Zach Lowe’s 2018 Luke Walton All Stars

It’s time to name our seventh-annual Luke Walton All-Stars — role players and journeymen thriving in unexpected ways. (Click here for more on the column’s origin.)

Starters

Spencer Dinwiddie, Brooklyn Nets

In Detroit and Chicago, Dinwiddie developed a potentially career-killing reputation as a yappy know-it-all. “I learned when you’re a second-rounder, you’re not allowed to be vocal,” Dinwiddie says. “It was taboo in Detroit.”

The Nets discovered he deserved the rap. “It wasn’t great at first,” says Kenny Atkinson, the team’s coach. “It was, ‘Oh, this guy has all the answers.’”

Dinwiddie didn’t expect to play much with Jeremy Lin and D’Angelo Russell ahead of him. But Lin’s season ended in Brooklyn’s first game, and Russell went out with a knee injury before Thanksgiving. Suddenly, the Nets were Dinwiddie’s team. He made the most of it, working for a two- or three-month stretch as Brooklyn’s best player. Brooklyn has played its best, by far, with Dinwiddie as solo point guard — without Russell on the floor, per NBA.com.

He has proved a canny playmaker with a reliable (for awhile, anyway) 3-pointer. Dinwiddie operates in languid dribbles, with long spaces between them. Defenders can’t tell if he is about to pick up his dribble, and Dinwiddie preys on their indecision. He senses when help defenders are flat-footed:

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