MEMPHIS – Midway through a disappointing and injury-riddled season, the
Grizzlies shifted their focus to development for the immediate future.
As a result, the final months of a 22-60 finish were dedicated to fast-tracking
the growth and evaluation of rookies, second-year and third-year players on the
roster, with contract decisions looming on many of them within the next couple
of seasons.
While newcomers Dillon Brooks and Ivan Rabb appear to be steals from the second
round of last year’s draft, the jury remains out on prospects such as Deyonta
Davis and Wayne Selden. In either case, the Grizzlies missed the playoffs for
the first time in eight years and head toward the May 15 Draft Lottery assured
of no worse than a top-five pick in the June 21 NBA Draft.
The Grizzlies also have the second pick (No. 32 overall) in the second round and
the full midlevel exception in free agency to upgrade the roster, address needs
and chart a path back to the playoffs.
After starting Grind City Media’s ‘Offseason Outlook’ last week with my personal
analysis of the coaching situation and roster veterans, we continue this week
with a focus on young players the Grizzlies view as assets.
Player: Deyonta Davis, 21
Measurables: 6-11, 237 – 2nd NBA Season
2017-18 Stats: 5.8ppg, 4.0rpg, 0.6bpg in 15.2mpg, shot 60.8% (career-high,
team-high) from the field.
Status: Due $1.5 million for 2018-19 salary in third season of a three-year
contract.
Davis didn’t meet the NBA’s statistical minimums to qualify, but his field-goal
percentage (60.8%) would’ve ranked fifth behind Clint Capela, DeAndre Jordan,
Montrezl Harrell and Steven Adams.
As the old adage goes, “You don’t teach NBA size.” And at nearly 7 feet and 240
pounds, Davis has the physical foundation of a prototype professional center.
He’s also almost automatic when the ball finds him operating within his
wheelhouse slicing down the paint and at the rim. This past season, 196 of his
265 (72.8%) shot attempts came from within nine feet of the basket. He converted
on 74.1-percent from between the blocks and restricted area, with majority of
those finishes being either dunks or layups off lob passes. Project Davis’
production this season at a per 36-minute rate, and the second-year center
would’ve averaged nearly 14 points, 10 rebounds and two blocks a game. There was
modest improvement on the midrange jumper and face-up game of the roster’s lone
true backup to Marc Gasol.
Those expecting a huge step forward for Davis were largely disappointed with his
relatively meager progress in Year Two. Frankly, there were times Davis seemed
disinterested in putting together consecutive strong possessions, let alone
back-to-back compelling games. His unassertive demeanor on the court doesn’t
inspire energy or confidence, and there were numerous instances this season when
the coaching staff took Davis to task for his focus and work ethic. Davis has
all of the tools, talent and timing to be a much better shot-blocker and rim
protector than he showed, particularly late in the season when his minutes
increased. Connecting all the dots will continue to be a challenge unless Davis
takes a long look in the mirror as well as a motivated approach into the
offseason to spark his career.
Davis has another guaranteed season on the contract he signed as a rookie in
2016 taken with the first pick of that draft’s second round. But make no
mistake: this shapes up as a make-or-break summer for Davis. With DeAndre Ayton,
Marvin Bagley, Jaren Jackson Jr., Wendell Carter and Mo Bamba potentially on the
June draft board, the Grizzlies could use their top-five lottery pick on any
number of options to groom as Gasol’s next backup and eventual replacement. If
that’s the case, Davis should take it personally, dominate offseason workouts
and attack potential Summer League games trying to solidify his NBA future.
After two seasons, it’s easy to see why Davis slipped from a potential late
lottery pick to the second round. But it’s also difficult to completely give up
on his size, youth and promise too soon.
The contents of this page have not been reviewed or endorsed by the Memphis
Grizzlies. All opinions expressed by Michael Wallace are solely his own and do
not reflect the opinions of the Memphis Grizzlies or its Basketball Operations
staff, owners, parent companies, partners or sponsors. His sources are not known
to the Memphis Grizzlies and he has no special access to information beyond the
access and privileges that go along with being an NBA accredited member of the
media.
Player: Deyonta Davis
Media Content:
http://www.nba.com/grizzlies/news/grind-city-media/mikecheck-grizzlies-offseason-
outlook-deyonta-davis-180427
Media Keywords: NBA, Sports, Memphis Grizzlies, Deyonta Davis, Memphis Grizzlies
Media Thumbnail:
http://www.nba.com/grizzlies/sites/grizzlies/files/deyonta-davis-923577174-777×44
2.jpg
Taxonomy: MikeCheck, Grind City Media, Michael Wallace, Offseason Outlook
Story Link:
http://www.nba.com/grizzlies/news/grind-city-media/mikecheck-grizzlies-offseason-
outlook-deyonta-davis-180427