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NAS Awards: Most Improved – Courtney Lee

CourtneyLee

I apologize in advance to all of you readers out there who couldn’t get enough of our NAS off-season awards. With that said, after taking a bit of a hiatus, I realized there’s one more core member of the team who didn’t get any kind of acknowledgement.

Courtney Lee is an interesting case in that his season was so inconsistent, he could have been a candidate for many of the other awards given out so far: Most enigmatic? Sure, the guy would look like an all-around game changer one night, and then disappear the next. Disappointing? It depends a lot on your standards, but if you bought into the hype that the Nets traded their last star in Vince Carter for a guy who would be a suitable replacement offensively, then you would have been very disappointed. Most frustrating? Still think that Yi wins that award hands down, but similar to Yi, Lee’s stroke would be working on night, and then his shot would mysteriously go south.

But the award I’ve decided upon here is “Most Improved.” With all due respect to Terrence Williams and his outstanding final six weeks of the season, Lee statistically became a much more dynamic player as the season went along. Unlike TWill, outside of January, Lee got a little bit better every month of the season, and by the time mid-April rolled around, he looked like he was going to fit into next year’s core somehow (as a starter or bench player depends on who the Nets draft and sign in free agency).

An injury-plagued November limited Lee to only 7 games and 3 starts, as he seemingly found himself in Lawrence Frank’s doghouse early. The numbers weren’t pretty as he averaged 7.6 points on 35 percent shooting, including 22 percent from long-range, one of his supposed offensive strengths.  When Kiki Vandeweghe took over for Frank, his first move was to insert Lee back in the starting rotation. From there, Lee rewarded Kiki by scoring 13 points on 43 percent shooting, though he was still woeful from long range, shooting 26 percent from three.

By the time February rolled around, Lee’s game started to improve, and it’s no coincidence that the Nets started playing better as a team as a result.  February was probably his best month as he averaged 15.5 points on 49 percent shooting, including 41 percent from three. Lee was finally resembling the player Nets fans were hoping for after the Carter trade. No he wasn’t going to match VC’s offensive production, but he was resembling a good outside shooter with some nice defensive chops. He matched his shooting numbers from February in March, though he was done in by the small sample size of 7 games in March, averaging 14 points on 43 percent shooting, including 32 percent from three.

While Lee never resembled an “all-star” for sustained stretches, by the end of the season, he did come across as a steady presence on the roster. He got praise from coaches and sportswriters for his great attitude and his perseverance on the defensive end. Courtney Lee is certain to play some role for this organization next year.

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If he's not MIP, then who is? Brook was just a beast the entire year. DH didn't improve (only towards end of the year). Only other candidate would be Terrence and I'm not sure he deserves it over Lee.

I love his attitude and work ethic. Might not end up an all-star but most NBA players never do. Would love to have him on my team.

Courtney is like a fine wine. The older he gets, the better he will be. His consistency will improve as he gains experience each year. Last year his role was different (role player) on a very good team. He gets comfortable with his team and environment and gets traded. Flash forward to this year. Different team, different circumstances. Courtney is expected to do more in the offensive scheme with not a whole lot of talent to back him up. While Courtney is a scorer, he is still only a second year player in a new situation. He has another year under his belt now, lets see what he does in the next couple of years before you say he is overrated. He was not brought in to pick-up where VC left off, he was brought in on his upside for the future. Courtney is very talented both offensively and defensively. I can't believe how impatient some fans are. Well, that's what a 12-70 season does to you. With the addition of a superstar PF, this team could seriously be tons better next year.

I think he's overrated by some fans. Not saying trade him or anything like that, he's def a keeper, since he has a small contract, is a nice role player, plays hard and has a good attitude. But his season was pretty mediocre. He was stinking up the place during the first months of the season, Then he had a nice stretch of games, but that's about it.

Not my choice for MIP.
CLee really didn't do much more than last year with the Magic. He was inconsistent then and still is. Yes he improved but his minutes increased dramatically.
CLee was supposed to be a defensive stopper but we never saw it.
There were rumors that CLee cried when he found out about the trade. Realisticly noone expected CLee to replace VC but he didn't even come close. CLee was force fed the ball just like Yi.
So where is the improvement?

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  1. [...] their year, from what they did well to what they didn’t.  Today we are going to look at the Nets’ most improved player, Courtney [...]

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