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Utilizing Technology to Protect Biodiversity

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When discussing biodiversity, a powerful example often cited is the reintroduction of wolves in Yellowstone, which changed the course of the park’s rivers. This species was brought back to the U.S. national park in 1995, and soon after, the new predators reduced the deer population, allowing vegetation—especially aspens and willows—to recover. This, in turn, improved habitats for other species like beavers and birds, even altering river courses. This phenomenon is known as a “trophic cascade,” where the removal or addition of a species leads to unpredictable changes in an ecosystem. But how can we preserve biodiversity in the face of climate change and protect endangered species? Can technology help us in this effort?

Why is biodiversity being lost?

Before exploring the technologies that can help conserve species, it’s crucial to understand the main causes of biodiversity loss. According to UN data, one in eight species of flora and fauna worldwide is at risk of extinction due to four key factors:

  • Land-use change. This mainly involves converting forests and jungles into agricultural land, which destroys habitats and reduces biological diversity. This factor accounts for 30% of the global decline in biodiversity.
  • Overexploitation of resources. Overfishing, overhunting, and excessive harvesting of resources like timber deplete the planet’s renewable resources faster each year. This issue is responsible for 20% of global biodiversity loss.
  • Climate change and pollution. It is estimated that these factors contribute up to 14% of biodiversity loss. Some studies suggest that they could become the leading causes in the coming decades.
  • Invasive species. Species like the zebra mussel, lionfish, American crab, or Asian carp can become invasive, disrupting ecosystems and reducing biodiversity. They are estimated to be responsible for 11% of global biodiversity loss.

5 technological innovations for biodiversity conservation

In addition to transitioning to renewable energy, creating protected areas, and implementing similar conservation measures, technology offers valuable tools to support this mission. Here are five recent examples:

1. Genetic monitoring (eDNA). Environmental DNA (eDNA) technology has transformed how scientists monitor biodiversity. By detecting species through DNA traces left in the environment, such as in water or soil, it allows for the identification of rare or elusive species without invasive methods.

Example: Scientists at ETH Zurich in Switzerland are using drones equipped with adhesive to collect eDNA from tree branches.

2. Camera traps and drones. Camera traps equipped with motion and infrared sensors, along with drones carrying advanced cameras, enable the remote monitoring of wildlife and their habitats. These technologies can function in extreme conditions and transmit images in real time.

Example: The Australian Wildlife Conservancy used camera traps to capture footage of a rare Australian marsupial for the first time in history.

3. LiDaR for forest mapping. LiDAR (Light Detection and Ranging) uses laser pulses emitted from aircraft or drones to map vegetation in high resolution. This technology helps scientists measure changes in forest ecosystems accurately and efficiently.

Example: In Indonesia, LiDAR has been used to assess the impact of logging in tropical forests.

4. Bioacoustics. Bioacoustics uses recording devices to capture the sounds of natural ecosystems. These sounds, from birdsong to frog croaks, are analyzed by AI to assess the health and biodiversity of ecosystems.

Example: Bioacoustics has been used to monitor the coquí llanero, a frog native to Puerto Rico’s dry savannah, over a ten-year period. The ongoing use of this technology is providing researchers with insights into the area’s biodiversity trends.

5. High-tech maps and big data. Advanced mapping technologies combine satellite imagery, sensor data, and data modeling to monitor vegetation and ecosystem changes on large scales. These platforms allow ecologists to observe forest loss in real time and respond more swiftly to threats.

Example: This technology extends beyond forests, as the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) uses water quality sensors and satellite imagery to assess the health of the Great Barrier Reef in Australia.

To learn more about how technological advances can aid in conserving biodiversity, we recommend reading this article on the use of artificial intelligence and big data in preventing wildfires, one of the greatest environmental threats. And, of course, we encourage you to get involved in volunteer activities that contribute to the regeneration of natural ecosystems.

 

Fuentes:

Faith leaders oppose Texas law mandating Ten Commandments in classrooms | Education News

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The complaint alleges that a law requiring the religious text violates ‘fundamental religious-freedom principles’ in the US.

A group of faith leaders in the United States have filed a lawsuit seeking to block the state of Texas from requiring the Ten Commandments, as detailed in the Old Testament of the Bible, to be displayed in public classrooms.

Their legal challenge on Tuesday comes just days after Texas Governor Greg Abbott signed the legislation, which would make Texas the largest state in the country to impose such a requirement.

In the lawsuit, the Christian and Muslim faith leaders argue that the law would subject nearly six million students across Texas’s 9,100 public schools to “religious mandates, every single school day”.

“This is wholly inconsistent with the fundamental religious-freedom principles … upon which our nation was founded,” said the lawsuit.

It further noted that children who attend public schools in Texas “follow various faiths and religions, or do not practice any religion at all”.

The US Constitution protects the right to practice — or not practice — a religion without interference from the government.

Meanwhile, the concept of the “separation of church and state” has long been seen as a bedrock principle in US law. While it is not directly referred to in the US Constitution, its roots have been traced back to the US colonial period.

Thomas Jefferson, the country’s third president, used the phrase to discuss the Constitution’s Establishment Clause, which prohibits the government from making laws “respecting an establishment of religion”. The concept has also been upheld by several Supreme Court rulings.

Still, a handful of conservative-led states have sought to pass laws mixing public education with elements from the Christian religion.

In 2024, Louisiana became the first state in the US to mandate displaying of the Ten Commandments in public schools. Last week, a federal appeals court blocked the requirement.

Arkansas also passed a similar law in April, which several groups say they plan to challenge.

Proponents of those kinds of laws argue that the Ten Commandments have historical significance beyond their religious context and are foundational to US society.

A sponsor of the Texas bill, Candy Noble, said the requirement to show the Ten Commandments concerns “what is historically important to our nation educationally and judicially”.

In Biblical narrative, the Ten Commandments were scrolled on two stone tablets and given to Moses by God on Mount Sinai. Moses was then given the instruction to spread the teaching.

The commandments include rules such as “Thou shall not kill” and “Thou shall not steal”, as well as prohibitions against other gods, taking “the Lord’s name in vain” and not honouring the Sabbath day.

The Texas law requires public schools to display a poster or framed copy of an English version of the commandments, which should be no smaller than 16 by 20 inches or 41 by 51 centimetres.

Translations and interpretations, however, vary across denominations, faiths and languages and may differ in homes and houses of worship.

Several other groups have also vowed to challenge the law. They include the American Civil Liberties Union of Texas, the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), Americans United for Separation of Church and State, and the Freedom From Religion Foundation.

