Rosters for the 2024/25 season are far from being set, but it’s never too early to try to predict some of next season’s happenings. Top draft picks who immediately became stars like Paolo Banchero and Victor Wembanyama come to mind when thinking about players who are primed for breakouts, but several more in a tier below will become mainstays in rotations who weren’t before.
Think players like Sam Hauser of the Celtics. Hauser gradually crept up Boston’s rotation over the past three years, eventually becoming a part of the title core and earning himself an extension. Likewise, Miles McBride was a second-round pick who showed promise, but eventually broke out after the ’23/24 deadline for New York. Isaiah Joe of the Thunder is another example, while Vince Williams of the Grizzlies and Simone Fontecchio of the Pistons broke onto the scene this year.
With that said, here are four players I think could “break out” next season in the sense that they go from a fringe rotation piece to a mainstay for a team.
Day’Ron Sharpe
This might be cheating a bit, since Sharpe appeared in 61 games last season and averaged 6.8 points and 6.4 rebounds. However, he managed to record those numbers in just 15.1 minutes, improving across the board for the Nets. I expect Sharpe to play more this season even though he’s still behind Nic Claxton in the rotation.
For starters, the Nets pivoted toward a rebuild this offseason after trading away Mikal Bridges. With Bridges gone and players like Cameron Johnson, Dorian Finney-Smith, Bojan Bogdanovic and Dennis Schroder set up to be potential trade pieces, there should be more minutes to go around at some point in the season, at least in theory. That would put Sharpe, the No. 29 overall pick in 2021, in prime position to play more and continue to show off his improvement.
Sharpe is set to be a restricted free agent next offseason and, if he manages to continue to show linear growth, I wouldn’t be surprised to see him draw a bevy of suitors. If the Nets didn’t want to pay Sharpe after handing a contract to Claxton this offseason, Sharpe could draw interest at the deadline for a playoff team needing size or another young team looking for a mainstay.
Given his contract status, youth (turns 23 this season) and team positioning, Sharpe seems like a solid candidate to “break out” for next season.
Max Christie
The Lakers have had a quiet offseason, with their only external additions being 2024 draftees Dalton Knecht and Bronny James. One move that flew under the radar was the multi-year extension of Christie, a player who only played 14.1 minutes last season. While the 2022 No. 35 pick saw his responsibilities increase last season from his rookie year, he holds career averages of 3.8 points.
Clearly, the Lakers liked what they saw from the 21-year-old Christie, as they rewarded him with a $32MM extension. While he hasn’t played a ton at the NBA level, he holds solid upside as a three-and-D prospect. It was somewhat surprising, for my money, that a team with cap space didn’t try to price Christie out of the Lakers’ range.
The Lakers getting Christie back could be a huge win for a team that needs three-and-D players in their rotation. Given that the Lakers might still make a trade before the year and players ahead of him last year either fell out of favor or simply left in free agency, Christie seems like a lock for more minutes and production next season. He could play a key role for the Lakers in the final couple years of his contract if things play right.
Craig Porter Jr./Ricky Council IV
While Porter and Council are distinctly different players, both could improve and continue to work their way into playoff contenders in the Eastern Conference, hence being grouped together here.
Porter played more on a two-way contract last season before being promoted to a standard deal. He’s a small guard but in college and in the pros, has played well above his size. He works well as a secondary ball-handler and a solid defensive guard. While the Cavaliers are likely to fill out their remaining three roster pieces with players who could overtake Porter in the guard room, I could see him winning the ninth or 10th spot in the rotation and potentially being their top backup lead guard.
Council didn’t play as much for the Sixers until the end of the season, but his high efficiency impressed the organization and they rewarded him with a standard contract.
While the team eventually re-signed Tyrese Maxey, Kelly Oubre, Kyle Lowry and Kenyon Martin, I find it telling that the Council was just one of two players from last year’s roster who stayed on the roster throughout the entire offseason. His contract for next season is non-guaranteed, so they easily could have waived him if they felt someone else better fit his role. Martin and draft picks Jared McCain and Adem Bona might not play much next season, which has Council and Eric Gordon looking like the team’s only true bench wings off the bench.
While it’s not a lock Porter or Council make an impact on the rotation this year — let alone make it through their contracts being guaranteed at the leaguewide date in 2025 — their organizations have shown they value each respective player. To me, Porter and Council are some of the more likely candidates to follow Hauser’s footsteps of developing for a couple seasons before breaking into a rotation.