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Griz Lose Big to Hornets; Fans Boo Gasol

(AP) – Chris Paul had 40 points and nine assists, and the New Orleans Hornets used a third-quarter spurt to beat the Memphis Grizzlies 116-98 on Wednesday night.

Paul shot 17-of-25 from the field, including 5-of-8 from 3-point range, as the Hornets won their third straight. It marked the second-highest point total in Paul’s career. Only his 43 points against the Grizzlies on Dec. 7 was better.

Peja Stojakovic finished with 21 points and David West added 20 for the Hornets, who shot 56 percent.

Rudy Gay and Mike Miller led Memphis with 19 points apiece, while Kyle Lowry finished with 15 on 6-of-8 from the field. Lowry also had eight assists.

Pau Gasol, the Grizzlies’ second-leading scorer, finished with eight points, ending a streak of 81 games in double figures. That was the third-highest in the league behind Carmelo Anthony and Ray Allen .

Paul helped the Hornets run the lead to as many as 18 in the third quarter, scoring 16 points and handing out four assists in the period.

The Hornets eventually extended the lead to 20 points in the fourth.

Gasol, who seemed to settle for outside shots most of the night rather than challenge Tyson Chandler, was booed on several occasions when he didn’t take the ball to the basket. Chandler finished with 13 rebounds and 12 points, while Gasol managed only six shots.

New Orleans led 52-50 at the break behind 15 points from Paul and 12 by West. Miller scored 15 in the tight half, when both teams shot 50 percent.

Paul helped the Hornets break away in the third period, scoring nine points and assisting on two more baskets before the midway point of the quarter, keying an early 15-5 run. Stojakovic added 10 points to help New Orleans carry a 86-73 lead into the final period.

Notes: Grizzlies G Mike Conley returned to full contact practice Tuesday night, meaning his return from injury is much closer. The rookie from Ohio State has been out of action since injuring his right shoulder against Dallas on Nov. 17. “You wouldn’t have thought he had a shoulder surgery,” Memphis coach Marc Iavaroni said before Wednesday’s game. “Moving around well. He was quick. He needs to get in better shape, but that will come with play.” Iavaroni wouldn’t give a specific time on the first-round pick’s return. … New Orleans won the two previous games in this year’s series with Memphis in overtime. … West was whistled for a technical late in the first half by Steve Javie after West argued a no-call. Then Iavaroni got called for a tech midway through the third period for arguing with official Marc Davis. The weirdest tech of the night, though, came with just under 3 minutes left when substitution confusion by the Hornets left New Orleans with only four players on the court.

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FROM MY SEAT: Early Lessons

When God
(or Bear Bryant, I’m not sure which) invented football, the first commandment
handed down was the following: “Thou shalt not turn the ball over inside the
opponent’s 10-yard-line.” When the Memphis Tigers committed this sin not once,
but twice in their 2007 season opener Saturday against Ole Miss, their penalty
was a 20-0 halftime deficit that proved too much to overcome, even with a
spirited second-half comeback fueled by a record-setting passing attack and a
Tiger defense that stood toe-to-toe with an SEC offensive line and came away
with a notch in its belt.

“I had
no idea that our football team would play like it did in the first 40 minutes of
this game,” said coach Tommy West after the contest. “I never saw it coming.
That’s as bad as I’ve ever had a team play since I’ve been here. It was
embarrassing. It’s my responsibility. We can’t play any worse than that, I know.

Had
Miguel Barnes not fumbled at the Rebel 8-yard-line late in the first quarter and
had Tiger quarterback Martin Hankins not been intercepted at the Rebel
1-yard-line (a pass that was returned 99 yards for a touchdown by Ole Miss
cornerback Dustin Mouzon, the final score of 23-21 may well have been reversed,
if not padded in the home team’s favor. (Add a blocked-punt also returned for
six points by the Rebs and Memphis really had three game-turning plays in a
single afternoon.)

As a
result of the early deficit, Memphis was forced to take flight with its offense,
which led to quarterback Martin Hankins establishing new school records for
attempts (60, tying Danny Wimprine’s mark) and completions (41, shattering
Wimprine’s standard of 32) in a game. Among the most obvious silver linings to
the loss was the performance of the much-ballyhooed Tiger receiving corps.
Maurice Jones averaged almost nine yards for his five catches. Skyscraping
Carlos Singleton (he’s 6’8″) hauled in eight passes for 91 yards, including a
pair of jumpballs Hankins must have thrown 10 feet in the air. And sophomore
Duke Calhoun — the prince of this bunch — pulled down 10 passes for 87 yards,
scoring twice (once for a touchdown, once for a two-point conversion) on
well-executed cut-back screens. Were it not for the four extra completions
Hankins had — to Ole Miss defenders — the Tigers’ Davey O’Brien Award candidate
would have earned top billing for the opener.

Considering only nine of the Rebels’ 23 points were scored against the U of M’s
defensive unit, that top billing actually goes to the run stoppers and pass
defenders who held Ole Miss to 275 total yards (a fraction of the Tigers’ 467).
It’s unlikely Memphis will face an offensive line as massive as the Ole Miss
unit (average weight: 321 pounds), combined with a tailback as talented as
BenJarvus Green-Ellis (1,000 rushing yards a season ago, including 127 in the
opener against Memphis). With linebacker Winston Bowens and end Greg Terrell
leading the way, the Tigers held Ole Miss to a total of 74 rushing yards. A pair
of early drive-extending penalties were the most damaging marks against new
defensive coordinator Rick Kravitz’s crew.

“I’m
extremely proud of our defense,” noted West, who actually came as close to
ebullience during his postgame comments as you’ll see from a coach on the wrong
end of the final score. “They played their tails off, the whole game.”

It was
the other side of the line of scrimmage where West sees the most room for
improvement. “I’m not pleased with the play of our offensive line,” he noted.
“The difference in the game was we couldn’t block their defensive line on the
pass rush. That’s not gonna be us.”

With all
that went wrong Saturday afternoon, and yet still almost made right by the
steady defensive play and offensive resolve, Tiger fans have every reason to
believe nine-game losing streaks are a distant memory. “This could be a pretty
good football team,” stressed West. “That game was fixing to get out of hand,
and our kids wouldn’t let it. I’m never happy when we lose. But we looked like
what I thought we could look like over the last 20 minutes of the game. With six
turnovers? We shouldn’t have a chance to win the game with six turnovers.”

One game
down and 11 to go for the 2007 Memphis Tigers. Which brings us back to that
football scripture, and our second commandment: “Thou shalt not dwell on last
week’s defeat.”