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Here’s the Point
about James, Foye
Anyone who knows basketball understands success is predicated on
effective point guard play. No question the performance of Timberwolves’
point guards Mike James and Randy Foye will determine
whether the team makes the playoffs this year for the first time since
2004.
So
far neither James nor Foye have consistently played like point guards
who can transform the Wolves from their malaise of .500 basketball. The
Wolves’ play during the first half of the season has been characterized
by losing close games, not winning against inferior teams and
inconsistent team performance. A careless pass, a misguided dribble,
even stepping out of bounds at a game determining moment has too often
defined the Wolves’ point guards. A problem, too, is that neither James
nor Foye has inspired much praise as a defender.
Evidence of the team’s frustrations with losing close games is
dramatized by the record since Randy Wittman became coach on
January 23. The Wolves are 2-5 under Wittman with four losses by three
points or less.
The
opportunity remains for James and Foye to make the Wolves better. But
will it happen? Although James was a coveted off-season free agent
acquisition, talk is that Toronto, his former team, wanted to change him
from a starter (he averaged 20.3 points, 5.8 assists last season) to a
reserve. As the Wolves’ starting point guard his play and statistics
(11.1 points, 4.1 assists) have been mostly underwhelming and his star
season with Toronto looks more like an aberration than a sign of results
to come.
Foye,
the team’s No. 1 pick in last year’s draft, understandably plays at
times like the rookie he is, making mistakes in judgment and execution
that cause problems. His stats (8.9 points, 2.5 assists per game) are
somewhat impressive when compared with others in the NBA’s 2006-07
rookie class but they aren’t of the quality that will fast track the
team to the playoffs.
Neither James or Foye are highly creative playmakers, the kind of
players who look like they will ever stir comparisons with Steve Nash,
Jason Kidd, Chris Paul, Baron Davis, and,
yes, former Timberwolf Stephon Marbury, the best Wolves point
guard ever. James or Foye can’t play with flash but by simply improving
their shooting, setting up their teammates and providing solid
leadership, including in game deciding moments, they can give the Wolves
a better chance to win (example: see former Timberwolf Chauncey
Billups in Detroit).
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