Stauskas has played for several NBA and NBA G League teams. In 2022, he reached the NBA Finals with the Celtics.
Early life
Stauskas grew up in Mississauga, Ontario.[1] His first experience with basketball came as a member of the Aušra Sports Club, which is a Toronto-based traveling team for children of Lithuanian descent. He became so devoted to basketball that his head coach at Michigan, John Beilein, said in 2013,[2]
He doesn't know anything about hockey, he doesn't know anything about football. The other day we had him try to throw a baseball pass as a press breaker. And he had never thrown a baseball.
High school career
Until 2009, Stauskas played for Loyola Catholic Secondary School.[3] He averaged 15 points, 5 rebounds and 5 assists in 2007–08 and 32 points, 14 rebounds and 7.5 assists in 2008–09.[4] Stauskas also joined the premier Amateur Athletic Union (AAU) team in Toronto, run by Ro Russell. Some of Russell's prior players, such as Tristan Thompson and Cory Joseph had gone to the United States to complete their scholastic years.[1] Stauskas spent the 2009–10 academic year at South Kent School, but he transferred to St. Mark's School the following year.[5] He missed the 2009–10 basketball season as a result of a hip injury.[4]Michigan Wolverines men's basketballhead coachJohn Beilein became familiar with Stauskas during the Summer 2010 NBA camp prior to Stauskas's junior year.[6] He visited Michigan that summer and was also being recruited by Villanova, Iowa State, Georgetown, Notre Dame, Florida and Providence.[7] By the time he arrived at St. Mark's, he was expected to be an All-State performer.[8] In the 2011 NEPSAC Class AA Championship game, Stauskas led St. Mark's in scoring with 17 points against Nerlens Noel and the Tilton School, but St. Marks lost 72–56.[9] On March 26, 2011, Stauskas made a verbal commitment to Michigan. This commitment made him the second member of Michigan's recruiting class of 2012.[10][11] That summer, he scored 27 points in an exhibition of Canadian high school all-stars against the Baylor Bears men's basketball team.[1]
Prior to his senior year, ESPN named him as one of the top 25 three-point shooters in the national class of 2012.[12] At the time of their November 2011 National Letter of Intent signings, Stauskas, Glenn Robinson III and Mitch McGary gave Michigan a consensus top 10 entering class for its 2012 class.[13] Stauskas led St. Mark's to 67–57 victory in a 2012 Hoophall Classic contest with 16 points against Friends Central.[14] As the season progressed, Stauskas (and Robinson) improved in the national player ratings to offset McGary's slide and maintain a top-rated class.[15][16][17] He scored 19 to lead his school to a 59–53 2012 NEPSAC Class AA Championship game victory over Noel's Tilton.[18] Stauskas earned the NEPSAC championship game MVP.[19] He was selected to the 2012 All-NEPSAC Class AA first team (along with teammate Kaleb Tarczewski).[20][21] Following these honors, Stauskas's stock and rankings continued to rise.[22]
Stauskas began his college career with the expectation that he would be a sharpshooter based on his performance in three-point field goal drills in which he had raised the bar for the team.[27] In the championship rounds of the 2012 NIT Season Tip-Off tournament at Madison Square Garden on November 21 and 23, Michigan defeated Pittsburgh and Kansas State, respectively, to win the tournament.[28][29][30] On November 26, Stauskas earned Big Ten Freshman of the Week honors for his NIT tournament performance in which he averaged 12.5 points and 4.5 rebounds.[31][32][33] On November 27, Michigan defeated its first ranked opponent of the season, NC State (#18 AP Poll/#18 Coaches' Poll), in the ACC–Big Ten Challenge with a then-career-high 20 points from Stauskas in a 79–72 victory.[34] On December 1 against Bradley, Stauskas made his first career regular season start and posted a new career-high 22 points.[35][36] For his first two 20 point performances, he repeated as Big Ten Freshman of the Week on December 3.[37] On December 29, against Central Michigan, Stauskas posted 19 points on 5-for-8 three-point shooting. His 5 three-pointers and 7 rebounds were career-highs, earning him his third Big Ten Freshman of the Week on December 31.[38][39]
Entering the day of December 31, Stauskas led the nation in three-point field goal percentage.[39] On January 16, 2013, Sporting News named Stauskas the surprise player of the first half of the year.[40] As late as January 28, Stauskas was leading the Big Ten in free throw shooting percentage (.833) as well as three-pointers made and was second in 3-point shooting percentage (.490).[41] On that day, Michigan was ranked number one in the AP Poll with 51 of the 65 first place votes.[42] It marked the first time Michigan ranked atop the AP Poll since the Fab Five1992–93 team did so on December 5, 1992.[43] On January 31, Stauskas and Robinson were named to the Wayman Tisdale Award (USBWA National Freshman of the Year) top 12 midseason list, recognizing their performances as being among the 12 best freshman performances in the NCAA competition.[44] Stauskas finished the 18-game 2012–13 Big Ten Conference men's basketball season schedule with a 37% three-point percentage on 30-for-81 shooting during conference play.[45]
