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Tag: Coby White

  • Five things we learned about the Hornets on post-NBA deadline road trip

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    To fully understand the Charlotte Hornets’ recent success and just what kind of run they’re on, look no further than the birthdate of prized rookie Kon Knueppel.

    He wasn’t even a gleam in his mother’s eye the last time the Hornets won nine straight games, which is now the case after Saturday night’s 126-119 victory over the Atlanta Hawks at State Farm Arena.

    “It’s awesome,” Knueppel said. “It’s awesome to win. Now we’re playing meaningful basketball, meaningful games. And so every game, it’s going to be kind of looking at the standings and all that, and we’re battling for playoff position as we hit the home stretch of the season after the All-Star break.”

    Which in itself is a mild upset.

    Just a few weeks ago, it didn’t appear as if the Hornets (25-28) were going to have much of a chance of ending the NBA’s longest current postseason drought. They were chasing the Milwaukee Bucks, Chicago Bulls and Hawks, among others, in the lower echelon of the Eastern Conference playing tournament.

    But with this recent stretch, paired with the teams around them getting weaker by unloading talent at the trade deadline, the Hornets are in prime position to play well into April for the first time in the better part of a decade. In emerging victorious for nine consecutive outings, they’ve gone to a place the franchise hasn’t been since 1998-99 with the likes of David Wesley and Eddie Jones.

    “Those are playoff teams,” Miles Bridges said. “They won in the playoffs, and we’re trying to get to that level. So, we just don’t want to get complacent and just keep it going. The longest win streak is 10.”

    To reach that, they’ll have to get through Detroit on Monday at Spectrum Center. And the Pistons have had the Hornets’ number for a while now.

    “That’s against the best team in the East,” Bridges said. “So, if we want to win in that fashion, that’s going to be bittersweet. But we just got to stay focused and continue to focus on us.”

    Here are four other things we learned during Charlotte’s mini trip:

    LaMelo’s making most of minutes

    LaMelo Ball seems to be more available in crunch time than ever and the Hornets are in a better position because of it.

    Ball is maxing out at roughly 31 minutes per game, which is right where he was against the Hawks. He logged 10 of those in the fourth quarter, which tied him with Knueppel for the second-most behind Miles Bridges.

    LaMelo Ball of the Charlotte Hornets brings the ball up court.
    LaMelo Ball of the Charlotte Hornets brings the ball up court. Jacob Kupferman Getty Images

    “Credit our performance staff, credit Melo for making that adjustment because he wants to play obviously every minute and every game,” coach Charles Lee said. “And this was a great decision. I think it puts him in the best position to be available and him being available is helping our team play really well.

    “Overall, just energy and effort level has improved or increased. Knowing that the stints are going to be maybe a little bit shorter, he’s not trying to manage himself as some guys do when they know that they’re going to play heavy minutes or long stretches.”

    In turn, that is helping his decision making and everyone is benefiting.

    “His teammates, they’re not putting him in those positions where he’s got to make every play by himself,” Lee said. “I think our screening is improving and our ball movement.”

    Miles Bridges of the Charlotte Hornets reacts.
    Miles Bridges of the Charlotte Hornets reacts. Jacob Kupferman Getty Images

    Josh Green has been efficient

    Quietly, Josh Green is producing.

    Pegged as one of the Hornets’ top reserves after starting all but one of the 68 games he appeared in a season ago, Green has been extremely effective since joining the rotation in December.

    Through 29 games, he’s averaging 4.5 points while shooting 45.3% from the field. He’s been extremely effective from 3-point range — and really deadly in the corners — thanks to knocking down 42% of his attempts.

    “I feel good,” Green said. “I’m just trying to bring what I can bring, shoot the open shots, and I just try to bring as much energy as I can and momentum for the team. Just do whatever I can.”

    And he’s really enjoying coming off the bench as a super sub.

    “Yeah, I think it’s fun,” Green said. “And I think another thing is being able to build off the energy of the starters. I think I’ve seen over the last couple months, it’s a huge progression. Our starters are coming with so much energy. So, to be able to come in and go off that, that helps out a lot.”

    Coby White fitting in

    It hasn’t taken long for Coby White to get acclimated to his new surroundings.

