Detroit got an early look at Ebuka Okorie in Summer League, and the rookie point guard wasted no time making the case that the Pistons were right to move up for him.
Okorie scored 20 points in his debut and did it efficiently, knocking down 50 percent of his shots overall and 40 percent from beyond the arc. The scoring is nothing new - he was a prolific bucket-getter in college - but the more encouraging part for Detroit was how he handled the game as a lead guard.
He opened things up as the starting point guard and looked steady throughout, showing a level of control that stood out in his first NBA game, Summer League or not. He was composed with the ball, read the floor well and played with a poise that made him look comfortable running the offense right away.
Okorie also showed the kind of burst that makes defenders miserable. He can get to the rim at will, and once he forces a defender to commit to that first step, he has the second gear to blow past them. He finished well around the basket, too, which is already a notable difference in how he attacks compared with some other speedy guards.
It’s hard not to notice the connection to Jaden Ivey, especially since both wore No. 23 for the Pistons and both bring serious speed. But the similarities stop there.
Ivey came into the league with more loose edges in his ball security and had trouble finishing at the rim and in floater range. Okorie, at least in this first look, already appears more controlled and more reliable in those areas.
That matters for a Pistons team that needs another creator who can handle pressure and make his own shot. Okorie looked like that kind of player.
He also protected the ball. Okorie finished with four assists and just one turnover, which fits the pattern he established in college.
At Stanford, he didn’t post huge assist totals, largely because he didn’t have many teammates who could consistently score off his passes. That should change in Detroit, where better finishers around him could turn some of those setups into bigger assist numbers.
Even with the ball in his hands a ton - his usage rate was over 31 percent - Okorie averaged fewer than two turnovers per game. That’s a strong sign for a guard asked to do so much.
For comparison, Ivey had a 28 percent usage rate in college and averaged 2.6 turnovers per game, and that came with more weapons around him than Okorie had. Detroit has already added plenty of shooters this offseason, but it still didn’t really solve its ball-handling issue outside of Okorie.
The Pistons probably aren’t expecting him to play major minutes immediately. Still, the first impression was clear: Okorie already looks like the kind of second creator Detroit needed, one who can score, organize the offense and keep the ball moving without giving it away.
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