Having made his last 20 consecutive free throws entering the 2013 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament Sweet Sixteen,[46] Stauskas ended the season with an 85.1% (74–87) free throw shooting percentage,[47] which was better than the Big Ten Conference free throw shooting percentage leader, Adreian Payne (84.8%).[48] In the regional finals on March 31 against Florida, Stauskas made all 6 of his three-point shot attempts, including all 5 in the first half as the team built a 41–17 lead before going into the half up 47–30.[49] This marked the best NCAA Tournament single-game three-point shooting percentage in school history (min 5 attempts) since no other Wolverine has shot 100% with at least 5 attempts.[50] Michigan advanced to the April 8 national championship game where the team lost to Louisville by an 82–76 margin.[51] His 6 three-point shots was a new career best and his 22-point performance tied his career high.[52] All his three-point shots came from the left corner.[53] The 6 three-point shots pushed Stauskas to a Michigan freshman-season record total of 80, surpassing Tim Hardaway Jr.'s two-year-old record of 76.[52][54] Six 3 point shots made without a miss was one shy of a conference record shared by Wolverine Glen Rice and 3 others (including David Lighty's 2011 NCAA Tournament performance).[55] Stauskas joined McGary and Most Outstanding Player Trey Burke on the South All-Regional team.[56] For the season, his .9 fouls per 40 minutes was second in the country.[57]
Sophomore season
In the offseason, Stauskas added 16 pounds (7.3 kg) to his frame and 6 inches (15.2 cm) to his vertical jump.[58] On November 12, Stauskas posted career highs of 23 points and 5 assists in the second game of the regular season against South Carolina State.[59][60] In the next game, Stauskas contributed a career-high 6 assists as well as 20 points against Iowa State on November 17.[61] Stauskas scored a game-high 24 points on November 21 against Long Beach State in the first round of the Puerto Rico Tip-Off, surpassing his career high[62] set two games before and giving him three consecutive 20-point performances for the first time in his career.[63][64] Stauskas established another career high the next day against Florida State as he scored 26 points including 7 of the team's 13 points in overtime, despite scoring only 3 points in the first half. In the game, he set a career high with 9 made free throws and logged his fourth consecutive 20 point game. Following a Michigan timeout with 11 seconds in regulation, Stauskas made a layup to force overtime.[65][66][67] In the championship game against Charlotte, Stauskas tallied 20 points and a career-high 3 steals.[68] Although Michigan lost in the championship game, Stauskas earned tournament MVP honors.[69] In the second half Stauskas twisted his ankle, but continued to play the final 9½ minutes.[70] Stauskas sat out the November 29 game against Coppin State to rest his ankle.[71][72]
In the January 2 Big Ten Conference opener against Minnesota, Stauskas set a career high with 7 assists while scoring 14 points.[73][74] On January 14, he had a game-high 21 points, team-high 5 assists as well as 6 rebounds against Penn State.[75] On January 18, Stauskas scored 23 points including the final 11 for Michigan as the team defeated (#3)[76]Wisconsin at the Kohl Center for the first time since the 1998–99 team did so,[77] ending an 11-game losing streak at Wisconsin.[78][79][80] On January 21, Stauskas earned his first Big Ten Conference Player of the Week recognition. At the time he was leading the conference in scoring and 20-point games.[81] On January 22, against (#10)[82]Iowa Stauskas tied his career high with 26 points and contributed 5 rebounds and 5 assists, helping Michigan defeat consecutive top 10 opponents for the first time since the 1996–97 team.[83][84] On January 25 in the Michigan–Michigan rivalry game against the 2013–14 Spartans, Stauskas contributed 19 points and 4 assists, including a 5-for-6 effort on three-point shots.[85] The 80–75 victory over (#3)[86] Michigan State marked the first time in school history that the team defeated three consecutive AP Poll top ten opponents and marked the first time since the 1986–87 Iowa Hawkeyes that any team has won three consecutive games all of which were against top 10 opponents.[87] It also gave Michigan a 7–0 Big Ten start, which is the best since the 1976–77 team won its first eight games.[87] His effort for the week earned a second Big Ten Player of the Week recognition on January 27.[88][89][90] Stauskas also earned Oscar Robertson National Player of the Week recognition from United States Basketball Writers Association on January 28.[91] He led the conference in scoring and three-point shooting percentage through January,[92] but he only scored six points when Michigan got upset by Indiana on February 2, ending a 10-game winning streak and 8–0 Big Ten conference start.