With Jimmy Butler’s help, Andrew Wiggins could finally reach full defensive potential

FILE — Minnesota Timberwolves guard/forward Andrew Wiggins, right, looks to a pass as Chicago Bulls guard/forward Jimmy Butler guards during overtime of an NBA basketball game on Saturday, Nov. 7, 2015, in Chicago. The Timberwolves acquired Butler via trade this summer and now the two are teammates. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh)

For all the points he has put up and all the wicked dunks he has thrown down since entering the NBA as the No. 1 overall pick in the 2014 draft, Andrew Wiggins still has ample room to grow in terms of the impact he can make for Minnesota.

In his three professional seasons since leaving Kansas, Wiggins’ scoring average has climbed each year, and he produced 23.6 points per game (16th in the league) in 2016-17. However, his 6-foot-8 frame, 7-foot wingspan and elite athletic ability haven’t helped the young wing become the defensive stopper many envisioned.

Wiggins’ new teammate, Jimmy Butler, plans to change that.

During Butler’s appearance on The Bill Simmons Podcast, Wiggins’ reputation came up as Simmons and Butler discussed Minnesota’s roster. The host referenced Wiggins’ below-average defense, as recently detailed at FiveThirtyEight.com.

In a feature titled “The NBA Haters’ Ball,” FiveThirtyEight identified Wiggins as the league’s “Least Defensive Player.” That unwanted label got thrust upon Wiggins after some player-tracking data examined shots defended by individuals during the 2016-17 season and the results of said attempts.

“Possession by possession, there are a
few defenders who are as bad as
Wiggins,” Kyle Wagner wrote. “When
Wiggins contests a shot, opponents
have a 56.1 effective field goal
percentage; when they are unguarded,
they have a 56.4 eFG percentage.
Fundamentally, getting a shot up
against Andrew Wiggins is the same as
getting an open shot.”

According to the evaluation, Wiggins’ liabilities included a lack of full effort and ball-watching.

“He defended the 10th-most shots in
the league, by far the most by a
below-average defender,” Wagner added
at FiveThirtyEight. “Most teams do
their best to hide their weak
defenders, but opponents seek Wiggins
out like no other defender in the
league.”

A three-time second-team All-Defensive team selection, Butler expects he can mold Wiggins into a far more competitive and potent player on the defensive end of the court.

“He has all the tools to be a terrific
defender, by the way,” Butler said on
The Bill Simmons Podcast. “But it’s
different when somebody’s just telling
you something all the time and
somebody’s showing you: This is what
playing both sides of the floor can
get you.”

When Wiggins joined Minnesota three years ago, he had no savvy multi-time all-star to show him the NBA ropes. The Timberwolves have been somewhere between mediocre and awful throughout their current 13-year playoff drought, but finally appear to have a postseason-worthy roster thanks to the summer additions of Butler, Taj Gibson and Jeff Teague, to go with Wiggins and star big man Karl-Anthony Towns.

Minnesota acquired Wiggins with the idea that he would one day become an all-star wing such as Butler. Now the 22-year-old Canadian prodigy has a chance to learn every day from one of the league’s best all-around perimeter players long before entering the prime of his career.

“He is extremely talented on the
offensive end,” Butler said of
Wiggins. “And I think he’s going to be
just that talented on the defensive
end, as well, as long as you lock into
it. I think he has that will and he
wants to be great, so he’s going to
want to do it. And I’m excited to get
with him, just because I know how
passionate he is about the game — his
drive and his work ethic and how he
wants to win. When you have that as a
young guy, you have it. You can’t
really teach that; you just have it.”