Klomp wrote:younggunsmn wrote:Ant has 5 years and 400+ pro games under his belt.
And? 
LeBron James didn't win his first title until he had played 689 games. Michael Jordan took 509 games. Shaquille O'Neal took 534 games. None of them were drafted to what was at the time the least successful franchise in all four major professional sports.
 
"Took X years/games to win a title" is a dishonest argument.  Winning it all is not an honest measurement of growth.
Those guys all were all largely who they would become at their peak by 400 games, if not a lot sooner.  
Their winning habits and offensive/defensive identities were all well established by year 2 or 3 and those years were also right up there with their best if you want to judge by statistical benchmarks..
Winning titles came because their supporting casts improved and those teams developed winning chemistry and winning culture, which you can't win a title without.  
I want to believe Ant is going to get better and develop those winning habits and drop the losing habits.
But seeing regression in BBIQ and maturity from year 4 to year 5 makes me somewhat pessimistic.  
1.  Terrible late game and late shot clock decision making
2.  A large increase in whining about fouls and inability to handle adversity or control his emotions on the basketball court.  
3.  Lack of buy in and at times a willful disregard for the intentions of his coach. 
4.  Inconsistent effort defensively. 
These are all hallmarks of losing players and when Ant starts turning those 4 things around, only then will we see real growth from him.  
There's nothing he can add to his game in the gym this summer that will turn him into an MVP candidate.  
The growth he needs has to come from his mind and seeing the game unfold before him on the court.  
That means a lot of time in film study and discussing the game with coaches.
Yoga or meditation or some other form of peaceful mental discipline probably wouldnt hurt either.  
I would give Ant 3 goals for next year:
1.  Improve your Assist/TO ratio to 2.0/1 or better.  
His A/TO in his 5 years have been:
1.3
1.4
1.4
1.7
1.4
He's never going to be a MVP caliber player with those poor numbers.
SGA's Ast/TO have been 1.9 or higher in each of those same 5 years, with 2.4 this year.
He was at 1.7 his first year in OKC.
The best way to improve that in the short term is to worry about what you can control and that's eliminating your own sloppy turnovers from stuff like having a poor handle, dribbling into traffic, and not getting rid of the ball quickly enough when you recognize double and triple teams forming.  
2.  Get your effective FG% to 60%.  That means you shoot 40% from 3 and 60% from 2.  
And that all comes down to 2 things:  shot selection and finishing around the basket
3.  Get us back to being the #1 defense we were last year.  Be a leader on that end of the court like you are on the offensive end.  
Defense is not an opportunity to catch your breath for your next scoring opportunity.