Los Angeles Times

Former future of the Lakers is leading Nets

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Three games, three wins and three reasons to believe that the Brooklyn Nets are the best team outside of the Eastern Conference’s top tier.

Brooklyn beat Boston, Houston and Orlando last week, getting big performanc­es from a trio of young players the Nets acquired to become the base for one of the NBA’s most difficult rebuilding projects.

D’Angelo Russell, the onetime future of the Lakers, has become a reliable point guard and significan­t piece for Brooklyn. He rounded out a strong week with a 40-point game in Orlando — the scoring paired with an elite passing ability that Brooklyn coach Kenny Atkinson thinks is still developing.

Brooklyn scrambled to steal an overtime win Wednesday in Houston thanks to 11 points from guard Spencer Dinwiddie in the final 90 seconds of regulation (three threepoint shots came in the final 26.2 seconds).

Monday in a win over the Celtics, 20-yearold center Jarrett Allen had one of the best games of his young career, finishing with 19 points, 12 rebounds and four blocked shots.

The three players — one found in a trade, one found in the G League and one found late in the first round of the draft — are huge reasons why the Nets are sixth in the East and the most promising team outside of conference contenders Toronto, Milwaukee, Philadelph­ia, Indiana and Boston.

The Lakers dealt Russell to Brooklyn in 2017, using him as a sweetener to get Brooklyn to absorb center Timofey Mozgov and his albatross of a contract while setting the stage to land LeBron James in free agency.

Russell has developed in Brooklyn, averaging career highs in points (19.0) and assists (6.4) this season. Nets coaches and personnel people have raved about his willingnes­s to be part of the franchise and his maturity — not necessaril­y the book on him in his time with the Lakers.

“A lot of it’s maturity,” Atkinson said. “He’s been in the league awhile. He’s starting to get stronger, so it’s physical maturity. Emotional maturity. I’d like to think we’ve helped some. … I think our staff does a good job of developing players, but mostly, it’s on him and maturing. … He’s really taken a step up this year.”

Dinwiddie, Russell’s backup, could’ve been a lottery pick at one time if not for a major knee injury while playing at Colorado. With Russell injured last season, the Los Angeles native and star at Taft High in Woodland Hills proved he could be a contributo­r and was rewarded with a threeyear, $34-million contract extension.

Allen looks like a star in the making. At 6 feet 11 — a few inches taller if you count his afro — Allen is a fearless rim protector who has rejected dunk attempts by LeBron James, Giannis Antetokoun­mpo, Blake Griffin and James Harden.

“You’re going to get dunked on every now and then,” Allen said. “But if you don’t jump, there’s no way to know.”

It’s all a testament to the work of the Nets’ front office, their war chest of draft picks significan­tly limited from the Paul Pierce-Kevin Garnett trade with Boston by the previous regime. They’ve found players who work; they’ve made players better. Add in another successful late first-rounder, guard Caris LeVert, who’s been sidelined by an ankle injury, and the Nets suddenly have a nice group of young talent.

A possible berth in the postseason and plenty of cap space next summer have the Nets feeling good about their future for the first time in years.

 ?? Frank Franklin II Associated Press ?? D’ANGELO RUSSELL is averaging career highs in points and assists.
Frank Franklin II Associated Press D’ANGELO RUSSELL is averaging career highs in points and assists.

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