Jayson Kent didn’t arrive in the NBA through any of the usual doors.
No draft night call. No undrafted free-agent deal.
No summer league invite. No workout.
And yet, when the Trail Blazers opened their first summer league practice on July 3, there was Kent anyway - drenched in sweat, knocking down 3-pointers in a practice uniform.
He’s here now. An NBA player.
Kent’s path started with a local tryout for Portland’s G League affiliate, the Rip City Remix, last fall. That audition turned into a standard G League contract, then a two-way deal in March 2026, and eventually his NBA debut. Now the 6-foot-8, 215-pound wing is one of Portland’s featured players for its summer league run in Las Vegas, which begins Friday.
“I’ve always been overlooked. I’ve always been an underdog.
It’s just been me,” Kent said. “But I’m very blessed to be in the situation that I am.”
That line fits the arc of his career. Kent has made a habit of doing the unglamorous stuff that helps teams win, even when it didn’t do much for his profile.
At Indiana State, he broke out in his second year and helped the Sycamores win their first Missouri Valley Conference regular-season title in 24 years, along with their first NIT championship. That season earned him a move to Texas.
Then the momentum stalled. A wrist injury in a game cost him eight nonconference games at a critical stretch, right as the rotation was taking shape before conference play.
His role shrank, and so did the numbers attached to his name. After ranking sixth in the country in effective field goal percentage and starting more than 95% of Indiana State’s games in 2023-24, he played only 464 minutes at Texas and attempted just 110 shots, both career lows since his freshman year at Bradley University.
“I’m trying to find ways to impact winning,” Kent said while playing at Texas. “Whatever my minutes are, I’m going to do whatever I can to leave an impact.”
NBA teams, though, saw the reduced role and drew their own conclusions. His agent, Rob Anshila, said scouts came away believing Kent couldn’t shoot, dribble or defend on the perimeter, and that he was stiff. The problem, Anshila said, was that Kent’s willingness to fit into his Texas role ended up slowing his pro stock.
Even before the 2025 draft, Anshila arranged workouts over the course of a month so teams could see Kent up close. Nothing stuck.
The draft passed. Summer league passed.
Still nothing.
“There were a lot of days where he simply had to believe in himself because nobody else was validating him,” Anshila said. “That’s a really lonely place for a player to be.”
Kent stayed on the radar because of the basics: size, length and a high-level college background. But the first real crack came at a July 2025 Pro Day in Las Vegas, hosted by Anshila’s agency.
Kent wasn’t even supposed to be there, but he flew in anyway. Anshila alerted the NBA teams attending, and Portland asked to meet him in person.
That visit changed the conversation. Anshila put Kent on the wing and let him show more of his shooting and perimeter game, and the Blazers saw “a lot of things that no one got to see,” Anshila said.
Portland liked what it saw enough to bring him to a preseason mini-camp in August 2025 at the Blazer practice facility. Kent played against free agents, two-way players and Exhibit 10 contract players, and his showing earned him another shot: an invitation to the Remix’s official G League training camp in late October as a Local Player Tryout.
That label comes with no guarantees. Anshila called it “Bottom of the barrel,” and Kent knew the only way forward was to do exactly what the team asked and hope it led somewhere.
It did. By the end of camp, he had claimed the final roster spot.
“When (the call) finally came, he didn’t have to become someone different. He’s been the same dude,” Anshila said. “He just literally had to be the player who he’d been preparing to become for months beforehand.”
From there, Kent’s game took off in the G League, enough to draw interest from two other NBA teams before he signed with Portland on a two-way deal. Trail Blazers summer league head coach Gilbert Abraham praised the full package.
“He brings a world of intangibles,” Abraham said. “He guards the ball. He’s a tremendous athlete, plays off closeouts exceptionally well, and he’s a super high character.”
Then came the moment that made the climb feel real. Less than two weeks after signing, the Blazers needed him against the Brooklyn Nets.
Kent was out to dinner at P.F. Chang’s with his parents, Anna and Jason, when the call came.
Anna boxed up the food. Jason booked the tickets to Brooklyn.
They went to Kent’s apartment, packed his clothes, and sent him on a red-eye to the East Coast.
The next night, he checked in at Barclays Center with 3:09 left in the fourth quarter and Portland ahead 108-92. He inbounded the ball to Matisse Thybulle, drifted up the floor, and found himself completely unguarded. Thybulle fed him the ball, and Kent finished a smooth layup for his first NBA point.
No fist pump. No big scene. Just a quick bucket and a jog back on defense, the same way he’s handled just about everything on this road.
There are traditional routes to the league. Kent didn’t take any of them.
Still, as he heads into summer league in Las Vegas on Friday, the route doesn’t matter much anymore. Jayson Kent is an NBA player.
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