Russell Westbrick Discussion: Clipper Gonna Clip

Discussion in 'NBA Discussion' started by LaVarBallsDad, Jul 29, 2021.

  1. ElginTheGreat

    ElginTheGreat - Lakers MVP -

    Joined:
    Oct 15, 2014
    Messages:
    10,898
    Likes Received:
    30,260
    Trophy Points:
    113
    Offline
    On Hayward, I believe he has played more than Kawhi or Paul George the last 3 years but those two seem to completely avoid getting labeled and it’s really annoying to me.
     
    sirronstuff, LTLakerFan and abeer3 like this.
  2. ElginTheGreat

    ElginTheGreat - Lakers MVP -

    Joined:
    Oct 15, 2014
    Messages:
    10,898
    Likes Received:
    30,260
    Trophy Points:
    113
    Offline
    That said, I wouldn’t fixate too much on just him. We have no idea what a deal will look like as I’ve seen a few that had us not taking on any injured players. Again, we will see. Rarely do our moves get rumored about early and the Russ trade is a prime example of that.
     
    KareemtheGreat33 likes this.
  3. abeer3

    abeer3 - Lakers Legend -

    Joined:
    Oct 5, 2014
    Messages:
    28,030
    Likes Received:
    75,634
    Trophy Points:
    113
    Offline
    again, i think you also have to look past russ's attitude this year. that's what ended up sealing it for me. i just hated what he had to say about his and the team's play pretty much all season long. just so little accountability, so much passive aggressive finger pointing, so much focus on unimportant stuff like triple doubles and scoring average when nobody even asked about it. this is just not the mindset of a guy who's putting winning first, imo.

    i thought him coming here after talking to lebron and AD meant he was ready to be a third wheel and fit in, and instead he took it as AD and lebron were ready for him to be focal point or something. and just...no. no.

    only AD is injury prone.
     
    Juronimo, Cookie, Weezy and 4 others like this.
  4. ElginTheGreat

    ElginTheGreat - Lakers MVP -

    Joined:
    Oct 15, 2014
    Messages:
    10,898
    Likes Received:
    30,260
    Trophy Points:
    113
    Offline

    Completely agree.
     
  5. ElginTheGreat

    ElginTheGreat - Lakers MVP -

    Joined:
    Oct 15, 2014
    Messages:
    10,898
    Likes Received:
    30,260
    Trophy Points:
    113
    Offline
    I’d also add that bringing Russ back and then hoping a new coach would figure it out is pretty much the same thing we did last season to bad results.

    We traded for him based on name, his numbers, and the word of him, LeBron and AD. We ran with the belief that the coaches and players would figure out how to use him. No matter how you feel about the players or coaches it’s clear that was a colossal failure.

    You can not just roll the ball out there again and hope that a new coach and the players will figure it out.

    The new coach has to know exactly how that’s going to work and get everyone on board with it. That’s before you even get to the question of whether whatever this unnamed coach came up with was a winning formula or how things will look while they are all trying to figure it out….again.

    On the other hand, you could make some trades and put together a roster based on modern hoops concepts and that complements AD and LeBron right now. Then you try to make one more run at a title using the formula that already worked. I greatly prefer that approach and will continue hoping for that.
     
    Last edited: Apr 16, 2022
    Cookie, Weezy, LaVarBallsDad and 2 others like this.
  6. karacha

    karacha Moderator Staff Member

    Joined:
    Sep 6, 2014
    Messages:
    8,624
    Likes Received:
    27,962
    Trophy Points:
    113
    Offline
    The only reason to keep Russ is to use both him and Bron as expiring contracts and literally rebuild the team from scratch. Otherwise, you get something from him, re-tool and try again. Needless to say, I prefer the second option.
     
  7. LakerFanIam

    LakerFanIam - Lakers 6th Man -

    Joined:
    Oct 8, 2014
    Messages:
    1,777
    Likes Received:
    5,177
    Trophy Points:
    113
    Offline
    This probably won't be a popular opinion, but I'm fine with moving any 2 of the "Big Three".
    I don't have a preference on which one we keep either, it all depends on what pieces we get back for the other Two.
    We're in complete rebuild mode anyways.. I say better sooner than later.
     