[93] Stuaskas established another career high in assists with 8 against Nebraska on February 5 as the team posted its largest conference game margin of victory since defeating Indiana 112–64 on February 22, 1998.[94][95] On February 23 against (#13/14)[96] Michigan State, Michigan rebounded from an early 22–11 deficit to win 79–70.[97] Stauskas led the way with 25 points on 9-for-13 shooting and with 21 coming in the second half, including 10 that took the score from a 48–43 deficit to a 53–51 lead.[97] It marked his first game with 9 made field goals.[98] He added 5 assists, 3 rebounds and no fouls on his way to earning his third Big Ten Player of the Week recognition on February 24.[99][100] On March 4, Stauskas had 24 points, including a career-high seven three-point shots, as part of a 7-for-9 three-point effort against Illinois to help Michigan clinch its 14th and 8th outright Big Ten Conference championship.[101][102] On March 8, Stauskas had a team-high 21 points to help Michigan close out its season with a season-ending 84–80 victory over Indiana.[103] On March 10 Stauskas earned his fourth Big Ten Player of the week award (this time Co-POTW with Shavon Shields).[104] Stauskas's four Player of the Week awards led the Big Ten for the season.[105] Four B1G Player of the Week awards is a Michigan single-season record.[106] At the end of the regular season, he was the only player in the Big Ten to rank among the top 10 for field goal percentage (48.9), three-point percentage (45.8) and free throw percentage (81.1).[107]
On April 15, in a joint press conference with Robinson on the Big Ten Network,[112] Stauskas declared for the 2014 NBA draft.[113] During his two years with Michigan, the school enjoyed its winningest two-year stretch in school history marked by a total of 59 wins.[114] Of Michigan's prior 14 early NBA draft entrants, 10 were selected in the first round and 3 in the second.[115] Stauskas did sign with Bartelstein (along with teammate McGary).[116][117]
Discussion about him entering the 2014 NBA draft began when he got hot in January 2014 and his father told Sports Illustrated, "He knows all he has to do is keep his nose to the grindstone for another couple of months, and there's a really good possibility he might be able to go pro."[137] However, a few days later, Stauskas attempted to distance himself from his father's statements and apologized to his fans.[138] Following the season, Stauskas, who was regarded as a likely late first round selection, said he would need some time to process his decision and that he would make his decision after talking to his coaches and family.[139] On April 6, Stauskas said he would make his decision within the next week or so.[140] On April 10, reports emerged that Stauskas had decided to go pro, but he denied he had made a decision.[141] The reports were based on rumors that Stauskas had decided to hire Mark Bartelstein as his agent. Bartelstein is the father of former Michigan teammate Josh Bartelstein, and agent for former teammate Tim Hardaway Jr.[142]
On July 8, 2014, Stauskas signed a rookie scale contract with the Sacramento Kings.[148] During the 2014 NBA Summer League Stauskas was a starting member of the Summer League Champions.[149] In the 2014–15 NBA.com Rookie Survey at the annual Rookie Photo Shoot on August 6, Stauskas was named by his peers as the second best shooter in the Rookie class behind Doug McDermott.[150] During his rookie pre-season, he got a lot of publicity for the statement "I understand that I'm a rookie and I'm white, so people are going to attack me" because of stereotypes about race and his unproven and presumably weak defensive skills.[151] Stauskas was surprised by the attention the statement received.[152] In his first week in the league, he had a 3-block game against the Los Angeles Clippers.[153] On December 8 in his first game against Utah and former teammate and fellow Big Ten Player of the Year Burke, Stauskas posted career highs of 15 points and 8 rebounds.[154] Stauskas again posted 15 points against the New York Knicks and former Michigan teammate Tim Hardaway Jr. on March 3.[155] On March 24, he received the nickname "Sauce Castillo" via social media after a closed captioning error.[156][157] Stauskas started in the Kings' April 15 season finale against the Los Angeles Lakers and tallied 5 assists.[158] It was his first and only start of the season.[159]
Philadelphia 76ers (2015–2017)
On July 10, 2015, Stauskas was traded to the Philadelphia 76ers along with Carl Landry, Jason Thompson, a future first round pick, and the rights to swap first round picks in 2016 and 2017, in exchange for the rights to Artūras Gudaitis and Luka Mitrović.[160] During the preseason, Stauskas was impaired by a right tibia stress reaction.[161] Although he felt recovered from the stress reaction by the beginning of the season, he missed the October 28 season opener with back spasms.[162] Stauskas debuted for the 76ers on October 30 against the Utah Jazz, scoring 12 points.[163] Stauskas moved into the starting lineup on November 2 against the Cleveland Cavaliers.[164][165] He posted a career-high-tying 15 points.[166][167] On November 7, Stauskas posted a career-high 18 points and career-high tying five assists against the Orlando Magic.[168]
