Overview
Son of former NBA player Henry Williams, Brice was born and raised in North Carolina before starting his collegiate career with the Charlotte 49ers. He missed the entire 2021-22 season due to a knee injury but returned to action the following year before transferring to Nebraska. After a solid first season with the Cornhuskers, Williams exploded as a sixth-year senior in 2024-25, averaging 20.4 points, 4.1 rebounds, 2.9 assists and 1.1 steals per game. He was always an elite 3-point shooter, making 38.5% over five seasons, but he attempted a career-high 5.3 shots from deep in his final campaign. Brice finished with single-game (43 points in double OT loss to Ohio State) and single-season (713 points, surpassing James Palmer Jr’s 708) school records at Nebraska.
Analysis
Williams is a 6-foot-7 shooting guard who’s crafty in the paint and will stress defenses in transition. He’s adept at navigating screens and in catch-and-shoot situations, plus he has a high release point on his jumper, which allows him to get quality looks even when the defense is in a solid position. Williams isn’t a natural playmaker but will make the highlight pass to an open teammate when defenses collapse. Defensively, Williams has the size and length to be a solid wing defender but will have to fill out his frame to guard the NBA’s best scorers.
Projection
Williams’ bucket-getting nature draws comparison to T.J. Warren (6’8, 200) and Caris LeVert (6’6, 205). If he focuses on being a sharpshooter, Williams’ game could resemble Michael Porter (6’10, 218) or Cameron Johnson (6’8, 210). There are also flashes of Mikal Bridges (6’6, 209) in Williams’ game, but the Nebraska product would need to buy in defensively to match that projection.
— Profile by RotoWire.com