Middlesex Chamber Hurley Breakfast - Oct 7th | Page 5 | The Boneyard

Middlesex Chamber Hurley Breakfast - Oct 7th

EDIT

I attended the breakfast, got there early, had a very close table, it was a very nice morning, a good experience for sure.

I was going to report in but honestly all the information is already out here thru tweets and news articles. Very well covered.

Well :) , three or four impressions that I got from listening and really these are more from Hurley than from me, but there is some crossover.

We are better at center than most teams in the country with Adama and Donavon. Adama will most likely shoot some open threes, sorta like Whaley last year. Donavon is going to play somewhat more than just straight up backup center's minutes. Tallest player on the court sure, but he's a very good basketball player.

Sanogo's the man.

Alex Karaban is tough too, on defense also, excellent shooter, very court savvy, and is a huge part of this rotation in this, his first year.

Samson Johnson with all that upside. Very, very good, but still putting it all together.

Naheim Alleyne, legit path to a starting role, much more than a shooter, very cagey and skilled, makes plays for others, huge part of the rotation.

All this talk about the point lately and justifiably so. Hassan Diarra is competing with Tristan Newton for the starting spot (could be coachspeak fostering competition), maybe Diarra is somewhat more moldable at the point than Tristan, not sure about this, but Tristan's higher strength is scoring the ball.

Which brings us to Andre Jackson. Andre is the man this year, with the ball, without the ball. That Kemba, Khalid, Shabazz, emotional leader this year is Andre.

On the court last year, especially as the year progressed, he was lights out in transition as far as bringing the ball up very aggressively, and then decision-making whether to score in the first 8 seconds or to move into a half-court offense. There are multiple ball handlers here, but I would expect Andre to be the main facilitator of this offense, setting up at the top of the arc, offensively rotating, mixing it up, maybe not the guy with the ball in his hands with 3 seconds on the clock, but the guy with the ball with 6 to eight seconds left. He did not, to my recollection, turn the ball over much at all the second half of the season especially if you factor in ball usage or whatever you might call it.

Joey Calcaterra, a much better player than they thought. If he shoots at a high percentage and plays well, he'll be part of the rotation, I won't speculate further.

Richie Springs could see some court time, Roumaglou, the Greek player might see the floor as the season progresses, Hasson, the Israeli, needs more strength to be effective I guess.

Hurley sees Hawkins, Jackson, and Sanogo in the draft next year. How that translates into what sort of season Jordan Hawkins has I won't speculate, but he added like 15 pounds of muscle or something, is a much stronger player, and like Ray, his shooting is a thing of beauty. He's got the keys to score.


Go Huskies!
 
EDIT

I attended the breakfast, got there early, had a very close table, it was a very nice morning, a good experience for sure.

I was going to report in but honestly all the information is already out here thru tweets and news articles. Very well covered.

Well :) , three or four impressions that I got from listening and really these are more from Hurley than from me, but there is some crossover.

We are better at center than most teams in the country with Adama and Donavon. Adama will most likely shoot some open threes, sorta like Whaley last year. Donavon is going to play somewhat more than just straight up backup center's minutes. Tallest player on the court sure, but he's a very good basketball player.

Sanogo's the man.

Alex Karaban is tough too, on defense also, excellent shooter, very court savvy, and is a huge part of this rotation in this, his first year.

Samson Johnson with all that upside. Very, very good, but still putting it all together.

Naheim Alleyne, legit path to a starting role, much more than a shooter, very cagey and skilled, makes plays for others, huge part of the rotation.

All this talk about the point lately and justifiably so. Hassan Diarra is competing with Tristan Newton for the starting spot (could be coachspeak fostering competition), maybe Diarra is somewhat more moldable at the point than Tristan, not sure about this, but Tristan's higher strength is scoring the ball.

Which brings us to Andre Jackson. Andre is the man this year, with the ball, without the ball. That Kemba, Khalid, Shabazz, emotional leader this year is Andre.

On the court last year, especially as the year progressed, he was lights out in transition as far as bringing the ball up very aggressively, and then decision-making whether to score in the first 8 seconds or to move into a half-court offense. There are multiple ball handlers here, but I would expect Andre to be the main facilitator of this offense, setting up at the top of the arc, offensively rotating, mixing it up, maybe not the guy with the ball in his hands with 3 seconds on the clock, but the guy with the ball with 6 to eight seconds left. He did not, to my recollection, turn the ball over much at all the second half of the season especially if you factor in ball usage or whatever you might call it.

Joey Calcaterra, a much better player than they thought. If he shoots at a high percentage and plays well, he'll be part of the rotation, I won't speculate further.

Richie Springs could see some court time, Roumaglou, the Greek player might see the floor as the season progresses, Hasson, the Israeli, needs more strength to be effective I guess.

Hurley sees Hawkins, Jackson, and Sanogo in the draft next year. How that translates into what sort of season Jordan Hawkins has I won't speculate, but he added like 15 pounds of muscle or something, is a much stronger player, and like Ray, his shooting is a thing of beauty. He's got the keys to score.


Go Huskies!

Time will soon tell, but it really seems like we struck gold in the portal in the spring/summer.

Alleyne / Newton - had appropriate buzz/fanfare. Lots of well-deserved excitement.

Joey CA / Diarra - seemed like a general "ho-hum, deep bench/good practice body" reaction from most here on the 'yard and about the same reactions from pundits/so-called CBB experts. Turns out they may be much, much more than that for our teams' success this year and by themselves will be more than equal replacements for a couple of our transfers.

Once again, it seems like our coaches and staff know what they are doing. Go figure.
 
Correct. Andre couldn’t finish. Big issue to resolve. He just didn’t seem to have any idea how to put the ball in the hoop the last two years. He must have dunked everything in high school.

Kemba just needed to play smarter. Apples and oranges.
Yes, I am comparing apples and oranges. They are different but they can be compared.
 
IMO.. With our Big 3--4 new portal guards-- AK/DC-- I believe our overall team BBIQ will be superior to last year's team and as a result--esp. when playing 4 out with AS-- Our spacing will open up lanes and produce open shots for our shooters. If we can work on keeping the paint unclogged for AS/DC to do their thing-- I believe AJax can also exploit those open lanes taking it to the hole.. Too much congestion last year.
 
Kemba had flaws that he eliminated his all world year. He played too fast even though he was the quickest player on the court, he was out of control. He also had a terrible habit of overpenetrating. He would drive all the way to the basket and get his shot blocked.

Once he learned how to use his speed and quickness he was unstoppable.

Is it possible for Dre to make the same jump? He used to play out of control and make impossible passes. He has improved that part of his game. Unlike Kemba he needs to get to the rim, he can't overpenetrate. It's almost the opposite. He needs to learn to be more aggressive at appropriate times. AND FINISH. That would be good sign for our Huskies.
He credited playing with Rondo on that pro/amateur team in the summer before his last year. He said playing with Rondo he realized he had some holes in his game (including a mid-range shot). He got it all straightened out that summer and the rest was history. That's what complete dedication and effort to address his weaknesses did for him in the summer. Quite an example for everyone.
 
.-.
Jackson and Kemba absolutely are not comparable..

Have you lost your mind..

Of course you can compare college guards to each other? Are you so narrow minded?

Besides I think you are confusing the meaning of the words "comparable" and "compared." A common error.
 

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