Watching prospects play against Kansas allows for really meaningful evaluation. Kansas play man-to-man, no gimmicky zone. They do this, because they have personnel: most of the players on that roster are capable of making NBA-level plays. This means their style of defense is closest to NBA you can see in college. I would say Kansas is Indiana Pacers of college basketball defensively. Watching Thames play in this games really shows his strengths and weaknesses.
Strengths: excellent handles with both hands though favors left side, FT shooting, especially late in the game, excellent outside shooter both C&S and pull up, can get perimeter shot off against NBA length (Wiggins and Embiid), in the only true P&R situation (big man defender stayed to double team, while SDSU player rolled) found his teammate with ease, can get inside off a screen and draw fouls, have decent mid-range pull up jumper, moves his feet on defense, tries to anticipate screens and recovers pretty quick, if he gets stuck on one, being an excellent shooter has no problem and is effective playing off the ball, TO free .
Weaknesses: takes over games with sometimes bad results, questionable shot selection, for 23 y.o. still pretty weak - gets stuck on good screens, struggles to score inside through contact and is not a factor on the boards. Five year senior, upside is suspect: the only thing you can realistically expect improvement in is probably strength and polishing around the edges.
Still, when looking at what player is doing on the court, you should never forget, that this is college: spacing is worse, they are stuck with the roster they have for the whole season. And SDSU has a lot of ball handling, but not much in terms of shooting. In fact Thames and Polee (from time to time) are the only guys, who can knock down contested perimeter shots. That's why Thames often finds himself without the ball, and late into possession, when they give him the ball back there's no space inside and it's either a contested pull up three or time violation. Their offense relies heavily on dribble drive from other guys and offensive rebounds. And that should be taken into consideration, when you look at his measly 2.8 assists per game and decide, he has no chance to be an NBA PG. Thames is a combo guard, but he knows how to get the ball to his teammates and is unselfish.
P.S. Looking at Thames throughout this game really reminds of IT playing
: driving into 4 guys inside, hoisting contested 3s.
P.S.2 I think it's a no-brainer to give him a Summer League invite: no one has him as draftable, DX have him as just #48 senior. Probably due to a fact that they view him as 23 y.o. weak 6'3" SG.