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Posted on Tue. Jul. 10, 2012 - 12:01 am EDT

U.S. expects Westbrook to be off-bench scorer

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LAS VEGAS — Russell Westbrook was so good in Game 4 of the NBA Finals that Kobe Bryant couldn’t turn it off.

Bryant watched only one game in its entirety, and not surprisingly that was it. Westbrook scored 43 points, making 20 of 32 shots in a spectacular performance, but his Oklahoma City Thunder fell 104-98 in Miami.

“He just was bonkers,” Bryant said.

Good as Westbrook was, he couldn’t beat Dwyane Wade.

Now the Americans need him to be Dwyane Wade.

With Wade unable to play this summer, his former U.S. Olympic teammates believe Westbrook is the player who can inherit his role from Beijing as the potent scorer and game-changer off the bench.

“Absolutely, because he’s that type of player,” LeBron James said. “He’s that attacker, he’s that guy that can get in the passing lane, create steals. D-Wade, he changed the momentum when he came into the game. We told him we just want him to score, score the basketball, play high intensity on defense and he did that.”

Wade underwent left knee surgery Monday in Miami and is expected to be ready in time for the Heat’s training camp. The Americans think they can be better this summer than the 2008 gold medalists, but it will be difficult to replace Wade, who seemed to be playing at another speed in Beijing.

“One of the things that D-Wade brought to our team in Beijing was he created extra possessions for us,” Bryant said. “He shot the passing lanes extremely well. He got a great amount of steals, which created a lot of easy run outs for us, and Russell’s just as good at that.”

Wade was the Americans’ leading scorer in Beijing, averaging 16 points in just 18.8 minutes per game. He made 67 percent of his shots by blowing by defenders or capitalizing on the Americans’ fast-break chances.

“D-Wade, he was the leading scorer of that team I think, and Russell can do the same thing,” said Kevin Durant, Westbrook’s Thunder teammate. “He can score at will, he’s so athletic, extend possessions for us with his offensive rebounding, his defense. So we’re looking forward to having him out there.”

Yet Westbrook plays perhaps the NBA’s most scrutinized game. He isn’t a pass-first point guard, infuriating those who think his job should be to create shots for Durant, not himself. He’s prone to awful shooting nights, following his Game 4 masterpiece by going 4 of 20 as the Heat wrapped up the title in Game 5.

Perhaps the combination of the Olympic stage and a playing style that suits his skills better will help Westbrook win over his critics.

“Maybe, but you know my job is not to worry about that,” he said. “My job is to come in every day and try to get better.”


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