Brian T. Smith must have been in love with CJ.
"Then the promise of the highly athletic Miles began to shine through. He averaged at least 9.1 points in 2008-09 and 2009-10, and a strong showing in the 2010 playoffs — 14.4 average points on 44.3 percent shooting in 10 games — provided a glimpse at the talent inherent in an 18-year-old prospect Utah initially wooed away from the University of Texas.
A career season followed. Miles averaged highs in points (12.8), rebounds (3.3) and minutes (25.2) in 2010-11. He scored a career-high 40 points on 14-of-18 shooting against Minnesota on March 16, 2011; he drilled 7 of 10 3-pointers in only 30 minutes against Portland on Nov. 20, 2010.
But at the same time Miles showed signs of taking off, Utah fell apart. Sloan resigned in February 2011. Less than two weeks later, Williams — Miles’ closest and longtime friend on the Jazz — was shockingly traded. Miles never fully clicked with new coach Tyrone Corbin, and the high-volume shooter’s negative traits on the court were no longer glossed over by the organization. Even w hen Miles displayed improved man-to-man defense or offensive shot selection, statistics such as a 38.1 shooting percentage in 2011-12 or his inconsistent overall performance were offered as counterpoints."
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Yep Brian, career highs of 13/3 should be enough to cement a starting position anywhere. And after 7 years, don't you think a shooter should be better than 38%? Miles showed signs of taking off? Ummm, how about his shooting percentage declining for 4 straight seasons? He was taking off, all right; it just wasn't in the right direction.
Based on this one article, I'd nominate Brian for the hacker's HOF.
And BTW, what's the scoop he was supposed to post at 10:00. Haven't seen anything yet.