Optimistically, Ball’s natural maturation as a player leads to a gradual uptick in efficiency, and playing with more talent leads to easier scoring opportunities. He’s still figuring out how to strike the delicate balance between being scoring-oriented and being selfish, but it’s obvious that his feel for play-making is going to translate in potentially elite fashion. But he’ll have to make himself a perpetual scoring threat to maximize it, a transition that that’s troubled his older brother, Lonzo in his adjustment to the NBA. LaMelo is capable of making every pass, but when it comes to jump shooting and finishing, the results have simply not been there on a regular basis. He’s bigger, can get downhill and create space much more effectively than Lonzo at the same stage, plus his mechanics are cleaner. So it’s possible that LaMelo’s superior ball-handling may just be more cosmetic than functional when it comes to getting him better shots, and the statistical sample supports that case. It’s nice that he’s a great passer who’s also wired to score, but if the shooting splits don’t improve, it’ll be too much for some teams to stomach.
Another mitigating aspect for some front offices may be the lingering sticker shock from LaVar Ball’s Laker-adjacent antics, which undeniably damaged the early part of Lonzo Ball’s career to a degree. At some point, that noise shouldn’t matter. The nascent Kardashianism of youth basketball is going nowhere, as evidenced by the fact LeBron James Jr., now a high school freshman at Sierra Canyon in California will have 15 of his games broadcast or streamed by the network. Dwyane Wade’s son Zaire also plays for the team, as do potential lottery picks Brandon Boston and Ziaire Williams. Viral fame is the new normal for teenage players, and at some point, teams just have to get over it. It does seem positive that LaMelo has begun to redefine himself after bizarre few years underscored by his father’s aggressive, public chicanery. If a front office genuinely decides he’s the top prospect, they’re going to take him anyway.