DeAndre Jordan of the New Orleans Pelicans won the Twyman-Stokes Teammate of the Year award, recognizing his selfless play and leadership. Duncan Robinson of the Detroit Pistons was nominated as a finalist.
Key points
DeAndre Jordan won the Twyman-Stokes Teammate of the Year award
Award recognizes selfless play and leadership
Duncan Robinson was nominated by the Pistons
Finalists selected by league executives and player votes
Presented annually since 2012-13, the award recognizes the player deemed the league's best teammate, based on selfless play, leadership on and off the court as a mentor and role model to other NBA players, and commitment to the team.
Pistons center Jalen Duren (0) shoots on Pelicans center DeAndre Jordan (6) in the second half at Little Caesars Arena.
Pistons center Jalen Duren (0) shoots on Pelicans center DeAndre Jordan (6) in the second half at Little Caesars Arena.
The 12 finalists were selected by a panel of league executives, with current players voting to determine the winner. Duncan Robinson was the Pistons' nominee.
Jordan, 37, narrowly beat three-time winner Jrue Holiday of the Portland Trail Blazers. Jordan received the most first-place votes (66) and finished with 1,445 points, eight ahead of Holiday (1,437). Houston's Jeff Green (1,420) finished third and Toronto's Garrett Temple (1,223) was fourth, well ahead of the rest of the field.
Q&A
Who won the Twyman-Stokes Teammate of the Year award in 2023?
DeAndre Jordan of the New Orleans Pelicans won the Twyman-Stokes Teammate of the Year award in 2023.
What criteria are used to select the Twyman-Stokes Teammate of the Year award winner?
The award recognizes selfless play, leadership on and off the court, and commitment to the team.
Who was the Pistons' nominee for the Twyman-Stokes Teammate of the Year award?
Duncan Robinson was the nominee for the Pistons for the Twyman-Stokes Teammate of the Year award.
How are the finalists for the Twyman-Stokes Teammate of the Year award selected?
Finalists are selected by a panel of league executives, with current players voting to determine the winner.
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Jordan is a three-time All-NBA player, a two-time All-Defensive Team honoree, a one-time All-Star (2016-17) and an NBA champion with the Denver Nuggets in 2022-23. He appeared in 12 games (seven starts) this season for New Orleans, averaging 4.4 points and 6.3 rebounds per game.
Over 1,123 games (798 starts) with eight teams across the last 18 seasons, he is averaging 8.5 points, 9.7 rebounds and 1.4 blocks per game.
Jalen Brunson can continue to build on his reputation as a big-time player if he finds a way to carry the New York Knicks into the second round of the playoffs.
Led by Brunson, the Knicks hold a 3-2 lead over the Atlanta Hawks in their best-of-seven, first-round Eastern Conference series and will try to clinch the series on Thursday in Atlanta.
Brunson scored 39 points with eight assists and a game-high plus-23 rating in Tuesday's 126-97 romp over the Hawks in New York. The veteran is averaging 28.2 points and 5.8 assists in five playoff games. He's scored 26-plus points in four of the five contests and continues to provide matchup problems for Atlanta.
"We'll keep putting different guys on him, changing matchups, trying to do anything we can to make it hard on him," Atlanta coach Quin Snyder said. "I have tremendous respect for him as a player and a leader, and his ability to create for himself and then create for his teammates. It's not easy."
Little has worked.
"We're just trying to move him around as much as we can so they can't catch a rhythm with him," Knicks coach Mike Brown said.
It all worked for the Knicks on Tuesday. Karl-Anthony Towns had 16 points and 14 rebounds, and OG Anunoby added 17 points and 10 rebounds.
"OG and KAT were monsters," Brown said. "They were phenomenal."
The Knicks know, though, how elusive that fourth win in a playoff series can be.
"We just understand what the situation is. The toughest game to win is the one that ends someone's season," Towns said. "We've got to be super disciplined. We have to execute at the highest level that we have in this series. We have to be ready for a really tough game."
The Knicks produced a tough-guy effort on Tuesday. They were able to make the game more physical, the style New York prefers against the more finesse game Atlanta desires.
"We've just got to play through it. We can't let their physicality take us out of what we want to do," Atlanta center Onyeka Okongwu said. " … We're not really playing like ourselves. We're not running. We're not moving the ball. We're not spacing. The things that we did to get us to this point of the year, we're not doing well enough. So we have to do that on Thursday."
Atlanta failed to have a player reach 20 points in Game 5, with Jalen Johnson scoring 18 and Dyson Daniels adding 17. CJ McCollum, the hero of Atlanta's Game 2 win in New York, was 3-of-10 shooting with six points.
The Hawks flew the white flag of surrender when they cleared the bench trailing by 24 with 4:09 remaining.
The physicality has really seemed to bother Johnson. He is averaging 19.2 points, 7.6 rebounds and 5.0 assists in the playoffs, compared to 22.5 points, 10.3 rebounds and 7.9 assists during the regular season.
"They did what they were supposed to do, protecting home court," Snyder said. "Their defense never really let us establish consistently how we need to play to beat them. We have to be more committed to imposing our will on the offensive end. Really moving and passing, you can feel possessions where that occurs, and that's when we're efficient or have success."