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#i assume that little first year gymnast will be a teammate eventually and i will probably bench ann in favor of her LMAO
blueskittlesart · 1 year
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I think you get a new team member on the third or fourth palace, I'm pretty sure but I can't remember exactly. Hope this helps in your Yusuke-Removal Endeavors
thank god. i sincerely hope its the 3rd bc im currently in limbo between the 2nd and 3rd and i cant actually figure out if i need to like trigger an event to make the 3rd target come up or if i just keep dicking around until the game forces me to progress like last time
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Q&A with NH Legend XC Coach Art Demers
Entering my fourth season as BPS XC Head Coach I am fortunate that I have an opportunity to pick the brains of some of the best coaches in the region, I am very fortunate for them to share their wisdom, experiences and stories. Today I got to pick the brains of Coach Art Demers New Hampshire Hall of Fame Legend
DATG: Coach when did you start running ?
Art Demers: I started running in 1973 when I was a freshman in high school. I was walking home from school on the first day of the school year and I saw a group of kids running past me. I turned around and headed back to the high school and saw this man standing in front of the school with a clipboard and a stop watch. I asked him if he was associated with the group that was running. He said, "yes". I asked him if I could join the team. The next afternoon I showed with my black hitop basketball sneakers and I was on the cross country team. One week later still wearing my black hitop basketball sneakers won my first race and the team won the first varsity win in all sports at Pelham (NH) High School. I was hooked. It did take me three meets legendary NH Cross Country Coach Larry Martin saw me in a race and told my coach to have me buy running shoes! 
DATG: How many years have you been involved in the running community including your running and coaching years ?
Art Demers: I ran 4 years of cross country at Pelham at Pelham HS. Pelham did not have indoor or outdoor track. I was able to run indoors my senior year.
I then went to Plymouth University for two years. They dropped the indoor and outdoor programs in my sophomore year. So I transferred to UMASS Lowell my Junior year. I wish I had gone there from the start. I am not sure why I did not. The coach there, George Davis assumed I was coming my freshman year. I loved UMass Lowell, the academics, the athletics, and social atmosphere.
I developed as a runner at UMass Lowell. I spent three years at Lowell. I graduated with a double major of economics/political science. My coach suggested that I should become a teacher and a coach at all places Nashua High School!. I said I had other plans, my father and coach thought I was insane when I announced that I planned on joining the Peace Corps.
I joined the Peace Corps and served my two years in the Marshall Islands, but I surprised everyone and extended for another year and a half. I met my wife at the going away party and I extended my original two years.
When my three and a half years were over. Jane and I moved back to the United States in 1987. We both went back to school and both earned teaching degrees. During that time, I became the UMass Lowell assistant cross country/track coach for two years. I also became the Greater Lowell Road Runners assistant for the next seven years.
In 1995, I was going for my second master's degree and I ran into a man who asked me if I had some time to work with his son. I talked with his HS coach at my Alma Marta if he needed my assistance. He was new to coaching and welcomed my assistance. I worked with his team that fall and they showed some success. We were able to get indoor and outdoor track that year. At the end of the first indoor season the coach left the school district and the program fell on my lap.
DATG: How many team titles in NH do you have ? 
Art Demers: I won seven Class M/S titles at Pelham HS. The Pelham Boys and Girls won the first State titles in Pelham High School History in any sports. They also had 4 runner-up titles. They also had many individual state champs in cross country as well as track.considering I was not teaching and I was working a job where I got out at 4:30 pm.
I left Pelham in 2001 when I got a job teaching at Nashua High School. I coached at cross town rival Bishop Guertin HS in 2003. We tied for second at the NHIAA Division One meet, but our sixth runner was a few places behind the eventual second place team. This is a great reminder, how important your sixth and seventh runner can be. A former runner of mine at Pelham HS took over the BG program when I was offered the Head Cross Country program at Nashua South program. I coached a team that was now divided. Nashua High became Nashua South and Nashua North. 
We went from a dwindled team to Division One Champions in 2008. I am very proud of that team. It was the first team at Nashua High South to win a Division One Championships since the split and the first Boy's Cross Country Championship in the city since 1984. More impressive was I had the five fastest boys in Division One ever to run on the Derryfield course in NH. Two of the boys were 25 minute 5k runners when they were freshman and sophomores. Never give up on a kid.
DATG: How many schools have you coached at ?
Art Demers: Pelham, Bishop Guertan HS, Nashua South High School, and Alvirne HS. Plus Nashua PAL (USATF)
DATG: What kind of attributes and intangibles where you looking for in your captains ?
Art Demers: A love for the sport is one I feel is important. Another who has questions about the sport and my coaching, and understands his teammates ups and downs. I feel a good captain can listen and speak for his teammates. As a coach I do want to know about the lives of every athlete I coach. How is school going? Social life? Family life? Do they have any injuries they are hiding? I do not want a snitch, but extra eyes and ears that benefit the athletes and myself. Sometimes an athlete will tell me direct, or I over heard it when I ran with them but a good captain also keeps a coach informed of any problems an athlete is having on and off the team.
DATG: To build a successful program what does it take ? 
Art Demers: Enthusiasm and getting athletes to believe. I remember a kid at Pelham saying to me, "We're from Pelham, we do not win anything."  The next year we placed second in the division championships losing by 2 pts and then the next year we won. This same kid went on to a very successful collegiate career and then became a phenomenal coach and his team went on to win NH State Championships.
Getting kids to believe that they can. I have kids who told me that they were going to win state championships and I am thinking what planet are you from? And they went out and did it. I had one girl who never won a race in her life, win the Division Three Cross Country title and ran so hard, she did not even remember it.
You have to believe in yourself, your coach, and your team to achieve your goals. I have so many memories of kids believing in themselves and teammates.
