One Tight Grizzlies Win Put The Spotlight On Their Young Core

Young talents shine in a thrilling Las Vegas Summer League matchup as Wilson and Boozer make their mark with standout performances.

The Memphis Grizzlies edged the Chicago Bulls 97-96 in one of the most entertaining games of Las Vegas Summer League, and the headliners delivered exactly the kind of fireworks that make this stage matter. Caleb Wilson went nuclear for Chicago, Cameron Boozer put together a polished all-around performance for Memphis, and the rest of the matchup still had plenty to say about a few more young NBA prospects.

Wilson’s biggest statement came from outside, where he looked nothing like the player who had never been known for his jumper. He buried 7 of 11 from 3-point range and poured in 35 points in his NBA debut. A handful of those makes came off the dribble, from deep range or over tight contests, which made the whole thing feel even more out of nowhere.

That kind of volume was the real shock. Wilson had made just seven of 27 3-point attempts in his lone, shortened season at North Carolina, and across his final college, high school and AAU seasons he went 2-20 on off-dribble threes.

His 11 attempts against Memphis also blew past his previous career high, according to Synergy, which had been set in an EYBL game in April 2024 when he shot 1-8 from three. For a player whose Summer League watch point was always going to be volume, he answered in the loudest way possible.

Boozer, meanwhile, looked like the steady force he’s been billed as. He finished with 23 points, 6 rebounds, 4 assists, 1 steal and 1 block on 81 percent true shooting, and he did it by moving all over the floor. One possession he was working on the wing, the next he was carving out space inside, and that mix of perimeter skill and physicality showed up throughout the night.

His scoring came in a bunch of different forms: an off-dribble three, deep seals near the rim and playmaking on the move. On defense, Boozer was mostly solid too, and one of his best moments came when he picked Wilson’s pocket and finished with a dunk at the other end.

His interior defense still has rough edges, but his quick hands and awareness stood out when he was rotating on the wing. It may not have been his peak performance, but even a modest Boozer game looked like a strong one for a teenager.

Boozer also continued to build chemistry with Cedric Coward, and that connection showed up in a few different ways. One Boozer deep seal came off a Coward entry pass, and at another point Boozer lofted the ball over the top to Coward’s huge catch radius. Those two were repeatedly involved in actions that worked for Memphis, especially when they attacked the offensive glass with purpose.

Coward’s own line was a calm 17 points, 10 rebounds and five assists, and he looked like a player too advanced for the setting. His size and length don’t translate to the kind of steal totals you might expect from a wing built like that, but Boozer’s perimeter defense and off-ball playmaking helped cover for Coward, while Coward’s weak-side rim protection did the same for Boozer’s issues around the basket. Coward blocked two shots, and the pairing gave Memphis a clear edge in how the two complemented each other.

Chicago’s other two recent first-round picks had more uneven nights. Dailyn Swain and Noa Essengue both showed flashes, but neither consistently took over on offense.

Essengue finished with 10 points on five shots and couldn’t turn his added height into a bigger scoring impact, though he did get to the line seven times by attacking the rim. His defense was the stronger part of his night, as he posted four blocks and two steals while showing the mobility and smoothness that make him such a tough perimeter defender.

Swain was quieter still. He scored seven points on 10 attempts and had trouble making his presence felt for long stretches, even though his slashing ability still popped at times. His deep paint attacks generally looked sound in terms of process, but the efficiency never followed.

In Other News...

Tony Allen Sees Something In Isaiah Stewart Grizzlies Fans Will Love

Isaiah Stewarts arrival in Memphis has already drawn a familiar kind of attention, the sort that usually comes when a team adds a player whose edge shows up as much in the defensive end as anywhere else. Former Grizzlies standout Tony Allen liked what he sees, pointing to Stewart as the kind of tough, physical presence who can fit right into a franchise that has long valued effort, resistance and a willingness to make every possession uncomfortable.

For Memphis fans, the appeal is obvious: Stewart is not arriving as just another frontcourt piece, but as someone who could help shape the tone of the roster. Allens view is that Stewart has the ingredients to matter in a way that goes beyond box scores, with the chance to become part of a new defensive identity and revive some of the spirit that once defined this team. [Read more 🡒]

Beloved Former Grizzlies Guard Just Landed Another NBA Opportunity

A familiar name is getting another shot in the league, and for Grizzlies fans it is easy to see why this one still carries some weight. Mike Conley Jr. has been around the NBA long enough to become one of the most respected guards of his era, with a career that has stretched across Memphis, Utah and Minnesota and made him a steady presence wherever he has landed.

Even as his on-court production has dipped in recent seasons, Conley still brings the kind of leadership and experience teams value when the games get bigger and the margins get tighter. He is also closing in on a rare career milestone, one that would put him among a very small group in NBA history, and it adds another layer to a run that has already lasted nearly two decades. [Read more 🡒]