Summer League: 28 on 10-20 or 25 on 9-29
Two debuts, two big scoring nights, and the usual argument over whether the shooting splits tell the real story.
Darryn Peterson scored 28 points on 10-20 shooting in 24 minutes against the Hawks. Darius Acuff Jr scored 25 on 9-29 in Sacramento's win. One side sees proof of impact, the other sees empty volume in a low-stakes setting.
Why these scores — Both tweets cite actual box-score lines from corroborated Summer League games. Side A uses made shots and minutes; Side B uses attempts. No fabricated stats, but each post omits the full context the other supplies.
28 points on 10-20 with three threes in 24 minutes jumps off the box score for Darryn Peterson. The other debut that same cycle shows 25 points on 9-29. Both numbers are now circulating as evidence.
Side A points to Peterson's efficiency and quick impact as signs the production will carry over. Side B highlights Acuff's volume on poor shooting to argue Summer League stats remain mostly noise until real training camp and regular-season minutes arrive.
Fleming and Sharp posted their own lines in the same slate, yet the timeline narrowed to these two performances. The split keeps the replies moving without new data.
28 points on 10-20 and 3-6 from three in 24 minutes shows Peterson already impacts winning at this level.
- @Frankie_Vision✓ verified“Darryn Peterson 28 PTS 10-20 FG 3-6 3PT in 24 mins; how we feeling?”
Acuff's 25 points on 9-29 proves the same inflated scoring environment that makes every debut look better than it is.
- @ARHoopScoop✓ verified“Pro Hog Darius Acuff Jr posts 25p but on 9-29 shooting in debut”
Read it straight — Pull the full box score and shooting splits for both players before weighing either claim.
