Forget homecourt advantage
April 23, 2003 | 12:00am
In the National Basketball Association (NBA) playoffs, the homecourt advantage is supposed to be a cushionsomething to lean on when a game is on the line. Its often said that during the regular season, teams fight for the homecourt edge to take to the playoffs.
The hometown crowd is usually referred to as the host teams sixth man. But curiously, it wasnt much of a factor in the openers of the four series now raging in the first round of the playoffs. Four road squads won as upsets marked the start of postseason hostilities.
Chalking up "away" victories were Orlando, Boston, Phoenix, and the three-time defending champion Los Angeles Lakers.
In the playoffs last year, there were 29 road wins of 71 total gamesa 41 percent clip. Only two teams, however, survived a playoff series without the homecourt edge. Boston trounced Detroit, 4-1, in the Eastern Conference semifinals and the Lakers barely beat Sacramento, 4-3, in the Western Conference finals. Both the Pistons and Kings enjoyed the homecourt advantage over their rivals.
Orlando and Phoenix, a pair of eight seeds, provided the shockers in the openers. The Magic stunned the Easts No. 1 squad Detroit, 99-94, while the Suns shaded the Wests No. 1 finisher San Antonio, 96-95, in overtime. Boston (No. 6) also pulled a surprise in upending No. 3 Indiana, 103-100.
As for the Lakers road triumph over Minnesota, it wasnt unexpected. The Lakers (No. 5) had no difficulty whipping the Timberwolves (No. 4), 117-98, as Kobe Bryant and Shaquille ONeal combined for 71 points. Poor Minnesota. The Wolves, under coach Flip Saunders, have qualified for the playoffs the last six years but never advanced beyond the first round. It doesnt look like theyll crack the jinx this season.
Its the first time Minnesota has entered the playoffs with the homecourt advantage. Its also the first time the Wolves are matched up against the Lakers in the playoffs. Last year, Minnesota was blanked in three by Dallas. In previous playoffs, the Wolves lost to San Antonio twice, Dallas, Seattle, and Houston.
Unless Kobe or Shaq breaks a leg, theres nothing that Saunders can do to prevent the Lakers from advancing to the second round where theyll meet the winner of the San Antonio-Phoenix duel. Kevin Garnett isnt Superman and Rasho Nesterovic is just no match for ONeal down low.
Although the Spurs and Pacers lost their openers, they should be able to rebound. San Antonio, in fact, has evened its series with an 84-76 win over Phoenix in Game 2 and Indiana bounced back to wallop the Celtics, 89-77, to also knot their tie at a win apiece. The Suns and Celtics, however, wont go down without a fight. Theyll make it tough but in the homestretch, they wont have enough to hold off San Antonio and Indiana.
In the East, the Pistons will gradually wear down Orlando and survive. Tracy McGrady erupted for 43 points in Game 1 but the leagues leading scorer is only human. With its physical defense, Detroit will outwork the Magic and leave Orlando gasping for breath. The Pistons should move on to face the winner of the Philadelphia-New Orleans series.
The Hornets are no pushovers. Allen Iverson hit 55 points to lead Philly to a 98-90 decision in Game 1 and despite the Answers outburst, New Orleans had a chance to steal it on the road in the late going. It wont be easy for the Sixers to take out New Orleans but coach Larry Brown is too smart to be outsmarted by Paul Silas.
If Iverson doesnt wear out, the Sixers should be able to handle Detroit, too, and figure in the Eastern Conference finals against either New Jersey or Indiana.
The Nets look too good for Milwaukee even if the Bucks count on Gary Payton and Toni Kukoc. Jason Kidd, Kenyon Martin, Richard Jefferson, Kerry Kittles, Dikembe Mutombo, and Aaron Williams make a solid six-man rotation.
The Pacers, whore expected to oust Boston, will be a test for the Nets in the second round. But coach Isiah Thomas will fall short of outwitting the Nets Byron Scott. Itll be a heckuva series, anyway, and a Game 7 is highly likely.
Philadelphia versus New Jersey is a dream series. The Sixers were in the Finals two years ago and the Nets, last season. New Jersey, enjoying the homecourt advantage, should win in six.
In the West, the Lakersafter dismantling Minnesotawill find it difficult to get past the Spurs who should dispose of Phoenix in six, assuming theyre healthy. But if San Antonios lineup is decimated, the Lakers should cruise. For the Spurs to beat the Lakers, theyve got to limit Shaqs touches and put a shadow on Kobe. San Antonios problem is its a finesse team whose only physical anchor is Malik Rose.
Sacramento will run roughshod over Utah, the sentimental favorite because Karl Malone and John Stockton arent tipped to return together next year. Too bad for the Jazz. Utah had its chances in 1997 and 1998 but Michael Jordan just wouldnt cooperate. The Kings will face either Dallas or Portland in the second round.
The Mavericks should put the Trail Blazers out of their misery. Portland is a team thats imploding. Players are fighting each other and show little respect for coach Mo Cheeks. Scottie Pippen wants out and theres talk that hes headed for a Phil Jackson reunion at L.A. next year. Dallas will walk all over Portland but against Sacramento, the Mavs dont stand a chance.
So it could go down to a rematch between L.A. and Sacramento in the Western Conference finals. The Lakerswithout the homecourt advantagebeat the Kings, 112-106, in overtime of Game 7 in their series last year. Sacramento blew a 3-2 series lead as the Lakers swept the last two outings to clinch. If they meet this year, Sacramento will again enjoy the homecourt edge. This time, the Kings should be able to hurdle the Lakers. Theyve learned their lesson. With Keon Clark and Jim Jackson now in the fold, coach Rick Adelman finally has the depth to destroy the Lakers shallow bench piece by pieceKobe and Shaq notwithstanding.
