Jaylen Nowell put up a lot of tantalizing numbers when he played for the Timberwolves' G-League affiliate at Iowa a season ago.
Nowell, a second-round pick from 2019, averaged 21 points, but the number that stuck out most was 44% — that's what he shot from three-point range.
If Nowell could translate that efficiency to the NBA level, he'd likely find himself in the rotation on a regular basis.
Nowell has played his first significant minutes of the season over the past three games. He had 12 points in 16 minutes against Golden State, 10 in 23 minutes against Philadelphia and a career-high 13 in 19 minutes vs. Cleveland.
"Playing with other players who I haven't really played with consistently, it's taken a little bit of time to read them and for them to read me as well," Nowell said. "We're still in that process of learning each other consistently, so that's definitely something that's been challenging, but we're up for that challenge."
In his limited time at the NBA level, Nowell has shot just 8-for-45 from three-point range, and that, he said, is partly a product of growing accustomed to playing with different players when he's on the floor.
"It's pretty challenging, just because I don't know when I'm going to get it, don't know certain guys' tendencies, so that's certainly challenging," Nowell said. "But the more reps we will get, the more I'll be able to read off guys. It's actually been happening faster than I thought it would."
Even though he's not shooting at the clip he was at Iowa, Nowell has had an uptick in production. He shot just 36% overall and 12% from three-point range in 15 games last season. Through fives this season he was at 48% overall, 31% on three-pointers.