In a statement in May, the groups said the law “is religiously coercive and interferes with families’ right to direct children’s religious education”.

Nvidia’s stock reaches all-time high due to increased optimism in AI sector

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Nvidia shares hit a record high on Wednesday, marking a turnaround for the chip company following a rocky start to the year marked by US-China tensions over critical artificial intelligence technology.

The US chip designer’s shares rose 4.3 per cent, putting Nvidia decisively ahead of Microsoft as the world’s most valuable company, with a $3.77tn market capitalisation compared with Microsoft’s $3.66tn.

The rally came as Nvidia chief executive Jensen Huang gave a bullish outlook at the company’s annual shareholder meeting on Wednesday about its ability to continue its explosive growth over the next decade. He cited the “multitrillion-dollar opportunity” of AI and robotics.

“We are at the beginning of a decade-long AI infrastructure build-out: demand for sovereign AI is growing around the world,” Huang told shareholders.

Concerns that tech giants such as Microsoft and Amazon might pull back on their massive spending on the infrastructure behind AI have abated. During the most recent earnings season, tech companies reiterated their commitment to these investments.

Nvidia followed this with a solid earnings report at the end of May in which it beat Wall Street expectations.

Nvidia’s stock was dented earlier this year when a breakthrough by China’s DeepSeek led to concerns about the durability of Nvidia’s dominant position in the global AI infrastructure market. That event wiped nearly $600bn from the company’s market value.

Its stock was also knocked after US President Donald Trump introduced new restrictions on Nvidia’s China-specific H20 AI chips in his trade conflict with China.

The move has closed off Nvidia’s access to the Chinese market, which it says could reach $50bn in the coming years. Nvidia is considering a redesign to its Blackwell chips to continue to serve the China market while complying with the export controls.

Daniel Newman, chief executive of research company Futurum Group, said the rally was “about the ability of Nvidia to move as fast as it’s moving”.

“Even though cloud providers like Amazon and Microsoft want to build their own vertically integrated AI infrastructure, right now there’s no situation where the best technology stack isn’t Nvidia,” he said.

Threats from competitors such as AMD to take market share for advanced AI chips did not matter “if it’s a $400bn market in the next four years”.

Microsoft alone processed more than five times more requests to AI models such as ChatGPT last quarter compared with the year before, Huang told shareholders on Wednesday.

Other markets for Nvidia chips are also growing, including so-called neocloud AI companies, which offer access to leading AI chips. Nvidia-backed CoreWeave’s shares are up more than 300 per cent since its listing on Nasdaq in March, reflecting the return to investor optimism around the long-term growth prospects for AI.

Nvidia has committed to an annual release of AI chips and is positioning itself for the launch of Vera Rubin, which will follow its latest Blackwell systems that have seen massive demand, including from sovereign infrastructure deals with Saudi Arabia and the UAE.

Huang recently toured the Gulf states and Europe, announcing large deals as he touts a new era of “accelerated computing” and promises advances in productivity across all global industries.

“Nvidia is riding a general chip wave,” said G Dan Hutcheson, vice-president at TechInsights, with markets recovering from the impact of Trump’s “liberation day” tariffs and the DeepSeek breakthrough. “Nvidia was oversold because of both.”

Rights group reports 16 deaths as thousands protest in Nairobi

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At least 16 people have been killed and 400 injured in nationwide protests in Kenya against President William Ruto’s government, human rights group Amnesty Kenya has said.

Police clashed with protesters, who marched in their thousands – some chanting “Ruto must go” and waving branches as a symbol of peaceful opposition to his rule.

The government banned live TV and radio coverage of the demonstrations, but its decree was overturned by the High Court in the capital, Nairobi.

Ruto urged protesters not to threaten peace and stability, as crowds tried to reach his official residence but were pushed back by police.

“Protests should not be to destroy peace in Kenya. We do not have another country to go to when things go wrong. It is our responsibility to keep our country safe,” he said.

The president was speaking at a burial ceremony in the coastal county of Kilifi.

His absence from State House, his official residence, was notable as young protesters threatened to storm it.

Police used barricades and razor wire to seal off major roads – especially those leading to State House and parliament.

The protests were held exactly a year after demonstrators stormed parliament, setting part of the building ablaze.

At least 60 people were killed in a wave of anti-government protests last year.

The authorities have not yet given any casualty figures from Wednesday’s protests, but the Kenya Medical Association, Law Society of Kenya and the Police Reforms Working Group said in a joint statement that at least eight protesters were killed.

Of the 400 injured, 83 required “specialised treatment” and eight had suffered gunshot wounds. The injured included three police officers, the statement added.

Amina Mude told the BBC she joined the protests “to fight for the future of my kids”.

“I feel like as a country we’re not going in the right direction, especially in education and everything happening.

“I feel like it’s high time that the country and the leadership listens to us.”

Video footage showed plumes of white tear gas drifting between buildings in Narobi, sending protesters scrambling for cover, coughing, and shielding their eyes.

In the heart of the city, protesters marched pass shuttered shops and empty streets.

The fence around parliament was lined with wreaths and handwritten notes from grieving families and defiant youths – a reminder of last year’s unrest at the site.

A young woman draped in a Kenyan flag clutched a poster bearing the names of those killed a year ago by the security forces as they tried to end the protests.

Nvidia and Tesla Drive Strong Movement in Mega-Cap Stocks on Wednesday’s Market

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Nvidia and Tesla Stir Mega-Cap Movers on Wednesday's Market

Israel believes Netanyahu has triumphed over Iran – what’s his next move? | Latest updates on Benjamin Netanyahu

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As the Israel-Iran ceasefire staggered into effect on Tuesday, all of the combatants launched a plausible argument for victory.

In the United States, President Donald Trump claimed that both his diplomatic and military interventions had largely been responsible for halting the fighting, while the leaders of Iran and Israel each claimed to have secured a decisive win in a regional contest that dates back decades.

In Israel, however, the emerging narrative is that the end result of the conflict with Iran has solidified the position of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Just two weeks ago, Netanyahu was in real trouble. On the night before he ordered the unilateral strike on regional nemesis Iran, his governing coalition was only able to survive thanks to a last-minute deal with dissenting members. Public and political opinion had also appeared to have turned against his war on Gaza, and internationally, Israel’s allies were beginning to protest the blockade of the Palestinian enclave.

Now, he can argue that he has severely weakened Israel’s most dangerous regional enemy, Iran, and he claims that its nuclear programme has been destroyed and sent “down the drain”.

The Iran threat

Buoyed by rising poll numbers and the sense of having successfully confronted Iran, Netanyahu may, according to reports in Israel, seek to take advantage politically and call snap elections.

