
2024-25 Thunder player grades: Ajay Mitchell
The Oklahoma City Thunder continue to enjoy their NBA championship. They had a historic 68-14 regular-season campaign that eventually led to the franchise's first title with a 2025 NBA Finals Game 7 win. They'll enter next season as a favorite to be a rare repeat winner.
To reflect on their title run, Thunder Wire will conduct 2024-25 season grades for all 19 players who suited up for the squad at one point during the year. Thirteenth up is Ajay Mitchell, who had a promising start to his career despite injuries:
2024-25 statistics:
Advanced stats:
Significant Percentile Finishes:
Contract:
Thoughts:
Being on a two-way deal to start the season, Mitchell was the rare player who never suited up in the G League. Instead, he loudly knocked on the door and forced the Thunder to play him from the start. The 23-year-old had a strong start to his rookie season that was eventually torpedoed by injury.
The Thunder desperately needed another ball-handler. When Shai Gilgeous-Alexander was off the floor, the offense plummeted. Mitchell helped it stay above water as the backup guard. A couple of months into the season, he was a staple in OKC's rotation.
It didn't take long for Mitchell to surpass his draft spot. The second-round rookie gained rotation minutes on an NBA champion. He was a steady hand who could run the offense. He drove to the basket and was a good catch-and-shoot option. He helped Jalen Williams dominate on the bench lineup.
Everything looked great for Mitchell. He was ready to contribute from the start. Isaiah Hartenstein campaigned for him to win Rookie of the Year. He was well on his way to getting converted to a standard contract. Then a toe turf injury sidelined him.
Mitchell required surgery. He missed three months of the regular season. He managed to return before the playoffs started, but his rustiness and inexperience made it difficult for him to get serious minutes in the postseason. Instead, he was on the outside looking in with OKC's rotation.
While the injury ruined any chances for rookie accolades, it was just a speed bump. The Thunder felt confident enough in Mitchell to convert him to a standard deal, anyway. They liked what they saw in his limited action. The 23-year-old showed he could fit the traditional backup point guard role.
Moving Forward:
It looks like the Thunder nailed another second-round pick. All the hoopla they went through to add Mitchell was worth it. They gave him a new contract this offseason to keep him around. He's had quite the journey from a two-way player to receiving NBA Finals minutes.
Let's see if Mitchell can take the next step in his development. He showed some flashes of it at Summer League. He was the Thunder's top scorer by playing a drive-heavy brand of scoring. He'd get to the lane and either finish through traffic or go to the free-throw line. That looked promising. Especially if he can draw contact more often.
Mitchell could also improve as a playmaker. The assist numbers weren't great. He was more of a score-first guard. But that type of improvement comes with time. No reason to think he won't be better at making reads with more reps in the future.
The Thunder will need to figure out who their backup guard will be next season. Mitchell will certainly be in the mix. His main competition will be Nikola Topic. Those two young players will battle it out to see who's more ready to contribute right away and who needs more time to develop in the G League.
Taking a guess, Mitchell looks to be the former. It makes sense, being three years older than Topic. He also has NBA experience on his side. It's a good problem to have, as the backup guard role was one of the Thunder's few weak spots last season.
As the Thunder get more expensive, they will need players like Mitchell to step up as rotation players. He's a young player on a cheap contract who can continue to grow. At worst, he has a safe floor of being a bench player. OKC's roster is filled with guys who played above their draft status. He could be another example of that.
Final Grade: B-minus
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
25 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Arrivederci, JTA!
