Aaron Nesmith Continues To Show Improvement
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Aaron Nesmith Continues To Show Improvement
https://nesn.com/2021/01/aaron-nesmith-celtics-first-round-pick-continues-to-show-improvement/
Celtics Rookie Aaron Nesmith Continues To Show Improvement
Nesmith saw well-earned playing time in Boston's back-to-back
by Sean T. McGuire
17 hours ago
Aaron Nesmith appears to be coming into his own for the Boston Celtics.
The Celtics’ first pick in the 2020 NBA Draft — No. 14 overall — has put together a solid stretch with more opportunities. The Vanderbilt product played in each of Boston’s back-to-back games, registering 17 or more minutes in consecutive contests for the first time this season.
Nesmith was an identical 3-for-5 from 3-point range against both the Cleveland Cavaliers on Sunday and Chicago Bulls on Monday. He contributed an early career-high 11 points in 17 minutes against the Cavs and nine points in 19 minutes the next night.
Celtics head coach Brad Stevens said Monday how he thought the game is beginning to “slow down” for Nesmith on the offensive end.
It comes after the Boston rookie, along with all others in the Class of 2020, have been dealt a more difficult hand without a training camp or preseason.
“It’s been a journey,” Nesmith told reporters Monday, as seen on NBC Sports Boston’s postgame coverage. “It’s been tough at times for sure, but just trying to expedite my learning curve and make sure I’m always locked in, always making sure I’m taking advantage of every opportunity.
“And so even in the games where I don’t play or don’t play as much, just making sure that I’m mentally locked into the things that we’re doing as a team so whenever I come in, it’s like I haven’t sat out at all.”
Nesmith has played in seven of the 16 games this season for the 10-6 Celtics. And while his shot-making ability was at an NBA level coming into the league, perhaps his biggest improvement has been on the defensive end.
“I wouldn’t point it at one thing,” Nesmith responded when asked what he was most focused on developing. “I would just tell you that it’s becoming a better basketball player. You know, working on my game as a whole. Making sure I was comfortable and just trying to make the game slow down and make it easier for me.”
Stevens expressed how he thinks Nesmith has “a chance to be a good defender,” but also came to the 21-year-old’s defense, explaining how it would be unfair to judge Nesmith on such limited reps.
“He’s actually done a pretty darn good job all the way through,” Stevens told reporters Monday. “He’s into the body. He’s tough. He’s physical. He stays in plays. He got the deflection in transition. I just think he has the chance to be a good defender and he’s worked hard at learning that.”
Any contributions that Nesmith can add for the Celtics, who enter a tough stretch with six of the next seven games on the road, certainly would be welcomed.
Bob
MY NOTE: He's shooting 34.6% from 3. That's mediocre, especially since that's his calling card, but he's only taken 26 3pt fgas total. Remember Grant last year? He famously went 0-25 to start his career but he shot 58.8% from 3 in the playoffs last year and so far, this season, he's shooting 39.3% from 3 and he's not a dead-eye shooter like Nesmith. The player to wonder about isn't Nesmith, or even Grant in my opinion, it's Romeo. If Nesmith stays healthy he's going to have a long NBA career because high-quality shooting is always in demand. Grant, too, knows his role. He's a defensive Jack-of-all-trades who defends multiple positions. That's not as marketable as Nesmith's skillset, but he has a defined job. What's Romeo's? He's a D-and-NO-3er. Forget about his injuries, what's his calling card? I'm not down on Romeo, but I don't see something where you say "other than being 'a natural', why is he in the league?".
.
Celtics Rookie Aaron Nesmith Continues To Show Improvement
Nesmith saw well-earned playing time in Boston's back-to-back
by Sean T. McGuire
17 hours ago
Aaron Nesmith appears to be coming into his own for the Boston Celtics.
The Celtics’ first pick in the 2020 NBA Draft — No. 14 overall — has put together a solid stretch with more opportunities. The Vanderbilt product played in each of Boston’s back-to-back games, registering 17 or more minutes in consecutive contests for the first time this season.
Nesmith was an identical 3-for-5 from 3-point range against both the Cleveland Cavaliers on Sunday and Chicago Bulls on Monday. He contributed an early career-high 11 points in 17 minutes against the Cavs and nine points in 19 minutes the next night.
Celtics head coach Brad Stevens said Monday how he thought the game is beginning to “slow down” for Nesmith on the offensive end.
It comes after the Boston rookie, along with all others in the Class of 2020, have been dealt a more difficult hand without a training camp or preseason.
“It’s been a journey,” Nesmith told reporters Monday, as seen on NBC Sports Boston’s postgame coverage. “It’s been tough at times for sure, but just trying to expedite my learning curve and make sure I’m always locked in, always making sure I’m taking advantage of every opportunity.
“And so even in the games where I don’t play or don’t play as much, just making sure that I’m mentally locked into the things that we’re doing as a team so whenever I come in, it’s like I haven’t sat out at all.”
Nesmith has played in seven of the 16 games this season for the 10-6 Celtics. And while his shot-making ability was at an NBA level coming into the league, perhaps his biggest improvement has been on the defensive end.
“I wouldn’t point it at one thing,” Nesmith responded when asked what he was most focused on developing. “I would just tell you that it’s becoming a better basketball player. You know, working on my game as a whole. Making sure I was comfortable and just trying to make the game slow down and make it easier for me.”
Stevens expressed how he thinks Nesmith has “a chance to be a good defender,” but also came to the 21-year-old’s defense, explaining how it would be unfair to judge Nesmith on such limited reps.
“He’s actually done a pretty darn good job all the way through,” Stevens told reporters Monday. “He’s into the body. He’s tough. He’s physical. He stays in plays. He got the deflection in transition. I just think he has the chance to be a good defender and he’s worked hard at learning that.”
Any contributions that Nesmith can add for the Celtics, who enter a tough stretch with six of the next seven games on the road, certainly would be welcomed.
Bob
MY NOTE: He's shooting 34.6% from 3. That's mediocre, especially since that's his calling card, but he's only taken 26 3pt fgas total. Remember Grant last year? He famously went 0-25 to start his career but he shot 58.8% from 3 in the playoffs last year and so far, this season, he's shooting 39.3% from 3 and he's not a dead-eye shooter like Nesmith. The player to wonder about isn't Nesmith, or even Grant in my opinion, it's Romeo. If Nesmith stays healthy he's going to have a long NBA career because high-quality shooting is always in demand. Grant, too, knows his role. He's a defensive Jack-of-all-trades who defends multiple positions. That's not as marketable as Nesmith's skillset, but he has a defined job. What's Romeo's? He's a D-and-NO-3er. Forget about his injuries, what's his calling card? I'm not down on Romeo, but I don't see something where you say "other than being 'a natural', why is he in the league?".
.
bobheckler- Posts : 62620
Join date : 2009-10-28
Re: Aaron Nesmith Continues To Show Improvement
Glad to see Nesmith getting minutes. Hope Romeo also gets minutes when he is back. Both are just-outside-lottery picks, and should be developed. Development is on Brad. I don't really understand why he is more interested in developing GW than these 1st rounders.
Shamrock1000- Posts : 2711
Join date : 2013-08-19
Re: Aaron Nesmith Continues To Show Improvement
Nesmith will be just fine. He just needs playing time. Danny added 2 really talented rookies.
Both were outstanding shooters in college.
Both were outstanding shooters in college.
dboss- Posts : 19221
Join date : 2009-11-01
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