Just smaller.Finally a shot blocker! our best teams under cal have finished #1 or #2 in blocked shots he’s very much like nerlens noel with his timing and bouncy blocking
not shorter so by smaller you must mean skinner which he is . What makes JAckson and one and done lottery pick if he plays D like Noel but his offense is 4x that of someone like Noel or WCS . He can shoot 3's , 15 footers and handle damn well for a 6'10 guy. He will have a few games where he goes for 17 /12/8 next season. For sure the best big we have signed since Bam.Just smaller.
No, I mean shorter and smaller, which he is.not shorter so by smaller you must mean skinner which he is . What makes JAckson and one and done lottery pick if he plays D like Noel but his offense is 4x that of someone like Noel or WCS . He can shoot 3's , 15 footers and handle damn well for a 6'10 guy. He will have a few games where he goes for 17 /12/8 next season. For sure the best big we have signed since Bam.
guys like that are few and far between team first you love to see it!His coach on his unselfishness.
“He’ll be great down at Kentucky,” McGlown said. “It will go back to that team with Anthony Davis and those guys. I think Anthony Davis only shot the ball eight or nine times a game. He’s that type of player. He’s not worried about his stats. All he wants to do is win. So all those other guys — if they want to shoot — he’ll let them shoot, and he’ll just go do his job and help out.”
His job, it seems, will be to do the things he does best: rebound, rim-run and block shots.
Read more here: https://www.kentucky.com/article239246343.html#storylink=cpy
Lot of unrealistic hyperbole in this post .not shorter so by smaller you must mean skinner which he is . What makes JAckson and one and done lottery pick if he plays D like Noel but his offense is 4x that of someone like Noel or WCS . He can shoot 3's , 15 footers and handle damn well for a 6'10 guy. He will have a few games where he goes for 17 /12/8 next season. For sure the best big we have signed since Bam.
You must have stopped watching at the 15 second mark.Not one shot outside of three feet...we seen this before.
Not one shot outside of three feet...we seen this before.
Didnt see it all. Nice step back and fall away. Looks very quick and doesn't lope when he runs.You.must have stopped watching at the 15 second mark.
Lmao. Considering the 3 he hit was early in the video guess he turned it off in 2 seconds.You.must have stopped watching at the 15 second mark.
Did you read Brinley90's post above on S&W...stop anointing these kids before they get here and let them breathe.Did you even watch the video? Takes a step back 3 at the 16 second mark followed up a spin move fade away on the baseline. I swear some of your are just miserable and love to ***** and moan.
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Weaknesses:needs work on offense,consistancy isn't there yet but has good shooting form.Needs more weight and strength.Not good on free throws,foul prone and bites on jump fakes.
Haha that is very true. I can't recall a player biting on more jump fakes than EJ.@Bites on jump fakes.
Seems like a perfect backup for EJ
So, how do you think Calipari should use Jackson next season? My guess is that on offense about 80% of Jackson's shots next season should be in the paint.Looks like he has some bounce, length and skill. Lets see how it goes.
It will be a long season if Cal tries to turn him into a guy that plays in the paint with his back to the basket, but he looks like he can be a rebounding machine with a good blocking ability too.
Did you miss Nick’s first two seasons?Haha that is very true. I can't recall a player biting on more jump fakes than EJ.
I think Jackson is a guy that would rather face the basket than play with his back to the basket. Training a guy to play like a back to the basket center isn’t something that can be done overnight.So, how do you think Calipari should use Jackson next season? My guess is that on offense about 80% of Jackson's shots next season should be in the paint.
Looking at Nick Richards for comparison, Richards is still a long way from being a good back to the basket scorer. But, I think Richards is clearly held back in that regard by his still developing ability to hold on to the ball and his lack of almost any ball-handling ability. I think from the little bit I've seen (big qualifier) that Jackson has better hands and ball-handling ability, and would be ok posting up some if he's strong enough to hold his position.