  8. LTLakerFan

    LTLakerFan - Lakers Legend -

    Joined:
    Oct 5, 2014
    Messages:
    36,434
    Likes Received:
    60,623
    Trophy Points:
    113
    Location:
    So Cal
    Offline
    Weezy, alam1108 and ElginTheGreat like this.
  9. LTLakerFan

    LTLakerFan - Lakers Legend -

    Joined:
    Oct 5, 2014
    Messages:
    36,434
    Likes Received:
    60,623
    Trophy Points:
    113
    Location:
    So Cal
    Offline
    ^^^

    Russell Westbrook’s lack of self-awareness apparent in his deflection and blame during Lakers exit interviews

    [​IMG]
    By Jovan Buha Apr 12, 2022[​IMG] 321 [​IMG]
    EL SEGUNDO, Calif. — While many Los Angeles Lakers players preached accountability and self-reflection over the issues that plagued their team during exit interviews on Monday, Russell Westbrook remained defiantly in denial about why things went awry.

    Throughout his 21-minute post-exit-interview press conference, Westbrook doubled down on the consistent excuses he used amid a subpar season — and debuted new explanations to absolve his responsibility in constructing his Lakers experience.

    Westbrook believes one of the primary issues with his season was that his negative reputation preceded him and he was never given a “fair chance” with the organization.

    “When I first got here, unfortunately, people create narratives of who I am, and what I do, and what I believe in, that just aren’t true,” Westbrook said. “I’m always having to prove myself again year after year after year, which to me is really unfair. There’s no reason for me to have to do that. So when I first got in here, I just felt that I never was given a fair chance just to be who I needed to be to help this team.”

    Westbrook specifically mentioned recent media reports that detailed his disconnect with the Lakers’ coaching staff behind the scenes due to his unwillingness to accept criticism or adapt from his ball-dominant game.

    “The famous ‘source’ stories that came out about myself, whether it be between me and the staff, me and Frank, me and the fans, there’s just so many made-up stories that are not true,” Westbrook said. “It’s just always having to fight against that constantly. It’s just not (being) given a fair chance.”

    When asked to directly refute a report or anecdote, Westbrook declined.

    “No,” Westbrook said. “I can’t. You know the examples. I don’t want to get in details, what story, who wrote it, why … it’s pointless. It really doesn’t matter because it’s not true. If it doesn’t come from me (it is not true).”

    Westbrook’s criticism quickly extended to former head coach Frank Vogel, who was fired on Monday morning.

    After regularly taking veiled shots at Vogel, particularly after games in which Vogel benched him during the fourth quarter, Westbrook attempted to flip the narrative and say that Vogel instead had a problem with him.

    “I think it’s unfortunate, to be honest, because I’ve never had an issue with any of my coaches before,” Westbrook said. “I’m not sure what his issue was with me or I’m not sure why, but I can’t really give you an answer to why we really never connected …

    “That’s something that he has to answer. But I never, from the get-go, was feeling like (we were on the same page.) I was having to try to prove myself to him and my capabilities and what I’ve been able to do for this game. And it’s unfortunate but it’s really not (my fault). It’s kind of out of my hands.”

    Multiple recent media reports contradict that notion, though.

    Vogel was reportedly one of Westbrook’s lone allies, optimistically believing that he would eventually turn his play around and insisting that he remain in the starting lineup despite some in the organization pleading for Vogel to bring Westbrook off the bench to split him and James up.

    The postgame comments throughout the season refute that sentiment, too.

    Westbrook repeatedly criticized Vogel and the coaching staff in a passive-aggressive manner. Meanwhile, Vogel routinely defended Westbrook’s performance despite his starting point guard clanking jumpers, throwing passes out of bounds and failing to rotate or keep track of his man defensively.

