Hunter Sallis Scouting Deepdive
After a shaky start to his senior campaign, Hunter Sallis has once again emerged as one of the most intriguing two-way guard prospects in the 2025 NBA Draft class.
The 2010s saw the age of the one-and-done ushered in by the most influential programs in all of college basketball. High flying freshman bred a kind of excitement into fanbases that they hadn’t previously experienced. Fans were able to follow a player’s journey from high school to the NBA in less than a year, making for an expedited and easily digestible process that rested softly on the palate of less-than-knowledgeable audiences. That’s why, despite one-and-done rosters resulting in very few national championships, people seemingly couldn’t get enough of the spectacle. Fast forward to today and many people still work under the assumption that prospects must be underclassmen if they want to find significant success in the NBA. That assumption simply isn’t based in reality, and while I will concede that youth is a legitimate indicator of long-term success, I remain steadfast in my belief that several other factors supersede age in order of importance when evaluating a prospect. To prove this theory true, I want to break down the game of Wake Forest senior Hunter Sallis, a player who, despite his upperclassmen status, may be selected early in the 2025 NBA Draft.
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