    Although he’s not going to make his debut until after the All-Star break as he nurses a left calf strain, White is getting comfortable with things behind the scenes as he settles in with the Hornets. He was among the final players individually working out with coaching staffers after morning shootaround at the arena, putting up jumpers with assistant Josh Longstaff.

    The North Carolina native is quickly leaving a good impression.

    “Spend a minute with him,” Lee said, “you can already feel a sense of maturity, a sense of eagerness to want to play and build relationships, a competitiveness to him already. He’s super engaged in everything we do. A great human being. He’s so polite.

    “I’ve gotten texts from people that are just, ‘Hey, picked him up from the airport or ran into him in the hallway, and he was really polite,’ so I think that he’s already trying to put his fingerprint or put his stamp on our environment and on our culture.”

    Because of White’s injury, the Hornets and Chicago Bulls amended the trade, league sources confirmed to The Observer. Instead of sending the Bulls three second-round picks, the Hornets are only giving them two.

    There’s no concern about White’s strain lingering, though.

    “He sat down with our performance team, and they will carve out a perfect plan to get him back to play,” Lee said. “But he’ll be [compliant] and he’s excited to get to work.”

    Roster roulette

    There was a lot of shuffling on the back end of the roster.

    KJ Simpson got released on Friday prior to the team flying to Georgia to complete the mini trip, a move that came on the heels of waiving Pat Connaughton and Mike Conley. Malaki Branham was also acquired via trade from Washington via a three-team trade, and they also picked up Xaiver Tillman from Boston in exchange for cash considerations and a top-55 protected 2030 second-round pick.

    Throw in filling the two-way slot vacated by Simpson’s release by signing Tosan Evbuomwan and there were more than just a few transactions.

    “It’s one of those things where it’s, you know, bittersweet or whatever,” Lee said. “You feel two sides of the coin where you’re sad to see some of the guys go. But those guys did such a great job and I think they helped elevate a lot of the things that we do here from a team day-to-day process, and culture and even their performance on the court. They came in and they made the place better than it was when they got here.

    And now we look forward to some new guys coming in and doing the same thing, helping to elevate our culture, help to elevate the product on the court.”

    Lee seemed really excited about the addition of Tillman, who played with Bridges at Michigan State. In six seasons, Tillman has averaged 5.2 points, 3.7 rebounds and 1.2 assists in 15.6 minutes per game in 274 appearances, 21 of which were starts.

    “I think bringing in a guy like Xavier, he’s been around a championship organization,” Lee said. “Even in his time in Memphis, they were a playoff team. So, he just brings a lot of experience and knowledge of the game. His competitive spirit, and his ability to be versatile defensively and offensively, too, is really intriguing.”

    Roderick Boone

    The Charlotte Observer

    Roderick Boone joined the Observer in September 2021 to cover the Charlotte Hornets and NBA. In his more than two decades of writing about the world of sports, he’s chronicled everything from high school rodeo to a major league baseball no-hitter to the Super Bowl to the Finals. The Long Island native has deep North Carolina roots and enjoys watching “The Fresh Prince of Bel Air” endlessly.
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    Roderick Boone

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  • Same teams. Different night. Same result: Hawks lose a second straight to Bulls, 126-123

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    Hawks guard Vit Krejci shoots over two Bulls defenders during the first quarter of Tuesday’s game. Photo by Donnell Suggs/The Atlanta Voice

    The Atlanta Hawks hosted the Chicago Bulls for the second time in three days. The result of Tuesday’s game was the same as Sunday’s game: a loss.

    The final two seconds of this game told the tale. The Hawks gave up three free throws to the Bulls and lost, despite Chicago not having to make a basket.

    Final score: Bulls 126, Hawks 123.

    The Hawks were without guard Dyson Daniels, who was listed out of the lineup with a hip injury, and big man Kristaps Porzingis, who has missed the majority of the team’s 30 games this season. Nickel Alexander-Walker was back in the starting lineup for the first time since Trae Young (35 points and nine assists on Sunday) returned from injury. Alexander-Walker (20.3 points per game) gives the Hawks’ starting lineup that much-needed third scoring option after Young and Jalen Johnson (28.3 points, 10.5 rebounds, and 8.2 assists per game).

