jbk1234 wrote:JonFromVA wrote:jbk1234 wrote:I suppose that the important thing is that Sexton eventually gets it regardless of why.
That said, Sexton really didn't make an effort to get his teammates involved until he started hearing Garland's footsteps. He's never made an effort on the defensive end and it shouldn't take his next contract being at risk  to get there.
I just struggle with the idea that a core guy can be satisfied with just getting buckets in the paint, and doing little else, while his team only wins 20 games three seasons in a row. It shouldn't have taken external incentives for him to do the things that were necessary to win more.
We need to cut everyone a little slack, though. We are dealing with a pandemic and there are limits what a player like Collin can do in an empty gym working by himself and even in the best of times there's no fixed time line for a young player to figure things out.
 
If he gets it now, and his on the court behavior changes (which has yet to happen), it will be water under the bridge. But it is disconcerting that it takes external incentives for him to focus on things that would result on the team performing better and possibly winning more. I'm not in his head but I'd hope he'd rather score less and win more than the other way around.
 
There's so much going on with an NBA player, all the money, the fame, dozens of people biding for his time, getting in his head, etc, etc. In the olden days, he'd have spent the past 3 years figuring out how to win in the NCAA and just be entering the league ... and some players still needed more time.
Mark Price (the greatest PG in Cavs history) averaged just 7 & 3 when he was Collin's age. We used the 7th pick in the draft on a PG because we feared Mark would bust. Fortunately he didn't need a lot more time ... but wow, imagine if Collin had only averaged 7 & 3 last year.
Developing players and getting them to where you want them to get is hard and the road is different for every player. We emphasized certain character traits in the hopes that the players we've drafted will eventually figure things out, but a lot of players have to get kicked to the curb and live without some of those paychecks before they really feel the need to change their habits.
We've force fed our young players minutes they never earned and put them in situations even a superstar would have struggled with ... it really warps perception. Other fans aren't going to recognize this, but we should.