
For the first time in their lives, twin brothers Caleb and Cody Martin are going to play against each other in a regular-season game. And while theyâre ecstatic for one another, theyâre both coming for bragging rights and the win this Saturday night in Charlotte.
âMy brother [Caleb] is gonna be amped, but at the same time itâs like, he approaches the game like heâs playing me every game,â Cody told BasketballNews.com over the phone.
Caleb is excited to return to Charlotte, back where his NBA career began and where he grew up.
âGetting to be back home and play where it all started will be fun,â Caleb told BasketballNews.com. âTo get play against all the others that were on my past team. Thereâs always bragging rights⊠and getting to leave with the dub.â
The Martins have been playing and practicing against one another their whole lives, even when they played on the same team. Theyâve constantly driven each other and motivated each other.
In fact, Caleb and Cody have always been together.
Whether it be basketball, fishing, grabbing a bite to eat or working at their local Walmart in Mocksville, North Carolina as cart pushers growing up, youâd find the pair together.
From Davie County High School, to a senior year at prep powerhouse Oak Hill Academy, two seasons at North Carolina State and transferring to the University of Nevada â together.
They played a significant part in back-to-back NCAA Tournament appearances, including a 2017-18 run to the Sweet 16, the Wolf Packâs deepest run since 2004. Both made All-Mountain West Conference squads each season and were heavily decorated, with Cody winning MWC Defensive Player of the Year and Caleb winning MWC Player of the Year.
Graduation and the NBA Draft brought the reality of separation to the forefront.
Cody would hear his named called on draft night, with the Charlotte Hornets taking him with the 36th pick on June 20, 2019, while his brother didnât hear his name called. However, Caleb would later sign an Exhibit 10 with the Hornets a month after, eventually earning a converted two-way contract and ultimately upgrading to a standard multi-year deal. Both factored in heavily in the Hornetsâ rotation by the end of their rookie season after spending time in the G-League with the Greensboro Swarm, further cementing themselves the following year.
Cody Martin throws the lob to his twin brother Caleb Martin!
â Ballislife.com (@Ballislife) March 1, 2020
But, in the 2021 offseason, Charlotte waived Caleb.
Caleb had prepared himself heading into the summer knowing it was a possibility, but mentioned it still caught him by surprise.
âIt was just very eye-opening, in terms of just putting yourself in perspective to say, âAlright well I havenât done enough, guys donât believe that youâre an NBA player.â I think a lot of that was emphasized whenever I didnât get picked up off waivers,â Caleb said.
He signed a two-way deal with the Miami Heat a month-and-a-half later, focused on proving himself and showing he belonged in the league.
âThe Heat gave [Caleb] an opportunity and I donât think heâs looked back since⊠his mindset, what he brings to them and the dynamic he brings to them, and just how hard he works. Thatâs the culture there. So, I think heâs fitting right in,â Cody said.
Watch @CalebMartin14 work on the defensive end
@MiamiHEAT | #HEATCulture pic.twitter.com/FEoD7EgpSJ
â Bally Sports Sun: HEAT (@BallyHEAT) February 2, 2022
And fit right in Caleb has, securing a high-leverage spot in the rotation for a team thatâs tangoed with the top seed in the Eastern Conference. Heâs put together career-highs across the board with respect to production and efficiency; that includes a renewed focus on the defensive end, as heâs boasting his highest ratings in Defensive-Estimated Plus-Minus â emphasized by crisp rotations and honed-in tenacity.
Heâs played a significant part in the surprising emergence of Miamiâs bench unit, comprised mainly of undrafted and two-way players. The fourth most-played lineup by the Heat this season per Cleaning the Glass is an all-bench group of Gabe Vincent, Tyler Herro, Max Strus, Caleb Martin and Dewayne Dedmon. The group has been remarkably effective (plus-6.2 point differential), and played a key part in the Heat rallying back in the fourth quarter to take the Toronto Raptors to overtime in a recent game. (Editorâs Note: It took three extra OTs to decide that contest, with the Raptors outlasting Miami 124-120.)
Itâs not often that a full, five-man bench lineup will play, let alone have a positive impact. Mostly coming from similar backgrounds (being undrafted) has factored into their ability to play together.
