Another year of the Shaedon Sharpe Experience™ has come and gone, and I regret to inform you all that he has not yet become Michael Jordan with a jumpshot. Following what seemed to be – despite recurring calf injuries – a regular season chalked with offensive growth, the Portland Trail Blazers guard was ostensibly benched in the first round of the NBA Playoffs. Defensive gaffs outshined his offensive contributions, leading Blazers acting head coach Tiago Splitter to sit the young guard for the majority
of the series. Prior to the postseason, though, Sharpe’s scoring continued on its year-over-year upward trajectory.
Fresh off giving an extension to Sharpe last offseason, the front office must decide: Is Sharpe showing enough growth to justify keeping him around? Or should the Blazers employ him as the young centerpiece in a superstar-caliber trade?
Season Stats
- Minutes: 29.4
- Points: 20.8
- Rebounds: 4.3
- Assists: 2.6
- FG: 45.2%
- 3PT: 33.7%
- Blocks: 0.1
- Steals: 1.4
- Turnovers: 2.9
Other Standout Stats
- Sharpe continues to be a standout scorer from his draft class. Among all 2022 draft picks, he ranked 2nd in points per game this season at 20.8, trailing only Paolo Banchero’s 22.2. Depending on how strongly you feel about his defensive deficiencies, you could argue that Joe Cronin and company got a steal by selecting Sharpe with the 7th pick.
- Despite continued flashes throughout his career, Sharpe’s turnover-to-assist ratio continues to trend negatively. He finished the season with an AST/TO ratio of 0.9. Those who watch Sharpe know that he has a knack for finding shooters off of pindowns, often utilizing jump passes from the middle of the paint to spray to an open shooter. As Blazer fans are all too aware of, though, the shooter would rarely convert on such opportunities. Poor shooting aside, Sharpe still lacks the handle necessary to fully unlock his athletic gifts, which contribute to the turnover problem plaguing both him and the team at large.
- After an exceptionally healthy rookie season in which he played 80 of 82 games, Sharpe has routinely missed time with varying lower body ailments. Since his first season, he has averaged only 51 games per regular season. Missing such large stretches of time clearly impacts his game. The months in which Sharpe saw the fewest number of contests, February and April, also saw his lowest Player Impact Estimate (PIE). The eye test confirms the stats: In the stints before and after Sharpe missed time for his ailing calf, he looked anonymous. Health will be as important a factor as any in Sharpe’s continued success.
Change Year-Over-Year
Sharpe’s usage and points per game have followed a steady, upward trend each year. Similarly, his efficiency has remained relatively stable. The bad news is, that efficiency leaves plenty to be desired. Despite being one of the league’s preeminent rim finishers, Sharpe continues to struggle from behind the three-point line. In the poor-shooting-laden ecosystem of the Blazers’ offense, an environment in which opponents can easily pack driving lanes, this limits his effectiveness as a driver.
- Sharpe averaged a career high in scoring this year, jumping from 18.5 points per game a season ago to 20.5 points per game this season. He also achieved his personal best while playing two fewer minutes per game than the previous season, clocking in 29.4 minutes per game in 2025-2026 and 31.3 minutes per matchup in the 2024-2025 season.
- Sharpe shot the exact same percentage from the floor this season as he did in the previous year, hitting at a 45.2% clip. He upped his three-point shooting from last year, but only marginally, converting on 33.7% of his shots from beyond the arc in the 2025-2026 season, compared to only 31% a season ago.
- The rest of Sharpe’s statistics remain almost comically similar to last year’s. His free throw attempts, free throw percentage, rebounds, assists, and blocks are all nearly identical to last year’s averages. At the very least, you can’t knock his consistency (you absolutely can).
Analysis
Shaedon Sharpe’s career development is both one of the most exciting and frustrating experiences to endure. Hiding behind his gravity-defying, physics-disregarding, jaw-dislocating dunks is a player whose flaws are obvious, consistent, and (you would think) fixable. Every year, fans enter the season with the same set of “ifs”: “If Shaedon fixes his handle, his game will open up”; “If Shaedon can hit on just one more three-pointer per game, defenders will have to respect his jump shot”; “If Shaedon can be more disciplined on defense, then he certainly has the frame and athleticism to lock down opposing defenders.” None of those “ifs” have come to fruition yet.
Defense has been, and continues to be, the main sticking point of Sharpe’s year-over-year woes. Clumsy rotations and poor point-of-attack marking make him a liability on the defensive end. However, his playmaking on the defensive side of the ball has certainly taken a leap. In the early part of the year, he was one of the league’s preeminent steal-getters. That said, his inclination to jump passing lanes would often put his team out of rotation. Shaedon giveth, and Shaedon taketh. In the playoffs, his warts became more visible. The Spurs hunted Sharpe on as many actions as they could, taking him inside the paint and exploiting his inability to stay in front of the ball-handler.
Beyond his defense, Sharpe’s shooting from three is the most limiting factor of his game. Though certainly capable of hot streaks, his stroke remains streaky enough that defenders can be comfortable going under screens. For a little over half of his season, in December and January, Sharpe shot 40.5% from three. In the other 21 games, he connected on under 24% of his threes. These splits seem to mostly line up with his health. During periods in which he was returning from injury, his percentages tanked. During prolonged periods of health, his offense was consistent and impactful, especially when he got downhill.
Even with his flaws, Sharpe is one of the Blazers’ best offensive players, and remains one of few players on the roster who can consistently create his own shot. He hasn’t lost any athleticism over the years. Through the season, he added more clips to his already all-time career highlight reel. Though he hasn’t yet reached what many believe could be an All-NBA ceiling, his talent remains exceptional. He is still an incredible at-the-rim finisher, and can get into the paint seemingly any time he wants. “Ifs” are frustrating, but they also represent questions that can still be answered.
Future Outlook
Shaedon Sharpe is a lottery ticket. Shaedon Sharpe is a slot machine. Shaedon Sharpe is a cryptocurrency. Every season, Lucy lines up the proverbial football (in this case, Shaedon Sharpe’s All-Star campaign), and halfway through you realize she pulled it away weeks ago, and you’ve fallen flat on your back. But that’s okay because the clouds resemble Shaedon Sharpe going fully horizontal during a poster dunk. Therein lies the frustration. Sharpe is a player with all the tools, with all the aesthetics. Every game there still remains a glimmer of hope that tonight is the night that he will put it all together; that maybe he’s done just enough cone drills to fully realize his handle; that maybe his jump shot will start falling at the rate that it looks like it should (100%); that maybe he finally understands rotations to the point that he is no longer a defensive liability. But moment-to-moment, he continues to be the same player with the same flaws.
That was dramatic. Probably too dramatic. Sharpe is, for all intents and purposes, a good regular season basketball player. This year’s playoffs demonstrated that, for now, that’s all he is. He is exploitable on defense, and does not bring the necessary dynamism and consistency on offense to warrant playing time (though, there’s certainly an argument to be made against his benching). But there are still so many pieces. There is nothing stopping Sharpe from becoming one of the league’s preeminent offensive players. The wingspan remains. The jumpshooting remains. The silky smooth movement remains. The athleticism remains. For now, though, they’re disconnected. Until he can put those pieces together, that same intrigue that has Blazers fans on the edge of their seats may be best utilized as the centerpiece of a trade package.











