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As I hope came across in my column, coaching is crazy. Sam and his staff huddle and ponder and think and decide to change the starting lineup in Game 1 and get – arguably – burned by it in Game 1 and 2. In Game 3 he makes another change, though really just a return to the lineup they used most this season (Bosh, Bargnani, Moon, Parker and Ford was in place 36 times this season and the Raptors were .583) but not regularly for a while, given injuries to Ford, then Bosh and then Bargnani's performance compared with Nesterovic later in the season.
And while it made sense on one level, the risks of playing two struggling shooters – Ford and Moon – at the same time when it seemed to play directly into the Magic's game plan, basically allowing them to ignore two guys and let Howard and Nelson crowd Bosh. But what do you know?
Moon gives an energy boost that helped feed the crowd and Ford answered a lot of critics – myself included – by giving the Raptors just what they needed and making the Magic pay by hitting those mid-range jumpers. Bargnani was even good – battling Howard, hitting some key shots and generally being active. I'm tempted to point out that he still shot 4-of-11, was 1-of-5 from three and somehow avoided getting a rebound in 23 minutes, but the reality is he was effective and he deserves credit for competing as hard as he did. Similarly, Sam made some moves, didn't make others and they all worked. The number one measuring stick for a coach – and it's grossly imperfect – is did his team respond to his words and deeds? In this case the answer is yes. The coaching business no easier to figure out as a result.
One Series, some things, v1.3
1. Obviously T.J. Ford is a Globe reader. There it was in black-and-white yesterday morning and on the Internet too, my personal challenge to T.J.: time to show up! Okay, that was lame, but Ford was not. That was a solid as he's looked all season with his mid-range jumper. He stepped into in it with confidence and knocked them down and when he does that he is very tough to contain, especially if your name is Carlos Arroyo. But the most important part of his game might have been the energy he took the floor with. He had a steal before the game was 10 seconds old and got the Raptors into some early transition with a couple of defensive rebounds.
2. Here's kind of a cool stat. The Raptors had 31 assists on 42 field goals. Of the 11 unassisted field goals Ford had five of them, four of them coming when he started undressing Arroyo late in the second quarter, for which he clearly didn't need much assistance.
3. Interesting story line to follow this morning. Apparently Magic guard Jameer Nelson collapsed in the hallway outside the Magic dressing room in the game after being hit with a sudden back spasm. According to Magic coach Stan Van Gundy he took a hit defending a screen-and-roll and then the back spasms kicked in. If he can't go Saturday that could be a major problem for Orlando. I think Keyon Dooling has been pretty good in stretches for them but my guess is he's not quite the floor leader Nelson is, and Arroyo is pretty suspect defensively.
4. I don't think I've ever seen Chris Bosh quite so animated than after the game last night. It wasn't that he was acting all crazy, it's just that when he was talking at the press conference he was all engaged and almost bubbly. You could tell he was just so happy to win that game. There wasn't a hint of concern that it wasn't a great all-round night for him. He was praising his teammates, the crowd, the coaching staff. There is a big, big difference being down 3-0 and down 2-1 and Bosh was obviously demonstrating just that.
5. I was sitting in the lower bowl in temporary press seating as opposed to down on the sidelines as is normally the case. It was kind of cool to be ‘in' the crowd. People were really into it, everyone wearing their red shirts and drinking beers. One thing about this job is you forget about how much fun people have at games, and obviously even more so at a playoff game and even more when the Raptors are winning. Lots of smiles on lots of faces.
6. On that note there is no doubt that the crowd got into Howard's head a little bit when he was at the free throw line, where he was just 3-of-8 on the night and had to back off a few times.
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Craig B from Toronto, Canada writes: Michael, glad you were sitting amongst us little people!
Any comments on the game operations? After 8 years of season tickets, and attending every playoff game, I thought it was pathetic last night. The crowd was trying to start chants before the game, but 4Korners were blasting disco music, and then just blasting themselves. Add in all the stupid contests and it really takes away from the environment that the fans create themselves.- Posted 25/04/08 at 11:34 AM EDT | Alert an Editor | Link to Comment
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Michael Grange from Canada writes: Craig B....I cna't really comment on Game Ops, as I'm just kind of immune to that stuff -- it just kind of washes over me, unless it irritates me. I would say if customers like you don't like it, that's all the comment MLSE should need.
- Posted 25/04/08 at 11:40 AM EDT | Alert an Editor | Link to Comment
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Evan Mackintosh from Ottawa, Canada writes: In response to the comments about Bargnani in this post, I agree that his shooting was off again last night. And although he didn't get any rebounds, I thought he did a great job boxing out Howard/Turkaglu to allow his teammates to get rebounds. There should be some kind of stat on blown-box outs, I think that is the missing explanation on those nights when the Raps give up a ton of offensive rebounds.
