Williams was a fan favorite from the moment he entered the league. His uninhibited street style of basketball, his amazing ball handling and imaginative passing created an off-the-wall buzz in the NBA that made him stand out among a large group of middle-of-the-road players and gave him a fan base as large as the league's top players.
Williams has maintained his fancy and aesthetically pleasing floating style of play since moving from the Kings. After Hubie Brown's arrival with the Grizzlies, Jason Williams' spontaneous style of play began to gradually change. During his four years in Memphis, Jason Williams gradually shed his dazzling but turnover-prone style of play and began to gradually change into a true NBA point guard in the eyes of the coaching staff. But he's still a regular in the weekly Big Ten.
When he came to the Heat, Williams was a steady presence on the court, becoming Wade's right-hand man in the backcourt, and was instrumental in the Heat's championship run in the 2006 season.
Jason Williams' flaws have been with him throughout his career. He was a poor defender and did not protect the rim enough; his play was inconsistent, he lacked leadership and big-picture vision, and he didn't even have much of a knack for controlling the tempo, preferring to gamble at key moments of the game, and his age was becoming an issue. on August 7, Jason Williams, who had already passed the prime of his life, signed a one-year, $1.26 million contract with the Los Angeles Clippers. No one thought Williams would suddenly announce his retirement. Once the "white chocolate", may only exist in the memory of the fans and the computer saved countless white chocolate basketball video.