Has Dante Exum Hit a Rookie Wall?

  • January 22, 2015
  • Dan Boyce
  • NBA News
  • 0
  • 2490 Views

In a broad sense, there was perhaps no better candidate for a collision with a rookie wall than Dante Exum. Unlike the majority of his peers in the 2014 Draft class who either attended a Division I college program or played a professional season in one of Europe’s several such leagues, Exum’s highest level of pre-NBA competition was a couple of appearances in international play and what basically amounts to high school level play outside these limited viewings. He barely even played competitive basketball of any kind last year outside Australia’s National High School Basketball Championships (several months before the Draft). His physical profile was obviously at the NBA level, but it was very easy to wonder whether his stamina and mental acumen would be able to keep up when thrust into a far higher level of play than he had ever experienced.

As he reaches the game threshold where such tendencies would be expected to reveal themselves, the bag is mixed. On the one hand, his shooting, once a pleasant surprise for a guy who was supposed to be a liability here coming into the league, has fallen off a cliff since the turn of the new year. His effective field goal percentage, which had maintained at a respectable 48.6 through his first 32 games spanning until the end of December, has plummeted to 39.6 thus far in January. His overall field goal figure is an icky 31.3 percent in this time, and he’s made just eight of his 33 attempts from 3, good for 24.2 percent (he was shooting just short of 34 percent from beyond the arc until this point). Any form coach will tell you that a big part of sustained jump-shooting is legs and conditioning, and it would appear as though Dante’s struggles here could indicate a bit of a cutoff point.

Of course, there’s another side to that coin. His splits for this month, and really for the entire season, still represent a very small sample, particularly for shots – he’s taken 48 in January and just 188 on the year, still far too few for his long-term percentages to have even approached stabilizing. Meanwhile, other areas of his game have seen small improvements in this sample, with his assist figures rising and his turnovers dropping amid his highest average minutes per night of any month so far in his career. The Jazz have actually been far more effective with him on the floor on a per-possession basis than they were to this point, though of course this metric has quite a bit of static attached in just a nine game period.

Dante Exum – 10 points vs Miami (17/12/14)

>

He’s certainly not in the clear by any means, though, even if whether he’s hit an arbitrary standard for a “rookie wall” is certainly debatable from a numbers standpoint. Exum has been a strange and unique study the entire year for the way his on-court performance has varied drastically from what most experts expected of him coming into the league. It remains very early in what’s certainly a long-term project, but certain elements of his game are drawing small bits of concern.

Most noticeably, Dante appears simply petrified at the idea of initiating or absorbing contact while handling the ball, an issue that seems to be compounding itself rather than improving as the year has worn on. Whether it’s hesitance or a lack of understanding of the system (it’s likely a good dose of both), he’s appeared highly unwilling to initiate any meaningful offensive action, preferring to defer universally to his teammates even when playing only with bench units. His usage rate, already in the bottom third for high-minute rookies, has decreased each month and now sits below 14 percent of possessions used in January, an uncommonly low number for any ball-handler.

Dante Exum – 13 points vs Atlanta (1/2/14)

Exum has attempted just 1.6 drives per game according to SportVU figures – by comparison, Trey Burke attempts 7.2, a huge discrepancy even when accounting for their gap in minutes. Exum’s number is on par with guys like Matt Bonner and Kyle Singler, and particularly within a Quin Snyder system that stresses drive-and-kick action, represents a young player who isn’t fully comfortable in his scheme just yet. It’s strange, too, because the few times he does initiate an incisive action, he’s shown good vision and awareness even as he goes out of his way to avoid contact:

Exum’s handle has been a small worry as well, and is perhaps part of the reason he isn’t comfortable taking guys off the dribble. He doesn’t really have any go-to moves just yet, and apart from sheer speed and surprise has been mostly unable to create any organic separation in one-on-one offense. Basketball Insiders’ Nate Duncan confirmed these points a couple weeks back while joining us on SCH Radio, noting it as one of his chief concerns for Dante going forward.

dante exum utah jazzNow, none of this is anything resembling a condemnation. Exum won’t be able to legally drink a beer until just before his third NBA season begins, and his trajectory to the NBA is almost completely unique among can’t-miss prospects historically. His physical profile is absolutely present, and he’s been a pleasant surprise on the defensive end where many expected him to be among the worst in his class (he’s been the opposite).

Small concern is justified at his level of passiveness while on the floor, but it’s still likely that he’s yet to put everything together mentally at such a young age and will improve as he gains comfort both with his own skills and within an NBA system. He’s displayed absolutely none of the typical characteristics of a prima donna, and if anything appears a little too reserved and deferential to his more experienced teammates. He may have indeed hit a point at which his legs and conditioning are falling behind, but given the circumstances leading up to the beginning of his career, it’d be hard to criticize him here. The future remains as bright as ever for Dante Exum, though his path to stardom may be unfolding far differently from how we assumed it would.