I also remember the fun they had. Spaghetti dinners, mini golf, hanging out and building wonderful friendships. Freshman, Sophomores, Juniors, and Seniors all taken care of each other.
DATG: Does Sports and politics coincide ?
Art Demers: Yes, sport and politics coincide. Good coaches have to stand up for their teams. The cross country and track teams are on the same level as all other programs in the school. Some schools put cross country on a lower level than other sports. The coaching staff as well as student athletes, and their families have got to make their sport an equal program in their school and community.
While coaching at Pelham, the student athletes and families pushed the school district and community to build a track complex and sure enough the town and a generous donation from an incredible man's donation built the Harris Family Track.
And at Alvirne HS, the student athletes and their families led the effort to resurface and renovate the Hudson HS Track two years ago.
DATG: How was your experience in the Peace Corps ?
Art Demers: Loved every minute of it. For the first two years I spent two years on the island of Lib. Marshall Islands. No electricity, running water, no radio communication with the outside world. The boat came every five months with the mail. I did little running on this island. It was only one third square mile. I ran but not as much as I would like.
At the going away party, I met my future wife and stayed in the Peace Corps for another year and a half.  I taught school and also worked on developing a local government on the outer island. In my third year I taught a few classes at the Community College of Micronesia. I also worked with the Marshall Islands Department of Interior  and Outer Island Affairs, working on a handbook for running local governments. 
I always wanted to give back to the country and in the early eighties the military was not hiring or at least not in the areas I was interested in.
DATG: What was the feeling to see your son Phil grow as a rising runner ?
Art Demers: When Phil was three I knew we had to get Phil involved in sports. He had so much energy and needed something to do. We enrolled him in gymnastics. From three years old till eighth grade he was a gymnast. He loved it. He would train three hours a day three days a week. He would then compete on weekends. One day on the way home from the Eastern Gymnastics Championships, Phil told me he decided not to do gymnastics anymore. I told him that was fine, but he needed to find another activity to get involved in. I said physical activity, not playing video games. He said, I think I will try running. I really have to thank all the people I coached through the years as well as the people from Camp Foss. Phil has gone there since he was three or four. Walking Mr. Maloney's dog, listening to guest speakers, staying in cabins with or without me in there. He has seen people who love the sport.
I am proud of Phil's accomplishments on and off the course and track. He is now running for UMass Lowell where I ran. He is having a blast running and studying Public Health. 
He is also a NH certified official. I think he is the youngest in the organization. He also understands the sport. He is an integral part of setting up the NHIAA Meet of Champions each year at Nashua South High School. He and I have been setting up the course since he was in junior high. We know every landmark in the Nashua South course. If he decided to become a Coach or teacher I think he would be great. Whatever he does, he will do well.
DATG: What does the future behold for the legend ?
Art Demers: Hmm that is a tough question. I still have one or two bad days a week. I wish I knew when they were going to occur. For your readers, I had T-10 tumor that left me with parapalegia in 2012, I cannot walk without hand canes or a walker. I use a wheelchair for most of my day. Since the removal of the tumor I have had a stroke, a blood transfusion, spinal menengitis and continuing bouts of UTI'S.
I had to retire as a coach and teacher, but as soon as I can get healthy I would love to return to full time coaching and possibly teaching.
I will stay involved with the NHIAA Cross Country Committee as well as putting on the NHIAA Meet of Champions as well as the Battle of the Border.
I will continue officiating for the New Hampshire Track and Field Officials
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footballleague0 · 7 years
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Wyoming Cowboys Josh Allen goes from unknown to No. 1 pick in NFL draft buzz
LARAMIE, Wyo. — On Nov. 20, 2014, near the end of Josh Allen’s first season at junior college, he sent emails imploring someone — anyone, really — to give him a chance to be a Division I quarterback.
The recipient list included not only every FBS head coach, but also every offensive coordinator, defensive coordinator and position coach from Alabama to Washington, more than 1,000 emails in total. They started with the same salutation and the same desperate plea from a kid in tiny Firebaugh, California: I want to be your quarterback.
Courtesy of Josh Allen
His unsolicited emails went over like a loan request from a Nigerian prince. He received a handful of responses and only two — Eastern Michigan and Wyoming — eventually offered him a scholarship. (The Eagles actually withdrew their offer after he chose to visit Wyoming near the end of the early signing period for junior college transfers.)
“Yeah, I was disappointed,” Allen said. “I couldn’t believe it.”
On the bright side, it was one more scholarship offer than Allen had coming out of Firebaugh High School the year before, when not a single FBS or FCS program called.
“I truly felt like I was a Division I quarterback, and I’d felt that way for a long time,” Allen said. “I just wanted other people to see it.”
No one else saw it, at least not back then. But after throwing for more than 3,000 yards and 28 touchdowns for Wyoming last season, the quarterback that nearly every FBS team (but two) ignored might very well end up being one of the first players selected in the 2018 NFL draft.
Allen’s anonymity ended almost immediately after the final selection of the 2017 NFL draft was made on April 29, when ESPN reporter Adam Schefter said: “There was one personnel director who told me this week that you can put in the books, Josh Allen will be the No. 1 pick in the NFL draft next year.”
Of course, most of the people watching ESPN’s draft coverage that day probably wondered: Who in the hell is Josh Allen?
“Probably 90 percent of America,” Allen admitted. “That’s kind of been my M.O. my entire football career.”
There’s only one stoplight in Firebaugh, California, a farming town of about 7,500 residents in California’s Central Valley, about 40 miles west of Fresno. Originally known as Firebaugh’s Ferry, it was an outpost on the San Joaquin River during the California gold rush during the mid-19th century.
According to 2011 data from the U.S. Census Bureau, Latinos make up more than 90 percent of the town’s population, many of them migrant workers employed in agriculture.
