引用第1218樓迪神於2008-11-16 06:46發表的“”:
呢個morrow咩來架? [表情]
Golden State Warriors guard Marcus Williams hates facing rookie forward Anthony Morrow in practice. No matter how hard he plays him, no matter how well he defends him, it's never seems to be enough.
"He never misses," Williams said. "It can be so frustrating. He doesn't even give you a chance to win."
Warriors fans got to witness what Williams has been experiencing since August. Morrow knocked down his first three shots -- a spot-up 3-pointer, a turnaround jumper out of the post, and a pull-up 3-pointer in transition -- and scored eight points in nine first-half minutes Tuesday against Minnesota.
Morrow displayed his cold-blooded shooting stroke in Sunday's loss at Sacramento, too. He nailed his first-career attempt, a jumper from the right corner, with the calmness and fluidity of a 10-year vet.
Just ask rookie forward Anthony Randolph how nerve-wracking that first shot can be. He said he was about to have a panic attack on his first pro shot.
Morrow went on to make 3 of 5 attempts, scoring seven points in 12 minutes. He impressed coach Don Nelson enough to be the first guard off the bench Tuesday for the Warriors, ahead of shooter Marco Belinelli and former starter DeMarcus Nelson.
"It just felt like I was shooting the basketball," Morrow said before Tuesday's game. "The rim is still 10 feet. ... Don't get me wrong, it was a special moment, though."
Morrow said his goal is to show he's more than a shooter. Defending and rebounding would certainly endear him to coach Nelson and perhaps earn him more playing time.
Morrow said he patterns his game after teammate Stephen Jackson, who entered the league as a shooter and proved to be a more all-around player. Jackson has taken Morrow under his wing, calling him "Little Steve."
"I don't think he gets enough credit for his passing ability," Morrow said. "I can take a lot from his game."
from yahoo
hopefully he will do well