Charlotte Hornets

LaMelo Ball has career-high 34 points, but Utah Jazz dominates Charlotte Hornets

Charlotte Hornets rookie LaMelo Ball scored a career-high 34 points, but it wasn’t enough to hold off the Jazz in a 138-121 Utah victory at Spectrum Center.

Ball, the third overall pick, made 14-of-27 shots from the field and added eight assists. Gordon Hayward added 25 points, 10 rebounds and five assists.

The Jazz, with the NBA’s best record at 18-5, got 31 points from Bojan Bogdanovic and 30 from Donovan Mitchell.

The Hornets lost their second in a row, falling to 10-13.

Observations off the game:

Graham hurt

The Hornets lost starting guard Devonte Graham in the second quarter to a left groin strain. Hornets coach James Borrego called a timeout, with Graham kneeling on the court in obvious pain.

While Graham was able to walk off the court without assistance, he went straight back to the training room in need of treatment. He tried jogging around at halftime, then immediately returned to the training room and was declared out.

Tough night for Bridges

Miles Bridges missed his first five shots, including a layup and two wide-open 3-pointers. Bridges has thrived in his current off-the-bench power forward role, after being the starting small forward last season, but Friday was really rough.

A new starting group

Rather than choose between starting Ball and Terry Rozier, Hornets coach James Borrego started them both, along with Graham, in a three-guard lineup. It was the sixth different Charlotte starting group this season.

That shift made Gordon Hayward the power forward and returned Bridges to the second unit after a start Wednesday against the Philadelphia 76ers. The Hornets are hurting for power forwards, as P.J. Washington missed his second game in a row with a sprained right foot.

Rozier missed the prior two games with a sprained right ankle suffered in the victory Saturday over the Milwaukee Bucks. Rozier said after morning shootaround he’d be fine with coming off the bench Friday, if that’s what Borrego wanted.

Washington’s progress

Washington did some shooting drills pregame, and Borrego said he was progressing after injuring his right foot in the second half of Monday’s victory in Miami. However, Borrego wouldn’t speculate pregame about whether Washington was close to returning. The Hornets next play a day game Sunday at home against the Washington Wizards.

All-Star Game misgivings

Rozier wonders if it’s a good thing to bring together the NBA’s top players to play an All-Star Game in March in Atlanta, as the league and players association are planning.

“I feel like it’s the last thing we need to be worrying about right now,” Rozier said after morning shootaround.

“It’s not the right time to really discuss that. I feel like we still have a lot of other things (in the pandemic) we need to overcome and work on, with all these new mask (protocols) and other stuff. I feel like we just need to take it one step at a time before we worry about an All-Star Game.”

Several NBA players, most prominently Los Angeles Lakers superstar LeBron James, have expressed misgivings about bringing stars to Atlanta in March, during what was expected to be a five-day break from games.

“I have zero energy and zero excitement about an All-Star game this season.” James told media Thursday night. “I don’t even understand why we’re having an All-Star Game.”

This story was originally published February 5, 2021 at 10:29 PM.

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Rick Bonnell
The Charlotte Observer
Rick Bonnell has covered the Charlotte Hornets and the NBA for the Observer since the expansion franchise moved to the Queen City in 1988. A Syracuse grad and former president of the Pro Basketball Writers Association, Bonnell also writes occasionally on the NFL, college sports and the business of sports. Support my work with a digital subscription
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