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Desmond Bane opens up on LeBron James altercation and how being picked so low in the draft motivates him | NBA News


Desmond Bane’s face is a picture of restraint as he stands in a dark hallway tucked inside the bowels of San Antonio’s AT&T Center.

If you’ve spent any time watching Bane and the brash, young, Memphis Grizzlies, you know that said restraint won’t last.

“I didn’t know how good we were gonna be,” Bane explains. “I knew we were a young team, had some promising young talent, and I thought it would be a good opportunity to grow with those guys with everybody being a similar age to me.

“I love the culture. You could just see it. It looked like they were having fun playing, playing together, and [in] a small market, which is what I wanted, just so I could lock in on my craft and on my game.”

The classy sentiments flowed easily initially, but the mere mention of Memphis’ relentless style brimming with confidence bordering on cocky finally coaxed out a smile.

Bane laughingly nods in acknowledgment at the assertion his team are ‘dogs’ in terms of their levels of fight and panache.

“We know how to mingle and keep it professional, but when we step in between those lines, it’s a different animal out there.”

Memphis demonstrated as much through its first 54 games, climbing to near the top of the food chain in the ultra-competitive Western Conference (36-18), having knocked off some of the NBA’s heavy hitters along the way in the Warriors (twice), Jazz (twice), Heat, 76ers, Suns and Bulls before continuing their run of good form against the New York Knicks at Madison Square Garden.

Alongside Ja Morant’s meteoric rise and the steady improvement of Jaren Jackson Jr., second-year swingman Bane deserves plenty of credit for Memphis’ current run of success.

The sophomore guard returned from a three-game absence (Health and Safety Protocols) on January 26 to help the Grizzlies reel off a three-game winning streak, before falling Monday in overtime to the Joel Embiid-less Philadelphia 76ers.

Bane entered that outing as one of two players (Kevin Durant is the other) over the last 25 seasons to average 20-plus points on 50-50-80 shooting splits on the road (minimum 10 games) over the course of a season. He poured in a career-high 34 points, hitting 5-of-9 from deep to go with seven rebounds and three steals in the defeat, as Morant whipped up a game-high 37 points and five assists.

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Take a detailed look at the Philadelphia 76ers’ overtime win in their thriller against the Memphis Grizzlies. Ja Morant and Tyrese Maxey had a fascinating duel, with Maxey scoring the game-winning basket just before the OT buzzer

“There’s great chemistry, they’ve got a lot of confidence in each other,” Memphis coach Taylor Jenkins said of Morant and Bane. “Ja’s ability to find Des in a lot of different situations whether it’s play calls, his drive-and-kick game, pick-and-roll game, he’s just got a great awareness for him. Those guys are playing well off each other.”

The 30th pick of the 2020 NBA Draft, Bane earned second-team All-Rookie recognition last season after leading all rookies in 3-point percentage (.432), which registered as the third-best 3-point percentage since 2009-10 behind Stephen Curry (.437) and Jayson Tatum (.434 in 2017-18).

Bane only ratcheted up the production in Year 2, engineering the largest jump in points per game (from 9.2 points to 18.1) among 308 players over the last two seasons to play at least 25 contests. His points per 36 minutes bumped up from 14.8 to 21.6 among 265 players over each of the last two seasons to play at least 500 minutes, with only Morant tallying a larger increase in points per 36 minutes from last season.

That’s quite the improvement for an unheralded and overlooked prospect unsure initially of how he might fit in the NBA.

“Training camp [as a rookie] was terrible for me, actually,” Bane said. “It was not good. But then I got into our first game in the preseason, and I think I had 10 or 12 points, and then backed it up with another double-digit performance like a day or two later. I was like, ‘Okay, I can find a role in this league. I can play in this league.’

“Then, once I figured out I could play in this league, it’s like, ‘Okay, how am I going to take my game to the next level and be a guy that can really be a difference-maker?'”

All the while, Bane closely kept watch on each of his peers from the 2020 draft class – including Cole Anthony (drafted at No 15 by the Orlando) whom he comes up against on Saturday night.