Potentially the first three picks in the 2018 NFL draft. The reigning Heisman winner. A two-time top-four Heisman vote-getter. And that’s just the half of it. Add it all up, and 2017 is truly shaping up as college’s year of the quarterback.
“It’s a small town, everybody knows everybody and news travels fast,” said Allen. “It was an experience I wouldn’t trade for anything because it kind of shaped who I am today.”
Thousands of acres of alfalfa, pistachios and almond groves line the road to the ranch where Allen grew up. Joel Allen, Josh’s father, and his uncle, Todd Allen, grow about 3,000 acres of Pima cotton, cantaloupes and wheat against the backdrop of a coastal mountain range. Joel and Todd Allen are third-generation farmers.
Josh’s great-grandfather Arvid “Swede” Allen arrived at Ellis Island from Sweden in 1907 and settled in Firebaugh during the Great Depression. Josh’s grandfather A.E. “Buzz” Allen established the family farm in 1975 and was also a local school board member and civic leader (the high school gymnasium is named in his honor).
“Josh would be fourth-generation,” Joel Allen said. “But I don’t think he’s coming back to the farm.”
Joel and his wife, LaVonne, raised their four children on the ranch, and Josh, his younger brother Jason and sisters Nicala and Makenna were involved in sports at an early age. There is a basketball goal, swimming pool and batting cage at the ranch, and Josh grew up playing nearly every sport, including baseball, basketball, football, golf, gymnastics, karate and swimming. He and his brother, who plays first base at Saddleback College in Mission Viejo, California, also helped their father and uncle on the farm.
“It instilled a work ethic,” Josh said. “Seeing my dad wake up super early when the sun wasn’t even out and then coming home when the sun was set, he worked his tail off to provide for our family and did a great job. He’s the most selfless man I know, and I think if I’m half the man he is, I’ll be all right in this world.”
Josh learned quite a bit about hard work from his mother, too. Until recently, LaVonne owned one of the few restaurants in town — aptly named The Farmer’s Daughter — and fed farmers every morning before they went to work.
“She’s the rock of our family,” Josh said.
Josh grew up a Fresno State football fan and tailgated with his parents and siblings at most home games. He attended the Bulldogs’ summer camps and even retrieved the kicking tee during a few games (former coach Pat Hill once yelled at him to get off the field). One of Josh’s most memorable moments was meeting Fresno State quarterback Derek Carr, another homegrown star, who now plays for the Oakland Raiders.
Josh Allen, right, grew up near Fresno State and was a fan of the Bulldogs and current Oakland Raiders QB Derek Carr. Josh Allen
In February 2014, when it was time for Josh to choose a college as a high school senior, the Bulldogs — and every other FBS team — weren’t interested. At the time, Josh was about 6-foot-3 and 180 pounds. He hadn’t attended the elite quarterback camps and wasn’t a widely known prospect. His high school team didn’t participate in many 7-on-7 camps because Josh and many of his teammates were busy playing baseball and other sports. He was the leading scorer on his basketball team and also pitched on the baseball team, reaching 90 mph with his fastball.
It wasn’t like Josh wasn’t trying to get coaches’ attention, though, especially those working at Fresno State. When his father played in a charity golf tournament with then-Bulldogs coach Tim DeRuyter, he told him about Josh’s desire to play for him. But DeRuyter decided Josh wasn’t the right fit. San Diego State offered Josh a chance to join the team as a walk-on, but coach Rocky Long couldn’t promise playing time. Left without a major college scholarship, Allen enrolled at Reedley College, about 65 miles southeast of Firebaugh, where one of the assistants was married to his cousin.
“He wasn’t too concerned when he went to junior college,” Joel said. “He knew there was going to be a big-time opportunity for him. He just needed a stage and he got one.”
Josh didn’t start the first three games at Reedley College, but he came off the bench to run for four touchdowns in the fourth game. After only a couple of starts, his offensive coordinator predicted FBS scholarship offers would soon start rolling in. But the offers never came, even after he’d grown to 6-foot-5, 238 pounds, and sent the mass email to every coach in the country.
“He saw himself as a big-time quarterback, even though he was in this small-time situation in a smaller body,” Wyoming offensive coordinator Brent Vigen said. “Not all kids see themselves that way.”
We have to assume that most coaches didn’t click on the link to Josh’s junior college highlights on hudl.com — a handful of coaches told ESPN that they receive dozens of unsolicited emails from recruits every day. If they had, they would have seen Allen display the arm strength, accuracy and mobility they covet.
On the first play of his highlight reel, he makes a back-shoulder throw from his end zone for a 38-yard gain. On another throw, he looks to his left, rolls to his right and fires a 37-yard strike into the back of the end zone — just before an outside linebacker viciously hits him near the sideline.
“Allen has an elite arm and frame (listed at 6-foot-5, 233 pounds) and is surprisingly fast and athletic for his size. He can make any throw, and his accuracy is terrific when his feet are set. A little bit of a gunslinger at times, he has all the tools to be an elite NFL QB. If he comes out, he’ll be in the running for the No. 1 pick in the 2018 NFL draft.”
The coaches also would have seen Josh keeping the ball on a zone-read, running up the middle and breaking a tackle for a 40-yard touchdown. On another run, he leaped over a safety trying to tackle him. The highlights were good enough to get Wyoming’s coaches interested — even if they’d gone to Reedley College to scout another potential transfer. And Vigen admits the Cowboys offered a scholarship to Josh only after they lost quarterback prospect Eric Dungey to Syracuse late in the recruiting process.
Wyoming coach Craig Bohl, who had guided the Cowboys to a 4-8 record in his first season in 2014 after winning three FCS national championships at North Dakota State, was the only FBS coach who made the long trek to Allen Ranch.
