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A Tale of Two Rookies

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December 15th, 2010 @ 12:44am
It is the best of times for Jazz rookie Jeremy Evans and it is the worst of times for Gordon Hayward.


This past summer, Evans was drafted with the 55th pick. That was chapter one of the best of times, since the 6' 9" rail thin forward was not even expected to be drafted. No expectations, no pressure.

Gordon Hayward was drafted with the 9th overall pick. It seemed at first to be a best of times scenario. Hayward was coming off a Cinderella run in the NCAA tournament with Butler. One mid-court shot away from immortality. The Jazz were so confident with their pick that they allowed undrafted free-agent Wesley Matthews to walk, with a max mid-level deal with the Blazers. Huge expectations, huge pressure.

However, these players are not rivals. They are good friends who hang out off the court. According to Jerry Sloan, they work hard in practice and try to improve every day.

What has transpired through almost a third of the season has been interesting. Hayward averages about 2 points and 1 rebounds in 9 minutes a game. Evan averages 3 points and 1 rebound in 5 minutes. Low impact numbers on both accounts.

But when Evans gets in the game, magic happens. Every ball seems to bounce his way, every lob pass is just right and he makes the most of his opportunities. His highlight dunks and $473,604 smile has endeared him to Jazz fans and coaches.

"Don't put your head up too high in the air, somebody will knock it off your shoulders."
After the Warriors game on Monday, Sloan said, "I was really happy for him. He did a nice job. He executed what we were trying to do. He's a very smart person, he listens to what is being said. His abilities show up when he does things he's supposed to do, plus you throw the ball up in the air a couple of times, he goes after it."

And go after it he does. Evans has nearly perfected the art of the alley-oop with teammate Earl Watson.

Watson handed out a pair of alley-oop dunks to the springy Evans, "With a player like Jeremy and him being a rookie, you just want him in situations where it's really easy for him. Catch and lobs for him and dunking in transition is really easy."

"We always work on it. We get it in just about every game that I play in." said Evans. " Earl know that if (the defender) is overplaying... I just spin and Earl tells me to go, so he'll throw it."

And Watson has received some special and unlikely instruction from the rookie. "He tells me I throw it too low. I don't know if he's serious or what, but if he wants me to throw it higher... we'll see."

Watson knows it's not the most difficult play in the playbook. "It's easy once you see it open, but it opens so quick you have to make the right pass, but with him you just put it up in the air and 99 per cent of the time he's going to go get it."

Sloan recognizes it as well, "He can get up in the air and go get the ball. You just throw it up in the air and he can go get it. And he's worked really hard."

Big Al Jefferson has seen the bottom of those sneakers more than once, "We see it everyday in practice. He be dunking on me all the time, but I'm glad to see him dunking on somebody else."

After playing to the small crowds of Western Kentucky, Evans can't help but notice the reaction of 19,911 at EnergySolutions Arena after one of his thunderous jams.

"When your in the zone you really can't hear too much, but you always hear the crowd." the smiling Evans responded.

But while teammates and coaches gush over Evans, Hayward suffers in silence. Given the chance to start the last three games (with Raja Bell out with a groin strain) Hayward has been saddled with early foul trouble (9 in the last 40 minutes) and has scored only 1 point.

"It's tough for those young guys. Gordon struggled a little bit, going through tough times, he just has to fight and work himself out of it. The only way you do it is when you get out on the floor, you get 10 minutes of practice that has to be your game time. You have to work to make yourself better."

When Sloan speaks, Evans listens, "Coach always says be ready to play. So we come into every game, me and Gordon thinking that we might get the chance."

So far those chances have produced mixed results, but this story has not finished.

There may still be room for two protagonists?

Coach Sloan and his 60 years of experience has advice for his rookies, "Put everything they have into it... and if things don't go well, you have to fight back. If they go well, then don't put your head up too high in the air, somebody will knock it off your shoulders."

Here's to hoping the guillotine remains far away in the Parisian streets and that both rookies can find a way to play well and hold their heads up high.

But not too high.
 
Evans: Man you see those dunks Hayward?
Hayward: Did you know I was in the NCAA finals game?
 
One difference is how much Hayward has played against starters and how much Evans has played in garbage time or against backups. Not the only difference but worth mentioning. Put most rookies against starting 2-guards in this league and they will be saddled with foul trouble.
 
Tsk, tsk. It was written by a "pro," too. Nice article, otherwise.
 
January 2nd, 2011 @ 10:43pm
By Tom Kirkland
On Sunday I had a conversation with Jazz rookie Gordon Hayward about his roller-coaster rookie season.

Hayward
I think having those extra minutes and kind of being out on the court a little bit more has kind of allowed me to get into the flow of the game a little better and I also think just playing with those guys more allows them to know how I play and allows me to know how they play more so the trust is there a little bit more...

Tom
I know coming from the program you have come from and being a star in college, confidence is huge, what was the, what did it feel like, what was the low point like a month, six, eight weeks ago?

Hayward
Well it was difficult, like you said, anytime you come from a place where you were like, the man, step into a new level, you're back down on the totem pole, so it was tough mentally. That was the biggest part especially the way that Jeremy Evans would go in and it felt like I couldn't miss in practice and they just wouldn't translate to the game. I just got to keep working I guess, there's going to be ups, there's going to be downs, so you try to stay level-headed through all that.

