Orlando Magic 110, Los Angeles Clippers 88

Rashard Lewis elevates to shoot against Corey Maggete. Lewis' Magic beat Maggete's Clippers by a final score of 110-88.
Photo by John Raoux, the Associated Press
Tonight, the Magic got off to a slow start against an inferior opponent, spotting the Clippers a 7-1 lead to start the game. It appeared as though the Magic were on their way to losing yet another "trap game," something their fans have become accustomed to watching over the past several season. But thanks to some strong defense and aggressive offense, the Magic battled back to take a 13-12 lead midway through the first period, a lead they would not relinquish en route to a 110-88 drubbing of the undermanned, overmatched Clippers. Here's the boxscore.
I give Rashard Lewis a lot of credit for getting the Magic out of their early funk. The usually passive Lewis drove hard to the basket for the Magic's first field goal, a layup on which he was fouled; he converted the free throw, and the Magic got the message. They didn't settle for too many open jumpers, instead driving into the teeth of Los Angeles' poor interior defense. With Chris Kaman and Elton Brand unavailable, the Clippers had no choice but to depend on Josh Powell, Nick Fazekas, and Tim Thomas to defend the post. They did poorly, to say the least. Dwight Howard had his way with the smaller, weaker defenders hanging onto him; as Magic color-commentator Matt Guokas observed, Howard was "literally head-and-shoulders" above everyone else down low, and it appeared as though he was playing in a high-school game. Our franchise center scored 22 points, grabbed 15 boards, and swatted three shots, numbers good enough to compensate for his 7 turnovers.
Once again, the Magic played stellar defense. Granted, the Clippers are not an offensive juggernaut, but only Corey Maggette distinguished himself; he scored 22 points in the contest, but just 2 after halftime. Rookie sensation Al Thornton scored 17 points, but missed 16 of his 24 shots. Despite being quicker and more athletic than his defender, Rashard Lewis, Thornton too often settled for jump-shots, which the Magic were happy to grant him.
Indeed, only two negatives came from this game: first, the Magic once again struggled to force many turnovers. The Clippers turned the ball over 7 times in 92 possessions, which is 7.6 percent. On average, they turn the ball over on 15.9 percent of their possessions. Granted, the Magic's defense held them to offensive efficiency (95.7) and effective field goal percentage (.428) below their respective averages (102.8 and .464), but the Magic absolutely need to make a stronger commitment to getting into the passing lanes if they hope to succeed in the playoffs. The better teams in the East will certainly score more efficiently and shoot straighter than the Clippers did tonight, and the Magic will need to balance that by forcing turnovers, something they've struggled to do all season.
The other negative is Dwight Howard's injury. Howard collided with Corey Maggette with 6:37 to play in the game and the Magic leading by 19. He was called for an offensive foul and struggled to get up. He has a bruised right quadriceps, but the injury does not appear to be serious. This hopefully minor injury certainly calls Stan Van Gundy's substitution patterns into question. With a 19-point lead against a team as offensively challenged as Los Angeles, there's no reason for the starters to be in the game.
Overall, though, the Magic played very well, and continue to surge toward the playoffs. Tonight's game marked the fourth time in six games this month the Magic held their opponent to a sub-100 offensive rating. They also got great point guard play: Jameer Nelson and Carlos Arroyo combined for 25 points on 9-of-13 shooting, 9 assists, and 0 turnovers. Yes, we should take those numbers with a grain of salt, given the Clippers' less-than-formidable point guard platoon of Brevin Knight and Dan Dickau, but it's still encouraging to see the much-maligned Magic signal-callers get back on-track.
Check out Steve's recap at Clips Nation for the view from the other side. He assesses Howard thusly: "He's got some of the worst footwork this side of Michael Olowokandi [....] The guy is one of the most dominant players in the league already - if ever develops a game he's going to be unstoppable."
Final notes:
- The Magic's 11 three-pointers brought their season total to 622, which ties a franchise record. (HT: Denton)
- Pat Garrity played 2 minutes of garbage-time this evening, his 500th career game in the NBA. He scored 2 points by making his only shot.