Having built up the threat of Iran over three decades, and repeatedly warned that his country’s principal bogeyman was about to build a nuclear weapon despite Tehran’s denials, Netanyahu can now take advantage of being seen as the man who ended that threat.

“Entire generations have grown up in Israel with this fear of Iran,” Israeli political scientist Ori Goldberg said. “There’s a foundational narrative that there’s this crazy state out there that, without any logic or reason, wants to destroy us.”

“My oldest daughter is 22 now, and has never known anything else,” Goldberg said. “Netanyahu is now getting the credit for having confronted that.”

In a video statement released earlier today, Israel’s far-right Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich framed the conflict in characteristically apocalyptic terms, telling his social media followers, “The State of Israel has defeated in the last twelve days the empire of evil that threatened the entire world and sought the destruction of Israel.”

That argument is supported by much of the Israeli public – which has largely supported right-wing and far-right parties in recent years.

“Netanyahu is stronger than ever,” Mitchell Barak, an Israeli pollster and former political aide to several senior Israeli political figures, including Netanyahu, told Al Jazeera. “No one’s going to bring him down, no one’s going to challenge him, not his opponents, not his detractors, nobody.”

“He showed that Israel can go it alone. He held off, before American help, then continued alone. Bennett, Lapid can’t challenge that,” Barak continued, referring to two former Israeli prime ministers, the right-wing Naftali Bennett and the centrist Yair Lapid, who are both opponents of Netanyahu.

Not so rosy

However, how long the Israeli prime minister’s perceived victory will last is uncertain. The Iranian government and its Islamic Republic form of governance remain in place, even as Netanyahu has repeatedly called for its overthrow. Netanyahu insinuated that regime change was a possible result of the conflict between Israel and Iran, and Trump used the term in a social media post on Sunday, before clarifying on Monday that he was opposed to regime change because it could lead to “chaos”.

And despite Israeli claims, it is too early to have a definitive answer on the condition of Iran’s ballistic missile and nuclear weapons programmes. The former, despite Israel’s effective air defence systems, led to the deaths of at least 28 Israelis during the conflict, while Iran is likely to shroud its nuclear programme in secrecy going forward. Early intelligence assessments are reported to have determined that Iran’s nuclear timeline has been delayed, but not destroyed.

And analysts have previously suggested to Al Jazeera that Iran is likely to accelerate its nuclear programme, with hardliners within the Iranian regime now even more convinced of the need for a plausible deterrent against Israel.

“There are a lot of unanswered questions out there, such as how much uranium remains enriched, or even where it is, but, in the short term, it doesn’t really matter whether it’s been destroyed or not,” Yossi Mekelberg, a senior consulting fellow with Chatham House’s Middle East and North Africa Programme, told Al Jazeera. “Netanyahu and his allies in the White House will be able to spin it. What matters to them is that Iran has suffered a real physical and psychological blow.”

However, how long Netanyahu may be able to survive on spin alone remains far from certain, Mekelberg added. “Every Houdini eventually comes across a lock they can’t pick,” he said.

 

US President Donald Trump was unsparing in his criticism of Israel and Iran’s disregard of the ceasefire he brokered in remarks made on June 24 in Washington, DC, the US [Kevin Lamarque/Reuters]

Netanyahu’s actions since the start of Israel’s war on Gaza in October 2023 have arguably made his country’s position weaker in the long term. Israel’s international isolation has increased, with revulsion worldwide at the Israeli military’s actions in Gaza, where it has killed more than 56,000 Palestinians. Netanyahu himself is wanted by the International Criminal Court for war crimes, and South Africa has led a number of other countries in taking Israel to the International Court of Justice, accusing it of carrying out genocide in Gaza.

The images of those killed, including thousands of children, and the total destruction of Gaza, have spread on social media in particular, turning many in the West against Israel. This has become particularly noticeable in the US, where even on the right – traditionally a bastion of support for Israel – support for the country has become controversial.

And while Trump has shown himself to be a pro-Israeli president, the perception among many in his “America First” movement that Israel dragged the US into a war against Iran has led to anger and heavy criticism of Israel among many of Trump’s most prominent supporters.

Trump himself publicly reprimanded Israel after the latter planned to launch a large attack on Iran after the ceasefire began on Tuesday. Eventually, Israel conducted only a small and symbolic attack, following what it said was a ceasefire violation by Iran – one that Trump was clear did not warrant a response.

Some indication of the fury that has greeted Netanyahu’s decision to abuse the terms of Trump’s ceasefire was provided by Trump’s former chief strategist and ally Steve Bannon. Speaking on his War Room podcast on Tuesday, Bannon called Netanyahu a “bald-faced liar” and Israel a “protectorate”.

Appearing to address Netanyahu directly, Bannon continued, “You have the gall – particularly after what [Trump] did for you and the grief he’s taken over here – you have the gall … When he said, ‘This is what I’ve done, and I need you to be a partner, I need you to stand down first’, you lied to him. That’s why he’s furious”.

Gaza deal?

While Israel can put the conflict with Iran behind it – for now – the war on Gaza continues, with no sign of Israel finding an alternative force to Hamas to rule the enclave, and no deal to secure the release of the Israeli captives still held in the Palestinian territory.

That may put a wrench in any plans for Netanyahu to secure another term as prime minister in the short term.

“I’m not so sure about snap elections,” Aida Touma-Suleiman, a member of parliament representing the Hadash-Ta’al Party, said.

“The polls are in Netanyahu’s favour, but it’s still not certain. I can’t see Netanyahu going to the polls with Gaza still going on,” she added, suggesting that the prime minister might wait for the summer parliamentary recess on July 26, when he would be freer to negotiate some kind of conclusion to the war on the enclave.

Based on Netanyahu’s attitude towards negotiations over the past 20 months, it is not clear that finding a deal to end the war on Gaza is something he wants. Instead, any deal is likely to require a significant push from Trump – if the US president wants to make one.

“I can’t see how Netanyahu can reach any kind of settlement in Gaza,” Goldberg said. “Everyone’s waiting for Trump to act again … Negotiations with Hamas may start again, but it’ll be Trump that imposes some kind of end to [the war].”

Leading in the Age of Automation: Embracing Humanity in a World of Machines

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Mark Minevich is the president of Going Global Ventures and a strategic partner at Mayfield Venture Capital.

Computers now can write code, assess markets, prepare marketing campaigns, and carry out negotiation. As a leader, you must begin to ask yourself, where will we be when all of our people are no longer needed? Computers powered by AI can do nearly every task needed to run the technical aspect of an organization. Some in the field are sounding the alarm on potentially catastrophic effects to the labor market. Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei recently warned that AI tools could eliminate half of entry-level, white-collar jobs and spike unemployment to as much as 20%.

