Kushner: What’s going on with Jrue Holiday? Pelicans need him to rediscover his scoring touc

What’s going on with Jrue Holiday?

The New Orleans Pelicans’ are 2-8. An ebullient and promising offseason is giving way to a grim reality, naturally prompting the cycle of blame to start in earnest.

And there are a myriad of culprits to point to — defense, rebounding, transition scoring and free throw shooting — but none are more obvious than holiday sluggish performance.

Holiday was handed the keys, expected to emerge into being the Pelicans’ best player, an All-Star candidate, potentially capable of a dark-horse MVP run. These outsized expectations weren’t placed on him by the media or fans, but rather his team’s own executive vice president, David Griffin.

“I really challenged Jrue,” Griffin told SiriusXM radio in July. “I told him ‘You can be the most underrated guard in the league for as long as you want to be, but I’d rather you want to be an MVP.’ He jumped out of his skin, but this guy is capable of far more than he’s done.”

For the past several seasons, New Orleans Pelicans fans likely believed they always had a potential league MVP on their roster.

While Griffin’s words were intended to stoke confidence in Holiday’s ability to lead a quickly-refurbished franchise, the message has yet to manifest itself on the floor. In fact, Holiday is in the midst of one of the most unproductive stretches of his prime.

He’s yet to tally a 20-point performance, a year after averaging a career-best 21.2 points per game. He’s converting just 36.4% of his shots, and 23% of his 3s, a rate worse than any full season in his 11-year career.

There’s still time for him to sort out his shooting, but after 10 games it’s exceedingly fair to ask: Did the Pelicans put too much of a burden on holiday?

“I don’t think we put too much pressure on him,” coach Alvin Gentry said. “Our expectations were high, but there is no reason they shouldn’t have been. And I think he’ll tell you the same thing. He’s just going through a tough time right now.

“I’m not worried about Jrue. He will find his way. He’s done it every year that I’ve been here. We shouldn’t have such a short memory that we don’t remember Game 4 against Portland here in the (2018) playoff series (when Holiday finished a sweep by scoring 41 points).”

As Jrue Holiday enters his 11th NBA season, he does so as the leader of a Pelicans group even the most creative of users of ESPN’s “NBA trade …

But in his last two games, Holiday has made just 10-of-23 shots and bricked all 12 of his 3-point tries. While he’s still stoic defensively and dutifully playmaking for others, the scoring slump is glaring, prompting Gentry to sit with his star guard before Tuesday’s practice.

“Jrue is so conscientious about everything,” Gentry said. “He feels like he needs to get everyone involved. We had a talk about that today. I just need for him to be Jrue. We’ll get it figured out. I’m not going to worry about him. This is my fifth year here, and he’s always found a way to step up.”

That confidence extends to the rest of the roster. Veterans like JJ Redick down to rookies like Jaxson Hayes have unanimously supported the captain when questions arise about Holiday’s start.

“I’m one of Jrue’s biggest fans, and I have been,” Redick said. “Being around him the last six weeks has only strengthened that fandom. I’m a believer his shots are going to go in and he’s going to be playing at an All-NBA level. He does so much for us beyond just making shots, and he’s been doing that. So, the shots will eventually go.”

But why aren’t they falling now?

This isn’t just a bad game or two. It’s closing in on a bad month.

Perhaps the external pressures are weighing on him, but it’s likely the team’s internal machinations are also to blame. Gentry mentioned Holiday’s desire to get teammates involved in the offense, and too often he’s the only Pelicans’ player capable of doing so.

This is Brandon Ingram’s team.

Holiday leads the team with 17 drives per game, according to NBA.com, and is the only guard able to consistently attack defenses at two levels. A banged-up Lonzo Ball (adductor strain), was expected to handle much of the ball-handling but has been relegated to being a spot up shooter, accounting for just 3.8 drives per game.

So, as Holiday spends more time and energy breaking down defenses, his shooting suffers. While it doesn’t explain everything, it’s illustrative of how New Orleans can help lift up its scuffling shooting guard.

Because until Holiday can regain the form of the past two seasons, and start heading toward the preseason expectations bestowed upon him, the Pelicans are unequipped to compete in the Western Conference. Even with Zion Williamson on the court.

The Pelicans need Jrue Holiday. Not just as a defender, or a playmaker, but also a reliable scorer.

Entering Wednesday, his true shooting percentage ranked 190th out of 216 NBA starters this season. It’s not just below Griffin’s lofty standards. It’s flat-out bad.

And it illustrates how urgently the Pelicans must concoct a way to help him. It could be by getting Holiday back into a pure off-ball role, allowing him to cut freely. Perhaps they could encourage him to finish his drives more often than kicking out to teammates.

The solution is not as obvious as the problem.

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When the NBA schedule was released in August, JJ Redick saw an opportunity for the Pelicans’ Duke heavy roster to do some bonding. New Orleans…

“I’m just going to keep pushing,” Holiday said. “Everybody goes through slumps. I’m not shooting too efficiently. I’ve missed free throws, missed easy buckets at the rim and my 3 is not falling.