Tom
Has it hit you yet and how sweet is it that not only are you getting minutes, you are getting every fourth quarter minute, which in Jerry Sloan's world, not a lot of rookies ever do that?

Hayward
You know it is kind of a confidence booster that he has that faith in me but I gotta continue the way that I have been playing in order to keep that trust of his. So, like I said, there will probably be more ups, there will be probably more downs, I know the season is a learning process for me, but I just try to go out there and have fun and play hard.

Tom
I see you talking to Raja, asking him questions in the game and a little bit with Deron too?

Hayward
Definitely. One-hundred percent. You play with a guy who is an all-star point guard like Deron he obviously knows a couple things about the game, Raja has been around forever too and he knows the little things that sometimes coaches can't teach you so when I out in the game and I see something, I'll be able to ask them and see what they feel about it.

Tom
I saw your post(game reaction) to the Clipper game when you had that 17-point second half which is kind of your staple right now, were they (teammates) really saying "Too Big Yo" from your bench when you were hitting shots?

Hayward
They were kind of joking around with it a little bit yeah...just having some fun with it I think...

Tom
Who's the ring leader in that one?

Hayward
They all take turns. It was good fun and kind of fun for them to be able to say that.

Tom
You and Jeremy Evans, you talked about him, I know you have gotten close to him, what's it like watching him play, I mean he is a "wow" guy?

Hayward
Oh for sure, the things that he does, only certain people can do that in the game, it's really cool to see someone that you have become friends with and that you work hard with compete against, and don't get me wrong, we've gotten in fights in practice over one-on-one games stuff like that, but to then be able to see him go out on the court and do well makes me proud, I am happy for him.

Tom
You are kind of a sneaky good dunker, we have seen you go left, we have seen the two-hander in Minnesota.

Hayward
I think I am more athletic than people give me credit for, sometimes I realize in this league if you go up soft and lay it up, they are not going to bail you out. You just gotta try to go up and dunk it and if you get fouled, you get fouled, you should go hard to the rim.

New interview with Hayward.
 
Hayward
I think I am more athletic than people give me credit for, sometimes I realize in this league if you go up soft and lay it up, they are not going to bail you out. You just gotta try to go up and dunk it and if you get fouled, you get fouled, you should go hard to the rim.

someone tell this to ak with his flailing arms
 
Another from the SLTrib
BY BRIAN T. SMITH
The Salt Lake Tribune

Published Jan 2, 2011 08:36PM
Updated 8 hours ago
Jazz rookie forward Gordon Hayward was a viable candidate for the Development League just two weeks ago. Now, the ninth overall pick of the 2010 NBA Draft is playing like a legitimate lottery selection, and he has earned the on-the-court confidence and trust of All-Star guard Deron Williams.

Hayward has played in all 12 minutes of the fourth quarter in five consecutive games. He has recorded double figures in scoring in three straight contests. And he had his second-best performance of the season Saturday during a home victory against Memphis, recording 13 points on 6-of-10 shooting and four rebounds in 30 minutes.

Prior to his breakout performance Wednesday on the road versus the Los Angeles Clippers — when he set season highs in points (17), made 3-pointers (three) and minutes (44) — the 20-year-old rookie had only played more than 20 minutes in a single game three times this season. But in Utah’s past three contests, Hayward has accomplished that feat each night, totaling 100 minutes during the stretch and working his way deeper into the Jazz’s rotation. With C.J. Miles dealing with the flu, Hayward was the first Utah player off the bench in the win against Memphis.

Jazz coach Jerry Sloan was the first to publicly stand behind the rookie, using him as a late-game insertion during Utah’s comeback road victory Dec. 22 versus Minnesota. Meanwhile, Williams acknowledged that his own belief in Hayward has recently increased, stating that the former Butler standout is a much-improved player compared with his October self.

Hayward said that basketball is a game based upon confidence.

“With each game it’s going to get better and better, and I’m going to get better and better,” said Hayward, who acknowledged that the floor is beginning to open up for him. “I try to improve every day, and that’s what I’m going to go out there and do.”
 
"Hayward
I think I am more athletic than people give me credit for, sometimes I realize in this league if you go up soft and lay it up, they are not going to bail you out. You just gotta try to go up and dunk it and if you get fouled, you get fouled, you should go hard to the rim."

Big Al could learn something from this kid.
 
"Hayward
I think I am more athletic than people give me credit for, sometimes I realize in this league if you go up soft and lay it up, they are not going to bail you out. You just gotta try to go up and dunk it and if you get fouled, you get fouled, you should go hard to the rim."

Big Al could learn something from this kid.

I don't think Al as the legs to do it anymore.
 
I don't think Al as the legs to do it anymore.

The problem is he doesn't even go for aggressive layups either. He's improved, but there have been way too many times he pulls up as the roll man and tries to roll in a shot from 3-5 feet out. Whether it goes in or not does not change that half the time he plays like a eunuch, however, this is the primary reason his FG% is so dismal for a 'star big'. At least that's what I attribute it to.
 
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