But there is one indispensable thing machines can never do: Be human. 

The future of leadership will be the result of working through this paradox.

Advances in hybrid intelligence

We are entering a time where machines and humans can join forces and work as one—aka hybrid intelligence. AI is being used as a tool by humans everywhere to enhance their abilities and productivity. Unfortunately, the fact that AI is primarily a tool and not a replacement for humans is not always well understood by the general public, or the workforce.

Simply putting artificial intelligence into a system isn’t enough for hybrid intelligence. How that AI is integrated is the crucial part. AI agents are not only used at the final stage of decisions, but they also partner with teams and sometimes even decide things by themselves. Because of this change, managers have to rethink their roles and how they control, supervise, and produce value.

Simply managing workflows is not enough for you to be a true leader anymore. Leadership in 2025 and beyond requires fitting humans, who supply feelings and ethics, together with technology that enhances the speed, reach, and uniformity of processes. 

The human responsibilities in this era are not just crucial to the use of AI, they are the main ingredient to AI’s existence.

How to manage when AI rules the world

Last year, private investment in AI reached nearly $110 billion in the U.S. As AI agents quickly wrestle work away from us humans, how does management respond and truly lead? To lead organizations in the future, executives need to change how their org charts are written and begin focusing on human skills rather than divisions and ranks. 

Always consider what only humans can do:

  • Emotions and political skills require better understanding of people. AI falls short here.
  • Strategic creativity is needed since innovation does not happen in a single direction. Only humans can make up the rules for games, rather than only focus on playing it faster.
  • Visionary leaders work on coming up with stories, judging ethical issues, building trust with all parties, and planning for various threats.

Some organizations are choosing to build teams now based on personal qualities. What does the human bring that is unique? Are they open-minded enough to use AI instead of deeming it a threat? Are they experienced with the technology and do they see it as an advantage rather than a personal detriment? These are the questions leaders of this new reality will continually ask.

Traditional leadership is becoming increasingly irrelevant 

Middle management teams are being slowly removed in many organizations as more and more work can be automated and less human hours are needed. I am not talking about this happening over the course of the next five years—I mean now. So, your methods of leading and coaching these types of teams are no longer needed.

But not all the needs for humans will disappear. Leaders must figure out, in their specific business, what human skills are most relevant to the success of the company. Identify the employees in your business who possess these skills or are agile enough to be coached up. These are the workers you focus your coaching and development skills on. 

Then, leaders must sell this approach, in essence, to all the major stakeholders in their business. This ensures that stakeholder confidence in the business is strong and well-maintained. Part of this sell is informing stakeholders that what you are keeping your human workforce for is to find better ways to think about a problem, rather than simply finding the fastest answers.

Can your culture keep up with technology? 

Technologically everything moves at an ever-increasing pace. Culture in leadership is always much slower. While the worldwide move to automation is happening now, the majority of C-suites are sticking to ideas from the 20th century.

We already see that up to 99% of Fortune 500 companies use automation in hiring and resume screening and that AI is being used in sales and marketing, as well as in nearly every other part of work as we know it. So, leaders must adapt their approach. 

A large part of leading and coaching in the future will be showing your teams the ways in which AI is being deployed to their benefit, not as their replacement. You will need to let them behind the scenes as you create and implement new automations. You need to show them not only how this AI will work, but also why it is being used to their and the company’s benefit. 

Who the new leader needs to be

In order to succeed in this new environment, leaders must be the director of societal ethics in their company. They must decide what is an ethical use of AI and when they are about to cross the line of pushing for pure profit at any human cost. 

They must paint the picture for their teams of the full AI vision and make that picture related to every employee they want to keep in the fold. 

They must also lead to create—or allow space for their teams to create—innovative approaches that make machine operations meaningful for people. They have to then be the orchestrators and bring people, platforms, and processes together without just sticking to antiquated organizational charts.

With less middle management, there is less delegation. Leaders must be the ones with the soft skills to work across divides. Whether those divides be cross functional, age gaps, or personality differences, leaders must speak all of these languages to get their teams working together. This allows them to foster quick and steady solutions.

The humanity dividend

Machines will keep getting better—there is no slowing that train. They will handle writing, building, forecasting budgets, and giving advice. Leaders earn the greatest advantage by having qualities that machines do not: judgment, empathy, and imagination.

In this era of AI, leadership means judging situations rather than controlling them. It means standing firm and seeing clearly, and being able to see all potential outcomes and how they affect your people, because AI will not know the best path for humans. That is your job, to make the decisions that benefit the most important part of your business: your people. 

The opinions expressed in Fortune.com commentary pieces are solely the views of their authors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions and beliefs of Fortune.

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Cable theft causes severe delays for Eurostar passengers

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Eurostar passengers are facing a second day of severe delays after two people died on the railway track in France and then cables were stolen.

The high-speed rail operators says repairs are complete and the railway line is open again, but delays will last until the end of the day.

Eurostar said passengers should postpone their journey, after the disruption saw services cancelled and delayed in both directions on lines connecting London with Paris, Brussels and Amsterdam.

Eurostar said there was already knock-on disruption on Wednesday after two people died in separate incidents on the LGV Nord line on Tuesday, but services were further impacted after cable was stolen on the same line.

The theft near Lille, which French media said was of around 600 metres of copper cables, caused trains to be rerouted, leading to extended journey times.

Further cancellations are not expected on Wednesday now that the railway line is repaired.

Eurostar said that so far, five trains between London and Paris have been cancelled.

It added that impacted passengers can change their travel plans for free or request a full refund.

“We’re very sorry for the impact this is having on our customers,” Eurostar said in a statement.

“Our teams are working closely with the French authorities and infrastructure teams to manage the situation and restore services safely.”

The operator earlier said one track had reopened, allowing some trains to run in both directions until full repairs were completed.

Water is being handed out to passengers onboard delayed trains, and stations are also very busy.

Hundreds of people are queuing at London’s St Pancras International railway station trying to access the service centre to rebook onto other trains.

Elizabeth Romijn, a yoga teacher from the Netherlands, told PA news agency at St Pancras that the situation was “very chaotic” and people were having to sit on the ground because there were not enough chairs.

The 75-year-old was planning to travel home to Brussels after visiting friends in Surrey.

“My plan is to just wait. Maybe I should go and be more proactive and go to ask one of the staff but nobody seems to know anything,” she said, adding that “it’s quite horrible long queues.”

