Does Russell Westbrook’s polarizing game have a shelf life?

0
700


SITTING IN THE back corner of the visitors locker room in New Orleans after a close win on Nov. 11 — one day before his 31st birthday — Russell Westbrook gives a nod of approval.

You may approach.

The Houston Rockets have just beaten the Pelicans 122-116, with Westbrook scoring 26 points, plus all the other usuals in the box score — four assists, five rebounds, four steals. He had gone 11-of-21 from the field and 1-of-8 from 3. He had galvanized the Rockets in the second half, with back-to-back driving layups to finish the third and a battering-ram dunk to open the fourth. But down the stretch, it had been James Harden‘s game to win — and he did just that, scoring 19 of his 39 points in the decisive fourth quarter.

It is 10 games into the Westbrook-Harden experiment, and the results thus far have been mixed. That lone 3-pointer against the Pels was only Westbrook’s ninth of the season — on 41 attempts — and he has continued to search for a rhythm after offseason surgeries on his left hand and right knee and a limited training camp.

The media clear the locker room after Harden talks, unwilling to wait out Westbrook, who is in no hurry to leave as he watches the final minutes of the San Francisco 49ersSeattle Seahawks game on Monday Night Football. Westbrook emerges and starts the process of assembling his postgame outfit — a black trench coat with lime green lining over a T-shirt.

Westbrook is in a good mood. A fine win, a solid performance and some momentum. He is up for a couple of questions. After a brief negotiation, he agrees to three.

He is 30 years old now, and another birthday is mere hours away. He is asked: When the speed burst lags, the first step isn’t as electric and the bounce isn’t as spring-loaded, what kind of player will Russell Westbrook be? How does he plan to evolve?

Westbrook prides himself on playing the same way every night, often boasting that no one in the league can do what he does at the level he does it. He has gotten to this point, a transcendent record breaker, by doing it his way.

He has been asked about this before, and it annoyed him then. He will entertain it now, but he offers a polite warning.

“You already know what I’m going to say.”


FOR YEARS, HE had flat-out ignored The Question, staring off into the void like a flight attendant was giving him safety instructions. When he did, Westbrook’s response — or lack thereof — could be viewed two ways: as a ferocious commitment to remain rooted in the present or a denial to accept there might eventually be a need to change.

He is a freak athlete, a top 1 percenter in NBA history in that regard, but his tool set has historically had its limitations. He is not a gifted shooter or even an above-average one. He had to teach himself court vision. He isn’t a shepherd of offense. He has always claimed to be a point guard, but that was more of a defiant middle finger to his critics than an actual characterization of how he played.



Source : ESPN