BeachedBear said:
I like him a lot. I think watching his development through this season and into next is a key metric for this staff. Joel has all the tools but he needs to improve his shooting and related confidence? to be a true P12 level PG. His D is pretty much there and his assists/turnovers seems to be as much on his teammates as him - so I'm not too concerned in that facet.
In a perfect world, he would really focus on his 3pg and FT% before next season. I really like having a lock down perimeter defender who is also a perimeter threat.
I agree. The only thing I would add that needs improving, would be on-court decisions as to when to drive, and when not to drive. We have all used the term, "shot selection", when referring to shooters deciding when they should take a shot. I'll coin a new one for Brown, and everyone, really, which is "drive selection". Deciding when to penetrate. Brown has tremendous speed, and often thinks he can blow by a defender, and he is often right about that. But often he does not see and gauge the size, quickness, and reaction time of other defenders near the basket. He does not always seem to see or know how the defense might collapse on him and cause a steal, a turnover, a tied-up ball, a stuffed shot, a pass that is intercepted or batted loose. Many of his drives end up in a wasted possession, precisely because of driving when he should maybe choose a better option, and wait for a more suitable moment to drive.
At Cal, you never saw Jason Kidd make a foray into the lane and not have an idea of his options before going in to that hostile territory, and he very seldom turned the ball over near the basket. He just seemed to sense what everyone was going to do, and what his best options were, and he usually picked one that would result in a basket.
Jason Kidd had an edge over Brown, in that he had experienced centers and forwards on his Cal teams who knew where to go to get open or set screens for Jason, and were presenting lots of problems themselves for the defenders who might be thinking of leaving them alone and helping out to defend Jason. Joel Brown needs a point guard's vision, able to see the whole floor, the other 9 players out there, and size up the possibilities. I am one who thinks great point guards are born, not made, but with experience and coaching, I think Brown can become a good point guard. He has tools, competitiveness, aggressiveness, and he is very young. Kidd was a pass-first point guard, and so it was natural for him to always look at the whole floor, to see who might get open. Brown is a defense first point guard, and on offense, he is more of a shoot-first point guard, and needs to train himself to look more for openings to pass. And Fox needs to show his bigs how to get open near the basket more often, and when to get out of the way, draw their defenders away from Brown's lane to the basket, and how to set picks for Brown. Tall order, but many of Cal's players are good enough athletes to learn this.