
#8PG · Utah Jazz
Height
6'4"
Weight
210 lbs
Age
21
College
USC
Experience
1 yrs
Wingspan
6'4.8"
Reach
8'1.5"
Hand Size
8.5" × 9"
Grade Isaiah Collier
Your grade joins the crowd-sourced Fan Verdict.
On the field, Isaiah Collier grades out as a shaky PG for Utah Jazz (D- Impact). That places him 35th of 93 graded point guards. In his on-court role, the grade is strong (B- Role), reflecting how he produces relative to others at his position. Against that production, his deal reads as good value on the Contract Value Index (B) — the team is paying below what the play would command. The public read is positive (B- Sentiment), drawn from current news and social signal rather than the box score. As a pro, expect these grades to move quickly as a real sample builds.
| Year | Team | GP | PPG | RPG | APG | SPG | BPG | FG% | 3PT% | FT% |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Career | ![]() | 130 | 11.7 | 2.5 | 7.2 | 1.1 | 0.3 | 49.5% | 25.7% | 70.5% |
| 2025-26 | ![]() | 59 | 11.7 | 2.5 | 7.2 |
| Season | Team | GP | PTS | REB | AST | FG% | Grade |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2025-26 | ![]() | 59 | 11.7 | 2.5 | 7.2 | 49.5% | B- B- |
| 2024-25 | ![]() | 71 | 8.7 | 3.3 | 6.3 | 42.2% | C C |
Grades reflect the player's performance in each season. Header grade shows the current season.
Length
2 years
Total Value
$5.4M
Guaranteed
$5.4M
AAV
$2.6M/yr
Earning a B Contract Value Index, Isaiah Collier's 2-year pact reflects Utah's read on rotation impact. At $2.64M AAV on a rookie-scale deal, Collier is being paid like a depth piece, yet his 2025-26 production—11.7 PPG, 7.2 APG, and 2.5 RPG across 59 games—suggests he's already outperforming that ceiling as a 21-year-old point guard still acclimating to running an NBA offense. The contract carries minimal salary risk; at this dollar figure, Collier's upside is pure organizational optionality with zero cap constraint, a luxury available only to teams in full evaluation mode like the Jazz, who have spent the last month cycling through rest-of-season guard signings rather than making competitive acquisitions. His CVI grade is anchored in that split: a C performance grade reflects solid but not elite early-career production, yet the media narrative positions him as a foundational piece and genuine long-term building block—rare air for a second-year player on a 22-60 roster. Collier's 22-assist performance and the national spotlight it generated have shifted the conversation from "promising prospect" to "centerpiece debate," a sentiment shift that his current contract valuation doesn't yet fully price in. If he sustains above-average playmaking and efficiency into Year 2, the Jazz will have locked in franchise-caliber guard talent at a bargain rate; if the production plateaus, the short term keeps the organization flexible to pivot. Either way, this deal represents an intelligent risk-on bet by a rebuilding front office.
Other same-position deals the Contract Value Index also places in the B band — a quick read on where Isaiah's contract sits relative to comparable money.
Isaiah Collier ranks 35th of 93 graded point guards by performance. That slots Isaiah between Ja Morant (C+) just ahead and Javon Small (C) just behind.
Graded higher
Ja MorantMemphis GrizzliesC+Ryan RollinsMilwaukee BucksC+Davion MitchellMiami HeatCGraded lower
Javon SmallMemphis GrizzliesNo transactions found for this player.
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Isaiah Collier is a player on a rookie-scale contract listed at PG for the Utah Jazz. FanVerdicts covers every NBA player, team, GM, and transaction — and puts your verdict on all of it. Sign in to cast your Fan Verdict on Isaiah Collier, see where the crowd lands, and argue the call. FanVerdicts also brings its own read — performance, sentiment, and Contract Value Index — as one honest input alongside the crowd's. Where FanVerdicts has weighed in so far: Contract Value Index B, Performance C, Sentiment B-.
The crowd's Fan Verdict moves in real time as fans vote on this profile. FanVerdicts' own read updates as new data lands — performance recalculates when NBA game stats post, sentiment shifts with media coverage and fan discussion, and the Contract Value Index recomputes when contract terms change. Contract details below show the structure (years, total value, average annual value, guarantees) behind the Contract Value Index read.
For league-wide context, the NBA hub has team rankings, GM report cards, the transactions feed, and live scoreboards. The NBA player rankings page sorts every active player by performance and contract value within their position.
| 1.1 |
| 0.3 |
| 49.5% |
| 27.0% |
| 72.2% |
| 2024-25 | ![]() | 71 | 8.7 | 3.3 | 6.3 | 0.9 | 0.2 | 42.2% | 24.9% | 68.2% |
Isaiah Collier earns a C Performance grade — solid for a sophomore, with room to grow into a larger role. Through 130 games, Isaiah is contributing 11.7 points, 2.5 rebounds, and 7.2 assists per game in his role. Isaiah's strongest area is APG at 7.2, which compares favorably to the point guard median of 4.0. The biggest area for growth is RPG at 2.5 (point guard median: 5.0). Among 93 NBA point guards graded this season, Isaiah ranks 35th. At 21, Isaiah is still developing. The production should improve as he gains experience and a larger role with the Utah Jazz.
Isaiah Collier's public narrative sits at a B- — genuinely positive for a second-year point guard on a 22-60 team, though the momentum has cooled noticeably over the last 30 days after what was a peak-A sentiment window. The story driving that earlier enthusiasm was hard to ignore: a historic 22-assist performance generated the kind of national spotlight that rarely finds players on lottery-bound rosters, and multiple analysts responded by framing Collier not as a developmental curiosity but as a legitimate long-term building block — the rare second-year player whose ceiling gets discussed in optimistic rather than cautious terms. That narrative aligns reasonably well with his C+ performance grade, which reflects the reality that 11.7 PPG, 7.2 APG, and 2.5 RPG across 59 games in the 2025-26 season represent genuine above-average production for a 21-year-old still learning to run an NBA offense, even if the raw numbers haven't yet caught up to the heat of the hype. The recent organizational activity — a string of rest-of-season and 10-day signings at guard — is the quiet drag on sentiment, signaling that the Jazz are in full evaluation mode rather than competitive mode, which frames Collier's growth in a rebuild context that some fans find frustrating despite understanding the logic. The bottom line is that Collier's narrative is healthy but decelerating: the foundational optimism is real, Jazz supporters are vocally invested in him as a centerpiece rather than a complementary piece, and the national media has taken notice — but sustaining a high-grade sentiment on a team this far removed from playoff relevance requires consistent individual performance that keeps the spotlight on him regardless of the standings.
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