Date | League | Transaction |
---|---|---|
3rd November, 2011 | D-League | Drafted 36th overall in the 2011 D-League Draft by Sioux Falls Skyforce. |
10th December, 2011 | NBA | Signed an unguaranteed two year minimum salary contract with Houston. |
13th December, 2011 | NBA | Waived by Houston. |
2nd February, 2012 | D-League | Left Sioux Falls Skyforce. |
13th February, 2012 | Slovenia | Signed for the remainder of the season with Union Olimpija Ljubljana. |
26th July, 2012 | Germany | Signed a one year contract with New Yorker Phantoms Braunschweig. |
20th December, 2012 | Germany | Left New Yorker Phantoms Braunschweig. |
5th March, 2013 | D-League | Designated as a returning player by Sioux Falls Skyforce. |
9th October, 2013 | Israel | Signed for the remainder of the season with Elizur Ashkelon. |
30th October, 2014 | D-League | Designated as a returning player by Sioux Falls Skyforce. |
7th November, 2014 | D-League | Waived by Sioux Falls Skyforce. |
2007 - 2009 | Chipola (Junior College) |
2009 - 2011 | West Virginia (NCAA) |
November 2011 - December 2011 | Sioux Falls Skyforce (D-League) |
December 2011 | Houston Rockets (NBA) |
December 2011 - February 2012 | Sioux Falls Skyforce (D-League) |
February 2012 - June 2012 | Union Olimpija Ljubljana (Slovenia) |
July 2012 - December 2012 | New Yorker Phantoms (Germany) |
March 2013 - June 2013 | Sioux Falls Skyforce (D-League) |
October 2013 - June 2014 | Elitzur Ashkelon (Israel, National League) |
October 2014 - November 2014 | Sioux Falls Skyforce (D-League) |
March 16, 2011
Jerry West's son Jonnie plays a bit part role on the team as a shooting specialist. He is, however, behind both Dalton Pepper and Casey Mitchell on the shooting guard depth chart. Pepper is a big strong guard with improved defense and a decent outside stroke that he doesn't use nearly enough, while Mitchell is comfortably the best shooter on the team with a decent outside stroke that he uses way too much. Mitchell has easily the worst shot selection on the team, far worse than is really acceptable in an upperclassman, and while his 14.1 points in only 24 minutes per game leads the team, it belies his crazily streaky and ultimately unreliable nature. At point guard, Joe Mazzulla is the oft-cited coach on the floor - a tough, defensive-minded ball mover with a good deal of offensive talent, but who knows what needs to be done, even if he hasn't the talent to make it happen. And Darryl 'Truck' Bryant has rather unproduced this season, given that it was anticipated he would step into a bigger role with Ebanks and Butler gone. As it is, Bryant has merely sustained his production and skill set from previous years; tough, under-every-screen defense, mediocre shooting, good transition play, and not really a point guard.