Show Me a Prospect: Dailyn Swain

November 13, 2025
show-me-a-prospect-dailyn-swain

For this series, I will be interviewing a variety of thoughtful draft analysts, both from the Swish Theory team and otherwise. Each guest will make a claim regarding the 2026 NBA draft, which I will then challenge in a written back-and-forth exchange.

For this piece, I’m talking to Swish Theory’s Avinash Chauhan, who makes an optimistic claim about Texas wing Dailyn Swain. You can find Avinash’s Swish Theory work here, additional basketball musings at his Substack here, and follow him on Twitter here.


Avinash’s claim: Dailyn Swain is a top-20 level talent in the 2026 NBA draft.

Question #1:

The list of drafted players Swain’s height with a <15 three-point attempt rate (3PA/FGA) is littered with misses. Opponents leave him wide open. Do you think his outside shot is absolutely cooked (career 11-54 from three, 27-74 from midrange) or is there some hope?

Avinash:

How could it not be cooked? Swain is an astonishing 3 for 23 on open catch-and-shoot 3s. I would advise against expecting strong 3P development across his career, and I remain quite high on Swain despite this cognizance. He does not need to shoot to be a productive NBA player.

But is there hope? There will always be hope with a profile as contradictory as Swain’s.

Swain shoots extremely well from the FT line (career 81.6% FT across 152 attempts). While FT proficiency is usually a sign of future shooting goodness, it can’t be that easy.

See, Swain is in this weird zone, shooting enough threes to not be a complete non-shooter, but shooting a relatively low number of threes overall and bricking them.

To showcase this, let’s focus on the three main indicators of shooting upside: FT%, 3P%, and 3Pr.

High FT% + High 3PR + High 3P%: elite elite shooter

  • Ex. Steph Curry, Sam Hauser

High FT% + High 3PR + Low 3P%: still an elite shooter, likely lots of OTD 3s

  • Ex. Austin Reaves, Franz Wagner

High FT% + Low 3PR + High 3P%: usually a rim-heavy guard that can still end up shooting

  • Ex. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Jalen Williams

High FT% + Low 3PR + Low 3P%: ???

This is an extraordinarily rare intersection: just 7 NBA-appearing college players since 2008 have shot worse than 40% 3P with less than 4 3PA/100 while still shooting 80% from the line. What’s even more interesting is that just 3 of these players had a true career sample: it’s really just Delon Wright, Hansbrough, and Mike Muscala that met this intersection over multiple seasons, and only Mike Muscala did it over more than 2 seasons. Swain appears poised to join him.

What makes this even more baffling is that Swain has been shooting 80% from the line all the way back to his AAU days. In 37 AAU games over 16U and 17U Nike EYCL seasons, Swain shot 83/107 (77%) from the line. That means Swain has been shooting ~80% FT since 2021.

Sidebar: even in AAU, Swain’s oreb x a:to x stocks x FT% stood out.

75% FT, < 30% 3P, < 2 3PA/game. From my AAU database with ~2000 player-seasons, just 5 players met these criteria. Despite every one of the NCAA players here having lower career FT% in NCAA compared Swain, they at least doubled his 3Pr.

Some other notes:
Swain has shot 13/33 (39%) on dribble jumper 2s across 2 NCAA seasons. He shot 7/25 (28%) on dribble jumpers in AAU. At least there’s touch improvement somewhere, and there’s a bit of asymmetric reward to risk. It’s the type of shot someone with a 14% PnR BH scoring frequency could really use (this is a superb rate for a wing-sized player).

And Swain narrowly missed this query with a number of impressive developmental stories, sporting an assist percentage just 1% off the 12% threshold.

So we have 100 games of Swain’s low 3P make + high FT% tomfoolery across AAU+NCAA, and he has at least 30+ games left in his college career. This is uncharted territory, and your guess is just as good as mine for whether he ever meaningfully shoots. For what it’s worth, the only person close to this sort of volume (Muscala) shot 37% 3P on 8.2 3PA/100 for his NBA career, but it took him 6 NBA seasons to actually hit that rate across a season.

And, Swain kinda ended the season with some momentum. He went 3/5 from 3P in his final game vs Illinois in the first round of March Madness. It was actually his best college game ever (27 points, 27 BPM, 33% USG, 6 assists+steals : 0 TOs). Positive momentum for the win?

Maybe. For those keeping track, that also means he was 1/9 from 3 during that month, excluding the Illinois game. Still, his 3PA/100 was doubled relative to his career average across that final month.

Swain’s highest month-long 3PA/100 came in the final month of his sophomore year.

