MIAMI - Long after his Miami Heat had finished wiping the AmericanAirlines Arena floor with the Hawks Saturday night, Dwyane Wade said something that crystalized the difference between these two playoff combatants.
Asked about the leadership he provides for his team, the Heat superstar described his evolution as a team leader so perfectly, it almost sounded as if a Hollywood script writer had penned the response for him.
“One thing about being a leader is that it’s 24/7, 365 days a year,” Wade said. “It never stops. I was very disappointed with myself in Game 1. I was quiet, and that is not what my team needs. In Game 2 and Game 3 I took it upon myself to make sure that my voice is heard. To drive the points the coaches made and make sure they hear it again before they get on the court.”
You won’t hear anything resembling that from the Hawks. They don’t have a vocal leader in the mold of Wade (they don’t have a player with game like Wade’s either, but we all knew that going into this series). So their won’t be anyone rescuing the Hawks from themselves between now and the start of Monday night’s epically important Game 4 (a third straight loss by the Hawks spells almost certain doom in this series).
All those cliches about leaders being born and not bred don’t register in this case. Leaders emerge in times like this. Leaders rise to the occasion and impose their will in times like this. Leaders of men and leading men are two distinctly different beings in the NBA landscape and beyond.
Wade’s both a leader of men and a leading man. He’s John Shaft (talk about a leader of men and a leading man) in a pair of funky looking shoes and without the sideburns. There are a handful of Shafts in the NBA these days (Kobe Bryant, LeBron James, DWade, Chauncey Billups and Paul Pierce come to mind with others floating in and out of the Shaftosphere). The mettle required of your team leader in the playoffs isn’t hard to spot. And Hawks’ captain and All-Star Joe Johnson has yet to show if he has it in him in this series.
The contrast between his demeanor Sunday and that of Wade over the past few days was striking. Wade vowed to revive his crew after that humiliating, 26-point loss in Game 1 and has done exactly that with two backbreaking efforts since then. Johnson didn’t sound a similar alarm Sunday when asked if he was ready to do it himself, speaking in terms of “we” and “us” when it’s clear that he has to pick up the mantle and carry his team back to even in this series.
“We’ve just got to grow up, man,” Johnson said, his voice trailing off with every word. “We hit a little adversity and now it’s as if we’re out of it. But we have to think positive the rest of the way. You’ve just got to believe. And we have to put it in the guys who have never been in this situation and we have to make them believe we can do this. We have to keep talking to them and keep putting confidence into them.”
The words are fine, but in the playoffs a man can only be judged by his actions.
AND NOW, A MOMENT OF SILENCE for the Detroit Pistons.
James and his Cavaliers tossed the last shovel of dirt on a deceased Eastern Conference behemoth Sunday afternoon at the Palace of Auburn Hills, sweeping the Pistons out of the playoffs in four games.
It’s only fitting that the Cavaliers did the honors, seeing as how they were the first team expose the flaws of the once-mighty Pistons (in the Eastern Conference finals a couple years ago). The interesting thing going forward is what direction the Pistons go with their rebuilding project.
They’ll have plenty of cap space now that the Allen Iverson deal/fiasco is finally over. I suspect Pistons boss Joe Dumars has a plan mapped out already, and there’s no doubt it includes some big names (wish I knew which ones).
It’s certainly going to make this summer a bit more intriguing come July 1, when free agency begins. It’s supposed to be a sleepy summer with everyone waiting on the 2010 free agent crop. But why wait when you can make a splash now?
THE MORNING AFTER GOING DOWN 2-1 IN A PLAYOFF SERIES might seem like an odd time to have a players’ only team meeting, but Hawks coach Mike Woodson gave the session his blessing after the Hawks’ Sunday practice.
”They’ll meet today and try to figure out some things amongst them,” Woodson said. “For me, from a coaching standpoint, this is not the time for me to scream and yell and curse guys out. We’re right where we need to be. We just have to figure out [Monday] night’s game.”

Secret meetings? Josh Smith and the Hawks are pulling out all the stops to get back into this series.
