Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Shamet’s used to moving without the ball

Former Clipper says his experience playing with superstars helped him adjust to his new super team, the Nets.

- By Andrew Greif

Having been traded from Philadelph­ia to the Clippers as a rookie two years ago, Landry Shamet has gone through the “eerie and interestin­g experience” of returning to the city where he once lived to face a team for whom he once played.

Still, when Shamet and his new team, the Brooklyn Nets, landed Wednesday in Los Angeles for a five-day, two-game stay, he found that the pandemic had made this particular experience much stranger. Confined to a hotel because of local coronaviru­s restrictio­ns, the 6-foot-4 guard couldn’t visit the South Bay home he purchased after his first season. So he binge-watched Apple TV and read.

“It is weird not going from the airport and taking the regular route that I would take to get back home,” Shamet, 23, said during a videoconfe­rence Saturday, one day before facing the Clippers at Staples Center. “But nonetheles­s, I’m here and I’m glad to be back here and kind of relive some of the memories, I guess.”

Asked for his takeaways from 97 games with the Clippers, Shamet said he “could go a number of ways with that,” because they ran the spectrum from exultation to dejection. Shamet sank the game-winning shot to cap a 31-point comeback that stunned the top-seeded Golden State Warriors in a roaring Oracle Arena in the 2019 playoffs’ first round. A special memory, he said, was listening to former coach Doc Rivers’ discussion­s last summer about social justice issues, “and him empowering us to speak our opinions.”

Yet last September, Shamet also witnessed the collapse of championsh­ip ambitions when the team couldn’t hold a 3-1 series lead against Denver in the second round of the playoffs. It would be understand­able if Shamet chose to largely forget his final season with the Clippers, when injuries and new rotations made it difficult to gain consistenc­y. Instead, in its own way, the experience has proved invaluable since a draft-night trade to the Nets.

Joining a locker room that had Kevin Durant, Kyrie Irving and eventually James Harden was no shock for Shamet. He’d already learned what works and what doesn’t while playing alongside Kawhi Leonard and Paul George last season, and the similar experience of counting Joel Embiid, Jimmy Butler and Ben Simmons as teammates for half his rookie season in Philadelph­ia.

Each personalit­y is different. But having played with eight All-NBA teammates, Shamet has found the ingredient­s needed to build organizati­onal culture around a superstar core to be the same.

“Any team that’s ever been put together with that much talent isn’t going to just happen overnight and be perfect,” Shamet said. “I think that’s the biggest thing — time and patience and accountabi­lity. And if you have those things, over time you’re going to grow and you’re going to develop and turn it, hopefully, into what you wanted it to turn into. I think that’s what I’ve learned.

“It is interestin­g, in my career I have been fortunate to be on a number of teams that have had kind of this stature and I think that gives me a little bit of a valuable perspectiv­e going through some of the lulls that we’ve had this season and some of the highs. It’s part of it and we’re all learning and rolling with it.”

His former team is a test case for the benefits of added time. Amid their 22-9 start, Clippers players routinely describe the roster as more connected than last season, when injuries allowed for little on-court cohesion and special freedoms afforded to stars rankled some as they adjusted to a new locker room hierarchy.

“We just have a real bond amongst everybody and a real brotherhoo­d amongst everybody on this team,” George said.

When second-year guard Terance Mann said last week that player-to-player communicat­ion had improved, he attributed it to the extra time teammates spent together.

“By the end of the [last] season, there was a lot of, you know, frustratio­ns,” center Ivica Zubac said. “Guys were just, I feel like, tired of the bubble, you know? … It was different, communicat­ion-wise. This year, guys are holding each other accountabl­e more and there’s no bad feelings about it.”

The Nets (19-12), who have moved into second place in the Eastern Conference amid a five-game winning streak, are in the early stages of their own ambitious experiment melding “some of the best people to ever touch a basketball, to be quite honest, on the same team,” Shamet said.

In the 18 games since Harden arrived in a trade from Houston, the HardenDura­nt-Irving trio has played together six times and posted a 5-1 record, including one victory over the Clippers. The Nets have matched the NBA’s best record against teams with winning records at 11-4 and are 7-0 against West teams in playoff position.

“We’re not there by any stretch of the word,” Shamet said. “But we are growing and getting more comfortabl­e and it has become a little bit easier for a number of guys to, I think, step into a number of different roles and be comfortabl­e and be themselves.”

That includes Shamet. Since making only 28% of his three-point tries in his first 16 games, the career 40% three-point shooter has shot 41.5% from deep in his last 11.

It’s the kind of shooting that, should it continue against his former team Sunday, could help him leave L.A. with something good to look back on.

TONIGHT VS. BROOKLYN

When: 5 On the air: TV: ESPN, Prime Ticket; Radio: 570, 1330 Update: Durant will miss a fourth consecutiv­e game because of a hamstring injury that has taken more time to heal than expected, Nets coach Steve Nash said. Harden leads the NBA by creating 28.8 points from assists per game. Brooklyn runs the fourth-most isolation possession­s per game and generates a league-leading 1.15 points per isolation. During its five-game win streak, the team is fourth in net rating, fourth in offensive rating and 18th in defensive rating.

 ?? Carlos Osorio Associated Press ?? LANDRY SHAMET, traded by the Clippers to Brooklyn after last season, had a rough start to his season with the Nets but appears to have found his footing.
Carlos Osorio Associated Press LANDRY SHAMET, traded by the Clippers to Brooklyn after last season, had a rough start to his season with the Nets but appears to have found his footing.

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