Las Vegas Review-Journal

Bench energy is real, really loud, at restart

NBA subs to provide impactful support

- By Tim Reynolds The Associated Press

LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. — Dion Waiters took an open 3-opener and about 75 feet away, a dozen or so of his Los Angeles Lakers teammates all seemed to leap from their seats in unison.

“SAY CHEEEESE!” they yelled, dragging out the last syllable for effect.

At Staples Center back in Los Angeles, such a yell would have been heard by the Jack Nicholson-types in the super-expensive seats. But at the NBA restart, where the only fans inside the building are the ones wearing uniforms, that sort of enthusiasm is most definitely getting noticed.

At the scrimmage games at Walt Disney World over the past few days, bench energy has been real — and often loud.

“It’s a bunch of different things that they’ll be screaming,” said Waiters, whose teammates were playing off his “Philly Cheese” nickname with the salute they directed his way. “But it feels good. That’s the only thing I got. Some guys like myself, we like to play off the crowd and their enjoyment. But the teammates, they’re there, supporting you. It’s a win-win.”

There will be some crowdnoise elements when the seeding games — essentiall­y the resumption of the regular season — begin Thursday night. Music will blare and the 17-foot video boards surroundin­g three sides of the courts in each arena will even sometimes show real fans who logged in to “cheer” for their team.

But the biggest source of cheerleadi­ng will come from the benches, and some coaches are even encouragin­g players not in the game to be active that way.

“To reference that and try to coach it and try to praise it, it’s on my mind,” Philadelph­ia coach Brett Brown said. “To ignore it and not reference it, I don’t do that.”

Brown’s 76ers had the NBA’S best home record this season, going 29-2 in games at Wells Fargo Center. He’d love to see his players replicate that energy in all the neutral-site games that will be played the rest of the way this season.

“You have to decide where you want to spend your money and that one is important to me,” Brown said. “You’re talking about our spirit enduring. Anything you can do to help that — point it out, praise it, coach it — is on my mind.”

When Deandre Ayton of the Phoenix Suns made a 3-pointer in a scrimmage on Sunday against Boston, something he’s never done in a “real” game during his two NBA seasons, some of his teammates leaped over the video board at the corner of their bench and onto the floor in celebratio­n.

 ?? Mark J. Terrill The Associated Press ?? Clippers substitute­s celebrate from the bench versus the Cavs on Jan. 14.
Mark J. Terrill The Associated Press Clippers substitute­s celebrate from the bench versus the Cavs on Jan. 14.

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