- J.J. Redick played alongside Garrity for the game's final two minutes, recording a turnover as his only stat. He drove into the lane, left the floor, and dished to Brian Cook on the right baseline. Cook zigged when Redick thought he would zag, and the ball sailed out of bounds.
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Tonight's Game: Orlando Magic vs. Los Angeles Clippers. Special Guest - Steve from Clips Nation
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| 41-24 | 21-41 | |
| Amway Arena | ||
| 7:00 PM | ||
| Sun Sports HD | ||
| Probable starters: | ||
| Jameer Nelson | PG | Brevin Knight |
| Maurice Evans | SG | Quinton Ross |
| Hedo Turkoglu | SF | Corey Maggette |
| Rashard Lewis | PF | Al Thornton |
| Dwight Howard | C | Josh Powell |
| Season series: | ||
| 9 Jan 2008: Magic 113, Clippers 106 | ||
Given the heaps of praise piled upon the Los Angeles Lakers, it's easy for some people to forget that they share a building with the Clippers. For more on this criminally underexposed team, I checked-in with Steve from Clips Nation.
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3QC: The Clippers are in a bad way right now. Elton Brand and Shaun Livingston, two of their top-four players, have yet to play this season due to injury. Another top-four player, Corey Maggette, is worth more money than he's earning and may leave via free-agency this summer. If you could only bring one of those players back next season, which one would you choose? And why do you think that player is Clippers' key to building a winning franchise?
Steve: There's no question who everyone in ClipsNation would bring back - it's Elton Brand. And it's not close. I've wondered at times why other teams seemed to weather prolonged absences of superstar players a little better than the Generic Clippers (no Brand). I've come to the conclusion that Elton Brand, as the best all around player on the Clippers - the best scorer, the best rebounder, the best post defender, the best locker room influence, the best leader - is just that much more important to the Clipers than, say, Gilbert Arenas is to the Wizards. The Wizards replace Arenas with Antonio Daniels and there team defense gets better and their turnovers go down, while their offense definitely suffers. The Clippers replace Brand with Tim Thomas and every damn thing gets worse. EVERY DAMN THING.
In fact, I'd go so far as to say that if Brand isn't coming back, don't bother re-signing Maggette. With both of them gone, they'd be far enough under the cap to actually sign somebody (not that there's anyone out there, but still). If Brand isn't going to be here, get out the dynamite, blow it up.
Livingston is a bit of an exception - because of his uncertain status, he can probably be retained inexpensively. I don't expect him to play anywhere else next season - he and the Clippers have been through too much together. But he's a restricted free agent, and it remains to be seen how much he signs for and for how long.
The good news is that Brand is not going anywhere. He's chomping at the bit to get back on the floor this season, and would be playing on this trip if Coach would let him. And the reason he wants to play is to start getting the team ready for next season. He's committed to staying with the Clippers, and has said as much. It may only be for the final year of this contract (he has one more year, with an opt out this summer), but he'll be a Clipper next season, and so will Livingston. Maggette is a tougher call. I really have no idea what will happen with him.
3QC: The Magic and the Clippers have something in common in that they both have veteran players having career-years this season. We have Hedo Turkoglu; you have Chris Kaman. When completely healthy, how far can Kaman lead the Clippers? Is he All-Star material?
Steve: Is he All Star material? Well, the short answer is yes. He might well have been an All Star this season had he not been playing on a last place team. But I think we're finding out that he's not really cut out to be the main man - as the double teams have become more aggressive, his offensive numbers have definitely suffered. He has certainly shown that he will be a defensive and rebounding force in this league for years. He's third in the league in both rebounding and blocked shots, and maintaining that position despite playing hurt for the last month. He also is a surprisingly good on ball defender - he does ok on the pick and roll, he can cover more mobile centers - he's not just a Camby style free safety loading up on weak side blocked shots. In the absence of Brand he's had to take the tough low post assignments all season long, and he's still managed to be third in the league in blocks. (This is another reason Brand will be back - he definitely wants to play alongside this new version of Kaman. Brand has been top 10 in rebounding and blocked shots for years. If they can manage to be top 10 in those categories in the same front court it will be the first time since David Robinson and Tim Duncan - and those guys did alright together.)