    “You have to learn from this for sure,” said Trae Young (above) after the 126123 loss to the Bulls on Tuesday. Photo by Donnell Suggs/The Atlanta Voice

    Following the game, Young said he and his teammates will have to learn from games like this. “We’re trying to figure out how to execute down the stretch, whether it’s me or Jalen,” Young said.

    The Hawks got off to a better start in this game, going ahead 7-0 before the Bulls eventually tied the game at 16. Atlanta would take and maintain a lead throughout the first quarter behind Young, who is on a minutes restriction at the moment. His three-pointer and floater, plus a foul, looked like vintage Trae Young baskets.

    The Hawks closed the first quarter with a 36-30 advantage, and led by as much as 13 in the second quarter after rookie forward Asa Newell dunked following a steal, and then hit a corner three on the next Hawks possession. Young found Johnson with a no-look pass to bring the lead up to 15 with less than five minutes to play in the first half. With less than a minute to play in the half, the Bulls closed the gap a bit, getting scoring from Coby White down the stretch, but a pair of free throws from Young gave Atlanta a 68-55 lead at the half. During the first half, Young, Johnson, and Alexander-Walker combined for 38 points.

    Trae Young (above at free throw line). Photo by Donnell Suggs/The Atlanta Voice

    The first couple of minutes of the second half saw Chicago forward Nikola Vucevic score eight of the Bulls’ first 14 points to cut the Hawks’ lead to just eight points. The Hawks would put together a run that included a three-point play from Young and a three-pointer from forward Zaccharie Risacher to re-establish a double-figure lead and force a Bulls timeout with just over five minutes remaining in the third quarter.

    With less than two minutes to play in the quarter, Newell, whose minutes have been up and down this season, connected on a pair of three-pointers that got the supporter section chanting his name and out the Hawks 102-87. Newell, an Atlanta native, played his single season of college hoops at the University of Georgia before being drafted by the Hawks in the first round of last year’s draft. Atlanta ended the third quarter ahead by 13 points.

    NBA basketball, more than any other level of the sport, is a game of runs. The Bulls had another run in them, and went on a quick 6-0 run to force Hawks head coach Quin Snyder to call a time out with the score now 105-98 with 9:41 on the game clock.

    Johnson has been the Hawks’ go-to man all season, and with the momentum about to shift toward Chicago like a wind off of Lake Michigan, Johnson drove to the basket, scored, and was fouled in the process. Atlanta maintained a 10-point advantage with 5:41 on the clock and an eight-point lead with 4:02 remaining in the game. The two teams were back-to-back in the standings coming into the game, and this particular affair was equally as close throughout.

    Chicago pulled within a point at 117-116 when White hit a three-pointer with a Hawks defender in his face. Johnson added another jumper to give Atlanta a 119-116 cushion with 1:43 left to play in the game. White’s free throws made it a one-point game again seconds later. Giddey’s jumper in the lane with 40 seconds left put the Bulls ahead 122-119.

    The last 40 seconds of this game tell the tale. With Chicago ahead 122-121, Bulls guard Coby White went to the free throw line and proceeded to make one of two free throws to give his team a two-point lead with six seconds in the game. Alexander-Walker’s layup tied the game at 123 with 1.9 seconds to play.

    The Hawks will play the day after Christmas, hosting the Miami Heat on Friday, December 26. Photo by Donnell Suggs/The Atlanta Voice

    Atlanta, off on Christmas Day, isn’t done with the home games. The Hawks will host the Miami Heat on Friday, December 26, and the New York Knicks on Saturday, December 27. Those games will be the first time the Hawks face the Heat and Knicks this season.

    The last home game of the year will take place on New Year’s Eve when the Minnesota Timberwolves and Atlanta native Anthony Edwards will be in town for an afternoon tip-off (2 p.m.). The new year will begin with a three-game homestand. The Hawks and Young will be in New York at Madison Square Garden to play the Knicks on January 2, and follow that up with consecutive games in Toronto against the Raptors on January 3 and 5.

