Tag Archive | "charlotte"

Stan Van Gundy: Orlando Magic Don’t Want to Be Great

Wednesday, March 7th, 2012 at 9:30 am  |  6 responses

After the Orlando Magic dropped a game to the awful Charlotte Bobcats last night, you just knew that a Stan Van Gundy rant was on its way. And the Magic head coach did not disappoint. Reports the AP: “Orlando Magic coach Stan Van Gundy seems to be growing tired of his team’s dispassionate attitude. Van Gundy took a few shots at his players’ lackluster approach following a 100-84 loss Tuesday night to the Charlotte Bobcats, the worst team in the NBA. ‘Our guys are satisfied that we came in with the third-best record in the East and the fifth-best record in the league,’ Van Gundy said. ‘They’re satisfied with that. I don’t think there’s any push to be better or any push to be great. If there is, it doesn’t show up in games.’ Added Van Gundy: ‘This is who are. Whether we change that or not, I don’t know.’”

What do you guys think about this.

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Magic's Van Gundy coaching after health scare

Updated: March 7, 2012, 12:28 AM ET


ESPN.com news services


CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Orlando Magic coach Stan Van Gundy was on the sidelines coaching Tuesday against the Charlotte Bobcats despite a health scare less than 24 hours earlier.

Van Gundy says he developed some mild chest pain during the Magic’s 92-88 win Monday night in Toronto. Van Gundy stayed behind to get checked out by doctors as a precautionary measure, but everything turned out fine and he didn’t spend the night in the hospital.

Van Gundy didn’t make the team flight and flew to Charlotte on Tuesday morning on his own for the game.

Van Gundy saw the Magic give away a 20-point lead against the Bobcats en route to a 100-84 loss.

Van Gundy, 52, did his usual postgame media interviews after the Magic’s game Monday against the Raptors and didn’t mention the illness.

Van Gundy has compiled 247-120 regular-season record in five seasons with the team.

Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.


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Magic coach Van Gundy OK after experiencing chest pains Monday in Toronto

By Josh Robbins

Orlando Sentinel

10:21 a.m. EST, March 6, 2012

Orlando Magic coach Stan Van Gundy is traveling to Charlotte, N.C., this morning and is expected to coach his team tonight after he felt chest pains during his team’s win Monday in Toronto and stayed behind as a precautionary measure.

“He was experiencing some chest discomfort,” said Joel Glass, the Magic’s chief spokesman. “The doctor thought it was best they do some tests, and everything checked out fine.”

Orlando defeated the Toronto Raptors 92-88, and Van Gundy did his usual postgame media interviews after the final buzzer.

The Magic are scheduled to face the Charlotte Bobcats tonight at Time Warner Cable Arena. Van Gundy, 52, is flying from Ontario to North Carolina this morning.


Van Gundy is now in his 5th season as the Magic’s head coach. He’s compiled a 247-120 regular-season record with the team and a 359-193 regular-season record in eight NBA seasons.

Van Gundy is not the first member of the Magic to experience chest pains in recent weeks.

Thirty-one-year-old starting guard Jason Richardson sat out three games last month after he felt discomfort when he exerted himself. Team officials believed Richardson had a virus that caused inflammation in his chest.

jbrobbins@tribune.com. Read his blog at OrlandoSentinel.com/magicblog. Subscribe to our Orlando Magic newsletter at OrlandoSentinel.com/joinus.

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Hedo Turkoglu expects to return for Orlando Magic's game against Celtics

Magic starting SF Hedo Turkoglu expects to play Monday night against the Celtics in Boston after missing the last two games with a back injury.

Turkoglu was injured last Tuesday night in a game against the Charlotte Bobcats. He experienced soreness and spasms that kept him out of games against San Antonio and the Los Angeles Lakers.

Turkoglu said he had regained mobility the last day or two, but still hasn’t run hard up and down the floor. He practiced on Sunday, but the team didn’t go full bore.

The game against the Celtics will be a test for his back.


“You can’t make practice like a game anyway, so why not just go out there and see?” Turkoglu said.

Turkoglu is averaging 14.5 points, 4.9 assists and 3.3 rebounds per game.

Turkoglu and coach Stan Van Gundy won’t know how the veteran’s back will react until he gets on the court and starts to play. He’ll have to face Celtics SF Paul Pierce as well.

