Walter Clayton Jr. Scouting Report and NBA Comp


Walter Clayton, The star of the NCAA Tournament to this point, is deservedly receiving more and more draft buzz. He’s been a superstar shotmaker at the college level for years now dating back to his time at Iona. Can Clayton’s tough shotmaking, acrobatic style translate to the NBA?

  • Team: Florida
  • Height: 6’3
  • Weight: 195
  • Wingspan: 6’4
  • Age: 22.9 (March 6, 2003)

Walter Clayton Jr. — Guard, Florida (22.9 years old)

NBA Comparison: Coby White, Terry Rozier

Clayton’s special shotmaking talent and athletic tools could see him developing into low-end star in the mold of another stout, jittery shotmaker like White. Even if he can’t develop into a star, Clayton should be talented 

Strengths

  • Nuclear shotmaker with years of elite shooting on his resume, incredible tough/off-balance shotmaker with unlimited range
  • Smart off-ball mover, finds pockets of space to shoot and drive off the catch
  • Tight handle with both hands, splits ball screens and controls against pressure
  • Passes with both hands with solid vision to find rollers and kickouts
  • Thick, explosive point of attack defender, blows through and evades screens, great defending guards
  • Excellent strength and power, explosive leaper
  • Has the vertical bounce and instincts to develop into a passable off-ball defender

Weaknesses

  • Relies heavily on tough shotmaking on the ball, can settle for difficult attempts 
  • Bursty/quick enough to beat switches, but can struggle to separate without a screen against athletic defenders
  • Questionable decision maker on the ball, turns down easy passes/shots 
  • Inconsistent off-ball defensive effort, loses engagement/fails to tag and rotate low
  • Struggles to chase through off-ball screens

Offensive role: On-Ball Scorer/Bench Creator

Defensive role: Point of Attack Defender

2025 NBA Draft Projection: Round 1, Pick 20-25

Clayton must scale down at the NBA level and prove he can sharpen his decision making and defensive effort playing next to other stars. His long history of elite shooting and great athletic tools give him quite a bit of NBA upside and a solid rotation floor. 

 



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