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I will be interested to see how Len plays against Nurkic on opening night. That will be a true test for him.
Chandler has 9 rebounds in less than half the time Len has been on the floor. If Len wants to have a future here, he has to improve that.Len has 20 points, 7 blocks and 4 rebounds thus far. When the light come on for Len, he can be dominant.
Chandler has 9 rebounds in less than half the time Len has been on the floor. If Len wants to have a future here, he has to improve that.
And starting him won't make a bit of difference in that respect.
In the Australian league, perhaps. A non-NBA exhibition game is not the the time to make any generalizations about Len. Or when he has one decent game, then stinks it up for three. Over and over.Len has 20 points, 7 blocks and 4 rebounds thus far. When the light come on for Len, he can be dominant.
He has had a remarkably consistent preseason. He is only 24. He lost a lot of time in his first two years to injury. Coaching had him playing away from the basket which is silly. I am not sure how much of Len's past inconsistency is actually Len's fault.In the Australian league, perhaps. A non-NBA exhibition game is not the the time to make any generalizations about Len. Or when he has one decent game, then stinks it up for three. Over and over.
At this stage of his career, Alex Len should have developed some sort of consistency.
He has had a remarkably consistent preseason. He is only 24. He lost a lot of time in his first two years to injury. Coaching had him playing away from the basket which is silly. I am not sure how much of Len's past inconsistency is actually Len's fault.
It's just the Suns luck that they get a young big who is starting to play well just after they declined to lock him up long term.
He has had a remarkably consistent preseason. He is only 24. He lost a lot of time in his first two years to injury. Coaching had him playing away from the basket which is silly. I am not sure how much of Len's past inconsistency is actually Len's fault.
It's just the Suns luck that they get a young big who is starting to play well just after they declined to lock him up long term.
In the Australian league, perhaps. A non-NBA exhibition game is not the the time to make any generalizations about Len. Or when he has one decent game, then stinks it up for three. Over and over.
At this stage of his career, Alex Len should have developed some sort of consistency.
I don't know what to make of any of this. Len supposedly talked to teams around the league this summer and they said what they wanted to see out of him. Now a light goes off in his head and he now "gets it". So now he's going to tear up the league..sink our draft...and then bail.
WHY DID THE SUNS RE-SIGN LEN?
I want to reply. I want to talk about this. But I just, well... that avatar.Read somewhere that Len practiced in Maryland with his former college coaches during the offseason. Getting back to basics helped him, he tried simplifying things and it looks like he has, the Suns seem to be expecting less of him also, not trying to run the offense through him or trying to get him to hit 18 footers.
The Suns desperately need a big man coach on the staff though, it might be too late for Len, but we still have Bender and Chriss here for the next 3-4 years, at least. Chandler doesn't seem to be cutting it, it doesn't seem he's helped Len at all since he's been here. He's not the sort of guy who can teach offense either because he was never really an offensive threat. There wasn't a big man on Watson's staff last year either but there should be. I believe Mark West is still in the front office and he works with some of our bigs but he was really only good for 6 smart fouls when he played, with maybe 1/4 of the offense Chandler has. I'm not sure who is available out there, as far as full time developmental coaches but the Suns should have looked to send Len to work with someone like Hakeem at least once over the last few summers, who holds camps for players every summer that a lot of NBA players attend, not just Centers. The list of players who have worked with him is pretty impressive. Maybe it wouldn't help Len but it couldn't have hurt.
Read somewhere that Len practiced in Maryland with his former college coaches during the offseason. Getting back to basics helped him, he tried simplifying things and it looks like he has, the Suns seem to be expecting less of him also, not trying to run the offense through him or trying to get him to hit 18 footers.
The Suns desperately need a big man coach on the staff though, it might be too late for Len, but we still have Bender and Chriss here for the next 3-4 years, at least. Chandler doesn't seem to be cutting it, it doesn't seem he's helped Len at all since he's been here. He's not the sort of guy who can teach offense either because he was never really an offensive threat. There wasn't a big man on Watson's staff last year either but there should be. I believe Mark West is still in the front office and he works with some of our bigs but he was really only good for 6 smart fouls when he played, with maybe 1/4 of the offense Chandler has. I'm not sure who is available out there, as far as full time developmental coaches but the Suns should have looked to send Len to work with someone like Hakeem at least once over the last few summers, who holds camps for players every summer that a lot of NBA players attend, not just Centers. The list of players who have worked with him is pretty impressive. Maybe it wouldn't help Len but it couldn't have hurt.