NBA
Why Markieff Morris is One of the Best Breakout Candidates for Next Season
With Channing Frye off to Orlando, Markieff Morris looks set to start in Phoenix. If last year was any indication, a big year is on the way.

The Phoenix Suns were full of pleasant surprises last year, not the least of which being that they were actually competitive and good at basketball. Most NBA pundits had them pegged for the bottom of the Western Conference barrel, but the Suns obviously missed the memo, going 48-34 and only barely missing the playoffs.

They got as far as they did by having practically every player in their main rotation put up a career year in the same season (of the nine players who played more than 1,000 minutes for the Suns last year, ten players that hit the 18 and 8 mark in the NBA last season in points and rebounds and that list is a who’s who of great power forwards and centers in the league. If Morris gets the minutes and continues to produce at the level he did last season, he’ll have a chance to start sneaking into Most Improved Player conversations as well (an award often swayed by good players getting more minutes).

Still, there are areas where Morris still needs to get better. He’s somewhat of a stretch four (and we all know how important those are nowadays), but not nearly to the level Frye was/is. He’ll also need to work on his rim protection if he has to go up against the LaMarcus Aldridges and Blake Griffins of the Western Conference on a nightly basis.

2013-143PM/363PA/363P%Opp FGA at RimOpp FG% at Rim
Channing Frye2.56.737.0%6.552.2%
Markieff Morris0.61.831.5%5.056.1%

There’s some hope for his three-point shooting to boomerang, as he hit 1.3 threes per 36 minutes at a clip of 34.7% in his rookie season (and 42.4% in his last year at Kansas). He’s shot fewer long balls and at a worse percentage in each subsequent year, but if he’s done it before, you have to believe he could do it again. His percentages from every single other distance from the hoop universally hit career highs last season, so now he just needs to put it all together.

FG% by Distance (Feet)0 - 33 - 1010 - 1616 - 3P line2P3P
2011-1258.7%36.2%39.7%25.0%42.0%34.7%
2012-1358.8%25.0%28.7%41.4%42.6%33.6%
2013-1465.8%40.1%47.8%42.9%51.2%31.5%

As for the rim protection, we’ll just have to see. At the very least, the Suns were a better defensive team last year with Morris on the court (103.0 points allowed per 100 possessions) than with him off (104.9). He’s got decent size and a wide base for staying in front of his man, so there’s still reason to think he can improve on that end of the floor with more reps.

It’s hard to imagine any of the eight teams that made the playoffs out west last season falling out of the picture to let the Suns in, but they should still be on track to be better (and there are always unpredictable injuries, trades, breakouts, and meltdowns that lay to waste our initial expectations, anyway). The addition of Isaiah Thomas gives them the best point guard rotation possibly ever and Markieff Morris is in position to alleviate the loss of Channing Frye. Soon to be 25 and going into his fourth season, Markieff could be on the verge of breaking out in an even bigger way than last year.

If he does, it might finally get easier to tell him and his twin brother apart.

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