron James crushed T.J. Ford within plain sight. JOB was well past the half-court stripe during the timeout and was soon heading back to his office where he listened to Slick and Boyle on the video feed.
- The Pacers head into another period of transition as they return some healthy bodies. JOB mentioned that Hansbrough and Murphy will likely play together as they did tonight, but they've only practiced together once. Jeff Foster returns on Sunday. Man, they could've used him inside tonight to help on the glass.
- Mike Dunleavy is expected to return next week, likely against the L.A. Clippers on Wednesday. His return will create more jumbling of the lineups, although it will take awhile before Dunleavy logs serious minutes. Still, while the options are plenty, the challenge of working the players into the right combinations remains.
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4th quarter
We seem to be fading in the 4th the last couple games. It was still anybodies game and my new pet project (Brandon) missed two free throws. Then our dependable star Danny missed a few shots he normally knocks down…then BAM, a Lebron 3…ugh! Were getting some bodies back, it will be interesting to see how JOB works out rotations that can work. Maybe the returning guys will keep some legs fresh for the 4th so we quit clanging shots. Definatley a step back for Roy, it was a flashback to last year with the foul trouble. Young fella has to figure out how to stay on the court. We missed his post presence.
by Rush Rules!!! on Nov 21, 2009 11:37 AM EST reply actions 0 recs
What do you guys think??? Diener or Price?
So when Dieners toe heals who is gonna be the inactive guy in street clothes? Diener or Price? Personally, Ide like to see Price stay active. Not that Diener is terrible, but…he’s kinda terrible. Lol! He was suppose to be a shooter, but from what I’ve seen I trust Price shooting more. Price is definatley better on D. Diener has the edge on running the O, but that’s why I think Price needs to stay dressed and get some experience.
by Rush Rules!!! on Nov 21, 2009 12:14 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
A loss like this isn't as painful...
we are supposed to lose to them….
If we could just beat the teams we should beat AND occasionally surprise some people that would be nice
by dbcb on Nov 21, 2009 12:25 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
A bit ridic
I think Lebron is great, no question about that but come on he can do no wrong. If u breath on him wrong its a foul. The refs were treating the Cavs like champs and calling every little thing against the pacers. Lebron is a great player but when the refs favor him then he is unstoppable. Just once it would be nice for Granger to get that kind 0f treatment. He would go off too. It will be nice when the P’s get FOster and Dunleavy back the team will be a whole again and pretty hard to stop once they all get on the same page
by supercolts on Nov 21, 2009 2:27 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
Man, no clue what happened
I was at a show in a bar in Columbus, OH and they had the game on, so I watched a bit. They actually did pretty poorly whenever I watched the game, but did well when I didn’t, so I made the executive decision to not after I saw they were up 78-70. I kept tabs on it by glancing over from time to time, but all I saw was heartache as the fourth quarter continued.
Not to mention I was the only one paying any real attention to the game and the bartender kept turning around to basically cheer with me or something whenever LeBron did something amazing. How did she not see me wrought in agony when LeBron was being LeBron? I didn’t have the heart to tell her I didn’t care about the Cavs, but she should’ve figured it out when I was nodding after the Pacers did something.
I did go back and watch parts of the game that I didn’t catch and all in all, I’m not too disappointed in the loss. I think we gave away a win, but they’re a championship contender, and we’re not. We played extremely well for most of the game again, and while the fourth quarter is a bit of a concern, I think these are the kinds of issues that aren’t worth fretting over after such a small sample size. Danny tried. Got relatively good looks, just couldn’t get them to fall. If Danny hits those shots, we’re in that game to the end. But it was summed up well by Tom in that department.
I liked to see the return of Murph and it go well, and am getting anxious to see this team actually take the court as a team for the first time in Obie’s tenure. It’d be better if we were 7-3, but 5-5 isn’t too bad as long as we can keep playing well, and I think this team can be really good if everyone is available. There’s a long way to go and there are a number of positives to take from this performance, just like in the Knicks game.
by goodlucksaturday on Nov 21, 2009 7:02 PM EST reply actions 0 recs


















