Cleanest offensive player on the roster. He is the Bulldogs' best scorer without looking like a chucker.
How he helps us
He gives them efficient primary scoring, secondary playmaking, and late-possession composure. The 19.5 PPG, 64% FG, 67% 3PT sample is elite even with only two games. He looks like the player who turns a decent possession into a good one.
How opponents guard him
Make him see bodies early. Show help on the first dribble, then recover hard to his shooting window. Do not let him get comfortable in rhythm catch-and-shoots or clean downhill touches. The goal is not to stop every make. The goal is to make every touch a decision.
How opponents attack him
Make him defend your best perimeter action. Put him in multiple screening sequences and force him to chase, switch, and rebound. If the game is late and the foul math matters, his small-sample free throw profile is a pressure point.
Assignment priority
Their coverage priorityHigh.
Their attack targetLow to medium. He is more someone you wear down than someone you expose.
Our role for him
Primary scorer · cheat code
Takes the elite wing scorer every game — best perimeter defender with size. Plan for missed FT and crash the offensive board if fouled.
What he brings
Efficient at all three levels (64% FG, 67% 3P)
Cleanest decision-maker on the roster (4.5 APG)
Engine in the closing lineup
Things to manage
Tiny 2-GP sample — sustainability unknown
FT risk: 33% (1/3) on small sample
From the Bulldogs playbook
Late-game free throws
On the avoid list for late-game FT situations. small sample risk
Bulldogs are the cleanest offense in the league when the ball moves and the floor stays spaced. The team wins with shot quality, not chaos. The offense should look connected, not rushed. The defense does not need to create a ton of steals if the team rebounds,…