

Draymond is really the de facto point guard on that team anyway, right? I also chose that season because I couldn’t find any other star “point guard” of recent vintage who turned in a similar-age college season with such a low A:TO ratio. Junior-year Steph was about six months older than sophomore-year Ivey, but I chose that season specifically because Steph played his first two college seasons next to a good point guard who subsequently graduated, which resulted in Steph moving to a purely on-ball role.

Player A is Jaden Ivey this year, while player B is Steph Curry as a junior at Davidson. Player B: 1.5 assist-to-turnover ratio, 13.5 TO%.Player A: 1.2 assist-to-turnover ratio, 14.8 TO%.

Here is a comparison of similar-age college seasons: As Detroit Pistons fans look for the perfect player to slot alongside Cade Cunningham, the stakes feel extremely high. That’s often true of college basketball stars, and doubly true for those players who wow with elite athleticism. Jaden Ivey is a contentious topic among college basketball watchers. Every writer was given access to game footage and asked to deliver their takeaways about the player in whatever manner they saw fit.
#Assist to turnover ratio series
This is a part of our NBA Draft Prospect Review series where we evaluate the top players of the 2022 NBA Draft by reviewing every shot, assist, turnover, steal and rebound during their most recent collegiate season.
