Though each and every one of these are surprising, to say the least, none of them have the surprise factor that the Indiana Pacers have brought to the 2011 playoffs.
At 37-45 during the regular season Indiana was considered one of the worst teams to EVER make it into the NBA playoffs, and many said that it was an embarrassment that the Pacers were in the playoffs. In the Western Conference the Houston Rockets missed the playoffs despite a 43-39 record, six games better than Frank Vogel's squad.
No one really thought too hard about the Pacers making any noise in the playoffs because they were facing the Chicago Bulls who boasted the league's second best record during the regular season, the likely MVP Derrick Rose, and a great supporting cast including Luol Deng, Joakim Noah, and former all-star Carlos Boozer. Whereas the Pacer's starting line-up has a combine years experience in the league of 10, and had just one player, Danny Granger, average over 13.2 points per game during the season.
Granger will have to be huge if Indiana is to pull off the improbable upset of Chicago Courtesy of CJ Isherwood |
The Pacers have consistently been the more aggressive, and physical team throughout the series. This lead to former Bull great Scottie Pippen calling out Chicago's team.
"The Bulls have taken too many hard fouls in this series thus far, and have yet to give one. Being one of the No. 1 defensive teams in the league, at some point you have to make a stand and I think that’s what the Bulls have to do," Pippen said on “The Sports Reporters” on ESPN 1000 on Saturday morning.
After the game four win Indiana appears to be even more confident they can upend the East's top seed. Coach Vogel even feels confident enough in his team to make a bold prediction that, if correct, could make the Pacers the biggest surprise in NBA history.
"We feel like if we win tonight, we'll win this series," Vogel told reporters after the Tuesday morning shoot around.
No comments:
Post a Comment