by joeygraham on Mon Dec 01, 2008 7:33 am
The Year in Review
The 2008-09 season for the Indiana Pacers did not go quite as well as hoped, finishing 40-42 and missing the playoffs by two spots. The season was fraught with injuries and roster instability, but there were some bright points. Once a playoff position was almost assured to be a dream, Roy Hibbert stepped into the starting line-up and proved to be an excellent facilitator as well as a suprising offensive contributor. The power forward position remained a question mark with two players with similar skill sets vied for time and niether proved to be an offensive threat. Danny Granger is the unquestionable team leader so long as he stays healthy, which was a bit of a problem, falling to injuries three times during the season; while Brandon Rush played well in his role as sixth man and substitute small forward, Marquis Daniels provided an instant spark off the bench, capable of hitting deep shots and driving to the hoop. T.J. Ford and Mike Dunleavy both played very well, with the latter tailing off a bit from previous years' all-around contributions. Spencer Hawes did not wow anybody but showed much promise in the reserve centre/power forward slot.
Assessing the trades after the year has passed, it seems the Miami Heat trade proved to be the most worthwhile. Udonis Haslem has done exactly what was required of him, but his offensive skill set was sadly not offset upfront. Nick Collison, acquired from Oklahoma City, was supposed to be the answer: he failed to be the presence anticipated of him. With his contract not expected to come off the books for two more years, his acquisition for the expiring contract of Jeff Foster was a bust. Lastly, the six-player Sacramento trade which brought Hawes to the Pacers and saw Troy Murphy off to the Kings still has not payed off. Bobby Jackson's contract comes off the books this off-season but there is still no cap room to sign anybody. Kenny Thomas' contract ends next off-season, which will be helpful in re-signing Danny Granger and also providing financial flexibility to sign another free agent. Troy Murphy's unique abilities were missed, but his inconsistency certainly was not.
This off-season sees three needs to be resolved: first, a suitable back-up point guard needs to be acquired; second, the frontcourt situation needs to be resolved and likely one of Haslem or Collison needs to be moved; third, a true shooter needs to be added to the roster, as three-point shooting was woefully bad.