Mar 28 '08

Nets Must Bring Offense on the Road

Richard Jefferson went as far to say the Knicks win does not even count as a road win. At least RJ has a grasp on reality. Besides Monday’s 106-91 win at the Garden, the Nets have not won a road game since February 8th, and hold a 3-18 record away from home since January 8th, and those three wins – Miami, Charlotte, New York – are nothing to write home about.

Since Devin Harris debuted against Milwaukee, the Nets have been an offensive juggernaut at home, eclipsing 100 points and 50% shooting in 6 of the 7 home games, posting a 5-2 record. With Harris leading the way, the entire team, particularly Vince Carter, have elevated their games. The Nets play with confidence at home, even appear to have fun at times – a shock if you saw them earlier in the year.

However, New Jersey has failed to pack up the newly found offense for the road trips. They play like two completely different teams at home and on the road, and it starts with the offense, notably ball movement. When adversity hits, a few missed shots or a run by the opponent, the Nets forget how to run offensive sets, stop passing, and transition goes by the waste side. Lack of ball movement leads to tougher, lower percentage shots, combined with less fast break points, and it’s no surprise the Nets have not shot over 50% during this treacherous road skid and only cracked 100 points once – ironically, in their visit to Indiana.

Offensively, the recipe is simple for the Nets, do as you do at the Izod Center. Push tempo, play aggressive and drive to the basket, make the extra pass, look for high percentage shots.

Jermaine O’Neal expects to return to the Indiana lineup tonight, giving the Pacers another weapon to throw at the Nets. In the three match-ups this season, Mike Dunleavy has torched the Nets, averaging 28.7 ppg, while Indiana has feasted from behind the arc, burying 40% on 33-81 shooting. O’Neal brings another inside presence for the Nets to worry about, along side second leading scorer Danny Granger and big man Troy Murphy, who also sat out Wednesday. Knowing Indiana’s 3-point shooting prowess, Coach Frank must make sure his defenders don’t get caught trying to double team the post and leave shooters open, especially Dunleavy. Though the Nets 3-point defense has improved recently, which may have more to do with the opponents than the defense, they allow about 1.5 more three pointers per game in losses. Too often this season, they have left good shooters open, and paid the price. It’s no secret Dunleavy can score, the Nets can’t allow another 30-point outburst.

After tonight the Nets embark on a treacherous six-game stretch against playoff teams, magnifying the importance of this game. When the Pacers make a run – and its inevitable, basketball is a game of runs – will the Nets counterpunch, or fall back to the bad habits they’ve exhibited on the road?

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