as prospects going forward it would be hard not to have Ball #1. Smart and Kuzma are clearly the bottom 2. I still have no idea what to make of Ingram, but thus far haven't seen enough to put him above 4. I'd put Tatum 2 and Brown 3.
I have seen absolutely nothing from Ball so far this season or in preseason or summer league to suggest he is a better prospect than any of the other players in that list. None.
Ball is shooting terribly, absolutely no question about that, but he is very active everywhere else. He has a very strong assist to turnover ratio, he is getting to the boards very well, he is generating steals, etc. Once he gets his shooting up to a more reasonable percentage (he was a very strong shooter at UCLA), his points will go up a great deal and you will have a huge PG averaging in the 15/7/7 range as a rookie. PG's and C's are the two positions that are the hardest transitions to the pros. No question Tatum and Brown have both played far better than Ball this year, but I'd still rate Ball as a higher end long term prospect.
Except unless he changes that funky shot of his, he'll never shoot a significantly higher percentage. That shot movement is just not conducive to consistency.
except he has consistently shot at a high level at every level even with that shot technique. You don't go from a 55/41 shooter to a 30/23 shooter overnight. I'm sure he won't shoot as well in the NBA as he did at UCLA, but he won't be this bad either. PG is the hardest position to transition to at the professional level and it is even harder for someone in Ball's position on such a visible team, with a visible father, and an organization that has dubbed you the next Magic Johnson. There is a lot of pressure on Lonzo. He will start to get more comfortable and he will shoot better.
He shot at a high level based on being wide open. He still hits wide-open threes (no defender within 6 feet, such as in transition) at a decent 35% clip.
The problem is that he's predictably sucking with a player within 6 feet of him. Here are his nearest defender 3PT metrics:
nearest
defender
distance 3PA 3PT%
0..2 ft 0 0.0%
2..4 ft 6 16.7%
4..6 ft 20 16.0%
6+ ft 20 35.0%
Granted, these are a small sample size (they don't include this last game) but they are indicative of something that is plain to the eye test.
Because his shooting form involves a slow wind-up of bringing the ball out across the front of his body and way back to his left ear, he has tremendous difficulty getting his shot off when forced to dribble to his right.
This was very apparent in the game last night. Watch how NBA defenders guard him.
Until (unless) he fixes this, he's always going to have trouble getting that shot off in the NBA.
If he's willing to put in the work, it's fixable. But may take a while.