Caleb Wilson didn’t hide what he wanted out of Summer League in Las Vegas. He wanted the matchups.
He wanted the best players. And when those games got pulled off the board, he made it clear the whole thing felt off.
The Bulls’ No. 4 pick had already delivered one of the event’s loudest performances, dropping 35 points in a tight 97-96 loss to Cameron Boozer, the No. 3 pick. That was the showdown everyone circled when the schedule came out. The next two were supposed to keep the top-pick spotlight rolling, with Darryn Peterson and then AJ Dybantsa lined up to face Wilson.
Instead, both of those games disappeared before tipoff. Utah shut down Peterson, and the Wizards ruled out Dybantsa after two outings in Las Vegas.
Ace Bailey and Cody Williams, Utah’s first-rounders from the prior two drafts, were also unavailable. For Wilson, that changed the feel of the night in a hurry.
“I feel like yesterday was kind of weird for me, honestly, because I expected to play against Darryn," Wilson said. "I expected to play against a lot of the players they had, so when I came into the game, I didn’t have the right mindset, in my opinion … I’m a real competitor, and I want to play against the best players, so I feel like that led to me not having my best game yesterday.”
Even with that off night by his standards, Wilson still put together a strong line: 19 points and 5 blocks. The shot wasn’t dropping from deep, but he kept grinding on defense, and he finished with a fourth quarter highlight that gave Summer League one of its best dunks.
Afterward, Wilson said the Dybantsa matchup being scratched gave him a better feel for how to approach the game. He focused more on making the right reads and setting up teammates, and that showed in how he handled the night.
But if the idea was to cool him off, it didn’t work. Wilson was still plenty direct about how he sees himself and how he wants to play.
"I feel like I’m different than all of them," Wilson said confidently. "I can’t say they don’t enjoy basketball, but I enjoy basketball.
I love this sh*t. I’m going to play as much as I can, as much as my team will let me.
I’m not the type to go away from a game because I don’t feel good. I know in the NBA, I’m not going to feel good some days.
As long as I don’t have an injury or something that’s actually wrong with me. People come from all over the world to see me play, so I don’t want to let them down, too.”
That kind of attitude is part of why Wilson has already stood out beyond the box score. He specifically asked Bryson Graham for the chance to play back-to-backs, wanting a real taste of NBA life. That sort of workload is unusual for a top rookie in Summer League, and it would not be surprising if the Bulls keep him to one more game, even though the team has not announced anything.
For now, Wilson has already shown Chicago plenty. The talent is obvious.
The motor is obvious. And just as important, so is the mindset.
In Other News...
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The Warriors have spent the offseason waiting for a major move that still has not come, and one of the names that has hovered around them is Anthony Davis. For Washington, though, the conversation has taken on a different tone. Brian Keefe and Michael Winger are both under pressure to show progress, and the franchise is being pushed to get the roster moving in the right direction after years of little traction.
That makes Davis a far more complicated name for the Wizards than it might have seemed a few weeks ago. Instead of treating him as a possible trade chip, the team may be more inclined to keep him as part of a broader attempt to stabilize the roster and build around its next wave of talent. For Golden State, it is another reminder that even when a star appears available, the path to a deal can get murky fast. [Read more 🡒]
Bilal Coulibaly Just Reached A Defining Moment In Washington
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Coulibaly is entering year four at 21, and the question now is whether he can show enough growth to keep himself firmly in the picture as the Wizards sort through a crowded depth chart. Washington has plenty of young talent to sort through, and the logjam only makes the evaluation more important for a front office trying to balance development with winning. The next stretch should tell the Wizards a lot about where Coulibaly fits, and whether his place in the long-term plan is becoming clearer or more complicated. [Read more 🡒]
Clippers Get One More Tough Read On Keaton Wagler Vs Wizards
The Wizards and Clippers are set to meet in NBA Summer League after both teams came away from recent losses, with the game carrying a little extra weight for two clubs still sorting out what they have. Washingtons lineup has already been altered by the summer shutdown of top pick AJ Dybantsa, while Los Angeles keeps getting a closer look at fifth overall pick Keaton Wagler as he works through the early part of his pro introduction.
Wagler has shown real improvement across his first three games, which makes this matchup another useful test for the Clippers against a Washington group that will be playing on tired legs after a Tuesday game. Summer League can be messy by nature, but for Los Angeles this is still a chance to gauge whether Waglers early bounce is the start of something more stable. [Read more 🡒]