On December 1, Stauskas and the 76ers defeated the Los Angeles Lakers 103–91. The win ended the longest losing streak in the history of major professional sports in the United States (28 games going back to the prior season) and the worst start in NBA history (tied with the 2009–10 New Jersey Nets at 0–18).[169] Stauskas was injured in overtime of the January 15, 2016 contest against the Chicago Bulls and missed three games before returning to the lineup on January 25 against the Boston Celtics.[170][171] Stauskas established a new career high on March 18 against the Oklahoma City Thunder, scoring 23 points.[172][173]
After the first week of the 2016–17 NBA season, the 76ers exercised the fourth-year team option.[174] On November 19, 2016, Stauskas scored 21 points, while shooting 8-for-9 in a 120–105 win over the Phoenix Suns.[175] He posted a career-high 24 points on 4-for-7 three-point shooting on March 4 in a 136–106 loss to Detroit.[176] On March 20 against Orlando and March 22 against Oklahoma City, Stauskas reached 20 points in consecutive contests for the first time in his NBA career.[177]
Brooklyn Nets (2017–2018)
On December 7, 2017, Stauskas was traded, along with Jahlil Okafor and a 2019 second round draft pick, to the Brooklyn Nets in exchange for Trevor Booker.[178] In his debut for the Nets on December 15, 2017, Stauskas scored a team-high 22 points in a 120–87 loss to the Toronto Raptors.[179] In his first few weeks with Brooklyn, he made 19 of his first 33 shots (57.6%) from beyond the three-point line and set a career high with 7 made three-point shots (on 7-for-10 shooting) on December 27 against the New Orleans Pelicans,[180][181] which tied a Nets franchise record by a performance off the bench.[182]
Portland Trail Blazers (2018–2019)
On July 5, 2018, Stauskas signed with the Portland Trail Blazers.[183] In his debut for the Trail Blazers in their season opener on October 18, 2018, Stauskas came off the bench to score a career-high-tying 24 points in a 128–119 win over the Los Angeles Lakers.[184][185]
Cleveland Cavaliers (2019)
On February 4, 2019, Stauskas was traded to the Cleveland Cavaliers along with Wade Baldwin IV and two second-round picks for Rodney Hood.[186] Three days later, he was acquired by the Houston Rockets in a three-team trade that involved the Cavaliers and Sacramento Kings.[187] Hours later, he was traded again, this time to the Indiana Pacers alongside Baldwin, a 2021 second-round draft pick and the rights to Maarty Leunen, in exchange for cash considerations.[188] He was waived by the Pacers on February 8.[189] On February 11, Stauskas signed with the Cavaliers.[190]
On December 3, 2020, Stauskas was signed to a training camp contract by the Milwaukee Bucks.[195][196] He was waived at the end of training camp.[197]
Raptors 905 (2021)
On January 27, 2021, Stauskas was included on the Raptors 905 roster for the 2020–21 season.[198]
Grand Rapids Gold (2021)
On October 16, Stauskas was signed by the Denver Nuggets,[199] but was waived later that day. He subsequently joined the Grand Rapids Gold as an affiliate player.[200]
Miami Heat (2021–2022)
On December 31, 2021, Stauskas signed a 10-day contract with the Miami Heat.[201][202]
Return to Grand Rapids (2022)
Following the expiration of his 10-day contract, Stauskas returned to the Grand Rapids Gold. On March 1, 2022, he scored a franchise-record 57 points in a 131–127 win over the Wisconsin Herd. Alongside the feat, which was the sixth-highest scoring total in NBA G League history, he logged a G League-record 38 first half points.[203][204] Stauskas made his first 12 shots in the game (including a 9–9/24 point 1st quarter), marking the second-highest scoring 100% FG% quarter in league history. The 38-point first half was one point shy of the G League record for either half. The next day, Stauskas posted 43 points against the Lakeland Magic, becoming the second G League player (Russ Smith, 105 March 2016)[205] to achieve at least 100 points in consecutive games and the first to do it on consecutive nights.[206] Stauskas' 100-point effort coincided with the 60th anniversary of Wilt Chamberlain's 100-point game.[207] On March 8, 2022, he was named G League Player of the Week.[208]
He represented Canada at the 2015 FIBA Americas Championship,[219] contributing 111 points in 9 games—including 18-for-36 three-point shooting,[220] but did not play in the team's final game.[221]Food poisoning had impaired him in the semifinal loss against Venezuela,[222] and the illness caused him to miss the bronze medal game against Mexico, which Canada won 87–86.[223]
Stauskas is the son of Paul and Ruta Stauskas.[4][19] His brother's name is Peter.[1] Three of Stauskas's four grandparents lived in Lithuania before World War II. Stauskas previously attended Lithuanian Saturday School in Toronto and is able to understand and speak some Lithuanian.[224]