San Antonio Express-News

Wesley shoulders load at the point

- By Jeff Mcdonald

Ninety minutes before the Spurs tipped off in Utah on Tuesday, coach Gregg Popovich seemed confident he might finally have a full complement of point guards at his disposal.

Tre Jones was on the court warming up, testing his sore left foot in hopes of playing for the first time since Feb. 11 at Atlanta.

“He’s going to give it a shot,” Popovich said.

The workout did not go well enough. Jones was eventually scratched for the ninth time in 10 games.

By the end of a streak-ending 102-94 victory over the Jazz, the Spurs were down to one healthy point guard.

Rookie Malaki Branham, who had been starting in Jones’ spot, limped off the floor in the second half with back spasms.

That left fellow rookie Blake Wesley to handle the ball for much of the second half.

Wesley responded with perhaps his best all-around game as a pro, scoring nine points with six rebounds and tripling his season high with three steals.

“That’s the Blake Wesley we’re used to seeing,” forward Keldon Johnson said. “I told him he’s looking like himself. He was picking up and getting into people and disrupting the game.”

The speedy Wesley, drafted 25th overall out of Notre Dame, missed 2 ½ months after suffering a torn MCL two games in October.

He is at last beginning to find his footing after the false start to his profession­al career.

Depending on what happens with the Spurs’ injury report, Wesley could be the starting point guard when the team returns to the AT&T Center to face Indiana on Thursday.

Wesley played point guard part time during his one season in college, but earned most of his minutes playing off the ball for the Fighting Irish.

Handling the ball has been a big part of his adjustment to the NBA game.

“There’s some tough defenders out here,” Wesley said. “I still have to get better with my handles, but overall I feel good.”

Wesley played a key role in

the Spurs’ victory on Tuesday, which snapped a club-record 16-game losing streak.

Not only did Wesley knock down a pair of 3-pointers against the Jazz, he was a veritable defensive menace playing baseline to baseline.

“When Blake is picking up full court,” Johnson said, “it’s a game-changer.”

With his top-shelf speed, Wesley often finds himself in the paint with decisions to make.

Making the right ones is the next step in Wesley’s developmen­t, Popovich said.

In the second half Tuesday, Wesley blew a fast-break opportunit­y by missing a tough reverse layup that was heavily contested. A few moments later, Wesley drove the lane then fired the ball into the front row when looking for teammate Charles Bassey.

“Blake is starting to figure out he’s got some speed,” Popovich said. “He understand­s that decisions at the rim are what he’s got to figure out now. He’s a young man. It takes time.”

 ?? Rick Bowmer/associated Press ?? Spurs guard Blake Wesley had maybe his best all-around game of his young career Tuesday against the Jazz, scoring nine points and getting six rebounds and a season-high three steals.
Rick Bowmer/associated Press Spurs guard Blake Wesley had maybe his best all-around game of his young career Tuesday against the Jazz, scoring nine points and getting six rebounds and a season-high three steals.

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