Orlando Sentinel
Point guards got chewed out:
Point guards Jameer Nelson and Keyon Dooling sat next to each other in silence, their feet in ice buckets, cooling their emotions while their coach was still hot under his mock collar.
Stan Van Gundy stormed out of the locker room Wednesday night after the Orlando Magic (34-22) were dissected by the Toronto Raptors, 127-110, the wheels of his travel bag catching the corner of the door.
And he stated the obvious about Dwight's job on Bosh:
"There was not one thing they did that we could guard," Van Gundy said. "Chris Bosh, we could not guard. We have to think about double-teaming him next time. I thought Dwight Howard could guard him a little bit, but he obviously could not."
Howard just shook his head and bit his tongue even harder.
And the players acknowledged the problem.
"We watched film of [Calderon], and I thought it was on fast forward, but it was on regular speed," Howard said. "He's tough. We might see these guys in the playoffs, and we have to play better defense. They just exposed some of our weaknesses."
"They literally hit about anything they put up. Calderon controlled the tempo. A lot of it was our defense; we weren't showing on the pick-and-rolls and missed rotations. It was totally different than the defense we played against Detroit," said Rashard Lewis.
I don't see stating the obvious as airing dirty laundry or publically calling out a player. If anything, he called himself out. He indicated should have had Bosh double teamed, and he should have taught his team how to defend against the pick and roll.