“He looked me straight in the eye and said, ‘We went all around the country and there’s only one quarterback we want and that’s your son. He’s going to be the face of our program,'” Joel recalled.
Before Josh committed to Wyoming, however, he made one last plea to Fresno State’s coaches. The Bulldogs had just received a commitment from quarterback Chason Virgil, a 6-foot-1, 170-pound high school prospect from Mesquite, Texas. Virgil was shorter and lighter than Josh was during his senior year at Firebaugh High, when he said the Bulldogs told him he didn’t fit the prototype of what they wanted in a quarterback.
After Virgil committed to Fresno State, Josh sent a terse email to an assistant coach: “6-1, 170?”
“Yeah, we got our guy,” the assistant responded. “Good luck.”
In Allen’s first season at Wyoming in 2015, he exited training camp as the No. 2 quarterback, behind Indiana transfer Cameron Coffman and ahead of freshman Nick Smith. Coffman hurt his knee in the season opener, a 24-13 loss to North Dakota, so Allen started against Eastern Michigan the next week. He led the Cowboys on an eight-play, 84-yard touchdown drive on his first series and had them moving again on the second drive.
But then Allen took on a defender at the end of a 24-yard run, breaking his collarbone in seven spots. Surgeons needed eight screws and a plate to repair it, and Allen said he didn’t leave his dorm room for three weeks after he was hurt. Wyoming finished 2-10.
“I was devastated,” he said.
Wyoming’s Josh Allen is among the college quarterbacks rising on NFL draft boards. AP Photo/Ryan Kang
In hindsight, sitting out the rest of the 2015 season might have been the best thing that could have happened. Vigen said Allen weighed 215 pounds when he arrived at Wyoming, but it was a “bad 215.” Allen spent the next several months working to get bigger and faster, and his collarbone was fully healed by the time preseason camp came the next year. It was during preseason practices in 2016 when Bohl and Vigen realized how good Allen might be.
Former San Francisco 49ers general manager Trent Baalke was watching a Wyoming practice in late August, before the 49ers played an exhibition game at the Denver Broncos. Baalke and a couple of scouts were there to evaluate tailback Brian Hill and a handful of other seniors, but Allen was the one who made the biggest impression.
“Your quarterback could be in an NFL camp right now,” Baalke told Bohl.
It was high praise for a player who had taken only 13 snaps at the FBS level. In the 2016 opener, Allen led the Cowboys to a 40-34 win over Northern Illinois in three overtimes. He scored the winning touchdown on a scramble, eluding three would-be tacklers to find the end zone. Allen finished his junior season with 3,203 passing yards with 28 touchdowns and 15 interceptions. The Cowboys upset Boise State 30-28 en route to winning the MWC Mountain Division title, but then they lost four of their last five games.
On the night of Jan. 9, Allen watched Clemson defeat Alabama 35-31 in the College Football Playoff National Championship. He watched the Tigers’ thrilling victory in his parents’ living room, along with agent Tom Condon and his associates. The next night, while dining at one of his favorite Mexican restaurants, Allen told his parents, siblings, girlfriend (Brittany Williams, a Fresno State cheerleader) and a few other friends that he was turning pro.
But Allen couldn’t sleep that night, and when Vigen called the next morning, he couldn’t muster the courage to answer.
“I couldn’t talk to him and tell him that I was declaring for the draft,” Allen said. “At that point, I knew there was something wrong with my decision. I’m a firm believer in your gut being undefeated.”
Vigen was driving to the Denver airport to make a recruiting trip to Wisconsin. He called Joel Allen, who told him that Josh was having second thoughts about turning pro. When Vigen’s plane landed, he immediately called Bohl, who told him that Josh had changed his mind and was staying in school.
“I asked him, ‘Do you want to get drafted or do you want to have a career?'” Bohl said. “We think this next year is going to really give him a better shot to have a long-term career in the NFL. I mean, he barely shaves now.”
Bohl wasn’t the only one who offered Josh advice. Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Carson Wentz, who played for Bohl at North Dakota State, also reached out to him when he was deciding what to do. Like Josh, Wentz was a late bloomer. College recruiters had largely overlooked him at Century High School in Bismarck, North Dakota, and he didn’t start for the Bison until his junior season.
After leading North Dakota State to back-to-back FCS national titles, he was the No. 2 pick of the 2016 NFL draft by the Eagles, the highest selection ever for an FCS player. He ended up starting 16 games as a rookie, throwing for 3,782 yards with 16 touchdowns and 14 interceptions.
Besides their small-town upbringing and the fact they played in a pro-style offense under Bohl, there are obvious physical similarities. While Vigen says Wentz is “off the charts” when it comes to maturity and other intangibles, he says Josh might be more physically talented.
Wentz’s advice to Allen was simple: Make sure you’re ready for the NFL.
“He seems like a bright kid with a bright future,” Wentz said. “I know he has a lot of talent and people are really high on him.”
One thing that Wentz said especially struck a chord with Josh: “He told me that I’d be stepping into a locker room full of 35-year-old men with families and children, who would be depending on me to win games and help secure their jobs.”
For one more year, at least, Josh prefers a smaller stage. His goal is to lead the Cowboys to a MWC championship and a New Year’s Six bowl game. Six months from now, he hopes everyone in America recognizes him.
“Everything happens for a reason,” he said. “I think that kids who are at smaller schools or don’t have offers from big schools can look at my story and continue to work hard. I preach to them that it doesn’t matter where you come from, it matters how you play and how you apply yourself. If you want something, go get it.”
The post Wyoming Cowboys Josh Allen goes from unknown to No. 1 pick in NFL draft buzz appeared first on Daily Star Sports.