“I really don’t know where Turk is at with his back,” Van Gundy said. “He’ll go.”

Van Gundy said if Turk can’t go after warm-ups or he must leave the game at some point, J.J. Redick will start at shooting guard, with Jason Richardson moving to small forward to defend Pierce. G-F Quentin Richardson is also expected to see some time defending Pierce.

Advice for Ainge

Celtics GM Danny Ainge hasn’t ruled out breaking up his Big Three of Paul Pierce, Kevin Garnett and Ray Allen to improve his team. The Celts, 2008 NBA champions, are 6-9 after beating the Washington Wizards on Sunday.

Van Gundy, tongue firmly planted in cheek, says the sooner the better.

“I’d put a vote in for breaking them up,” Van Gundy laughed, talking about the Celtics after practice. “Move all three. Danny Ainge should get it done today.”

Seriously, Van Gundy still considers the Celtics a “formidable team,” and said the club has been snake bit because of injuries and a tough schedule.

Of the possibility of the Celtics trading any of the Big Three, Van Gundy said, “It’s a tough thing. For Pierce, I’d think it’s even more of a dilemma for them. He’s been through the tough times.”

Layups

Asked to gauge the 11-4 Magic after 15 games, Van Gundy said, “I still think we have a long way to go to get at the level to be contenders. I don’t think that we’ve been consistent on the defensive end. I’m not saying that in a negative way. If we can play consistent defensively to get to that level, we can be contenders, no doubt.”

Howard needs 26 points tonight to overtake Nick Anderson as the Magic’s all-time scoring leader. He has 10,625 points in seven-plus seasons.

Van Gundy said the Magic worked on their pick-and-roll defense and catch-and-shoot defense, hoping to slow Allen and Pierce.

Magic PF Ryan Anderson is making a case to compete in the NBA All-Star Game’s 3-point shooting contest in Orlando. He leads the NBA in 3-point field goals made (49) and attempted (117).

 The Magic play three consecutive back-to-backs: Boston-Indiana, Boston-New Orleans and Indiana-Philadelphia. – Brian Schmitz.

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Bobcats Vs. Magic Final Score: Orlando Wins Fifth Straight, Beating Charlotte 96-89

Read More: Dwight Howard (C – ORL), Jameer Nelson (G – ORL), Von Wafer (G – ORL), Orlando Magic, Charlotte Bobcats

The Orlando Magic pulled away from Charlotte Bobcats in the fourth quarter on Tuesday night, winning their fifth straight game 96-89. Dwight Howard led the Magic with another monstrous double-double, pouring in 25 points and grabbing 17 rebounds. Howard has been the center of continuous and rampant trade rumors, but his play, and thus Orlando’s, has not suffered from the outside distractions.

In the backcourt, Orlando got solid contributions from Jameer Nelson and Von Wafer was big off the bench. Nelson finished with 17 points, getting into the lane and to the line to hit six of seven free throws. The former FSU Seminole Wafer added a season-high 13 points.

Orlando now hosts the San Antonio Spurs, who will be coming to town on the second night of a back-to-back after being blitzed by Miami in the second half on Tuesday night.

For more on the Orlando Magic, visit SB Nation’s Magic blog Orlando Pinstriped Post. For more on the Charlotte Bobcats, visit SB Nation’s Bobcats blog Rufus On Fire.

That’s all the news for today.

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Magic take care of Bobcats for fifth straight win

CBSSports.com wire reports

ORLANDO, Fla. — With little down time during this fast-paced NBA season, Orlando Magic coach Stan Van Gundy has been anticipating a night when his team had to rely on unconventional methods to stay in games.

Van Gundy’s predictions finally came to fruition Tuesday night against Charlotte as the Magic needed late baskets from unusual suspects and timely defensive stops to preserve a 96-89 win — their fifth straight– over the Bobcats.

Dwight Howard had 25 points and 17 rebounds to lead the Magic, which survived 18 turnovers to win for the 10th time in 12 games.

Jameer Nelson added 17 points, Hedo Turkoglu had 15 and Von Wafer 13 as the Magic won for the 10th time in 12 games. Turkoglu and Wafer each scored eight points each in a decisive fourth-quarter run to help preserve the victory.

“We gotta keep rolling, we gotta keep playing and not think too much into it,” forward Ryan Anderson said of the Magic’s current run. “I think that we’ve beat some really good teams, and just as important we need to keep our heads and really stay focused down the stretch like we did tonight.”

