The New Orleans Pelicans are staring at a tricky call as summer league wraps up, and Kobe Bufkin has put himself right in the middle of it.
With one roster spot still open and, once second-round pick Jaron Pierre Jr. signs, likely only one two-way spot left, New Orleans has to decide whether Bufkin is worth the investment. The 22-year-old has been the Pelicans’ top scorer in summer league, putting up 21.3 points per game and dropping 30 in his debut.
That kind of production matters, especially for a player trying to reset the conversation around his career. Bufkin entered the 2026 Summer League with plenty to prove after three seasons in the NBA produced only 43 games and shooting splits of 35.4 percent from the field and 21.2 percent from three. From the opening tip, he looked like a player determined to change that story.
Against Minnesota in his first game, Bufkin came out aggressive, hunting mismatches and playing with a “you can’t guard me” mentality. He looked like a guard who believed every possession belonged to him.
But the follow-up was less convincing. After knocking down 5 of 9 from three in that opener, Bufkin went just 2 of 13 from deep over his next two games, and the old concerns started creeping back in. That’s where the Pelicans’ dilemma really begins.
There’s no question Bufkin can hoop. He can create off the dribble, hit mid-range jumpers, finish through contact, or grab a defensive rebound and take it coast to coast.
The problem is fit, and fit matters here. New Orleans ranked in the bottom 10 in all major three-point statistics, so taking on a guard whose jumper has been his biggest issue is a risky move.
The other issue is role. In summer league, Bufkin has the ball constantly.
That wouldn’t be the case in New Orleans. He’d be playing off the ball far more, and that’s where the question marks get louder.
If his outside shot isn’t dependable, defenses won’t have to treat him like a real threat away from the action.
And the Pelicans already have players who fill the same lane. Jordan Poole brings shot creation and floor spacing.
Jeremiah Fears and Dejounte Murray are both players who need 28-plus minutes per game and could start. That leaves little reason to chase a fourth lead guard who needs the ball to be at his best.
New Orleans has bigger needs elsewhere, too. Center, wing depth, and more shooting all sit ahead of Bufkin on the priority list. He may have done enough to earn an NBA contract, but the Pelicans have to decide whether one of their last roster spots should go to a luxury or a need.
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