Jump to content

Thanks for visiting BtownBanners.com!  We noticed you have AdBlock enabled.  While ads can be annoying, we utilize them to provide these forums free of charge to you!  Please consider removing your AdBlock for BtownBanners or consider signing up to donate and help BtownBanners stay alive!  Thank you!

ccgeneral

Cody Zeller - Atlanta Hawks

Recommended Posts

Zeller extension 4 years/56million. No Idea why Zeller would sign that. He should fire his agent. 


I love Zeller. He is making good money so I am happy for him.
I wish he would go to a different franchise where he could get treated like a number 4 pick. Never been given starter minutes to really see his impact. His +/- is always good relative to the team.


Sent from my iPhone using BtownBanners

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

NEW YORK — The pick-and-roll has morphed into the NBA's most popular play during recent years.

Offensive attacks, such as the one belonging to the Charlotte Hornetswho run pick-and-rolls more frequently than 25 of the league's 30 teamsare built around it. Defensive schemes are predicated on being able to stop it. The play has catapulted a number of guards, like Charlotte's Kemba Walker, into stardom.

Walker could credit his favorite pick-and-roll partner Cody Zeller for a few of his career-high 23.8 points per game, and he does, but that'll have to wait:

"He sets illegal ones," Walker told Bleacher Report, with a laugh. "But I love it when guards get hit. It happens to me all the time, getting hit by other bigs. It's fun to see other guards deal with the same thing."

Zeller is averaging five screen assists per game, the third best mark in the NBA this season. He's doing so despite averaging just 25 minutes, 10 less than Washington Wizards center Marcin Gortat, whose 6.4 screen assists per game lead the league.

Screen assists take into account all versions of picks, but it's Zeller's potency as the big man in the pick-and-roll that has salvaged his career and transformed him into one the NBA's most valuable role players. 

The statistic, which the NBA made public last postseason for the first time, tracks the number of baskets in a game created by a pick. There are a number of tricks to the craft, Zeller said, but the one he most enjoys is standing strong and absorbing the contact.

"Most big guys want to get to the rim really quick and slip out," Zeller says. "What I'll do is hold it a little longer and try to get away with as much as I can without being called for it.

"The guards (on other teams) don't like that."

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — Cody Zeller’s unplanned move to center is paying major dividends for the Charlotte Hornets.
When Al Jefferson went down last season with an injury, coach Steve Clifford asked the 7-foot, 240-pound Zeller to fill in by shifting from power forward to the 5 spot. Zeller played so well that Clifford decided to keep him there even after Jefferson returned.

“It was kind of a freak thing how it happened and I don’t think anyone was planning on it,” Zeller said Monday. “But I’m glad it worked out that way.”
The Hornets liked what they saw from Zeller so much last season they rewarded him with a four-year, $56 million contract in the offseason. They didn’t re-sign Jefferson.

Zeller spent the offseason working at improving his skills as a center. He’s still a work in progress midway in his fourth NBA season, but is averaging career highs in points (10.8), rebounds (6.3) and blocks (1.2) per game.
And yet it’s hard to completely quantify Zeller’s worth in statistics.

He’s the type of player who does the little things — setting a solid screen to free up Kemba Walker or Nic Batum, tapping out an offensive rebound to a teammate or hustling back on defense to prevent a transition basket.

What he lacks in physicality against the league’s taller and stronger centers he makes up in hustle — something that at times tends to result in a trip to the training room.

“I don’t think there are many guys willing to break their nose like he has,” Batum said with a laugh on Zeller’s uncanny knack for taking shots to the face. “I mean that guy is diving on every ball and he doesn’t fear anybody. He’s facing guys like (Hassan) Whiteside, DeAndre (Jordan), (Rudy) Gobert and Dwight Howard every night. He’s been huge for us.”

Clifford agrees.

He’s been thrilled with Zeller’s progression since taking over as a starter, particularly his “rolling” in the pick-and-roll game for the Hornets (15-13).

“That sounds like a small thing, but it’s not,” Clifford said. “He has a good feel for screening, which helps the ball handlers.”

Clifford would like to see Zeller’s rebounding numbers improve, particularly on defense because the team is not particularly tall.

But that appears to be getting better.

He has 21 rebounds in his past two games after averaging 6.1 in his previous nine December games.

“Outside of Mike (Kidd-Gilchrist) and Nic (Batum) we don’t have guys at their position who are good at that, and it’s a critical part of the game,” Clifford said. “We have had a couple games when we played good enough on defense (to win) but lost because of our rebounding.”

Zeller is working hard to improve his mid-range jump shot and become a more consistent scorer.

He took for jumpers Saturday night against the Atlanta Hawks.

The Hornets know if he can make them consistently it will force opposing big men to step out and guard him, thus opening up more scoring opportunities for his teammates.

“He isn’t hesitating to take those shots, which is good,” Batum said. “It will help his game a lot. We all know he can run and he can dunk on people. He has a gift to play this game. And if he can shoot like that…”

Charlotte lost its chance to acquire a dominant center in 2012 when it failed to land the No. 1 overall pick in the NBA draft lottery — and the rights to Anthony Davis — despite finishing 7-59 the season before. It was a gut-wrenching break for the team at the time, knowing that talented centers like Davis don’t come along very often in the NBA.

Zeller, the No. 4 overall pick the following year, may never develop into the type of player Davis has become, but it’s pretty clear the Hornets like what they have in him.

“I mean, he’s a 5-man,” Clifford said. “The way the league is now he’s a 5, at both ends of the floor. And it definitely suits him better.”

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

http://www.theplayerstribune.com/cody-zeller-charlotte-hospital-visit/

This is from The Players Tribune. Cody writes about a particular patient he grew close to while visiting a children's hospital in Charlotte. Good stuff and you get to see him dressed up as a minion. That's worth it in and of itself.


Sent from my iPhone using BtownBanners

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now

×