Ezi Magbegor - Exclusive Thread | Page 3 | The Boneyard

Ezi Magbegor - Exclusive Thread

Liking what I see and, even more, liking how much upside she would have under the right coaching. She'd be more explosive, shoot her layups from a higher level, not just be tall but play really, really tall. Even by her sophomore year, she'd be a serious gamer.
 
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OMG. She's wearing whitish-grey dreads. What colors are UCLA? What colors are UConn? Another sign!!!
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The more I see of her, the more I like her. There's been some grrrreat classes that's come through UConn during Geno's tenure. A class of ONO, Williams and Magbegor would be exceptional, and possibly one of the best. Keeping my fingers crossed.
 
I love Magbegor's upside as much as anyone but there is some laziness in her game that is a little alarming. I'm sure Coach Auriemma can break this bad habit(or she won't play) but at first she may be in for a rude awakening.
 
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Atm she is just a prospect, a player with enormous potential.
It'll take a season before you can see what she might become. Same goes for Williams and ododa.
 
My wife and I went to watch a hoopgurlz top 10 junior. So disappointed. She played nonchalantly. I was so hoping she would be recruited by UConn (so UConn would play at Iowa or maybe Illinois). Don't see it happening. I don't see Ezi being nonchalant. Few high schoolers (none ?) play with the intensity of UConn until they've been at UConn. Ezi has the potential. That's all Geno needs.
 
My wife and I went to watch a hoopgurlz top 10 junior. So disappointed. She played nonchalantly. I was so hoping she would be recruited by UConn (so UConn would play at Iowa or maybe Illinois). Don't see it happening. I don't see Ezi being nonchalant. Few high schoolers (none ?) play with the intensity of UConn until they've been at UConn. Ezi has the potential. That's all Geno needs.

I]m not sure you can make a definitive judgement about a player's "nonchalance" at the high school level unless you see them play multiple times........even top ten players take a few moments off.................the question is what are they like in competitive games.................if they are lazy under those circumstances then they have a real problem.
 
I]m not sure you can make a definitive judgement about a player's "nonchalance" at the high school level unless you see them play multiple times...even top ten players take a few moments off.......the question is what are they like in competitive games.......if they are lazy under those circumstances then they have a real problem.

I agree. She played to the level of her competition. I was really hoping for someone to play with a little more fire,that's all. We were hoping to see someone whose coach would say of her, “She comes out every game like someone stole her lunch money". And her team did have another player who was giving far more effort to the game.
 
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Atm she is just a prospect, a player with enormous potential.
It'll take a season before you can see what she might become. Same goes for Williams and ododa.


I have a feeling that Christyn Williams will show early on that she is the real deal. She will be an aggressive scoring two who will receive encouragement from the coaches to be just that.
 
Fascinating background (Capitals youngster Eziyoda Magbegor forging her own legacy):

Seems as though her international background would fit in well at UConn, what with Batouly Camara and Napheesa Collier and Z having African family ties, Kia coming from Canada, and others coming from relatively distant reaches of America: Gabby from Chicago, KLS from California.

"Magbegor's heritage is something she is extremely proud of, having been born in New Zealand to Nigerian parents Patience and Appolus. The family moved to Craigieburn in Melbourne's north when Magbegor was six years old with Patience and Appolus keen to find a better environment to raise their kids in. The emerging basketball star hasn't been to Nigeria yet, but she'd "love to go over the next few years" to connect with her family roots. Magbegor is the third of four kids behind older siblings Elo and Ovie - who is pursuing a college basketball career at the University of West Georgia - and ahead of younger brother AJ.

"But she was the first to leave home when she moved to Canberra as a 15-year-old, leaving behind her immediate family in Melbourne to join the Australian Institute of Sport's basketball program."
 
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Fascinating background (Capitals youngster Eziyoda Magbegor forging her own legacy):

Seems as though her international background would fit in well at UConn, what with Batouly Camara and Napheesa Collier and Z having African family ties, Kia coming from Canada, and others coming from relatively distant reaches of America: Gabby from Chicago, KLS from California.

"Magbegor's heritage is something she is extremely proud of, having been born in New Zealand to Nigerian parents Patience and Appolus. The family moved to Craigieburn in Melbourne's north when Magbegor was six years old with Patience and Appolus keen to find a better environment to raise their kids in. The emerging basketball star hasn't been to Nigeria yet, but she'd "love to go over the next few years" to connect with her family roots. Magbegor is the third of four kids behind older siblings Elo and Ovie - who is pursuing a college basketball career at the University of West Georgia - and ahead of younger brother AJ.

"But she was the first to leave home when she moved to Canberra as a 15-year-old, leaving behind her immediate family in Melbourne to join the Australian Institute of Sport's basketball program."
LoL ! Gabby is from Chicago? Chicago & California are the distant reaches of America? :D
 
LoL ! Gabby is from Chicago? Chicago & California are the distant reaches of America? :D

California is as far from Connecticut as London is from us. Chicago is a thousand miles away. So, yes, they are not the environs of Storrs. A kid has a two-hour plane flight to get from Chicagoland to Connecticut. And a lot of kids balk at going that far from home to play basketball and attend college.

So I would say that to travel from the midwest or California (or as I did going from Washington, D.C. to California for college) to Connecticut is a big undertaking and takes one a long way from family, friends, and to unfamiliar climates and lands. So I would say that a kid coming from Australia, whose family were originally from Nigeria, would find kindred sportiest on this UConn team, what with kids with African relatives, a kid from Canada, and others from across the United States.

Not as if it's a team in the northwest with everyone from Washington or Oregon.
 
