Heat rookie Justise Winslow turning heads, playing well beyond years
By Zach Harper / NBA writer
November 10, 2015 11:12 AM ET
MIAMI -- "He's the oldest 19-year old I know."
This has been something Chris Bosh has said about Miami Heat rookie Justise Winslow after a handful of preseason and regular season games. Just two weeks into Winslow's first NBA season and people are still shaking their heads at how he fell to Pat Riley and the Heat with the 10th pick in the draft. It was one of those fortuitous gifts that just seemed too perfect to actually happen.
Throughout training camp and preseason, coach Erik Spoelstra said the best thing Winslow could do in trying to fit in with such a veteran core (including Bosh, Dwyane Wade, Luol Deng, and Goran Dragic) is to not respect them. Bring the athleticism and energy, but don't revere them on the court. Take it to them on every possession as if it's something he's supposed to do despite not having the requisite experience. He's starting to treat the rest of the league this way early on.
In the Heat's first seven games, Spoelstra has tested Winslow on LeBron James, James Harden, Paul George, and DeMar DeRozan. He worked against LeBron but mostly didn't bother him too much (3-of-3 from the field). Against Harden is where the Heat really took notice of his defensive capabilities. With Harden encased in struggles with his shot, Winslow added to the frustration by allowing just one make in seven attempts.
"Coach kept putting him [on top guys]," Bosh said. "He put him on LeBron. Then he put him on James [Harden], and once we saw him on James, it was like OK. Then he guards Paul [George]. Paul got the best of him a little bit but there weren’t too many mistakes he made. It was more so on screens. It was on the bigs and the help side defense on that one.
"Just look at his poise. These are guys who average 20-30 points a night. DeRozan is [the Raptors'] leading scorer. He gets to the line 10 times a night. He averages 20-plus points. He just made it a nightmare for him.”
To Bosh's point, against George, Winslow was both good and bad. George was 1-of-6 with Winslow as the closest defender, but he got loose from the rookie on plenty of screens that took advantage of defensive miscommunications. The next game back, Winslow was tasked with slowing DeRozan and allowed just one make in four attempts while frustrating the Raptors' scorer to the point of provoking a technical foul and an offensive foul.
How does such a young player manage to do this with little to no experience?
“Yeah, he’s confusing me," Bosh admitted following the win over the Raptors. "I mean you always want to just kind of be easy on the rooks but he’s raising the bar every game. With his maturity. His ability. His knack to play defense. I’ve never seen anything like it as long as I’ve been in this league -- from a rookie.
"He’s just not making many mistakes. He’s playing solid defense. He’s already built like a tank. Him just being able to move his feet is able to help us out a lot.”
There can be a lot of noise in individual net rating statistics, especially this early in the season. But the Heat have just flat-out been better with the rookie on the floor. In the 140 minutes with Winslow on the bench, the Heat hace been outscored by 9.2 points per 100 possessions. In the 197 minutes Winslow has played, they're outscoring opponents by 19.4 points per 100. A difference of 28.6 points per 100 possessions doesn't even seem real, but his activity has affected the game demonstratively.
Opponents are shooting just 32.8 percent when he defends an attempt, which is 9.1 percent lower than they'd normally shoot. It's getting to the point that this kind of defensive production is expected out of a guy who has only played in seven games. He rebounds well, he hardly scores, he passes well, but the defense is what seems to be guaranteed. His teammates are counting on it.
His assignments over the next week will test him in very different ways. You can expect him to see time on Kobe Bryant, Gordon Hayward, and Andrew Wiggins. His presence on the floor is getting to the point where Spoelstra may have to consider starting the rookie, although that could threaten the balance and effectiveness of Miami's bench unit that is performing so well. It's the determination and poise to be that defensive presence that allows Winslow to do it. He has the right mindset for it.
“He’s committed to it," Spoelstra explains. "I don’t want to put too much right now on his shoulders. It’s what’s required. When he comes in off the bench, this is a dynamic wing league. This is a league of speed, quickness, of athleticism. Guys who can do a lot at the 6-foot-6 to 6-foot-9 range.
"And that’s one of the reasons we drafted him. You have to be able to have guys on your roster that can compete at those positions. Some nights, guys are going to get the best of him. He competes. He studies. He applies. He learns.”
Applying what he's learning with each possession that goes by is something we rarely see from rookie wing defenders. We saw it with Kawhi Leonard in San Antonio. We saw it with Wiggins in Minnesota last year. And for the time being, we're seeing it with Winslow and the way he approaches everything. No smile. No expression. All business out there.
He'll turn 20 years old in March, a few weeks before the Heat plan on returning to the playoffs. To Bosh, he'll probably be the oldest 20-year old in the world by then. To the rest of the NBA, he'll simply be a nightmare to score against.