Gerald Henderson had 22 points for Charlotte, which has lost eight of its last nine. The Bobcats are also winless in their last five trips to Orlando.

Charlotte stayed close throughout the game and pulled within a basket late in the fourth quarter before Anderson’s 3-pointer extended Orlando’s lead to 86-81 with 1:33 to play. The Bobcats never got closer.

“We threw the ball away too much,” Bobcats coach Paul Silas said. “We defended Howard very well and then we started going in the lane too much for help, then they kicked the ball out for 3s.

“That was the game right there when they made those shots. But we hung in there. We’re just not there yet, but we’re getting there.”

Henderson agreed with his coach’s assessment.

“We are playing better,” he said. “I think it is at the end of games that we have to lock down and execute. I think we will be better off with experience and kind of have to learn to win.”

Another victory aside, Van Gundy said there is still a lot to work on the defensive end. Charlotte shot 46 percent from the field (36 for 77) Tuesday after coming in shooting just 39 percent in the second half of games this season. Still, he liked his team’s resiliency late in the game.

The Magic also connected on 46 percent of their shots (36 for 78) for the game, but were just 7 for 22 (31 percent) from the 3-point line after hitting at least 10 in four straight outings.

“We’ve relied on our shooting and so when we have a night where offensively we’re not very good and the ball’s not dropping, then we get ourselves into trouble,” Van Gundy said. “We’ve got to be able to rely on our defense, which I think in the second half we did.”

Charlotte went into halftime with a 50-47 advantage after a scrappy first half that included eight ties and seven lead changes.

Both teams shot 48 percent from the field, but the Magic struggled from both the 3-point line (3 for 10) and at the free-throw line (4 for 10). Charlotte was for 4 for 8 beyond the arc and a perfect 8 for 8 from the line, in addition to holding a 22-20 rebounding edge.

The Bobcats benefited from some Magic foul trouble in the opening 12 minutes to take a seven-point lead.

Howard and Turkoglu were forced to the bench after picking up two fouls each less than five minutes into the game.

Without two of Orlando’s starters to deal with Charlotte closed the quarter on a 16-5 run. Henderson led all scorers with eight first-quarter points.

The Magic host San Antonio Wednesday and get a one-day break before the Los Angeles Lakers visit Friday night.

Unconventional or not, Howard said he likes the buzz that is coming out of the locker room right now with tougher games and stretches awaiting them on the schedule.

“Playing some great basketball — just got to keep it up,” Howard said. “We picked it up a little bit. We just have to be consistent and understand that this is going to be a tough season.”

Notes

  • Magic G Jason Richardson missed his second consecutive game with a bone bruise in his left knee.
  • After playing five games in six days, the Bobcats are off until Saturday when they play at Chicago to begin a stretch of four games in five nights.

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Howard fuels Magic to 5th straight win

Updated Jan 17, 2012 11:12 PM ET

 

ORLANDO, Fla. (AP)

With little down time during this fast-paced NBA season, Orlando Magic coach Stan Van Gundy has been anticipating a night when his team had to rely on unconventional methods to stay in games.

Van Gundy’s predictions finally came to fruition Tuesday night against Charlotte as the Magic needed late baskets from unusual suspects and timely defensive stops to preserve a 96-89 win – their fifth straight – over the Bobcats.

Dwight Howard had 25 points and 17 rebounds to lead the Magic, which survived 18 turnovers to win for the 10th time in 12 games.

Jameer Nelson added 17 points, Hedo Turkoglu had 15 and Von Wafer 13 as the Magic won for the 10th time in 12 games. Turkoglu and Wafer each scored eight points each in a decisive fourth-quarter run to help preserve the victory.

”We gotta keep rolling, we gotta keep playing and not think too much into it,” forward Ryan Anderson said of the Magic’s current run. ”I think that we’ve beat some really good teams, and just as important we need to keep our heads and really stay focused down the stretch like we did tonight.”

Gerald Henderson had 22 points for Charlotte, which has lost eight of its last nine. The Bobcats are also winless in their last five trips to Orlando.

Charlotte stayed close throughout the game and pulled within a basket late in the fourth quarter before Ryan Anderson’s 3-pointer extended Orlando’s lead to 86-81 with 1:33 to play. The Bobcats never got closer.

