Scouting Report: Rondae Hollis-Jefferson, SF, Arizona

by Blake Murphy
Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports

Tap here to get an in-depth look at the top prospects in this year's draft class leading up to the NBA draft, which takes place on June 25 in Brooklyn.

At some point, landing the second-best defensive prospect in the draft will outweigh the cost of committing to playing a non-shooter.

That trade-off will be the one that faces teams selecting outside of the top-10, with Rondae Hollis-Jefferson representing an interesting trade-off. Is a team willing to sacrifice spacing and offensive flexibility for a multi-position lock-down defender who can make the team's defense far more versatile? Shooting is always at a premium, but doing one thing as exceptionally well as RHJ does really raises a player's floor.

Relevant Background

Position DraftExpress Rank ESPN Rank Height w/ Shoes Weight
SF 13 22 6' 7" 211
Wingspan Standing Reach Max Vertical (in.) Hand Length (in.) Body Fat %
7' 2" 8' 8" 38.0 8.75 5.0%
NCAA Stats PPG RPG APG FG% 3FG%
2014-15 11.2 6.8 1.6 50.2% 20.7%
2013-14 9.1 5.7 1.4 49.0% 20.0%

Scouting Report

Strengths: Arizona tasked Hollis-Jefferson with guarding as many as five positions over his two seasons, and he figures to be able to check three or four at the NBA level. He's an unbelievable athlete, he has an enormous wingspan and reach for his height, and those tools manifest themselves in transition just as well as they do on defense. He's also a solid ball-handler on the wing and moves fairly well without the ball, so don't confuse his lack of a jumper for a complete lack of offensive utility.

Weaknesses: So, about that jump-shot. It's ugly. Teams who have developed other shooters may be confident they can bring it along, and teams like the Philadelphia 76ers have prioritized shooting lower than other skills, believing it can be a learned skill. His 71-percent free-throw rate is encouraging in that regard, and the hitch in his shot appears to be improving, but the numbers are going to scare teams off - he went 8-of-39 on threes over two seasons and shot 36.3 percent on all jumpers this year.

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What to Expect on Draft Day

Where Hollis-Jefferson winds up being selected depends so much on the preferences and roster structure of each individual team, so it's difficult to nail down a narrow draft range for him. His limitations render him unlikely to crack the lottery, but seeing him off the board in the late-teens wouldn't surprise. What would surprise is if he isn't taken in the first round altogether, as he'd be a great addition to any number of contending teams picking in the 20s.

The Digest

2015 NBA Draft: Scouting reports, team needs, and more

by Blake Murphy
Godofredo Vasquez-USA TODAY Sports

Tap here to view theScore's NBA offseason tracker, which includes the 2015 draft order, and latest transactions and rumors.

Get an in-depth look at the top prospects in this year's class, what each team needs to do with their picks, mock drafts, and more leading up to the 2015 NBA Draft, which takes place June 25 in Brooklyn.

What you need to know

It's finally here.

A year after Andrew Wiggins became the No. 1 pick, after a college season, after months of accusations of tanking and unintentional ineptitude, after the draft lottery, after all the posturing and misinformation leaked to shuffle player values: the 2015 NBA Draft is upon us.

Salary cap spikes in 2016 and 2017 have conspired to confuse what teams and players may look to do here in 2015, while also increasing the relative value of rookie-scale contracts in the near future.

Draft night usually brings plenty of surprises and loads of trades, from small and largely meaningless to league-changing. Some of those won't be official until after July 1, when rookies can be included in deals more freely, but Thursday should prove frenetic.

Embrace the chaos. [Read More]

Mock Drafts

Tap the links below to see full first-round mock drafts from throughout the draft process.

Final 60-pick mock draft
theScore roundtable mock draft
Early 1st-round mock draft

Scouting Reports

Tap the links below to see a full scouting report for each of the top 35 players in the draft.

Point Guard

D'Angelo Russell
Emmanuel Mudiay
Cameron Payne
Tyus Jones
Jerian Grant
Delon Wright
Terry Rozier
George Lucas de Paula (Note: Withdrew from draft on June 15)

Shooting Guard

Devin Booker
R.J. Hunter
Rashad Vaughn
Anthony Brown

Small Forward

Justise Winslow
Mario Hezonja
Stanley Johnson
Kelly Oubre
Sam Dekker
Rondae Hollis-Jefferson
Justin Anderson
Jonathan Holmes

Power Forward

Kristaps Porzingis
Myles Turner
Trey Lyles
Bobby Portis
Kevon Looney
Montrezl Harrell
Chris McCullough
Jarell Martin
Christian Wood

Center

Karl-Anthony Towns
Jahlil Okafor
Willie Cauley-Stein
Frank Kaminsky
Robert Upshaw
Dakari Johnson
Mouhammadou Jaiteh

Team Needs by Division

Tap the links below to see an analysis of what each team could be looking to do with the picks they have, division by division.

Atlantic Division
Southwest Division
Central Division
Northwest Division
Pacific Division
Southeast Division

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