Tuesday, June 2nd, 2009 at 8:03 am  |  54 responses

Magic Mania: Then vs. Now

Rewind, fast-forward. Orlando is much the same.

by Nada Taha

Most people in Orlando can attribute their heart problems to the Magic. Seems like soon everyone will be walking through downtown Orlando with a defibrillator and an oxygen tank.

The Magic finished eight games this postseason with a final score differential of five points or less (seven of which were decided three points or less). Four buzzer-beaters cost them the game. And of course, there was LeBron “1-second” James. Can you say, heart attack? Everyone in Orlando flatlined for a moment after that shot in Game 2. I was at the official watch party, and all I can say is it looked like a bunch of zombies walking out of that bar.

“Hi, I’d like a room at the Heartbreak Hotel.”

But it wasn’t the first time (or the second, or the third) that Magic fans were checking their pulse during a game or walking away with their heads held low. Let’s take a trip down memory lane. Welcome to 1995.

Ahh, things were good these days. Stamps were 32 cents, the Dow closed above 5,000 for the year and DVDs made their first appearance. The year the glove didn’t fit so they had to acquit. The year Michael Jackson told us “You are not Alone,” Mariah Carey had a “Fantasy” and Seal got a “Kiss From a Rose.”

It was the year the Rockets swept the Magic in the NBA Finals.

It was their year. The underrated and “young” team was on its way to glory. They beat the Celtics, putting their fingerprint on the mystic Boston Garden, closing it out with a win. They took on the Bulls and they defeated the Pacers in seven games, which was arguably the best series in Magic franchise history.

They were Shaquille O’Neal, Penny Hardaway, Horace Grant, Nick Anderson and Dennis Scott.

They were Orlando’s only—and still are—franchise sports team, and they were bringing home a title. Driving Orlando’s streets during a game you were greeted with empty roads. “Go Magic” signs littered home and store windows. Men, women and children donned Magic jerseys and every now and Penny Hardaway & Hakeem Olajuwonthen, you caught someone reppin’ the Horace Grant goggles. It was Magic Mania… and then they choked.

Nick Anderson missed four-straight clutch free throws and the series against Houston was lost forever; their fingers left without championship rings.

A year later, it all fell apart. Shaq wanted to be an actor, and, well, we all know how that turned out. So he took an extra $8 million from the Lakers and headed to L.A. And we all know how that turned out.

“If we would have stayed together, the Magic would have had a championship,” former Magic guard Darrell Armstrong said. “We had some talent on that team.”

It took the organization 14 years to recover after Shaq ripped the hearts out of Orlando fans, balled them up and slammed them into the hole he once dominated in a Magic jersey.

Fast forward to the year 2003. We went to war with Iraq. We elected the Terminator as the governor of California and we found Nemo. We also witnessed the Magic’s horrific 21-61 season where they went winless for 19-straight games and fired former Coach of the Year Doc Rivers.

The Magic took 10 wrong turns, missed the intersection, ran out of gas, blew a tire and stopped to ask for directions before they were able to come to their final destination: The 2004 Draft.

Known for their baffling decisions (letting Shaq walk) and questionable draft picks (Fran Vazquez), the Magic made moves that shFrom right: Francis, Mobley, Howard, Stevensonook up their franchise. They chose high school prospect Dwight Howard over the seasoned Naismith college POY Emeka Okafor as the No. 1 pick. And their off-season pickups didn’t end there. They acquired Jameer Nelson from the Nuggets in a draft-night trade.

Near the end of June, they sent Tracy McGrady packing for Steve Francis, Cuttino Mobley and Kelvin Cato. OK, that was a bad example.

But they did pick up Hedo Turkoglu from free agency and traded for Tony Battie that year. A change was a-comin’. Otis Smith continued to build around their star center, dropping $118 million in a sign-and-trade for the versatile Rashard Lewis from Seattle.

Now, this team is right back where it was 14 years ago—at the cusp of an NBA championship title. If you feel a little deja vu coming over you, that’s OK.

