Kevin Arnovitz of TrueHoop runs down the eight biggest stories of summer league. He discusses Blake Griffin and Anthony Randolph’s star potential, how the economic crisis is affecting European basketball as well as the NBA, how free agency (specifically the Lamar Odom, Carlos Boozer and Allen Iverson situations) had executives gossiping like housewives, the death of the back-to-the-basket game and how dysfunctional organizational structure breeds dysfunctional franchises.

He also describes out the deep 2009 point guard class fared this summer.

The Point Guard Class
Several point guards who came to Las Vegas made strong impressions. Jonny Flynn, despite all the turmoil surrounding Ricky Rubio, stood out. Though many in Vegas questioned the wisdom of playing Tyreke Evans at point guard long-term, few doubted that his strength, size, and capacity to get to the rim would make him a scoring machine. Observers had reserved praise for Brandon Jennings and Stephen Curry, the former for his unrefined shot, the latter for looking more like a gunner than a floor general. Some of the mid-first-rounders earned a lot of praise. Dallas’ Roddy Beaubois led Vegas point guards in oohs and aahs, zipping through the lane in traffic and filling it up from beyond the arc. Of all the point guards in Las Vegas last week, Darren Collison was among the most polished before going down with an ankle injury. After starting Summer League 1-for-15 from the field, Ty Lawson bounced back to turn in three dominant performances, averaging 23.7 points over that span. Lawson is the kind of point guard who needs to be surrounded by scorers to excel. He’ll have that in Denver.

It seems like Brandon Jennings is a divisive personality right now. I’ve read some scouting reports that said he played outstanding at summer league while other observers barely mention his name. He averaged 14.6 points, 8.2 assists, 3.6 steals and 4.2 turnovers. He only shot 38% from the field, but even though he has an “unrefined shot,” he made 9 of 21 (43%) three-point attempts. He’s lightning quick, so if he can get a little more consistent with his jumper and develop a Tony Parker floater in the lane, he’s going to be tough to stop.

How quickly he has to develop depends on whether or not the Bucks are able to keep Ramon Sessions. If Sessions signs elsewhere, Luke Ridnour may keep the starting job while Jennings learns in a reserve role. If Sessions stays, it would give the Bucks great depth at point guard and trade assets for the future. I think the Bucks will match an offer up to the mid-level for Sessions, but the way they’ve been dumping salary this summer, he should be a prime target for teams that have a need at point guard.