Kasparas Jakucionis May Have Answered One Bucks Question Already

Despite a shaky shooting debut, Kasparas Jakucionis demonstrated critical playmaking skills that could be a game-changer for the Milwaukee Bucks.

Kasparas Jakucionis’ first game in a Bucks uniform didn’t come with much polish. Milwaukee got blown out by the Heat in Summer League, and Jakucionis spent most of his 21 minutes looking like a player still trying to settle in. He finished 2-for-10 from the field, and the shot clearly wasn’t there.

But the part Bucks fans can hang onto is a lot more encouraging: six assists in his debut against his former team.

That’s the kind of number that jumps off the page for a point guard, especially when the scoring is off. Jakucionis showed he can still move the offense, make the right read under pressure and find the open man in pick-and-roll action. Even in a rough outing, the playmaking looked real.

That matters for Milwaukee because the roster around him needs that connective tissue. Tyler Herro is going to be a scorer first, Kel'el Ware is still working on his handle, and Brayden Burries is still a rookie getting his reps. If Jakucionis can keep being the guy who makes the simple play and keeps the ball moving, he gives the Bucks something useful even when the jumper goes cold.

The assist total also hints at a bigger offensive role down the line. Six dimes in 21 minutes works out to a pace of roughly 16 assists per 36 minutes, which is obviously a wild projection from one game, but it still says something about the way he sees the floor. For Taylor Jenkins and company, that kind of feel is the piece worth building around.

The shooting is worth watching, not worrying about. Jakucionis shot 42.3 percent from beyond the arc during his rookie campaign in Miami, so there’s already some proof that he can space the floor. And the passing feel is the more stable trait anyway - the ability to read a defense two passes ahead, slip a bounce pass through traffic and know where the ball should go before it gets there.

He’s 20 years old, in his second NBA season, and making his first appearance for a new team against the one he just left. The box score was ugly, but the six assists weren’t. For Milwaukee, that was enough to count as a solid first test.

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