Johnson didn’t give up the particulars of the time or place and barely acknowledged that any meeting would be taking place. Sorting out whatever internal issues they need to before Game 4 is an excellent idea. Because if it’s going to take a secret meeting to get the Hawks back to playing like they did in Game 1, so be it (no one wants to see one-sided blowouts in the playoffs, well I don’t).
”We beat them pretty bad in Game 1, and they beat us pretty bad in Game 3,” Josh Smith said Sunday. So we’re even. We just have to look at ourselves as individuals and as teammates and come together with a solution. There has to be a philosophy where we have each other’s back. In Game 2 it was a hostile environment in Atlanta, it was just them and the crowd. They played together and everything clicked. They had fun. We have to do the same thing.
”Our backs are against the wall. What are we made of? Are we going to fold and let them win, or do we step up and show them this is going to be a series and turn it around?
WOODSON WAS IN FULL SPIN MODE Sunday, casting the Heat as the veteran crew with all the playoff seasoning and his bunch (everyone knows the Hawks are youngest team in the Eastern Conference postseason field) as the “underdogs” according to my man Ira Winderman of the Sun-Sentinel.
When asked about the Heat’s supporting cast Woodson said, “When you have O’Neal, who has been a six or seven-time All-Star, and [Udonis] Haslem who has played championship basketball, they have veteran guys who have been through the battles. My guys haven’t been battle tested. This is something new for our team. When I came into the series I thought we could make it to the next round. I want them to think that too. This series is a long way from being over if we take care of business tomorrow.”
If this was some master media stroke to ease the pressure on his team, consider that mission accomplished. But it didn’t look that way to me. I honestly didn’t hear it that way. Woodson’s comments on how his team would bounce back against the Heat seemed far more interesting to anyway.
”Our team has been committed all year long, so I’m not ready to put them out to pasture so fast,” he said.” They have been committed. We’ve had some tough times and some tough games, stretches where we didn’t play well. And we bounced back. We haven’t played well the past few games. We have to find what we’re made of. Until we’re eliminated I’m going to keep fighting and I’m going to push them to keep fighting.
”Again, when we won the first game, I’m sure they were down after that. They had to be thinking we had to win three more to get to the next round. I’m thinking the same thing. I have to get these guys thinking the right way. The last two games, we’ve been kind of punched out a little bit. We have to rebound.”
1,132 comments Add your comment
Booty Lover
April 27th, 2009
11:48 pm
I got big balls!!
Da Real Real
April 27th, 2009
11:52 pm
Curious to see what Chuck and crew say about the Hawks game tonight…and NO too
Big Ray
April 27th, 2009
11:58 pm
Hey, there’s my mini me! I was starting to get lonely…
doc
April 28th, 2009
12:00 am
ray there is enough room for three great minds around here. sorry to leave you behind. i really wasnt around until about midway into the fourth quarter listening to the game on the radio for a while.
mykhalc
April 28th, 2009
12:04 am
Doc, you’re right bro. couldn’t quite stay away!! but WOODSON does make it kinda easy!!! for me to not even watch the game…man…it’s just that bad for me regardin’ the BRAINLESS ONE!!!
doc
April 28th, 2009
12:04 am
samuel ditto for josh.
aj, mevin’s real middle name is milton.
Najeh Davenpoop
April 28th, 2009
12:05 am
AJ, when you lose by 30 points, obviously it is about more than just scheme. But there is no question that the Hawks’ entire offense functions better when they make a concerted effort to get the ball in the post and move away from the ball. Both those things are entirely scheme-related. When they don’t do those two things, the offense bogs down, players start throwing up contested J’s that miss more often than not, the other team gets long rebounds with which they can start fast breaks, and the momentum shifts in the other team’s favor.
Sure, you can say the players lost the last two games and the players won today’s game. It’s perfectly reasonable to expect professionals to show up and play hard for 48 minutes in every playoff game. But at the same time, it’s not asking very much out of a coach to make a simple scheme adjustment that puts his players in a much better position to be effective. In the big picture, the Hawks play better when they feed the post and move off the ball. That’s on Woody to make sure that happens.
