Thursday, October 16th, 2008 at 11:00 am  |  254 responses

SLAMonline Top 50: Deron Williams, no. 11

The definitive ranking of the best players in the NBA today…

by Ryne Nelson

Somewhere, sometime, something happened to Deron Williams. Something that can only be defined by the look in his eyes.

We’re excellent at reading expressions. We can look at someone’s eyes and learn more than any words can attempt to explain. Try it yourself sometime. Take an old family photo and cover each person’s face but their eyes. The people who are truly happy stand-out clear as day. Now check a couple pictures of Deron Williams in the past four or five years. Cover everything but his eyes. See the absolute assuredness. And read on.

Whether it’s on the court or elsewhere, Deron Williams has a twinkle of confidence, and he’s had it for some time. It’s a swagger, a humbleness and a confidence wrapped into a single gaze. This look hasn’t wavered for years, and it almost scares me how constant it’s been. Deron’s drive and focus will not leave until his plan is complete. The fact that his confidence is so pure makes doubting him impossible.

Deron’s had this plan for a while, and he follows it to a tee. This is why he’s confident in his every move on the court. It’s why a fragile change of direction will send almost every defender off-balance (and often to the floor). This is why teammates and opponents immediately respect him as a leader. He has a plan, and he’s confident about executing it.

Remember, Deron Williams never was supposed to make it. He barely showed up on high school recruiting charts (49th in the Class of 2002). He wasn’t a McDonald’s All-American. Texas, the big hoops powerhouse in his home state, wasn’t interested in him. He was chubby, a bit too slow and a lot too normal to be anything but an average collegiate starter.

We may never know when it all clicked, but we do know what happened. His entire demeanor changed. He added a little strut to his stride. He would stare-down any opponent without a hint of fear. He began to believe he was better. He wasn’t faster. Not stronger. Surely not quicker. But better. He began believing he could make others better as well. Deron Williams learned what a true leader – in any walk of life – knows…somehow, some way.

And this is rare, you see. Extra rare. I’m not one to put stock in fate, but the majority of people either have it or they don’t. You’ve heard it before, and it’s true: some people walk into a room and go unnoticed, and others enter a room, demanding attention. Generally, this cannot be taught. What makes Deron Williams such an aberration is not only did he transform into that person who commands attention, but he intuited how to do it himself. He had no sensei; he had no teacher. It – whatever that indefinable it is – came to Deron at the very last possible moment in his basketball career. He knew right away what he could become and immediately created a plan to get there.

To give you a better picture of how profound this change was for Deron Williams, consider again his high school ranking. Scout had him at no. 56, Prep Stars had him at no. 54. For too many reasons, recruiting systems should not be taken as dogma, but their innate flaws prove a point. The rankings compare athletic gifts (which somehow extrapolates to potential?). Deron Williams ranked in the exact middle of the pack, and rightly so. His physical gifts didn’t change, but something else did.

Deron clearly found something. A light bulb came on, and the path illuminated immediately. He saw a way and began walking in that direction without one regret. Not one bit of fear. This confidence has not changed his skill set, per se. Yet, the confidence made him an infinitely better player. He puts the ball on the ground with a clear purpose. He shoots knowing it will go in every time. He defends like he can predict his opponent’s every move. He plays until the very end, understanding anything can happen when you believe. Deron figured something out, and it transformed him into a transcendent talent.

For the first time in his career, Deron Williams no longer looks round. As he lets his vision become more and more of who he is, I suspect Deron’s physique will continue to change. What Deron sees for himself will no longer just be in his eyes. His exterior will match that of his mental philosophy – an elite athlete. Clearly, Williams is transforming his body, but don’t think he didn’t know it would happen. That undying confidence is making him into the new point guard prototype only he envisioned.

He’s slowly painting a picture on an easel that’s facing away from you. He has the slightest hint of a smile, which makes you wonder what exactly he’s creating. All you can see is a faint reflection in his eyes. You wonder why he’s taking his time like this, barely moving his brush before altering the color ever so slightly on his pallet.

Of course, the painting could be the complete wreck. But something about the way he’s regarding his work – with so little struggle, so much vision – assures you. As much as you want to, you don’t need to see the picture yet because you worry even the slightest movement could ruin his concentration. Let the artist go to work. This is why he must be trusted to execute. This is why, In Deron Williams I trust.

Want more of the SLAMonline Top 50? Check out the archive.

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  • scott

    @Caleb…Turkoglu shoulda been top 50.

  • Caleb

    Who would you remove in order to accomodate him? Just curious.

  • justin

    If KG is ahead of Duncan, then this list is bogus. Pierce better be next because I couldn’t see him being ahead of Williams in the first place. Top 10 should be Kobe, James, Wade, Paul, Duncan, Garnett, Nash, Amare, Howard, and Williams. Guarantee Kobe and James are top 2.

  • http://www.freewebs.com/betcats BETCATS

    PP! PP!