âI think a lot of that has to do with mentality man, the fact that we want each other to win so bad,â Caleb said of the unitâs success.â
Many will and have looked at Caleb and Cody side by side and struggled to tell the difference. Often on opposing broadcasts in prior years, thereâd be confusion over which brother was which when they were in game. But make no mistake: Theyâre fraternal twins and will be the first to tell you.
âWeâve been trying to tell people, you know, we look the same, we do a lot of the same stuff, and weâre together all the time, but our games are totally different. Itâs night and day.â said Cody.
Thatâs perhaps been the beauty of this season. Finally apart, each brotherâs game has blossomed, and as Cody mentioned, theyâre quite different. They bring a similar energy and hustle to the court that âmight rub you the wrong way,â as Cody made light of a recent event with Russell Westbrook when Charlotte played the Los Angeles Lakers. (Heâd block Westbrookâs lay-up attempt into the abyss about a minute later.)
Caleb has fashioned himself into a top-notch slasher, taking advantage of hard closeouts and attacking the rim with authority, where he converts at a high rate (70% per Cleaning the Glass) and has put opposing shot-blockers on notice.
(Calebâs favorite dunk is the first one).
Give him the baseline, and you may as well give him the âand-one.â
Meanwhile, Cody has flashed his ball-handling and playmaking chops more than ever at the NBA level due to defenses respecting his shooting, providing him driving lanes he didnât routinely garner his first two seasons.
Cody Martin?!?!?!? pic.twitter.com/6nbpXXQR8y
â Mark Schindler (@MSchindlerNBA) December 6, 2021
If youâve watched closely their whole careers, that dynamic has been there between them throughout â Caleb often leading their teams in scoring and shooting at a high clip, with Cody facilitating and filling in the gaps.
âItâs kind of like refreshing too, that (playing apart) allows him to be him and that allowed me to be me,â Cody said.
Both brothers spoke on the oddity of being apart on the court, but off the court has been an entirely different transition.
âThe house is way more quiet,â said Cody, who had lived with Caleb during his two years in Charlotte. âThe transition has been not as bad as I thought it was gonna be just in terms of like, how different it would be. Because youâre so busy, and youâre on the road all the time.â
Caleb emphatically remarked how much he loved living with his brother, and that it was an awkward adjustment at first, but âitâs been cool to get to just be yourself.â It really hit him one of the first times he went to get food by himself.
Despite being the furthest apart in their lives, the brothersâ relationship is as strong as ever. They FaceTime every night and play video games with each other constantly in their off time, especially Call of Duty.
Do the Martins keep up with one anotherâs play? Follow each otherâs stats and production?
âOh yeah, man. Yeah every game, every game,â promptly said Caleb, who was preparing to watch Cody and the Hornets take on the L.A. Clippers in a matinee before his flight out of Miami last Sunday.
Cody gloated over his Calebâs play and fit with the Heat.
âWeâre each otherâs biggest fan, we want to see each other do well,â Cody said. âWe talk to each other every night, we critique each other every night. And tell each other what we see, and basically just trying to help each other. Regardless [of] whether he was here or not here.â
To no oneâs surprise, you can just tell that this is genuine. The pride they brim with when talking about one anotherâs career breakouts was an emotion filled with warmth.
Though Saturday will be the first non-exhibition game Caleb and Cody will play against one another (Caleb was inactive when Charlotte and Miami first played this season), things arenât as different as they might appear on the surface. The jerseys may not be the same, but their mentalities and energy remain resolute.
Maintaining significant roles on opposing teams with playoff aspirations, the fraternal nature of their twindom can finally be seen abroad by a demarcation in their playing styles. Being apart has allowed them to flourish as individuals, but all their time together helped them get here.
Looking to go to the hottest concerts, sports, theater & family shows near you? Get 100% guaranteed tickets to more than 125,000 live events from TicketSmarter, the official ticket marketplace of BasketballNews.com. Order online now!
Produced in association with BasketballNews.com.
Recommended from our partners
The post Growing Apart Together: Caleb And Cody Martin Flourishing On Their Own appeared first on Zenger News.

