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NAS Awards: Most Frustrating – Yi Jianlian

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When the team you follow can run out a guy who’s 7-feet tall, can stretch a defense by hitting a bunch of threes, and is long enough body-wise that he’s able to block some shots and grab rebounds, you want to believe this guy is capable of becoming a major player in the NBA. Unfortunately, that same player is maddeningly inconsistent offensively, is one of the worst defenders in the league, and seems to lack every other physical tool outside of length. What you get is the Nets’ “Most Frustrating” player in Yi Jianlian.

Perhaps problem number one for me was having any expectations at all for Yi headed into this season. But after seeing him bulk up and put together a strong showing in the Asia Cup games last summer, I allowed myself to believe that at the bare minimum, Yi could develop into a league average player at his position. After missing a majority of the first six weeks of the season with a knee injury – Yi proved me wrong – he looked like an even better than average player, scoring 22.5 points on 54 percent shooting in his first four games back from injury. What was even better was how Yi was doing it – an assortment of inside and outside moves. Kiki Vandeweghe immediately tried to instill a “twin towers” strategy on offense, with most plays running through Brook Lopez and Yi. The results were a disaster. Brook’s offensive production took a short-term hit, and Yi faded back to the player he was in his first two NBA seasons: 13.4 points per game with woeful 39 percent shooting in January. It’s also no coincidence that January was probably the most embarrassing month for the Nets last season, including back-to-back losses against the Warriors and the Jazz where the Nets were blown out by more than 30.

And Yi’s season continued to slide from there, as he average less than 10 points per game in Feburary and March. After missing some more time in March, he came back and outside of one game against the Pistons, was a non-factor. It was like 2008-09 all over again, when Yi flashed potential, only to miss some time with a wrist injury and never really be an impact player again.

Talking strictly as a fan, what frustrates me the most about Yi is from my vantage point, he’s come to represent all that the front office has done wrong with this organization the past few years. Yi was acquired in a salary dump for Richard Jefferson – and while the idea of having cap space this coming summer was nice, it was disingenuous for the front office to tell fans that this deal was made to make the Nets better in the long-term. Milwaukee, a team that has done a mighty good job rebuilding itself the past few years, was quite quick to dump Yi after only one season. That speaks volumes. There’s also the idea that Yi is solely on this roster as a marketing ploy – capitalizing on the world’s biggest market in China. Considering the desperate lengths the front office has gone to try and make money the past few seasons as their eyes were turned to Brooklyn, it’s not an outlandish Idea that Yi was seen as a cash cow and nothing more.

I wonder how much rope Mikhail Prokhorov will allow Yi this coming season. There are players out there that will improve the team at the PF position, but if the Nets are unable to lure any of them to Newark, this team is going to have to make a decision on Yi. I think he’s had ample opportunity to prove he’s not a starting caliber player in this league, not when he can’t give the team enough consistent offense to offset the fact that the opposing team’s PF is all but guaranteed to go 20 and 10 while Yi is on the floor.

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3 seasons and you`re giving up? Also Harris should take some blame since he underperformed compared to last year. Yi is 25... give me a break. So far the proof given here was that some guy's chinese friend said Yi isn't 22... really? Nice Job... Yi played much better at the end of the year, where he got that 30+pts game. But you know what... Fine trade him, its not like the Nets are any good anyways.

it is true that he has no IQ watsoever and he has not heart but what i dont understand is y people think he can be a special scorer he doesnt really do anything well on offense?

This man has 0 basketball IQ, no heart and a low motor. Do you understand how hard it is to tolerate playing next to someone like that? He has one gear. As a basketball player myself, I can respect a player that, though limited in talent, works hard and plays tough. There are some players that just dont get it. Yi is one of them. Those are the type of players that you dont want to play with. While you're in the trenches fighting, he's just no where to be found, there's no trust. Yes you can point to the fact that he has the potential to be a special scoring big, but the difference between your allstars and the other 90% of the league is their proven abilility to constantly do it at a high level. Yes he had a 20 20 game, but most players on any given night can do that, they are professionals after all. My concern is the extremely low IQ and constantly just getting out worked, out matched, out rebounded, out hustled by 3rd string pf or anyone else he's going against.