Finally a shot blocker! our best teams under cal have finished #1 or #2 in blocked shots he’s very much like nerlens noel with his timing and bouncy blocking
I feel the same is true of Jackson. Jackson looks like he can be a McCarty type player but if you remember it took 20 pounds of muscle for McCarty to be effective. McCarty took 3 years to get that 20 pounds. Hopefully our training program is that much better now that Jackson can do it in a season or 2 but I do believe he will need a sophomore season here. Right now I see Jackson getting physically pushed out of scoring range by an SEC PF. He will become a special player the day he can operate within 5 to 10 feet of the basket and not get pushed out of there.
I agree with you that Richards has made great progress with his sure-handedness. I don’t mean to slight him. I’m just saying I think he still has plenty of upside left regard to his hand dexterity and ball-handling – which are the only things I can figure that are keeping him from being a first round pick and a 10 year NBA guy, because he sure looks to me to have most everything else you would want for a back-up or even starting Center.I think Jackson is a guy that would rather face the basket than play with his back to the basket. Training a guy to play like a back to the basket center isn’t something that can be done overnight.
He might have better hands than Richards had as a sophomore, but Nick had pretty good hands this past season. He got stripped a few times, but college players are a lot better at stripping the ball than HS/AAU players are, so we really don't know how strong Jackson is going to be with the ball at this level.
I'm excited about a starting frontcourt of Brooks and Montgomery. But Jackson and Ware are going to have to grow up quick, as both are going to have to play a lot of minutes. It'll be fun and interesting watching the frontcourt develop.It would really be perfect if Brooks and Montgomery could man the 4 & 5 next year, with Ware and Jackson coming off the bench so that they can really contribute by their sophomore years, likely with another elite big man from the 2021 class ~ Banchero, Huntley-Hatfield, Kepnang, etc.
The one thing I know for sure with Cal running the show here is that he will make sure we have a strong post presence. I think he learned his lesson in 2016. Having great guards is awesome, but "if you don't have a legit post presence, you are a fraud".I agree with you that Richards has made great progress with his sure-handedness. I don’t mean to slight him. I’m just saying I think he still has plenty of upside left regard to his hand dexterity and ball-handling – which are the only things I can figure that are keeping him from being a first round pick and a 10 year NBA guy, because he sure looks to me to have most everything else you would want for a back-up or even starting Center.
We’ll have to see where the post scoring comes from next season. But any good team has to have it – or at least the legitimate threat of it - to be really good. Aside from just the higher percentage baskets and drawing fouls, throwing into the post puts a lot of pressure on the defense and opens up so much for the offense. I’m guessing Montgomery (and maybe Lance Ware also) will initially be better as UK’s back to the basket scorer – Montgomery’s ability to handle the ball and makes quick moves around the basket are skills made for great post-ups.
I’m sure Jackson will need time (maybe a season or more) to be real effective in the post, but he has to do it. The better he gets at it the more he can use that skill set. And he doesn’t have to try to be a power post player (e.g., PJ Washington, Caleb Swanigan or Jared Sullinger). Jackson could instead use his quickness and agility to score on quick-turn post ups to the middle of the lane or the base-line - if he has strong hands and a confident ability to dribble left or right once or twice in the post. Even if Jackson couldn’t score through an opponent, he has the length and athleticism to score over an opponent in the post aka Nick Richards.
It’s Calipari’s job to force BIGS to learn how to play in the post. To not do so is a failure, and a detriment to them individually and to the team as a whole. It’s another skill set they need and adds another dimension to their game. See Karl Anthony-Towns for reference. What Calipari did with him in that one season was brilliant. Towns should probably pay a percentage of his salary to Calipari rather than an agent for what Calipari did in forcing him to learn how to play in the post.
But I think EJ will be our post guy. He is ahead of where NR was after his sophomore year. Actually, he's way ahead of where Nick was. Nick couldn't catch or hold onto the ball his sophomore year, EJ actualluly has good hands and started to round the corner at the end of this season.
Is he really 6'9 and 200?