”We threw the ball away too much,” Bobcats coach Paul Silas said. ”We defended Howard very well and then we started going in the lane too much for help, then they kicked the ball out for 3s.

”That was the game right there when they made those shots. But we hung in there. We’re just not there yet, but we’re getting there.”

Henderson agreed with his coach’s assessment.

”We are playing better,” he said. ”I think it is at the end of games that we have to lock down and execute. I think we will be better off with experience and kind of have to learn to win.”

Another victory aside, Van Gundy said there is still a lot to work on the defensive end. Charlotte shot 46 percent from the field (36 for 77) Tuesday after coming in shooting just 39 percent in the second half of games this season. Still, he liked his team’s resiliency late in the game.

The Magic also connected on 46 percent of their shots (36 for 78) for the game, but were just 7 for 22 (31 percent) from the 3-point line after hitting at least 10 in four straight outings.

”We’ve relied on our shooting and so when we have a night where offensively we’re not very good and the ball’s not dropping, then we get ourselves into trouble,” Van Gundy said. ”We’ve got to be able to rely on our defense, which I think in the second half we did.”

Charlotte went into halftime with a 50-47 advantage after a scrappy first half that included eight ties and seven lead changes.

Both teams shot 48 percent from the field, but the Magic struggled from both the 3-point line (3 for 10) and at the free-throw line (4 for 10). Charlotte was for 4 for 8 beyond the arc and a perfect 8 for 8 from the line, in addition to holding a 22-20 rebounding edge.

The Bobcats benefited from some Magic foul trouble in the opening 12 minutes to take a seven-point lead.

Howard and Turkoglu were forced to the bench after picking up two fouls each less than five minutes into the game.

Without two of Orlando’s starters to deal with Charlotte closed the quarter on a 16-5 run. Henderson led all scorers with eight first-quarter points.

The Magic host San Antonio Wednesday and get a one-day break before the Los Angeles Lakers visit Friday night.

Unconventional or not, Howard said he likes the buzz that is coming out of the locker room right now with tougher games and stretches awaiting them on the schedule.

”Playing some great basketball – just got to keep it up,” Howard said. ”We picked it up a little bit. We just have to be consistent and understand that this is going to be a tough season.”

Notes: Magic G Jason Richardson missed his second consecutive game with a bone bruise in his left knee. … After playing five games in six days, the Bobcats are off until Saturday when they play at Chicago to begin a stretch of four games in five nights.

Running low on time today, i’ll be back tomorrow hopefully with some more news.

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Five straight for Magic

Magic win 5th straight behind big nights from Dwight Howard, Von Wafer

The Orlando Magic looked tired Tuesday night.

But Dwight Howard, Von Wafer and Glen Davis provided a spark.

Playing their second game in as many nights, and with another one looming Wednesday, the Magic overcame a listless start and eked out a ragged 96-89 victory over the Charlotte Bobcats at Amway Center.

It wasn’t pretty, but it still counts as Orlando’s fifth consecutive win.

“It’s not like any other season where we get chances to get breaks and rest here and there,” said Howard, who scored 25 points and collected 17 rebounds, both game highs.

“So, we’ve got to really count on our defense, because there’s going to be nights where offensively we’re not shooting the ball well.”

Wafer, who came off the bench because starting shooting guard Jason Richardson was out with an injury, added 13 points, including a key 3-pointer down the stretch.

Davis’ stat line was unimpressive — he scored just six points and gathered three rebounds in almost 30 minutes — but he repeatedly attempted to draw charges and dived to the parquet floor for loose basketballs.

His play seemed to inspire his teammates, who allowed the Bobcats to make almost 49 percent of their shots in the first half but limited the Bobcats to just under 45 percent shooting in the second half.

“Look, in the first half, we didn’t put much into the game, particularly at the defensive end of the floor,” Magic coach Stan Van Gundy said.

“The second half, I thought we played a lot harder defensively. What I said at halftime to ’em was, ‘At some point, if we want to be good, we’re gonna have to become a defensive team.’ ”

It would be a mistake to give the Magic (10-3) too much credit for their second-half performance against the Bobcats (3-12), a team with no stars and no legitimate go-to scorer.

Still, the Magic can win their sixth consecutive game if they beat the San Antonio Spurs on Wednesday night.

“If we’re playing like this in April, then that’s one thing,” Wafer said. “But it’s too early right now. It’s giving us confidence. It’s bringing us closer together. But as far as meaning, it doesn’t really mean much if we don’t finish.”

