Times-Herald (Vallejo)

Molding Smailagic into floor-spacing big man

- By Wes Goldberg

It could be easy to confuse Alen Smailagic’s goofy grin, broken English and doe- eyed demeanor as marks of a bashful 20-yearold who is just happy to be here. But make no mistake, give Smailagic a goal and his competitiv­e streak reveals itself, and his grin fades to a grimace.

This is what Golden State Warriors player developmen­t coach Seth Cooper discovered when working with Smailagic last season. So when workouts were limited this offseason to a single player and coach working one- on- one because of the coronaviru­s, Cooper challenged Smailagic to make as many 3-pointers as he could in five minutes.

Cooper had picked up the drill rebounding for Steve Novak as a video coordinato­r with the Clippers 10 years ago. When Smailagic was informed that Novak — owner of the ninth-best career 3-point percentage in NBA history — used to make 50 3-pointers in four minutes before every game, he committed to completing the drill nearly every day.

“Because he’s very competitiv­e, he gets more excited to do things where there’s a goal and a specific number to target,” Cooper said. Although it’s unlikely Smailagic will reach Novak’s proficienc­y, the Warriors hope he can blossom into one of the league’s best floor-spacing big men.

In addition to going through a battery of shooting drills, Smailagic was shown film of players the Warriors think he could emulate such as Davis Bertans, Ersan Ilyasova and Moritz Wagner.

Of that group, Bertans suggests the highest ceiling. After coming off the bench for three years in San Antonio, Bertans averaged 15.4 points and 4.5 rebounds per game and made 42.4% of his 3-point shots with 8.7 attempts per game last season in Washington. Last month, Ber

tans, 28, signed a five-year, $80 million contract extension with the Wizards.

However, Smailagic, who made only three of his 13 3-point attempts last season, has a long way to go before earning consistent minutes for the Warriors. The No. 39 pick in the 2019 draft, Smailagic is only three years removed from playing in a semiprofes­sional league in Serbia. He spent most of the last two seasons playing for the Warriors’ G League affiliate in Santa Cruz and, in his brief

stints with Golden State, seemed overwhelme­d by NBA competitio­n.

For example, during a game against the Houston Rockets in February, Smailagic posted up a smaller wing in Thabo Sefolosha, took two left-handed dribbles and spun to no avail, then attempted a pass to Ky Bowman that missed by six feet and sailed out of bounds. Plays like this clouded Smailagic’s rookie year, which was delayed because of an ankle injury he suffered in training camp.

 ?? DOUG DURAN — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP FILE ?? Golden State Warriors head coach Steve Kerr talks to Alen Smailagic in the fourth quarter against the Milwaukee Bucks at the Chase Center on Jan. 8.
DOUG DURAN — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP FILE Golden State Warriors head coach Steve Kerr talks to Alen Smailagic in the fourth quarter against the Milwaukee Bucks at the Chase Center on Jan. 8.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States