Noah Penda Is Starting To Look Like A Real Magic Find

After struggling to find his footing in his rookie year, Noah Penda has emerged as a force to be reckoned with following an impressive Summer League performance.

Noah Penda arrived in Orlando with the kind of profile that usually takes time to bloom: a 6-foot-7 forward drafted early in the second round after the Magic traded up, viewed as a raw but intriguing piece with defensive versatility and plenty of room to grow. Summer League in Las Vegas has now given the team a much clearer picture of what he can be.

The biggest change is simple enough to spot. Penda no longer plays like a rookie searching for the next spot on the floor.

He looks settled, aggressive and far more sure of himself, especially with the ball in his hands. After spending much of his first NBA season as an energy guy and rebounder, he has shown real progress as a scorer and shooter.

In three Summer League games, Penda is averaging 15.0 points and 6.7 rebounds per game while shooting 14 for 25 from the floor and 8 for 17 from three, good for 56.0 percent overall and 47.1 percent from deep. That kind of production matters, but the way he has gotten there has mattered just as much. He opened in Vegas by going 5 of 10 from three in a 23-point, seven-rebound performance against the Charlotte Hornets, and the confidence was obvious.

"I think his confidence is coming with it," Jase Richardson said after practice Friday. "A lot of it is all confidence with him.

Offensively, it's confidence. Defensively, he knows he can guard anybody he can.

Offensively, with that confidence he has on his shot and his drive is big for him."

That confidence is a big step for a player whose first NBA look last season came in the Magic’s fourth game against the Philadelphia 76ers. Back then, Penda still looked like a rookie trying to feel his way through the league, relying more on instinct than polish. He made a three for his first NBA basket in 6:46 of action that night, and for much of the season his value came from hustle, boards and loose balls.

He appeared in 59 games and averaged 12.8 minutes, but his role shrank late. His last game with more than 10 minutes came in the loss to the Toronto Raptors, and he played just three minutes at the end of Game 2 in the Playoffs.

That made Summer League a useful measuring stick. It was a chance to see what the work from the offseason actually produced, and Penda made the most of it.

"It's a good way to get to know the expectations from the coaches for next season," Penda said after practice Friday. "It is a good way to see the improvements of the work that you put in during the summer.

I worked a lot during the summer. I think the results were there.

It's encouraging to keep pushing you for the rest of the summer."

The offensive leap has been the loudest part of his showing, but defense is still the foundation. That was always the appeal with Penda: the size, the frame, the ability to handle bigger players and still move well enough to stay with quicker ones. Even now, that remains his clearest path to minutes.

He has backed that up in Vegas too, piling up five steals and eight blocks in three games. The shot is coming around, but the defensive versatility is still what makes him stand out.

"Defense is always going to be the first thing that pops up when you think about Noah Penda," Penda said after practice Friday. "As a second-year [player], you want to make the right play and show all the things that are categorized as rookie mistakes. You want to erase that and show poise and growth during the games."

There is still cleanup work to do, especially when it comes to cutting down mistakes and sharpening his defensive awareness. But the overall arc is hard to miss. Penda has turned this Summer League into a real statement, one that points toward a fight for backup forward minutes with Jonathan Isaac once the season starts.

Vegas will not be the final test. It has already done its job by showing what Penda has added. The next proof comes when the games count.

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