“But, I’m making other things happen, so I know when I’m out there it’s not just scoring. I can produce in other ways.”

However, the Pelicans’ first 10 games have proven Holiday’s scoring still matters. And they won’t be truly competitive until it’s fixed.

MORE PELICANS CONTENT: 

When Anthony Davis returns to New Orleans just hours before Thanksgiving is celebrated across the nation, he can’t help but wonder if his form…

If there’s a defining trait of the Alvin Gentry era in New Orleans, it is that his teams have played at breakneck speed. In Gentry’s first fou…

Ten games into their season, the Pelicans have already used seven different starting lineups. On Thursday against the Los Angeles Clippers, th…

Holiday Survival Guide: Family Style

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This story comes from Life Kit, NPR’s podcast with tools to help you get it together. To listen to this episode, play the audio at the top of the page or subscribe. For more, sign up for the Life Kit newsletter.

When the halloween candy goes on sale and the dulcet tones of Mariah Carey’s “All I Want For Christmas Is You” are piping out of every store speaker, it can mean GO TIME for some folks. But there are also a lot of people who get a very familiar pit in their stomach when the holidays roll around. holiday can mean exhaustion, confronting familial trauma, managing your uncle’s opinions and all kinds of overload.

We asked Life Kit listeners for their trickiest situations around family and the holidays and invited Dr. Andrea Bonior, Licenced Clinical Psychologist to offer advice. Here are some excerpts of the letters we received along with some advice that will hopefully help you weather this holiday season with strength if the cheer and goodwill are hard to find. (And don’t forget to listen to the full episode so you can get more questions and all of the wisdom!)

We’re only using first names to identify the people who wrote in with questions, since their inquiries involve family relationships and are sensitive in nature.Tl;dr Bah Humbug

“The message that I hear around the holidays is that it’s all about family. But I don’t have that. It becomes stressful to try and find something I can do to fill that for Thanksgiving and for Christmas which seems to last for a full two months. Also people will say that one of the great things about the holidays is that there is a feeling of love for strangers and our neighbors. But I feel the opposite way! I feel completely alienated. I hate people during the holiday season. They’re awful. Have you ever tried to go shopping? They’re rude in the parking lots and in the lines. It’s all awful.” — Tory

This letter is so relatable and speaks to a very real alienation and loneliness that can come up around the holidays. For any number of reasons — if you’re estranged or far away from family, if you don’t celebrate the holiday or even if the whole thing simply rubs you the wrong way — it can be that much more difficult to watch everyone else operating at that egg-nog-for-breakfast-inject-candy-canes-into-my-bloodstream level.

Andrea’s advice is simple: find a way to derive your own meaning from the holidays. “Maybe you can derive meaning from the holidays as a time that you kind of cocoon into yourself and you do let yourself be a little bit frustrated with things but you treat yourself better,” she advises. “So many times the pressure and the alienation comes from this idea that we’re supposed to feel a certain way.” Dr. Bonior recommends volunteering or even scheduling a brunch with a friend who gets it and creating a tradition around that. “The more that we can feel in control that, hey we’re we’re choosing this, the more soothing it can be and the less left out we’ll feel because we’re actively choosing what to do with our time.” So go ahead and take on the yoga challenge or bake 45 different kinds of muffins or host an anti-holiday party if that’s what suits you.My Family Doesn’t Accept Me

“I came out as a trans woman to my family several months ago and I haven’t had a holiday with my extended family yet. I know my mom is coming around but my dad isn’t and no extended family knows. I’m worried about whether I’ll have to pretend to be a boy for a week or if I’ll even be welcome at all. I’m dreading constantly being misgendered and treated like the nephew grandson I always presented to them rather than who I actually am. I’m dreading disguising myself just to make my family happy at my own expense.”

— Vivian

This letter is heartbreaking, and very representative of many of the letters in the Life Kit inbox where a listener expresses their anxiety and dread at not being accepted by their families. Dr. Bonior’s advice in this case is to find an ally and have an exit strategy. She says that this letter writer might consider sitting out this holiday and simply Skyping in for a few minutes to mitigate some of the trauma, but says that it’s promising that mom is coming around. “You need an ally to help you be understood and eventually, in an ideal world, her mom can work on the other family members too,” Dr. Bonior says.

