mook
The 2018-19 season was the best I've seen
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I actually have been closely watching CJ the last couple games. I can see why Stotts is patient with him. CJ's priority is to first do no harm. He's not taking bad shots, he's not completely blowing defensive assignments, he's not stopping ball movement, he's not fouling excessively.
Most rookies have the benefit of beginning their first year against guys who aren't playing in midseason form, and going up against other rookies who are just as bewildered as they are. CJ has no such advantage. He's been thrown into the deep end of the pool on a team with a huge target on its back and an offense that was already humming like a finely tuned machine.
Remember, it's been a full year since he last played competitive basketball, and even then he was going against the likes of Virginia Commonwealth and Quinnipiac, schools I have never even heard of until I looked it up just now.
He's a 4 year player (well, 3 and a half, anyway) so it's maybe unsurprising that he plays relatively mistake-free basketball. Still, given his circumstances it's nice to see, and hints that there could be much bigger things to come when he finally starts figuring things out.
I'm not willing to claim his absence of failure is a success, but after seeing Lillard take off last year, having seen his overall court demeanor, his generally error-free play, and all of this in the context of a guy who is doing this with so little preparation to be doing as well as he is, I think Stotts is handling his minutes perfectly.
Most rookies have the benefit of beginning their first year against guys who aren't playing in midseason form, and going up against other rookies who are just as bewildered as they are. CJ has no such advantage. He's been thrown into the deep end of the pool on a team with a huge target on its back and an offense that was already humming like a finely tuned machine.
Remember, it's been a full year since he last played competitive basketball, and even then he was going against the likes of Virginia Commonwealth and Quinnipiac, schools I have never even heard of until I looked it up just now.
He's a 4 year player (well, 3 and a half, anyway) so it's maybe unsurprising that he plays relatively mistake-free basketball. Still, given his circumstances it's nice to see, and hints that there could be much bigger things to come when he finally starts figuring things out.
I'm not willing to claim his absence of failure is a success, but after seeing Lillard take off last year, having seen his overall court demeanor, his generally error-free play, and all of this in the context of a guy who is doing this with so little preparation to be doing as well as he is, I think Stotts is handling his minutes perfectly.




