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Charlotte Hornets

Eddie Jones proved a perfect fit for this team; now a rookie will follow in his shoes

Sports Illustrated Ranking: 11

By Tim Crothers

 
1999 Leaders
Stat Leader No.
Points
Assists
Steals
Turnovers
Rebounds
Minutes Per Game
Field-Goal %
3-Pt. Field-Goal %
Free-Throw %
Personal Fouls
Eddie Jones
David Wesley
Eddie Jones
David Wesley
Elden Campbell
Eddie Jones
Elden Campbell
Bobby Phills
David Wesley
Elden Campbell
17.0
6.4
3.00
2.8
9.4
38.6
.477
.395
.832
159
Sports Illustrated When two of the best guards in Los Angeles first met at a pickup game at UCLA's Pauley Pavilion in the summer of '95, the Lakers' Eddie Jones noticed that Crossroads High's Baron Davis was sporting sneakers so worn that the fraying soles slapped against the floor. The next day Davis showed up for a game back in his neighborhood in South Central, and one of his buddies asked him where he got his sweet shoes.

"They're Eddie Jones's shoes," Davis said.

"You mean they're Eddie Jones model?"

"No," Davis said. "I mean Eddie Jones was wearing them yesterday."

Thus began the kinship of Davis and Jones, who, against very long odds, have been reunited in Charlotte this fall and should form one of the most potent backcourts in the NBA by season's end. "Sometimes at practice I'll think back to that day in Pauley when he gave me the shoes off his feet," says Davis, amused at the memory. "What a wonderful guy, looking out for the needy. I'll try to remember that this season if he's calling for the ball."

Notice that Davis uses the word if. Jones's selflessness is so renowned that it's hard to imagine his ever demanding the ball. In fact, Hornets general manager Bob Bass credits Jones's "old school" attitude with the franchise's 180-degree turnaround a year ago. Just five weeks into the '98-99 season, Charlotte found itself traumatized by injuries to its two best players, Glen Rice and Anthony Mason, as well as coach Dave Cowens's sudden resignation and an unsightly 5-11 record. That's when Bass masterminded what Heat coach Pat Riley called "the greatest trade" of the year. Charlotte acquired Jones and Elden Campbell from the Lakers for the disgruntled Rice, along with J.R. Reid and B.J. Armstrong. "We were really down in the dumps," says Hornets coach Paul Silas, who replaced Cowens. "When those two guys showed up we felt like our saviors had come."

It was as if the Hornets had cracked a bank safe and found even more inside than they had expected. The 28-year-old Jones single-handedly transformed the fractious Hornets into a united front. "I'm the ultimate team guy," says Jones, a 6'6" two-time All-Star with the Lakers. "When I got here and people said the Hornets didn't have any stars, I thought, That's good because five weapons are harder to stop than one. I like to think of myself as a silent assassin."

Campbell, meanwhile, stepped out of Shaquille O'Neal's shadow to provide Charlotte with a reliable center. In 32 games with the Hornets he averaged 15.3 points and 9.4 rebounds, and shot 48.9% from the field. Charlotte went 22-13 under Silas and won 14 of its last 18 games, only to miss the playoffs by a single victory. Even that turned out to be a blessing when, despite 136-to-1 odds, the Hornets drew the third pick in the draft lottery and grabbed Davis.

During his two seasons at UCLA, Davis played dozens of pickup games with Jones, who likes to claim that Davis would never have made it to the NBA without him, which is accurate only in that Jones drove the rookie to his first Hornets practice. Initially the 20-year-old Davis will apprentice under veteran point guard David Wesley, but the organization hopes the gifted rookie will quickly emerge as the long-term solution for a team that has tried 24 point guards in its 11-year history. Silas believes that Jones and Davis will be a dangerous defensive tandem from the start. On offense, the pass happy Davis has been shooting extra jumpers to become a more consistent perimeter threat. "Baron is showing me he can find the open man better than any guard I've ever seen," Silas says. "He has a flair, a swagger and a smile that will make him a fan favorite."

While Charlotte could break the franchise record of 54 wins this season, the Hornets' most critical assignment may be trying to win back those fans, who have grown grumpy with the departure of stars like Alonzo Mourning, Larry Johnson and Vlade Divac. After leading the league in attendance in eight of its first 10 seasons, including a string of 364 straight sellouts, Charlotte didn't sell out a home game last season, prompting the club to begin an ad campaign featuring the less-than-exciting slogan, GET EXCITED. It's challenging to market a team that didn't have a player among the league's top 30 scorers last season, and the Hornets generated remarkably little buzz this preseason, despite the ardent promotional efforts of Knicks coach Jeff Van Gundy, who called Charlotte "the most talented team in the East."

Silas is willing to embrace any high hopes that these Hornets can advance past the second round of the playoffs for the first time. But to do so he must strike a balance at power forward between two of the league's most volatile characters: Mason, who is likely to begin the season as Charlotte's sixth man, and Derrick Coleman. Silas must also find a three-point bomber and convey some of his rebounding expertise to a club that ranked 25th in that category a year ago.

After a two-month layoff from basketball this summer due to surgery on his shooting hand, Jones was so eager to begin the new season that he telephoned his teammates a month before the start of training camp and asked them to join him at the Hornets' practice facility. A more selfish veteran might have been grumbling about the gross injustice of the rookie Davis's making more money than he does this season. Instead Jones recently fulfilled yet another request from his protégé for a cutting-edge pair of sneakers. "Eddie could easily be one of those cocky stars who scores 25 points every game, but I'm glad he'd rather keep his teammates happy," Silas says. "Don't get me wrong, though. When it comes down to somebody taking the big shot, nine times out of 10 I want Eddie to take it."

Issue date: November 1, 1999


Fast Breaks   Jump Balls
  • The Hornets went 22-13 after Paul Silas replaced Dave Cowens. Charlotte was 4-11 under Cowens.
  • Elden Campbell and Eddie Jones, acquired from the Lakers, combined to average nearly 31 points a game.
  • Rookie Baron Davis is a better point guard than David Wesley. The Hornets were thrilled when he fell into their laps at No. 3 in the draft.
  •  
  • Charlotte did not sell out one game last season. Not one. The team continues to look for ways to secure funding for a new arena, even though Charlotte Coliseum is only 11 years old.
  • Derrick Coleman's scoring average has a habit of decreasing in each of the season's four months.
  • The Hornets were the second-worst offensive rebounding team in the NBA last year, at 9.6 per game.
  • Personalities and past performance
    GM: Bob Bass
    Coach: Paul Silas, 2nd season (22-13), 5th season overall (100-181)
    Assistants: Jeff Bower, Mike Osowski, Lee Rose
    Last year: 26-24 (16th in the league)
    Playoffs: None
    Points Averaged per Game: 92.9
    Points Allowed per Game: 93.0

    Circle the date
    Wed., Dec., 1: at Portland - A battle of possibly the two deepest teams in the NBA.
    Fri., Jan., 7: at L.A. Lakers - Eddie Jones and Elden Campbell get to show Jerry West that they're pretty good.
    Tue., Jan., 25: Sacramento - Paul Silas says the Hornets are going to run. Here's his chance to run with the best.

    Standout stat
    0: The number of games Anthony Mason played last year. Mason tore a biceps during the preseason and wound up missing the whole year. Mason had averaged 14.5 points per game and 10.3 rebounds per game over the previous three seasons.

    Quote from the court
    "Baron Davis doesn't have a clue right now in terms of what he'll eventually know as he learns the game. I haven't really set a time table with him yet. It all goes with how he develops." -- Paul Silas


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