Get to know this NBA rookie now — you'll be talking about him all weekend
The NBA Slam Dunk contest is a rare beast that regularly makes the leap from sports spectacle to full-on topic of pop-culture watercooler exaltation.
Back-to-back winner Zach LaVine (remember his Space Jam dunk two years ago?) is out this year with injury, leaving his high-flying rival Aaron Gordon and serial posterizer DeAndre Jordan to headline Saturday's field.
But the name you really need to know is one you might never have heard before.
When this year's dunk contest field was announced, hardcore hoop-heads immediately zeroed in on neither Gordon nor Jordan, but Derrick Jones Jr.
Jones is a Phoenix Suns rookie who only turns 20 this Wednesday. His stats this season -- six total games played, and five total points scored as of this writing -- are unimpressive. But in basketball circles, online clips of the 6-foot-7 wing's aerial exploits have attracted gawkers and admirers since he was in high school.
A quick tour of Jones' internet dunking catalog is as edifying as it is jaw-dropping, so let's take take a spin.
We'll start with an NBA Development League game last December. That's when Jones threw down one of 2016's most impressive dunks regardless of league or level -- a one-handed alley-oop catch-and-slam while knocking a defender to the ground. Look at this screen-grab. This is where he caught the pass!!
And here's the entire thing.
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Here's a compilation of Jones' best D-League dunks this season.
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Destroying defenders with slams and winning a dunk contest are two different propositions, however -- the former relies more on raw power and leaping ability, while the latter requires a combination of precision and creativity. So maybe Jones is just a good in-game dunker?
Nahhh. Here he is nonchalantly executing a 360-windmill during warmups before a recent Suns game.
Earlier, meanwhile, we mentioned that Jones' dunking ability has been a hot topic among basketball fans since he was in high school. Let's revisit that.
Below is a two-minute video from 2015 of Jones absolutely abusing rims. He dunks while looking down at the hoop. He goes through the legs off the backboard then dunks. He dunks after putting the ball around his back in mid-air. He dunks off one leg and he dunks off two legs. He dunks over defenders and pulls off crazy tricks just for kicks. Take a look.
And thus concludes our public service announcement, dear reader. Derrick Jones -- learn the name now, because after Saturday's dunk contest, it will be everywhere.
Sam Laird is Mashable's Senior Sports Reporter. He covers the wide, weird world of sports from all angles -- as well as occasional other topics -- from Mashable's San Francisco bureau. Before joining Mashable in November 2011, his freelance work appeared in publications including the New York Times, New York Times Magazine, Slam, and East Bay Express. Sam is a graduate of UC Berkeley and UC Santa Cruz, and basketball and burritos take up most of his spare time. Follow him on Twitter @samcmlaird.