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    Donnell Suggs

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  • Giannis sets assists mark, hurts wrist; Bucks beat Bulls

    Giannis sets assists mark, hurts wrist; Bucks beat Bulls

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    CHICAGO (AP) — Giannis Antetokounmpo stayed on the ground, grimacing in pain before heading to the locker room. A sprained wrist in the early going ended his night.

    Not before he set yet another franchise record.

    Antetokounmpo became Milwaukee’s career assists leader before getting injured, and the Bucks won their 12th straight, beating the Chicago Bulls 112-100 on Thursday night.

    Brook Lopez scored a season-high 33 points. Jevon Carter had 22 against his hometown team, and Jrue Holiday added 15 points and nine assists.

    The Bucks were never seriously threatened. But Antetokounmpo’s injury early in the second quarter cast a bit of a cloud over a team that otherwise has so much going for it heading into the All-Star break.

    Coach Mike Budenholzer said initial reports were “hopeful” and the X-ray was “clean.”

    “We’ll just see how he feels tomorrow, see how he feels the next few days and continue to evaluate it,” Budenholzer said.

    He had “no idea” if Antetokounmpo would travel to Salt Lake City for the All-Star Game.

    The two-time MVP was hurt trying to block a finger roll attempt by Chicago’s Coby White after the guard drove past him. He jammed his wrist when he reached out — perhaps to soften the blow — as he crashed into the padded stanchion. He continued to flex his hand and got subbed out a few seconds later before heading to the locker room.

    “He’s a guy that’s attacking the basket all the time,” Budenholzer said. “He’s fearless. He takes a lot of falls so you kind of learn to just expect him to always just bounce back up, and that’s what we’re hoping for from this one.”

    Antetokounmpo finished with a season-low two points and three assists, giving him 3,274 over 10 seasons to break Paul Pressey’s record of 3,272 from 1982 to 1990. He also had seven rebounds.

    SETTING THE RECORD

    Antetokounmpo matched the assists mark when he fed Lopez for a 3-pointer two minutes into the game and broke it when he passed to Carter for another 3 that bumped Milwaukee’s lead to 19-10 in the first quarter. He also is the Bucks’ career leader in blocks, triple-doubles, free throws made, free throws attempted and minutes.

    “It’s greatness, right?” Holiday said. “Especially to do it with one franchise, to be here through the ups and the downs, to see where he started and where he is now. I’m so happy for him.”

    Lopez made three 3-pointers. Carter hit four from beyond the arc, and the Bucks beat Chicago for the first time in three games this season.

    SLIDE CONTINUES

    The Bulls lost their sixth in a row, their worst skid since dropping six straight in the 2020-21 season. They also fell seven games under .500 at 26-33, not what they envisioned after making the playoffs a year ago.

    Nikola Vucevic had 22 points and 16 rebounds. Zach LaVine scored 18, and Patrick Williams had 16 points.

    “We’re not just throwing in the towel,” LaVine said. “I don’t think we have the type of team or personnel to do that. Losing hurts.”

    SIDELINED STARS

    Both teams were missing stars, with Milwaukee’s Khris Middleton managing a sore right knee that has kept him out for a big portion of the season and Chicago’s DeMar DeRozan sidelined for the second time in as many nights because of a strained right quadriceps.

    TIP-INS

    Bucks: Though Middleton’s absence was not expected, coach Mike Budenholzer said the three-time All-Star did not experience a setback against Boston on Tuesday. Middleton had 16 points and 11 rebounds in 25 minutes against the Celtics. “I think we’re overall not concerned, but we’ll see how he does over the break and just continue to work with him and make sure he’s in a good place when he plays,” Budenholzer said.

    Bulls: The Bulls said DeRozan is expected to play in the All-Star Game on Sunday. … G Ayo Dosunmu was selected to replace injured Houston Rockets guard Jalen Green on fellow former Illinois star Deron Williams’ team in Friday’s Rising Stars game. The Chicago product played in the game as a rookie last year and was averaging 9.6 points and 2.9 assists in his second season after being drafted in the second round. Dosunmu called it a “blessing” to be selected again and said Williams was “a big mentor” for him in the draft process.

    UP NEXT

    Bucks: Host Miami on Feb. 24.

    Bulls: Host Brooklyn on Feb. 24.

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    AP NBA: https://apnews.com/hub/NBA and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports

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