“It’s like looking in the mirror,” Armstrong said. “Offensively, they’re both the same. The only thing our ‘95 team had an advantage of is we had a 6-7 Penny Hardaway who could post up as well and we knew he could give us stuff that Shaq could give us.

“But do they have a big guy like Shaq? Yes, they do. Do they have shooters on the perimeter? Yes, they do. We had the same thing this team has.”

It’s uncanny the resemblance the Magic of the present have to the Magic of the past:

Orlando Magic
1995 2009
3P% 37 38.1
FG% 50.2 45.6
Points Per Game 110.9 101.0

But it’s not only the numbers that stick out. How about the (lack of) national media attention? The beat down in Beantown? Being the only hope for the city of Orlando to get any sports respect other than Tiger Woods?

The rosters are almost identical. Big man down low (Then: Shaq; Now: Dwight), perimeter shooters (Then: Dennis Scott, Brian Shaw, Nick Anderson; Now: Turkoglu, Lewis, Mickael Pietrus), clutch players (Then: Hardaway, Anderson; Now: Turkoglu, Lewis).

More than anyone on the current team, Dwight is the most like his predecessor. The Defensive Player of the Year is the nucleus of the Magic team, just as Shaq was. Both centers carried their teams to a deep run into the Playoffs, but can Dwight take the Magic where Shaq was never able to take them?

At 22 in 1995, the Diesel had an almost complete offensive game, but Dwight, at 23, has the defensive game on lock.

“With Dwight, he blocks more and rebounds a lot better than Shaq. They’re two different players but both know the game,” Armstrong said. “I couldn’t give Shaq the edge at the same age as Dwight and I can’t give Dwight the edge.

By the numbers, however, Dwight takes the edge. Only a year older this season than Shaq was when he led the Magic tDwight Howardo the Finals, Dwight leads the original Superman in blocks (231 to 192), rebounds (1093 to 901) and although both players are known to struggle at the free throw line, Dwight barely leads in that category as well (.594 to .533).

Shaq’s offensive prowess is evident, however, with his commanding 930 made field goals at .583 percent compared to Dwight’s 560 on .572 percent.

And Dwight, like many have already pointed out, is nowhere near his prime yet. He’s maturing with every year and under Pat Ewing’s watch is growing as an offensive player—he’s already got the hook shot down, almost. Even with his limited offensive arsenal, Dwight still averaged 20.6 points per game this season. Add a “go-to” move to get him two more field goals a game and a slightly improved free throw percentage and he can be averaging close to 26 ppg.

“If you look, they had more skilled players, we have more talent. They had guys that were very skilled in their positions… we have more talented guys,” Alston said.

Like the Magic of the past, this 2009 team has defeated the odds. It continued its trek to the playoffs after their premier starting point guard and team leader Jameer Nelson was sidelined with a torn labrum in his right shoulder. They sprung back as championship contenders after trading for Rafer Alston out of Houston. They beat the defending champions—on their home court—after coming back from a 3-2 series deficit. Oh yeah, and Boston had a 32-0 record when leading three games to two in a series.

Now, they are heading to Los Angeles to take on Kobe Bryant and the Lakers after sending the Cleveland LeBrons fishing and sending one of the Nike puppets to the storage closet.

“We have a bunch of winners in this locker room. We have a bunch of guys that people said can’t do it, couldn’t do it or don’t want it,” Nelson said. “One thing we understand is to win a game, to win a series you have to come together as a team and that’s what we’ve been doing.”

And doing it well. They were one second away from sweeping the team that swept both opponents on their playoff path to the finals beforOrlando Magic 2009e the Magic stood in front of them like Detroit did to Orlando in most of their past playoff appearances. The city of Orlando was turning off their respirators and taking their nose tubes out. They were being revived. They were breathing again. They believed again.

The Magic, although shaky at the beginning of the post season, overcame more obstacles than any team in these playoffs. They’ve hustled back from large leads, survived suspensions to two of their starters and they’ve closed out two teams on their home courts. That’s what’s different with this team: They will their way to win.

