Thursday, April 22, 2021

Brooklyn Nets: Spotlight Suddenly Fixed on Kyrie Irving

From the desk: THE HOOPS OF FLATBUSH

WEDNESDAY
Nets    103
Raptors 114
FINAL

All Together, Or Not ...

One look at the starting four alongside Kyrie Irving makes it difficult to begrudge him over Wednesday's loss against Toronto.  Kyrie said it himself: Harden is the point guard, and he is the shooting guard.  Their respective talents actually make it a natural fit.  Harden is the ball handler and the facilitator; Kyrie is the shooter, penetrator, and scoreboard detonator.  

There have been a few occasions this season without KD or Kyrie on the floor wherein Harden demonstrated his ability to incorporate more of his teammates en route to victory.  Case in point, Harden squeezes the most out of DeAndre Jordan.  Not that he hasn't before, but Kyrie Irving not so much as he is usually too busy creating his own shots.  The respective season averages in assists between Harden and Irving partly bears this out.  DeAndre Jordan finished with seven points on four attempts but secured a game-high 14 rebounds in 29 minutes off the bench.  Harden looks for Jordan four times in one quarter.

With easily the game's most attempts, Kyrie Irving was 10/21 from the field, including just 2/5 from behind the arc, and once again a perfect 6/6 from the line for a game-high 28 points.  He secured eleven rebounds, but with 21 attempts being a priority, his radar blipped for just eight assists.  In his defense, Kyrie is averaging 6.1 assists for the season, so there's that.

Landry Shamet was second with 17 attempts from the field, and his inaccuracy (3/17 from the field and 2/12 from behind the arc) was certainly a contributing factor in this loss.  But he was second on the team with only four assists in 36 minutes.  That's a mere twelve assists together from Irving and Shamet when James Harden alone is averaging eleven assists as a member of the Nets.  Flatbush had 19 assists all game, and no one other than Kyrie and Landry had more than two.

Otherwise, Joe Harris followed up a big game against the Pelicans by descending back down to fourth on the team in shot attempts.  He was 5/10 from the field, including a more accurate 4/5 from behind the arc for 14 points in 34 minutes.  Bruce Brown was second on the team with 21 points and a game-high 14 rebounds in 30 minutes off the bench.

Lack of ball distribution wasn't the Nets' only problem.  Toronto was plus-14 in fastbreak points and plus-15 from behind the arc.

Brooklyn jumped out to a 36-23 lead after one but was outscored 69-45 through the second and third quarters, then in the fourth quarter dueled to a 22-22 stalemate and an eleven-point loss against the Raptors.

LAST EIGHT GAMES:
  • W ~ L ~ W ~ L ~ W ~ L ~ W ~ L

Thirteen games remain before the postseason begins.  Win or lose, they're now at a point where their present condition becomes increasingly more problematic with each passing day.


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