    Westbrook’s teammates noticed the negative trickle-down effect of the disconnect.

    “You’re talking about the point guard of our team, right? That’s usually the head of the snake,” Wayne Ellington said. “He doesn’t feel like he had the best year of his career by any means, but as the point guard of the team, if he doesn’t feel comfortable on the floor, he doesn’t feel the connection within his game, that kind of trickles down as well.”

    Westbrook’s grievances then moved on to his on-court dynamic with his star teammates, LeBron James and Anthony Davis.

    In postgame press conferences, James and Davis supported the concept of “let Russ be Russ” as the best strategy to empower Westbrook and unlock the best version of the former MVP.

    But Westbrook revealed that he felt that notion was disingenuous.

    “Yeah, (they said it),” Westbrook said. “But that wasn’t true. Let’s be honest.”

    He also took another shot at Vogel, placing much of the blame on the star trio’s lackluster record — they were 11-10 in their 21 games together — on the way they were used offensively, while also mentioning their obvious fit issues and unfortunate health.

    “I mean, it’s a combination of where we are on the floor, positioning, fit and challenge, trial and error, being able to play on the floor with each other,” Westbrook said. “Finding ways to be able to utilize us to the best of our abilities. It’s that simple.”

    Westbrook said he was “very rarely” able to feel like himself in Los Angeles.

    “I embraced every change,” Westbrook said. “There wasn’t a time where I was like, ‘Oh, I’m not doing this.’ There were conversations where I may have felt like what I bring to this team and my abilities to be able to help the team win may not have been in the cards of kind of how the coaching staff wanted to play. … I was coming in with open arms. I got no reason to (refuse anything). I knew coming here I would have to make the biggest sacrifice of anyone.”

    To his credit, he acknowledged that his play was below his own standards for one of the few times this season.

    But he partially neutralized the impact of his commentary by shifting to a more ego-driven tone. He said that his internal scale is the only opinion he cares about — another sign he doesn’t process external feedback/criticism — and then added that his biggest gripe with his statistical production was that he didn’t hit his usual triple-double averages.

    “Just my play, in general, not my best season,” Westbrook said. “Just going off my own personal scale, because that’s the only thing I go off of regardless of this season. … Obviously I’m coming off averaging a triple-double, so anything less than that would not be a good season for me in my eyes, you know what I’m saying? So that’s why the scale of where it comes from is a little bit different.”

    Westbrook also acknowledged the effects of his problems with his hometown crowd, whom he discussed with a dismissive tone in the final weeks of the season after taking offense to the crowd shaming his surname by calling him “Westbrick.” The Crpyto.com Arena crowd booed Westbrook over a half-dozen times during the season, forming a hostile dynamic that he felt uncomfortable bringing his family around. His contract and underperformance made him an easy target.

    “I would probably say the only thing that was a problem or issue was with just the reception I got from people here,” Westbrook said. “For any reason, whatever that may be. Whether it’s the fans or whatever, it wasn’t so great.”

    All told, Westbrook isn’t wrong. There is some truth in some of his pushback. The Lakers’ troubles aren’t binary. Westbrook has probably received too great a share of the overall blame. There are numerous factors that compounded into a disappointing 33-49 record and the West’s 11th spot.

    But Westbrook’s attempt to deflect and finger-point ultimately rings hollow.

    The Lakers indisputably went out of their way to accommodate their highest-paid player ($44 million), from giving him spots in the starting and closing lineups at times he didn’t deserve them, to letting him handle primary ballhandling duties, to handling him with kid gloves in critical media sessions. Vogel tweaked his defensive schemes to factor in Westbrook’s limitations.

    Even Westbrook’s superstar teammates made notable adjustments. Davis slid up to center more despite his historic hesitance to better space the floor. James even played some small-ball center, and implemented more screening, rolling and cutting into his game to remain effective off the ball when Westbrook had it.

    In contrast, Westbrook, who promised James and Davis last offseason that he would adjust more than either player, never expanded his skill set to become effective without the ball in his hands. He rarely screened on or off the ball, cut hard, or relocated around the perimeter.

