He is also focused on his ball-handling, as he plans on playing some point guard moving forward.
https://www.slamonline.com/nba/on-the-rise-josh-jackson/
Interesting tidbit there...
Moderators: bwgood77, lilfishi22, Qwigglez
He is also focused on his ball-handling, as he plans on playing some point guard moving forward.
https://www.slamonline.com/nba/on-the-rise-josh-jackson/
Revived wrote:He is also focused on his ball-handling, as he plans on playing some point guard moving forward.
https://www.slamonline.com/nba/on-the-rise-josh-jackson/
Interesting tidbit there...
Revived wrote:TOO wrote:eitanr wrote:How about using the 16th pick to acquire said PG, but still make that player have some size who can help pace the unit. What about 16th pick for Tomas Satornsky?
I kind of like him next to Booker, and helping maintain pace and movement for a 1st unit.
Oh heavens no.
16 in this draft is still a solid player, not giving that up for a career back up.
Sato put up really good #s when starting for John Wall. To dismiss him as a career back up is silly considering many of the guys being discussed like Smart, FVV, McConnell etc have all been backups for all of their NBA careers thus far.
I don't think he has the PG instincts and offensive awareness to be a lead guard imo. It's awesome that he's 6'8 with elite athleticism but we should stop trying to shoehorn him into a Ben Simmons/Lebron role. Just let JJ be who he is, a versatile two-way wing who can play spot minutes from 1-4.matt131 wrote:I mean if he dedicated his entire life to training to become a PG, maybe. But I feel like he's a little too loose with his handle and turns the ball over too much (not becasue of his decision making but just because he doesn't have the handles of a point guard). But yes, a 6'8" PG with a 6'10" wingspan would be ideal defensively haha
lilfishi22 wrote:I don't think he has the PG instincts and offensive awareness to be a lead guard imo. It's awesome that he's 6'8 with elite athleticism but we should stop trying to shoehorn him into a Ben Simmons/Lebron role. Just let JJ be who he is, a versatile two-way wing who can play spot minutes from 1-4.matt131 wrote:I mean if he dedicated his entire life to training to become a PG, maybe. But I feel like he's a little too loose with his handle and turns the ball over too much (not becasue of his decision making but just because he doesn't have the handles of a point guard). But yes, a 6'8" PG with a 6'10" wingspan would be ideal defensively haha
NBA Fiend wrote:This guy believes he can do so as well
http://m.kusports.com/news/2017/jan/04/tom-keegan-no-reason-point-guard-not-josh-jacksons/
cberry78 wrote:http://www2.kusports.com/news/2017/jan/04/tom-keegan-no-reason-point-guard-not-josh-jacksons/
Sharing this again, it's not the first time the idea has been brought up. The article, written after his freshman year, states that '"my decision-making and my IQ," as his biggest areas of improvement since the beginning of the season.' And the eye test says that those 2 things also increased in the second half of his rookie season. If he can continue to improve those areas, along with tightening up his ball handling, there's no reason he can't be a primary ball handler (or co-primary ball handler with Booker).
Probably never a true PG, but being an option (1A or 1B or 1C) to run the offense through him is definitely not out of the realm of possibilities.
jcsunsfan wrote:lilfishi22 wrote:I don't think he has the PG instincts and offensive awareness to be a lead guard imo. It's awesome that he's 6'8 with elite athleticism but we should stop trying to shoehorn him into a Ben Simmons/Lebron role. Just let JJ be who he is, a versatile two-way wing who can play spot minutes from 1-4.matt131 wrote:I mean if he dedicated his entire life to training to become a PG, maybe. But I feel like he's a little too loose with his handle and turns the ball over too much (not becasue of his decision making but just because he doesn't have the handles of a point guard). But yes, a 6'8" PG with a 6'10" wingspan would be ideal defensively haha
I think he has the instincts and awareness. His bball IQ is very high. No point in "shoehorning" but there is value in investigating.
TOO wrote:Good passer for a wing, solid feel, just like Booker, but neither will ever or should be considered a PG. Foolish. With that being said, we need less of a floor general type if both keep developing their PG skills. A guy like Okobo could be ideal in the long run with his ability to shoot and score.
TOO wrote:Revived wrote:TOO wrote:
Oh heavens no.
16 in this draft is still a solid player, not giving that up for a career back up.
Sato put up really good #s when starting for John Wall. To dismiss him as a career back up is silly considering many of the guys being discussed like Smart, FVV, McConnell etc have all been backups for all of their NBA careers thus far.
You said move 16 for Satoransky, who literally has been a career back up. I didnt dismiss him, you made a suggestion, and I told you why I wouldnt do it. You would've given up the chance to obtain Mikal Bridges for Tomas **** Satoransky. GROSSSSS.
Fo-Real wrote:I am looking forward to seeing if he can show pg skills in practice and summer league. I am not in the habit of saying someone cant do something until they have been given a couple chances to prove so.
Joe Pong wrote:Josh Jackson shouldn’t be starting anywhere unless he learns to shoot. Until then, he’s a decent 6th man.
Saberestar wrote:Revived wrote:He is also focused on his ball-handling, as he plans on playing some point guard moving forward.
https://www.slamonline.com/nba/on-the-rise-josh-jackson/
Interesting tidbit there...
I would love to watch him playing PG. He just needs to improve his ball handling and slow down his game.
He has that PG mentality in him...he wants to create for others and himself and he can be more effective at that position because he is not a good shooter.