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Originally published Thursday, January 17, 2008 at 12:00 AM

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Hornets send Sonics to 8th straight loss

The Sonics are back where they started, on an eight-game losing streak. After opening the season with eight losses, Wednesday's 123-92 loss...

Special to The Seattle Times

Eight-game losing streak

The Sonics' record stands at 9-29, after their eighth straight loss. The Sonics are on pace to win 19 games this season. The franchise's inaugural team in 1967-68 started 10-28 and finished with a club-worst 23-59 record. A look at the Sonics' recent woes:

Loss

Dec. 31

Philadelphia

L, 98-90

Iguodala

scores 25 for 76ers

Loss

Jan. 3

@ Phoenix

L, 104-96

Suns score 91 in final three quarters

Loss

Jan. 6

@ Washington

L, 108-86

Seattle missed 10 of first 13 shots

Loss

Jan. 8

@ Cleveland

L, 95-79

LeBron and Co. too much to handle

Loss

Jan. 9

@ New Jersey

L, 99-88

Durant cold, just 5 of 14 shooting

Loss

Jan. 11

Dallas

L, 90-70

Sonics shoot 35.4 percent from the floor

Loss

Jan. 14

L.A. Lakers

L, 123-121

Kobe Bryant scores season-high 48

Loss

Jan. 16

@ New Orleans

L, 123-92

Hornets reserves score 52 points

NEW ORLEANS — The Sonics are back where they started, on an eight-game losing streak.

After opening the season with eight losses, Wednesday's 123-92 loss to the New Orleans Hornets in front of 9,882 in the New Orleans Arena shoved the team back again. The streak equals the fourth-longest losing stretch in team history.

Perhaps more frustrating is whatever energy was generated in Monday's overtime loss to the Los Angeles Lakers dissipated in a flash. A flash of Hornets point guard Chris Paul, the heft of center Tyson Chandler and the sure firing of old-standby shooter Peja Stojakovic, who led the team with 23 points and four three-pointers.

"We can't come out like a majority of teams and have a decent effort, we have to have a really good effort to win games, that's the way we are," Sonics forward Nick Collison said. "We had a really good effort against the Lakers, we were right there, got beat at the end, but tonight we had an average effort and we have to be above average — really good — for us to win."

It was a glowing night for the Hornets (26-12), who are on a three-game winning streak and reached a franchise record for wins through the first half of the season even though they are three games from the season's midpoint.

Center Tyson Chandler finished with 14 points and 21 rebounds. But it was the way he started that made history.

Chandler pulled down 17 rebounds in the first half, setting a franchise record for the number of rebounds in a half. His 13 defensive rebounds in the first half set another team record. His scavenging ways coupled with Seattle's 43-percent shooting to New Orleans' 51.6 percent robbed the Sonics of an avenue to get back into a game. They trailed 65-46 at halftime. New Orleans also outrebounded the Sonics, 53-41.

Center Kurt Thomas sat knee-deep in a bucket of ice water commiserating the regrettable night.

"Mainly we just missed a lot of shots and Tyson grabbed every one of them," Thomas said. "You've got to take your hat off to him. ... We've just got to shoot the ball better. We got off to a horrible start in the first quarter and it just carried over to the rest of the game."

The Sonics (9-29) briefly revitalized to open the third quarter, with their best flash of competition of the night.

Seattle opened the second half on an 11-2 run courtesy of better shooting and improved rebounding. Thomas scored twice, Jeff Green hit a driving layup, and Kevin Durant provided a one-handed dunk in transition. Earl Watson was fouled on a made shot on the following possession and made the free throw to slice the Hornets' lead to 67-57 with 9:41 remaining in the third quarter.

Collison's baseline jumper cut the margin to eight points with 8:23 remaining in the third quarter.

But New Orleans regrouped. Stojakovic hit a three-pointer with 6:58 remaining in the third to move the lead to 74-61 and the Hornets kept slipping the Sonics' defenses in the final five minutes of the third quarter. New Orleans exited the third with a 95-75 edge.

The opening of that quarter was the only time in the game the Sonics met the Hornets' aggression.

"When we did [match their intensity] — we were obviously upset after talking about it at halftime, and we came out and you see what we are capable of doing and for that six or seven minutes," Sonics coach P.J. Carlesimo said. "New Orleans didn't match our intensity, it was a night and day different team. They played hard, but you've got to keep playing hard for 48 minutes."

