I am, of course, talking about Jalen Brunson, who finished with 18 points on 11 shots to go along with four assists, including one which proved to likely be the most significant of his career to date.
JALEN TO DWIGHT FOR THE GO-AHEAD JAM! pic.twitter.com/pc6LkAimPO
— Dallas Mavericks (@dallasmavs) March 31, 2019
Brunson, like many of his teammates, have spent much of the post-All-Star break grouped in as one of the “other guys” next to Luka Doncic, who’s having one of the most outstanding rookie seasons we have ever seen (and who was out today with a right thigh contusion). But Brunson himself is also having a quality first-year campaign, in the midst of a stretch of 14 straight games scoring in double-figures, and boasting 16-point, four-assist per averages since the All-Star break. The Villanova product has put together an All-Rookie season, but whether he receives that recognition or not is still in question. This is a loaded rookie class, of course, and he’s the second-best rookie on his own team, one that’s toward the bottom of the Western Conference standings. But plays like these — making an advanced pass in an enormous moment, on the road against a playoff team — will help make his case not only for All-Rookie honors, but also for continuing to receive significant playing time moving forward, no matter how many quality players the Mavericks add in free agency or via trade this summer. He’s in the rotation if I’m the coach, no matter what. (Now, thankfully for all of you I’m not the head coach, but the point stands.)
A huge bucket by @TreyBurke puts us on top! pic.twitter.com/XLKVC00vwj
— Dallas Mavericks (@dallasmavs) March 31, 2019
That bucket came against Paul George, mind you, one of the best perimeter defenders in the game. Burke knew he didn’t have the separation required to finish over George as things stood when he prepared to turn the corner, so he made a nice hesitation move to line him up and remove Steven Adams from the play, then bumped George to create the space needed to flip it in off the glass. That’s a beautiful move and a big-time finish from the smallest player on the floor.
Burke shot 4 of 8 from beyond the arc in this one, bringing his 3-point percentage as a Maverick up to 36.7 percent. That mark, to go along with his nearly 3-to-1 assist ratio, makes him quite a playmaker to bring in off the bench. And despite the team’s results, he’s had a positive plus-minus in eight of his last nine appearances, indicating that things have generally gone well when he’s been out there. He’s about to be a free agent, and no one’s future is ever perfectly clear, but Burke has proven himself to be a quality rotation piece in his time in Dallas, especially during these last couple weeks as his playing time has been on the rise.
The Mavs (30-46) will play Eastern Conference powerhouse Philadelphia at home on Monday. Tipoff is at 7:30 p.m.
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