Missouri Tigers Basketball

N/A

Tag Type
Slug
missouri-tigers-basketball
Short Name
Missouri
Abbreviation
MIZZ
Sport ID / Foreign ID
77ca152a-cb2f-48a5-97b2-492351250d94
Visible in Content Tool
On
Visible in Programming Tool
On
Auto create Channel for this Tag
On
Parents
Primary Parent
Primary Color
#c69214
Secondary Color
#000000
Channel State
Eyebrow Text
Men's Basketball

Jontay Porter Declares for 2019 NBA Draft Despite Suffering 2nd Torn ACL Injury

Apr 19, 2019
Missouri player Jontay Porter speaks during the SEC men's NCAA college basketball media day, Wednesday, Oct. 17, 2018, in Birmingham, Ala. (AP Photo/Butch Dill)
Missouri player Jontay Porter speaks during the SEC men's NCAA college basketball media day, Wednesday, Oct. 17, 2018, in Birmingham, Ala. (AP Photo/Butch Dill)

Jontay Porter is going to test himself by putting his name in the 2019 NBA draft pool despite tearing his ACL for a second time last month.  

The Missouri Tigers sophomore announced his decision to turn pro on Twitter:

https://twitter.com/JontayPorter/status/1119379207711334402

Porter re-tore his right ACL as he was rehabbing from the same injury he originally suffered in October 2018 during a scrimmage. 

The original injury caused Porter to miss the entire 2018-19 season. The 19-year-old played alongside his brother, Michael Porter Jr., in 2017-18. 

Both Porter siblings entered last year's NBA draft, but Jontay opted to return to school. Michael wound up being the No. 14 overall pick to the Denver Nuggets, though he didn't play as a rookie due to ongoing back problems from a microdiscectomy he had in November 2017. 

B/R's Jonathan Wasserman has Jontay ranked as the No. 38 overall prospect in this year's class, citing his "skill level, obvious feel and fit in today's NBA."

Porter had a solid freshman campaign with the Tigers, averaging 9.9 points and 6.8 rebounds in 33 games. 

NBA Draft Prospect Jontay Porter Reportedly Tore ACL for 2nd Time in 2 Years

Mar 23, 2019
Missouri player Jontay Porter speaks during the SEC men's NCAA college basketball media day, Wednesday, Oct. 17, 2018, in Birmingham, Ala. (AP Photo/Butch Dill)
Missouri player Jontay Porter speaks during the SEC men's NCAA college basketball media day, Wednesday, Oct. 17, 2018, in Birmingham, Ala. (AP Photo/Butch Dill)

Missouri Tigers star forward Jontay Porter has reportedly torn his ACL for a second time in the past year, according to Alex Schiffer of the Kansas City Star.

Per that report, "Porter, the Missouri power forward who missed his sophomore season after tearing his right ACL in a preseason scrimmage against Southern Illinois, recently re-tore the same ligament while in Denver, multiple sources told The Star. The Missouri basketball team confirmed the injury."

Porter had been rehabbing the injury, though the tear occurred during an on-court workout.

Porter, 19, averaged 9.9 points, 6.8 rebounds and 1.7 blocks as a freshman last season and would have been the Tigers' star player had he been healthy. Even missing his entire sophomore season, he was still projected to be a potential first-round pick.

B/R's Jonathan Wasserman projected Porter to the San Antonio Spurs with the No. 21 overall pick in his March 20 mock draft, writing: "Porter shot, passed and defended well enough as a freshman to warrant first-round consideration. He needed to improve his conditioning last year, and that was before the ACL injury that sidelined him for the entire 2018-19 season."

It's hard to imagine a second ACL tear in a year won't drop Porter down the board, though the fact that he displayed enough talent to still be a first-round pick despite his first ACL tear is good news for his draft stock. His injury history may make teams wary of selecting him in the first round, but he'll still likely be in play for teams early in the second round if he does fall down the board.

Harry Giles, for instance, tore each of his ACLs during his high school career over a three-year period, but after playing a limited role for Duke, he was drafted No. 20 overall in 2017, landing with the Sacramento Kings. Granted, Giles didn't play his rookie season, as the Kings chose to take the cautious approach given his injury history.

Any NBA team that selects Porter very likely would do the same. 

It's also possible Porter could consider returning to Missouri and rebuilding his draft stock with a healthy, and successful, 2019-20 season. Regardless, Porter very clearly has the game to play at the next level, so with a full recovery, he should get the chance to showcase that talent.