This isn't actually a question; I just want to give you the opportunity to tell Magic fans, and other 3QC readers on the East Coast, how awesome Al Thornton is.
He's pretty awesome. Since I see him every night, I forget what a secret he is around the league. But never fear - everyone got to see Jeff Green in the Rookie game, so there's that. The fact that Al Thornton wasn't selected for the rookie game; the fact that he lost out to Luis Scola for February Rookie of the Month (Scola averaged 11.7 points and 5.9 rebounds while Thornton went for 17.4 and 6.3); well, that's just life in ClipsNation.
While many rookies have been hitting the Wall, Thornton has been steadily improving. He averaged 6 points in November, 8 in December, 13 in January and the aforementioned 17.6 in February, which he's pretty much maintained into March. He's also shooting better and rebounding more. In 21 games since January 30, he's been in double figures 18 times, gone for 20 or more 9 times, and had two games of 33. He's a freak of an athlete, and can score in a variety of ways. He's got a deadly first step and the ability to finish around the basket; he can create space for his jump shot; he has NBA three-point range (31 for 87 on the season); and he's got a motor that just doesn't stop. The athleticism in particular is very welcome on the Clippers. Brand is one of the less athletic superstars in the NBA. Outside of Maggette, the Clippers don't have anyone that qualifies as a flyer, let alone a high flyer. Thornton's myriad dunks this season, over Vince Carter, Chris Bosh, Josh Smith and Mikki Moore among others, are the only things getting the Clippers onto SportsCenter these days.
Perhaps most amazing for a rookie is that he's been the go to scorer in the fourth quarter of several wins. Against New Jersey he out-dueled Carter in the fourth. He scored 9 crucial fourth quarter points while being defended by Bosh in a close win on the road in Toronto. And last week against the Kings he nailed a nasty step back 20 footer on the Clippers final possession to send the game into overtime. He scored 22 points in the fourth period and overtimes combined in that game, which the Clippers eventually won. How many rookies are getting the ball in key late game possessions this season? I'll answer my own question - two. Kevin Durant and Al Thornton.
The duel emergences of Thornton and Kaman are definitely the silver lining on this cumulonimbus of a season in ClipsNation.
3QC: I like to end these Q-and-A sessions positively, so I wanted to compliment your team on its wonderful uniforms. What are your thoughts on the Clippers' on-court attire? I think the blue alternate uniforms are among the best in the entire league.
Really, that's it? That's the most positive you can be? "Nice unis."
I'm no expert by any means, but this is probably an area where the Clippers non-innovative ways have benefited them. While most of the NBA has been exploring the color pallet (teal? really?), designing ever more detailed logos, and adding black to pretty much everything (it was cool when the Bulls did it - it's just lame for the T-Wolves), the Clippers have remained with the most primary of primary colors, and logos involving nothing more than letters and a basketball. As the pendulum has swings back to old school unis, it turns out the Clippers have been there all along. That blue road uniform is a case in point - pretty much a straightforward royal blue uni with the word Los Angeles on the front. But name another team that uses that color at all? Of course, I don't think they've won while wearing that uniform in like two seasons, so I'm beginning to hate it. But it looks sharp.
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Many thanks to ClipperSteve for those thorough responses. I meant no harm in commending the Clippers for their beautiful uniforms, but I do indeed see now how that could come across as a slight. Apologies to Steve and to Clippers fans for that.
Check out my answers to his questions -- including my take on the Magic's point guard situation -- at Clips Nation.
Assorted notes:
- Corey Maggette gets to the foul line at will -- he's taken 48 foul shots in his last 5 games! -- and converts at a high rate: .841 on the season and .823 for his career. Keith Bogans and Mo Evans are going to keep him away from the basket and force him to take contested jumpers. Maggette's hitting his outside shots at an effective field goal percentage of .418, which is well below average.
- Chris Kaman is day-to-day with a sore back and may not be available this evening. If that's the case, Dwight Howard will
feast uponmatch-up against Josh Powell. - Al Thornton should go for 20+ points tonight. I don't think Rashard Lewis can stop him.