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giantsfootball0 · 7 years
Text
Wyoming Cowboys Josh Allen goes from unknown to No. 1 pick in NFL draft buzz
LARAMIE, Wyo. — On Nov. 20, 2014, near the end of Josh Allen’s first season at junior college, he sent emails imploring someone — anyone, really — to give him a chance to be a Division I quarterback.
The recipient list included not only every FBS head coach, but also every offensive coordinator, defensive coordinator and position coach from Alabama to Washington, more than 1,000 emails in total. They started with the same salutation and the same desperate plea from a kid in tiny Firebaugh, California: I want to be your quarterback.
Courtesy of Josh Allen
His unsolicited emails went over like a loan request from a Nigerian prince. He received a handful of responses and only two — Eastern Michigan and Wyoming — eventually offered him a scholarship. (The Eagles actually withdrew their offer after he chose to visit Wyoming near the end of the early signing period for junior college transfers.)
“Yeah, I was disappointed,” Allen said. “I couldn’t believe it.”
On the bright side, it was one more scholarship offer than Allen had coming out of Firebaugh High School the year before, when not a single FBS or FCS program called.
“I truly felt like I was a Division I quarterback, and I’d felt that way for a long time,” Allen said. “I just wanted other people to see it.”
No one else saw it, at least not back then. But after throwing for more than 3,000 yards and 28 touchdowns for Wyoming last season, the quarterback that nearly every FBS team (but two) ignored might very well end up being one of the first players selected in the 2018 NFL draft.
Allen’s anonymity ended almost immediately after the final selection of the 2017 NFL draft was made on April 29, when ESPN reporter Adam Schefter said: “There was one personnel director who told me this week that you can put in the books, Josh Allen will be the No. 1 pick in the NFL draft next year.”
Of course, most of the people watching ESPN’s draft coverage that day probably wondered: Who in the hell is Josh Allen?
“Probably 90 percent of America,” Allen admitted. “That’s kind of been my M.O. my entire football career.”
There’s only one stoplight in Firebaugh, California, a farming town of about 7,500 residents in California’s Central Valley, about 40 miles west of Fresno. Originally known as Firebaugh’s Ferry, it was an outpost on the San Joaquin River during the California gold rush during the mid-19th century.
According to 2011 data from the U.S. Census Bureau, Latinos make up more than 90 percent of the town’s population, many of them migrant workers employed in agriculture.
Potentially the first three picks in the 2018 NFL draft. The reigning Heisman winner. A two-time top-four Heisman vote-getter. And that’s just the half of it. Add it all up, and 2017 is truly shaping up as college’s year of the quarterback.
“It’s a small town, everybody knows everybody and news travels fast,” said Allen. “It was an experience I wouldn’t trade for anything because it kind of shaped who I am today.”
Thousands of acres of alfalfa, pistachios and almond groves line the road to the ranch where Allen grew up. Joel Allen, Josh’s father, and his uncle, Todd Allen, grow about 3,000 acres of Pima cotton, cantaloupes and wheat against the backdrop of a coastal mountain range. Joel and Todd Allen are third-generation farmers.
Josh’s great-grandfather Arvid “Swede” Allen arrived at Ellis Island from Sweden in 1907 and settled in Firebaugh during the Great Depression. Josh’s grandfather A.E. “Buzz” Allen established the family farm in 1975 and was also a local school board member and civic leader (the high school gymnasium is named in his honor).
“Josh would be fourth-generation,” Joel Allen said. “But I don’t think he’s coming back to the farm.”
Joel and his wife, LaVonne, raised their four children on the ranch, and Josh, his younger brother Jason and sisters Nicala and Makenna were involved in sports at an early age. There is a basketball goal, swimming pool and batting cage at the ranch, and Josh grew up playing nearly every sport, including baseball, basketball, football, golf, gymnastics, karate and swimming. He and his brother, who plays first base at Saddleback College in Mission Viejo, California, also helped their father and uncle on the farm.
“It instilled a work ethic,” Josh said. “Seeing my dad wake up super early when the sun wasn’t even out and then coming home when the sun was set, he worked his tail off to provide for our family and did a great job. He’s the most selfless man I know, and I think if I’m half the man he is, I’ll be all right in this world.”
Josh learned quite a bit about hard work from his mother, too. Until recently, LaVonne owned one of the few restaurants in town — aptly named The Farmer’s Daughter — and fed farmers every morning before they went to work.
“She’s the rock of our family,” Josh said.
Josh grew up a Fresno State football fan and tailgated with his parents and siblings at most home games. He attended the Bulldogs’ summer camps and even retrieved the kicking tee during a few games (former coach Pat Hill once yelled at him to get off the field). One of Josh’s most memorable moments was meeting Fresno State quarterback Derek Carr, another homegrown star, who now plays for the Oakland Raiders.
Josh Allen, right, grew up near Fresno State and was a fan of the Bulldogs and current Oakland Raiders QB Derek Carr. Josh Allen
In February 2014, when it was time for Josh to choose a college as a high school senior, the Bulldogs — and every other FBS team — weren’t interested. At the time, Josh was about 6-foot-3 and 180 pounds. He hadn’t attended the elite quarterback camps and wasn’t a widely known prospect. His high school team didn’t participate in many 7-on-7 camps because Josh and many of his teammates were busy playing baseball and other sports. He was the leading scorer on his basketball team and also pitched on the baseball team, reaching 90 mph with his fastball.
It wasn’t like Josh wasn’t trying to get coaches’ attention, though, especially those working at Fresno State. When his father played in a charity golf tournament with then-Bulldogs coach Tim DeRuyter, he told him about Josh’s desire to play for him. But DeRuyter decided Josh wasn’t the right fit. San Diego State offered Josh a chance to join the team as a walk-on, but coach Rocky Long couldn’t promise playing time. Left without a major college scholarship, Allen enrolled at Reedley College, about 65 miles southeast of Firebaugh, where one of the assistants was married to his cousin.