On Tuesday night, the Magic’s start was the problem.

It didn’t help that Howard picked up two personal fouls in the game’s first 4 minutes, 36 seconds.

Howard went to the bench for the rest of the quarter, and the Magic suffered without him. Orlando made only seven of its 22 first-quarter shot attempts.

But Howard’s foul trouble didn’t persist. He went the entire second quarter without committing a foul, and he had just one personal in the third period.

He also provided the highlight of the night with 25.1 seconds remaining in the third quarter.

He caught a deep entry pass from Hedo Turkoglu and was fouled by rookie Bismack Biyombo, who fell to the parquet court. Howard tripped over Biyombo, but as Howard went to the floor, he threw a shot almost blindly toward the hoop. The ball went in.

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Orlando Magic win 5th straight behind big nights from Dwight Howard, Von Wafer

The Orlando Magic looked tired Tuesday night.

But Dwight Howard, Von Wafer and Glen Davis provided a spark.

Playing their second game in as many nights, and with another one looming Wednesday, the Magic overcame a listless start and eked out a ragged 96-89 victory over the Charlotte Bobcats at Amway Center.

It wasn’t pretty, but it still counts as Orlando’s fifth consecutive win.

“It’s not like any other season where we get chances to get breaks and rest here and there,” said Howard, who scored 25 points and collected 17 rebounds, both game highs.

“So, we’ve got to really count on our defense, because there’s going to be nights where offensively we’re not shooting the ball well.”

Wafer, who came off the bench because starting shooting guard Jason Richardson was out with an injury, added 13 points, including a key 3-pointer down the stretch.

Davis’ stat line was unimpressive — he scored just six points and gathered three rebounds in almost 30 minutes — but he repeatedly attempted to draw charges and dived to the parquet floor for loose basketballs.

His play seemed to inspire his teammates, who allowed the Bobcats to make almost 49 percent of their shots in the first half but limited the Bobcats to just under 45 percent shooting in the second half.

“Look, in the first half, we didn’t put much into the game, particularly at the defensive end of the floor,” Magic coach Stan Van Gundy said.

“The second half, I thought we played a lot harder defensively. What I said at halftime to ’em was, ‘At some point, if we want to be good, we’re gonna have to become a defensive team.’ ”

It would be a mistake to give the Magic (10-3) too much credit for their second-half performance against the Bobcats (3-12), a team with no stars and no legitimate go-to scorer.

Still, the Magic can win their sixth consecutive game if they beat the San Antonio Spurs on Wednesday night.

“If we’re playing like this in April, then that’s one thing,” Wafer said. “But it’s too early right now. It’s giving us confidence. It’s bringing us closer together. But as far as meaning, it doesn’t really mean much if we don’t finish.”

On Tuesday night, the Magic’s start was the problem.

It didn’t help that Howard picked up two personal fouls in the game’s first 4 minutes, 36 seconds.

Howard went to the bench for the rest of the quarter, and the Magic suffered without him. Orlando made only seven of its 22 first-quarter shot attempts.

But Howard’s foul trouble didn’t persist. He went the entire second quarter without committing a foul, and he had just one personal in the third period.

He also provided the highlight of the night with 25.1 seconds remaining in the third quarter.

He caught a deep entry pass from Hedo Turkoglu and was fouled by rookie Bismack Biyombo, who fell to the parquet court. Howard tripped over Biyombo, but as Howard went to the floor, he threw a shot almost blindly toward the hoop. The ball went in.

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Magic’s Howard gives Charlotte fits

NBA Game Summary – Orlando at Charlotte

Written by

The Sports Network

Magic vs. Bobcats: Orlando Cruises To 100-79 Victory

By Adam Bittner

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The Magic improve to 3-1 on the season.

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Dec 30, 2011 – The Orlando Magic shot 44 percent and hit 12 3-pointers as they defeated the Charlotte Bobcats 100-79 on Friday night at the Time Warner Cable Arena in Charlotte, N.C.

Ryan Anderson led the offensive attack for Orlando, putting up 23 points on 8-18 shooting. Dwight Howard was big on both ends, scoring 20 points while pulling down 24 boards. Jason Richardson (16 points), Hedo Turkoglu (15 points) and J.J. Reddick (11 points) joined them in double figures.

