Steven Adams listed on injury report for tomorrow night?s game vs. Phoenix @SmoothieKing | #Pelicans https://t.co/44fTFBW9WN
— New Orleans Pelicans (@PelicansNBA) February 18, 2021
I think we all saw this coming: after visibly tweaking his ankle and not returning to the game last time around, Adams is listed as doubtful on the Pelicans injury report, with an ankle sprain.
Tonight we play the Phoenix Suns, who are 17-10 (same record Portland had last game) and who are one of only 2 teams in the NBA to have both their offense and defense rank inside the top 10 league wide: 10th in ORtg, 7th in DRtg. The only other team to achieve that is the Utah Jazz, who have the league's best record.
Part of this is pace: the Suns play the second slowest game in the league, so they have a bit more time to set their defense, but that's not the entire thing. The breakout of Mikal Bridges into his full defensive power, CP3 somehow still having it despite his age, Devin Booker improving to be not-disastrous on that end, and the solid team D of guys like Cam Johnson and Jae Crowder are helping them a lot. Ayton, too, is having his best defensive season despite still being a bit of a stiff in space.
The strength of Phoenix's offense doesn't come from red hot shooting, either. They're a solid team in FG% and 3pt%, falling 10th and 16th in those ranks respectively, but part of what makes their offense so potent is the lack of mistakes: they turn the ball over barely 13 times a game, 4th lowest in the NBA, and when they get fouled they make sure it counts, averaging 83.5% from the line as a team - that's 2nd in the NBA.
Nor, really, is their defense based around getting tons and tons of steals and blocks - they rank bottom 5 in both categories. Instead, they just don't foul (bottom 10 in the league in foul rate) and they give up the 2nd fewest three point attempts in the league.
If we want a win tonight, it's all going to be based around our shooters hitting, us avoiding fouling on defense, and exploiting their relatively mediocre paint defense (19th in the league in 2pt shots allowed).
Which isn't actually asking for too much, really, it's just asking for guys to play with their brains switched on and hit their shots, but for the Pelicans that appears to be a constant struggle. Let's see how it goes.