DeShawn Stevenson has proven his doubters, critics wrong

Discussion in 'Dallas Mavericks' started by truebluefan, Oct 5, 2010.

  1. truebluefan

    truebluefan Administrator Staff Member Administrator

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    "Ask anybody in the Mavericks' organization what their first thought was when they heard DeShawn Stevenson was going to be part of the trade that also netted Caron Butler and Brendan Haywood, and the analysis would likely have been something like this:

    Free spirit, full of himself, flaky.

    On the court, opinions may have been even worse.

    Eight months later, the shooting guard has proved every one of those observations dead wrong.

    Stevenson's iffy reputation may have been justified earlier in his career. In fact, he realizes now that it probably was well-deserved. But those tough times have served him well later in a career that is entering its 11th season.

    He knows now that some of the harsh things that happened when he was a first-round pick as a teenager for Utah worked out for the best.

    "Playing with Jerry Sloan – Jerry's a strict coach and we had our ups and downs, but I think he made me stronger as a player," Stevenson said. "I try not to get mad about certain situations now.

    "He [Sloan] was tough, but he made me who I am now. If I didn't go through that kind of system and that caliber of coach, I wouldn't be in the NBA right now."

    But he's still here, preparing for tonight's preseason opener against Washington, his former team, and he's operating on the final year of a nice contract that will pay him over $4 million this season.

    Stevenson, 29, is a member of the crowded house at shooting guard. In the old days, that might have bugged him. But he's learned that coach Rick Carlisle's tendency to go deep into his bench could actually fit Stevenson's style.

    "The one thing he's been for us is extremely reliable," Carlisle said. "If you need him to be your 12th man, he's going to find a way to impact the team positively. If you need him to start and guard Kobe Bryant, he'll make a positive impact there. If you need him to play three minutes in a game, he'll do that well. He's a pro."

    Maybe it's maturity, or maybe it's simply learning that the NBA requires you to roll with the punches.

    Owner Mark Cuban remembers thinking the worst when Washington wanted to include Stevenson in the trade. But not for the reason most people would think.

    "It wasn't because of his reputation; it was because of the money," Cuban said. "DeShawn's a good guy. We've all seen that." "

    http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcon...mavs/stories/100510dnspomavslede.26f225c.html
     

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