National Post

Siakam’s improvemen­t speaks to his maturity

‘ Taking what the defence gives me’

- Mike Ganter

Pascal Siakam has progressed so quickly on the basketball court, but it’s sometimes easy to forget what is being asked of him this season.

Siakam is being asked to fill the offensive void left by Kawhi Leonard, who left for the Clippers.

It’s a bigger ask when you recall Siakam has only been playing the game since he was 16 years of age.

The most improved player in the NBA receives frequent questions about filling those very large shoes. Even more impressive is his maturity.

Media ask him about his developing role. More often than not it is after a game in which he has used his unique blend of skill, speed and athleticis­m to put up 20- 35 points while handling more than his fair share of the rebounding, defending and setting up teammates.

But there are games when the opposition loads up its defence against the 25- year- old power forward, holding him to less impressive numbers.

Siakam still fields the same questions about his game and where it’s at and politely, if need be, reminds his questioner­s that he’s learning on the fly. The path isn’t as always as quick and easy as he and everyone else would like it to be.

Teams got a good book on Siakam’s spin moves and his aggressive drives a year ago. And now with no Leonard in the lineup to focus on, they load up for him.

In the first couple of months of the season that approach was still very effective with Siakam averaging between 24 and 28 points a game through the first 21/2 months. But then a groin injury through late December and early January cost him 11 games and when he came back teams were throwing even more bodies at him more often.

His numbers sagged a little, dropping to 20 points a game. Again, rather than get frustrated with the attention, he continues to adapt every game.

“I’m watching the double team and obviously that is part of growing and getting better as a player,” he said during the recently completed 4-1 West Coast road trip. “Understand­ing that you command attention and making plays out of that. I think I am improving.”

It’s meant changing the very mindset at times that got him this opportunit­y to be the focal point of a team’s offence in the first place, but Siakam is doing it.

“It’s tough because your mentality is to score and you feel like you always have an advantage, but a lot of teams aren’t letting you play that one- on- one game anymore,” he said. “So you have to find other ways to score and also other ways to affect the game.”

It’s not an accident that his assists for the month of March are at a season-high 5.2 a game.

But that doesn’t mean he’s not scoring. In addition to becoming a better passer, he’s still among the league leaders in scoring.

His 23.6 points a game are 15th in the NBA, tied with Boston’s Jayson Tatum, and only a few points behind Leonard, Lebron James and Anthony Davis.

The difference between Siakam and Tatum — and that elite group they are chasing — is Siakam and Tatum are still reaching for their respective ceiling.

A favourite phrase of Siakam’s these days in describing his game is “taking what the defence gives me.”

Again that speaks to his maturity. Rather than put his head down and run into those double teams, he’s picking his spots. When the defence is lined up to stop him, he understand­s someone else is probably in a position to score easier, and passes to them.

“Just watching the guys that do that at the highest level and that’s something that Kawhi always would say last year — ‘ You don’t look at the past quarter. Whatever happened before has no effect on the game whatsoever’ and for me I just try to have that approach. After I missed the last shot that one is over. Move on. That is what I am trying to do.

“I think it’s all mental, right?” Siakam continued.

“One of the things I have always done early in my career is that every time I missed a shot it felt like the world ended type of stuff. It’s something I try to work on every single day. Just understand­ing that the last shot don’t matter. It’s over. If you make it or miss it nothing is going to change. So just continue to do the things you do and you work on those things every day so there is no reason you should be worrying about those things.”

 ?? RUSSEL ISABELLA / USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Raptors’ Pascal Siakam says he tries to adapt his game every outing.
RUSSEL ISABELLA / USA TODAY SPORTS Raptors’ Pascal Siakam says he tries to adapt his game every outing.

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