What had been considered Egor Dëmin’s biggest weakness heading into the last NBA draft has turned around with the Nets.
It was showcased again when the rookie recorded a career-high 26 points, shooting 6-for-10 from the 3-point line, in the Nets’ 118-98 road loss to the Magic on Thursday night.
After posting the fifth-worst 3-point shooting percentage at BYU in 2024-25 — 27.3 percent off of 4.7 attempts per game — scouts and league analysts questioned how high Dëmin’s ceiling would be without an effective long-range shot.
The eighth overall pick has taken those concerns to heart this season, developing an outside shot that he now shoots at a 40.2 percent clip on an average of 6.4 attempts.
At the postgame press conference, Dëmin credited the help of his personal coach, Zach Gonzales.
“We’ve done an incredible amount of time working on that in the gym in Los Angeles in the predraft, and then during the preseason that I’ve been here,” he said after the loss. “He’s definitely one of the biggest reasons why my shooting is so much better right now. … I’ve just been shooting a lot. That’s kind of the key. To be able to run faster, you gotta run. To be able to shoot better, you just gotta shoot a lot at the game speed and learn those habits.”
Though the Nets have dropped 10 of their last 11 games, Dëmin has seen an uptick, shooting 41.4 percent from beyond the arc on seven attempts per game across the last 10 contests.
It has consistently improved over time.
He held his highest 3-point shooting percentage in January (47.2) and shot as low as 32.9 percent in November.
The most 3-point attempts the Moscow native has taken this season is 14, including during a loss against the Warriors when he shot 7-for-14 on Dec. 29.
“Thanks to my teammates for finding me. I think most of them were catch and shoots, if not all of them,” Dëmin said of his performance. “So, for me, it’s a goal to find this window where I make my teammates’ lives easier for them to find me. Their unselfishness is obviously huge for me. They’re willing to share this ball and trust me with my shots.”
Head coach Jordi Fernández even thought Dëmin should have made more Thursday.
“We all know he is a threat from the 3-point line. Every time he shoots, I think it’s going in,” Fernández said. “He was 6-for-10 but I felt like he could have been 10-for-10. Very good right there. We needed that from him because I think Nolan [Traore] shot it well too, but after those two, the rest of the team made three 3s. So, we gotta be shooting with confidence. … We gotta find that rhythm as a group. I think it will come sooner than later.”
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His efforts Thursday also came along with other positive takeaways for him and his fellow rookies.
Dëmin’s career-high night, along with Traore’s career-high-tying 21 points, marked the first Nets rookie duo to each score 20-plus points in a game since Albert King and Buck Williams on April 17, 1982.
Additionally, the five Nets rookies took the court together for the first time, winning the six minutes in the fourth quarter, 19-13.
“Every minute matters and they won their minutes together,” Fernández said. “Their last seven minutes, they won those minutes, and I’m proud of them for doing that. That’s what I expect from them every time they play.”
While the Nets go through another rebuild, it’s vital for them to build on the early development of their rookies, especially Dëmin, who has been the most promising, before they hope to add a college star as they sit fourth in the lottery race.