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Can Ja’Kobe Walter be Raptors playoff X-Factor?

It goes without saying that self-awareness can carry a player far in the NBA.

Not just understanding strengths and weaknesses, but realizing what’s required on a given team.

Ja’Kobe Walter, for instance, has known for quite some time the type of player he needs to be for the Toronto Raptors.

“Defence, for sure. I know that’s going to keep me on the floor when I’m playing with the Raptors,” the sophomore explained to me when I asked him just over a year ago how he thought he could carve out a consistent NBA role.

Fast forward more than 365 days later, and that introspective approach has sparked a stretch of play post-all-star break that has not just solidified Walter’s spot in the Raptors’ would-be nine- or 10-man rotation come the post-season, but also has me wondering whether he could even steal a win or two. (Think rookie Norman Powell putting up 10-plus points in three of the Raptors’ last four games against the Indiana Pacers — and a dunk for the ages — in a seven-game first-round series back in 2016.)

Why? Because like many X-Factor-esque players (such as Powell), the 21-year-old Walter appears to be a wolf (a Raptor?) in sheep’s clothing. He clearly has the natural ability to grow into a more robust two-way player, but he’s embraced the tenets of 3-and-D dynamism to help enhance this current Raptors team.

Or as he told me: “When you give energy on defence, you get energy on offence.”

Showing the awareness required to do what’s needed — and do it well — to earn a steady diet of minutes, while also being prepared for when he’s undoubtedly called upon for more, like spearheading the short-handed Raptors with a season-high six triples for 21 points against the lowly Utah Jazz.

Now it’s helped that Walter has been on an all-time heater from downtown, shooting 49.3 per cent since the all-star break, but accounting for that alone would be a disservice to how and why he’s won his minutes lately.

So, let’s start with the “D” in 3-and-D, since that part of his game has been consistently impactful for much of the season, and what sets him apart from the rest of Toronto’s bench guards/wings.

The wiry Walter has made the most of his 6-foot-4 frame and 6-foot-10 wingspan at the point of attack all year, routinely hounding opposing players. And while it hasn’t always resulted in him shutting down the league’s best (which it won’t when he’s being asked to check superstars like Jamal Murray or Devin Booker), Walter has done well to at least shut the taps off most opponents’ perimeter production.

The Baylor product has held players to just 34.8 per cent on shots outside of 15 feet, and as low as 33.1 per cent on attempts specifically from beyond the arc — numbers that have only looked better post-all-star, even with an uptick in playing time by three extra minutes per game. He’s also ninth among sophomores in defended field goal percentage on threes this season (minimum 42 games).

Walter has done well to stay face-to-face with his assignments, while showing a willingness to keep up on drives and handle any physicality thrown his way.

And while he hasn’t necessarily been an impenetrable wall, Walter has been active, mobile and done just enough as the first line of defence (off the bench) to allow help to arrive. Just ask Ace Bailey, who, before having a pretty stellar offensive night, started by testing Walter and was ushered into a sea of bodies and rejected at the rim for his efforts.

Not to mention that Walter has been an incredibly handsy and opportunistic defender off the ball as well. He’s maybe the only guard on the Raptors with a green light to blind double, and he uses that freedom liberally to help out his teammates or swoop into passing lanes.

Walter is fifth in average deflections (2.3) and fourth in steal percentage (26.9) among second-year players who’ve played at least half the season.

And if we’re talking about doing it in the playoffs, Walter has been no stranger when it comes to matching up against the Eastern Conference’s premier talent — even finding success against some of it. In terms of total minutes guarding players this season, the sophomore’s top two matchups have been Kon Knueppel and Jalen Brunson. In the more than 10 minutes against each, Walter has held them to 25 per cent and 46.7 per cent shooting, respectively.