“He wasn’t too concerned when he went to junior college,” Joel said. “He knew there was going to be a big-time opportunity for him. He just needed a stage and he got one.”
Josh didn’t start the first three games at Reedley College, but he came off the bench to run for four touchdowns in the fourth game. After only a couple of starts, his offensive coordinator predicted FBS scholarship offers would soon start rolling in. But the offers never came, even after he’d grown to 6-foot-5, 238 pounds, and sent the mass email to every coach in the country.
“He saw himself as a big-time quarterback, even though he was in this small-time situation in a smaller body,” Wyoming offensive coordinator Brent Vigen said. “Not all kids see themselves that way.”
We have to assume that most coaches didn’t click on the link to Josh’s junior college highlights on hudl.com — a handful of coaches told ESPN that they receive dozens of unsolicited emails from recruits every day. If they had, they would have seen Allen display the arm strength, accuracy and mobility they covet.
On the first play of his highlight reel, he makes a back-shoulder throw from his end zone for a 38-yard gain. On another throw, he looks to his left, rolls to his right and fires a 37-yard strike into the back of the end zone — just before an outside linebacker viciously hits him near the sideline.
“Allen has an elite arm and frame (listed at 6-foot-5, 233 pounds) and is surprisingly fast and athletic for his size. He can make any throw, and his accuracy is terrific when his feet are set. A little bit of a gunslinger at times, he has all the tools to be an elite NFL QB. If he comes out, he’ll be in the running for the No. 1 pick in the 2018 NFL draft.”
The coaches also would have seen Josh keeping the ball on a zone-read, running up the middle and breaking a tackle for a 40-yard touchdown. On another run, he leaped over a safety trying to tackle him. The highlights were good enough to get Wyoming’s coaches interested — even if they’d gone to Reedley College to scout another potential transfer. And Vigen admits the Cowboys offered a scholarship to Josh only after they lost quarterback prospect Eric Dungey to Syracuse late in the recruiting process.
Wyoming coach Craig Bohl, who had guided the Cowboys to a 4-8 record in his first season in 2014 after winning three FCS national championships at North Dakota State, was the only FBS coach who made the long trek to Allen Ranch.
“He looked me straight in the eye and said, ‘We went all around the country and there’s only one quarterback we want and that’s your son. He’s going to be the face of our program,‘” Joel recalled.
Before Josh committed to Wyoming, however, he made one last plea to Fresno State’s coaches. The Bulldogs had just received a commitment from quarterback Chason Virgil, a 6-foot-1, 170-pound high school prospect from Mesquite, Texas. Virgil was shorter and lighter than Josh was during his senior year at Firebaugh High, when he said the Bulldogs told him he didn’t fit the prototype of what they wanted in a quarterback.
After Virgil committed to Fresno State, Josh sent a terse email to an assistant coach: “6-1, 170?”
“Yeah, we got our guy,” the assistant responded. “Good luck.”
In Allen’s first season at Wyoming in 2015, he exited training camp as the No. 2 quarterback, behind Indiana transfer Cameron Coffman and ahead of freshman Nick Smith. Coffman hurt his knee in the season opener, a 24-13 loss to North Dakota, so Allen started against Eastern Michigan the next week. He led the Cowboys on an eight-play, 84-yard touchdown drive on his first series and had them moving again on the second drive.
But then Allen took on a defender at the end of a 24-yard run, breaking his collarbone in seven spots. Surgeons needed eight screws and a plate to repair it, and Allen said he didn’t leave his dorm room for three weeks after he was hurt. Wyoming finished 2-10.
“I was devastated,” he said.
Wyoming’s Josh Allen is among the college quarterbacks rising on NFL draft boards. AP Photo/Ryan Kang
In hindsight, sitting out the rest of the 2015 season might have been the best thing that could have happened. Vigen said Allen weighed 215 pounds when he arrived at Wyoming, but it was a “bad 215.” Allen spent the next several months working to get bigger and faster, and his collarbone was fully healed by the time preseason camp came the next year. It was during preseason practices in 2016 when Bohl and Vigen realized how good Allen might be.
Former San Francisco 49ers general manager Trent Baalke was watching a Wyoming practice in late August, before the 49ers played an exhibition game at the Denver Broncos. Baalke and a couple of scouts were there to evaluate tailback Brian Hill and a handful of other seniors, but Allen was the one who made the biggest impression.
“Your quarterback could be in an NFL camp right now,” Baalke told Bohl.
It was high praise for a player who had taken only 13 snaps at the FBS level. In the 2016 opener, Allen led the Cowboys to a 40-34 win over Northern Illinois in three overtimes. He scored the winning touchdown on a scramble, eluding three would-be tacklers to find the end zone. Allen finished his junior season with 3,203 passing yards with 28 touchdowns and 15 interceptions. The Cowboys upset Boise State 30-28 en route to winning the MWC Mountain Division title, but then they lost four of their last five games.
On the night of Jan. 9, Allen watched Clemson defeat Alabama 35-31 in the College Football Playoff National Championship. He watched the Tigers’ thrilling victory in his parents’ living room, along with agent Tom Condon and his associates. The next night, while dining at one of his favorite Mexican restaurants, Allen told his parents, siblings, girlfriend (Brittany Williams, a Fresno State cheerleader) and a few other friends that he was turning pro.
But Allen couldn’t sleep that night, and when Vigen called the next morning, he couldn’t muster the courage to answer.
“I couldn’t talk to him and tell him that I was declaring for the draft,” Allen said. “At that point, I knew there was something wrong with my decision. I’m a firm believer in your gut being undefeated.”
Vigen was driving to the Denver airport to make a recruiting trip to Wisconsin. He called Joel Allen, who told him that Josh was having second thoughts about turning pro. When Vigen’s plane landed, he immediately called Bohl, who told him that Josh had changed his mind and was staying in school.
