Sporting News NBA Rookie of the Year: Kon Knueppel wins over Cooper Flagg in talented class originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.
The 2025 NBA Draft class was hyped up as a strong one, and it certainly lived up to expectations in a major way. The top four rookies, who I would classify as Kon Knueppel, Cooper Flagg, VJ Edgecombe, and Dylan Harper, are all better than anyone from the 2024 draft.
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Harper and Edgecombe have put together excellent seasons in their own right, but the race for Rookie of the Year really comes down to the two former Duke teammates.
Flagg was supposed to be a generational pick. He lived up to his billing as the No. 1 selection, putting together a great season highlighted by some massive scoring and all-around outbursts down the stretch.
Knueppel ended up being a steal at No. 4 overall, with the thought that he could contribute immediately with his shooting on a Hornets team that certainly loves to let it fly.
And let it fly – he certainly did. Again and again and again.
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Knueppel was the first rookie to ever lead the league in 3-pointers made, while also shattering the record for most 3’s by a rookie with 273. The Hornets were one of the biggest surprises this season, vaulting into a top-five offense through that deadly 3-point attack.
Flagg is probably going to be the best player in this class when all is said and done. But I picked last year’s Sporting News NBA Rookie of the Year Zaccharie Risacher based on who had the best season instead of best long-term projection. I’m using that same logic this time around, and Knueppel was better than Flagg this year.
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Flagg did have some brilliant moments, and ended up averaging 29 points in the last month of the season. That stretch included a 51-point explosion against the Magic, followed by 45 against the Lakers. The consistency over the entire season simply wasn’t there, though. It took Flagg a long time to get adjusted to a very difficult role as the Mavericks‘ primary creator on a team that really wasn’t trying to win.
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While Flagg was at his best near the finish line, Knueppel slumped. Recency bias will hurt him with a lot of voters of the NBA’s award, who are not supposed to consider his disappearances in two Play-In Tournament games but will probably do so anyway.
Knueppel built up such a big lead in the early and middle portions of the season though that he still put up the better season over Flagg. Knueppel played a winning role for a playoff team. Flagg was the best player on one of the worst teams in the league.
|
Knueppel |
Stat (per game) |
Flagg |
|---|---|---|
|
81 |
Games |
70 |
|
18.5 |
Points |
21.0 |
|
5.3 |
Rebounds |
6.7 |
|
3.4 |
Assists |
4.5 |
|
0.7 |
Steals |
1.2 |
|
0.2 |
Blocks |
0.9 |
|
47.5% |
FG% |
46.8% |
|
42.5% |
3-point% |
29.5% |
|
60.1% |
Effective FG% |
49.8% |
Flagg did score more, but he did so much less efficiently. He was forced to take a lot of shots on a bad offense with weak guard play. His 3-point shooting took a nosedive from how he performed at Duke. He certainly didn’t have it easy, but he had a lot of opportunities to pile up stats.
Knueppel played a more important role for a Hornets team that won 18 more games, and he also played a lot more minutes. He was a key reason why the Hornets were able to improve by a stunning 25 wins from last season’s bottom-feeders.
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Efficiency is where Knueppel wins this award. Forget rookies, he was one of the best shooters in the league bar none. He finished ninth in the NBA in 3-point percentage and was also deadly from midrange and on drives.
While Flagg had a fairly average shooting season for a Rookie of the Year winner, Knueppel was in a league of his own, putting together a historically efficient debut.
