For much of this season, any fleeting success the Nets found came at🔯 the offensive end. But their best form of the season has come over the past two weeks, and it’s come riding the best defense in the league.
With their 97-89 win Monday night over the Hornets, a fellow lottery aspirant, the Nets have won five of s❀ix and suddenly are playing withering defense, with coach Jordi Fernandez’s teachings seeming to have finally taken hold.
The Nets held the Hornets to 89 poin🐲ts, after smothering Miami to 86 on Friday. It marked the first time they’d held consecutive opponents under 90 points in over a decade (Dec. 2014).
“The consistency, the wඣork the coaches put together with finding what our priorities are,” Fernandez said before the game. “The 3-point line was an issue, and our pick-and-rolls were very inconsistent. So finding time and ways to get that work done, and then getting the reps.
“We’ve had a lot of different lineups, and it’s hard to find consistency when those guys don’t play together for long stretches. Now, those guys have done a great job. They’ve played together for a little bit and now you can see some results. So credit to the coaches, to the players and we’ve got to keep taking positive🅷 steps.”
The 🅠Nets had bottomed out with a Jan.𒅌 27 loss at the hands of the Kings, running their season-worst losing streak to seven.
They snaꦜpped that skid with a 104-83 laugher at Charlotte two nights 𝔍later, starting this turnaround.
Entering Monday, they’ve led the entire league in a host of metrics, including defensive rating (105.2), field goal percentage allowed (40.7), field goals alꦓlowed (35.2) and blocks (8.2) since then.
“It’s our pressure, intensity, physicality. We buy into what Jordi waඣnts to do defensively, helping each other, not worryi𒊎ng about our guy, just buying into the game plan. We go out there and play hard,” said Day’Ron Sharpe, came into the night with a 94.2 defensive rating the past two weeks and helped key this run.
“Our physicality, but also our focus is being consistent. That results in positive things,” Fernandez said. “There’s no perfect🍌 system. The ♐only way is when everybody pushes in the same direction and everybody’s trying to do the same things.”
Bꦉefore this, any success was: 1) offensive smoke and mirrors; 2) through vets not lo꧂ng for this roster; 3) both.
This run has been spurr♕ed by defense, and it’s a subtly different defense than what Jacque Vaughn and Kevin Ollie ran a season ago, one that they’re still learning.
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“Our system has to keep developing and have more things t𒆙o do in our arsenal, so this way we can adjust,” Fernandez said.
“While we’re out there, w๊e play hard, but we still have to be able to do the things we need to do while we play hard. We just can’t play hard and just be doing whatever,” Sharpe said. “You have to be in control or a controlled way of playing hard. Stay focused on the game plan. [With the plan] they present us with every game, I feel like we’re gonna win.”
That game plan still doesn’t switch as much as in years pas🔜t. 𒆙Sharpe and Nic Claxton hedge aggressively, but still know when to sink back.
Both centers hav🃏e been much louder and better commun💜icators, quarterbacking the defense.
“Jordi is just challenging us to be defensive anchors,” Sharpe said. “Me and Nic, we’re taking that challenge … talking the whole game, being able to touch on the screens, making the second effort, sinking. Just buying into that and trying to help the team win.”
The Nets have done a better job closing out onﷺ shooters and have funneled foes to the sidelines.
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“We all started focusing on the little things on the defensive end, just listening to what Jordi is preaching step-by-step,” Tyrese Martin told The Post. “When you’re not guarding the ball, making sure you’re in the right spot in your stance, clo꧙sing out the proper way, rebounding better. It really took our defense to another level.
“Just having Nic and [Sharpe] on the backside, it helped a lot. We can really climb into the ball and up our pressure,” added Trendon Watford. “When Nic and Day’Ron [talking], we’ve got to be the loudest in the gym. … I feel like we can pretty much guard a lot of teams in the league.”