During his three seasons with the Golden State Warriors, Juan Toscano-Anderson was the only Mexican-American player in the NBA. Now, his professional basketball career is taking him out of North America entirely. According to 'Il Piccolo,' which is a local newspaper in Trieste, Italy and not a magazine devoted to small woodwind instruments, JTA will be portando il suo talento nel Mar Adriatico — that is, taking his talents to the Adriatic Sea. He's agreed to a deal with Pallacanestro Trieste, a team based in Trieste that plays in Italy's Serie A, the top professional league. Toscano-Anderson was a member of the Warriors' 2022 title team after absolutely clawing his way into the NBA. Born and raised in Oakland, JTA went undrafted out of Marquette in 2015, then spent the first three seasons of his pro career playing for teams in Mexico and Venezuela, so he's no stranger to playing internationally. He joined the Santa Cruz Warriors in the fall of 2018, then made his NBA debut in 2020, two months shy of his 27th birthday. By the 2021-22 season, Toscano-Anderson was a part of the rotation, playing 73 games that season and starting six. Though undersized as a 6-foot-6 forward, JTA's high basketball IQ, quality defense, and screen-setting were valuable for a Warriors team still trying to operate on 'two timelines.' He was athletic enough to participate in the NBA's Slam Dunk Contest, and in 2021 made one of the most impressive out-of-bounds saves you'll ever see. While we're here, let's watch him dunk on Andre Drummond. Toscano-Anderson signed with the Los Angeles Lakers before the 2022-23 season, but didn't find his niche like he did as a Warrior. He was a throw-in in the deal that sent Russell Westbrook out of L.A. in exchange for Forever Warrior D'Angelo Russell at midseason. JTA finished the season with the Utah Jazz, played a few games for the Sacramento Kings in 2023-24, then spent last season with the Mexico City Capitanes of the G League. JTA will be forever beloved in the city of Oakland and among Warriors fans, and it's truly impressive to carve out a 10-year pro career anywhere after going undrafted. But it goes to show how difficult it is to stay in the NBA. If Malcolm Brogdon, the Sixth Man of the Year two years ago, still can't find an NBA home, it's incredibly tough for a guy like Toscano-Anderson. He'll be able to see a former Warrior teammate in Serie A. Nico Mannion plays for Olimpia Milano, who competes in both Serie A and the EuroLeague, though the Warriors have held onto his rights. We wish Juan Toscano-Anderson a fond, 'Arrivederci!' Let's hope that Serie A has a dunk contest.
Yahoo
42 minutes ago
- Yahoo
'We wanted to throw a twist on it': Why an iconic Kobe Bryant image was altered for a Dodger-themed mural
The image is iconic — Kobe Bryant letting out a roar while tugging on his gold Lakers jersey after scoring 49 points during a playoff win over the Denver Nuggets on April 23, 2008. It has been used in numerous murals around Southern California, including one that is being painted in larger-than-life form on the side of a future Eat Fantastic restaurant on the 700 block of North Pacific Coast Highway in Redondo Beach. This particular painting, however, is a little different from the others, and from the original image itself. Bryant's intensity is still there. His pose is exactly the same. He is still wearing a No. 24 jersey. But in this version, that jersey is not gold with "Lakers" spelled across the chest in purple letters. It's white, with "Dodgers" across the chest in blue letters. The altered version of the iconic image is just one portion of a sprawling mural paying tribute to the Dodgers' 2024 World Series championship. It's on the north-facing side of a former Carl's Jr. building that will open later this year as part of the growing Eat Fantastic chain in the Los Angeles area. The mural was conceived by artist Gustavo Zermeño Jr. and Eat Fantastic owner Efthemios Alexander Tsiboukas. It features some of the key figures from the Dodgers' title run — players Mookie Betts, Freddie Freeman, Shohei Ohtani (with his beloved dog Decoy) and rapper Ice Cube, who is shown riding in a classic Dodger blue convertible as he did when he performed before Game 3 of the World Series. And then there's the late Lakers legend Bryant, whose inclusion in the piece was a must, Zermeño said. Read more: Want to visit Kobe Bryant murals? Here are 24 in Los Angeles and 8 in Orange County "Each [Eat Fantastic] location has a Kobe mural, at least the ones that have a good wall," said Zermeño, who is a huge fan of both the Dodgers and Bryant. "And for this location, [Tsiboukas] wanted to create something for the Dodgers' championship team. That's why Kobe has the Dodger jersey on, you know, staying on theme with the locations having a Kobe mural." Zermeño said the original idea was to paint Bryant wearing a Dodgers baseball jersey, as he did while attending the team's