  • http://hibachi20.blogspot.com Moose

    Caleb: Josh Howard, Jermaine O’Neal, Lamar Odom.

  • http://hibachi20.blogspot.com Moose

    BETCATS! What’s good, my man? You read the Wolves preview that I wrote for Bachi? If you haven’t click my name and party on.

  • http://shawn-kemps-offspring.blogspot.com/ TADOne

    Allenp: Fuunny thing is, I would take Deron right now if I was starting a team from scratch. But, if I had a team already set and needed to pick one player between Nash and Deron for one season for all the chips, i’m taking Nash. I understand the hate on his defense and it is warranted, but I know Nash has that “take over” mentality and leadership that Deron just doesn’t have yet. Trust me, I love all three players. I clearly like Paul above all 3, but Nash still is very good and is a lot more athletic then people give him credit for. He is also smarter and a better shooter then all 3 players, so that tells me he would be just fine in a half court offense. The thing is, i’m not sure why it’s a bad thing that Nash is very good in the transition game? The point is to score more than the other team, not how you do it. Who is to say that Deron wouldn’t struggle in the Phoenix offense pre-Shaq? I don’t think he would, but you can’t hate on Nash and say he cannot run a half-court offense without allowing him to prove he can or cannot.

  • http://hibachi20.blogspot.com Moose

    TAD, he is smarter and a better shooter. But with Deron and CP young and improving, both of those things will improve as well.

  • http://hibachi20.blogspot.com Moose

    Especially the “smarter” category.

  • http://twentythreenine.blogspot.com Russ Bengtson

    From some of the things that get written about Nash, you’d think he was the second coming of Scott Brooks.

  • http://hibachi20.blogspot.com Moose

    Nash is like Nate Archibald. Great for part of their career and good for the rest, just not quite at the level that they were at at one point in their career.

  • Melo Man TO

    i am canadian but i still feel Deron is better than Nash

  • scott

    @Caleb…Off the top of my head I would take Josh Howard out of the top 50 and replace him with Turkoglu. Your thoughts?

  • http://www.manutd.com Z

    Why is Nash smarter than CP3? No, seriously… on what basis?

  • http://hibachi20.blogspot.com Moose

    Z: More experience, sees the court better, etc . . . in time, CP will be smarter.

  • http://hibachi20.blogspot.com Moose

    And Deron will be, too.

  • http://shawn-kemps-offspring.blogspot.com/ TADOne

    CP3 has a ton of basketball smarts and is very mature for his age, but Nash is like a coach on the court. He knows the plays and knows what his coach wants to run before he calls it. He has that uncanny ability to always make that right play. Trust me, Paul is my man and I think he is better than both, but you cannot front on experience. I’m quite sure Paul would say the same thing if asked.

  • http://hibachi20.blogspot.com Moose

    Agreed, TAD. You think Paul will take his rightful position at number three on this list?

  • http://shawn-kemps-offspring.blogspot.com/ TADOne

    Now, i’m not sure who could figure out a New York Times crossword first or who could figure out a Geometry problem, so Paul may have an overall higher IQ. I haven’t gave them a litmus test lately.

  • http://shawn-kemps-offspring.blogspot.com/ TADOne

    I’m not sure Moose. I can’t say it’s his “rightful” position either. People seem to forget that there was a 4th person in the MVP race last year named Garnett. I also cannot sleep on Duncan, age be damned.

  • http://hibachi20.blogspot.com Moose

    TAD, I of all people should be aware that Garnett has a shot at number three. I think he deserves it, and I think Duncan will be number 5, behind Paul and Garnett. Not quite sure who’ll be third and who’ll be fourth, though.

  • scott

    Paul only saved basketball in New Orleans. Turned them into a contender and maybe even the “favorites” out West this year. Replace Paul with an average point guard and they probably win 35 games last year. Paul had the single all round greatest year by a point guard since who knows (Oscar Robertson?). I think Paul will in the top 5 without a doubt.

  • http://shawn-kemps-offspring.blogspot.com/ TADOne

    An argument can be made for all, a very convincing one. Unlike others, I have enjoyed the list. The write-ups have been phenomenal.

  • http://hibachi20.blogspot.com Moose

    scott, I know that the Hornets would be a lot worse without Paul, but check out the rest of the team. 35 games??? Most teams would win more than that with West, Chandler, Stojakovic and an average point guard would win 40-45.

  • http://shawn-kemps-offspring.blogspot.com/ TADOne

    Scott: NO QUESTION Paul will be top 5. I’m just not sure where exactly he will be.

  • http://hibachi20.blogspot.com Moose

    And scott, Paul WILL be in the top 5. Just which spot is in question.

  • http://hibachi20.blogspot.com Moose

    I’m out. Y’all better check Hibachi and read my Timberwolves preview, too.

  • scott

    Paul means that much to New Orleans without him they wouldn’t be a playoff team. I don’t think Devin Harris could lead Orleans to the playoffs. Paul should be top 3 only behind Bryant and James.

