Hours before the second round of the NBA draft, the Lakers came to terms with Austin Reaves on a max four-year extension. It gets Luka Dončić his running mate locked in early and heads the team in a clear direction of building around their explosive backcourt.
It’s no secret that to surround those two, the Lakers need to raise their athletic floor. They got off on the right foot on Tuesday. LA traded up one spot to the 24th pick in the first round, sending cash to the New York Knicks to take Cameron
Carr from Baylor.
They seem to now have a type. Similar to Adou Thiero, the 36th overall selection last year, Carr is a freakish athlete with a standout highlight reel dunk package. He showed that athletic pop off at the combine, posting a max vertical leap of 42.5″, tied for second overall.
Carr measured out at 6’4.5 and 184 pounds, with a long 7’0.75″ wingspan and an 8’8″ standing reach. Offensively, he’s the prototypical modern NBA-level wing teams are looking for, living with baskets at the rim or behind the 3-point line with tantalizing fluidity.
He leverages his physical traits in a multitude of ways. One is as a monster finisher in transition, showcasing as one of the best vertical threat wings in the draft, a tailor-made athletic fit next to the playmaking savant Luka, who’s had success with similar players like the high flyer Derick Jones Jr.
The quick and agile burst allows him to blow by defenders on closeouts. While playmaking off the bounce isn’t his strength, once he gets his shoulders past a defender, he goes to his repertoire of nifty acrobatic finishes around the rim or above the basket with his length, as shown below.
It’s almost impossible to carve out a promising career as a wing in today’s NBA without the ability to shoot. Carr shot 37% on just over six 3-pointers per game. He’s armed with a smooth jumper and can fire at long range with promising mechanics.
While many of his 3-pointers were spot-ups, he’d routinely demonstrate the ability to hit shots off the bounce as the ball handler in pick and rolls and off the move.
This threat as a shooter makes him an excellent cutter, with good special awareness for lobs and finishes at the basket. Carr connected on 80% at the free-throw line on 4.9 attempts per game, one of the better predictors for success at the next level.
Defensively, there’s a clear need for development, both physically and as a tactician on and off the ball. There’s clear upside with all the physical tools he possesses, and he flashed those as a defensive playmaker and rebounder, pulling down 5.9 per game.
Carr gets his active long arms in passing lanes during ball denial and turns that into transition opportunities on the other end, as shown below, collecting a steal per game in his final college season.
His length becomes enticing as a shot blocker, collecting 1.3 blocks per game, an impressively high mark for a perimeter-based player. The long wingspan allows him to recover on closeouts and take away what looked to be open 3-point attempts, as shown below.
He had a number of chasedown blocks as well, and even showed off some rim protection ability as a wing.
The Lakers still have a lot of work to do and have clearly put many eggs in this summer’s basket. How much a 24th overall pick, as promising as he projects to be, is ready to play next season remains to be seen. However, Carr fits the mold of players the team should look to add, putting it on track to build a contender around its star backcourt.
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