To summarize: Swain’s profile holds an unparalleled long-term integration of FT% goodness x 3P badness, nice dribble jumper proficiency, high levels of cognition typically associated with strong development, and positive momentum. And he’s super young for class. This year, I expect some 3P shooting improvement for the first time in years.

But he’s missed so many 3s for so long that it’s still more likely than not that he does not end up shooting well. There’s hope, but he doesn’t really need it. He should be a solid NBA contributor regardless.

Question #2:

A big part of the appeal for Swain is his being a wing ballhandler. This premise makes his fans excited about his transition game and utility as a pick-and-roll operator. However, his turnover rates for both pick and roll when pressured and when used as a transition ballhandler are a very high 30% for each.

Avinash:

A big part of Swain’s appeal is indeed his wing ball-handling upside. He clocks in at an impressive career 15% assist rate on just 17% usage. However, his career 16% TO rate is unimpressive relative to this lower usage. What gives?

The unifying theme of Swain’s turnovers is errant passes. This is important to me, as most other wings that I’ve watched have turnover issues more concerned with scoring process or poor dribbling technique.

More specifically, Swain is trying to get rim assists at a pretty high clip, which is actually a feature of the Xavier offense: they ranked in the 4th and 1st percentiles in spot-up frequency in 2025 and 2024, respectively. There are some gimme assists that he fails, like bouncing off his foot, but his biggest issue is just forcing passes into very tight windows, as well as poor pass accuracy on the move.

In defense of Swain, he didn’t quite have the safety valves that others may have. First, Xavier probably had the worst “center” rotation out of any reasonably good high major team. Their center was Zach Freemantle, a 6’9 225 lb power forward with a mediocre wingspan. Forcing the ball to a guy with such a limited catch radius is just not ideal, but he just didn’t have those other safety valves. Beyond their uber-low spotup frequency, Xavier didn’t run many cuts either (13th percentile in 2025, 7th percentile in 2024), meaning that many of Swain’s passes out of PnR had to be post entries.

As a side note, Swain probably should be used more on cuts. He has the body and intuition for it, along with 1.3 PPP last year. Unfortunately, Xavier’s primary perimeter PnR was 6’2 Dayvion McKnight, who shot 49% at the rim and less than 3 3PA/100. His abhorrent 0.702 PPP on PnR BH, and the departure of the four Xavier players with higher assist rates than Swain in 2024, were major reasons why Swain’s PnR BH frequency doubled from 2024 to 2025.

So, Swain’s TO rate when defense commits is concerning, but it was a bad enough context that we can hopefully expect strong improvements with his feel and another year under his belt. It is something to monitor.

Swain’s turnover rate in transition is less defensible. The most obvious culprit again seems to be errant passing. He’s more pass-heavy in transition than I expected, considering a massive 30% of his scores came in transition. He’s just moving too quickly and isn’t able to make dynamic, accurate kick-ahead reads.

Ultimately, Swain has clear turnover issues, but not something I would consider truly pivotal: I’d be more concerned if more of these were bad scoring TOs rather than bad pass TOs (see below: his drive TO rate). His career 1.7 A:TO and 3% steal rate indicate strong enough cognition that we can partially cope that this is an issue of poor technique rather than processing. I expect more turnovers with increased usage, but hopefully he trims the rate somewhat.

Question #3:

Additionally, his 1.4 drives per game lags the second-year drive rate of Herb Jones (1.8 per game), Kyle Filipowski (2.9), or Mikal Bridges (1.7), among prospects with relatively similar production profiles. What kind of ball-handling burden/complexity is Swain really capable of when faced with tougher comp?

Avinash:

Yes, to activate higher-end outcomes worthy of meaningful draft capital, Swain needs to demonstrate creation capacity. His career 17% usage + 55% minutes share after two seasons lags a bit behind these names mentioned. While it remains to be seen how well he scales up, his playtype rates, rather than per-game numbers, is probably more instructive.

Let’s compare his playtype numbers to the names mentioned, plus three more I added. I used Bart’s Career Player Comp feature to generate this query that ranked the most similar careers to Swain, and added an NBA filter and height filter. I chose the top 3: OPJ, Cody Martin, and Dalen Terry.

Swain’s 13.4% drive frequency isn’t as pressing in this paradigm, but it still notably lags behind Filipowski and Herb.

However, Swain crushes the field in drive efficiency, with over 0.9 points per drive possession. He does this with the lowest drive turnover rate, while still drawing a healthy number of fouls per drive. This micro turnover rate is an interesting antidote to his turnover concerns.

However, since there is typically no double-counting between drive possessions and PnR BH possessions (a drive does not involve a screen), I like to account for these PnR BH “quasi-drives”.

