He hit 77 threes in just 43 games after hitting 79 total in his first four seasons. In his first four seasons, he took 279 three pointers and hit 28.3% of them. How many wing scorers are you getting for nothing, one in the middle of a four-year $50 million deal? At the rim, he’s outrageously efficient — he shot 67.2 percent on shots that were 0-3 feet from the basket this past season. But the takeaway from watching him on the fruitless end of the floor is that Warren is a far below average defender.
This NBA season has been an NBA season like we've never seen before. Defending away from the rim is where things get shaky. It worked in big ways. Indiana took him into cap space and received a second-round pick from Phoenix for their troubles. The Indiana Pacers started off their summer full of wheeling and dealing by acquiring TJ Warren via trade.
Warren just can’t pass players open, both due to timing and accuracy issues. Then 2018-19 happened. Sometimes that hinders him, but other times his strong legs make him hard to get by.
Former Roll Tide, Derrick Henry has been nominated as the FedEx Ground Player of the Week. He’s a quality creator, but only for himself. That’s led everyone to look back at the trade the Suns made and laughed so very, very hard. Warren projected happiness when asked about the trade a few weeks ago. "When I heard about the trade, it didn't throw me off, but like any other player (felt) a certain way about it," Warren said in a recent TNT interview. Microsoft may earn an Affiliate Commission if you purchase something through recommended links in this article. So it's not like Phoenix replaced Warren with below-average parts. As a rebounder, Warren is adequate but nothing more. Booker, of course, is a star, DeAndre Ayton is starting to turn a corner, Bridges is a defensive dynamo who could be the next great 3-and-D stud, Rubio has filled in exactly how he was supposed to and former first-rounder Cameron Johnson has shown some flashes. He certainly has his moments containing the other team and forcing misses: But more often, things don’t go as well. Warren finished the season with the eighth best three-point percentage in the entire NBA for players who played over 1,000 minutes. When the Indiana Pacers acquired T.J. Warren last year along with a draft pick from the Phoenix Suns, there wasn’t much made of the trade.Up to that point, Warren had just been an average NBA player who didn’t live up to expectations in Phoenix after they rewarded him with a four-year, $50 million deal in 2017. In his first four seasons, when he wasn’t raining threes and was banging more inside, he was a solid offensive rebounder for a wing, grabbing nearly two per game in his third and fourth seasons.
These looks repeatable, if you ask me: Scoring is the only thing on the list of clear positives that Warren brings on offense, though. He’s is a tremendous finisher: Warren’s outside shooting will be a curious case this season. Do they get Rubio if they don’t trade him? He is better than that.
He hit 77 threes in just 43 games after hitting 79 total in his first four seasons. In his first four seasons, he took 279 three pointers and hit 28.3% of them. How many wing scorers are you getting for nothing, one in the middle of a four-year $50 million deal? At the rim, he’s outrageously efficient — he shot 67.2 percent on shots that were 0-3 feet from the basket this past season. But the takeaway from watching him on the fruitless end of the floor is that Warren is a far below average defender.
This NBA season has been an NBA season like we've never seen before. Defending away from the rim is where things get shaky. It worked in big ways. Indiana took him into cap space and received a second-round pick from Phoenix for their troubles. The Indiana Pacers started off their summer full of wheeling and dealing by acquiring TJ Warren via trade.
Warren just can’t pass players open, both due to timing and accuracy issues. Then 2018-19 happened. Sometimes that hinders him, but other times his strong legs make him hard to get by.
