Lowe's 10 things: LA's gamble on Westbrook, Chicago's woeful offense, and the meaning of a high five
This week's 10 Things highlights a gamble in Los Angeles, some rugged unsung guards, an awful season in Chicago, and the meaning of a high-five.
The day after the trade deadline — after upgrading the roster, but not finding that coveted «traditional» point guard — Lawrence Frank, the Clippers' president of basketball operations, described the point guard the Clippers wanted. The player would defend, and operate in an ecosystem in which Paul George and Kawhi Leonard would have the ball «60% of the time» — meaning, one would assume, the point guard in question would be a good shooter.
Now they've signed Westbrook, and Tyronn Lue, the Clippers coach, is talking about putting the ball in Westbrook's hands — even with Leonard and George on the floor — way more than the fictional scenario Frank described. Gulp.
The Clippers have some need for Westbrook's theoretical strengths. They are 20th in drives, and tied for 23rd in shots at the rim. They haven't generated as many catch-and-shoot 3s as in past seasons. They have more shooting around Westbrook than the laser-less Lakers did.
But I'm not sure those needs are so glaring; that Westbrook's strengths are what they were two or three seasons ago; or that this remodeled roster is built for an easy Westbrook fit.
The Clippers are closer to average in rim attacks and drives than they are to the basement. Their offense — including their ability to generate good 3s — has been elite with George and Leonard together, and Leonard looks more like his peak self every game. They are 12th in free throw rate.
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