“The best thing they did was come back and took an 8-point lead in Game 5 that puts doubt in teams’ minds. They lost, but they still put doubt in Cleveland,” Armstrong said. “In Detroit (in 2003), we were up 3-1 and we laid enough eggs for everyone around the world to have for Easter. We went there and laid down.”

This team isn’t laying down anywhere. They’ve elbowed and slapped and fought their way to the Finals. They’re taking on the Big Boys and the officials and the national media and the critics. They don’t care if people disrespect them, because according to Rashard, they will respond by how they play on the court.

“I believe in my team and I believe that if we come out every night and play our brand of basketball, we can beat anybody,” Howard said.

Although most of the current Magic players were learning their multiplication tables the last time the Magic went to the Finals, they’re looking to take their franchise’s past accomplishments and add to them. They’re looking to write their own history.

They’re looking for a ring.

Nada Taha covers the Orlando Magic as the Web Content Director for the Florida News Network.

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  • Ronak

    which sadly they wont get.

  • J-rell

    the dream woulda destroyed dwight…at least shaq held his own against him in the finals

  • serevei

    1st

  • Kas

    comapring howard to shaq is blasphemy.
    the reason the nba sux now compared to early-mid 90′s is that some of the biggest stars now (howard, james) have huge holes in their fundamentals, making them kind of hard to watch

  • minikidd

    @kas: Whereas Shaq was the perfect all-round player!? Watching that guy shoot FT makes me want to kill myself…

  • Babygab

    I need answers here ? Do you guys from slam think the Magics can do it ?

  • Ken

    *points and laughs at serevei*

    Honestly, a nice analysis, except that the 09 Magic don’t have anybody who was close to Penny’s skill. The Shaq-Dwight comparison I can see, but there really is no good analogy for Penny and anybody on the current team.

  • Babygab

    If only they had someone like Penny on their roster then I would be confident about their chances. But hey let’s wait and see what happens we might be suprised…

  • madamerica

    I don’t care what the Slam people think, the Magic have a pretty good chance.

  • Oli

    i wish grant hill had stayed 2 years ago…

  • http://blogs.orlandosentinel.com/.a/6a00d83451c3cb69e201156fbef83c970c-pi ENDS

    Tear Rolling Down. Lets do this. I told ya’ll ***** i would see ya’ll in Juneand we aint done yet

  • http://blogs.orlandosentinel.com/.a/6a00d83451c3cb69e201156fbef83c970c-pi ENDS

    Ima Disregard That Grant Hill Comment and Continue to have a Great Day.

  • http://blogs.orlandosentinel.com/.a/6a00d83451c3cb69e201156fbef83c970c-pi ENDS

    I still havent been able to breath/sleep after Big Wins I just keep Thinking…

  • http://mynameinblue.blogspot.com Hisham

    The teams are pretty similar, except there is no penny-like player on the Magic (turkoglu comes to mind but is waaaaaayyyyyyyy too far of a reach). Plus, those stats that you posted don’t compare very well. The only thing they have in common is the threepoint percentage. All that chart shows me is that the ’95 Magic were over 10(!!) points more efficient offensively, and shot 5% better from the field, which is also a lot. That ’95 team was more talented. I predict Lakers in 6. But I also predicted Boston in 6, and Cleveland in 6, so hey…

  • http://mynameinblue.blogspot.com Hisham

    sorry, just under 10 points per game

  • ka

    Hedo is a pretty good comparison to penny. Have you guys been watching the game?

  • Kas

    ka: have you seen penny in his prime?

  • AlbertBarr

    The only reason the ’95 magic have more points per game is cause they didnt play defense. That is the most underrated part of this team, their defense. Lakers are gonna have to work for their buckets.

  • Washtub

    The Shaq – Dwight number comparison is bogus, since Dwight is in his fifth season while Shaq was only 3 seasons in back then

  • http://mynameinblue.blogspot.com Hisham

    @AlbertBarr: well there’s another mismatch in the comparison between the two teams. The general comparison is that they have a dominant big man and a whole bunch of shooters. That’s about it.