Durant led the Sonics with 20 points. Collison, who scored two points and grabbed five rebounds in 22 minutes, said the rebounding was hampered by the poor shooting.

"Offensive rebounding is a function of how you are playing," Collison said. "If you are playing well, and you're breaking defenses down and guys have to help, that opens things up. When you're not and you're forced to take tough jump shots, then not only is the ball not coming off in the rebounding area, but you know your man is right there with you because he didn't have to move."

The Monday-Wednesday schism in the Sonics' performance provided yet another example of their inconsistency.

"They're a good team, but with that being said we didn't play real well all night," Collison said. "Pretty much a bad effort all the way around. A lot of nights we haven't played well, hopefully that's not who we are."

The Sonics head to Memphis to play the Grizzlies on Friday for the second game in their four-game trip. But they didn't have much positive to take out of New Orleans.

Said Carlesimo: "It's not as frustrating as it is disappointing. ... [The Hornets are] a good team in their building. ... We just didn't meet the challenge of their intensity for too many minutes."

SEATTLE
min fgm-a ftm-a or-t a pf pts
Green 27:55 4-13 1-1 1-2 0 2 9
Collison 22:23 1-6 0-0 1-5 2 2 2
Thomas 22:29 5-8 2-2 1-5 1 3 12
Watson 24:25 6-9 3-3 1-3 11 2 17
Durant 29:31 9-15 1-1 1-7 6 0 20
Wilcox 18:29 3-8 2-3 0-4 0 2 8
Petro 20:38 2-7 0-0 3-7 0 3 4
Ridnour 23:35 0-3 3-4 0-3 2 1 3
Szczerbiak 23:17 6-11 0-0 0-3 2 1 14
Wilkins 21:25 0-4 0-0 0-2 5 2 0
Gelabale 5:53 1-2 0-0 0-0 0 0 3
Totals 37-86 12-14 8-41 29 18 92
Percentages: FG .430, FT .857. Three-point goals: 6-11, .545 (Watson 2-2, Szczerbiak 2-3, Gelabale 1-1, Durant 1-2, Collison 0-1, Ridnour 0-1, Wilkins 0-1). Team rebounds: 3. Team turnovers: 15 (26 PTS). Blocked shots: 4 (Thomas 2, Petro, Wilkins). Turnovers: 15 (Durant 4, Green 2, Ridnour 2, Watson 2, Gelabale, Petro, Szczerbiak, Wilcox, Wilkins). Steals: 6 (Thomas 2, Wilkins 2, Durant, Green). Technical fouls: None.
NEW ORLEANS
min fgm-a ftm-a or-t a pf pts
Stojakovic 29:57 6-11 7-7 1-4 1 1 23
West 25:54 8-17 3-4 3-11 3 4 19
Chandler 36:34 7-9 0-4 5-21 1 0 14
Paul 29:57 6-13 0-0 1-3 11 1 12
Peterson 20:34 1-9 0-0 0-1 1 1 3
Ely 23:53 4-9 0-1 1-3 1 1 8
Jackson 19:33 5-9 0-0 0-1 6 0 13
Bowen 13:00 1-1 0-0 2-2 2 0 2
Pargo 18:03 7-9 1-1 0-1 4 2 18
Armstrong 8:49 0-0 0-0 0-2 1 0 0
Butler 7:53 2-4 4-4 0-4 1 2 8
Vinicius 5:53 1-2 0-0 0-0 0 1 3
Totals 48-93 15-21 13-53 32 13 123
Percentages: FG .516, FT .714. Three-point goals: 12-22, .545 (Stojakovic 4-6, Pargo 3-3, Jackson 3-4, Vinicius 1-2, Peterson 1-5, Paul 0-2). Team rebounds: 5. Team turnovers: 13 (13 PTS). Blocked shots: 6 (Armstrong 2, Ely 2, Chandler, Pargo). Turnovers: 12 (Paul 4, Pargo 3, Armstrong, Butler, Chandler, Ely, Stojakovic). Steals: 7 (Chandler 2, Pargo 2, Armstrong, Butler, Paul). Technical fouls: Defensive three second, 6:26 third.
Seattle 18 28 29 17 — 92
New Orleans 30 35 30 28 — 123
Attendance: 9,882 (17,200). Time: 2:01. Officials: Ron Garretson, David Guthrie, Leon Wood.

Copyright © 2008 The Seattle Times Company

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