Magic Playmakers and Low Turnovers Key to Game 3
Amid the 3rd quarter “clock error” in Game 2 was the big picture as to why the Magic lost game 2: 19 turnovers to 16 assists, bad shots, and only 23 shots at the free throw line. Compare that to Detroit’s 23 assists to 8 turnovers, good shot selection, and 28 shots at the free throw line, in which they converted 86% of them, and you’ve got another loss for the Magic at Detroit.
So what went wrong exactly? Well, to start, Orlando kept on throwing the ball away. The Pistons had some good pressure defense, and the refs were allowing contact. Therefore, bad passes, incomplete plays, and Dwight getting more turnovers than trips to the free throw line. The Pistons played aggressive defense against Hedo, and his usual 4th quarter heroics were non-existent in Game 2. The Magic did catch fire from three-point land in the 4th quarter, but they eventually cooled off and their drives to the basket produced little.
For Game 3, the Magic need to start, first and foremost, with taking care of the ball. a 16 to 19 assist-to-turnover ratio is just ugly. Stay away from turnovers. Make smart passes - don’t just throw the ball away. If Dwight’s getting double- or triple-teamed, he needs to know when to pass the ball out to the perimeter, or a cutting player (such as Maurice Evans, the recipient of many assists from Howard in the regular season and First Round of the Playoffs).
In the Playoffs, Dwight has consistently done a few things: rebound, block shots, make easy shots down low, defend well, turn the ball over, and been inconsistent at the free throw line. Against Toronto, this was fine. His teammates, along with what he was doing right, could make up for what he was doing wrong. Against Detroit, however, it’s a different story. Dwight needs to limit his turnovers, as he did in Game 1. He also needs to pull of what he did in Game 2 - and make at least 70% of free throws. What his teammates need to do is feed him the ball. We saw what happened in Game 2 when he actually got the ball in the post - when he didn’t turn it over, he established a good post presence to keep the game close.
Dwight’s teammates, on the other hand, need to do something they’ve been doing the whole season: make open shots, make good, smart plays, and stay aggressive. This includes Rashard Lewis, who needs to get aggressive when going to the basket. Instead of lightly throwing the ball up…so that it could fall off the rim, he needs to just go up and dunk it in, or muscle his opponents to get the ball to fall in. Hedo as well: in Game 2, there were frequent attempts at which he was just throwing the ball up when he got close to the rim. Normally, he makes those, but when those aren’t falling, what he needs to do is go straight into the defense, and attempt to get a foul. Zero free-throws is unacceptable for a team’s primary ball-handler and play-maker.
Jameer, as opposed to his other teammates, had a great game in Game 2 - he made shots, attacked the basket, limited turnovers. He simply needs to continue doing what he was doing for the Magic, and build onto his good game.
For Detroit to win at Orlando, they need to continue doing what they’re doing…and not let up at all. We’ve seen their Achilles heel - their “cockiness”, which shows when playing down to an opponent. They need to remember the Sixers series, and not forget that these are Playoff teams - just because you’re favored by the media, and just because you had the second best record in the league, it doesn’t mean these teams will just roll over and die. They’ll put up a good fight. Orlando knows what it takes to win, and they have good leaders in Hedo, Dwight, and Jameer. They know what their capable of, and that’s something Detroit shouldn’t forget.
Game 3 should be a good indicator in whether or not Orlando has a chance to come back in this series. These next 2 games are must-wins for them.
