New York Post

Benching catches struggling Griffin off guard

- By MARK W. SANCHEZ

One big man who fell out of the Nets’ rotation is trying to help another.

Among the people who have reached out to Blake Griffin since the Nets benched the veteran center/forward has been DeAndre Jordan, whom Steve Nash sat last season for more than a month. Griffin cannot help the team on the court, so he is trying to see how he can contribute from afar.

“I have had great examples, DeAndre last year — he is a guy that I talked to, that reached out,” Griffin said Monday at practice, his first time speaking publicly since the Nets minimized his role. “A lot of the guys from last year reached out. [Jordan] did a really great job with it. I told him that. That is how I am going to try to do it as well.”

Griffin said he understand­s why LaMarcus Aldridge is starting over him, but the outright benching came as a surprise.

“LA has been playing unbelievab­le,” Griffin said of Aldridge. “So I totally get starting him, especially [with] Joe [Harris] out.

“Being completely out of it though, I didn’t necessaril­y see that coming.”

Griffin, who reinvented his game last season, when he shot 38.3 percent from the 3-point arc in 26 games with Brooklyn, has not been able to match his production a season later. He was shooting 16.1 percent from deep before Nash plucked him from both the starting five and the rotation. Griffin played nine minutes against Cleveland on Nov. 22 and has not touched the court in the past two games.

Nash has said that will continue “for now.” While Aldridge is seeing the bulk of the time, Paul Millsap also is getting a shot.

“I haven’t shot the ball well,” acknowledg­ed Griffin, who does not have the athleticis­m he used to have but leads the league in charges drawn. “I’ve tried to make up for some of that with other stuff.”

The 32-year-old said he has not received a clear reason from Nash concerning the benching but will do whatever the coach asks. He wants to be a good teammate and “be a profession­al.”

By all accounts, that is what he has done.

“I feel for him. That’s not easy,” Nash said. “We have to give other guys an opportunit­y at this point, but Blake’s had a great attitude.”

➤ The Knicks-Nets matchup at Barclays Center on Tuesday means Nash will get to see his godson, RJ Barrett, again. Nash and Barrett’s father, Rowan, were teammates with Team Canada and have been longtime friends.

Even though the teams play their home games a borough apart, Nash and RJ have not been able to meet up this season.

“I never see him,” Nash said. “I never get to see him, but we stay in touch over text message.”

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