Shawn Marion tells it like it is about Russell Westbrook

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I’ve spoken my peace about Russell Westbrook 20 times over during this postseason. While some were calling him a ballhog, a selfish player or an egotistical maniac, I saw a guy that was forced into trying to make plays from his point guard position.

He maybe called his own number a little too much and his usage went up from the regular season, but for the most part, he was the same old Russ that makes you yell “I love that dude!” and that makes you throw things.

Kevin Durant defended him valiantly after Game 5’s elimination last night saying, “It’s kind of frustrating to see the kind of criticism he’s been getting  because he led us by playing the way he’s been playing now the whole  season. That’s what made him an All-Star, second team All-NBA. And it  kind of baffles me that people just start to criticize because he’s  playing like that now.”

Naturally though, you’d expect KD to always say the right thing no matter what. That’s why I thought this quote from Shawn Marion last night was maybe even a little better. “He didn’t have any choice but to shoot some of those shots, because we were denying everybody else the ball,” he said.  “When you deny everybody else from catching the ball, he ain’t got no  choice but to go one-on-one.

“Don’t talk bad about that man, because he’s  competing out there and he’s playing hard on both ends of the floor.  When you deny people from catching the ball, he’s got no choice but to  shoot it. Don’t kill him. I don’t like that. He is out there playing  hard and competing.”

That’s perfectly put. Westbrook’s choices truly were limited. He was out of options a lot of times because of horrible, stagnant offense, great ball denial defense and double-teaming on KD. It was either have Westbrook do something or hoist a terrible shot from 20 feet every possession.

Was it a perfect postseason for Westbrook? Hardly. He could’ve been better. The Thunder needed him to be better. If he had performed a bit more under control and taken a few smarter shots, maybe there’s a Game 6 Friday night in OKC.

People got a little too caught up in staring at the box score instead of  actually watching Westbrook play. Yeah, he took 28 shots in Game 5. But  that’s what the Dallas defense was giving him. You really want a guy  that averaged 22 a game this year to turn down good looks so that he can  force it to his teammate that’s double-teamed? What sense does that  make?

He’s 22. He just finished his third year. This was his first foray this deep into the playoffs. The fact that he was able to hear every bit of that criticism and shake it off says a lot about his mental fortitude. The guy’s a winner. He plays his butt off for you every night.

He’s got to progress a little more, learn from these mistakes and take his team a little deeper. Which I think he can do.