The Brooklyn Nets’ rookies ran into a wall against the Houston Rockets, and the 103-83 loss in Las Vegas made that pretty clear.
Summer League can fool you if you let it. One hot shooting night can look like a breakthrough, and one ugly one can get blown way out of proportion. But this game still told a story about Brooklyn’s new faces: the ball wasn’t moving the way it usually does, the shots got rushed, and the rookies had to work through a rough offensive night.
Mikel Brown Jr., Joshua Jefferson and Tyler Bilodeau combined to go 8-for-31 from the field and 4-for-17 from three. That kind of line will always look rough, even in Summer League. Brown did show more as a playmaker in the second half, while Jefferson and Bilodeau each chipped in on defense, but the missed shots and forced looks defined the night.
Brown’s appeal has always been tied to his creativity with the ball, but early on he couldn’t get others involved. He didn’t record an assist in the first half, and his own shot wasn’t falling either. He finished at 20% from the floor and 20% from deep, a sharp drop from the three games before this one, when he was shooting 47.1% from the field and 43.8% from beyond the arc.
Bilodeau’s recent shooting slide kept going. After an 18-point game with six made threes five games ago, he’s cooled off hard.
Over his last four games, he’s just 2-for-13 from long range. Still, this one wasn’t empty.
The 22-year-old logged three stocks for the second straight game and grabbed two offensive rebounds, finishing with a -3 plus/minus in the 20-point defeat.
Jefferson also found a way to leave a mark after a quiet first half. He had only a foul to show for the opening two quarters, but he picked it up after halftime. The 28th overall pick ended with four points, three rebounds, three stocks and two assists in 19 minutes.
For Brooklyn, the bigger picture still matters more than one rough Summer League game. The Nets have four rookies from their 2025 draft class and three from their 2026 draft class, and the front office already knows more about the earlier group than it does about this newest trio.
But with the regular season approaching, the margin for these players gets thinner. Training camp and preseason will matter a lot more than a July box score if they want to earn real minutes around the players already on the roster.
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