    Westbrook obviously sacrificed, to some extent, by sharing ballhandling duties with James in crunch time and pivotal moments (and sometimes even ceding them). But that’s about the bare minimum when stars are teaming up. Otherwise, he was largely the same player, with the same strengths, only decreased, and the same weaknesses, only increased. He also clearly cares more about external perception and validation than he tries to let on.

    On the whole, there is a clear cognitive dissonance between the player Westbrook is and the player he thinks he is.

    He is no longer an All-Star or All-NBA player. He’s declined as a jump-shooter, finisher and defender. He was arguably the worst high-volume shooter in the league. He no longer impacts games with his energy and effort the way he used to.

    His lack of gravity can suffocate his team’s offense, barring the other four players all being above-average shooters. It’s difficult for a coach to find four shooters to place around Westbrook in every lineup. His turnovers are often momentum-swinging. Defensively, he’s typically disinterested, to say the least. He didn’t box out.

    The Lakers were just 20-37 in the 57 games that Westbrook appeared in with one or both of James and Davis out. If Westbrook was the Oklahoma City version of himself — or even the post-All-Star-break Houston or Washington version of himself — the Lakers’ record is probably closer to, if not above, .500 in 57 games. Most advanced metrics deem Westbrook as somewhere between an average-to-major-net-negative player.

    Yet that is not how he views himself. He hasn’t accepted that he’s moved into a different phase of his Hall of Fame career. He believes he’s entitled to playing time and a role because of who he used to be. He lacks self-awareness. And he can’t properly adjust his game — and become the proverbial star in his new role — until he adjusts his perspective.

    Which makes the uncertainty regarding his future so interesting.

    The tone of Westbrook’s exit-interview comments opposed his rosy proclamation last week after the Lakers were eliminated from the Play-In tournament that “the plan” would be for him to exercise his $47 million player option and return to the Lakers so that he, James and Davis could try to jell again in a second season together. Westbrook spoke more like a player that was ready to move on.

    With regards to free agency and his future, Westbrook said he hasn’t “thought that far into anything.”

    “I’ll make the decision,” Westbrook said. “That’s why it’s called ‘player option.'”

    That decision will have a significant impact on the direction of the Lakers’ offseason.

    Lakers vice president of basketball operations and general manager Rob Pelinka, who indicated the franchise will not tolerate mediocrity next season and will aggressively pursue upgrades to the roster via trade or free agency, effusively praised Westbrook’s career accomplishments but left open the (likely) possibility that Los Angeles tries to trade him to appease him.

    “Like any player, we’ll partner with him after that decision is made about what’s best for his future,” Pelinka said.

    Based on Westbrook’s interpretation of his past experience with the Lakers and his present abilities, his plans appear to be finding a situation in which he can be treated like a superstar and refrain from accepting any substantive blame.
     
  10. lakerjones

    lakerjones Moderator Staff Member

    Joined:
    Sep 7, 2014
    Messages:
    10,685
    Likes Received:
    31,803
    Trophy Points:
    113
    Location:
    La La land
    Offline
    Gotta part ways with him. Good article.
     
  11. abeer3

    abeer3 - Lakers Legend -

    Joined:
    Oct 5, 2014
    Messages:
    28,030
    Likes Received:
    75,634
    Trophy Points:
    113
    Offline
    he's really going "fake news" on us? anything he doesn't say isn't true? that's totally insane.

    this guy must not have watched the games, either. so many people didn't watch westbrook play this year!

    show me one game where westbrook's failed boxout definitely cost the team the game. gotcha!

    anyway, i would actually be interested in reading a defense piece of westbrook by...anyone, frankly. westbrook's brother can write it for all i care. but it needs to point to facts. westbrook is literally inventing a separate reality and then bristling at people who would like substantive support for it. help me help you--which stories were made up? you care enough to b**** about them now, months later, but you have no idea which things were said that were both harmful and false?

    and your fan reception was about you randomly hitting the side of the backboard on open jumpshots early in the clock like 27 times this year. are you going to tell me those were fake, too? what's real?
     