Story courtesy of Ben Dowsett

Share:

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

  • Beyond the Arc: The Greatest Shooters in NBL History

    In 1984, the NBL introduced the three-point line, forever altering the geometry of Australian basketball. Since then, the league has seen traditional snipers, stretch bigs and volume scorers completely revolutionise how offenses operate and defenses scramble. But as the modern game places a premium on spacing and perimeter shooting, a critical question arises: Who are the most efficient and devastating shooters in the 40-year history of the NBL? To cut through the noise, we have to look beyond raw percentages. By combining historical spreadsheet data…

    READ MORE
  • John Rillie on roster changes for NBL27, pressures from fans and media and Bryce Cotton/Trevor Gleeson narratives

    Perth Wildcats head coach John Rillie joins the podcast to discuss the pressure that comes with coaching one of the NBL’s most successful clubs, the challenge of moving forward after Bryce Cotton’s departure, and what Perth needs to build its next championship contender. Visit dunk.com.au for your next set of basketball uniforms. Host Dan Boyce chats with Rillie about taking over the Wildcats after the club missed the finals for the first time since 1986, the expectations of the Red Army, and how Perth’s three…

    READ MORE
  • Rolan Roberts on Kings Titles, Dunk Contest Injury and Playing for Brian Goorjian and Trevor Gleeson

    Former Sydney Kings and Townsville Crocodiles big man Rolan Roberts joins the podcast to reflect on his time in Australia, including joining the Kings mid-season and helping them complete their historic 2005 NBL three-peat. Visit dunk.com.au for your next set of basketball uniforms. Host Dan Boyce chats with Roberts about playing under Brian Goorjian, becoming a key interior presence for Sydney, and being part of the Kings team that became the first in NBL history to win three straight championships. The episode also dives into…

    READ MORE
  • Boomers: we’re not taking Patty and Bryce

    At some point over the next 12 months, the Boomers are going to have to make a decision that Australian basketball has managed to avoid for almost two decades. Who exactly is this team built around now? Since 2010, that answer was simple. It was Patty Mills’ team. Mills has been the primary scorer for the Boomers for nearly two decades and few Australian victories have been recorded without a major scoring performance from Patty. But as the Boomers move toward the 2027 FIBA World…

    READ MORE
  • NBL players who have played in the NBA

    A player arriving in the NBL with NBA experience always creates interest. Fans get excited when their team signs a former NBA player, commentators mention it during broadcasts, and every article about that player usually links their NBL performance back to their NBA résumé. Sometimes, we see a big-time college prospect use the NBL as a springboard to the NBA and never return. Other times, established NBA veterans come to Australia looking for a fresh opportunity. And in many cases, local talent develops in the…

    READ MORE
  • Who are the greatest NBA Players to play in the NBL

    Over the years, Aussie Hoopla has taken a deep dive into the full list of players who have competed in both the NBL and the NBA. You can see the full list of NBL players who have played in the NBA here: Names from every decade since the 1980s have featured, including NBL legends like Andrew Gaze, Shane Heal, Lanard Copeland and Rob Rose, alongside a long list of imports who used the NBL as a stepping stone to the world’s biggest stage. But with…

    READ MORE
  • Julius Hodge on Stepping on Brett Maher, NBL Pay Issues and NBA Stories

    Former Adelaide 36ers star Julius Hodge joins the podcast to reflect on one of the most dominant short stints in NBL history, his journey from the NBA to Australia, and the impact he made during the 2007/08 season. Visit dunk.com.au for your next set of basketball uniforms. Host Dan Boyce chats with Hodge about his incredible all-around performances, triple-doubles, and what it was like adjusting to the Australian game mid-season. The episode also dives into his time playing in the NBA and overseas, his perspective…

    READ MORE
  • NBL Free Agent Tracker

    Below is an up-to-date roster for each NBL team and a list of rumours and potential signings derived from discussions with NBL staff and media. Players listed as contracted come from information supplied by the National Basketball League. * = Denotes import player ** = Naturalised Australian DP = a member of the team's development roster SRP = the previously named Asian player exception denoting an Asian player who qualifies as a local in the NBL. MP = Marquee players listed as known Click here…

    READ MORE

SEKOLAHTOTO

slot deposit 5000

sekolahtoto

toto togel

SEKOLAHTOTO

SEKOLAHTOTO

sekolahtoto

sekolahtoto

sekolahtoto

sekolahtoto

sekolahtoto

sekolahtoto

SEKOLAHTOTO