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[Nets Daily] How long will Mikal Bridges next step be?



[Nets Daily] How long will Mikal Bridges next step be?

by shadow_spinner0

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  1. shadow_spinner0

    > When Bobby Marks did his post-mortem on the Nets — and talked about where they’re headed, he said this about Mikal Bridges.
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    >“No closers on this team,” the former Nets GM turned “ESPN insider”said. “My apologies to Mikal Bridges. He’s probably the third best player on a top four team. I mean that’s the reality of it. He had a great year. He’s not a No. 1. I think he’s probably a No. 1 on a bad team. Probably a No. 2 on a team that’s a fifth seed, fourth seed. He’s not the No. 1 if you’re trying to win a championship. And no one asked him to be.”
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    >That seems to conflict what another Marks (no relation), current Nets GM Sean Marks, said around the same time when asked last Sunday, “How do you view Mikal as a No. 1 player on team or do you need to get another No. 1 option?”
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    >“Regarding Mikal, I think he’s proven to a lot of people that his role can continue to get better and better and bigger and bigger so I think I would be pretty silly to be up here and limit him and say he cannot be something,” said Sean Marks.
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    >“Really for a few of our guys so I think that a few people have had their eyes open to what he can do. But now that when the ball’s in his hands in those key crucial moments of games, can he step up? Can he be that guy that we can rely on in big moments? I think we saw it a little bit in Phoenix when Devin Booker was out, he carried a considerable load for them. And then we saw this year where he came in and immediately was a crowd favorite. You could get behind him. It’s just the way he played, how he played and he didn’t shy away from those moments either. So I would definitely not limit him and say he could only be this for us.”
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    >“People, I don’t think they fully realize that what he was able to do in his time here wasn’t just he woke up one morning and was better than he was before,” said [Cam] Johnson.
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    >“One, he was very effective in Phoenix. But two, there were hours and hours and hours of offseason work on every shot you saw him shoot, every move you saw him make. We were working on those moves all summer for multiple summers. That growth does come in the offseason…
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    >“I think Mikal’s a prime example of someone who’s ready to take advantage of that opportunity, and I’m super proud of him.”
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    >As Brian Lewis reports Saturday, “privately, Jacque Vaughn and members of the Nets front office have acknowledged [**playmaking and using his newfound gravity to punish double-teams will be the next steps in Bridges’ development**](https://nypost.com/2023/04/08/how-nets-mikal-bridges-can-improve-on-breakthrough-2023/) into an All-Star.” But Lewis also wrote the plan is more about supplementing not replacing Bridges who seems ready for whatever role the Nets have for him.
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    >He also admitted he’s still a work-in-progress, looking to add new wrinkles to his game, which also includes top-flight defense.
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    >“Maybe try some things I never tried,” he said of off-season plans. “Which probably will help, which I always kind of do each offseason just add a little thing that’s just kind of new.”
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    >Growth at age 26 doesn’t seem like that much of a challenge, considering where he’s already been. Indeed, one thing seems certain: that the Nets are willing to let it happen on their watch, not another team’s.

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