Every July, a rookie drops 30 in Vegas and the same two questions flood search bars: do those stats count, and do they mean anything? The answers are no, and it depends who you are — which is a more interesting answer than it sounds. Summer League numbers count toward nothing official, and their predictive record for stars is famously terrible (the cautionary tale: Josh Selby shared the 2012 Vegas MVP with Damian Lillard — one became a Hall of Fame-track superstar, the other played 38 NBA games). But for the players fighting for roster spots, July stats are the most consequential of their lives.
Here’s the full breakdown: what counts, what predicts, and how to actually read a Summer League box score.
The chart below covers the official answer, the predictive record, and the reading guide. Take a look, then we’ll break it all down.
Contents
The Selby-Lillard Rule
Summer League’s predictive reputation was settled by one trophy: the 2012 Las Vegas MVP, shared by Damian Lillard and Josh Selby. Lillard became a top-75-caliber franchise superstar; Selby played 38 NBA games and was out of the league within two years — the same award, the same summer, measuring the same thing, and telling you nothing about which career was coming. The mechanism behind the mirage is well understood now: Summer League play rewards older, physically mature scorers with unlimited green lights against thrown-together defenses running no scheme, which is precisely the profile that stops working when NBA coordinators and NBA athletes arrive in October. That’s why scouts long ago stopped reading totals and started reading tools — does the defense hold up, is the body ready, does the ball move on time, is the shot mechanically real at speed — and why a lottery pick’s “disappointing” 12-point outing routinely worries evaluators less than a fringe player’s empty 28. The paradox resolves at the roster’s edge: for the two-way and Exhibit 10 candidates who fill most of every Vegas roster, these two weeks are the highest-stakes stats of their lives, because ninety development jobs get partially decided on them. So do Summer League stats matter? Officially never, predictively rarely, professionally — for the players you’ve never heard of — more than any numbers they’ll ever produce again.
Final Word
Do Summer League stats matter: they count toward nothing (exhibition numbers stay out of all official records), they predict little for stars (the Lillard-Selby co-MVP is the permanent warning), and they decide everything for the fringe — the two-ways, Exhibit 10s, and camp invites that turn on two July weeks in Vegas. Read tools, not totals, and remember the sliding rule: the bigger the name, the smaller the meaning.
The event’s full structure is in NBA Summer League, explained, the contract at stake is in the two-way contract, explained, and baseball’s identical wall is in do Home Run Derby homers count?.