- No word on if J.J. Redick, who left the team after Saturday's loss to Golden State to be with his brother, will be in-uniform tonight. David Redick underwent successful surgery to remove a tumor from his spine on Monday.
- If J.J. isn't available, and the game is a blowout, we could very well have another Marcin Gortat sighting. I do not object to this. Free Marcin.
Tip's at 7, as usual. I may be a bit late to the party, but better late than never, amIrite?
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UPDATED - Joe Johnson vs. Hedo Turkoglu: The Tale of the Tape
Yeah, Turkoglu got robbed. When I made my selections, I didn't choose Hedo because other guys where having better seasons. But never in my wildest freaking dreams did I imagine Hedo Turkoglu would get screwed out of an All-Star roster-spot by Joe Johnson. In that regard, Turkoglu is more deserving than Johnson, and I'm pretty cheesed-off. Ultimately, Turk's omission comes down to two factors:
- He hasn't ever played this well
- He doesn't score over 20 points per game
Below, you can see the statistical comparison between the two players. Note that points, rebounds, assists, steals, blocks, and turnovers are based on per-36-minute production to give a better idea of how each player would fare given the same amount of playing time. Also note Turkoglu's huge advantage in nearly every shooting statistic.
| Johnson | Turkoglu | |
|---|---|---|
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| 18.7 | Points | 18.4 |
| 3.9 | Rebounds | 5.8 |
| 4.7 | Assists | 4.0 |
| 0.7 | Steals | 1.0 |
| 0.1 | Blocks | 0.4 |
| 2.3 | Turnovers | 2.7 |
| 6.4 | Points per 4th Quarter | 6.0 |
| .407 | FG% | .438 |
| .350 | 3FG% | .371 |
| .851 | FT% | .835 |
| .458 | eFG% | .505 |
| .514 | TS% | .562 |
| 16.0 | PER | 17.2 |
| 18-24 | Team Record | 29-18 |
| 3 | Division Rank | 1 |
| 7 | Conference Rank | 3 |
Other Expressions of Outrage
- Henry Abbott at TrueHoop:
Hedo Turkoglu
In what was supposed to be the season he became redundant (thanks to the arrival of Rashard Lewis), Turkoglu instead became resplendent. He freaks out defenses by being a tremedous shooter and slashing with grace. But most importantly, he is the best Magic player at getting the ball to Dwight Howard in a position where he can use it. He's also a go-to guy in the clutch. I'd take him over Hamilton, Kidd, gimpy Wade, and right there with Jamison and Johnson. - Charles Barkley (transcribed by John Denton of Florida Today):
TNT analyst Charles Barkley picked Turkoglu to make the team and said the Magic's forward was the player he felt most deserved an all-star nod.
"Hedo Turkoglu is having a fantastic season and deserves to make the team," Barkley said. "I'm disappointed that Turkoglu didn't make the team. He's made a lot of game-winners. The biggest slight is Hedo Turkoglu."
- Brett Edwards at Fanhouse:
As far as snubs go, Hedo Turkoglu strikes me as the one who's playing the best this season that was left off the team. Ray Allen is solid, and is one of the big three on the team with the best record in the league, but he's definitely been the weakest of the trio this year.
- UPDATED - David Friedman of 20 Second Timeout, although he's not quite outraged:
I guess Bosh is being considered as the team's back up center. I am surprised that Johnson made the team not only because this violates the rules [of not choosing a center] but because of the mediocre record of his team. If the coaches were not going to choose a true center then Hedo Turkoglu should have gotten the nod.
As bad as Turk's omission from the team was, Jose Calderon's was worse. I've about had it with stats for tonight, but let me say the following: Calderon outdoes Jason Kidd in essentially every category other than rebounding, and is dead-even with him in assists, when adjusted per 36 minutes. He also turns the ball over less frequently. And he does all this for a much-better team; the Raptors are 25-20 whereas the Nets are 19-26. It's absurd that Calderon isn't starting, let alone that he's not even in the damn game.