Former Roll Tide, Derrick Henry has been nominated as the FedEx Ground Player of the Week. He’s a quality creator, but only for himself. That’s led everyone to look back at the trade the Suns made and laughed so very, very hard. Warren projected happiness when asked about the trade a few weeks ago. "When I heard about the trade, it didn't throw me off, but like any other player (felt) a certain way about it," Warren said in a recent TNT interview. Microsoft may earn an Affiliate Commission if you purchase something through recommended links in this article. So it's not like Phoenix replaced Warren with below-average parts. As a rebounder, Warren is adequate but nothing more. Booker, of course, is a star, DeAndre Ayton is starting to turn a corner, Bridges is a defensive dynamo who could be the next great 3-and-D stud, Rubio has filled in exactly how he was supposed to and former first-rounder Cameron Johnson has shown some flashes. He certainly has his moments containing the other team and forcing misses: But more often, things don’t go as well. Warren finished the season with the eighth best three-point percentage in the entire NBA for players who played over 1,000 minutes. When the Indiana Pacers acquired T.J. Warren last year along with a draft pick from the Phoenix Suns, there wasn’t much made of the trade.Up to that point, Warren had just been an average NBA player who didn’t live up to expectations in Phoenix after they rewarded him with a four-year, $50 million deal in 2017. In his first four seasons, when he wasn’t raining threes and was banging more inside, he was a solid offensive rebounder for a wing, grabbing nearly two per game in his third and fourth seasons.
These looks repeatable, if you ask me: Scoring is the only thing on the list of clear positives that Warren brings on offense, though. He’s is a tremendous finisher: Warren’s outside shooting will be a curious case this season. Do they get Rubio if they don’t trade him? He is better than that.
He hit 77 threes in just 43 games after hitting 79 total in his first four seasons. In his first four seasons, he took 279 three pointers and hit 28.3% of them. How many wing scorers are you getting for nothing, one in the middle of a four-year $50 million deal? At the rim, he’s outrageously efficient — he shot 67.2 percent on shots that were 0-3 feet from the basket this past season. But the takeaway from watching him on the fruitless end of the floor is that Warren is a far below average defender.
This NBA season has been an NBA season like we've never seen before. Defending away from the rim is where things get shaky. It worked in big ways. Indiana took him into cap space and received a second-round pick from Phoenix for their troubles. The Indiana Pacers started off their summer full of wheeling and dealing by acquiring TJ Warren via trade.
Warren just can’t pass players open, both due to timing and accuracy issues. Then 2018-19 happened. Sometimes that hinders him, but other times his strong legs make him hard to get by.
Former Roll Tide, Derrick Henry has been nominated as the FedEx Ground Player of the Week. He’s a quality creator, but only for himself. That’s led everyone to look back at the trade the Suns made and laughed so very, very hard. Warren projected happiness when asked about the trade a few weeks ago. "When I heard about the trade, it didn't throw me off, but like any other player (felt) a certain way about it," Warren said in a recent TNT interview. Microsoft may earn an Affiliate Commission if you purchase something through recommended links in this article. So it's not like Phoenix replaced Warren with below-average parts. As a rebounder, Warren is adequate but nothing more. Booker, of course, is a star, DeAndre Ayton is starting to turn a corner, Bridges is a defensive dynamo who could be the next great 3-and-D stud, Rubio has filled in exactly how he was supposed to and former first-rounder Cameron Johnson has shown some flashes. He certainly has his moments containing the other team and forcing misses: But more often, things don’t go as well. Warren finished the season with the eighth best three-point percentage in the entire NBA for players who played over 1,000 minutes. When the Indiana Pacers acquired T.J. Warren last year along with a draft pick from the Phoenix Suns, there wasn’t much made of the trade.Up to that point, Warren had just been an average NBA player who didn’t live up to expectations in Phoenix after they rewarded him with a four-year, $50 million deal in 2017. In his first four seasons, when he wasn’t raining threes and was banging more inside, he was a solid offensive rebounder for a wing, grabbing nearly two per game in his third and fourth seasons.
These looks repeatable, if you ask me: Scoring is the only thing on the list of clear positives that Warren brings on offense, though. He’s is a tremendous finisher: Warren’s outside shooting will be a curious case this season. Do they get Rubio if they don’t trade him? He is better than that.
He hit 77 threes in just 43 games after hitting 79 total in his first four seasons. In his first four seasons, he took 279 three pointers and hit 28.3% of them. How many wing scorers are you getting for nothing, one in the middle of a four-year $50 million deal? At the rim, he’s outrageously efficient — he shot 67.2 percent on shots that were 0-3 feet from the basket this past season. But the takeaway from watching him on the fruitless end of the floor is that Warren is a far below average defender.
