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Silas, the former Clippers, Hornets and Cavaliers coach, has been living in the Charlotte area and was assisting his neighbor coach 13- and 14-year-old kids. That changed when Charlotte owner Michael Jordan decided to make a change. The Bobcats had lost six of seven, with three of them by 30 points or more.
Silas immediately tried to push the pace, changing the shot clocks in practice from 24 to 14 seconds. He then tweaked with the rotation. Gerald Henderson started with Gerald Wallace (ankle) still out. He gave heavy minutes to DeSagana Diop and benched Kwame Brown.
"Any time you lose games by 30 points, something is wrong," Silas said before the game. "I didn't see them getting up and down the court. They didn't seem like they were really into the game."
While Jordan wasn't in his courtside seat, the Bobcats had perhaps their best stretch of the season in a dominant second quarter.
Diop, mostly dressed in a suit on game nights this season, blocked three shots and even hit a mid-range jumper. Little-used Matt Carroll contributed. Barely in-the-rotation Derrick Brown had an acrobatic alley-oop dunk.
The 67-year-old Silas, greeted warmly when he was introduced, was one of the most popular figures on the Charlotte Hornets in 2002 when the city shunned owner George Shinn as he prepared to move the team to New Orleans.
Silas now hopes to get Charlotte's second NBA team into the playoffs, too.
"We all feel like the season has started over for us," Jackson said. "I think everybody came to work at practice and we support each other on the court. That's how it should have been at the beginning of the season."
NOTES: Silas said he left a phone message with Larry Brown but hasn't heard back. "It's hard. I've been there, getting fired," Silas said. "Do you want that team to do well? Quite honestly, no. I can understand, but I hope to talk to him soon." ... Kuester, an assistant under Brown on Detroit's 2004 NBA title team, did speak to his former boss shortly after he was let go last week. "He's hanging in there," Kuester said. "I'm very sad that it happened, because I always look forward to coming to Charlotte for a number of reasons. He was one of them."
[Associated Press;
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