Former WSU player Thompson takes off for Warriors
OAKLAND, Calif. – Klay Thompson was only 7 years old when his father took him to meet a young Kobe Bryant inside the Los Angeles Lakers’ locker room. Or, rather, tried to take him.
Mychal Thompson, the No. 1 overall pick by Portland in the 1978 NBA draft, had his son pull his hand back and squirm away from a place most kids can only dream about.
“He didn’t want to go in to meet Kobe,” said the elder Thompson, now an analyst on the Lakers’ radio broadcast. “He was too shy.”
Spend time around his son now and it might seem little has changed in his demeanor.
The Golden State Warriors’ first-round pick, a strong candidate for the NBA’s All-Rookie first team, is so calm and quiet that teammates often tease him just to get a reaction – or at least they try. He rarely speaks in Golden State’s locker room, and his laid-back attitude might also give the impression he’s timid on the court.
That’s just what he wants everyone to think.
“That’s who he is,” Warriors coach Mark Jackson said. “The guy is not afraid. He thinks he’s the baddest dude in the gym. He’s a silent assassin.”
What a fitting nickname.
Stuck on a gutted Golden State team with more injured starters than healthy ones, Thompson has quietly put together a solid season out West. The 11th overall pick has a chance to accomplish a rare feat: earn first-team rookie honors despite being left out of the rookie-sophomore game during All-Star weekend.
The slight seemed to motivate Thompson even more.
The former Washington State standout spent the break back home in the Los Angeles area with his dad. Both watched the All-Star game, but when the rookie-sophomore game appeared two nights earlier, there was no chance of Klay checking in.
“I really wanted to go to Orlando and be around those All-Stars and that whole weekend,” he said. “I thought I was easily in the top nine rookies.”
Much has changed since February.
Thompson took off following the March 13 trade that sent Warriors leading scorer and starting shooting guard Monta Ellis to Milwaukee – a move made in part because of Thompson’s rise – for injured center Andrew Bogut, who is expected to team with the formidable scoring backcourt of Stephen Curry and Thompson next season.
Thompson has averaged 18.3 points per game since the trade, polishing his still in-the-works game to be more than just a pure shooter with great range. He’s shooting 44 percent from the floor and 42 percent from beyond the arc.
While the 6-foot-7 guard’s defense still has great strides to make, he’s putting the ball on the floor more, finishing at the rim with both hands and making opponents who run him off the 3-point line pay.
“I don’t know that he was comfortable enough to make that play earlier in the year,” Jackson said. “It’s definitely an indication of his growth.”
Thompson has always been a comfortable shooter.
Growing up as the son of a NBA player, he was constantly around basketball. By the time he was 13, his dad could no longer beat him in 1-on-1, moving on to H-O-R-S-E, which they play regularly during time off.
“I can still beat him with old-man shots,” Mychal Thompson said, chuckling. “Sleepy hooks from the 3-point line. That’s about all I got on him.”
Thompson led the Pac-10 with 21.6 points per game – 11th in the nation – as a junior at Washington State and also averaged 5.2 rebounds and 3.7 assists.
Cleveland’s Kyrie Irving appears to be a runaway choice for NBA Rookie of the Year, and Minnesota’s Ricky Rubio — out for the season with torn ligaments in his left knee — will likely land second. Where Thompson finishes is still to be determined, but it will almost certainly be higher than his 11th spot in the draft.
“Talking to some of the teams’ general managers and coaches throughout the season as we traveled around, they come up to me and said, ‘If they could redo the draft, he definitely would’ve been in the top six,’ ” Mychal Thompson said.