Tennessee Basketball Rookie Jahmai Mashack to Start NBA Season in G-League

Jahmai Mashack (15) defends a Mississippi State guard during a game at Food City Center. Tuesday, Jan. 21, 2025. Cole Moore/RTI

After a strong showing at the NBA Summer League, former Tennessee basketball standout Jahmai Mashack is going to start his professional career in the G-League. According to a report from Damichael Cole, the Memphis Grizzlies still ‘value him highly,’ but he will start the year with the Memphis Hustle.

This comes after the Grizzlies signed Olivier-Maxence Prosper to a two-way contract. The other pair of two-way spots for Memphis went to PJ Hall and Javon Small.

In the summer league, Mashack averaged 9.0 points, 4.4 assists, 3.8 rebounds, 2.0 steals and 1.2 blocks per game. He wasn’t able to practice with the team until shortly ahead of his summer league debut due to a pending trade. That didn’t stop him from making a strong impact with the team, though.

He was drafted with the final pick of the 2025 NBA Draft by the Grizzlies. After being selected with pick No. 59, Mashack was asked about the franchise saying they wanted to take ‘dogs’ in this draft. He’s clearly taking that mentality to heart to start his career.

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“It’s something that I’ve always done,” Mashack said. “It’s not something that a coach asked me to do and I decided to buy into that. It’s something that I’ve been doing since I was 12, 13, 14 years old, when I told my dad that I want to become a great basketball player. He sat me down and he told me, it’s not going to be through making the most points or having the flashiest passes or looking at highlights, it’s going to be being the hardest working dog that you can be. I’ve embraced that ever since I was in high school and college and I don’t plan on doing nothing different now.

“I know what got me here. I know what works as far as winning and I know how to improve my game. And I know being a dog is No. 1 on that list. There’s no reason to change it now. It’s the formula I’ve always worked with and I feel like if I can grow that and mold that to something special, I can end up being a great winner in this league and help Memphis continue to evolve.”

Mashack played four seasons at Tennessee, where he became known as possibly the best defender in the country. As a senior, he was named the Field of 68 National Defensive Player of the Year for his efforts. He also averaged 6.0 points, 4.2 rebounds and 1.5 assists per game while starting in all 38 contests.

He was a key part of back-to-back Elite Eight appearances, two of the three times the program has ever reached that point. While in Knoxville, UT went 109-36 and he played in the seventh-most games in program history (137). His nine appearances in NCAA Tournament wins are the most of any player at Tennessee, too.

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