Regarding the Western team... Chris Kaman. Ouch. Third in the league in rebounding and in blocked shots, but he plays for the Clippers, which is basically an automatic disqualification from consideration.
The Eastern coaches owe Turk an apology. Damn. I was really looking forward to adding this jersey to my collection:

Check out the NBA.com store for all your All-Star gear, including customized jerseys and t-shirts.
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Orlando Magic 113, Los Angeles Clippers 106

Hedo Turkoglu gave this large contingent of fans from his native Turkey plenty to cheer about in the Magic's victory over the Clippers. Turkoglu accounted for 23 of the Magic's 25 fourth-quarter points.
Photo by Noah Graham, NBAE/Getty Images
The Magic nearly snatched defeat from the jaws of victory tonight in Los Angeles, blowing plenty of double-digit leads in the second half, but Hedo Turkoglu put the team on his back and lead it to victory. He tied a season-high with 28 points. More impressively, he accounted for 23 of our 25 fourth-quarter points. In fact, the only two points for which he were not directly responsible were the final ones of the game, which were Dwight Howard's clinching free-throws. Here's the boxscore, and here's the fourth-quarter play-by-play.
It's hard to feel great about this victory, though. The Clippers showed spirit, and I give them a ton of credit for fighting despite never leading in the game, but we really should have run them out of the gym tonight. The only thing that kept the Clippers in it was their ability to convert at the foul line. They had 7 more attempts than we did, which isn't such a huge disparity. However, they also had nine more makes at the stripe than we did. Their FT rate (FTM/FGA) was a whopping 41.3% to our 26.8%.
But I'll take that disparity every time, provided that we counter with three-pointers: 9 makes for us compared to just 3 for them. A +18 differential in a game we only won by 7 is definitely key. Of course, you know what they say about teams that live by the three...
I'd like to commend Rashard Lewis for stringing together two strong games in a row, and Jameer Nelson for playing the way he's supposed to play (14 points, 9 assists). And, as I mentioned in the halftime update, Mo Evans and Keyon Dooling were also tremendous. Good job, guys.
Not-so-good-job, Dwight Howard. In the fourth quarter, he missed a dunk, missed a layup, had another layup block by Chris Kaman, goaltended a Corey Maggette layup that probably wouldn't have gone in, got called for an illegal defense, AND got called for a technical foul. Dwight, dude. You're an All-Star. You're arguably the best center in the game. Don't worry about some calls and non-calls not going your way. Wake up, shut up, and play. Your team needed you to come up bigger than you did in the fourth quarter.
Aside: I just imagined myself saying that last bit to Dwight's face. My life flashed before my eyes.
Anyway, I'm off to email Henry Abbott to see what he knows about fourth-quarter productivity. Also, I have to work tomorrow. So there's the whole sleeping thing to get to.
All in all, a good win for us -- our first in 2008! -- but it certainly could have been much better.
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UPDATED - Tonight's Game: Los Angeles Clippers vs. Orlando Magic
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| 10-21 | 22-14 | |
| Staples Center | ||
| 10:30 PM | ||
| FSN Florida | ||
| Probable starters: | ||
| Sam Cassell | PG | Carlos Arroyo |
| Quinton Ross | SG | J.J. Redick1 |
| Corey Maggette | SF | Hedo Turkoglu |
| Al Thornton | PF | Rashard Lewis |
| Chris Kaman | C | Dwight Howard |
I stayed up late last night to listen to the Kings game, although I did tune-out early. Here's the recap, which just hit the front page moments ago. Either way, this preview is pretty abbreviated.
- Chris Kaman used to look like a caveman
- Clips Nation homepage
- See below for a link to Clips Nation's preview.
- ClipperBlog homepage
- Is Chris Kaman an All-Star?
The Clippers have been absolutely decimated by injuries, and it might be time for them to make some trades to make sure they get something in return for free-agents-to-be Corey Maggette and Sam Cassell. ClipperSteve thinks Orlando would be an ideal destination for Maggette, who started his career with the Magic:
But wouldn't Corey be a nice fit in Orlando? Keith Bogans is their starting shooting guard, and Mo Evans is their first forward off the bench. Maggette would be a major upgrade in both cases.
