In his first season as a part-time starter, Kawhi Leonard averaged 7.9 points and 5.1 rebounds per game. Three years later, Leonard's the reigning Sports Illustrated cover star, the NBA Finals MVP and an ascendant franchise player.
In his first season as a part-time starter, Jeremy Lin averaged 14.6 points and 6.2 assists per game. Three years later, Lin's no longer a starter, he's routinely ripped by basketball bigots and he's easy trade bait.
Kawhi Leonard is what happens when a coach displays real belief in a player, when an organization puts team over stars, when player development is a real mission rather than just a convenient soundbite mantra. Jeremy Lin is what happens when a coach shows his doubt nightly, when it's all about promoting a few select superstars, when young players are nothing more than trade pieces.
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http://houston.culturemap.com/news/s...h-level-coach/
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Obviously a little bit absent of the potential and natural gifts Kawhi has that Lin doesn't, however, Lin has always been a solid guy and could have seriously developed with the right coaching. Still could. I think overall the article is on point. Coaches are still chasing superstars -- they haven't realized that the game is passing them by as coaches like Popovich and Thibs reinvent the next phase of development in the NBA.