games over the years before his shocking death in January 2020. "So we looked up a bunch of images," Zermeño said. "A lot of them are obviously cool images, but either they were very pixelated, or just didn't have what we wanted, that really aggressive Mamba-mentality feel. "So we found this image. And you know, this image has been done before in several murals. But with the Dodger jersey, we wanted to throw a twist on it." Tsiboukas said: "That's my favorite picture of him. I have the exact same one [painted at the restaurant location] in Arcadia. He's wearing the real jersey, though, the yellow one. So I wanted a replica of that same one I did in Arcadia, and do it in a Dodger jersey, because of the Dodger dynasty right now." The purple and gold may have been removed from the jersey, but Zermeño said he purposefully incorporated them into the sunset depicted behind Bryant as a nod to the Lakers. Zermeño started working on the mural Aug. 7 and expects to have it completed next week, ahead of Bryant's Aug. 23 birthday. The portion featuring Bryant is already done — and it has garnered mixed reactions. "For the most part, I've gotten a pretty positive reaction over it," Zermeño said. "You know, a lot of Laker fans are also Dodger fans, so I think that overlap is pretty consistent throughout L.A. But yeah, man, you're always going to have some haters. I think a lot of it is more like playful taunting. ... Read more: North Hollywood mural lauds Dodgers' Kiké Hernández 'for standing up for what is right' "A couple of people driving by — I think they're just trying to be funny, making a joke, like yelling 'He didn't play for the Dodgers!' or like, 'He was a Laker!' And then some people are just curious why I made that change. I think the people that are curious are older, some of the older crowd that, I guess, doesn't understand why I would switch it, you know?" Tsiboukas said he has seen a lot of online discussion about it, including on the popular kobemural Instagram page. "Maybe 70% love it, and 30% are like, 'That looks like a Clipper jersey,'" Tsiboukas said. "It's causing a lot of friction back and forth, but it's good topic. It's raising awareness. It's keeping Kobe's legacy alive." Zermeño said he doesn't mind the discourse over his artwork. 'It just, it sparks that conversation," he said. "So regardless of whether people like it or not, I think it kind of breaks the ice for people to come up and ask questions and learn more about why we created it, and the process of putting it together. ... 'It's art, you know, and art's meant to kind of create some type of conversation. And if we were to put him with a regular jersey, people would have been like, 'Oh, that's cool, but it's been done X amount of times,' you know? I've seen that photo in at least five different murals. So, yeah, I think switching it up definitely — I don't want to say it elevated the piece, but it definitely created more conversation than there would be if we just kept the original jersey.' Get the best, most interesting and strangest stories of the day from the L.A. sports scene and beyond from our newsletter The Sports Report. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.


USA Today
an hour ago
- USA Today
What chance does 76ers' VJ Edgecombe have at Rookie of the Year award?
The 2025-26 season is expected to be a bounce back one for the Philadelphia 76ers. The Sixers finished a dreadful 24-58 in 2024-25 as injuries decimated the roster and it produced the No. 3 pick in the draft. With that selection, the Sixers went with Baylor star VJ Edgecombe. The expectation is that he will step in and produce at a high level right away and give Philadelphia the athleticism and production it needs on both ends of the floor. With that being said, Edgecombe is entering a unique situation. While the Sixers had a tough season, they will be looking to contend for a championship in the 2025-26 season if their star trio of Joel Embiid, Paul George, and Tyrese Maxey is healthy. The Sixers will be looking to those three to guide them to a championship. Therefore, while Edgecombe will be a part of the rotation, he isn't going to be a huge part of the game plan. ESPN projected the 2026 Rookie of the Year winner will be Cooper Flagg who went No. 1 overall to the Dallas Mavericks. However, guys like Edgecombe, and others like Utah Jazz forward Ace Bailey and San Antonio Spurs guard Dylan Harper will certainly have a chance at winning the award. It will depend on numbers, though, and Edgecombe is less likely to put up big numbers in his situation in Philadelphia compared to a guy like Bailey, for example, who will have that chance in Utah. Either way, the Sixers expect Edgecombe to step in and give them some production to help turn things around. Obviously, this roster is better than 24-58 and the Sixers will be relying on being both healthy and the additions they made to get back on the path of contention.