Lakers forward Dalton Knecht got off to a great start as a rookie last season, averaging 12.2 points per game and making 43.9% of his three-pointers in his first 19 outings. However, he averaged just 8.1 PPG and knocked down just 34.8% of his outside shots the rest of the way while struggling defensively.
As Dan Woike of The Athletic writes, a poor Summer League showing in which Knecht shot just 32.1% from the field and 23.7% on three-pointers further exacerbated the concerns that rival scouts and executives have about the 24-year-old, whose trade value has dipped in the past year.
While Knecht has been viewed as a prime trade chip for the Lakers – he was part of the package the team was prepared to give up in February for Mark Williams – sources who spoke to Woike don’t believe the Lakers would be able to extract value comparable to the No. 17 pick they used on him right now. The general consensus, Woike writes, is that he could return multiple second-rounders, or perhaps even a single second-rounder.
However, Knecht is in just the second season of his four-year rookie contract and should still have plenty of time – and opportunities – to work on making his game more well-rounded. Head coach JJ Redick remains optimistic about Knecht’s potential.
“I’m very confident (that) when he’s confident, he’s a high-level offensive player in the NBA,” Redick said last weekend. “It’s the other stuff that he’s got to just do and find that consistency in his defense, on being the low man, or boxing out, or crashing every time or sprinting back and actually talking in transition. When he’s doing those things, he’s an impact player.”
Here’s more from around the Pacific Division:
- With Kevin Durant and Bradley Beal no longer in Phoenix, Devin Booker knows there’s more pressure on him to be the face of the Suns on and off the court, as Duane Rankin of The Arizona Republic relays. “(I) think it’s a big responsibility for me to be a leader and continue being a leader and getting everybody on the same page so we can start this thing off the right way,” Booker said within a more extensive Q&A ahead of the team’s preseason games in China.
- New Suns center Mark Williams, who is entering a potential contract year and has dealt with injuries during his first three NBA seasons, was a high-risk, high-reward investment for Phoenix. Doug Haller of The Athletic takes a closer look at the bet the Suns made on Williams and what his ceiling might look like. “He could be one of the better rim protectors in the game, first of all,” former Hornets assistant Tyrone Corbin said. “He could get quicker at setting screens and just rolling to the rim really hard. He’s a threat at the rim always because he can catch the ball. He just has to get there a little quicker. … He’s smart. … He has the potential to be a pretty good starter and a reliable guy in the lane.”
- While the Kings made it an offseason priority to add an experienced point guard like Dennis Schröder in large part to organize the offense, head coach Doug Christie is also asking the 32-year-old to “set the tone” defensively with full-court ball pressure. Jason Anderson of The Sacramento Bee has the story on Christie’s defensive expectations for Schröder and the rest of the Kings.
The Suns look bad. REALLY bad.
Houston should have gone all in for Booker and not KD. They are a young up and coming team. New York, on the other hand, needed to go all in on KD. However, I don’t know if OG and Mitch or KAT would have been enough. Trading for Bridges was a good move not great. However, does that amount of picks get a Luka or Booker. We will never know because New York didn’t try.
Kings and Suns will both be playoff teams this year
Seems wrong.
What did either team do that would improve them enough to make the playoffs? Schroder is a downgrade from Fox, Eubanks is worse than Valanciunas, and apparently no one wants to take Monk off their hands.
And the Suns will be lucky to win 35 games (Vegas over/under is 31.5).
Dalton Knecht is only 5 months younger than Talen Horton-Tucker, who got drafted 6 years ago in 2019. He either has a good season this year in LA, or he won’t get a 2nd contract in the NBA.
LAL might not even pick up an option on his rookie deal, which is $4.2 million for 26-27, and $6.5 million for 27-28. At the moment, he doesn’t look like he’s worth it at all.
Trade Dalton Knecht to Rockets for Sheppard, then trade him again in February
Dalton Knecht is a better player than Sheppard now.
Lakers GM has made some horrific deals and non-deals lately. Welcome to the play-in.
IMO, Lakers are a better team than Rockets
Guards: Luka, Reaves, Smart
Luka is far better than Thompson
Reaves is far better than Sheppard
Smart is far better than any Rockets guards