An escape plan is also a big recommendation in this case, whether it involves actually taking a break from the event — by going on a walk or calling a supportive friend — or coming up with a few safe topics to bring up in case a conversation goes off the rails. “Give yourself permission to change gears. Sometimes, that permission is hard to come by. We feel guilty about it but really you need to protect your own emotional health and you deserve that.”This Holiday Glorifies Genocide

“My husband and I are white and adopted our son from South America many years ago. Last year, at 30, he embraced his native South American heritage and spends all of Thanksgiving in mourning and protest for the horrible things that have been perpetrated on native peoples. While I sympathize I view Thanksgiving as time to spend with friends and family to enjoy a good meal and to socialize. He has also become vegan which puts lots of pressure on hosts to accommodate his needs. I want to be respectful of his very real concerns and choices but the rest of my family is not understanding and feels resentment that he doesn’t just fit in. If I side with my son, the rest of the family suffers. If I side with the rest of my family, my son suffers.” — Laura

A lot of holiday family gatherings will have at least one person attending who doesn’t really feel like participating for any number of reasons. Dr. Bonior says that the way to solve this conundrum is to make space for that person to address their concerns. “It sounds like there’s a false dichotomy here I’ve got to side with my family or with my son when in reality I would think OK how can we honor some of his beliefs and and ask to incorporate it.” If people roll their eyes when your son speaks to the table about the atrocities committed against native people, go ahead and let them Dr. Bonior says. “I would start with asking the son how can I take you out of a box here and actually hear more about the nuance of what you do believe in and how that could be incorporated into the day,” she says. Listening to one another despite differences in tradition and opinion is something that most folks will likely toast to (and if they don’t, hopefully they’ll at least sit through it respectfully.)Everyone’s Needs Are More Important Than Mine

“Experience has shown me that someone always forgets something important. So I have just maintained the sanity as much as possible by planning everything. I make a checklist and just start marking things off so that nothing is left behind that is important in keeping the peace on the road trip. Then there’s the issue of traveling with an 85-year-old man who has to urinate almost before we pull out of the driveway, and together with my husband who is not the most understanding person about the needs of an 85-year-old man. Then I have two sons and a daughter. My daughter’s needs, equally, are as important as my 85-year-old father. She also needs to go to the restroom often enough that it makes my husband crazy. So, there’s that battle.There’s the battle of arriving, of course, with peace and safely. The last person on the list for any of these road trip necessities is myself. — Yolanda

This listener has really hit the nail on the head of what the holidays can be in some families: a time when everyone in a very, very large group is putting their needs on one (or a few) of the family’s matriarchs who are struggling to do a TON of emotional, physical and mental labor in the interest of the holidays. Dr. Bonior says this is very common. “I hear this from so many women in particular, it’s certainly not exclusive to them,” she says.

Her advice for this listener is to ask her family to support her. “It’s a matter of maybe asking more from her family, and I imagine she thinks that they’re not going to come through for her,” Dr. Bonior says. “That could be a problem, but if it is a problem then I truly see it as an issue that is worthy of being addressed because what’s the alternative? She does this every single year?” Dr. Bonior says that the exhaustion and overextended nature of this listener is going to ultimately lead to resentment, which is bad for everyone. So, if this resonates with you as you’re surveying a kitchen that looks like a crime scene for dishes, or if you’re having anxiety dreams about wrapping paper, remember that you *can* ask your family for support. Asking your partner to show up for you can be especially difficult, but go ahead and trust Dr. Bonior on this one: “Maybe she’s bought 19 gifts for the past 10 years and made sure everything was perfect and ironed the tablecloths and made things festive. But now she’s ready to simplify. She’ll probably actually be a lot happier and maybe everyone else will too.”

Here are a few takeaways that can help you through tough situations with family this holiday season:

1. Find your own meaning for the holiday season.

2. If you know it’s gonna be hard: find an ally and have an escape plan.

3. If someone is upset about something, make space for them to share their concerns.

4. Ask for the support you need holiday

Introduce Yourself (Example Post)

This is an example post, originally published as part of Blogging University. Enroll in one of our ten programs, and start your blog right.

You’re going to publish a post today. Don’t worry about how your blog looks. Don’t worry if you haven’t given it a name yet, or you’re feeling overwhelmed. Just click the “New Post” button, and tell us why you’re here.

Why do this?

  • Because it gives new readers context. What are you about? Why should they read your blog?
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The post can be short or long, a personal intro to your life or a bloggy mission statement, a manifesto for the future or a simple outline of your the types of things you hope to publish.

To help you get started, here are a few questions:

  • Why are you blogging publicly, rather than keeping a personal journal?
  • What topics do you think you’ll write about?
  • Who would you love to connect with via your blog?
  • If you blog successfully throughout the next year, what would you hope to have accomplished?

You’re not locked into any of this; one of the wonderful things about blogs is how they constantly evolve as we learn, grow, and interact with one another — but it’s good to know where and why you started, and articulating your goals may just give you a few other post ideas.

Can’t think how to get started? Just write the first thing that pops into your head. Anne Lamott, author of a book on writing we love, says that you need to give yourself permission to write a “crappy first draft”. Anne makes a great point — just start writing, and worry about editing it later.

When you’re ready to publish, give your post three to five tags that describe your blog’s focus — writing, photography, fiction, parenting, food, cars, movies, sports, whatever. These tags will help others who care about your topics find you in the Reader. Make sure one of the tags is “zerotohero,” so other new bloggers can find you, too.

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