This NBA season has been an NBA season like we've never seen before. Defending away from the rim is where things get shaky. It worked in big ways. Indiana took him into cap space and received a second-round pick from Phoenix for their troubles. The Indiana Pacers started off their summer full of wheeling and dealing by acquiring TJ Warren via trade.
Warren just can’t pass players open, both due to timing and accuracy issues. Then 2018-19 happened. Sometimes that hinders him, but other times his strong legs make him hard to get by.
Former Roll Tide, Derrick Henry has been nominated as the FedEx Ground Player of the Week. He’s a quality creator, but only for himself. That’s led everyone to look back at the trade the Suns made and laughed so very, very hard. Warren projected happiness when asked about the trade a few weeks ago. "When I heard about the trade, it didn't throw me off, but like any other player (felt) a certain way about it," Warren said in a recent TNT interview. Microsoft may earn an Affiliate Commission if you purchase something through recommended links in this article. So it's not like Phoenix replaced Warren with below-average parts. As a rebounder, Warren is adequate but nothing more. Booker, of course, is a star, DeAndre Ayton is starting to turn a corner, Bridges is a defensive dynamo who could be the next great 3-and-D stud, Rubio has filled in exactly how he was supposed to and former first-rounder Cameron Johnson has shown some flashes. He certainly has his moments containing the other team and forcing misses: But more often, things don’t go as well. Warren finished the season with the eighth best three-point percentage in the entire NBA for players who played over 1,000 minutes. When the Indiana Pacers acquired T.J. Warren last year along with a draft pick from the Phoenix Suns, there wasn’t much made of the trade.Up to that point, Warren had just been an average NBA player who didn’t live up to expectations in Phoenix after they rewarded him with a four-year, $50 million deal in 2017. In his first four seasons, when he wasn’t raining threes and was banging more inside, he was a solid offensive rebounder for a wing, grabbing nearly two per game in his third and fourth seasons.
These looks repeatable, if you ask me: Scoring is the only thing on the list of clear positives that Warren brings on offense, though. He’s is a tremendous finisher: Warren’s outside shooting will be a curious case this season. Do they get Rubio if they don’t trade him? He is better than that.
He hit 77 threes in just 43 games after hitting 79 total in his first four seasons. In his first four seasons, he took 279 three pointers and hit 28.3% of them. How many wing scorers are you getting for nothing, one in the middle of a four-year $50 million deal? At the rim, he’s outrageously efficient — he shot 67.2 percent on shots that were 0-3 feet from the basket this past season. But the takeaway from watching him on the fruitless end of the floor is that Warren is a far below average defender.
This NBA season has been an NBA season like we've never seen before. Defending away from the rim is where things get shaky. It worked in big ways. Indiana took him into cap space and received a second-round pick from Phoenix for their troubles. The Indiana Pacers started off their summer full of wheeling and dealing by acquiring TJ Warren via trade.
Warren just can’t pass players open, both due to timing and accuracy issues. Then 2018-19 happened. Sometimes that hinders him, but other times his strong legs make him hard to get by.
Former Roll Tide, Derrick Henry has been nominated as the FedEx Ground Player of the Week. He’s a quality creator, but only for himself. That’s led everyone to look back at the trade the Suns made and laughed so very, very hard. Warren projected happiness when asked about the trade a few weeks ago. "When I heard about the trade, it didn't throw me off, but like any other player (felt) a certain way about it," Warren said in a recent TNT interview. Microsoft may earn an Affiliate Commission if you purchase something through recommended links in this article. So it's not like Phoenix replaced Warren with below-average parts. As a rebounder, Warren is adequate but nothing more. Booker, of course, is a star, DeAndre Ayton is starting to turn a corner, Bridges is a defensive dynamo who could be the next great 3-and-D stud, Rubio has filled in exactly how he was supposed to and former first-rounder Cameron Johnson has shown some flashes. He certainly has his moments containing the other team and forcing misses: But more often, things don’t go as well. Warren finished the season with the eighth best three-point percentage in the entire NBA for players who played over 1,000 minutes. When the Indiana Pacers acquired T.J. Warren last year along with a draft pick from the Phoenix Suns, there wasn’t much made of the trade.Up to that point, Warren had just been an average NBA player who didn’t live up to expectations in Phoenix after they rewarded him with a four-year, $50 million deal in 2017. In his first four seasons, when he wasn’t raining threes and was banging more inside, he was a solid offensive rebounder for a wing, grabbing nearly two per game in his third and fourth seasons.