The railway line in France was closed for much of the afternoon and evening on Tuesday after the two fatalities between Lille and Paris.

Services were cancelled on routes to and from Paris while trains between London, Brussels and Amsterdam ran with delays.

Eurostar said disruption continued into Wednesday as trains and crew were displaced.

K-pop agencies, including HYBE and SM Entertainment, agree to subcontract reforms following FTC investigation

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Five major entertainment companies in South Korea, including K-pop giants SM Entertainment and HYBE, have reached an agreement with the market’s Fair Trade Commission over alleged subcontracting violations.

The resolution marks the first time a consent resolution system was applied to the manufacturing and service subcontracting sector since the system was introduced in July 2022, the South Korean FTC said in a notice on Tuesday (June 24).

The FTC’s consent resolution system allows companies under investigation to propose voluntary corrective measures instead of facing violations.

The resolutions were finalized with HYBE, SM Entertainment, YG Entertainment, JYP Entertainment and Starship Entertainment after the companies applied for the consent procedure between April and May 2024, with the commission approving the process in December.

It follows an investigation by the FTC, launched in July 2023, which examined whether companies violated subcontracting laws by failing to issue written contracts in advance when outsourcing production of music records, merchandise like light sticks and dolls, video content, and performance services including stage composition, lighting installation and sound equipment operations.

South Korea’s Subcontracting Transaction Fairness Act requires companies to provide written contracts containing statutory information before work begins, the FTC said.

Under the settlement finalized on June 9, each company will contribute KRW 200 million ($147 million) to create a KRW 1 billion ($736m) mutual cooperation fund, instead of paying fines to the government over their violations.

The fund will provide practical assistance to suppliers. Each companies have outlined specific support programs ranging from health checkup subsidies, safety equipment purchases, to educational course vouchers.

HYBE, the agency behind BTS, has allocated KRW 100 million ($73,600) over the next three years to support protective equipment purchases for its suppliers. It has also earmarked another KRW 100 million to provide assistance with purchasing consumables for video production such as memory cards and batteries.

SM Entertainment, home to groups like aespa and NCT, will set aside KRW 50 million ($36,800) for health checkup expenses or holiday gifts for employees of suppliers. It also earmarked KRW 50 million for video editing programs and support for suppliers’ filming equipment.

Before finalizing the agreements with the five K-pop companies, the FTC collected opinions from stakeholders including the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism and Ministry of SMEs and Startups during a 49-day review period from February to March 2025.

Key reforms include provisional contracts that can be converted to formal contracts, establishing an electronic contract system, enhancing in-house contract management system and improving education on subcontracting laws.

The regulatory action comes as the K-pop economy continues to grow at home and overseas. In 2023, the K-pop market achieved overseas sales of KRW 1.24 trillion ($914m), according to data from Statista. Of the total, 47.6% came from overseas performances, while 31% were from overseas album sales.

K-pop companies have pursued aggressive expansion strategies overseas. Less than a month ago, HYBE officially launched a subsidiary in China, the world’s fifth-largest recorded music market. The news follows another report by South Korean news agency Yonhap last month that HYBE is also planning to establish an office in Mumbai, India.

SM Entertainment, meanwhile, set up a Southeast Asian headquarters in Singapore in late 2022. Back in March, the company announced that it would launch a training academy for K-pop hopefuls in the city-state.

Music Business Worldwide

Introducing New Metrics for Assessing Passing in the NBA Draft

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No part of basketball captivates me like beautiful passing does. Possibly reflective of my basketball strengths and weaknesses, I’ve always felt partial to brilliant players with a sixth sense for playmaking. Hours of watching Jason Williams, Steve Nash and Chris Paul passing highlights growing up led me to my most ambitious scouting project to date.

Passing is a critical component of basketball scouting, yet there’s a lack of depth in traditional evaluation of playmaking. Basic passing analysis starts and ends with assist and turnover counts. Even more ‘advanced’ passing stats like assist-to-turnover ratio, assist rate and passing-by-playtype link back to the box score.

Problems surrounding passing evaluation center around one idea — not all assists (and turnovers) are equal, though the box score views them as such. Though raw assist totals point in the direction of the best passers in a given class, there’s so much more to passing than the outcome of the possession.

Take this assist from Cooper Flagg — screening action between Kon Knueppel and Sion James springs James wide open downhill. Flagg simply has to pass the ball forward to a wide-open target who finishes the play:

Compare the play above, which added one assist to Flagg’s total, to this play, which is my personal favorite pass of the 2025 cycle. Flagg drives baseline, twists in midair under heavy pressure and kicks it out for a wide-open three and an assist in the box score:

The first clip presented a fairly basic pass. Flagg had to read the action unfolding and pass over a defender, but most NBA-caliber players comfortably convert that pass. The second clip, worth the same box score value as the first, demonstrates high-level vision, creativity and spatial awareness from Flagg, as well as an ability to pass under pressure.

This basic example underscores the need for more detailed analysis when projecting plamymaking. In pursuit of a deeper understanding of the passers in this draft, I set out to watch an ungodly amount of passes, hand-tracking different passing features to better describe true passing talent.

Football stats inspired this project, as I always envied the depth and diversity of metrics and insights about the game described quantitatively. I mirrored some of what Pro Football Focus attempts to achieve with their passing metrics, subjectively evaluating a quarterback’s ball placement, anticipation, arm strength and pocket presence, all important football traits that basic stats struggle to capture.

It would be impossible for one person to watch every second of every prospect’s season and log every single pass. To best approximate a player’s passing totals, I watched all of their assists, turnovers and pick-and-roll/isolation/post-up passes that didn’t lead to assists on Synergy. This process was inherently imperfect, notably missing blown potential assists in transition and on other playtypes not mentioned before. It still encompassed a fairly large sample of passes for quite a few prospects.

Across the last eight months, I watched hours of passing clips, charting 4,982 passes for 28 different prospects, logging information on each pass to create 10 different ‘metrics,’ each aiming to capture a different aspect of passing.

(In quotations, as these aren’t truly statistical metrics in the traditional sense, rather a quantitative expression of my subjective experience. I’ll use the word ‘metric’ throughout the piece to refer to these stats as a shorthand, but these aren’t trying to replace true numerical measures.)

Here are the 10 main metrics I aimed to log and create, explained:

Passing Chances

Each clip I charted added a single ‘passing chance’ to a player’s total. Passing chances include logged assists, passes that led to potential shots but didn’t result in points and turnovers resulting from passing. This number, adjusted per 40 minutes to normalize for playing time, can help us visualize the highest volume playmakers in the class.

