While there are high hopes for Kimbrough, he is not the first American prodigy to burst onto the scene – with Freddy Adu among the most infamous in recent times – and Sacramento president Todd Dunivant has told The Athletic of handling another precociously-gifted youngster with care: “There’s no need to heap that kind of pressure on him. This is not somebody we’ll be leaning upon to start games when he’s 13 and a half or 14 — it’ll be when he’s ready. We will ramp it up in the right way that makes sense. The pressure (Adu was under) is not fair to anyone at that age, and we won’t put that on Da’vian. He is going to go at his pace, and it’s our job as a club to set him up for that through a development plan that continues to challenge him in the right way and puts him in positions to succeed. There’s always going to be setbacks, and we have to be cognizant of all of it. He’ll be one of the guys, and after getting his feet wet, it’s about understanding that he’s there to do a job. It’s not just the young kid. If he’s good enough, he’s old enough.”