The Celtics finished the regular season portion of Summer League at 3-1 with an 82-76 victory the Sacramento Kings. The wire-to-wire win included a strong defensive effort in the first quarter when the Kings only scored four points, the lowest in SL history. There’s still a shot for Boston to be a playoff team with today’s games still undecided.
Maine on my mind
Earlier in the day, former CelticsBlogger and Spotrac’s Keith Smith reported that Boston had signed Milos Uzan and Tucker DeVries to Exhibit 10 contracts. Tennies are basically non-guaranteed training camp deals that tend to subsequently lead to G League invites to Maine.
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Uzan has been particularly impressive throughout this Summer League regular season. Kingston Flemings was the University of Houston’s highest draft pick at #8 to Atlanta, followed by Cenac Jr. to the Cs and Emanuel Sharp to Sacramento, but Uzan has been a pleasant surprise as the lone undrafted Cougar. He had another solid game with 13 points, seven rebounds, and two assists last night and could be a good candidate to be the starting point guard up at the Portland Expo.
“I know I’m going to be at training camp, so I’m just trying to keep getting better and just try to add value to the team,” Uzan said.
What could interesting is the fate of John Tonje. He was included in the trade that sent Chris Boucher to the Utah Jazz and played on a two-way contract with the Celtics last season. Now, he’s effectively a free agent after the Celtics didn’t pick up his option last month. He hit 47.4% from 3 heading into the Kings game and made another 3-of-7 against Sacramento.
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The 25-year-old is a capable second-side scorer as a spot-up shooter and close-out attacker, but he just lacks the athleticism on defense to hold his ground.
Hugo has been huge
I made this Hugo Gonzalez comp in our CelticsBlog Slack and I think it’s pretty accurate: Austin Reaves. Ridicule and disgust followed the comparison to the Laker. The sophomore still has three more years on his rookie contract while Reaves signed a four-year, $185 million max extension this summer. There’s still some ways to go for Gonzalez, but the tools are there. Hugo is the superior defender (by far) and the Summer League ## turnovers are an eyesore in his SL box score, but he’s on track with Reaves’ development on offense.
His Eurostep and decel have generated 15 trips to the free throw line — remember: Summer League is testing a new rule where one free throw is two points — and he’s dished out 17 assists in three games.
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Admittedly, the grift isn’t exactly my favorite part of his game, but if his handle tightens up and his vision focuses, he could be a reliable ball handler in the second unit. That’s a huge development from last year when he was mostly used as a spark off the bench and a versatile defender.
Speak softly and carry a big stick
The marquee signing of this offseason was Mitchell Robinson. The former Knick earned a three-year, $47 million contract in Boston after finishing last season as one of the league’s best offensive rebounders and rim protectors. He’ll join last year’s breakout star Neemias Queta and second unit stalwart Luka Garza in the Celtics center room.
However, in the shadows of the Summer League, Boston is developing the future of their franchise in Amari Williams and Chris Cenac Jr. Williams spent last season in Maine on a two-way contract and he’s signed on again to do the same, but don’t be surprised if he’s converted into a standard deal again by the end of the year.
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The prerequisite rebounding and rim protection is there — I swear there are times that Williams seemingly invites a driver to test him only for him to swat their attempt into the first row.
What sets Williams really apart is his passing.
“It calms everybody else down,” SL head coach Amile Jefferson said of playing through Williams. “When you’re able to play off-ball knowing that we have a guy that—his strength is his passing. He’s creative. He can find you. If you move and you’re open, he can get the ball where it needs to go.”
He had three assists to go along with his seven rebounds and two blocks.
Cenac Jr. is a different animal. After making that game-tying three in the team’s opener against the Raptors that sent the game into overtime, he missed his next four attempts against Charlotte and Atlanta. Then, last night, he went 1-for-3 against the Kings.
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His shot plot at Houston consisted of a heavy diet of mid-range jumpers. Think Chris Bosh or LaMarcus Aldridge. In the pros, that shot might need to migrate out to the three-point line and it looks like it’s already an adjustment that the team has made with him.
“I dropped way lower than I was supposed to in the draft,” Cenac Jr. told ESPN. “So, I’m coming out and showing everybody what I’m capable of doing and [making them regret] the decision that they made.”
Cenac Jr. finished with a strong double-double of 10 & 12.