The nets definetly need an upgrade at power foward because Yi was beyond inconsistent it was very very rare for him to have a good game or if he did have a good game that would be followed by 4 or 5 really bad games, Yi would be better coming off of the bench. And yi like many other bigs is also injury prone as he only played 52 games this season!!and only 61 last season!!

Bash him all you want, the nets still wouldn't win more than 12 games this year without him.
Yi deserves some blame but theres plenty of other players on the team that did not produce on a daily level.

I feel sorry for Yi because he always got picked on. Yes, he still has some problems such as inconsistent and bad defense. But honestly, be fair, he did make an significant improvement compare to his last season. He drived to the rim more and was more aggressive than last year. When he didn't shoot so well he still manage to contribute in other way such as grabing 9 or 10 rebounds in the game. In terms of statistic, he is a lot better than last swason
Sadly, it seems that people only focus on his weakness rather than his contribution to the team. I saw Yi once scored 20 points and grabbed 19 rebounds and 12 of them was offensive rebounds which is something that even Dwight hasn't manage to done yet. However, no one praised his play. But when he shoot 3 to 12 from the field in other game, he got screwed over by everyone! fans, newspaper and website.

I just feel sick when I see people try to blame everything on Yi.

Riding the pine and comming in to stretch the floor is the only way I can tolerate Yi next year and if he doesn't show any devolpment with whatever minutes we throw his way than don't renew his contract.

It's so evident that he's at least 25 that I'm not even going to try explaining.

Some players just cant get it within a season...and they may not get it until they're like 25. With that being said, on the negative note, I have a Chinese friend who's 80% sure yi is about 25 years old, not 22

GIVE YI A CHANCE? This entire year was his chance. All he can do is shoot, and he's extremely inconsistent at it. If he develops, its from the bench. Although in my opinion, he just needs to go. Any 7 footer that gets blocked by the rim while dunking and laughs about it needs to revaluate theirself as a basketball player. He is terrible point blank!

OK Yi may have been frustrating, but i think people need to stop bashing him. He is still 22 YEARS OLD!! GIVE THE GUY A BREAK! He just needs some more development. I think he can be a beast in a year or two, just wait and see. If we don't get a Free Agent PF like Amare or Boozer, then I say screw it and let Yi develop into the beast he can be. We all watched that game where he and brook combined for 65 points! Yi was a beast in that game, putting up a Dirk-like performance with I think 34 points and like 5 threes. Give him a chance.

Of course bigs possibly play a more physical game which may lead to injury but I still think guard and small forwards are more injury prone.

Houston? Didn't Dallas make a play for Grotat last year and then Orlando was welling to match so they kept him? Just saying.

Saying he's less injury prone than a couple of superior players is hardly a defense. At least their good and injury prone unlike say Yi. Fact is Yi does little to nothing right in terms of the little things and say rebounding, defending, passings. So when he's not scoring which is plenty he's nothing but a liability on the court and he makes a bunch of mental errors (bad fouls, lane violations, turnovers etc.) to boot. Yi was getting outplayed at the end of the season by Josh Boone. So no finding a a power forward better than Yi isn't hard.

As for big being injury prone, I don't really think thats true. I mean usually smaller guys that get knocked around or a have lot of movement to their game are logically more injury prone. Brook hasn't missed a game yet. Bigs esp centers tend to be less injury prone because there big meaning less players on the court can hurt them and also because they just camp out in the post, must less running turning and even jumping those all being some of the biggest causes of injury.

Bigs are hard to find. Even you can find quality bigs, they are injury prone. At least Yi stays longer than the Yao, Oden or Przybilla at a lower price.

Remember Marcin Gortat? Houston's stat manager was trying to sign him with MLE, got outbid by Dallas and Miami.

I was waiting for this!
Yi is the most frustrating player on the Nets by far.
On paper a 7 footer that can hit the 3 is golden, but when the same player doesn't understand weakside or help defense its a lost cause.
I like when you say Yi represents all the bad moves the front office made! Classic!
The Nets need an upgrade at the POWER forward position not a cupcake with a jumper

Trackbacks

  1. [...] This offseason is going to be an exciting one for the New Jersey Nets, but before we can move forward we must look back.  Over the next couple of days, I am going to be looking at the Nets who will (most likely) be back, and review their year, from what they did well to what they didn’t.  Today we are going to look at the  Nets’ Most Frustrating  Player, Yi Jianlian. [...]

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