Collison, Hornets rally past Celtics
Darren Collison didn't look like a rookie when he took over the
fourth quarter against the Boston Celtics.
He only felt like one when he returned to his locker and sat
next to the pink "Little Mermaid" suitcase his teammates have made
him cart around all season.
"Until they stop having me come in with doughnuts and
carrying that (suitcase), I'm still a rookie," Collison said. "I
like being a rookie. You learn a lot. ... I can't see why anybody
doesn't like being a rookie."
Easy for him to say after he scored 13 of his 25 points in
the final period to lift New Orleans to a 93-85 comeback win
Wednesday night.
Splitting defenders on the dribble, tossing in floaters over
crowds of defenders in the lane and draining mid-range jumpers, the
Hornets' first-round draft pick tormented veteran Boston down the
stretch. At one point, he scored 11 straight points to ensure his
team protected a single-digit lead to the end.
"I didn't want this game to get away from us," Collison said.
"I just wanted to make sure we had enough pressure on them where we
had a lot of comfort zone where we could come out with the win."
That's precisely how Hornets coach Jeff Bower wants Collison
to think, especially now that All-Star point guard Chris Paul is
sidelined for a month or so after having surgery to repair a torn
meniscus in his left knee.
"We don't treat him like a rookie point guard who's filling
in," Bower said. "We treat him like the point guard of our team who
has a responsibility to his teammates ... and he doesn't back down
from that."
Peja Stojakovic scored 20 for New Orleans and Morris Peterson
had 16 points and 10 rebounds for his first double-double in more
than two seasons. David West added 15 points to help the Hornets go
into the All-Star break with two wins in their last three games.
Paul Pierce scored 15 points for the Celtics, who played
without starting guard Ray Allen (back spasms) in their second
straight loss. Marquis Daniels added 14 points for Boston, which
missed 11 free throws -- clanking 10 of 13 in the second half --
while squandering a 12-point halftime lead.
"It's tough to win games when you turn the ball over and miss
free throws," Celtics coach Doc Rivers said.
The teams combined for 47 turnovers, with the Hornets
committing 24, including a franchise-high 10 by Collison.
"That's rookie mistakes right there," Collison said. "That's
something I'm going to be looking at the film to assess."
Trailing for much of the first half, New Orleans seized the
momentum in the third quarter by hitting six 3-pointers, including
three by Stojakovic and two by Peterson.
The Hornets surged into the lead with an 11-0 run on
Stojakovic's fourth 3 of the game, Peterson's three-point play on a
tough transition layup, Collison's 3 and Stojakovic's jumper, which
made it 72-65.
"Our defense was horrible in the third quarter," Rivers said.
The Celtics shot 5 of 19 from the field and only 2 of 9 from
the foul line during the quarter.
Daniels briefly got Boston's offense rolling again, scoring
three baskets during an 8-2 run that pulled the Celtics to 76-75
early in the fourth quarter.
However, New Orleans didn't wilt as it did two nights earlier
in Orlando, when the Magic overcame a 17-point deficit.
Collison hit a double-pump runner and followed it with a
driving floater through a crowd as he was fouled. He added a jumper
and then split Eddie House and Glen Davis on the dribble for
another layup to make it 85-78.
Collison wound up missing a dubious triple-double by one
assist.
Pierce committed eight turnovers and scored only two points
in the second half. Kevin Garnett had seven points and seven
rebounds in 26:29 and did not score in the second half, missing an
open but rushed fastbreak layup in the final minute when Boston
trailed by six.
"Our starters struggled," Rivers said. "Kevin struggled in
the second half and Paul forced too much due to the struggling of
the team."
Notes: Davis, a Baton Rouge native and avid Saints
fan, said he was able to watch the NFL club's championship parade
with several Celtics teammates from in front of their Canal Street
hotel Tuesday night. ... The Hornets played their final game of
four in their purple, green and gold "Mardi Gras" uniforms, meaning
the Celtics had to wear home whites. ... The Hornets are 3-4 since
Chris Paul went out with his knee injury. ... Several Saints
players made appearances at the game to raucous applause, including
safety Darren Sharper, and ends Will Smith and Bobby McCray.