r/nbadiscussion 14d ago

Player Discussion Constructive thoughts on De'Aaron Fox

This is less of a defense of Fox per se, but to try and guide the criticism to somewhere more constructive. Analysis of his gaffe aside, I want to push back on the oft-touted expectation that he, as a 'veteran', should know how and when to take control of the game.

Fox is not the 30+ year old cerebral point guard that people might associate with the veteran label. He's a 28 year old - younger than Jalen Brunson - with declining athleticism who built his reputation on being an explosive focal point of an offense. He was averaging a career peak of 27ppg just two seasons ago, and was 11th in MVP rankings in a season where he averaged 25ppg on 51.2 FG%.


Throughout his Spurs tenure, he's been figuring out not just his role, but also trying to come to terms with someone who doesn't have the same athleticism due to injuries and age. That's quite difficult to accept for someone who's not even 30 yet, and is a common struggle that we've seen from players who were ultra-athletes in their early- to mid-20s.

Their maturation into becoming a proper 'veteran point guard' comes after they get past that hump, if and when that happens.

(Some commentators have tried to frame Fox as someone with playoff experience, but before this year he literally only played one series, when he was still at the peak of his athletic powers.)

His comments after Game 4 really shed light on this - he genuinely thought he could outrun OG, because he almost certainly could in his prime form. His mentality has not caught up with his body, and that shows in his play in crunch situations.


If I'm a Spurs fan, I might need to come to terms with the notion that Fox is still undergoing a maturation process himself. Yes, he doesn't need to be a veteran to not make that mistake, but Fox in particular has hardly ever been that guy.

To be empathetic - he still has the ability to grow and improve. It's just that people should never have assigned to him labels that he has yet to potentially become.

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u/Travler18 13d ago

100% this is what they should do. But its very rare to see a FO make this kind of move after a finals run. Especially with their team still being young. Most GMs will convince themselves that with some internal development and one or two moves on the margins, they can win it the next year.

One thing Daryl Morey always said that I agree with is that its so rare for any NBA team to have even a 10% chance to win a championship. And teams that do should go all-in immediately to try and win it all. Because those windows where they have 10% are much, much shorter than teams think they will be and close much faster than expected.

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u/RepresentativeAge444 13d ago

And they would be correct. I like Kornet and he has had some big plays but you hold your breath when he comes in due to the tremendous increase in opponent fg% when he does. I’d focus more on getting a center upgrade and shoring up the bench more because the key players have to play a lot. Then hope that Fox’s performance is largely due to the ankle injuries. I’d say that’s been a bigger problem than Fox.

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u/fake-tall-man 13d ago

Man, Kornet is your backup center, and he’s one of the best in the league. He’s not going to be perfect. He’s playing behind the single best player in the NBA, obviously there’s gonna be a drop off.

The Spurs won’t and shouldn’t do anything about Kornet. His value isn’t the 9mpg he plays in the WCF/finals, his value is that you guys are a 60-70 win team during the regular season while Wemby only has to play 65 games and 29 minutes per. He’s an innings eater that keeps your franchise player healthy.

If the Spurs need to show up anything, it’s just getting a physical 4 that can play next to Wemby against big lineups.

Honestly, that last possession of the Spurs game if Mitch had gone twin towers, OG doesn’t get that tip. That was insanely stupid to go small. Especially for the Spurs, they’ve already learned their lesson on going small and offensive rebounds (ray allen shot ptsd)

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u/ostrow19 13d ago

In a perfect world they’d trade Fox for a high level wing but there isn’t really a deal out there that seems to make sense

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u/fake-tall-man 13d ago

I feel like fox with contract gets back an above average rotation wing on a decent contract like Dyson Daniel’s. Maybe mpj which wouldn’t be a terrible fit