“I asked him, ‘Do you want to get drafted or do you want to have a career?'” Bohl said. “We think this next year is going to really give him a better shot to have a long-term career in the NFL. I mean, he barely shaves now.”
Bohl wasn’t the only one who offered Josh advice. Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Carson Wentz, who played for Bohl at North Dakota State, also reached out to him when he was deciding what to do. Like Josh, Wentz was a late bloomer. College recruiters had largely overlooked him at Century High School in Bismarck, North Dakota, and he didn’t start for the Bison until his junior season.
After leading North Dakota State to back-to-back FCS national titles, he was the No. 2 pick of the 2016 NFL draft by the Eagles, the highest selection ever for an FCS player. He ended up starting 16 games as a rookie, throwing for 3,782 yards with 16 touchdowns and 14 interceptions.
Besides their small-town upbringing and the fact they played in a pro-style offense under Bohl, there are obvious physical similarities. While Vigen says Wentz is “off the charts” when it comes to maturity and other intangibles, he says Josh might be more physically talented.
Wentz’s advice to Allen was simple: Make sure you’re ready for the NFL.
“He seems like a bright kid with a bright future,” Wentz said. “I know he has a lot of talent and people are really high on him.”
One thing that Wentz said especially struck a chord with Josh: “He told me that I’d be stepping into a locker room full of 35-year-old men with families and children, who would be depending on me to win games and help secure their jobs.”
For one more year, at least, Josh prefers a smaller stage. His goal is to lead the Cowboys to a MWC championship and a New Year’s Six bowl game. Six months from now, he hopes everyone in America recognizes him.
“Everything happens for a reason,” he said. “I think that kids who are at smaller schools or don’t have offers from big schools can look at my story and continue to work hard. I preach to them that it doesn’t matter where you come from, it matters how you play and how you apply yourself. If you want something, go get it.”
The post Wyoming Cowboys Josh Allen goes from unknown to No. 1 pick in NFL draft buzz appeared first on Daily Star Sports.
from https://dailystarsports.com/2017/09/16/wyoming-cowboys-josh-allen-goes-from-unknown-to-no-1-pick-in-nfl-draft-buzz-2/ from https://dailystarsports.tumblr.com/post/165407425921
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flauntpage · 7 years
Text
D.J. Wilson Is Milwaukee's Next Positionless Freak
During the Milwaukee Bucks' final Summer League game, D.J. Wilson, who had been having a rather unremarkable Summer League stint to that point, exemplified the spectacle he can seemingly create whenever he wants.
With one arm cocked behind his head and his nose nearly at the rim, Wilson glided across the paint, his eyes locked on a floater from a Utah Jazz player that seemed out of reach. But instead of falling through the net, as the shooter hoped it would, the ball was met with a violent swing by Wilson, who whipped it off the glass at an awkward angle and right into the hands of his own teammate standing directly underneath the basket.
The possession ended with two points for the Jazz, but moments like this help rationalize Milwaukee's decision to select Wilson with the 17th overall pick in last month's NBA draft. In discussing Wilson, questions about an up-and-down collegiate career, his overall toughness, and his inconsistency are weighed against the fact that he'll turn 22 in the middle of his rookie season, his impressive wingspan, and his athletic 6'10'' frame.
For all his promising qualities—the gymnastic spring, the nimble touch, the agility—Wilson played only 182 minutes in his first two years at the University of Michigan, and didn't score more than ten points in eight of his first ten games this past season. During the Summer League, he averaged only 11.8 points per game on 38 percent shooting. But then there was that block that made you forget those average numbers.
When asked when he first realized Wilson could be a first-round pick, Michigan assistant coach Saddi Washington deadpanned, "On draft night." There's a bit of truth in every joke, though; Wilson's unpredictable play has thus far been intertwined with his nearly limitless potential.
"A lot of the NBA scouts, in the early part of the season, we'd get calls and questions on him," Washington told VICE Sports. "You'd walk in the gym, he has presence and he fits the profile. But can he really make that next jump?"
On the whole, Wilson's Las Vegas experience was mediocre. He launched 22 threes and only made six of them, with an assist rate that eclipsed his rebound percentage. But it can be overkill to base any sort of meaningful criticism on Summer League stats. In many ways it's a peculiar environment that won't make or break anyone's career, especially a big man. Thon Maker, Wilson's new teammate, held his own in the NBA playoffs a few months ago, but was an anxious horror show (six points per game, 22 percent shooting) in two ultimately meaningless Summer League games a couple weeks ago.
Contending with his own nerves, Wilson battled in the post, flashed some bullish aggression on the glass, and inevitably sketched the chalk outline of a player who can be useful for a very long time.
"I think I performed alright," Wilson told VICE Sports. "Some games my shot wasn't falling or whatnot, and I think that kind of changed a lot of things for me as far as, I don't know, just my mentality. But once I get over that, once I get those shots to fall—because those are shots that I can make any day of the week—I think my game will definitely elevate to another level."
Even if his ceiling isn't on the same plane as an All-NBA headline act like Giannis Antetokounmpo, or if he doesn't have the intangibles of bottomless intrigue that surround Maker, Wilson is still tailor-made to complement those two, Khris Middleton, and Jabari Parker with his own upside.
He made 37.3 percent of his threes at Michigan last year while displaying an ability to stick with shiftier players on the perimeter. He should be able to switch most screens in the NBA (if the Bucks ever adopt that strategy on a full-time basis) and allow Milwaukee to maintain size without sacrificing speed or skill.
"At 6'10", he's an elite athlete," Washington said. "In time he may get to be a player who can masquerade at the three in the NBA. The league is just emerging into positionless basketball, so there would be times where we had D.J. playing the five for us.… For him to go 17 was a bit of a shock, but for him to go to the Bucks was a blessing in disguise."
