The Peterborough Examiner

Brooks rewards Grizzlies’ show of faith

After lost season, Canadian proving his worth again in Memphis

- CURTIS WITHERS

This National Basketball Associatio­n season could have been a lot different for Dillon Brooks.

The guard-forward from Mississaug­a faced an off-season of uncertaint­y after injuries limited him to 18 games in his sophomore 2018-19 campaign with the Memphis Grizzlies. He didn’t make a single start after having 74 in his rookie season. With the final year of his threeyear rookie deal not guaranteed, a rebuilding Grizzlies team could have cut ties with the once promising prospect.

Instead, the Grizzlies showed faith in Brooks, with the team picking up the final year of his deal and new head coach Taylor Jenkins making him an integral part of his system. While Brooks remains an offensive enigma with his streaky scoring, he has proved his worth to a young Grizzlies squad with “pesky” defence and an infectious energy.

“Playing with passion, playing with grit and making it contagious throughout the team,” Brooks told reporters before the season when asked what he hoped to bring to the team. “We’re going to need that because games are going to be upand-down, and somehow I’ll have to channel it, keep it going and make it contagious.”

There is no question Brooks’s play is contagious when his shot is falling; the Grizzlies are 5-0 when he scores 20 or more points. But the offensive numbers in his game log read like a roller-coaster.

A 30-point performanc­e on Oct. 16 against Oklahoma City is followed by three points on one-of-eight shooting against San Antonio, seven points on three-of-seven shooting against Miami and six points on twoof-12 shooting against Chicago.

That’s followed by a run of four games of at least 16 points over his next five starts — including a season-high 31 points in a win over the Minnesota Timberwolv­es — followed by two games of single-digit scoring which included a dismal zero-for-seven outing against Orlando. He seems to have stabilized lately with double-digit scoring in his last three games.

Despite the ups and downs of his offensive game, he has been consistent­ly tenacious on defence. Brooks has admitted that he fouls a lot — he was among the top-10 most penalized players in the league heading into Tuesday’s action at 3.9 fouls per game — but his energy has impressed Jenkins.

“Shots maybe not falling or there may be foul trouble but his spirit has been consistent,” Jenkins said after Brooks’s 31point game. “He’s been ultraconsi­stent in just being a tonesetter for us defensivel­y.”

Added Brooks: “I foul a lot, but I am just physical. I want to guard the best player. I want to try to shut them down and make their life a little harder even if they score 30 or whatever, it’s a hard 30 to get.”

The former Oregon Ducks star was only Memphis player to appear in all 82 games in 2017-18, a bright spot in an otherwise miserable 60-loss Grizzlies season that saw coach David Fizdale fired, veteran centre Marc Gasol benched and star point guard Mike Conley limited to 12 games due to injury.

What was supposed to be a promising followup season went wrong right from the start. He was used off the bench by coach J.B. Bickerstaf­f before suffering a serious knee ligament sprain just 11 games into the season. He returned after missing 21 games, only to suffer a season-ending toe injury seven games later.

This season is proof that Brooks’s rookie campaign was not a fluke. He is setting careerhigh averages in points (13.7), rebounds (3.7), assists (2.1), and his free-throw percentage has improved dramatical­ly, up to 81.3 over 73.3 last season and 74.7 in his rookie year.

“The great thing about DB is his defensive effort’s consistent­ly been there, and as you look back at our wins he usually has a big night for us offensivel­y,” Jenkins told reporters a day after Brooks had another big game against Minnesota, scoring a game-high 26 points including going four-of-five from the three-point line in a 115-107 Grizzlies victory on Friday.

“As we’ve continued to coach him and show him the path is being aggressive when necessary, not trying to force anything, and last night was a testament to him making aggressive moves. He didn’t have a couple of finishes fall but he didn’t put his head down and get discourage­d. He kept competing defensivel­y.”

> CANADIAN CONTENT: The Toronto Raptors’ otherwise routine 126-98 win over the visiting New York Knicks on Nov. 27 did have one interestin­g footnote. At one point in the game, Toronto’s Chris Boucher (Montreal) and Oshae Brissett (Mississaug­a) were on the floor at the same time as New York’s RJ Barrett (Mississaug­a) and Ignas Brazdeikis (Oakville). It’s believed to be the first time four Canadians were on an NBA court at the same time.

> KEEP AN EYE ON: Jamal Murray of Kitchener, Ont., and the Denver Nuggets travel to New York to take on Barrett and the Knicks on Thursday. Murray has been a fan of the emerging Knicks guard, stating in an interview on “The Undefeated” that Barrett will be a better pro than his former Duke teammate Zion Williamson, who was selected first overall by New Orleans this year but has yet to play this season.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? The Memphis Grizzlies’ Dillon Brooks, centre, a Mississaug­a native, is posting career-high averages in points (13.7), rebounds (3.7) and assists (2.1) so far in his third NBA season.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO The Memphis Grizzlies’ Dillon Brooks, centre, a Mississaug­a native, is posting career-high averages in points (13.7), rebounds (3.7) and assists (2.1) so far in his third NBA season.

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