Wisconsin Badgers 2022 NBA Summer League Recap

Five former Badgers showcased their talents in the NBA summer league; let’s see how they fared:

The University of Wisconsin has only two players signed to guaranteed NBA contracts entering the 2022 season, Frank Kaminsky and lottery pick Johnny Davis, who was the first player selected during the Greg Gard era.

However, this summer, former Badgers Vitto Brown, Nate Reuvers, Micah Potter, and Aleem Ford also had a chance to showcase their talents in front of NBA scouting personnel in Las Vegas.

Summer league offers a little something for everyone who partakes. For rookies, it’s their first chance to get a taste of the next level. For other young players, it’s an opportunity to show their growth from one year to the next. For journeymen that have scratched and clawed their way to be in Las Vegas, it’s a last-ditch effort to make the leap from overseas to the association.

With summer league wrapping up last week, BadgersWire examines how all five former Wisconsin Badgers standouts played in Las Vegas:

These three former Badgers will play in NBA Summer League

A look at the Badgers playing in NBA Summer League next week

NBA Summer League marks a chance for players to make a roster, get experience at the next level, and impress teams from around the league.

For three former Wisconsin players in the professional ranks, Las Vegas will provide a platform to accomplish different goals. Whether it be a rookie looking to gain valuable experience or a veteran trying to make a roster, Badgers will be on the floor at the 2022 NBA Summer League.

The main event begins on July 7 and runs through July 17 at the Thomas and Mack Center, the home of UNLV. Here is a look at the three Badgers who will be participating:

Vitto Brown makes his Lakers NBA Summer League debut

Vitto Brown makes his 2022 NBA Summer League debut

One of three former Badgers participating in 2022 NBA Summer League, Vitto Brown suited up for the Los Angeles Lakers in Saturday afternoon’s California Classic opener.

The four-team tournament acts as a precursor to the Las Vegas main event set to take place next week.

Brown and the Lakers are off to a good summer start, as they defeated the Miami Heat 100-66 to get things underway. The former Badger was one of four Laker players in double-figures, as he finished with 11 points on 5-6 shooting as well as connecting on his lone three-point attempt.

Brown and the Lakers will take on the Golden State Warriors on Sunday. Fans can catch the action on NBA TV with tipoff set for 6:30 PM CT.

Lakers place Vitto Brown onto summer league roster

Vitto Brown, a former University of Wisconsin forward, will join the Lakers for summer league play.

The Los Angeles Lakers entered draft day on Thursday without a pick, but they ended it with a slew of players added to their roster.

After nabbing the 35th pick from the Orlando Magic, L.A. used it to select Michigan State University guard Max Christie.

Afterward, Cole Swider, Fabian White Jr., Shareef O’Neal and Scotty Pippen Jr. joined the Lakers after not being taken in the 2022 NBA draft.

But they weren’t the only ones who were scooped up by the Purple and Gold.

Vitto Brown, who played his college ball for the University of Wisconsin, will play for the Lakers’ summer league entry next month.

Brown wrapped up his college career a while ago. After his senior season with the Badgers in 2017, he entered the G League, spending three years there with four teams.

He spent the last two years playing overseas in France and Spain.

Brown is listed at 6 feet, 8 inches and 235 pounds. While in the G League, he showed some promise as a solid 3-point shooter.

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A former Badger to play on Los Angeles Lakers’ NBA Summer League roster

The former Badger forward will head back to Summer League

With the conclusion of the 2022 NBA draft on Thursday night, Summer League roster news has started to trickle out.

A former Badger and someone who has been at Las Vegas NBA Summer League in the past will once again join a roster. Vitto Brown, who spent 2013-17 at Wisconsin, will join the Los Angeles Lakers’ Summer League squad. The news was first reported by Michael Sotto of HoopsHype.

Brown spent the past season with Real Betis in Spain’s ACB League, one of the top leagues in overseas basketball. The former Badger averaged 11 points and just over 4 rebounds per game. He participated in the 2021 NBA Summer League, joining the Phoenix Suns.

Former Badgers F attends Utah Jazz free agent minicamp

A former Badgers forward earns a free agent mini-camp invite with the Utah Jazz:

The Utah Jazz held a two-day, 20-player free agent mini-camp earlier this week, a workout that included plenty of familiar faces.

Among the players in attendance was former Badgers forward Vitto Brown, according to Eric Walden of The Salt Lake Tribune.

After graduating from Wisconsin back in 2017, the Ohio native has played in the NBA G League for the Wisconsin Herd, Agua Caliente Clippers, Maine Red Claws, Rethymno Cretan Kings, and the Erie BayHawks.