  12. karacha

    karacha Moderator Staff Member

    Joined:
    Sep 6, 2014
    Messages:
    8,624
    Likes Received:
    27,962
    Trophy Points:
    113
    Offline
    [​IMG]
     
  13. ElginTheGreat

    ElginTheGreat - Lakers MVP -

    Joined:
    Oct 15, 2014
    Messages:
    10,898
    Likes Received:
    30,260
    Trophy Points:
    113
    Offline
    :LLLLLebronlaughing::LLLLLebronlaughing::LLLLLebronlaughing:
     
  14. LTLakerFan

    LTLakerFan - Lakers Legend -

    Joined:
    Oct 5, 2014
    Messages:
    36,434
    Likes Received:
    60,623
    Trophy Points:
    113
    Location:
    So Cal
    Offline
    @abeer3 …. yeah I almost put into my intro something about Brick playing the “fake news” card too.
     
    sirronstuff and abeer3 like this.
  15. FrontOfJersey22

    FrontOfJersey22 - Lakers All Star -

    Joined:
    Oct 21, 2021
    Messages:
    5,210
    Likes Received:
    8,922
    Trophy Points:
    113
    Offline
    sirronstuff, abeer3 and LTLakerFan like this.
  16. Weezy

    Weezy Moderator Staff Member

    Joined:
    Sep 6, 2014
    Messages:
    18,573
    Likes Received:
    75,420
    Trophy Points:
    113
    Location:
    Anaheim
    Offline
    Wow, this article was spot on, and damning.
     
  17. ZenMaster

    ZenMaster - Lakers All Star -

    Joined:
    Oct 5, 2014
    Messages:
    6,025
    Likes Received:
    13,385
    Trophy Points:
    113
    Offline
    Always thought he was a moron.
     
  18. svtzr

    svtzr - Lakers Starter -

    Joined:
    Nov 13, 2016
    Messages:
    2,668
    Likes Received:
    7,130
    Trophy Points:
    113
    Offline
    Houston might be labelled as gimmicky to a lot of people, but they were on pace for a 55-60 win season after they figured out how to get the most out of Harden and Westbrook (this trend started before they traded away Capela and lasted for 2/3rds of the season). They also only had Gordon for 50% of the season, and Jeff Green for only 18 games.

    Not sure you can blame Westbrook for Washington, they didn’t have the talent to contend. Westbrook underachieved here but we also had our two main stars miss 50% of the season which was the main problem.
     
  19. svtzr

    svtzr - Lakers Starter -

    Joined:
    Nov 13, 2016
    Messages:
    2,668
    Likes Received:
    7,130
    Trophy Points:
    113
    Offline
    Anyway, I’m done going around in a circle on this subject. Whether Westbrook is here or not next season has nothing to do with me convincing anyone that he is salvageable or has a good attitude amongst the roster or is a good mentor. I’m going to support the team regardless of whether any player is here or not.

    I just don’t want us making bad long term moves to get rid of Westbrook that is literally a short term pain (expires in a season).

    What will dictate him being here is whether AD and Lebron want him here still and they believe he’s the best running mate for them.

    As to a coach we should interview coaches and get their input on what they would do with this roster and whether they want Westbrook on it or off it. And what kind of players they would like. What a weird idea to work with your coaching on building out their roster right? So if AD and Lebron want him here, you hire a coach who has an idea on what he would do with all 3.
     
  20. abeer3

    abeer3 - Lakers Legend -

    Joined:
    Oct 5, 2014
    Messages:
    28,030
    Likes Received:
    75,634
    Trophy Points:
    113
    Offline
    yeah, imagine if we did that before trading last year's team for this year's, right?

    and you point to houston's success, but i point to the fact that they tore down a top-tier team to make westbrook work. i'm just not interested. he's simply not good enough anymore to adjust to him.

    do you disagree?
     

Share This Page