
As a member of the media, Redick could vote on who he believed should win the league’s Most Valuable Player, Defensive Player of the Year, and other awards and honors. Among them was the NBA All-Defense Team, of which Anthony Davis was a part for a fifth time in his career. Davis was named to the first team, signifying voters believed he was among the top five defenders in the league. But Redick wasn’t one of them.
Redick featured three big men not named Davis — the Miami Heat’s Bam Adebayo, the Minnesota Timberwolves’ Rudy Gobert, and San Antonio Spurs rookie Victor Wembanyama — and his second team did not include Davis either. Instead, Redick limited his second-team selections to just one big man: the Cleveland Cavaliers’ Jarrett Allen. He also named the Oklahoma City Thunder’s Shai-Gilgeous Alexander, Denver Nuggets’ Kentavious Caldwell-Pope, Orlando Magic’s Jalen Suggs, and Boston Celtics’ Derrick White to his All-Defensive second team.
While Davis was very vocal about not winning Defensive Player of the Year — he finished fourth behind winner Gobert, Wembanyama, and Adebayo — AD is apparently not harboring any resentment toward Redick for his All-Defense team voting.
“One source close to the process insists that JJ Redick’s refusal to place Anthony Davis on his All-Defense ballot this season is a topic both parties can set aside with little fuss now that Redick is Davis’ coach in Lakerland,” NBA insider Marc Stein reported on his ‘The Stein Line’ Substack.
Anthony Davis primed for another big year

Regardless of what JJ Redick believed when he was filling out his awards ballot near the end of the regular season, Anthony Davis is one of the best and most impactful defenders in the NBA. The impact of Davis, who was exceptionally available this season, can best be seen when he is not around at all; in the six games in which AD did not play this season, the Lakers were 2-4 and allowed 126.3 points per game.
It will be interesting to see how Redick schemes the Lakers’ defense to try to further accentuate Davis’s strengths and hide some of the weaknesses of some of the other Laker defenders. All eyes will be on Redick, who has never been held a major head or assistant coaching position.
Preston Byers is an experienced writer and journalist who currently serves as an associate NBA, NFL, and NCAA Football editor for ClutchPoints. Preston also works as a staff writer at The Vindicator and Tribune Chronicle, and previously was a site expert for FanSided’s Union and Blue.
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