Speaking to reporters this week for the first time as a member of the Thunder, Isaiah Hartenstein said all the right things about his potential role, as Rylan Stiles of SI.com relays.
There has been plenty of debate in Oklahoma City this summer about whether the team’s major free agent addition will start or come off the bench, given the presence of Rookie of the Year runner-up Chet Holmgren at center. For his part, Hartenstein sidestepped that discourse, telling the media that he trusts head coach Mark Daigneault‘s judgment in managing the lineup and rotation.
“Whatever he does, he’s a really versatile coach. I mean, you watched last year. Some games the guys who would start would start the second half,” Hartenstein said. “(I’m) just being here and doing whatever the team needs to win. If that’s coming off the bench or starting, I’m just here to help the team win. That’s the main thing.”
Here’s more from around the Northwest:
- Having been traded from Washington to the Trail Blazers in July, Deni Avdija admitted it initially felt “kind of weird” to join a new team, but added that he’s adjusting quickly, according to Aaron Fentress of The Oregonian. “They’ve embraced me, they love me and they want me to get better,” Avdija said. “And I feel like that’s what you need as a new guy joining the team. I feel like my teammates support me, coaches. I feel at home.” Head coach Chauncey Billups referred to Avdija as a “Swiss Army knife-type of dude,” lauding the forward’s play-making, passing, screening, and shooting while noting that the plan is to use him “all over” the court.
- The addition of Russell Westbrook represents the “ultimate chemistry experiment” for the Nuggets, according to Tony Jones of The Athletic, who says the move has the potential to blow up — or to help Denver win another title. Westbrook shot just 3-of-10 from the floor in his preseason debut on Friday in Abu Dhabi, but had 12 points and eight assists in 19 minutes, with Denver outscoring Boston by four points during that time. “I thought Russ had some good moments out there,” head coach Michael Malone said, per Bennett Durando of The Denver Post. “Obviously playing downhill, putting pressure on the defense, getting his teammates involved. So overall for his first game after a week or so of practice, I think there are gonna be some positives, and like everybody else in that locker room, there are plenty of things that we can clean up as well.”
- Although Christian Braun started at shooting guard on Friday, Malone said that both Braun and Julian Strawther will get an opportunity to play with the Nuggets‘ starters during the preseason, tweets Durando.
- Reporting throughout the offseason indicated the Jazz plan to lean heavily on their young players in 2024/25, which will serve the dual purpose of letting Utah thoroughly assess its recent first-round picks while also potentially lining up the club for another high first-round pick next June. Head coach Will Hardy‘s comments this week reinforced the notion that winning games isn’t “the absolutely priority” for the team this season, writes Andy Larsen of The Salt Lake Tribune. “Going into this season, I think our vision is very clear: This is an opportunity for us to really invest in our youth,” Hardy said.
Jazz are really going to need recent lottery picks Walker Kessler, Keyonte George, Cody Williams, and Taylor Hendricks to really step up their respective games, if they even want to be a respectable contending team. I think those four guys alongside Sexton and Marrkanen are going to help the Jazz ultimately field their next competitive squad.
Then they have latter 1st Round guys and 2nd Round picks like Isaiah Collier, Brice Sensabaugh, Johnny Juzang, and Kyle Filipowski all waiting in the wings, and they’re going to need one or two of these guys to emerge as solid rotation pieces moving forward as well. I think Collier has all the tools to eventually become a real styd in the NBA, he’s just going to have to be more consistent offensively and continue working on his shot and his range.
In Danny we Trust!
On paper they are the weakest team so it does look like they are going after the #1 pick. Its going to be a very long season for jazz fans.
Next yrs lottery is strong. This is the yr to tank.
“(I’m) just being here and doing whatever the team needs to win. If that’s coming off the bench or starting, I’m just here to help the team win. That’s the main thing.”
That’s a Thibs momento there…….
You start IHart. Then he helps Chet become the next Dirk. IMO they are a perfect match. That’s why I thought Thunder could go after him. And they did. And made sure they got him with that salary.
Love IHart, wish him the best. I expect to see him starting in OKC.
Will need Hartenstein next to Holmgren in the playoffs at times. Was blatantly obvious Williams and chet at the 4 and 5 just can’t compete with the likes of Dallas or Minnesota for now, boys amongst men. Bringing in Hartestein and Caruso makes OKC much tougher and more versatile for sure.