I agree. She played to the level of her competition. I was really hoping for someone to play with a little more fire,that's all. We were hoping to see someone whose coach would say of her, “She comes out every game like someone stole her lunch money". And her team did have another player who was giving far more effort to the game.

I've noticed that sometimes the more skilled players get side tracked if they are not challenged by the opposition...........clearly UConn puts a lot of importance on the attitudes of it's recruits so consistency of effort is a necessity that has to be stressed by the high school coaches
 
California is as far from Connecticut as London is from us. Chicago is a thousand miles away. So, yes, they are not the environs of Storrs. A kid has a two-hour plane flight to get from Chicagoland to Connecticut. And a lot of kids balk at going that far from home to play basketball and attend college.

So I would say that to travel from the midwest or California (or as I did going from Washington, D.C. to California for college) to Connecticut is a big undertaking and takes one a long way from family, friends, and to unfamiliar climates and lands. So I would say that a kid coming from Australia, whose family were originally from Nigeria, would find kindred sportiest on this UConn team, what with kids with African relatives, a kid from Canada, and others from across the United States.

Not as if it's a team in the northwest with everyone from Washington or Oregon.
Well said. Board's energy would be better served focusing on the many basketball benefits of playing for Geno and UConn rather than underestimating travel issues and the relative remoteness of the campus.
 
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:D
California is as far from Connecticut as London is from us. Chicago is a thousand miles away. So, yes, they are not the environs of Storrs. A kid has a two-hour plane flight to get from Chicagoland to Connecticut. And a lot of kids balk at going that far from home to play basketball and attend college.
So I would say that to travel from the midwest or California (or as I did going from Washington, D.C. to California for college) to Connecticut is a big undertaking and takes one a long way from family, friends, and to unfamiliar climates and lands. So I would say that a kid coming from Australia, whose family were originally from Nigeria, would find kindred sportiest on this UConn team, what with kids with African relatives, a kid from Canada, and others from across the United States.
Not as if it's a team in the northwest with everyone from Washington or Oregon.
I'm just curious, when did Gabby move to Chicago? :eek:
BTW KLS' mom is from England & Olivia Nelson-Ododa's father is from Kenya, those might better fit an international melting pot/influence UCONN sort of narrative.
Distance from Little Rock Arkansas to UCONN 1371 Miles. Distance from Chicago to UCONN 918 miles. If only UCONN can recruit a good player from Chicago they probably be much further along. :D
 
California is as far from Connecticut as London is from us. Chicago is a thousand miles away. So, yes, they are not the environs of Storrs. A kid has a two-hour plane flight to get from Chicagoland to Connecticut. And a lot of kids balk at going that far from home to play basketball and attend college.

So I would say that to travel from the midwest or California (or as I did going from Washington, D.C. to California for college) to Connecticut is a big undertaking and takes one a long way from family, friends, and to unfamiliar climates and lands. So I would say that a kid coming from Australia, whose family were originally from Nigeria, would find kindred sportiest on this UConn team, what with kids with African relatives, a kid from Canada, and others from across the United States.

Not as if it's a team in the northwest with everyone from Washington or Oregon.

Oops! Somehow my brain slipped. I was thinking of Morgan Tuck, who was from Iliinois. Gabby's from nearly 3,000 miles away in Nevada.

But the basic premise would hold, I'd say.
 
But she was the first to leave home when she moved to Canberra as a 15-year-old, leaving behind her immediate family in Melbourne to join the Australian Institute of Sport's basketball program.

"Just waiting for that phone call [from the AIS] got me really excited. I wasn't nervous at all to leave home," Magbegor said.

"I missed my family for the first couple of months but having such a great group of girls there who were in the same situation as me helped a lot in my transition to the AIS and moving away from home."

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Probably helps that she is already accustomed to making big moves and sort of uprooting from the comforts of home. As long as she is with a good group of girls--and is furthering her bball career--she should be good to go. 'Check' and 'check'..!
 
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But she was the first to leave home when she moved to Canberra as a 15-year-old, leaving behind her immediate family in Melbourne to join the Australian Institute of Sport's basketball program.

"Just waiting for that phone call [from the AIS] got me really excited. I wasn't nervous at all to leave home," Magbegor said.

"I missed my family for the first couple of months but having such a great group of girls there who were in the same situation as me helped a lot in my transition to the AIS and moving away from home."

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Probably helps that she is already accustomed to making big moves and sort of uprooting from the comforts of home already. As long as she is with a good group of girls--and is furthering her bball career--she should be good to go. 'Check' and 'check'..!
I think it’s part of who her family is. Ezi’s parents moved from Nigeria to New Zealand to start a new life, and then again from NZ to Sydney, Australia when Ezi was 6 years old. Ezi’s brother matriculated to West GA and as you point out, Ezi moved away from her family to attend a school of sport when she was 15.

For many of us, moving half way around the world would scare the hell out of us. As for Ezi, “No worries mate.”
 
I think it’s part of who her family is. Ezi’s parents moved from Nigeria to New Zealand to start a new life, and then again from NZ to Sydney, Australia when Ezi was 6 years old. Ezi’s brother matriculated to West GA and as you point out, Ezi moved away from her family to attend a school of sport when she was 15.

For many of us, moving half way around the world would scare the hell out of us. As for Ezi, “No worries mate.”
It's always amazing to me to greet 18 yr old international students at our New England school. While other kids have their parents load up their SUVs with every imaginable piece of teenage paraphernalia and know they can go home on weekends or short holidays, these other kids kiss their folks goodbye for many months, hop on a plane--or two or three--with a couple of suitcases and land in a place they've never been--sometimes in a language which isn't native to them--and do just fine. You are so right, oldude: what scares the hell out of us is something these kids do so casually--and so well.
 
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