Potential Assists

Potential assists in this case can be viewed as passing chances without including passing turnovers. This metric also helps illustrate the highest volume passers who create the most shots for their teammates. As I mentioned before, this shouldn’t be used as a substitute for traditional assist totals, but rather an approximation of shot creation responsibility.

Big Time Passes

Pro Football Focus’s ‘Big-Time Throw’ metric directly inspired this stat, which forms a baseline for the entire project. At its core, this project aims to evaluate and quantify passing quality, which is best represented by their big-time passing rate.

A prospect’s big-time passing rate (total big-time passes / total passing chances) illustrates how many of their passing chances are high quality, meaning they demonstrate one or more of advanced vision, processing speed, timing, anticipation, creativity or skill in creating points for teammates.

Here’s an obvious big-time pass from Nique Clifford, showcasing incredible creativity to fire this pass behind his back for an easy layup:

Broome whips this pass into a tight window, skipping the ball from the post to create a high-value open three. The vision, velocity and skill are all impressive here:

This Kon Knueppel swing pass to the corner doesn’t qualify as a big-time pass. It’s a fairly easy read that most perimeter players at the NBA level make. One could argue the pump fake to draw the closeout adds some value, but it’s a large window to pass into regardless

Pressure Rate

Alongside big-time passes, pressure rate (total pressured passes / total passing chances) was most directly inspired by football stats. Modern defenses throw waves of bodies at great initiators and it’s paramount for them to beat pressure with their passing to crack defenses and dictate coverages.

I defined ‘under pressure’ as two or more defenders or one defender plus an out-of-bounds line directly crowding the passer. The second Flagg clip above is a textbook pressured pass, as he creates an open three surrounded by two defenders and the baseline. Passes around a soft hedge or show weren’t included in this analysis.

This Egor Demin turnover won’t count towards his pressure rate, since the turnover results from a travel before the pass:

Even though this might look like a pressured possession at first glance, this Kasparas Jakucionis pass doesn’t qualify. Only one defender is immediately guarding him and he isn’t applying particularly intense pressure (this does count as a big-time pass, though):

Importantly, this pressure rate metric only considers a player’s ability to beat pressure as a passer and not as a ball-handler. A pass that comes after a player splits a blitz or passes after dribbling away from pressure won’t count towards the metric (though I wish I had the time to chart holistic pressure rates on scoring chances, maybe one day).

Passing Turnovers

Passing turnovers (total passing turnovers / total passing chances) simply tally how often a player’s passing chance results in a turnover. I watched each player’s turnovers in full, logging the turnovers that resulted directly from a pass, rather than from ball control, an offensive foul or something else miscellaneous. 

This metric can help us understand a player’s decision-making, accuracy and risk aversion. For each passing turnover, I logged whether the turnover occurred because of a mental error (a poorly timed pass, passing to a covered teammate) or a technical error (inaccurate ball placement, sub-optimal delivery angle) as an attempt to understand why players commit turnovers.

In the future, I’d like to account for turnover-worthy passes that don’t result in giveaways (more on this later).

Weak Hand Passing

Weak hand passing rate (total weak hand passes / total potential assists) simply calculates how often a player passes with their non-dominant hand. It’s a rough measure of skill expression and versatility, though I’m not sure how much value something like this carries.

(These final five metrics only consider a player’s potential assist, not potential turnovers, which I may change to include all passing chances in the future.)

Live Dribble Passing

For this metric, I defined live dribble passing (total live dribble passes / total potential assists) as passes thrown where a player doesn’t discontinue their dribble and pick the ball up with both hands to pass. These two Flagg passes are examples of live dribble passes by my definition, with Flagg passing the ball before killing his dribble:

In the future, I’ll probably change this metric to a broader ‘passing on the move’ one, as I found my live dribble definition to be a bit too restrictive. It doesn’t capture exactly what I hoped, more representative of dexterity than processing/decision making on the move.

Rim Potential Assists

Most elite passers create tons of layups for teammates, manufacturing easy shots at the hoop for points and free throws. I charted each prospect’s rim potential assists (total rim potential assists / total potential assists), logging how often a player created a fairly open dunk, layup or foul at the hoop.

This metric doesn’t include entry passes to post-ups where a player has to dribble to create space, or passes into short rolls where a player dribbles into a rim attempt. 

Paint Touch Potential Assists

The paint touch potential assist (total paint touch potential assists / total potential assists) metric evaluates how often a player creates shots for their teammates from self-created paint touches. It doesn’t account for paint touches that don’t result in passes and shouldn’t be used fully as a substitute for paint pressure.

In the future, I might alter this metric to cover all passes that result from an advantage created, even ones that don’t result in paint touches, or I’ll create a separate metric to encompass this idea.

Manipulation

Many of the greatest passers ever create passing windows by moving defenses with their eyes, body language or the ball. This manipulation (total manipulation passes / total potential assists) metric aims to capture how often a passer passes proactively, forcing defensive mistakes and punishing those mistakes.

It’s impossible to truly know why a defender moves or doesn’t move somewhere, but we can infer confidently enough on many of these plays. We can watch the weak-side defender (bottom of the screen in white) stare down Clifford and watch his eyes, oblivious to the cutter slipping behind him:

Again, none of these metrics are perfect. I’ll further explain limitations and future planned changes at the end of the piece. For now, let’s dive into the passing data I charted for the 2025 draft class. I have completed data collection on 25 draft-eligible prospects and am missing a few notable players (Nolan Traore, Ben Saraf, Kam Jones, Javon Small, Ryan Kalkbrenner) that I wish I had had time for. However, our sample of prospects is solid.

Data Deep Dive

As expected, there’s an extremely strong positive correlation (r² = 0.92) between assist rates and passing chances, even accounting for passing turnovers. Regardless of teammate quality, players who pass more will almost always log more assists:

NBA Draft 2025: Developing a New Method for Projecting and Evaluating PlaymakingNBA Draft 2025: Developing a New Method for Projecting and Evaluating Playmaking

Three prospects stand out among the group as the highest volume passers by passing chances per 40 minutes — Egor Demin (17.8), Kasparas Jakucionis (15.7) and Jeremiah Fears (14.4). This makes sense, as all three of these players spend much of their time on the court with the ball in their hands, which inherently leads to passing chances.