I'd love to see Corey in Magic-blue again, but I still think our biggest concern is at power forward, not at shooting guard.
The game starts at 10:30. Maybe we'll start then, too. Another 18-point first quarter in a losing effort and I'll be royally pissed-off at first, then move into a fairly dark stage of depression as I prepare myself for another mediocre season. Maybe I can buy this Reece Gaines replica jersey -- yes, you read that right -- and cry into it when it arrives.
UPDATE: ClipperSteve has his preview up at Clips Nation, and makes this sobering statement:
[O]ther than Hedo Turkoglu, no one else on the Magic is having a particularly good season. Hence 10 losses in the last 16 games (I can't really explain the 16-4 start). In fact, in their last 9 games they are 4 and 5, but the four wins came against New York, Miami, Charlotte and Chicago - literally the 4 worst teams in the Eastern conference. They have one win against a team with a winning record in their last 16 games - which is one more than the Clippers have, but still.
...wow. It's actually even worse than that; the total is 0 wins over teams with plus-.500 records in that stretch, which starts with that awful home loss to Indiana. I knew we were playing poorly, but that poorly?! Sweet merciful Seikaly.
1 No, I don't think J.J. will start in this game at all, but he probably should. Bogans and Keyon Dooling have been awful lately, and Stan really has nothing to lose by starting the youngster, especially after his strong, 10-point showing last night. Free J.J.!
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UPDATED: Tonight's Game: Dallas Mavericks vs. Orlando Magic - Open Thread
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| 16-9 | 17-8 | |
| American Airlines Center | ||
| 8:30 PM | ||
| Sun Sports HD | ||
| Probable starters: | ||
| Devin Harris | PG | Jameer Nelson |
| Jason Terry | SG | Keith Bogans |
| Josh Howard | SF | Hedo Turkoglu |
| Dirk Nowitzki | PF | Rashard Lewis |
| Erick Dampier | C | Dwight Howard |
- Still no word on if Carlos Arroyo and Rashard Lewis will be available. If I had to guess, I'd say Carlos will be out, but Lewis will be ready.
- UPDATE: John Denton confirms that Lewis will be available tonight and will play in pain. The only way for his swollen neck to heal is through rest. The Magic don't have two straight days of rest until next Monday-Tuesday, so it may be awhile before Lewis is back in top form. Additionally, Denton's report says 55 minutes of the Magic's 70-minute practice this morning were devoted to defense. They'll have their work cut out for them against the Mavericks, who have the league's most efficient offense.
- Today's Sentinel preview mentions the Magic have lost 9 straight games in Dallas. Confidence is not high: Keyon Dooling told the Sentinel's Tim Povtak, "The road has been good to us, but that's about the only thing positive thing I can say right now."
- The preview also mentions that Maurice Evans or J.J. Redick might soon take Keith Bogans' starting role. I'd advise against that, though; Evans is colder offensively than Bogans is, and Redick's defense isn't going to set the tone at the beginning of games, which is what we need. Pass.
- Meanwhile, John Denton's article, entitled "Are the Magic Contenders or Pretenders?", takes a look at the offensive and defensive stats from the past five games. They aren't pretty.
- Seeing Juan Carlos Navarro have the game of his life against us Friday night only makes me wonder what Jason Terry will do to us.
- Here's the boxscore from our last victory over the Mavs in the Lone Star State. I dare you to guess our starting lineup. No peeking!
- Dallas' Erick Dampier, who is averaging 4.4 points and 6.1 rebounds this season, is third in All-Star balloting among Western Conference centers with over 100,000 votes. That's more than double the total votes that the Clippers' Chris Kaman has received, despite Kaman averaging career-best numbers in points (18.6) and rebounds (13.9).
- Clips Nation is hosting the second installment of Blogger MVP and Rookie of the Year rankings. Dwight leads the former category and Kevin "Kid Delicious" Durant leads the latter. Kevin Garnett and Durant received my first-place votes in their respective categories.
- Check out Mavs Moneyball, SB Nation's Mavericks site, for a view of tonight's game from a Dallas perspective.
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