Buddy Hield

And-Ones: D-League, Clippers, Beal, Draft

The recent call-ups of J.J. O’Brien by the Jazz and Keith Appling by the Magic could represent a new trend in how NBA teams use the D-League, according to D-League Digest. They are the first call-ups of the season directly from a franchise’s minor league affiliate, and their familiarity with the parent teams’ systems made them an easy fit. With 10-day contracts limiting the amount of instruction time for new players, it helps to have someone who already understands how a team approaches the game.

There’s more news from around the basketball world:

  • NBA veteran Henry Sims is one of three D-League centers identified as top prospects by Chris Reichert of Upside & Motor. Undrafted out of Georgetown in 2012, Sims played 121 games with New Orleans, Cleveland and Philadelphia. He is currently averaging 14.1 points and 9.1 rebounds for the Grand Rapids Drive. Also on Reichert’s list are 28-year-old Alex Stepheson of the Iowa Energy and 26-year-old Jordan Bachynski of the Westchester Knicks.
  • Dennis Wong, a former college roommate of Clippers owner Steve Ballmer, has bought a small percentage of the team, tweets Dan Woike of The Orange County Register. The sale amounts to less than 4% of the franchise.
  • Bradley Beal is slowly easing back into the Wizards‘ rotation and hopes to have his minutes restriction raised soon, writes J. Michael of CSNMidAtlantic. Beal, who is headed toward free agency, recently admitted that he may have to deal with restricted playing time for the rest of his career.
  • California’s Ivan Rabb, Vanderbilt’s Wade Baldwin and Oklahoma’s Buddy Hield were the biggest risers in the latest mock draft from Jonathan Givony of DraftExpress, as Adam Zagoria of SNY.tv details. His top five remains the same with Ben Simmons of LSU, Brandon Ingram of Duke, Dragan Bender of Maccabi Tel Aviv, Kris Dunn of Providence and Skal Labissiere of Kentucky.

Buddy Hield Declines To Enter Draft

Oklahoma junior shooting guard Buddy Hield will pass up a strong chance to be drafted in the second round this year to instead return to Oklahoma for his senior year, he announced today through the school. Chad Ford of ESPN.com ranks Hield as the 37th-best prospect, while Jonathan Givony of DraftExpress has him at No. 41.

The 6’4″ 21-year-old’s production plateaued somewhat this season after a significant jump between his freshman and sophomore years. Still, Hield’s 17.4 points per game this year led the Big 12, as did his 35.9% three-point percentage and 93 made three-pointers. He rebounded well for his size, grabbing 5.4 boards in 32.4 minutes per contest.

Ford points to defense as an area in need of improvement for Hield and suggests he should attack the basket more often. His rate of free-throw attempts per field goal attempt rose from .191 to .261 this season, so continued improvement in that regard figures to help his stock. He’ll have no shortage of exposure next season, with Oklahoma looking strong again for 2015/16 after a run to the NCAA Tournament Sweet 16 this year.