LAS VEGAS ā As first quarters go in a Summer League debut, it didnāt get much better than what Sterling āScootā Henderson unveiled Friday for the Trail Blazers.
A point guard who is built like a linebacker, Henderson got to any place he wanted on the floor, usually off a dribble between his legs and an explosive first step. He hit step-back jumpers. Faked defenders into the air and then passed to teammates for dunks. He swished a 3-pointer and left his hand in the air for style points. He blew past defenders on the baseline and finished a drive with a reverse layup.
When the first-quarter buzzer sounded, and the crowd paused long enough after the oohs and ahhs to catch its collective breath, Henderson had 13 points, three rebounds and three assists.
āYou could tell he wanted to make a statement,ā said Blazers head coach Chauncey Billups, who watched from a courtside seat. āAnd I thought he did.ā
There was more to like after the first quarter for the third pick, but his play ended up being overshadowed by an injury. He left the game with 4:51 left in the third quarter due to a right shoulder injury and did not return. It was difficult to determine when and where Henderson suffered the injury, and the team did not make Henderson available after the game. Neither Summer League coach Jonah Herscu nor Billups knew the extent of the injury after the game.
Henderson left the locker room with headphones around his neck and no protective sling or visible wraps around his shoulder. He stopped briefly and talked with Billups, then put a cell phone to his left ear and was escorted out of the arena by team personnel. A Blazers spokesperson said the team wanted to take him to a facility to get properly evaluated, and expected to give an update on Saturday.
Last season, the Blazersā top rookie, Shaedon Sharpe, suffered a small labral tear in his left shoulder just seven minutes into his summer league debut. He did not play the rest of Summer League.
Teammate Kris Murray, the Blazersā other first-round pick last month, said he didnāt expect Hendersonās injury to be serious judging from Hendersonās body language after the game in the locker room.
āItās not too bad. He will be fine,ā Murray said. āItās something where you donāt want to push too much in Summer League.ā
Hendersonās shoulder injury was the only concern from his debut. His final statistics were solid ā 15 points, six assists, five rebounds and two turnovers in 21 minutes ā but his raw physical skills and his intangibles were off the charts.
He blew past anyone and everyone. He had great vision and was a willing passer. He was vocal and showed leadership with his teammates, both on the court and in huddles. And ā¦ he just looked the part. He was the best player any time he was on the court, and everybody seemed to sense it.
āHis superpower is his speed and his explosiveness ā¦ and I told him he needs to always play that way, and I thought he did a really good job,ā Billups said. āAnd he did a good job of making the proper play most of the game. When he attacked and drew two (defenders), he found the open guy, as opposed to forcing it, which young guys can do.ā
One subtle, but notable play came in the second quarter when Henderson was guarding Houston guard Amen Thompson, who was picked immediately after Henderson. As Thompson tried to drive right, the Blazersā guard slid to his left, stuck his chest out and stonewalled Thompsonās drive, causing him to retreat and reset the offense. The defensive play caused the Blazersā coaching staff to spring to their feet and applaud.
āWhen your point guard is making it tough on their point guard, who is trying to initiate their offense, it makes their offense harder to navigate and get into,ā said Herscu. āItās very good when you can be physical with that first line of defense.ā
Behind the scenes, players and coaches are taking notice of other intangibles. They like his leadership qualities. Heās positive. And throughout the opening week of practices, heās proven to be coachable.
āHis parents did a heckuva job raising him,ā Herscu said. āHeās got a great head on his shoulders. Heās very composed, very mature, so we are fortunate to have him, and we love coaching him.ā
Henderson wonāt turn 20 until February, or halfway through his first NBA season, but on Friday it was difficult to tell he was still a teenager ā both physically and the way he carried himself. He not only was ready for the moment, he seemed to cherish it, thirst for it.
āHe has so much fire,ā Billups said. āHe never hangs his head, even when things go bad. And he has an ability to bring guys with him, if that makes sense. At a young age, thatās not easy.
āAnd Iāll be honest with you: the fact he played in the G League for the last two years? At 17, he has led men already. Heās been doing this for a while and most people donāt put enough credit on that.ā
Trailblazers fans are going through it these last couple of days. Hopefully this is nothing and Scoot is fine. Post-dame Blazers will be super interesting to follow.
Liking this. Gonna be fun seeing this team grow and take shape over the next couple years.
As is tradition.
Looked great when he was in, though. Wouldnāt surprise me if he is a ROY candidate (assuming the injury isnāt serious) but Iām guessing that will end up going to Wemby.