

If Las Vegas is the main event of the NBA's summer, then Utah's and Sacramento's pocket-sized summer league exhibitions are the appealing open acts.
Eight teams are in action before the Las Vegas Summer League starts Friday. Three of the top five picks highlight the Utah and Sacramento leagues, giving fans a glimpse of elite prospects from this June's draft class. As always, there have been both rookie jitters and jubilation.
A rundown of the highlights (and lowlights) of the first two days:
"I had a feeling they were going to play my 3 a little bit more," Jackson said. "I got a couple to fall, but I knew it would be harder to get them off."
Jackson finished 4-for-11 from the field (2-of-4 from 3) with 10 points and eight rebounds against Utah Tuesday. Jackson might be classified as a big man, but is a committed perimeter player -- and far more than just a stand-in-the-corner brand of stretch-big. He's flaring off screens and collecting dribble-handoffs.
But on Tuesday, Jackson was also more than happy to bang inside, brandish some fancy footwork, and work off the dribble against tight close-outs. A lanky presence down low on the other end, Jackson has mobility and reasonably good instincts. He unleashed a nasty block in the closing minutes and does appear capable of cultivating a mastery of NBA big-man defense.
Yet the total performance wasn't nearly the disaster the line might suggest. Young did a nice job facilitating against the Spurs' aggressive pressure.
"I'm getting a lot of face guards, a lot of [being] picked up full court, so I'm just trying to make the right play, make the right pass," Young said after the game.
Young is deeply enamored with his floater -- which he proved at Oklahoma can be effective in spots -- but at present in Salt Lake City, it's rendering him an inefficient scorer. He missed his first six shots, draining his first bucket just before halftime -- a straight-away 3-pointer.
Young enjoyed some nice moments in the second half. When he challenges the defense by changing speeds to get to the rim with the intention of finishing, he's an effective driver.
Likewise, the Spurs sat their first-round draft pick, Lonnie Walker IV on their only back-to-back of the summer league season. And like Allen, Walker struggled from the field in his debut, scoring seven points on 3-for-16 shooting.
-- Kevin Arnovitz
But on Tuesday, the Golden State Warriors' athletes bothered Bagley as he missed 13 of 16 shots. Tuesday night was a forgettable night for all the Kings, but especially those not named Justin Jackson (20 points, 7-of-11 field goals) or Frank Mason (16 points, 5-of-10 field goals). Outside of those two, the Kings combined to shoot only 7-of-48 from the field (14.1 percent).
A silver lining for the Kings is that 2017 first-round pick Harry Giles III played in both games after missing all of his rookie season due to knee rehabilitation.
LeBron James and the Los Angeles Lakers could use some more perimeter shooting on their revamped roster. Perhaps it can come from rookie sharpshooter Svi Mykhailiuk, who has made 5-of-14 3-pointers (35.7 percent) in the first two games. Mykhailiuk was the 47th pick in the 2018 NBA draft, so he's playing for a roster spot in Los Angeles.
Power forward Moritz Wagner, selected 25th overall by the Lakers last month, is only 3-of-12 (25 percent) from 3 through two summer games.
Bell shook off a 2-of-8 shooting performance Monday against Miami by going 4-of-5 from the field Tuesday against Sacramento. The defensive side is still where Bell shines, as he has five steals and four blocks through two summer games.
Center Bam Adebayo has been an elite rebounder so far, averaging 12 rebounds in the first two games. Adebayo has been turnover prone, however, giving up the ball nine times already.
-- Marc J. Spearsbr/]