islanders11040 wrote:24istheLAW wrote:GimmeDat wrote:The Jaylen Brown pick copped a lot of flak at the time, but I think it was a fair move by Ainge. You can definitely justify him at #3 given the tools he has.
Very divisive prospect but he's got a workers attitude and has shown some solid things so far.
The key for Brown is that he's not being asked to put up gaudy totals, just play a role off the bench as an athletic defensive G/F.
He'll have a few huge scoring games here and there as a small-ball 4 that will get people talking. But for the most part his rookie year will likely be defined by how well he defends.
Im getting the impression hes being asked to play the Justice WInslow role for his rookie year before being asked to do more down the line with development. I would say the right decision.
Yeah, that's a good way to describe what they have in mind at the defensive end.
Offensively, he's pretty different than Winslow. He doesn't have nearly the same touch around the basket, and isn't as good of a ballhandler, cutter, or facilitator. But on the other hand. I think his shot and ISO/midrange game have more potential.
Right now the biggest thing for Brown is going to be to become a better cutter so he can get shots within the flow of the offense. Shooting an okay clip on turnaround shots and out-of-control drives is fine during the summer - but he won't get those shots in the regular season.
Like I said, there are going to be a few games this year where the Celtics are facing a team with some Luis Scola type at the 4, and Jaylen gets a ton of minutes there and scores 30 pts off the bounce. But he needs to be a better cutter to hit 12 pts more regularly, rather than disappear offensively on nights his 3 pt shot is off or he doesn't have a nice matchup.