And coincidentally, nobody would benefit more from this simple scheme adjustment than Josh Smith, who otherwise tends to hang around the perimeter and put himself in a position to shoot jumpshots. Does he deserve some blame for doing this instead of camping out in the paint waiting for the rebound as Joe and Bibby dribble aimlessly and throw up contested J’s? Sure. But so does Woody. I’ve always said the best thing that could happen for Josh Smith’s development is the implementation of a scheme that clearly defines his role on offense, so that he can focus on his strengths like Fratello said today. It’s not asking too much for Woody to make this happen — in fact I would say it’s part of his basic job description.
Mike Woodson
April 28th, 2009
12:05 am
I sho is glad my schemes worked. Good thing them there dumb players did what I tol them to. All dey has to do is play wit some fire and dey will win.
Ariose
April 28th, 2009
12:06 am
Saw some of the action…..left when the heat were down by 18….then I get a text about a 4pt lead at the Half? I though I was dreaming lol. Glad we pulled it out though. Flip and Josh came through in the in….Bibby was great too. Joe needs to grow a pair quickly. LBJ is chillin’ right now. we can’t have that. We gotta get these next two.
I’ve sprained my wrist b4…..Marvin probably can’t even pick up a drink right about now…..It usually takes a week to heal…..he shpuld be ready by Wedneday…or game six at the latest.
Najeh Davenpoop
April 28th, 2009
12:07 am
I mean really, saying that it’s entirely on the players whether they win or lose and implying that scheme has nothing to do with it is exactly what got Jim Mora fired from the Falcons. That was Mora’s catchphrase in every press conference — they just gotta go out there and play hard and make a play. Sure, but it’s the coach’s job to make that as easy as possible.
doc
April 28th, 2009
12:07 am
it has been a good season going to the games myk in spite of the wooden one. man, whenever they intro him he is drawing up plays or doing etch-a-sketch like mad before the game starts. never smiles or acknowledges the intro. guess he is getting it happenin.
Najeh Davenpoop
April 28th, 2009
12:08 am
Just to be clear, I’m not even trying to say Woody is that bad of a coach — he’s nowhere near as bad as Mora was, for starters, and he did do some smart things in tonight’s game (playing Zaza extended minutes on JO from the beginning was very smart, even if it took early Horford foul trouble to make that happen).
doc
April 28th, 2009
12:08 am
oh yeah ray, meant to say i was with my prayer group. it worked man.
Refs text message sent to David Stern's cell phone
April 28th, 2009
12:09 am
Well, we tried…
Big Ray
April 28th, 2009
12:09 am
Najeh,
Good points, all.
You know, since apparently “scheme” or gameplan has absolutely nothing to do with wins or losses, I’m wondering why we need a coach. Oh yeah, somebody has to be in charge of substitutions, that’s it. Heh.
If playing with fire and a set of ball is all it takes to win, then Mario West should start every game, and play as many minutes as JJ does.
Najeh Davenpoop
April 28th, 2009
12:10 am
Anyway, after that win I’m not really in the mood to nitpick. The Hawks played a gritty, tough game and pulled out a much-needed and much-deserved win. Time to move the focus on to Game 5.
Ariose
April 28th, 2009
12:11 am
I taped the game……i’m about to watch the end of the second quater…..thas what y’all were cryin’ about right? Glad I didn’t see it in real time lol…..I’d probably have to buy a new T.V right about now heh.
Volman
April 28th, 2009
12:11 am
Doc… HILARIOUS point about the Wooded one!!! Seriously! I fell out of my chair laughing. That is spot on…
He is always “drawing a play up” when they call his name in the introductions… How many different times can you draw up “iso Joe” ??
Rollins Tree
April 28th, 2009
12:12 am
Nice win even though your keeping Woodson around for next year.
Volman
April 28th, 2009
12:13 am
Those were some ticky tack “and one” three’s… Seriously.
Da Real Real
April 28th, 2009
12:14 am
I agree with you Najeh. A basketball game without coaches is nothing but a good ol’ pick up game, and basketball without the players is nothing at all. Neither can work without the other which gets forgotten.
It’s much easier for a team to play with heart, hustle, and energy when the coach puts them in a position to succeed and they actually can see the success (game 1 and tonight). But when guys see something isn’t working you’re going to lose that focus and energy at least 9 out of 10 times which is why I personally would put the losses (especially in the playoffs) on the coach because you have to put players in a position to succeed.