“If there’s an opposing player on the court that got drafted before me, it’s a little motivation for sure,” he said. “And a lot of times, they’re not even on the court. They’re going through those dog days, trying to find their way into the rotation, or whatever the case may be.”

In his return from protocols, Bane pointed out that “every single one” of the Grizzlies’ upcoming opponents drafted a player ahead of him. San Antonio selected Devin Vassell at No 11. Utah grabbed Udoka Azubuike three spots ahead of Bane at 27, the Knicks took Obi Toppin eighth, Washington took Deni Avdija ninth, and Philadelphia selected Tyrese Maxey at No 21.

Interestingly, Maxey pumped in a team-high 33 points Monday in the win over Memphis, including a drive to the rack with 26.4 seconds left to seal the victory. But it’s no coincidence Bane managed to put up a career night in this clash with his 2020 draft counterpart.

“I take it personal, for sure.”

But for now, Bane relishes in the recent past and what’s likely to come in the near future.

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Highlights of the Memphis Grizzlies against the Los Angeles Lakers in Week 12 of the NBA

In the second quarter of Memphis’ win over Los Angeles on January 9, Bane and Lakers star LeBron James became embroiled in a minor altercation that went viral.

“Them footsteps ain’t scaring nobody,” said Bane on the NBA legend, after noticing he was slow getting back to defend him in transition.

Even Grammy award-winning singer Halsey – sitting courtside at the game – chimed in with harsh words about Bane.

“(Laughing) It ain’t [normal], but to me, it’s just basketball,” he said. “LeBron is another basketball player, another competitor trying to win games. We got into what we got into on the court, and obviously, it’s L.A., the Lakers, and LeBron. That’s gonna bring a whole different type of attention.

“So, it was kind of crazy. My DMs, my girl is getting texts, my people and everybody were calling me asking, ‘Hey, what did he say? What did you say?’ At the end of the day, we’re just two competitors going at it.”

Bane will continue making spirited runs at the game’s stars later this month in Cleveland after being named to the 2022 All-Star Clorox Rising Stars game.

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The NBA’s best players come together to take part in the All-Star Game, watch live on Sky Sports on February 20

“I was a guy that was gonna go to a Division II school out of high school. So, to tell me that I’d be participating in All-Star weekend would be a dream come true.”

Having recently locked up his first All-Star nod, partner-in-crime Morant has openly campaigned for Bane to win the NBA’s Most Improved Player award.

Morant is coming off his seventh-straight 30-point night, while Bane is averaging 22.5 points in the four games since returning from the league’s Health and Safety Protocols.

“Des can tell you. I always say, ‘Yeah, bro, you’re the goods,'” Morant said back in December. “That’s just him. He’s a professional scorer, can shoot the ball with the best of them, can get downhill, can make plays for others.

“In this league, to have a guy [in his] second year do that is big time. He’s always asking questions, always watching film, always in the gym, and it’s showing.”

Bane, 23, remains adamant that he wouldn’t take any other route towards arriving at the current stop.

Lightly regarded coming out of Seton Catholic High School (Indiana), Bane received only one Division I offer for college. Then, after finishing his senior season at Texas Christian University as the only player to rank in the top 10 in the Big 12 in points (16.6), rebounds (6.4), and assists (3.9), Bane watched helplessly as teams selected 29 players ahead of him in the 2020 NBA Draft.

Still, Bane quickly answers “no” when asked if he would have liked to traverse this journey differently.

“It starts with our coaching staff, our GM, just finding guys that are about the right things both on and off the court, and guys that are passionate about winning,” Bane said.

“I think a lot of these guys in the locker room are underdogs or have been through something to get to this point, and that really shows on the basketball court. That’s just me. I mean, my whole career things haven’t turned out how one would necessarily like for them to turn out. But you make the best of every situation that you’re in. I feel like I’m making the best of this situation, and I wouldn’t change it for anything.”





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