Jefferson’s second-year improvement boosts Spurs
by J. Michael Falgoust
USA Today Sports
Richard Jefferson has scored many more points and grabbed more rebounds than he has this season, his 10th in the NBA.
Yet the once-embattled small forward probably has never played better than this second year with the San Antonio Spurs.
“It’s like night and day. He understands where he should be on the court. He’s confident in the offense and what he’s doing,” Spurs coach Gregg Popovich says. “He’s playing better defense. … Big improvement.”
He’s one reason the Spurs have the NBA’s best record, 24-3 entering Wednesday.
Jefferson is averaging 14.1 points and 4.2 rebounds, a far cry from the career-high 22.6 points he averaged with the New Jersey Nets three years ago. But now he is playing alongside All-Stars such as Tim Duncan, Tony Parker and Manu Ginobili. He doesn’t have to carry the load by himself.
Jefferson just has to fit in, and is, shooting 49.2% from the field and a career-best 45.5% on three-pointers entering Wednesday.
“I played in an up-and-down, forward-based offense,” he says of his time in New Jersey, including two NBA Finals. “Here it’s more pick-and-rolls, more of a post-up situation for Tim. None of our games are similar so it’s not like you can run the same stuff for me that you can run for Manu and Tony. … In your first year in your job it’s going to take some time to get into your swing.”
Jefferson worked on his fundamentals in the offseason so he could play San Antonio’s efficient, precise style. Spurs assistant coaches went to New York to help with his two-a-day sessions.
“It was a lot of work only because it was something I hadn’t done before … the way I had to come off screens, shooting a ton more corner threes,” says Jefferson, whose 12.3-point average last season was his lowest since his rookie 2001-02. “I’d never gone into the gym and worked two hours on those exact things. Those guys really helped. They knew that I was not happy with the amount I contributed to our team, and I wanted to add more.”
After being swept by the Phoenix Suns in the Western Conference semifinals, the aging Spurs seemed headed downhill … until the rejuvenated play of veterans such as Jefferson.
“Usually with us, the second year is what changes it for people,” Duncan says. “The light goes on and they become more comfortable with what they’re doing. And he’s shown just that.”
The Spurs have become a top five offense (106.8 points per game) and lead in three-point shooting (40.5%). Jefferson’s contributions have been a big part of that, although his most important don’t show in a boxscore.
“He’s making it easier for a lot of other players around us,” says third-year guard George Hill, the leading scorer off the bench at 11.3 points per game. “He’s been a big key to our offense.”
Jefferson’s transformation has impressed Popovich, who has led the Spurs to four NBA championships, in other ways.
“I really give Richard a lot of credit. Most guys who’ve been in the league as long as him aren’t going to change much,” Popovich says. “He’s willing to go back to the drawing board and work on some fundamentals. It shows what kind of character he has.”