Morez Johnson Jr. has already made a name for himself in Summer League by doing the dirty work around the rim. On Monday in Las Vegas, he gets the kind of test that can tell you a lot about a rookie: a head-to-head battle with Memphis Grizzlies big man Cameron Boozer.
It’s a matchup of top-10 picks from this year’s NBA Draft, and more specifically, the top two big men taken out of the college ranks. Boozer, the No. 3 pick, came into the draft with a reputation as the best post player in the class, and Memphis has leaned into that strength by making the freshman All-American and national player of the year from Duke a central piece of its new identity.
Dallas went a different route with Johnson, the No. 9 pick out of Michigan. The Mavericks liked a prospect who would throw himself into the paint and do the unglamorous work, and through two Summer League games, he’s delivered exactly that.
“He’s playing hard,” said Mavericks Summer League coach Joe Boylan about Johnson. “He’s challenging shots at the rim.
He’s blocking shots. Even with the six or seven fouls, or whatever, he had that great block in transition.”
Johnson has averaged 18.5 points and 6.5 rebounds while piling up six total blocks and five steals in his first two games. The numbers back up what Dallas has seen: a defender who already looks comfortable handling NBA-style physicality, even if the setting is still Summer League. The energy is constant, the effort is obvious, and the rim protection has been the calling card.
“His effort, his energy, his activity. He challenges every shot,” Boylan said.
“He flies around. He wants to protect the rim.
He takes it personally when people score on him. He’s the leader of the defense.”
That’s the part of Johnson’s game that has jumped off the page. But Boozer brings a different kind of challenge altogether. His offensive feel is polished, patient and hard to rush, which is exactly the sort of thing that can make life miserable for a defender trying to handle him one-on-one.
Boozer averaged 16 points, six rebounds and five assists in four Summer League games in Salt Lake City, a stat line that hints at how Memphis can run its offense through him at the high post. That versatility is what makes him such a tough cover.
“He’s very, very, very mature for his years,” former Mavs draftee Olivier Maxence-Prosper said this week. “The way he plays the game, he plays at his own pace.
He’s fundamentally skilled. And he’s just a great dude off the court.
He’s going to be a great addition to our team, and I’m glad I’m able to play with him right now to start learning from him and for him to start learning from us. He’s been great for us.”
Memphis enters at 2-2 this summer, while Dallas is still looking for its first win at 0-2. For the Mavericks, Johnson’s defense has been the standout so far, and they’ll need that edge again if they want to slow Boozer and get on the board in Las Vegas.
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