

Amari Allen
Amari Allen is a SF from Alabama, sitting in the #17–#29 band on public boards. His best NBA-level skill is switchable 1-3 defender; the swing question is limited off-the-dribble creation. For Detroit at #21: Wing depth swing — fits the connective-defender archetype.
Combine intel pending. Measurements, workout reports, and team interviews land here as they break.
Per-36 Stats
Kentucky · 28.2 MPG · static profile seed
Best NBA comp for Amari Allen?
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- Cade3/5
- Ausar2/5
- Duren3/5
- Grit4/5
Wing depth swing — fits the connective-defender archetype.
Allen is the wing depth swing in a class light on real two-way 3s. Competes for backup minutes behind Ausar Thompson and Ron Holland with a connective skill set that survives next to Cade or any future shot-creator the front office adds.
The Report
Allen is the kind of two-way wing every team in the late first wishes they had. He's at 11/7/3 inside Nate Oats' fast-paced Alabama offense, but the box score doesn't capture what he is: a 6'5" / 204 lb / 6'8" wingspan connective wing who actually defends, makes the right read out of the short roll, and has shooting indicators (34.1% from three, 73.8% FT) that point in the right direction.
The defense is the foundation. He's strong enough to take on bigger wings, quick enough to stay in front of guards, and his hands plus instincts give him real disruption — Cyro Asseo's 'stronger Vince Williams Jr.' framing fits because the role projection is the same: switchable wing defender who connects the offense without dominating the ball. Ben Pfeifer's tape pulls focus on the help-side rotations and the closeouts: he's already a smart team defender, not just a tools-first prospect.
Offensively the game is connective. He's a willing passer (3.1 APG with low turnovers), a real cutter inside Alabama's drive-and-kick offense, and the spot-up three is climbing. The off-the-dribble game is limited — he's not breaking down set defenders — but he doesn't need to be. He attacks closeouts, gets to the rim in straight lines, and finishes through contact (real second-jump putback rebounder, 6.9 RPG from the wing).
For Detroit, Allen is the wing depth swing in a class light on real two-way 3s. He'd compete for backup minutes behind Ausar Thompson and Ron Holland, and his connective skill set survives next to Cade or any future shot-creator the front office adds. Late-first range with real role-player floor.
- ▸Switchable 1-3 defender — strong enough for wings, quick enough for guards, smart in help
- ▸6'8" wingspan + real disruption hands — closeout discipline is already advanced
- ▸Connective passer (3.1 APG, low turnovers) — short-roll reads and drive-and-kick feel
- ▸6.9 RPG from the wing position — real motor on the glass, both ends
- ▸Spot-up shooting indicators trending up — 34.1% from three, 73.8% FT, mechanics look repeatable
- ▸Plays inside Alabama's NBA-style offense — drive-kick-relocate, transition, pace — limited scheme adjustment at the next level
- ▸Limited off-the-dribble creation — not breaking down set defenders, doesn't have a counter to a strong closeout
- ▸34.1% three is good, not great — the jumper is the swing skill that determines starter vs. rotation
- ▸Frame at 204 lb is functional but not elite — gets pushed off spots by stronger NBA wings
- ▸Not a primary rim threat — finishing through length is inconsistent
- ▸Usage is low (18.6%) — projection as a real off-the-dribble option is unproven
- ▸Best-game ceiling is capped — even the highest projection is a connective starter, not a featured wing
Allen is the wing depth swing in a class light on real two-way 3s.
If limited off-the-dribble creation never resolves, limited off-the-dribble creation — not breaking down set defenders, doesn't have a counter to a strong closeout
He answers the open questions below — film, role, and reps between now and June.
Three Questions
Does the spot-up three settle in the high 30s and unlock real NBA spacing minutes?· debate →
Can he add an off-the-dribble counter to attacks closeouts that get over the top of him?· debate →
Is the defensive ceiling 'switchable wing stopper' or just 'positionally sound team defender' — there's a real gap between those two outcomes.· debate →
See the room argue it out
Open the Draft Room debateWhere Scouts Disagree
No public split on Amari Allen yet — the scouting community is mostly aligned (or hasn't weighed in loudly enough for us to call it a real debate).
We'll log the divide here as soon as the takes start splitting.
Start the debate in the Draft Room →- Cyro Asseo's 'stronger Vince Williams Jr.' comp is the role projection — switchable wing defender who connects offense without needing the ball.
- Ben Pfeifer pulls help-side rotations and closeouts as the upside lever — already a smart team defender, not just a tools bet.
- Ordinary Scout's tape highlights the short-roll passing reads — connective skill set is more advanced than the box score suggests.
- No Ceilings highlights show real second-jump putback rebounding from the wing — 6.9 RPG isn't an accident.
- The off-the-dribble game is the missing layer on every breakdown — every analyst flags it as the swing skill that separates rotation from starter.
Consensus
Each outlet's evaluation of the player's pure value, ignoring team fit. Bars scale inversely to rank.
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Keep digging on Amari Allen
Detroit-first ranking with Fit Scores.
Our latest first-round projection through pick #30.



