Thu. Nov 21st, 2024

BROOKLYN, N.Y. – While most of the Nuggets slept or kept quiet during a long flight to Toronto last weekend, Russell Westbrook walked up to the back of the team’s plane and struck up a conversation with coach Michael Malone.

They talked basketball, Denver’s new second unit and their bumpy start to the season. But that was secondary to Westbrook in this context. He had already tried to make the rounds with his new teammates during training camp, wanting to familiarize himself with their backgrounds. Now he had a chance to learn more about from his trainer.

“I do that stuff all the time, man; it’s just not seen by (the public),” Westbrook said. “… I like to learn about people, learn about their family, their kids. Basketball is whatever.”

He and Malone even ended up talking about the 1921 Tulsa Massacre, a topic Westbrook had learned about during his 11 seasons with the Oklahoma City Thunder, prompting him to produce a documentary for History Channel called “Burning in Tulsa.”

“I mean, what an interesting person Russell Westbrook is,” Malone marveled.

Westbrook’s on-court production had been secondary to the intangible impression he’s left in Denver before Tuesday, when his big performance ignited a team on fumes in Brooklyn. The Nuggets rallied from a 17-point deficit to force overtime and clinch the second time in as many nights – and in as many cities. In a 144-139 victorythe reserve point guard totaled 22 points and five assists in regulation time. He didn’t even have to play in overtime for his relentless presence to remain inescapable at the Barclays Center.

With 17 seconds left in the game, Nets veteran Dennis Schroder committed an offensive foul in the corner, right in front of the visiting bench. Westbrook paraded to the scene of the crime and pointed to the other end of the court, gleefully mimicking the foul. Schroder stood, perplexed.

“It was time for the game to end and go eat,” Westbrook said.

It was a vintage, idiosyncratic Russ moment, perhaps the most appropriate embodiment of his impact in Denver so far, in that it came outside of game action and infused the roster with a bit of fresh personality. That’s been a constant, even if the points and assists haven’t been.

“It’s not just about putting the ball in the hoop,” Peyton Watson said when asked if the scoring surge is what the Nuggets envisioned when they added Westbrook. “Russ does a lot of things that a lot of people would never see. … All those things matter more to me than whether he makes or misses shots.”

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By David Fleshler

david Fleshler covers city and metro news for the Barnesonly Post. He has written for the Boulder Daily Camera and works as a reporter, columnist, and editor for the CU Independent, the student news publication at the University of Colorado-Boulder. His passion is learning about politics and solving problems for readers.

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