OFFENSIVE ROLE & IMPACT
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Jones functions as Radford's lead initiator, operating at a 29.2% usage rate across 29 games and averaging 17.2 points and 3.5 assists per game. His 89th-percentile Assist% (21.9%) signals genuine playmaking volume for a combo guard, and his ability to draw fouls at a 40.1 FTR adds a consistent secondary scoring mechanism. The concern is that a 101.9 raw ORtg and 17.2% turnover rate (42nd percentile — below average ball security) cap how efficiently that usage translates into team value.
SHOT PROFILE & PLAYMAKING
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Jones's shooting profile is uneven: his 3P% of 30.1% on 133 attempts sits at the 27th percentile (below average), and his 2P% of 45.5% ranks at just the 29th percentile, combining for an eFG% of 45.4% at the 25th percentile — right at the threshold of poor. The saving grace is at the line, where his 81.7% FT% (81st percentile) on 169 attempts demonstrates both shooting touch and the ability to manufacture points through contact. Until his shooting from the field improves, his TS% of 51.87% will remain a limiting factor against higher-level defenses.
DEFENSIVE CONTRIBUTION
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The defensive metrics are the most significant red flag in Jones's profile: his Adj DRtg of 116.532 ranks at the 19th percentile against D1 competition, indicating he is a net negative on that end. His Stl% sits at the 27th percentile and his DReb% at the 41st percentile, confirming that the defensive struggles are not isolated to one area. At 6-3 with a 50th-percentile Blk%, he profiles as a perimeter-only defender who has yet to show he can hold up at a high level.
ADVANCED METRICS
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Jones's BPM of -3.91 breaks down into an OBPM of -1.40 and a DBPM of -2.52, meaning the model sees him as a below-average contributor on both ends, with his defensive drag slightly outpacing his offensive drag — a troubling split for a high-usage guard. His PORPAG of 1.82 (a per-40 production metric benchmarked against replacement level) is a relative bright spot, suggesting his raw scoring output clears a replacement threshold even if team-level impact lags. RAPM of -4.20 (Below Average) and an ORAPM in the 16th percentile further reinforce that his volume stats overstate his actual positive contribution to winning.
CAREER PROGRESSION
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Jones transferred from Clemson after a freshman season in which he posted a 21.0% usage rate, a 98.8 ORtg, and a PORPAG of just 0.54741 — a limited role that offered little projection surface. Moving to Radford and the Big South, his usage jumped 8.2 percentage points, his ORtg climbed to 101.9, and his PORPAG more than tripled to 1.82077, showing clear growth in offensive integration and scoring production within a larger role. The trajectory is encouraging as a sophomore, but the efficiency floor and defensive metrics indicate the jump in responsibility has outpaced the jump in effectiveness.
SCHEDULE CONTEXT
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Opponents' adjusted offensive rating of 106.4 classifies as above-average relative to the D1 mean of ~109, meaning Jones's defensive numbers were tested against offenses slightly better than the D1 average, lending modest credibility to his defensive struggles. Opponents' adjusted defensive rating of 112.1 falls in the below-average tier (111–114), indicating Jones faced weaker-than-average defenses, which should have inflated his offensive counting stats and makes his below-average efficiency metrics more concerning, not less.
YEAR-OVER-YEAR TRAJECTORY
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ORtg improved from 98.8 (Clemson, 2025) to 101.9 (Radford, 2026) — improving, though still below average by D1 standards. USG% climbed from 21.0% to 29.2% — improving sharply, reflecting a primary-option role. TS% is not available for the prior season, so trend cannot be assessed; current TS% of 51.87% is below average for a guard at this usage level. BPM moved from a prior PORPAG of 0.54741 (very limited contribution) to a current BPM of -3.91 — the increased role has not yet produced positive overall impact. Overall verdict: expanded role, modest efficiency gains, not yet translating to winning contribution.
PORTAL VALUE
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Among portal combo guards, pairing a 29.2% usage rate with an 89th-percentile Assist% (21.9%) is genuinely uncommon — most guards at this usage level are score-first and log Ast% below 15%. However, the combination of a 25th-percentile eFG% (45.4%) and a 19th-percentile Adj DRtg (116.532) makes Jones a difficult fit for programs expecting two-way returns on a high-usage guard, limiting genuine interest to programs that can absorb the defensive liability.
ELIGIBILITY
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Has 2 years of eligibility remaining after this season.
HISTORICAL COMPS
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• Mekhi Mason (2024, Rice) — nearly identical PORPAG (1.78) and usage (27.4%) with a similarly negative BPM (-1.9), a comp who stayed at the mid-major level
• Brayon Freeman (2025, Bethune Cookman) — closest match in usage (29.5%) and PORPAG (1.96) with a BPM of -3.69, reinforcing the high-volume/low-efficiency archetype
• Ezra Manjon (2022, UC Davis) — 28.6% usage and PORPAG of 1.96 with a BPM of -2.21, a guard who produced counting stats without translating to positive team-level impact
BOTTOM LINE
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Del Jones is a legitimate mid-major scoring option who has made a meaningful developmental leap from his freshman role at Clemson, but his below-average efficiency from the field, negative RAPM, and 19th-percentile adjusted defensive rating present real barriers to mid-major starting success, let alone high-major consideration. The playmaking rate (89th percentile Ast%) and free-throw volume are genuine tools that could be unlocked in the right system, but they need to be paired with shooting and defensive improvements to raise his ceiling. As a portal asset, he fits best in a mid-major or low-major program willing to build around a high-usage initiator and absorb the defensive cost.