Questions surrounded Mayo's fit with the team after somewhat of a disastrous first season in Milwaukee, but he arrived in camp in great shape and reasserted himself as a productive scorer. Mayo made 15 starts but primarily served in a bench role, seeing the fewest minutes per game of his career. As a result, his numbers aren't overly impressive, but prorating them over a per-36-minute sample reveals that Mayo actually had one of his best statistical seasons. Per-36 minutes, Mayo averaged 17.1 points (second-highest of his career), 4.2 assists (second) and 4.0 rebounds (second) while shooting 42.2 percent from the floor, just a hair below his career mark of 43.2 percent. Mayo ended the season with a 13.5 PER (up from 11.2 last season), right in line with his career average of 13.8. The 27-year-old will enter the final year of his three-year, $24 million contract next season, and he figures to hold down a similar role, assuming restricted free agent Khris Middleton returns to Milwaukee.