San Diego Union-Tribune

HOW WESTBROOK FITS IS STILL UP FOR DEBATE

He has some solid statistics but they they aren't leading to wins

- BY DAN WOIKE Woike writes for the L.A. Times.

Russell Westbrook leaned back in his chair and laughed Monday after the Lakers’ practice, the subject matter more of a riddle than a kneeslappi­ng joke.

How should Westbrook, the Lakers’ $44-million-plus investment this season, play?

As the team hits the midway mark of the season in two weeks, it’s hard to fathom that the Lakers don’t feel any closer to knowing that answer.

The plan all along, according to the team’s stars, has been to embrace Westbrook’s game and mold theirs around it.

“As far as Russ, we need Russ to be Russ,” LeBron James said on Sept. 28 during the Lakers’ media day. “We don’t need Russ to change for anybody. That’s why we got him.”

Yet with the Lakers’ record below .500, the team mired in a five-game losing streak and failing the eye test, is “Russ being Russ” the best fit for the team? Is it even happening yet?

Maybe that’s why all this is so funny to Westbrook. How teammates mesh with his style of his play was the same question asked in Oklahoma City, Houston and Washington.

“Honestly, I’m over the whole situation with what everyone else wants me to do and what they think I should be doing,” Westbrook said Monday, now very serious. “And I’m going to go out and just play and do what I do best — and that’s compete my ass off, compete to win games and make my teammates better like I’ve done many, many years. And I’ll continue to do that. It’s as simple as that.

“… People are saying, ‘let Russ be Russ.’ I think nobody understand­s what that means. I think people just say it — ‘let Russ be Russ’ — but nobody actually knows what that means but myself.”

Trying to define Westbrook’s game with NBA scouts and executives quickly starts to sound like something you might hear in the parking lot before a Phish concert, a string of circular arguments that don’t have answers and leave you hungry to move on to something new.

Westbrook wants to be, and is proficient at, impacting a game in many ways. He scores, he passes, he rebounds and he hustles. But while he’s impacting the game in so many areas, his flaws also are transposed onto each of them.

Take the Lakers’ Christmas night loss to Brooklyn in which Westbrook missed a barrage of layups but still registered a triple-double. The way he attacked the glass for the Lakers, a dreadful rebounding team, keyed their rallies. He’s always kept an eye on the rim, meaning he’d sometimes lose his defensive assignment, like he did with the Nets’ Patty Mills on a critical late-game 3pointer.

Westbrook also continued to get into the paint and challenge the Nets at the rim, 100 percent what the Lakers want, per David Fizdale, the assistant running the team while coach Frank Vogel is in COVID-19 protocols. Yet on a late dunk that Westbrook missed, cameras caught James in the corner of the court, hands in the air, calling for the ball.

“There will be nights when you don’t make shots,” Westbrook said Monday. “But for me, my game is not predicated on if I miss and make shots. I do other things that impact winning, that impact the game on nights when I don’t make shots.”

The Lakers aren’t winning lately. Even when they have, they’ve hardly been impressive.

Westbrook, who says he doesn’t pay attention to outside noise but acknowledg­es using criticism for motivation, has to be keenly aware of the scrutiny — he’s the easiest target to blame with Anthony Davis hurt and Vogel out.

Westbrook defended his play on Monday, saying he’s been “fine” despite not living up to the standards he’s set for himself. This season he’s one of only four players in the NBA to average at least 19 points, eight assists and seven rebounds. Of the four — James Harden, LaMelo Ball and Luka Doncic are the others — Westbrook has the highest field goal percentage.

But he’s turning the ball over a lot — 4.6 per game — and his free-throw problems (65.6 percent) have continued as part of a bizarre nosedive at the line, where his career average is 78.6 percent.

Yet most of his shooting splits are either at or above his career averages, including a terrific 47.6 percent on corner 3s, a valuable portion of the court critical to spacing the floor. Add in that Westbrook is a notorious slow starter, and there’s reason to expect some uptick in the coming months.

It’s a confusing picture, his numbers suggesting that he’s playing well, but the team not looking anywhere near a contender on the court.

“None of it is for him to figure out alone,” Fizdale said. “We don’t want to leave him any kind of island to figure out anything by himself. What we are encouragin­g him to do is what he said, he’s got to be himself. And within that framework, good things will come out of it.”

There is one factor, though, that is out of Westbrook’s control, and that’s his salary. He can’t escape from the depth the Lakers sacrificed to trade for him and the salary-cap problems his presence alongside two other maximum-contract players causes, particular­ly for a team that didn’t want to go deep into the tax to keep a valuable role player like Alex Caruso.

Within those circumstan­ces, “fine” isn’t good enough from Westbrook — just like it won’t be from Davis and James. With the current roster constructi­on, it can’t be.

 ?? TONY GUTIERREZ AP ?? Russell Westbrook, surrounded by Mavericks, is putting up numbers comparable to his career averages, but the Lakers are under .500 and have lost five straight.
TONY GUTIERREZ AP Russell Westbrook, surrounded by Mavericks, is putting up numbers comparable to his career averages, but the Lakers are under .500 and have lost five straight.

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