He's what I'll say... there was nothing surprising about Jaylen's Summer league performance. He showed the signs we expected him to show. He struggled with what we expected him to struggle with. All the things that scouts pointed out about him prior to the draft were on display.
Can't tell which scouts you're referring to. But his left hand, for instance, was much better than advertised ( for example by Schmitz, who also questioned his feel for the game; it turns out that Brown is instinctive and has developed a big repertoire of moves). Pelton had him ranked low before the draft, and completely turned around after Summer League.
The player we saw in Summer League isn't ready for the NBA yet.
We?
Your opinion is an outlier.
It's not really an "opinion" to say the guy struggled offensively. He struggled offensively.
You changed the terms here. To remind you, what you said originally was: "The player we saw in Summer League isn't ready for the NBA yet." That's the opinion you're an outlier on.
But it's hard to go along with your second... assertion... as well. What I saw in summer league was a player who could get the ball wherever he wanted on the floor, created a lot of shots for himself and others, had a wide repertoire of shots, got into the lane at will and drew fouls at an extraordinary rate.
He shot 33% and 22% from three. That's bad.
Like Stevens and Ainge, I'm unconcerned. The shot mechanics are excellent; his stroke is smooth and precise. He needs reps, and he'll get plenty in the next nine months or so.
I do agree that field goal percentages are important; but they are not "offense", which is a much bigger discussion.
If he struggled offensively against undrafted amateurs, it's fair to expect him to struggle against NBA players.
I think you misspoke here. Summer league is a league for basketball professionals. Not amateurs.
It's hard to tell what kind of defensive impact he'll make, but he doesn't really look ready for the NBA yet.
Great lateral movement, great hands, great instincts, quick off his feet, uses his ample length, willing to mix it up and get physical. He covers a lot of ground, closes out quick, gets a healthy amount of steals. He's got "stopper" written all over him.
I hope he makes dramatic improvements before the season starts. The good news is he shows potential, so there's plenty of reason to be optimistic he'll develop into a real player eventually. I hope we keep him, because I want to watch him improve.
I'm with you on this. The kid has a chance to be special.
I can't blame anyone too much for hedging about this guy. Irrational overestimation of a player is a lot more common than irrational underestimation, or even rational underestimation; it is simply smarter to bet against a player, any player, and the learning curve is steep for any rookie.