
Strengths...
* Spot-up Shooting - Excellent (84th percentile)
* Playmaking (scoring and assisting) - Very Good (76th percentile)
* Jump Shots - Very Good (79th percentile)
* Catch and Shoot - Excellent (93rd percentile)
* Mid-range Jumpers - Very Good (73rd percentile)
* 3pt Jumpers - Very Good (82nd percentile)
Weaknesses...
* Transition Scoring - Good (55th percentile)
* Transition Playmaking - Average (48th percentile)
* PnR Ball Handler - Average (38th percentile)
* PnR Playmaking - Average (45th percentile)
* Short Jumpshots - Below Average (30th percentile)
Other notes... doesn't drive to the right well, prefers to play off the right wing and score to his left. Is a good PnR ball handler passing to the roll man but didn't get the assist when passing to a spot up shooter (so either too slow in getting it over or just a poor spot up shooter receiving the pass).
His 1.7 A:TO works just fine as a back-up ball handler. We won't want him running the break - the ball needs to get into the hands of a larger ball handler (e.g. Green) and Hazz can play off as a spot-up shooter (he can also leak out early and get buckets). It's possible that he looks better as a PnR ball handler in the half court with better players around him (e.g. he never had a roll man with a 7 foot wingspan before). UCI ran very little PnR because their squad had poor roll men (20's and 30's percentile)... while at Arizona last season, Chase Jeter was Excellent in the 89th percentile and Ira Lee was Very Good in the 72nd percentile. Nnaji projects as an excellent PnR Roll Man as well. It's possible that the better team allows Hazz to do more as a ball handler.
Most of this is not revelatory - we've heard he's a good three point shooter and you know by his size that he's not going to score at the rim. But the deeper dive into his performance stats is interesting and gives us a clearer (and more confident) picture of what he brings to Arizona.