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| 1999 Leaders |
| Stat |
Leader |
No. |
Points
Assists
Steals
Turnovers
Rebounds
Minutes Per Game
Field-Goal %
3-Pt. Field-Goal %
Free-Throw %
Personal Fouls
|
Reggie Miller
Mark Jackson
Jalen Rose
Mark Jackson
Dale Davis
Reggie Miller
Dale Davis
Chris Mullin
Reggie Miller
Rik Smits
|
18.4
7.9
1.02
2.0
8.3
35.7
53.3
.465
.915
159
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Ask Pacers forward Al Harrington about going to the playoffs last
season as a 19-year-old, and he'll describe what it was like to
lie awake, anticipating his first NBA title run. He'll recall the
nervous excitement before the tip-off and the sound of his name
being announced at Market Square Arena -- and the fact that Indiana
dropped him from its postseason roster. Harrington, who had made
the jump from St. Patrick's High in Elizabeth, N.J., to the NBA,
went to the playoffs all right, but he did so in street clothes.
"It was the hardest time of my life," says Harrington, with no
trace of the warm smile that usually dominates his baby face. "I
had started to do really well in practice near the end of the
season. My confidence was up. I really thought I could
contribute.... "
Pacers executive vice president-coach Larry Bird thought
differently. While he could have used young legs in the
postseason, he was turned off by Harrington's youthful arrogance
and inability to focus on defense. "Al wasn't professional,"
Bird says. "He was running around here acting like some high
school kid. But there's no question he's learned from it. This
year, he's all business."
In fact, Harrington's play was the most promising development of
Indiana's training camp. If he can exhibit the same deadly jump
shot and creativity off the dribble in games that he unleashed in
practice, Bird will have a pleasant dilemma: Should he use his
old unit of Mark Jackson, Reggie Miller and Rik Smits in a
half-court, grind-it-out game, or rely on a smaller, quicker,
younger lineup of Harrington, Jalen Rose, Travis Best and,
eventually, No. 5 pick Jonathan Bender, another high school
player making the leap to the pros? The 6'11" Bender's offensive
arsenal has dazzled the coaches, but, as Bird is quick to note,
"he isn't ready to do much of anything in a game yet." Bender
will also be sidelined for at least the first three weeks of the
season with a fractured bone in his left wrist.
Harrington vows he will be a factor this year, after averaging a
scant 7.6 minutes as a rookie. He bulked up 24 pounds to 254
during a summer conditioning program and spent countless hours
with the Pacers' staff studying his shooting motion on video
tape. His cockiness has been replaced by a firm resolve to prove
he belongs. The postseason snub, he admits, was the catalyst.
"When it first happened, I was really angry," Harrington says. "I
felt like I was ripped off. But now I'm kind of glad it happened.
Every time in the summer when I thought I couldn't go anymore, I
remembered how Coach left me off the roster, and I found some
extra energy to keep at it."
Harrington spent last season living with forward-center Antonio
Davis, but Davis wanted a guaranteed starting job, which Bird
refused to give him, and was shipped to the Raptors in the deal
that brought in Bender. Without Davis coming off the bench, the
other Davis -- Dale -- will need to increase his productivity. Bird
will no longer have the luxury of using Antonio at center when
Smits is slowed by injury, ineffective or in early foul trouble,
all of which happened far too often last year, most disastrously
against the Knicks in the Eastern Conference finals. In that
series New York disposed of the Pacers in six games, exposing
them as too old, too predictable and too fragile offensively to
succeed.
Smits, who has chronic nerve problems in both feet, was so
discouraged over his injuries and lackluster postseason play that
he contemplated retirement. "There were some days over the summer
when I wanted to come back, and plenty of them when I said to
myself, Maybe not," says Smits. "But by the time August came
around, I decided I had to come back. I didn't want to end my
career on such a bad note."
Smits isn't the only one with something to prove. Both Jackson
and Miller are in the final year of their contracts and are
seeking long-term extensions. For Miller, a four-time All-Star,
last season was one of the most disheartening of his 12-year
career. He shot a career-low 43.8% from the field and connected
on a less-than-Reggie-like 38.5% of his three-pointers. The
Pacers looked to Miller to hit his historic big-game threes
against the Knicks, but he was unable to deliver. The effect it
had on his teammates was devastating. "We were all guilty of the
same thing," says Bird. "We kept thinking, 'Reggie will bail us
out of this one.' But it never happened."
Jackson also experienced a frustrating year. During the regular
season, Bird often platooned him with Best at the point and even
benched him during crunch time. In the playoffs Bird leaned
heavily on Jackson, but his role could be diminished again now
that Indiana is beginning to look to the future. Pacers president
Donnie Walsh is taking a wait-and-see approach to Jackson's and
Miller's contract requests, and no wonder: Not only can he clear
salary-cap space by waiting, but he must also make contract
decisions on Rose and Austin Croshere at season's end.
Croshere, who was also impressive in the preseason, is among the
plethora of small forwards who will battle Harrington for
playing time. The group includes Rose, who can also play either
guard position; 36-year-old Chris Mullin, last season's starter
who has already been told he will be coming off the bench; and
veteran Derrick McKey, who missed most of last season with
injuries but is healthy and remains Indiana's most effective
defender. That's a skill Harrington is hell-bent on acquiring.
"Us young guys spent most of the preseason trying to signal the
coaches that rebuilding won't be so bad," Harrington says. "Hey,
I'm ready now. Last year they called me Baby Al. I haven't heard
it once this time around."
Issue date: November 1, 1999
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