More recently, Brown has played professionally overseas for Le Mans in France, and Coosur Real Betis in Spain. 

This past season, the former Badgers standout averaged 11.0 points and 4.3 rebounds on 38.1% shooting from beyond the arc for Coosur Real Betis.

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Former Wisconsin Badger F Vitto Brown to join the Suns at NBA Summer League

The former Badger is headed to the Las Vegas NBA Summer League

Not only will Wisconsin Badger rookies be participating in NBA Summer League, but a professional basketball veteran will also be heading to Las Vegas. Former Badger forward Vitto Brown will join the Phoenix Suns for 2021 NBA Summer League.

Brown played at Wisconsin from 2013-2017, and was part of two Final Four teams during his time in Madison. In 31 games with French League squad Le Mans, the former Badger averaged 10 points and over 5 rebounds in 31 games played. Brown also shot over 40% from three during this past season, an area where he has greatly improved since leaving Wisconsin.

Brown is joined by D’Mitrik Trice (Milwaukee Bucks) and Micah Potter (Miami Heat) as former Badger in NBA Summer League.

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In the midst of a global pandemic, the TBT bubble was a needed success story

In the midst of a pandemic, the TBT created a safe environment

[lawrence-newsletter]After thousands of COVID-19 tests, a million dollar three pointer, and hundreds of pros going head-to-head, The Basketball Tournament (TBT) came to a successful end last night. TBT safely instituted a rampant testing plan inside of a bubble in Columbus, Ohio that brought basketball back to America from July 4 to July 14. The state of Wisconsin was well-represented in the finals as Fond Du Lac native and former Marquette Golden Eagle Travis Diener hit the million dollar shot (thank you Elam Ending) to give his Golden Eagles Marquette alumni squad their first ever TBT victory.

The Badgers also had their imprint on basketball’s return to the United States. Former Wisconsin standouts Vitto Brown, Kahlil Iverson, and Trevon Hughes were all part of Big X, a Big Ten alumni squad, and Ethan Happ was a member of Team Hines in this year’s tournament. Big X won their initial game before falling to Dayton alumni squad Red Scare, while Team Hines went down in a first round thriller to eventual runner up Sideline Cancer.

For professional basketball players, this was an experience they will never forget. Playing inside of a successful bubble was a unique challenge that Brown, who currently plays in the NBA G-League, took on with hundreds of other pros. The feeling of getting out there and hooping still gave these athletes the same thrill that it always does, despite the strange circumstances.

“It felt great to play again. Although the result was not what we wanted, I know myself and everyone else was happy to be a part of the first major basketball in America since the pandemic,” Brown told BadgersWire. “It’s always cool getting back with my fellow Badgers Khalil [Iverson] and Tre Hughes. I knew everyone on [Big X] either from playing with or against them in the past so we enjoyed our time on and off the court.”

Playing inside of a bubble was a new experiment in unprecedented times. The NBA is currently attempting to do the same in Orlando as most players have already entered their bubble at Disney World. As the last ten days showed, the world’s premier basketball league should look to TBT for guidance. During TBT, inside America’s first sports bubble, the protocol passed safety tests with flying colors. Testing began when players were at home, and then continued during their isolation period when they arrived to the hotel in Columbus. Any positive test at any point resulted in the disqualification of teams, which happened to multiple squads before the tournament began and on day one of TBT. By the time the players inside of the bubble reached day 5 of their quarantine period, there were zero positive COVID-19 tests in Columbus.

So what was all of this like from the player’s perspective? “The experience in the bubble was extremely unique,” Brown told BadgersWire. “Upon arrival we had to get tested immediately (after passing 2 tests at home prior to arrival). We had to quarantine in our rooms until our results came back negative. Any positive test at the hotel/bubble resulted in the disqualification of your whole team. Food would be at designated pick up spots during specific times slots. You could order delivery but you had to go down and pick it up from the lobby and bring it back to your room. Once tests were passed you were allowed to interact with your team only, in your designated team suite.”

The former Badger and Big X standout echoed statements from around the basketball world that TBT had done a fantastic job of keeping athletes safe and healthy while giving them a chance to hoop. “TBT did an excellent job in terms of safety, protocols, organization, etc. Especially for the first time. If this situation were to happen again, they’d no doubt have a perfect system next time.”

TBT successfully created a safe environment while bringing sports fans ten days of joy that has been severely lacking without live athletics. Hopefully aspects of the tournament model can be used as a game plan for success as other leagues begin to attempt their own returns.