(Sports Network) - Welcome to the New Orleans Hornets, the team without a
superstar.
The Hornets enter their second season post-CP3 looking for someone to take the
banner of team leader with no shortage of potential options.
The most logical is rookie forward Anthony Davis, the top pick of the 2012
draft who spent his summer in London wearing a Team USA jersey while hanging
out with some guys named Kobe Bryant, LeBron James and Carmelo Anthony.
Davis isn't the only NBA freshman looking to make an impact this year for the
Hornets. Guard Austin Rivers, the 10th overall pick out of Duke, may morph
into the heir apparent of Chris Paul.
Or it could be fellow guard Eric Gordon, the key return piece of last
offseason's deal that sent Paul to the Los Angeles Clippers. New Orleans fans
are still waiting to see what Gordon can bring to the table after injury kept
him out of most of the 2011-12 strike-shortened season.
One thing is certain in New Orleans: the face of the franchise is still a
blank canvas.
"That's who we are. We don't have the quote unquote elite player, so for us
it's going to have to be by committee every night and I think that's a good
foundation for us," said Monty Williams, who enters his third season as the
club's head coach. "We hope that one of these young guys we picked becomes a
superstar, if not all of them. That would be a good problem to have."
The more pressing problem for Williams is how to get a franchise back on track
that is still recovering from the losses of both Paul and forward David West.
Plenty of new faces appears to be the current course of action. Only six
players in camp this year were a member of last season's final roster after
overhaul and injury led to Williams having to use 22 different players in 28
distinctive lineups. That included 16 players making their debut with the club
and 15 different starters.
As if moving on from the departure of your franchise player wasn't enough, but
11 different players missed time with injury a season ago, totaling 218 games.
In fact, Williams only had the benefit of a full bench of 13 players five
times in the campaign.
But New Orleans' luck could be changing. After jumping over three teams to get
the No. 1 pick and select Davis, Tom Benson, owner of the NFL's New Orleans
Saints, officially became the new owner, giving the club some stability and a
long-term relationship with New Orleans.
"It's good, short-term and long-term. As far as short-term, we've got a lot of
young guys and it's time to progress at this point," said Gordon.
The Hornets spent this past offseason putting a solid group around Gordon, but
they are still entering an upcoming season without a lead man to play the
starring role.
2011-12 Results: 21-45, fifth in Southwest Division; Missed playoffs
KEY ADDITIONS: F Anthony Davis, G Austin Rivers, F Ryan Anderson, C Robin
Lopez, F Hakim Warrick, F Darius Miller, G Roger Mason Jr.
PROJECTED STARTING FIVE:
PG- Greivis Vasquez
SG- Eric Gordon
SF- Al-Farouq Aminu
PF- Anthony Davis
C - Robin Lopez
KEY RESERVES: G Austin Rivers, F Ryan Anderson, C/F Jason Smith, F Darius
Miller, G Roger Mason Jr.
FRONTCOURT: The biggest changes to grab hold of the Hornets take place up
front, with the club possessing four capable players to fill the three spots.
Most eyes will be on the 19-year-old Davis, the prize of the draft who helped
lead the Kentucky Wildcats to the NCAA Championship as a freshman before
jumping to the NBA.
The 6-foot-10 Davis is a great defender with a knack for blocking shots and
that should instantly make him a favorite of Williams. And even though he has
yet to play an NBA game, Davis certainly picked the minds of his superstar
colleague's while at the 2012 Summer Games.
Those friends quickly become foes and Davis will be a targeted man this
season.
"That's the NBA. Guys are going to come after you and he's got to get used to
that," Williams said of Davis. "He's playing against the best players in the
world and the best players at his position are really good in this league.
He's got to understand that not only does he have a target, he's probably got
a few booby traps out there too and that will be good for him."
Credit, then, should go to general manager Dell Demps, who made sure to get
Davis some help up front. After trading away center Emeka Okafor and swingman
Trevor Ariza to clear a starting spot for Davis, he made a deal with the
Orlando Magic to secure the services of 6-foot-10 forward Ryan Anderson while
also getting center Robin Lopez from the Phoenix Suns as part of a three-team
trade.
Lopez doesn't offer much in terms of scoring, but does represent a 7-foot
option to eat up minutes in the middle and save Davis some wear-and-tear down
low.
Anderson could also be key to giving Davis some room to work with.