Immediately, Swain’s massive PnR BH frequency stands out. Part of why Swain’s drive frequency was so low is that he scored on PnR BH possessions at a high rate.

It’s not just higher PnR BH frequency relative to the field. Swain’s scoring approach out of PnR BH playtypes was far better than any other player here. If we ignore Filipowski’s inflated stats out of a 1.3% PnR BH frequency, Swain paces the group in PnR BH frequency, PPP, AND free throw rate. His TO rate ranks 3rd out of 6.

To recap, Swain is the most efficient on drives and PnR BH reps among these players…while ranking close to the top in TO rate and FT rate. His drive+PnR BH aggregate frequency trails just Herbert Jones and his query-worst aggregate PPP.

To be fair, none of these guys were really creating like that in the NBA. But Swain’s production transcends this comparison. And he’s the youngest here, while weighing at least 10 more pounds than anyone besides Filipowski. With potentially the best wingspan. There’s just no argument to me: Swain has by far the best creation upside of the group.

Increased ball handling burden is inevitable, and while improving handling control and complexity are not something I can easily project, there’s just too much here for me not to expect continued improvement.

You can’t get better datapoints than size/age-adjusted creation efficiency (not that it needs to be adjusted) and strong cognition. While you raised exceptional points that cannot meaningfully be refuted until we see it manifested, this is my best cope.

Question #4:

That all sounds great, and I am struggling to poke holes in Swain’s fairly complete game otherwise. But I do struggle to see what kind of role Swain would fit into immediately that both keeps his development curve sharply sloped and the friction with NBA lineups low (absent a major shooting leap). How does he fit in right away?

Avinash:

Swain is largely theoretical in impact right now. He possesses a slew of important traits, from his FT touch to his cognition to his impressive ballhandling at size…but he hasn’t been particularly impactful.

2025 Swain ON, Swain OFF, Baseline: Xavier vs T300, no-garbage/luck-adj

A net offensive rating impact of -0.8 when Swain is on compared to Xavier’s baseline is very underwhelming for a decent offense. Swain has a positive FTR influence, and his positive TO influence is an improvement from last year. We can attribute this to his scaling up (higher PnR and driving responsibility) while maintaining A:TO.

2024 Swain ON, Swain OFF, Baseline: Xavier vs T300, no-garbage/luck-adj

The lack of on/off impact is emblematic of a more pressing issue with Swain: there just isn’t a whole lot of “guarantees.”

He’s promising in a lot of areas, but not truly adept at anything in relation to halfcourt offense. You’d think a player with his athleticism and transition prowess would be able to be more effective at the rim, but Swain shot a pedestrian 64% at the rim on a majority-assisted rim diet. While there’s some sliver of ball handling upside, there’s also a chance Swain isn’t able to convert self-created rim attempts at a respectable rate.

1.09 points per shot on HC layups is somewhat concerning.

Swain is what I’d call a “trait-maxxed” player: he checks lots of boxes that indicate high upside. He’s super young, he will measure and test exceptionally well, and he blends cognition, physicality, and touch in a way that typically translate to NBA goodness. But he simply hasn’t quite done anything worthy of NBA status … yet.

Without improved shooting volume, the projection is somewhat difficult but not impossible. Something like an athletic finisher with defensive impact, something in the realm of Ausar or Josh Minott. He could carry over his 98th percentile transition frequency to the league and do his best Christian Braun impression, though that is somewhat dependent on the context. This may not sound too compelling, but my thesis is that Swain’s ancillary production is too good to fail. It’s quite similar to my case for the aforementioned Josh Minott, who also faced questions about his NBA role, but is making it work given his cognitive and physical strengths.

To answer the other half of your question: based on historical trends, I believe that trait-maxxing is the most important predictor of development over expectation. Massive arms and feel, for instance, has been Sam Presti’s method to draft success. This is why I believe his development curve will be sloped upwards regardless of role, for the time being: he’s entering the critical period of development (age 20/junior year) where the big-time leaps occur.

Can he access super high-end outcomes without being able to shoot at reasonable volume? Probably not. But the guy is an S-tier athlete with huge dimensions, can run creation playtypes at efficiency, and he’s an elite stocker with strong passing and rebounding. There is a small (and improbable) chance that Swain could check every single meaningful “trait” box and parlay that into stardom, particularly if he shoots (and as I outlined before, higher volume shooting isn’t as unlikely as you may think).

In an expected value paradigm (probability x value), a miscellany of small probability x high upside avenues can aggregate towards a sneaky-high expected value. It is difficult for me to project the specifics of Swain’s development curve, but I feel that his expected value is somewhere in the tier of a real deal NBA player. Let’s see if ancillary production and trait-maxxing can manifest in legitimate impact.

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