Woodson did that tonight, and tonight the guys executed the adjusted game plan. Its not that we want to run Woodson out of town because I’m sure most of us want to see him and the team succeed. We just wont settle for a poor game plan and a lack of effort that results from a poor game plan.
Najeh Davenpoop
April 28th, 2009
12:18 am
According to the game recap:
“Seven players had two fouls before the game was 13 minutes old.”
That is just astounding. (Word to Bill Walton). I can’t say enough how absolutely atrocious these refs were tonight. That’s something on which Heat fans and Hawks fans should be able to agree, because both teams got screwed equally. Bennett Salvatore, if you’re out there, please note that not one person in that arena came to see you ref today.
doc
April 28th, 2009
12:21 am
lakers look real BAD. even labron will fall to that. if we get to the next rung, lose to the cavs who ultimately lose to the lakers then someone will tell everyone we are the third best team in the league, somehow. i guess it is an example of deductive reasoning rather than delusion.
volman anyone there any time at all has that image. only for mlk day did he change his persona and look at the camera then give a wonderful speech appropriate for the day. good guy in my book, avg coach. thus far, i meant to say top ten coach and one we will have next year..
Tree Rollins
April 28th, 2009
12:25 am
Is anyone else tired of seeing wade roll around on the floor everyone time he goes down….he is constantly “maybe” hurt…..and tnt just buys into and talks bout it all game
Big Ray
April 28th, 2009
12:30 am
“lakers look real BAD. even labron will fall to that. if we get to the next rung, lose to the cavs who ultimately lose to the lakers then someone will tell everyone we are the third best team in the league, somehow. i guess it is an example of deductive reasoning rather than delusion.”
They will also tell you Woody=COY….
Najeh,
Tim Donaghy = the guy they caught.
Bennett Salvatore = the guy they didn’t catch.
J.J.M.
April 28th, 2009
12:31 am
is this a record for most comments on here?
Snowman
April 28th, 2009
12:31 am
Big win for the Hawks…Big Congrats to ZSA, ZSA…Now let’s win the next won at home!!!!..
EAST ATLANTA HAWKS FAN
April 28th, 2009
12:35 am
NOW YALL MIKE WOODSON HATERS BACK OFF OF HIM TIL NEXT YEAR.
2-2 COMING BACK TO THE A-TOWN.
Ariose
April 28th, 2009
12:47 am
…..At least we won’t have to pay Mrvin big bucks now…..He can’t stay healthy lol.
Najeh Davenpoop
April 28th, 2009
12:52 am
Damn… I knew the Hornets were getting beat bad but I just saw the box score. Getting doubled up on your home court… now that is what you call laying down. As hard as we’ve all been on Joe Johnson, I wonder what the New Orleans fans are saying about CP3 right now.
I might have to rethink my point guard rankings from a few days ago where I had CP3 and Billups 1-2 in the league. The way this series is going I might have to make it Billups #1 with CP3 a spot or two below him.
RLP
April 28th, 2009
1:13 am
I know that Woody does not get much love on this blog but I have to say that I heard him tell Cheryl Miller that while he did not like the foul calls his team could not get caught up in the bad plays but had to fight through it. Tonight this team could have folded at the beginning of the third quarter. I did not think they would have it in them to win this series after the last two games. I have actually stayed away from this blog after the last two losses because I was sure that most people here would really be down on this team and at this point I did not want to hear it. I was trying to think of a way the team would benefit from a lost series. But this Hawks team will kill you by how hot and cold they run. Tonight they had me leaning on the side of them being a tough bunch of guys who really deserve our support as long as they last in the playoffs.
I remember back in the 1980’s ween the Celtics and Lakers were really going after it strong. The first game of the finals that year was a total blowout of the Celtics by the Lakers. I thought there was no way the Celtics would win the series. I started to post a warning after the first game that the team could not get too high after that performance because it was just one game. Events the next two games proved the rightness of that thought. But the Hawks have had the fortitude to battle back against terrific odds. And the fight continues. Will the fans be the sixth man Wednesday night?
Sekou Smith
April 28th, 2009
2:17 am
New blog up. 1,132 posts. We were rockin’ yesterday folks. I love it. New blog up!!!!!!!!!! ZP’s revenge.