Thunder big man Jaylin Williams has been ruled out for the remainder of training camp and the preseason due to a right hamstring strain, according to Joel Lorenzi of The Oklahoman.
Upon his return, Williams is poised to back up a crowded frontcourt that is composed of Chet Holmgren and Isaiah Hartenstein. Coach Mark Daigneault was especially complimentary of what Williams brings to the table.
“Those guys are really, really verbal players,” Daigneault said. “Defensively especially, that position has to be the most vocal on the court. [Williams] is a very bold communicator in his coverages.”
Williams will be reevaluated after the preseason, per Lorenzi.
We have more from the Northwest Division:
- Thunder offseason acquisitions Hartenstein and Alex Caruso have been as advertised, Lorenzi writes in a separate story. Both players have been early standouts in training camp. “I think the easiest thing for both of us is that we both play really hard,” Caruso said. “When you have that as your base and your foundation, the rest of the stuff will fall into place.”
- Messaging from the Jazz has been clear all offseason regarding their desire to focus on youth. Walker Kessler is among the players the front office considers as part of its young core. However, according to Andy Larsen of The Salt Lake Tribune, John Collins sees and considers himself a starter, which primes the Jazz for a starting center position battle in camp. Head coach Will Hardy threw another name in the ring – that of free agent addition Drew Eubanks – when speaking to media. Larsen notes that the Jazz tried starting Lauri Markkanen, Collins and Kessler together last season, but that supersized lineup wasn’t successful.
- Many scouts and fans regarded last year’s No. 3 overall pick Scoot Henderson as a generational prospect when he entered the draft. While Henderson struggled to score efficiently and didn’t garner the headlines that No. 1 pick Victor Wembanyama did, he still showed he could have a long future in the league. Perhaps underrated entering his second season, the Trail Blazers guard averaged 16.6 points and 7.1 assists in his last 19 games last year. Head coach Chauncey Billups indicated he’s seen improvement from Henderson this offseason. “You can tell that his confidence is so much different now,” Billups said, per Sean Highkin of Rose Garden Report (Twitter link). “He plays ferocious, as we all know, but he has a little extra chip on his shoulder now after having struggled his rookie year. So I’ve been happy with where he’s at. I think Scoot’s going to have a good season.”
- After playing in just six games last year due to knee surgery that ended his season, Trail Blazers center Robert Williams has been taking steps to return this year. According to Highkin (Twitter link), Williams went through all of practice as a full participant on Tuesday before sitting out Wednesday with soreness. The team is being careful with him in his recovery and his status for the preseason opener is to be determined, per Highkin.
scoot was #3
John Collins is really a PF. Lauri at the 3? Kessler to start?
Silly idea. Offer Kessler and Brice S to Detroit for Holland right now. Then trade Juzang and a future protection 1st for a prospect C. Isaiah Stewart’s best friend can start for now until a better option comes. Still a better C than GS has
Kessler really doesn’t fit the timeline as their young guys
Juzang and Abmas are the same age as Kessler, and Sensbaugh, George, and Hendricks are two years younger. Collier and Williams are three years. Kinsey is older than Kessler by about nine months. He fits pretty well with the rest of the core.
Three years not two. Kinsey is on a two way and just signed in so he doesn’t count. I believe Danny has said this himself that Kessler doesn’t fit. I like Kessler but think they need a young C and a veteran one with that trade
It would be
PG PG 19 20
SG 19
SF 19
PF 20
C 24 see Kessler see what I mean by getting a younger C. I like Kessler alot. I guess they could find another young C out there in the world. They don’t have to trade Kessler
As the article states:
Many scouts and fans regarded last year’s No. 3 overall pick Scoot Henderson as a
As a “generational talent”, Henderson arrived completely undeveloped. If he wasn’t the worst player in the NBA last year, he was close.
I won’t bet against Scoot becoming a star in a few years, but it’s going to be tough on the organization. Of course, Billups will take the fall.