The Bobcats, held to 36.1 percent shooting on the evening, were led in scoring by Corey Maggette, who put up 20 points and grabbed seven rebounds. D.J. Augustin had 14 points on 3-11 shooting while Boris Diaw posted a 10-point, six-rebound and six-assist line.

The big difference between the teams was performance from behind the arc. Orlando was 12-28 from deep while Charlotte was just 5-15.

The Magic, now 3-1, host the Toronto Raptors at 6:00 p.m. on New Year’s Day next time out.

For more on the Magic, please visit Orlando Pinstriped Post, SB Nation’s Orlando Magic blog. For news and notes on the Bobcats, check out Rufus On Fire, SB Nations Charlotte Bobcats Blog.

Read More: Dwight Howard (C – ORL), Ryan Anderson (F – ORL), Orlando Magic, Charlotte Bobcats

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Orlando Magic’s move finally benefits Keith Bogans

Call it fate or the work of the basketball gods. Heck, maybe it’s just the way the ball bounces.

Keith Bogans is the starting shooting guard for the Chicago Bulls only because J.J. Redick of the Magic is not.

Bogans could be the one on vacation and Redick the one guarding Dwyane Wade, which is no day at South Beach.

Here’s the transaction timeline that dramatically changed the paths last summer of Magic players past and present:

July 9: Bulls extend three-year, $19-million offer sheet to Redick.

July 16: Magic match offer sheet for Redick.

July 19: Bulls sign shooting guard Ronnie Brewer.

Aug. 11: Bulls sign Bogans.

The Bulls were prepared to have an all-Magic alumni two-guard club with Redick and Bogans, but were forced to add Brewer after failing to land Redick.

Funny thing, fate.

J.J. broke the bank.

Bogans finally got a break.

And while J.J. and the Magic have been home for weeks, Bogans and the Bulls are three wins from the NBA Finals.

No one knows how Redick would have fared in Chicago, if he had kept the job. The Bulls might have been just as good or even better. J.J. probably would have given them more scoring as a starter, with Bogans coming off the bench as the designated defender — not Redick’s strong suit.

The Bulls are in the East finals with coach Tom Thibodeau’s defense-first mentality, so you can make the case that Bogans-Brewer has worked just fine.

“If he’s guarding you, you know he’s guarding you. He’s going to make you work. He’s a physical player,” Thibodeau has said of Bogans.

Points never have been what Bogans has been about. He said people “need to understand that’s not why I’m here. I’m on the floor with Luol [Deng], Derrick [Rose], Carlos [Boozer]…there’s aren’t a lot of shots for me.”

Bogans averaged just 4.4 points, 1.8 rebounds and 1.2 assists this season. Redick averaged a career-high 10.1 points per game along with 1.9 rebounds and 1.7 assists.

They both specialize in the 3-point shot, with Bogans shooting 38 percent and Redick 39.7.

But J.J. also sustained a strained lower abdominal, playing in 59 games while Keith played in all 82.

Bogans is a survivor, having played for six different NBA teams.

The Magic acquired him in 2003 from the Milwaukee Bucks, who picked him in the second round out of Kentucky.

Cuttino Mobley and DeShawn Stevenson joined the team to fill the void left by Tracy McGrady’s trade to Houston, allowing Orlando to deal Bogans to the Charlotte Bobcats the next season. He was crushed.

Two years later, in 2006, Bogans was back in Orlando, signed as a free agent — six days before the club signed a rookie named Redick.

Both battled injuries, and before the 2008-2009 season, the Magic drafted Courtney Lee and signed Mickael Pietrus. They had more wingmen than a lonely bachelor.

Then a shoulder injury to Jameer Nelson caused a chain reaction. Bogans was shipped to the Bucks for point guard Tyronn Lue. Talk about bad timing for Bogans: The Magic went on to play for the title in 2009.

After a season in San Antonio, the always expendable Bogans landed as a starter in Chicago — thanks to Orlando’s decision to keep Redick, his old teammate, out of the Windy City.

Finally, a move the Magic made involving Keith Bogans worked out in his favor. About time.

bschmitz@tribune.com. Brian Schmitz’ Magic Insider and his blog at OrlandoSentinel.com/Magic blog. Subscribe to our Magic newsletter at OrlandoSentinel.com/join us. And listen to Brian every Wednesday at 9:30 a.m. on ESPN 1080.

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