Nets vs. Trail blazers: Late night hoops

While it isn’t ideal to want your team to lose, the Nets kind of did what they were supposed to last night against the Sacramento Kings. After a back and forth outing at the Golden 1 Center, Brooklyn lost 126-122, which means they are now one and a half games ahead of the Kings and only two games behind the overall No. 1 held at the moment by the Indiana Pacers. Perfect timing considering the fact that A.J. Dybansta and Darryn Peterson should now be all in to their NBA training at this point.
Tonight, the Nets will continue their West Coast road trip against the Portland Trail Blazers. Portland currently sit as the ninth seed in the Western Conference and a game behind the Los Angeles Clippers for playoff contention. If you ask me, both teams can definitely use each other’s help in this one if you know what I mean (wink wink).
Catch the late night action tonight at 10:00 p.m. ET on the YES Network and NBA League Pass, as well as streaming on the Gotham Sports App.
Danny Wolf is out with a sprained ankle sprain and Noah Clowney with a sprained right wrist. Drake Powell is also unavailable for left knee injury management. Terance Mann is resting and three Nets remain out for the season: Michael Porter Jr. (left hamstring strain); Egor Demin (left plantar fascia injury management); Day’Ron Sharpe (left thumb surgery) — four if you want to count Grant Nelson (left knee tendinitis.) That means more minutes for the team’s three two-ways.
For the Trail Blazers, Shaedon Sharpe (calf) and Vit Krejci (calf) will be out of action tonight. Damian Lillard will not play of course He’s recovering from his left achilles surgery.
If there is a team to look out for in the future, it is the Portland Trail Blazers. Even though they have been plagued with injuries this season, the pieces around this team could shape this organization into a playoff contender very soon.
Starting with the guards, the Trail Blazers have a good group in the backcourt. Jrue Holiday is still a great piece at 35 years old. He is averaging 16 on 45.6% from the field. Scoot Henderson has shown promise after many thought he was a bust as a top 3 pick in his draft class. Newcomer Caleb Love has proved himself an NBA level scorer and shooter. And the best part of it all, the franchise’s best two players in Damian Lillard and Shaedon Sharpe will most likely be back at the start of next season.
Combining this with a forward who gives you 24 a game like Deni Avdija and a center like Donovan Clingan who gives you a double double in his sleep, Portland has much to be happy for.
For this game specifically, those certain players would be able to do a lot of damage against Brooklyn tonight, especially as Jordi Fernandez continues to lose players. Danny Wolf, who left the game last night against Sacramento due to a left ankle sprain, has become another Net who we will most likely not see for the rest of the year.
But all will be well soon, Nets fans. The tank will continue on, and before you know it, the Draft will bless the organization with something they have been looking for some time now, hope.
A couple of years back, a lot of fans subscribed to the vague rumor that the Nets should trade Mikal Bridges to Portland for the rights to Scoot Henderson. Sean Marks & co. instead waited and got a haul from the Knicks for Bridges. Whether that rumor was real or not we don’t know, but his story remains a cautionary tale.
The Blazers took Henderson at No. 3 and although there have been patches of light seeping through, the picture remains cloudy. One of those patches took place last week and as Joe Moore of Blazer’s Edge, our sister site in Portland, admitted this is a time when some gaudy numbers come from unlikely names. That said, Moore wrote Henderson did indeed play well last week.
Henderson averaged 17.3 points, 2.5 assists and 2.5 rebounds per game in 22.8 minutes per game this week through the four games. The assist numbers were much lower than his season average of 4.0 per game, but that came as a result of him playing extended minutes alongside Jrue Holiday and Deni Avdija who averaged 5.0 and 7.3 assists respectively this week.
In a role that was more off-ball, Henderson showed great improvement on his shot from deep. He made 14 of his 23 attempts from behind the arc, good for a blazing 60.9% mark. He shot 47.9% from the field overall.
Moreover, Moore noted that Henderson, 22, is playing less out-of-control basketball and perhaps just maturing.
His explosiveness was one of his best qualities coming into the 2023 NBA Draft, and he does not seem to have lost a step after coming back from injury. He still struggles with being out of control at times, as evidenced by his low two-point percentage and averages of 3.0 turnovers and 3.3 fouls this week, but his confidence is growing every game and he has been able to string together a group of good games showcasing a newfound consistency.
There’s no doubt fans are disappointed in Henderson’s progress. The organization may be more patient. He’s averaging 13.5 points but on mediocre shooting numbers: shooting splits of 41/32/81. For tonight’s purposes, it should also be remembered that it was a little more than a year ago that Henderson had his best game: a 39-point explosion vs. the Nets in same arena where they play Monday.
The cautionary tale(s) out of the Scoot Henderson experience is that even super-hyped players given the right situation don’t always make it or you have to be, yes, patient.
January 23, 1991 is not seen as a great date in NBA history, but it is. That was the day the New Jersey Nets traded for Drazen Petrovic in a three-team deal involving the Blazers, Nets and Nuggets. Petrovic had been stuck behind Clyde Drexler and Terry Porter and the knock against European players was that they were soft if skilled.
Petrovic, of course, proved that notion incorrect. He was both and he could lead an NBA team. Not only was the trade lopsided for the Nets (Portland and New Jersey also exchanged firsts) but more importantly, it broke down stereotypes and the league slowly but surely became more international. A year later, he led Croatia to the silver medal at the Olympics which became a huge milestone for a worldwide game.
And so, there is never a bad time for a look back at Petrovic’s career:
Portland’s loss was the Nets gain.




