I do really feel like people are being quick to say "smart is what he is" or running out of patience with him when he is an age a lot of players now that people used to come into the league at. I remember a lot of people, possibly also myself, were thinking Bradley was what he was after 3 season when he was 22 because he had been around so long.
Bradley came into the league young, raw, and timid, with really excellent physical attributes. He was held back by his lack of confidence and polish, and also by injuries, early in his career.
Since then, he's added something to his game pretty much every year and has blossomed into a key piece on both ends, as well as taking the mantle of longest-tenured Celtic. He's gone from being a deer in headlights to a guy who knows exactly where he wants his shots and takes those shots without hesitation.
Smart, by comparison, has been much the same sort of player since he came into the league.
Now, I will say that I've seen improvements in the mental aspects of Smart's game. Decision making, running the pick and roll, passing.
But his shooting has been more or less the same since he entered the league. He's streaky, and doesn't lack for confidence. He shows flashes as a finisher, and has stretches where he gets to the line, but for the most part his offensive game is limited to the area beyond 15 feet from the basket because he can't really get by anybody.
He's not working with an overabundance of physical ability. At the same time, he hustles and competes and is excellent defensively. His confidence is sky high, and he brings intangibles onto the floor -- leadership, intensity, pride, persistence.
I could see him putting up more counting stats if he had to play a bigger role in terms of minutes and shot attempts. But as far as taking a leap to become a different category of player, I don't see it.
He's never been a terribly efficient scorer at any level. That's been true when he's had an outsized role in his team's offense and handled the ball a lot, and it's been true when he's played a smaller role and played more off the ball.
I don't regard all of this as negative talk. Smart being what he is means he is a valuable defensive role player who can be relied upon to be on the floor in big moments and make clutch plays. He's just not a star or a consistent two-way option you can install as a core part of your gameplan. That's OK, though it is a little bit disappointing in light of where he was drafted.
And if that is especially disappointing because it seems we make that rationalization with a lot of Ainge picks -- "He's a really solid contributor and a good value for where he was drafted, even though he's never going to be a genuine star" -- well, that disappointment is to be directed at Ainge, not at Marcus.