  • J-rell

    the 95 squad is the same team that eliminated his airness and the bulls in 6 games…something this years magic team would have no chance 2 do!!!

  • Dave

    “It’s uncanny the resemblance the Magic of the present have to the Magic of the past”
    Yes, they both play in Orlando.
    Those stats don’t back up that statement at all – ’95 would crush the ’09 team on those three stats. Come on, be serious.

  • Stan

    I think MJ was just 30 games back when they played in the playoffs so the Magic was lucky to get by. I’d still vote for the 95 magic to win against the 2009 team.

  • Blue

    Ka: Are you serious?! Penny was one of the most exciting players the league had to offer in his prime. And considering just a few of the others (Shaq, Jordan, Grant Hill, Olajuwon, Drexler, Kemp, Payton, Robinson, Miller) that’s saying a lot. Penny could dunk like Wade and pass like Kidd. The Michael Jordan of Turkey does not compare to Penny at all. Good player, though. Just not to that extent…

  • Seven Duece

    Um, the Magic NEVER let Shaq walk. They offered him a deal, he balked, they offered again. Then he stunned Orlando by signing with LA for a measly (for him) 8 million (over 6 years at that).

  • ABIMATOR

    Magic 4 a sweep or in 5!!!!

  • Pingback: SLAM ONLINE |

  • Statik

    This Magic team has no X-factor as Penny wasin his prime, a tall combo guard that gave defenses fits…Pip openly acknowledged he was one of the few guys that he had problems guarding because of matched height and the fact he could take anybody off the dribble. Then again, if the shooters around Dwight dont choke under pressure, then the comparisons stop here

  • JL

    what made it for me were those NBA videos back in the day, all those sweet highlights of the superstars back then. now it’s all sports center and … nba street series? hardwood classics? past champions? wut about the new stars? show me some dunks and 3′s!

  • http://mindyourbusiness@nosybutt.com Allenp

    See, the fact that anybody would compare Penny to Hedo is proof that Penny’s career is criminally underrated.
    That’s like comparing Andre Miller to Gary Payton cause they are both big guards who like to post and pass.l

  • http://double-technical.blogspot.com Zee!

    Or like comparing Gary Payton’s tv analyst skill’s to Magic’s cause they both can’t read a f’ng teleprompter.

  • Sparker

    a few comments. 1) shaq was a pure scorer and had a nose for the rim. dwight is not that guy and may never be, although his last game definitely gave me pause. 2) penny hardaway played above the rim. hedo may or may not be able to dunk. 3) i still think about nick missing those free throws sometimes, and wonder whether he is still traumatized. 4) weirdly, the team that the magic most reminds me of is not that old magic team, but the team that beat them: the rockets. and it has nothing with player similarities. as i wrote last week, they just feel like the team of destiny

  • Ray Datdeal

    Nice

  • Teddy-the-Bear

    @ Allenp: Yeah, but you have to give credit to Hedo and ‘Dre. They’re good players too. OBVIOUSLY Penny is the man.

  • Teddy-the-Bear

    Also, I’d say that Shaq was and probably always will be better offensively than Dwight, but Dwight is probably better defensively, compared to their respective Magic ages.

  • chintao

    “… the Diesel had an almost complete offensive game….” — If by that you mean an unstoppable combination of uncalled offensive fouls followed by dunks, then yes, Shaq had a complete repetoire.

  • chintao

    @ Allenp ==> If Penny is underrated, then its because he destroyed his own legacy by hanging around as injuries and age got the better of him.

  • http://www.triplejunearthed.com Dacre

    So….at the end of the day we have a ‘bogus’ ORLANDO THEN AND NOW article that tried to draw a comparison between two different Orlando line-ups based on their 2 runs to an NBA finals series…. Do we therefore go and do that for the 15 different teams that the LA LAKERS have featured…?

