Brayden Burries is wasting no time making noise in Summer League, and the Milwaukee Bucks have to like what they’re seeing from their No. 10 pick.
The Arizona guard turned in another strong showing Monday night against the Phoenix Suns, finishing with 23 points, eight rebounds, six assists, four steals and one block. He shot 8-for-15 from the field and 3-for-8 from 3-point range.
That came right after his standout performance against the San Antonio Spurs, and the trend has been clear: Burries has gotten better with every game in Las Vegas. Over three Summer League games, he averaged 22.3 points, 4.7 rebounds, 4.0 assists, 2.3 steals and 1.0 blocks while shooting 50% from the field and 44.4% from deep.
The production has matched the scouting report. Burries has shown the kind of all-around game that made him a top-10 selection in the first place - scoring from different spots on the floor, defending at a high level, making smart reads and playing with a confidence that never seems to waver.
The game, at least so far, hasn’t looked too fast for him. He’s been in control.
That confidence showed up in the goals he laid out after the Spurs game, when ESPN’s Katie George asked him what he wanted to accomplish as a rookie.
"I wanna try to be an all star my first year, I wanna be in the rising stars game, I wanna be a first-team All-Rookie, Rookie of the Year and just continue to get better," Burries said, "I wanna be in the playoffs too and make a deep run."
Those are big targets, but Burries isn’t the only one who sees a high ceiling.
On "The Kevin O'Connor Show," Yahoo NBA analyst Kevin O'Connor praised what Burries has already shown and where it could lead.
"We know his floor," O'Connor said. "We know it's high-level role player with all of the things he does as a high IQ guy who can cut, screen, defend and crash the boards.
He does all of the dirty work, we've seen that in the Summer League. But we're seeing the ceiling could be a lot higher than people anticipated with the development of his jumper off the dribble, and that could mean he could end up someday perhaps the best or second-best guard in this year's draft class, which is saying a lot."
That’s strong praise in a draft class that has already been loaded with guard talent. Darryn Peterson, Keaton Wagler, Mikel Brown Jr., Darius Acuff Jr. and Kingston Flemings were all taken before Burries, which makes O'Connor’s point stand out even more. Burries is already giving the Bucks plenty of reasons to believe they may have landed something special.
In Other News...
Bucks Fans Have A New Gary Trent Concern They Can't Ignore
Gary Trent Jr. is already giving Bucks fans something to watch beyond his fit on the floor. After opting out of his previous contract and landing in Milwaukee, the guard arrives with a deal that has drawn attention around the league, not just because of the money involved but because of the questions it has stirred about how the move came together.
Around the NBA, rival teams have been sizing up Trents market and privately wondering whether Milwaukee paid well beyond where he was valued. The league has no shortage of bigger headlines right now, with LeBron James still weighing his next move, but for the Bucks this is the kind of transaction that can linger if outside scrutiny keeps building. [Read more 🡒]
Bucks May Have Created A Guard Problem They Can't Ignore
The Bucks offseason guard picture got more complicated in a hurry, and it starts with the kind of move that can ripple through a roster for months. Milwaukee added Gary Trent Jr. on a deal that immediately drew scrutiny for its price, and now the backcourt looks crowded enough that outside observers are already trying to sort out who fits where once the season starts.
CBS Sports analyst Sam Quinn even floated Tyler Herro as a possible trade chip to help ease the logjam, with Detroit mentioned as a possible destination. But moving an All-Star-level guard just to create breathing room would be a risky way to clean up a problem of Milwaukees own making, especially when the Bucks have already invested heavily in a guard group that suddenly has more names than obvious answers. [Read more 🡒]
Bucks Suddenly Face A Bigger Jaime Jaquez Question Than Expected
Jaime Jaquez Jr. arrives in Milwaukee with the kind of contract setup that usually buys a team time, not urgency. He has one season left before restricted free agency, and the Bucks still control the right to match any outside offer next summer, so there is no immediate roster alarm around his future even as he settles in and adjusts to a new group.
Jaquez has made clear he is not spending much energy on the contract side right now, preferring to focus on fitting into the Bucks roster. The bigger question for Milwaukee is how quickly that fit turns into a larger on-court role, because a player in his position can go from useful addition to essential piece faster than the calendar suggests. [Read more 🡒]