- Posted 25/04/08 at 12:11 PM EDT | Alert an Editor | Link to Comment
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Yertu Damkule from Canada writes: hey, mikey - i had to re-read #5 a couple times, something seemed out of place. oh yeah, the part about having fun. i think some of us fans have gotten a little too caught up in the day-to-day drama over the last few months, that we've forgotten that the game is supposed to be fun. i wonder if the raps were feeling the same, 'cause before last night, i can't remember the last time they looked to be having fun playing. as they've demonstrated in the past, when they play well, play hard & play with emotion, it's fun, and in games when they put those together, they tend to come out on the right side of a W. so let's hear it for having fun (and W's...).
- Posted 25/04/08 at 12:15 PM EDT | Alert an Editor | Link to Comment
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Michael Peters from Toronto, Canada writes: Agree with the first few posts...love the Raps, hate the crap that comes through the speakers at the games. I don't mind things being so loud you can't hear the person next to you, but I'd prefer it to be of a genuine nature. The junk from the sound system is artificial noise and it's gotta go. Plus, it's so constant...it never ends!
- Posted 25/04/08 at 12:22 PM EDT | Alert an Editor | Link to Comment
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G Sears from Ottawa, Canada writes: Hi, Michael:
What I found interesting last night is that the Raptors used a very effective double-team strategy on Superman -- they turned him into a bumbling, stumbling Clark Kent!
My question: I don't recall the Raps using such a strategy during the regular season to shut down the opposition's star player. What is your view?
Thanks!- Posted 25/04/08 at 1:03 PM EDT | Alert an Editor | Link to Comment
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Michael Grange from Canada writes: G...real quick: I think you noticed it last night more than others because 1) it worked 2) you 've seen these teams three times now, so you are startin to recognize patterns 3) it's easier to help on a post than a wing....
which is to say, the raps trap other teams as much as other teams trap them, but trapping LeBron just makes it looking like he's beating two guys instead of one...trap a post and you can make him pick it up and get rid of it...- Posted 25/04/08 at 3:25 PM EDT | Alert an Editor | Link to Comment
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daniel dale from Canada writes: Craig B: I absolutely could not agree more. Even my little brother, a 15-year-old, complained over and over again about the horrifying corporateness of last night. (Though, of course, he didn't put it that way.) Almost every time the crowd wanted to stand and cheer during a timeout, it couldn't, because "NOW" it was "TIME FOR" the "(SOMETHING STUPID BUT SPONSORED)!" You'd think, with 20,000 people there paying crazy amounts for tickets and buying stuff at the concessions an hour before the game, that they could afford to let us cheer for once. (Seriously, can they not let us cheer two games a year?) In the minutes before tipoff, the insane 4 Korners guy and the horrible 4 Korners music drowned out every chant; during the game, the music-every-possession drowned out others. I was dumbfounded when the 4 Korners guy yelled at us to "MAKE SOME NOIIISE" after drowning us out for a whole minute: we HAD been making lots of noise, but he had yelled over us. And I I was dumbfounded again when Herbie complained, during one of the last timeouts, that everybody was sitting down and not cheering: we HAD been standing and cheering, but then they put on a video, and we all sat down.
Anyway. It's like MLSE thinks the only good noise is noise it either makes itself or implores us to make. It's absolutely appalling - even to those of us in the hip-hop generation.- Posted 25/04/08 at 4:23 PM EDT | Alert an Editor | Link to Comment
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warren standerwick from North Vancouver, Canada writes: Ford played a great game last night, and his PG play, along with Calderon's, were the main reasons for the win. But it doesn't change my opinion that he must be one of the stupidest people on earth.
Sometimes it show in his decision making on the court, but it always shows in his demeanour off the court.
When Ford performs well, and the camera cut to Calderon on the sidelines Calderson is on his feet cheering, etc. When Calderon does well, and the cameras cut to Ford on the sidelines, Ford looks dejected, as if he is thinking- "Oh great- there go some more of my minutes". Even if he really feel that way, you would think he would be smart enough not to let the rest of the world know it.
Or am I being unfair. It is the tv producers who pick the shots. Maybe someone who sees the game live could comment on whether the tv producers are showing what happens regularly, or whether they are presenting a distorted picture.- Posted 25/04/08 at 6:50 PM EDT | Alert an Editor | Link to Comment
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j k from Canada writes: Craptor announcers are desperate to make it seem like Bosh is a superstar like Howard...he isn't..he is a big GAME choker and a weakling.
- Posted 26/04/08 at 3:24 PM EDT | Alert an Editor | Link to Comment
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Guy MacPherson from Canada writes: I'm writing in the 3rd quarter of game 4. Why is Swirsky sounding so disgusted with the Magic, as if he's upset they haven't come to play, yet the Raptors have a 2-point lead?
- Posted 26/04/08 at 4:51 PM EDT | Alert an Editor | Link to Comment
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