A second cluster of players (Walter Clayton Jr., Danny Wolf, Nique Clifford, Dylan Harper, Cooper Flagg) sit between 8-11 passing chances per 40 minutes. Many of these prospects grade positively in terms of big-time passing rate, as visualized below:

NBA Draft 2025: Developing a New Method for Projecting and Evaluating PlaymakingNBA Draft 2025: Developing a New Method for Projecting and Evaluating Playmaking

Three prospects I charted eclipsed a 30% big-time passing rate — Kon Knueppel, Nique Clifford and Derik Queen. I view all three of these players as underrated passing prospects and this metric can help explain that. Though these players don’t pass as much as some others, they consistently exhibit high-quality vision, anticipation, manipulation and skill on their passing chances.

We can combine passing volume and passing quality metrics to estimate the most impressive passers in the class, comparing passing chances and big-time passing:

NBA Draft 2025: Developing a New Method for Projecting and Evaluating PlaymakingNBA Draft 2025: Developing a New Method for Projecting and Evaluating Playmaking

Our highest volume passers (Demin, Jakucionis and Fears) all rank closer to average by passing quality, but some of this comes with their heavy on-ball role. All three uncork plenty of high-level passes, but on-ball roles force plenty of basic assists, especially on strong offenses like BYU’s.

By raw big-time pass totals, the three highest volume passers rank second, third and fourth, only trailing Clifford (94 big-time passes). Still, the players towards the top right of the chart above generally line up with the best passers in the class on film.

Aside from passing quality, pressure rates and playmaking under pressure were the other main metrics this project aimed to create. Here are the leaders among prospects I charted in passing pressure rate, including how often they created potential assists from those possessions:

NBA Draft 2025: Developing a New Method for Projecting and Evaluating PlaymakingNBA Draft 2025: Developing a New Method for Projecting and Evaluating Playmaking

Dylan Harper is the main standout here, as he ranks third among the class in pressure rate (24.7%) and second in pressured potential assist rate (87.2%). Though this doesn’t account for Harper’s ability to burn pressure with his handle or shots, it reflects well on his future on-ball value. Jakucionis faced the most total pressure and mostly succeeded in cracking defenses with his playmaking.

Specifically, charting passing turnovers can help offer context for a high-turnover player like Jakucionis, where most of his turnovers stem from handling and strength limitations rather than mental processing ones. Jakucionis provides an example of a broader trend here.

Earlier, we noted the strong positive correlation between my charted passing volume and assist rate, which makes logical sense. However, the same doesn’t hold when we visualize charted passing turnovers against raw turnover rates:

NBA Draft 2025: Developing a New Method for Projecting and Evaluating PlaymakingNBA Draft 2025: Developing a New Method for Projecting and Evaluating Playmaking

Rather than our strong positive correlation, this chart reveals a weaker correlation (r² = -0.57) between raw turnovers and passing turnovers. Not all turnovers result from a pass, so this relationship underscores the need for better analysis of individual player giveaways.

Some players towards the top right of the chart (Danny Wolf, Carter Bryant, Derik Queen) have both high turnover rates and high passing turnover rates, indicating possible problems with decision making, accuracy or skill. Some high turnover players like Jakucionis don’t cough the ball up while passing often, and some lower overall turnover players (Ace Bailey, Asa Newell) turn it over often relative to their passing volume.

Even beyond the passing versus non-passing turnover distinction, not all passing turnovers are equal. For each prospect, I logged when a turnover stemmed from a mental error or a technical one, as mentioned earlier, to better understand why a player turns the ball over and how to interpret their turnover numbers going forward (ordered by passing turnover rate, descending left to right):

NBA Draft 2025: Developing a New Method for Projecting and Evaluating PlaymakingNBA Draft 2025: Developing a New Method for Projecting and Evaluating Playmaking

Players with more blue comprising their bar turned the ball over more often because of technical errors and players with more red comprising their bar turned the ball over more often due to mental errors. Not all turnovers are easily bucketed into one category. Some are the fault of both mental and technical issues and some passing turnovers aren’t the passer’s fault, resulting in some players notching above or below 100% on the chart above.

For prospects like Flagg and Queen, the majority of their passing turnovers resulted from accuracy and placement errors, which we could interpret more optimistically than prospects like Bailey and Newell, whose decision-making and processing more consistently faltered.

Let’s visualize how often prospects passed for easy shots at the rim (rim potential assist rate) versus how often they created potential assist chances from self-created paint touches (paint touch potential assist rate):

NBA Draft 2025: Developing a New Method for Projecting and Evaluating PlaymakingNBA Draft 2025: Developing a New Method for Projecting and Evaluating Playmaking

As a reminder, this metric doesn’t encompass paint touches without a pass, but there appears to be some anecdotal correlation between players who live near the hoop (Queen, Wolf, Clifford) and the paint touch metric. 

We can infer that players towards the top (Queen) mostly kick out of the paint to shooters and players towards the top right (Flagg, Tre Johnson, Jase Richardson) lay down passes for rim attempts. Those top-right prospects both collapse defenses and find high-value passes, which could forecast them optimistically as shot creators at the next level.

Based on these metrics and the film, who are the best passers in the 2025 NBA Draft? Before we answer that question, let’s look at one more chart, visualizing the relationship between passing quality (big-time pass rate) and passing turnover rate:

NBA Draft 2025: Developing a New Method for Projecting and Evaluating PlaymakingNBA Draft 2025: Developing a New Method for Projecting and Evaluating Playmaking

If I had to choose one chart from the piece to best represent the premier playmakers in the class, I’d pick the one above. Creating high-value passing chances without turning the ball over is a valuable commodity, reflected in most of the players I view as the best passing prospects in this draft.

Kon Knueppel

Knueppel’s best passes come when he feeds his rolling big man, often feeding the towering Khaman Maluach easy points. He processes defenses instantly on the fly, placing these interior passes accurately, often into tight windows while facing some pressure.

It’s incredibly rare for players to process the floor as quickly as Knueppel while consistently throwing high-value, often tight-window passes without turnovers. While Knueppel doesn’t break defensive structures like the best passers in the league, his playmaking brilliance comes in the form of remarkably consistent play-to-play decision-making on high-value passes.

Returning to the chart just above this section, he leads the class in big-time passing rate (31.4%) and passing turnover rate (7%) with solid enough passing volume (12th among all prospects). That’s an incredibly impressive feat, especially considering how Knueppel scaled his playmaking up in games without Cooper Flagg.

There’s an important distinction between passing and playmaking and Knueppel balances those as well as any prospect in the class. Some players can’t weaponize their brilliant processing, passing skill or vision because they lack the handle or scoring gravity to force defensive movement.

His gravity pulls two defenders his way after flaring off the Maluach screen, which forces rotations and opens the skip pass. Knueppel processes this instantly, releasing the pass within a second of catching the basketball. Plays like these let Knueppel wield his playmaking power without dominating the ball:

Knueppel’s magnetic shooting gravity and solid burst make him a dangerous on and off-ball playmaker who will create easy shots for his teammates. He’s a phenomenal pick-and-roll player, but his passing out of on-ball chances, closeout drives and off-ball movement help him create more efficient shots than more traditionally elite passers.

