But for 55 minutes of play last year in Denver, Sonny Weems would be the Raptors best rookie wing player in recent memory. And Weems play of late should have him labeled as one the NBA’s up and coming young players.
Weems came into this season as an unknown former college senior “project” player. Buried deep on the bench behind:
- The Raptors rookie, DeMar DeRozan;
- The Raptors free agent acquisition, Hedo Turkoglu;
- The fifth year veteran, Antone Wright;
- The Bryan Colangelo favorite, Marco Belinelli; and even,
- Jarrett Jack, who was expected to soak up minutes at both guard positions.
It took a while before Sonny Weems even saw “garbage time”.
But once Sonny Weems broke into the rotation, it became increasingly difficult to keep him nailed to the bench.
It has been quite some time since the Raptors have had a young wing player with the size, speed, composure, and finishing ability of Sonny Weems.
In his 17 games as starter this season, Weems has averaged 28.4 minutes and:
- provided 11.7 points per game;
- shot 55.2 percent from the field;
- made 77 percent of his free throws;
- collected 4.2 rebounds per game;
- passed for an average 2.0 assists; and,
- picked up 0.9 steals and 0.3 blocks per game.
Those are impressive statistics for a player in his first real season in the league. At least from a Raptors perspective.
And Weems statistics as a starter do make him comparable to Terrence Williams or James Harden.
Sonny Weems has not looked like the typical rookie “deer-in-the-headlights” and there is no questioning his effort.
This is not to say Weems’ play doesn’t have some holes in it. He still plays defense like a rookie at times, but he plays it with energy and enthusiasm.
It is not unusual to see Weems finishing at the basket and then being the first Raptors player at the other end of the court defending the fast break.
“…as a physical specimen, Sonny Weems tested out superior to his younger competition in many areas.”
“First, Sonny Weems is fast. At the NBA draft camp testing, Weems completed the 3/4 court sprint in under three seconds, a full 10 percent faster than DeRozan.”
And not just faster than DeRozan, Sonny Weems had the fastest 3/4 court sprint of any guard in the last five years recorded in NBA draft camp testing. per Draftexpress.com
Weems was tested faster than Chris Paul by a quarter of a second and Rodney Stuckey by 0.15 of a second. In fact, Draftexpress records no guard except Sonny Weems has completed the 3/4 court sprint test in under three seconds in recent years.
Just like height, you cannot teach speed.
Sonny Weems got his chance to start on a regular basis late in the season. Mostly because his friend DeMar was causing real problems defensively and the team was losing.
At 23 years-old, Sonny Weems has the “maturity” advantage over his younger competitor for minutes. But as often seems to be forgotten, 23 is not old. There is still a lot of development to look forward to in Sonny Weems game.
One has to wonder just how much better Weems statistics this year could have been if he had been starting instead of DeRozan? But quite literally, no one saw this coming.



One encouraging thing for me about Sonny is that his problem last year was apparently his shooting. Shooting can be learnt, and it appears Sonny has learned it. To me, that suggests he is legit.
Any rook shooting 50% is impressive.
Shows a lot of confidence and poise.
Sonny is keeper, no doubt. I am really happy to see him elevating his game. Sonny, Amir and DeRozan might be the core of this team in the near future — provided Hedo, Jose and (possibly) Andrea are traded somehow, somewhere.
I believe it’s a time for the Young Gunz. Few more young athletic players and respectable coach is all we need – and a lot of patience.
Sonny plays without fear. He makes mistakes but recovers fast. He could become the best young pick-up by the Raps in a long time – but its still early.
Amir shows great games and invisible ones – but he’s just 23 too. Potential… He’s got to get stronger in the off season.
DeRozan is all about potential – if the switch comes on, the kid will be great. But we still don’t know for sure if the Raps have Gerald Green or Iguodala.
For me – Hedo is now all about the off season. If he plays for his national team again and shows up to the Raps camp unable to go – BUST. But there is still hope Hedo grows up and focuses on his NBA career.
Jose is a puzzle wrapped in an enigma. Last year he was hurt but put up career best offensive numbers. This year he was lost???? Can he find his game again? It is hard to have hope – but….
Andrea is going to be one of the better big men in the NBA – patience required.
Jay Triano over-matched and took a long time to realize his blunders – so what does one expect from a rookie anyway? Almost everyone would have more confidence in a veteran coach – not sure that’s going to happen.
Random thoughts at the end of a random season…..