  • Caleb

    Agreed.. Moose, 40-45 is probably right. CP3 is the backbone of the franchise, but NO has a lot of talent… the front office has built this team very well.

  • Caleb

    Well, considering they are in the West.. yeah they probably wouldn’t be a playoff team without Paul. But as we saw last year, good teams can miss the playoffs when they play in the West..

    But hey I’m with you. In fact I think Paul ought to be higher than Kobe.

  • http://shawn-kemps-offspring.blogspot.com/ TADOne

    Scott: Just so i’m clear, I think Paul should be #3. He is in my book. I just wouldn’t be surprised if Duncan or Garnett were ahead of him. We are only talking about two of the best PF’s ever, with Timmy #1 all-time.

  • scott

    Chris Paul for #3.

  • scott

    Dare I say Chris Paul had the best all around single season by a point guard in the last 40 years in 07-08.

  • Caleb

    scott – probably. The only rival would be some of Magic’s best seasons, but I’m not sure its fair to (To Magic or to all the PGs out there) to even classify Magic as a point. That said, even if you do include Magic – you could still make a case for it.

  • http://slamonline.com/ Ryne Nelson

    You guys are reading too much FanHouse. :-)

  • http://hibachi20.blogspot.com/ RV

    Tad, did you visit hibachi?

  • Todd Spehr

    Anyone else find the much-anticipated Nash Decline good comedy? People point to his age – but no PG has ever played as well from ages 31-34 as Nash (Stockton included); people point to his dipping in numbers after the ASG – but he has done that every year in PHX, including his *THREE* MVP seasons (please note the sarcasm); And for someone who is expected to slow down, isn’t that just what his TEAM is doing – slowing down their tempo? Let’s have the Nash Decline argument in about two years.

  • KA

    I like how deron came totally out of left field, this piece is on point. and I’m not arguing the potential paul>nash>deron ranking either. I like the fact for all the disimilarities between them, deron n stock are more alike than not. but yeah, deron is stud, not bad for a light skinned brother.

  • http://www.manutd.com Z

    As most of you guys said, 3-4-5 will be CP3, TD and KG… and I wouldn’t be mad at any ranking amongst them. Now we all know who’s 1 and 2. The order? Well it depends on what your criteria are. The best individual talent and best flat out baller on the face of the Earth is 24. However, I think that LBJ gives you a better chance of winning. I can’t prove this in any way, but I’m convinced that if they had switched teams last year, the Lakers would have won the chip. I can’t back this up with any evidence, of course.

  • Ryan.T.

    I wouldn’t say Deron has better 1 on 1 ability than Nash. They’re about even, I’d say…. And I don’t feel it’s fair to judge the two teams on their playoff success last year. It was obvious that Phoenix had a tough time adjusting to having Shaq on there team. And I’d pick Nash over Williams THIS YEAR. If we are for sure talking about NOW, the only thing really separating the two of them is age. If they meet in the playoffs I’d pick Phoenix to win, not because of Shaq or Amare, but because of the guy running the team. The guy with the ball dictates the whole game, I’d say Nash is much better in doing so. And wasn’t Nash’s body supposed to broken down by now?? Mark Cuban said this a few years ago.

  • Gaz

    I liked this article from the moment I realized that BETCATS didn’t write it.
    Man that Charlotte Bobcats preview was some ugly $h!t.
    Hopefully that was just a one off and SLAM never need BETCATS to write a single word for them again.
    A-fkn-MEN

  • http://www.lkz.ch/basket Darksaber

    DAAAMN! Gaz done yammed one on Bet! Me like ;-)

  • tealish

    Dwight or PP or Nash tomorrow. PLEASE.

  • Lz – Cphfinest3

    Agree on this ranking. Had Deron at the same spot.

  • underdog

    Man, I loved that Illini’ team. They were nasty. Anyway this is the second point where I have any problem with this list. (The first was AI) So I say D-Will is top10. And Paul Pierce is not.

  • hugo

    this is q bs article. Hes never made an allstar team he aint better than dirk, the olympics made slam rank him higher cuz the memories of him playin well are fresher.

    ps PP is already ranked overrated. this isnt based on how constant the players are i assume, because how would he have been ranked 1 year ago?

  • jasondolemite

    For those of you hating on Pierce must be too young to understand how great of a player he is. We all know his offensive skills, but his defense is better than most. Everyone forgets basketball is a 2 sided game. That’s why the Celts won the championship. Also keep in mind that Deron is very good at defense and can take on more assignments that Chris Paul because of his size. Not to mention that he is also a slightly better shooter…

  • Cyrell

    ryne nice piece! inspirational! just what i need!

  • j-smoov 5

    Great article, oh, and EASILY BETTER than Rondo. He can actually MAKE shots unlike him.

  • Anton

    Hey Deron, tell me how CP3′s shadow tastes

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