These looks repeatable, if you ask me: Scoring is the only thing on the list of clear positives that Warren brings on offense, though. He’s is a tremendous finisher: Warren’s outside shooting will be a curious case this season. Do they get Rubio if they don’t trade him? He is better than that.
At the time, regardless of the fit, it was a heist for the Pacers, who needed a player to replace Bojan Bogdanovic — he left for the Utah Jazz in the offseason. January 23, 2020. by Steve DelVecchio. “Kicking my feet. That is thanks to his ability to get to his favorite spots off the dribble. Warren has been called a "professional scorer" by others. The Anthony Davis trade talks with the Los Angeles Lakers could include the Phoenix Suns and forward T.J. Warren reportedly as a third team for Lonzo Ball.
He hit 77 threes in just 43 games after hitting 79 total in his first four seasons. In his first four seasons, he took 279 three pointers and hit 28.3% of them. How many wing scorers are you getting for nothing, one in the middle of a four-year $50 million deal? At the rim, he’s outrageously efficient — he shot 67.2 percent on shots that were 0-3 feet from the basket this past season. But the takeaway from watching him on the fruitless end of the floor is that Warren is a far below average defender.
This NBA season has been an NBA season like we've never seen before. Defending away from the rim is where things get shaky. It worked in big ways. Indiana took him into cap space and received a second-round pick from Phoenix for their troubles. The Indiana Pacers started off their summer full of wheeling and dealing by acquiring TJ Warren via trade.
Warren just can’t pass players open, both due to timing and accuracy issues. Then 2018-19 happened. Sometimes that hinders him, but other times his strong legs make him hard to get by.
Former Roll Tide, Derrick Henry has been nominated as the FedEx Ground Player of the Week. He’s a quality creator, but only for himself. That’s led everyone to look back at the trade the Suns made and laughed so very, very hard. Warren projected happiness when asked about the trade a few weeks ago. "When I heard about the trade, it didn't throw me off, but like any other player (felt) a certain way about it," Warren said in a recent TNT interview. Microsoft may earn an Affiliate Commission if you purchase something through recommended links in this article. So it's not like Phoenix replaced Warren with below-average parts. As a rebounder, Warren is adequate but nothing more. Booker, of course, is a star, DeAndre Ayton is starting to turn a corner, Bridges is a defensive dynamo who could be the next great 3-and-D stud, Rubio has filled in exactly how he was supposed to and former first-rounder Cameron Johnson has shown some flashes. He certainly has his moments containing the other team and forcing misses: But more often, things don’t go as well. Warren finished the season with the eighth best three-point percentage in the entire NBA for players who played over 1,000 minutes. When the Indiana Pacers acquired T.J. Warren last year along with a draft pick from the Phoenix Suns, there wasn’t much made of the trade.Up to that point, Warren had just been an average NBA player who didn’t live up to expectations in Phoenix after they rewarded him with a four-year, $50 million deal in 2017. In his first four seasons, when he wasn’t raining threes and was banging more inside, he was a solid offensive rebounder for a wing, grabbing nearly two per game in his third and fourth seasons.
These looks repeatable, if you ask me: Scoring is the only thing on the list of clear positives that Warren brings on offense, though. He’s is a tremendous finisher: Warren’s outside shooting will be a curious case this season. Do they get Rubio if they don’t trade him? He is better than that.