I have very little expectations of RJ Hunter or any of our rookies this year. I expect most of them to spend the bulk of their time in D-League.
Once again, I feel that folks overreacted to Summer league. It's a tradition.
For context, if you're looking at these guys just based on pure stat averages (NBA EFF stat - points + rebounds + assists + steals + blocks... subtract missed shots and turnovers), here's how they ranked amongst all summer league players:
19th - Jordan Mickey (16.63) *
54th - Marcus Smart (14.2)
97th - Terry Rozier (11.25)
136th - RJ Hunter (9.38)
228th - James Young (6.0)
* MIckey was genuinely impressive (statistically), but he's like 6'8 220 pounds and I'm not sure where he gets minutes as long as David Lee, Jared Sullinger, Kelly Olynyk, Amir Johnson, Tyler Zeller and Jonas Jerebko are here.
I don't blame anyone for getting excited when they see a guy like Hunter average 12 points, 2.8 rebounds, 1.3 assists, 0.6 steals with .316/.356/.906 shooting ... but how about a little perspective?
Don't underestimate the massive talent gulf between Summer league (where the majority of the players are undrafted scrubs who will never play a minute of NBA basketball) and the real NBA (the greatest players in the world)... Sure, Hunter looked ok... but so did 130+ players who outperformed him statistically... such as Jordan Sibert, an undrafted player with no NBA team.
I'm not suggesting that Hunter has no future, I'm just saying you should temper your expectations. Remember that Hunter averaged 19.7 points, 3.6 assists, 4.7 rebounds, 2.1 steals and 1 block last season in College. He was taken #28 in the draft this year. It shouldn't be surprising that he's holding his own against undrafted d-league players who will never play a minute of real NBA basketball. It stands to reason that he'd be better than those guys... otherwise he wouldn't have been drafted ahead of them, right? But that doesn't mean he'll be able to hold his own in the real league.
Take his best performance, for instance... dropping 22 points on the Spurs. Look at that game in context. The Spurs started exactly two drafted players. Kyle Anderson (#30 last year) and Cady Lalanne (taken 55th this year). It's fair to expect James Young (taken 17th last year), Terry Rozier (taken 16th this year), RJ Hunter (taken #28 this year) and Jordan Mickey (taken #32 this year) to be better than them... seeing as they were better than them in College (hence why they were drafted ahead of them). And yet Boston still lost. While I admit that watching Hunter drop 22 points off the bench on 7-14 shooting is exciting, I have to acknowledge that in that very same game undrafted d-leaguer Jonathan Simmons might have been even more impressive for the Spurs (19 points on 7-11 shooting). I don't expect Jonathan Simmons to get minutes this year either.
The fact is, Mediocre performances in Summer league isn't reason for grand optimism. As someone pointed out to me... you should be concerned if a drafted rookie plays poorly in Summer league, but you shouldn't read into it if a rookie plays well. Obviously someone HAS to get stats out there... Last year Mike Moser was our 3rd best player (13.6 points, 4.8 rebounds, 2 assists, 2 steals and 1 block per game in 26mpg)... A couple years ago Dionte Christmas outplayed Jared Sullinger on our team by averaging 13 points, 5.3 rebounds, 3.1 assists, 1.8 steals. Back in 2010, Luke Haroangody was our summerleague superstar... 17 points, 7 rebounds, 1.6 assists. But getting stats doesn't mean the guy can play against the best players in the world.
Speaking of Christmas, that brings up a fun question.... Who was more impressive... RJ Hunter this year (12 points, 2.8 rebounds, 1.3 assists, 0.6 steals with .316/.356/.906 shooting)... or Dionte Christmas two seasons ago (13 points, 5.3 rebounds, 3.1 assists, 1.8 steals 47%/35%/70%)? I'm going with Christmas (15.10 EFF stat... 31st in Summer league that season). Like Hunter, Christmas was a beast in College as well (19.5 points, 6 rebounds, 3 assists, 1.5 steals, 43%/36%/78%). Hows his NBA career going? 31 games - 6.4mpg - 2.3 points, 1.2 rebounds, 0.3 assists, 0.1 steals 36%/29%/75% ... Do you get my point?
Again, it shouldn't be a shock that the best college players play the best against weak Summer league competition. Hunter isn't a bad basketball player. I'd go out on a limb and say he's one of the 30 best rookies this year (hence why he was taken #28). But what does that mean? Brian Scalabrine was taken in roughly the same range as RJ Hunter (#34 overall in the 2001 draft). Scalabrine was also a 3 year college player. Scalabrine's College stats were solid: 18 points, 6 rebounds, 3 assists, 53%/40%/72% (compared to Hunter's 40%/30%/87%) ... Scal averaged 12 points, 3 rebounds, 2.4 assists on 50%/50%/63% shooting in 5 summer-league games... compared to Hunter's 12 points, 2.8 rebounds, 1.2 assists, 31%/36%/90% ...
Scal played in like 20 NBA games as a rookie and only played garbage time. We know what kind of career he had. Hunter might some day reach Scal's peak, but this year I anticipate seeing him spend most of his time with the Red Claws. This team is filled with mediocre talent as-is, but we're pretty loaded on guards and forwards. I'd be a bit surprised to see Hunter crack this rotation unless we clean house a bit. I think it's naive to expect otherwise. Long-term, I hope he can be a factor. Short-term... come on... it's summer league.