Does he really "literally" play in your back yard? You have a court set up there and he frequents it?Very nice of you do donate your back yard for basketball use.
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Reports to follow.
I completely agree with you, but this kid, at this point, is looking like more of a wing than a combo forward. He is more likely to slide to the 2 and make the front of the zone super long than trying to be a primary rebounder for SU. At his current size, or even if he added 20 lbs, he would have to be coupled with a more physical forward, in my opinion.Anybody complaining about this signing, I just don't get it.
This kid is really intriguing to me. Incredible length at 16 years old, so there's even more time to sprout up. Length is crucial to our system. A smooth jumper, I realize there's a little hesitation before his jumpers but I wouldn't even call that a hitch, the shot itself is fundamentally very sound and smooth. Runs like a deer. Ball-handling may not be particularly strong, but he seems relatively comfortable putting it on the deck once or twice to create space. Certainly shows the ability to finish strong in transition, we thrive on transition and easy baskets. Shows some legitimate shot-blocking instincts in highlights, not just cherry-picked blocks against smaller kids.
He's the ideal 3/4 hybrid for our system.
I think we've got a gem here. Just my two cents.
In my backyard as well, I will be catching a few games and reporting.
Anybody complaining about this signing, I just don't get it.
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but but but ... top100 rankings... wahhhhhAnybody complaining about this signing, I just don't get it.
This kid is really intriguing to me. Incredible length at 16 years old, so there's even more time to sprout up. Length is crucial to our system. A smooth jumper, I realize there's a little hesitation before his jumpers but I wouldn't even call that a hitch, the shot itself is fundamentally very sound and smooth. Runs like a deer. Ball-handling may not be particularly strong, but he seems relatively comfortable putting it on the deck once or twice to create space. Certainly shows the ability to finish strong in transition, we thrive on transition and easy baskets. Shows some legitimate shot-blocking instincts in highlights, not just cherry-picked blocks against smaller kids.
He's the ideal 3/4 hybrid for our system.
I think we've got a gem here. Just my two cents.
OF, just taking a different tack, ... this kid is 16 years old, 17 in 2 months. I havn't surveyed his genetic code, but a 16 yo is likely to add some weight and he could grow anywhere from 1-3 inches before we're unwrapping presents on X-Mas 2013. If this happens (and it probably will), he could be Grant's height (6'8+ in stocking feet) or bigger. He's already very athletic and long (classic SU wing), and he can definitely shoot the rock. So this probably puts him, at least, at the 3, if not a stretch 4 ala' JS.I completely agree with you, but this kid, at this point, is looking like more of a wing than a combo forward. He is more likely to slide to the 2 and make the front of the zone super long than trying to be a primary rebounder for SU. At his current size, or even if he added 20 lbs, he would have to be coupled with a more physical forward, in my opinion.