Our fearless forecast in the Finals is Sacramento over New Jersey in seven.
The hometown crowd is usually referred to as the host teams sixth man. But curiously, it wasnt much of a factor in the openers of the four series now raging in the first round of the playoffs. Four road squads won as upsets marked the start of postseason hostilities.
Chalking up "away" victories were Orlando, Boston, Phoenix, and the three-time defending champion Los Angeles Lakers.
In the playoffs last year, there were 29 road wins of 71 total gamesa 41 percent clip. Only two teams, however, survived a playoff series without the homecourt edge. Boston trounced Detroit, 4-1, in the Eastern Conference semifinals and the Lakers barely beat Sacramento, 4-3, in the Western Conference finals. Both the Pistons and Kings enjoyed the homecourt advantage over their rivals.
Orlando and Phoenix, a pair of eight seeds, provided the shockers in the openers. The Magic stunned the Easts No. 1 squad Detroit, 99-94, while the Suns shaded the Wests No. 1 finisher San Antonio, 96-95, in overtime. Boston (No. 6) also pulled a surprise in upending No. 3 Indiana, 103-100.
As for the Lakers road triumph over Minnesota, it wasnt unexpected. The Lakers (No. 5) had no difficulty whipping the Timberwolves (No. 4), 117-98, as Kobe Bryant and Shaquille ONeal combined for 71 points. Poor Minnesota. The Wolves, under coach Flip Saunders, have qualified for the playoffs the last six years but never advanced beyond the first round. It doesnt look like theyll crack the jinx this season.
Its the first time Minnesota has entered the playoffs with the homecourt advantage. Its also the first time the Wolves are matched up against the Lakers in the playoffs. Last year, Minnesota was blanked in three by Dallas. In previous playoffs, the Wolves lost to San Antonio twice, Dallas, Seattle, and Houston.
Unless Kobe or Shaq breaks a leg, theres nothing that Saunders can do to prevent the Lakers from advancing to the second round where theyll meet the winner of the San Antonio-Phoenix duel. Kevin Garnett isnt Superman and Rasho Nesterovic is just no match for ONeal down low.
Although the Spurs and Pacers lost their openers, they should be able to rebound. San Antonio, in fact, has evened its series with an 84-76 win over Phoenix in Game 2 and Indiana bounced back to wallop the Celtics, 89-77, to also knot their tie at a win apiece. The Suns and Celtics, however, wont go down without a fight. Theyll make it tough but in the homestretch, they wont have enough to hold off San Antonio and Indiana.
In the East, the Pistons will gradually wear down Orlando and survive. Tracy McGrady erupted for 43 points in Game 1 but the leagues leading scorer is only human. With its physical defense, Detroit will outwork the Magic and leave Orlando gasping for breath. The Pistons should move on to face the winner of the Philadelphia-New Orleans series.
The Hornets are no pushovers. Allen Iverson hit 55 points to lead Philly to a 98-90 decision in Game 1 and despite the Answers outburst, New Orleans had a chance to steal it on the road in the late going. It wont be easy for the Sixers to take out New Orleans but coach Larry Brown is too smart to be outsmarted by Paul Silas.
If Iverson doesnt wear out, the Sixers should be able to handle Detroit, too, and figure in the Eastern Conference finals against either New Jersey or Indiana.
The Nets look too good for Milwaukee even if the Bucks count on Gary Payton and Toni Kukoc. Jason Kidd, Kenyon Martin, Richard Jefferson, Kerry Kittles, Dikembe Mutombo, and Aaron Williams make a solid six-man rotation.
The Pacers, whore expected to oust Boston, will be a test for the Nets in the second round. But coach Isiah Thomas will fall short of outwitting the Nets Byron Scott. Itll be a heckuva series, anyway, and a Game 7 is highly likely.
Philadelphia versus New Jersey is a dream series. The Sixers were in the Finals two years ago and the Nets, last season. New Jersey, enjoying the homecourt advantage, should win in six.
In the West, the Lakersafter dismantling Minnesotawill find it difficult to get past the Spurs who should dispose of Phoenix in six, assuming theyre healthy. But if San Antonios lineup is decimated, the Lakers should cruise. For the Spurs to beat the Lakers, theyve got to limit Shaqs touches and put a shadow on Kobe. San Antonios problem is its a finesse team whose only physical anchor is Malik Rose.
Sacramento will run roughshod over Utah, the sentimental favorite because Karl Malone and John Stockton arent tipped to return together next year. Too bad for the Jazz. Utah had its chances in 1997 and 1998 but Michael Jordan just wouldnt cooperate. The Kings will face either Dallas or Portland in the second round.
The Mavericks should put the Trail Blazers out of their misery. Portland is a team thats imploding. Players are fighting each other and show little respect for coach Mo Cheeks. Scottie Pippen wants out and theres talk that hes headed for a Phil Jackson reunion at L.A. next year. Dallas will walk all over Portland but against Sacramento, the Mavs dont stand a chance.
So it could go down to a rematch between L.A. and Sacramento in the Western Conference finals. The Lakerswithout the homecourt advantagebeat the Kings, 112-106, in overtime of Game 7 in their series last year. Sacramento blew a 3-2 series lead as the Lakers swept the last two outings to clinch. If they meet this year, Sacramento will again enjoy the homecourt edge. This time, the Kings should be able to hurdle the Lakers. Theyve learned their lesson. With Keon Clark and Jim Jackson now in the fold, coach Rick Adelman finally has the depth to destroy the Lakers shallow bench piece by pieceKobe and Shaq notwithstanding.
Our fearless forecast in the Finals is Sacramento over New Jersey in seven.
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