He’s held the likes of Brunson and Donovan Mitchell under league-average effective field goal percentage in over 100 combined possessions throughout his career when directly guarding them, according to Databallr.com. Just this season, in nearly five minutes spent defending Mitchell, Walter has held the Cleveland Cavaliers star to just 3-of-10 shooting.

Undoubtedly small samples, but also not insignificant enough to scoff at the idea that Walter could make a name for himself by troubling such a star in the playoffs. I remember a sophomore Pascal Siakam first garnered attention when his pesky efforts on John Wall helped the Raptors win a first-round series against the Washington Wizards in 2018. Wall may have averaged 26.0 points through six games, but he only made two shots on 10 attempts through nearly 40 possessions when guarded by Siakam.

Granted, the Raptors were the No. 1 seed and were likely going to beat the Wizards either way, but the effort still built a foundation of faith in Siakam that eventually bore fruit in abundance. And in Walter’s case, the Raptors will need that very same defensive impact, but not as a bonus and rather a necessity should they hope to advance beyond the first round.

Then there’s Walter’s offensive production, and this is the part where he’s really taken a “less is more” approach to amplify what he provides the Raptors.

Looking at his shot diet now compared to his rookie season — a lost campaign in which players were allowed to experiment endlessly — and it’s clear that he’s decreased shot diversity to increase offensive output. For starters, over 60 per cent of Walter’s shots come from distance this year compared to 44 per cent as a rookie. That’s happened primarily by cutting out a big chunk of his midrange game, dropping his frequency of non-rim two-pointers from 24 per cent to 10 per cent, per Cleaning The Glass.

Part of the equation has also been speeding up his game, buying in even further to head coach Darko Rajakovic’s 0.5 style and becoming a go-to perimeter play-finisher for Toronto.

For instance, last year, over 48 per cent of Walter’s shots came after he took one or more dribbles and nearly 40 per cent of his attempts occurred after two or more seconds with the ball. This season, those numbers are under 25 per cent and 20 per cent, respectively. That has also resulted in him upping his catch-and-shoot frequency to over 60 per cent from just under 40 per cent last year, and decreasing his pull-up shooting from 39 per cent in 2024-25 to under eight per cent.

Again, watching Walter wiggle and wriggle through the lane with a live dribble as a rookie was certainly entertaining and presented flashes of his on-ball potential, but that’s no longer what the Raptors need from him. At least, not right now. After adding an iso-specialist in Brandon Ingram and pushing toward a return to the playoffs, having Walter as a de facto ball-stopper and perimeter scorer off the bench has been far more valuable than exploring his greater potential. Especially of late, as the Raptors’ second unit has been less than impressive since the all-star break, ranking 27th in points per game.

And to Walter’s credit, he’s not only accepted that role, but he’s also excelled within it. The guard is an 82nd percentile three-point shooter — as high as 88th percentile from the corners — among wings this season, absolutely making the most of his increased volume beyond the arc. And for a Raptors team that’s ranked 21st in three-point percentage, they’ll take all the production they can get.

He’s upped his effective field goal rate (which adjusts for threes being more valuable than twos) by nearly 10 per cent, and specifically on catch-and-shoot looks, he’s got an EFG rate of over 60 per cent. And those numbers look even better post-all-star break as he’s gone scorched earth from beyond the arc, posting an overall effective field goal rate of 65.1 per cent — 72.7 per cent (!) on C&S attempts — through his last 15 games.

It’s never easy being asked to do “less.” Especially for hyper-competitive athletes who’ve been considered the top priority amongst their peers for much of their basketball lives before the NBA.

And maybe there will be a time, possibly even sooner rather than later, that the sophomore will be asked to explore his greater potential with a bigger role. But until then, Walter has shown the awareness necessary to buy into his opportunity, and in doing it so effectively, he’s earned the right to see real minutes in the playoffs. Maybe even swing a series like a true X-Factor and add his name to Raptors lore.

The post Can Ja’Kobe Walter be Raptors playoff X-Factor? first appeared on Raptors Republic.

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