He had games with good minutes in first half of the season and he sucked - 28min vs 76.rs, 4pts, 5TO for example
Take away last 10 games where he got his nice stats when Jazz were out of playoffs and nothing really mattered and see what stats you get for rest of the season.
Talk to me after he plays well in the games that matter.
There are 23 games after the all-star break, not ten. The stats I have been using include 13 other games before the period in which you think that "doesnt matter" so my data still holds, and your points are proven foolish yet again. Also, the Jazz were 36-36 with ten games left in the season, a playoff berth was still possible. Also, out of the final ten games, only 2 of the teams were out of the playoff picture, with he 8 others all trying to fight for the best possible seed (Lakers, Hornets, Trailblazers, Nuggets, etc.) So they do all matter; Im not sure why you think that they dont. You cant tell me that the Lakers weren't motivated to win when we beat them 86-85 at the staples center.
Here is what it comes down to. Most of the posters here unanimously agree that Gordon Hayward improved tremendously, with even coach Phil Jackson and Kobe Bryant touting him as having a very bright future in this league, with Bryant even saying that he think Hayward will become a Jeff Hornacek who can put the ball down better. So not only does this entire forum disagree with you, but the Zen Master and one of the most talented basketball players of the decade is siding with us as well. The games that Hayward did well in, were not as a result of teams not playing their starters, not showing the will to win, other characteristics that would deem a performance less impressive. His performances were against teams trying to get the bets possible playoff seed, with all of their starters playing >30 minutes and still not managing to shut down Gordon Hayward. Rookies showing improvement at the end of the season, and then continuing to improve onto the next season is no strange ocurrence. Wesley Matthews improved after the allstar break, and continued his momentum into next season.. Same with Deron Williams. Same with Derrick Favors. Same with almost all good players who started their season with limited minutes, only to improve once their minutes were finally increased
The only reason you could deny any of this, is to try and win this argument for some stupid reason. The fact that youre trying to pull anything out of your *** to take away an amazing improvement from one of our future cornerstones of the franchise for self-pride reasons is completely pathetic and unsubstantiated; you might as well have your fan-card revoked. Just give up already; you lost this argument a long time ago when you said drafting Gordon Hayward really wasnt that wise, seeing as there were "much better" players selected after him. Now you're just beating around the bush, and the longer you do it the more foolish you become.