Rockets top Pistons in McGrady's debut
Tracy McGrady seemed to be the last one to know he would make his
season debut against Detroit on Tuesday night.
The seven-time All-Star sank a 3-pointer in his first game
since Feb. 9, Luis Scola and Aaron Brooks scored 23 points apiece
and the Houston Rockets snapped the Pistons' five-game winning
streak with a 107-96 win.
McGrady wasn't expecting to play when he arrived at the
arena. He walked into the locker room about 90 minutes before the
game and his teammates said that coach Rick Adelman had something
to tell him.
"It surprised me," he said. "I went in there and talked to
him, he said he was going to play me about seven minutes and just
try to work our way through this. Tonight was that night."
Trevor Ariza's one-game NBA suspension for throwing a forearm
at Raptors guard DeMar DeRozan Sunday gave Adelman a chance to
start rookie Chase Budinger and bring McGrady off the bench for his
first action in 10 months.
Budinger had 16 points and 12 rebounds in his first career
start and reserve Carl Landry added 19 points for the Rockets, who
shot a season-high 54.7 percent (41 of 75) from the field.
McGrady entered at the 7:44 mark of the first quarter to a
standing ovation. He missed his first shot, a 20-footer from the
wing, then swished a 3-pointer from the top of the key for his only
basket. He sat out the last three quarters.
"It's been so long since I've played, it was just a great
feeling to be back on the court," McGrady said. "Just to get up and
down the court with these guys and to be back out there competing
is what I missed. To have that back, finally, and feel good and
have fun doing it, there's nothing better."
McGrady was in and out of the lineup all of last season and
played in only 35 games. He averaged 15.6 points, his lowest total
in a decade and admitted that he was playing in constant pain.
He declared himself done for the season just before last
year's All-Star break, then opted for the risky, season-ending
microfracture surgery. Doctors estimated he would need six to 12
months to recover, and McGrady spent the summer in Chicago working
with Tim Grover, who trained Michael Jordan.
He's been saying since training camp that he was "ahead of
schedule" and he returned to practice on Nov. 23. He said the knee
was no concern on Tuesday and he wasn't fatigued after his limited
appearance.
"My practices have been harder than what that was out there,"
McGrady said. "That's what made it a lot easier, just being able to
go hard in practice, playing some of these guys after practice
1-on-1, doing some of the things I wasn't capable of doing last
season. It's all just coming back naturally to me."
The Rockets play in Denver on Wednesday and Adelman said
he'll play McGrady about the same amount of time.
"He knows how to play the game, it's the little things, like
when he took it to the basket and got fouled," Adelman said. "Those
are the types of things we are looking for and his continued effort
on the defensive end. With that injury, the lateral quickness and
the comfort level is not there and he's got to push himself to get
to that point."
Richard Hamilton had 21 points and Rodney Stuckey shook off a
bad start to score 17 for the Pistons, who had averaged 99.6 points
during their win streak. Detroit shot poorly most of the night,
while the Rockets were a season-best 60 percent in the first half
(21 of 35) and held a double-digit lead for most of the second.
While McGrady took the early spotlight, Scola was the best
player in the first quarter, scoring 11 points to lead Houston to a
29-19 lead. The Rockets shot 67 percent (12 of 18) from the field
in the quarter and Houston stretched the lead to 15 early in the
second.
Hamilton hit seven of his first eight shots, but the rest of
the Pistons started 7 for 26 from the field. Stuckey, averaging 23
points in Detroit's previous nine games, missed nine of his first
10 shots.
The Rockets had 23 assists after three quarters - more than
they've had in 16 games this season - and led 81-68. Charlie
Villanueva missed a dunk and Kyle Lowry passed to Budinger for a
layup and eventual three-point play in the first minute of the
fourth quarter, and Houston cruised from there.
NOTES: The teams shot a combined 6 for 37 from 3-point range.
... Brooks has scored 20 points in six of the last eight games. ...
Detroit C Ben Wallace, a 53.7 percent free throw shooter, shot two
air balls from the line. He went 1 for 4 on free throws for the
game. ... Detroit guards Will Bynum and Ben Gordon sat out with
sprained left ankles. Bynum has missed three games and Gordon the
last six.