Nolan Traore is finding his feet with the Brooklyn Nets. The 19-year-old rookie has impressed with his composure as the team's primary ball-handler after earning the starting role. He put in another encouraging performance against fellow Frenchman Victor Wembanyama during Brooklyn's loss to the San Antonio Spurs on Thursday.
Wembanyama, who first met Traoré during the French national team's preparations for the 2024 Olympics, spoke highly of his potential future teammate.
"[Nolan's] Very young, and he was even younger when we were preparing for the Olympics in 2024,” he said, “and already, what I saw in him was maturity and the way he could control the game. And by the way, it doesn't matter who the opponent is. He has real guts, and I believe he is someone who will make incredible growth in his career.
Victor Wembanyama has high praise for Nolan Traore as he trains in the lead up to the 2024 Olympics:
"What I saw in him was maturity and the way he could control the game. And the way he could control the game, no matter who the opponent was. He has real guts. I believe... pic.twitter.com/rAr5i8lfj4
- Eric Slater (@erikslater_) 27 February 2026
Many considered Traore to be one of the top five prospects at the start of the 2025 pre-draft process. However, after an up and down 2024-25 season, he dropped to number 19 in the nets.
Nolan Traore impresses in starting point guard role in Nets' rebuild

Traore struggled during his first NBA appearance and the Nets assigned him to the G League at the beginning of the season. After a highly productive extension with Long Island, the rookie point guard has emerged as the focal point of Brooklyn's offense during the second half of the season.
Traore is averaging 11.9 points, 2.1 rebounds and 5.3 assists on 44/30/76 shooting splits in 15 starts. The French floor general is the only NBA rookie to average 11 points and five assists during that span. His 6.2 assists per 100 possessions this season ranks third among all rookies who have played more than 800 minutes, trailing only Walter Clayton Jr. (6.6) and Dylan Harper (6.2).
"Nolan always believed he belonged," Nets head coach Jordi Fernandez said. "He always fights back, and he's becoming the voice and presence that we believe he is. He's not there yet because we also believe his ceiling is very high. These last 23 games are huge for him, huge for this group going into the summer, which will be the greatest summer of our lives."