Though he has the body of a big man, the fourth-year vet has the shooting
touch of a sniper. The 24-year-old set career bests with 16.1 points and 7.7
rebounds per game with the Magic last season and led the league in three-
pointers made on the way to earning the NBA's Most Improved Player award.
His ability to shoot from the outside will force teams to pull a player out of
the paint and give Davis some room to thrown down dunks.
"Pick your poison," said Anderson on the club's versatility to create offense.
Anderson or Lopez could come off the bench and leave minutes at the small
forward spot to Al-Farouq Aminu, who had a strong finish to the 2011-12
campaign.
BACKCOURT: Gordon became the de facto franchise guy a season ago after coming
over from the Clippers, but one season removed from a 22.3 point and 4.4
assist per game campaign, he was limited to just nine contests due to injury.
That included 51 games lost to a bruised right knee and the Hornets gave him
little action during camp to try and keep him ready for this season.
Still, Gordon, one of the league's up-and-comers, and is in the mix for the
next four years after New Orleans matched the offer the restricted shooting
guard got from the Phoenix Suns worth a reported $58 million.
"I'm glad to be here. It's a new, young team. It's going to be an interesting
year for us and I look forward to the challenge," noted Gordon.
While Rivers figures to be Gordon's running mate of the future, it seems
likely that Williams will opt to open the season with Greivis Vasquez as the
starting point guard.
The second-year guard was one of three players to appear in all 66 games last
season for New Orleans and the club went 12-14 when he started. However, he
may be the right fit for this offense as the new additions and return to
health of Gordon will give him plenty of options to exercise his past-first
mentality.
BENCH: Williams figures to throw some different looks out early on in the
season in an effort to find the right mix of players to generate offense. That
should give his bench a changing look throughout the season.
Rivers should see plenty of minutes even if he doesn't start. The 20-year-old
became just the third freshman in Duke's star-laced history to lead the team
in scoring, averaging 15.5 points per game. Rivers sprained an ankle in a
preseason game, so his availability immediately is unknown.
The son of current Boston Celtics head coach Doc Rivers, Austin likes what he
sees from his new club, comparing the latest edition of the squad to an
Oklahoma City Thunder franchise that steadily built itself into a Western
Conference powerhouse.
Just how much he contributes this year will be up to Williams.
"I want Austin to play. If he puts the pressure on me to give him more
minutes, that's a good thing," declared the coach. "As far as putting him in a
position right now, I don't think that's fair to him."
Williams will also have rookie and 2012 SEC Sixth Man of the Year Darius
Miller, a college teammate of Davis, as an option along with forward Hakim
Warrick and 7-foot big man Jason Smith, who averaged nearly 10 points and five
rebounds a game last year in 40 games while missing time with a concussion.
Warrick, entering his seventh NBA season, figures to offer Williams' young
squad some valuable experience off the bench along with eight-year veteran
guard Roger Mason Jr.
COACHING: Williams has had two polar opposite seasons with the Hornets.
He inherited a talented roster in his first season, leading New Orleans to 46
wins and an opening-round playoff loss to the Los Angeles Lakers before
slipping to just 21 victories in the shortened campaign. Still, he got an
extension from the front office, a reported four years, and has some new
pieces to play with for 2012-13.
If it is one thing Williams can get his team to do, it is play defense. The
Hornets held 50 of their 66 opponents under 100 points a season ago and ranked
eighth with 93.4 points allowed per game.
OUTLOOK: As expected with a team of vigorous young players, the Hornets'
players are setting the bar at playoff level.
The more realistic Williams isn't so sure.
"We can't skip steps. I want our guys to understand that we have a lot of work
to do, yet I'm excited about getting back to work," he said.
"I share in that excitement, yet the reality is we have a lot of work to do."
Luckily, his players agree.
"We're really excited, but we also know that it is a process. You just don't
go out there and just win. It doesn't happen like that," declared Rivers. "We
have to put it together in training camp, the preseason. We're going to have
to take some bumps, play these older, veteran teams. We're going to learn
things, failure or success, either way. And it's just going to make us
better."
While the Hornets don't figure to be a walk-over opponent night in and night
out, there is in fact some growing pains the club must endure. It will first
have to establish its offensive identity while also making sure its young
players commit to defense.
Talents like Davis, Rivers, Anderson and Miller are used to winning and the
upcoming season could offer many moments of frustration. It's turning those
impediments into lessons that will serve the Hornets down the road.
The Sports Network