Derik Queen

Queen’s traditional passing statistics (0.8 assist-to-turnover rate, 11.6% assist rate) don’t paint him as a particularly strong passer. Our passing metrics present more of a mixed bag — he ranks second in big-time passing rate, fourth in pressure rate, first in weak-hand pass rate and first in rim potential assist rate. 

However, he ranks 23rd in passing turnover rate and 19th in potential assists per 40 minutes. If Queen’s overall passing quality grades so highly, why doesn’t he create more shots for his teammates?

Though Queen’s high passing turnover rate could cause some concern, a staggering 60% of those turnovers, ranking second, result from technical mistakes. He ranked sixth in the class in mental turnover rate (26.7%), as many of his passing giveaways look like this, resulting from accuracy issues and avoidable, unforced errors:

Queen’s low passing volume isn’t as easy to decipher. Some of it may result from Queen’s wiring leaning towards scoring, especially on a Maryland offense that relied heavily on his creation. Maryland’s offense improved a staggering 16.5 points per 100 possessions with Queen on the floor, evidencing his huge importance to their success.

Though Queen currently tilts toward a score-first playstyle, I generally trust players as talented as him to adapt and grow. There simply aren’t many players, especially in the frontcourt, with Queen’s vision, live-dribble ambidexterity and processing speed.

While he can capitalize on his scoring gravity to create for teammates, his lightning-fast processor adds value off-ball. Queen tossed quite a few assists like the first clip here, where it’s almost a touch pass with how fast the ball moves:

Those traits allow Queen to excel as an on-ball and off-ball passer. Though his numbers might not suggest it, I view Queen as one of the very best passing prospects in the class, regardless of position, for his phenomenal blend of gravity, vision and creativity.

Egor Demin

Demin would likely win a consensus poll for best passer in the 2025 class. It isn’t hard to understand why — at 6-foot-8, he comfortably leads the 25 prospects charted in passing volume by traditional assist rate and my passing chances measure. He spent the bulk of his time on the ball as a primary pick-and-roll initiator for a strong BYU offense this season.

He sports a sixth sense for space, timing and movement, passing like he’s constantly reading a miniap displaying every player and their position on the court. That court mapping leads to some incredible anticipatory passes, where Demin throws his target open like an elite quarterback.

Watch Demin uncork this pass before his target even enters the paint, leading him right to the block for a wide-open layup despite heavy traffic in front of the pass:

His height lets Demin attempt passes that other passers simply couldn’t imagine. While he’s doubled out to half-court, Demin launches a pass half the length of the court, leading his big man away from the rotating defender by lofting it away from the middle of the floor:

Demin’s height, vision, live-dribble trigger and sheer ambition render him the clear best skip passer in the class. He ranked 23rd in rim potential assist rate, illuminating his preference for exterior passing. Some of these skip passes come with ludicrous timing, velocity and ball placement, helping Demin create tons of open threes for great shooters:

Even with some obviously special passing traits, Demin offers an opposite example to Knueppel in the passing versus playmaking discussion. Despite possessing the mental acumen and technical skill to make every pass in the book, Demin may struggle to execute those passes.

He isn’t an accurate 3-point shooter, struggles to create separation on drives and turns the ball over at the slightest hint of contact. Though Demin’s passing talent will always let him punish tilted defenses, his inability to force defensive movement and rotations could hinder how much value his passing can add in an on-ball role.

Notice what happens when defenders play the pass against Demin, ignoring his scoring threat. Demin drives into open space here, but the help defenders read his intention to pass and back off to close the gap and force a turnover:

A weak handle, average burst and poor strength and balance limit Demin’s ability to unleash his passing brilliance. Improvement in any of those areas will help Demin extract more value from his playmaking at the NBA level. If he ever provides any semblance of a scoring threat on the ball, Demin has the tools to develop into one of the NBA’s better playmakers.

The strength of the 2025 draft’s overall passing makes it challenging to determine the best playmaking prospect of the bunch. I’d group the three above as the most intriguing passing prospects, but it’s reasonable to argue for Flagg, Clifford or Jakucionis as the best passer in the draft as well.

Beneath those prospects, the class features a handful of strong but limited passers in one or more way, notably Collin Murray-Boyles, Dylan Harper, Noah Penda and Jeremiah Fears. I’d love to write more in-depth passing profiles in the future, but my greatest hope for this project is expanding it to cover past and future draft classes.

For the moment, these metrics across a single draft class reveal some insights, but we can’t know the true predictive power of any of these metrics without a historic sample. At some point, I want to chart passes for historic prospects who did or did not become great NBA passers and if any of the metrics indicated that.

Assuming my current state of life doesn’t change too much, I plan on continuing this project over to the 2026 class. For the next cycle, I have a few changes in mind. As I previously alluded to, I’ll stop specifically charting live-dribble passes and focus more on on-the-move passing to capture a broader scope of plays and better estimate live-dribble processing.

Going forward, I’d like to develop a method for charting accuracy and decision speed. Measuring accuracy could be challenging without precise tracking data. Still, eyeballing placement, logging plays that almost resulted in turnovers but didn’t or charting tight versus open window passes could offer reasonable estimates. As always, I’m open to any suggestions here.

This project is inherently subjective and shouldn’t be viewed as a substitute for more traditional statistical measures; rather, another tool to enhance our knowledge of prospects. A different scout charting for the same thing might come to different conclusions than I would.

It’s important to note that plenty of these prospects have extremely limited samples, which lowers the confidence in the accuracy of the metrics. Gleaning much of anything from players like Newell, Maluach and Fleming with fewer than 100 total passing chances won’t uncover much definitive information.

Closely watching and writing notes on nearly 5,000 passes across 25 prospects will lead to inevitable human error. I undoubtedly miscounted, botched a calculation or evaluated a clip incorrectly at least a few times.

This project was a labor of love. Countless hours watching film, refining my process and creating this data isn’t something I would recommend anybody else do, but it brought me immense joy throughout the cycle. I love basketball deeply and I love obsessing over fine details. Intentional tracking work like this helps keep me grounded and present, which never hurts.

If you read this piece and made it through these 4,000 or so words, please know how deeply I appreciate it. I hope this project that brought me so much joy and insight can do the same for you and, again, this will ideally act as the beginning of my passing charting to keep expanding our understanding of projecting playmaking for NBA draft prospects.