{"id":31718,"date":"2020-05-01T23:15:46","date_gmt":"2020-05-02T06:15:46","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/kingsherald.com\/articles\/sacramento-kings-progress-report-buddy-hield-elite-shooter-luke-walton-role-bench\/"},"modified":"2020-05-01T23:15:46","modified_gmt":"2020-05-02T06:15:46","slug":"sacramento-kings-progress-report-buddy-hield-elite-shooter-luke-walton-role-bench","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/kingsherald.com\/str-archive\/sacramento-kings-progress-report-buddy-hield-elite-shooter-luke-walton-role-bench\/","title":{"rendered":"Kings Progress Report: Buddy Hield"},"content":{"rendered":"

Player: <\/strong>Buddy Hield <\/p>\n

Age:<\/strong> 27<\/p>\n

Relevant stats: <\/strong>Hield played 64 games, starting the first 44 and and coming off the bench for the last 20. As a starter, Hield averaged 20.0 points in 34.4 minutes per game while shooting 36.0% on 3-pointers. As a reserve, Hield averaged 19.4 points in 26.6 minutes per game while shooting 47.6% on 3-pointers. <\/p>\n

Contract status: <\/strong>Hield\u2019s rookie contract expires this year. Sacramento signed him to a 4-year, $86 million extension that begins in the 2020-21 league year. That contract is likely to reach $94 million in individual bonuses<\/a> with the potential to get to $106 based on team-specific incentives. <\/p>\n

Recap: <\/strong>The Kings began the year by placing a huge investment in Hield with his rookie extension. That contract values him a bit below what the Celtics gave Jaylen Brown (the No. 3 pick in Hield\u2019s draft class), but above Domantas Sabonis, who was an All-Star this season, albeit in the Eastern Conference. Then, the Kings ended the season by demoting Hield to the bench and telling anyone who would listen that Bogdan Bogdanovic was a franchise cornerstone at shooting guard. Not exactly the most consistent messaging. <\/p>\n

But we\u2019ll get back to the off-court nonsense that surrounded Hield. On the floor, he is still one helluva shooter. He wasn\u2019t quite as efficient as he was a season ago in Sacramento, as his 3-point percentage dropped from the low 40s to 39.5%, but he got up nearly 11 attempts from beyond the arc per 36 minutes. That is the highest volume of his career, and he can get up threes with little to no separation. <\/p>\n