  • Teddy-the-Bear

    chintao is the ultimate hater of great players… Something is the matter with you, son. What’s with all the exaggeration?

  • scorp99cam

    Worst post I have ever read on slamonline…and the comments may be worse, Penny hardaway is not a great player. He had 3 good seasons EVER and scored 21 ppg at his peak. Comparing Penny to Wade and Jason Kidd is dumb. He was okay, but criminally overrated, because of a stupid puppet ad.

  • http://www.triplejunearthed.com Dacre

    scorp99cam just injected possibly another 35+ ‘retaliation’ posts into this otherwise dying thread…
    UPGRADE COMPLETE
    Anfernee Hardaway was a fine NBA player.

  • Dave

    “Penny could dunk like Wade and pass like Kidd.”
    No offense to Penny, who was a very good passer, but he wasn’t as good a passer as Kidd. He could probably dunk as well – but he was 3″ taller.

  • Dave

    I might also add that Slam’s ten year issue has an article on Shaq and why he left Orlando. He said it was because he missed a training session and the opening of a game and the Magic told the press he was AWOL – rather than tell them he was at his grandmother’s funeral.
    I reckon I’d have told the Magic to GFT after that, too. And Shaq’s a more sensitive man than I am.

  • http://bleacherreport.com/users/42594-Hoops4life- Overtime

    Excellent read

  • 32789

    The three point line was closer back then… 22 ft compared to 23 ft 9 inches today.

  • http://nbacheapseats.blogspot.com Chendaddy

    Yeah, they’re so alike. They have a dominant center and shooters. Uh, are you kidding me?
    Look at your numbers. The only thing eerie about them is how anyone can think they are similar at all.
    Do you know why the 1995 Magic averaged 5% higher on FG% and 9 ppg more on offense? They had an offensive
    beast scoring in the post (Shaq) and a first-team All-NBA slasher (Penny). They couldn’t get it done because
    they didn’t get strong defensive efforts from all five guys on the court, starting with their franchise center.
    The 2009 Magic had the second highest defensive efficiency in the NBA this year. That’s the type of team they
    are: wholly different in strategy and outlook then that four-and-out 1995 team.

  • http://ibuzzunlimited.com T Williams

    Skip to my Lue TIME

  • chintao

    @ Teddy-the-Bear Posted: Jun.3 at 12:46 am ==> I don’t hate great players, so much as I hate lousy human beings. Penny was Jell-O Pudding-soft (not a cardinal sin, but not my preference). Shaq is a moron, who was born with size 22 sneakers in his mouth (being a jerk is a cardinal sin). Also, there’s no hyperbole. I just post my observations, uncut. If Shaq had been called properly for charging and had not been permitted to dunk, he would have been more useless than your third tit. If you accept that (a big “if”, for you), then it’s a pretty short step to saying that Shaq had zero versatility. If Shaq’s offensive game lacked the ability to score in a variety of ways, then that must mean it was far from complete. You can’t really argue with my assertion about the way Penny’s body broke down, can you? I mean, even Grant Hill is still (sort of) contributing in the L, right?

  • pennydunk_1

    @scorp99cam; In those three years, only MJ and Pip were better perimeter players than Penny. And averaging 21 back then, with the old offense rules (and Shaq in your team) was no small feat. His career is not to compare with Wade’s or Kidd’s. In his prime though, he could ball with either of them, and we didn’t even get to see the finished product. In 2000 playoffs vs LA, he was getting injections on his knee, yet Bryant had his hands full with him. Overrated? If that was the case, MJ,Magic, Pip, Riley etc wouldn’t praise him the way they did. Game acknowledges game, they say.

  • scorp99cam

    MJ didn’t play 2 of those 3 years. That is why Penny is overrated, we were desperate for a new MJ (This is the magazine that said Grant Hill was better than MJ on a cover, that’s how desperate we were.) He had a great marketing campaign, played on a good team. He was a good player in the perfect situation, but was a flash in the pan. Not worth mentioning 10 years later

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