A ninth straight loss would warrant any coach having a strong word with his or her team.
Yet, after what was an abysmal Nets performance that made for their longest losing streak this season, as well as the worst skid in the NBA, Jordi Fernández had more than a warning for his team.
He issued a challenge.
After watching his best player in Michael Porter Jr. score just nine points, Fernández yanked him off the court with 9:33 remaining in the third.
Porter didn’t return until 9:43 in the final quarter in the eventual 124-98 loss to the Heat on Tuesday night.
“I want Mike and the first group to play as hard as they can,” Fernández said. “I want to challenge them to do it, because I’ve seen them doing it, especially on the defensive end. If that happens, I can live with whatever happens. If that is there, then you’re being selfless, you’re playing for the team, and just good things happen. I’m trying to just challenge every guy in different ways.”
The Nets have their first chance to answer the call against the Heat again Thursday night.
For Fernández, it hopefully cannot be that much worse of a performance — one that Nic Claxton called “an all-around stinker.”
Miami’s physicality on defense held the Nets to only 38.4 percent shooting from the field (33-for-86) and a brutal 18.8 percent (6-for-32) from deep, which is their third-worst mark from beyond the arc in a single game this season. They also committed 18 costly turnovers.
It was easily Porter’s worst game of the season, shooting 3-for-17 and 0-for-9 from beyond the arc.
It was once thought that his first-half tear would have earned the 27-year-old his first All-Star nod as he averaged 25.6 points per game in the first 38 games of the season.
Yet, his production has fallen off since the break, averaging just 19.8 points per game.
However, the stat sheet and Fernández’s challenge don’t just come down to the starters and veteran players.
Twelve of those turnovers came from two rookies alone.
Nolan Traore, who started the game, scored 14 points and logged six turnovers without a single assist.
Ben Saraf, who stood in for Egor Dëmin as the backup point guard, also committed six turnovers against four assists.
It was the most either of them has committed in Brooklyn.
“[Traore and Saraf] need to grow. They need to grow and watch it and learn from it,” Fernández said. “And I know they’re better. It’s not an excuse if they’re young. I’ve watched them play and they’re way better than 12 turnovers. How they organize the team, how vocal they are, all that, it’s important.”
“Regardless how they happened, you can’t have that many [turnovers] for that many points,” forward Noah Clowney added. “I don’t know how many they scored off of [them], but even [if] we missed layups or they blocked shots, they were running the other way and scoring in transition because we don’t get back.”
The Nets (15-46), who sit second in the draft lottery race and 1 ¹/₂ games behind the Kings, are in the middle of a tanking season and trying to find some victories outside of the wins column.
However, it can weigh heavily on players as it has been made clear by the front office what the season mission is.
Still, the Nets will be challenged to reset Thursday and put up a fight in South Beach.
“I don’t know how to answer that. I take s–t day by day,” Clowney said when asked about the locker room environment during the losing streak. “I couldn’t tell you who we played last game. I try to forget about everything. Play, live in the moment. As far as the locker room, we’ll figure it out. We got to.”