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Cam Newton has left the throne. There’s a new king of Charlotte. Long live the king

Charlotte Hornets guard LaMelo Ball shoots a floater in the lane late in the fourth quarter to break a 99-99 tie with 15.4 seconds left against the Milwaukee Bucks during an NBA basketball game in Charlotte, N.C., Monday, Jan. 10, 2022. The Hornets won, 103-99.
Charlotte Hornets guard LaMelo Ball shoots a floater in the lane late in the fourth quarter to break a 99-99 tie with 15.4 seconds left against the Milwaukee Bucks during an NBA basketball game in Charlotte, N.C., Monday, Jan. 10, 2022. The Hornets won, 103-99. AP

There was a remarkable symmetry to what happened Monday, an only-in-Charlotte kind of day that marked the ascent of one sports king and the descent of another.

On Monday morning, Carolina quarterback Cam Newton gave what was likely his final press conference as a Panther after playing a total of two plays in his final two games.

On Monday evening, Charlotte Hornets point guard LaMelo Ball hit another milestone in his already spectacular career, breaking a 99-99 tie with 15.4 seconds left against Milwaukee with a “how’d-he-do-that” sideways floater — the critical basket in another big home win.

The king is gone; long live the king.

The 20-year-old Ball has done a lot of things already, but he hadn’t done that before. It was the first time Ball had scored a go-ahead field goal in the last minute of regulation in his 86-game NBA career.

“I ain’t gonna lie,” Ball said later, flashing a grin and explaining how playing “up” against grown men as a kid had forced him to develop exactly the sort of shot he hit for the game-winner. “I always did floaters my whole life — going left, right, straight, forward, backward, any type of way. I felt like it was a good shot. So yeah, I took it.”

“Sometimes you just have to tip your hat,” said Milwaukee guard Wesley Matthews, who defended Ball well on the play but still gave up the basket. “That is just a hell of a play by a hell of a player.”

Opponents used to say things like that about Newton, but he became an afterthought in the final two Panther games after being rehired in November in a last-ditch attempt to salvage the team’s season. Instead, a healthy Newton stood on the sideline and watched the final two games of the Panthers’ season-closing, seven-game losing streak.

Newton is 32 years old — 12 years older than Ball — and he has done just about everything in the NFL, short of winning a Super Bowl title. And he wants to keep playing — although if he comes back this time, he wants to play for a winner even if that means being a backup.

“I’m not coming back for no 5-12,” Newton said, referencing the Panthers’ record in 2021.

The Cam Newton years

For a long time in the 2010s, Newton was the biggest star in town and the Panthers dwarfed the Hornets in terms of popularity and success. The Panthers made the playoffs four times in seven years from 2011-17 and got to the Super Bowl once.

For almost a decade, Panthers quarterback Cam Newton was Charlotte’s biggest star. He dripped with both charisma and talent, as LaMelo Ball does now.
For almost a decade, Panthers quarterback Cam Newton was Charlotte’s biggest star. He dripped with both charisma and talent, as LaMelo Ball does now. Melissa Melvin-Rodriguez mrodriguez@charlotteobserver.com

But now the tables have turned.

It is the Hornets who are frequently drawing sellout crowds in Charlotte and the Panthers whose lower deck at Bank of America Stadium was often half-filled with fans from the opposing team this past season. It is the Hornets who just went 2-0 against defending NBA champion Milwaukee over a three-day span at home and the Panthers who didn’t win a home game for the final 15 weeks of the NFL season.

It is the Hornets who have surrounded Ball with a bunch of playmakers who score in bunches — Terry Rozier, Miles Bridges and Gordon Hayward — and the Panthers who were in the bottom 5 in nearly every offensive category in 2021.

And it is Ball, dripping with charisma on his chosen playing field in the way Newton always has, who is stirring the drink.

“He makes us different,” Hornets coach James Borrego said of Ball.

LaMelo Ball’s game-winner

On the go-ahead play Monday night, Ball threw the ball to Terry Rozier. This was normal. Rozier has generally been Charlotte’s closer during Ball’s two seasons here because he’s so good at creating his shot. But Rozier, surveying the defense, didn’t like what he saw, threw the basketball back and signaled Ball to take over.

“I wasn’t really feeling it,” Rozier said. “So I let him go to work.”

Starting 40 feet from the basket on the far right, Ball was isolated on Matthews. It took him five dribbles to get free — two between his legs, followed by a jab step right and then a quick cut left.

The shot was the most difficult part. Ball was flying sideways through the paint when he let go of the ball.

“On a lot of those movements, LaMelo has an uncanny ability to be going 100 mph and then be poised when he raises up to shoot,” Borrego said.

Charlotte Hornets guard LaMelo Ball shoots a floater in the lane for the game-winning basket against the Milwaukee Bucks at the Spectrum Center in Charlotte, N.C., on Monday, January 10, 2022. Charlotte won, 103-99. It was Ball’s first game-winning hoop in the final minute of an NBA game.
Charlotte Hornets guard LaMelo Ball shoots a floater in the lane for the game-winning basket against the Milwaukee Bucks at the Spectrum Center in Charlotte, N.C., on Monday, January 10, 2022. Charlotte won, 103-99. It was Ball’s first game-winning hoop in the final minute of an NBA game. Khadejeh Nikouyeh Knikouyeh@charlotteobserver.com

That’s what happened this time. The release was soft and the ball whispered through the net as the crowd of 14,253 exploded. Milwaukee turned the ball over with a chance to tie, Bridges hit two clinching free throws and that was that.

Charlotte won, 103-99, and made it to the halfway point of the NBA season with a record of 22-19 — the first time they’ve been at least three games above .500 at the midpoint since 2000-01. (The Hornets next play Wednesday in Philadelphia, against a 76ers team that has beaten them 16 times in a row).

So once again, Charlotte has a hot team and a young star to lead it. LaMelo has replaced Cam as the most highlighted, imitated and enthralling athlete in Charlotte.

We knew that already. But Monday made it clearer than it’s ever been.

Long live the new king.

This story was originally published January 11, 2022 at 1:00 PM with the headline "Cam Newton has left the throne. There’s a new king of Charlotte. Long live the king."

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Scott Fowler
The Charlotte Observer
Columnist Scott Fowler has written for The Charlotte Observer since 1994 and has earned 26 APSE awards for his sportswriting. He hosted The Observer’s podcast “Carruth,” which Sports Illustrated once named “Podcast of the Year.” Fowler also conceived and hosted the online series and podcast “Sports Legends of the Carolinas,” which featured 1-on-1 interviews with NC and SC sports icons and was turned into a book. He occasionally writes about non-sports subjects, such as the 5-part series “9/11/74,” which chronicled the forgotten plane crash of Eastern Air Lines Flight 212 in Charlotte on Sept. 11, 1974. Support my work with a digital subscription
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