It makes sense to be as long and tall as you possibly can, with gifted offensive players who can pass, dribble, shoot, cut, rebound, and generally not look like they're trudging through wet cement trying to defend a wing 25 feet from the hoop. The Bucks may be able to deploy units that can do that across all five positions, with Antetokounmpo, Middleton, Maker, Wilson, and Tony Snell essentially lining the court with reams of yellow tape. This is scary stuff.
In college, Wilson was able to fix critical defensive mistakes by recovering before too much damage was done. Open threes and blow-by layups turned into contested twos. His lateral quickness needs to improve, but Michigan coaches are confident it can, along with other areas of Wilson's game that make his skill set so attractive.
After Michigan was eliminated from the NCAA tournament, in a game where Wilson, a junior, made four threes, grabbed six boards, and blocked two shots, the Wolverines held a couple practices with everyone except the graduating seniors. Wilson dominated in ways that caught his coaches off-guard, from individual drills to five-on-five scrimmages.
"I was like, 'Oh my God, if scouts were in the gym right now they would be freaking drooling over themselves,'" Washington said.
There, they decided to put the rock in Wilson's hands and let him create in space a little bit, a terrifying concept if he continues to work on his ball-handling and is eventually given an opportunity to attack in Milwaukee's offense. He doesn't project to be a first or second option, but anyone that large who can confidently attack a closeout, corner crash, and engineer a screen-and-roll is devastating.
But that's all a best-case scenario. Wilson's frame needs to fill out and he has to approach each possession with a certain amount of belligerence. The existing technical skills make projecting what he can amount to such a tantalizing exercise, but it still takes a leap of faith to assume he'll get there.
It's telling that those who know him best were surprised to see him go as high as he did in the draft, but gambles have worked out for the Bucks before. If they hit on Wilson, this team could own the Eastern Conference with futuristic versatility like the NBA has never seen.
D.J. Wilson Is Milwaukee's Next Positionless Freak published first on http://ift.tt/2pLTmlv
0 notes
flauntpage · 7 years
Text
D.J. Wilson Is Milwaukee's Next Positionless Freak
During the Milwaukee Bucks' final Summer League game, D.J. Wilson, who had been having a rather unremarkable Summer League stint to that point, exemplified the spectacle he can seemingly create whenever he wants.
With one arm cocked behind his head and his nose nearly at the rim, Wilson glided across the paint, his eyes locked on a floater from a Utah Jazz player that seemed out of reach. But instead of falling through the net, as the shooter hoped it would, the ball was met with a violent swing by Wilson, who whipped it off the glass at an awkward angle and right into the hands of his own teammate standing directly underneath the basket.
The possession ended with two points for the Jazz, but moments like this help rationalize Milwaukee's decision to select Wilson with the 17th overall pick in last month's NBA draft. In discussing Wilson, questions about an up-and-down collegiate career, his overall toughness, and his inconsistency are weighed against the fact that he'll turn 22 in the middle of his rookie season, his impressive wingspan, and his athletic 6'10'' frame.
For all his promising qualities—the gymnastic spring, the nimble touch, the agility—Wilson played only 182 minutes in his first two years at the University of Michigan, and didn't score more than ten points in eight of his first ten games this past season. During the Summer League, he averaged only 11.8 points per game on 38 percent shooting. But then there was that block that made you forget those average numbers.
When asked when he first realized Wilson could be a first-round pick, Michigan assistant coach Saddi Washington deadpanned, "On draft night." There's a bit of truth in every joke, though; Wilson's unpredictable play has thus far been intertwined with his nearly limitless potential.
"A lot of the NBA scouts, in the early part of the season, we'd get calls and questions on him," Washington told VICE Sports. "You'd walk in the gym, he has presence and he fits the profile. But can he really make that next jump?"
On the whole, Wilson's Las Vegas experience was mediocre. He launched 22 threes and only made six of them, with an assist rate that eclipsed his rebound percentage. But it can be overkill to base any sort of meaningful criticism on Summer League stats. In many ways it's a peculiar environment that won't make or break anyone's career, especially a big man. Thon Maker, Wilson's new teammate, held his own in the NBA playoffs a few months ago, but was an anxious horror show (six points per game, 22 percent shooting) in two ultimately meaningless Summer League games a couple weeks ago.
Contending with his own nerves, Wilson battled in the post, flashed some bullish aggression on the glass, and inevitably sketched the chalk outline of a player who can be useful for a very long time.
"I think I performed alright," Wilson told VICE Sports. "Some games my shot wasn't falling or whatnot, and I think that kind of changed a lot of things for me as far as, I don't know, just my mentality. But once I get over that, once I get those shots to fall—because those are shots that I can make any day of the week—I think my game will definitely elevate to another level."
Even if his ceiling isn't on the same plane as an All-NBA headline act like Giannis Antetokounmpo, or if he doesn't have the intangibles of bottomless intrigue that surround Maker, Wilson is still tailor-made to complement those two, Khris Middleton, and Jabari Parker with his own upside.
He made 37.3 percent of his threes at Michigan last year while displaying an ability to stick with shiftier players on the perimeter. He should be able to switch most screens in the NBA (if the Bucks ever adopt that strategy on a full-time basis) and allow Milwaukee to maintain size without sacrificing speed or skill.
"At 6'10", he's an elite athlete," Washington said. "In time he may get to be a player who can masquerade at the three in the NBA. The league is just emerging into positionless basketball, so there would be times where we had D.J. playing the five for us.… For him to go 17 was a bit of a shock, but for him to go to the Bucks was a blessing in disguise."
It makes sense to be as long and tall as you possibly can, with gifted offensive players who can pass, dribble, shoot, cut, rebound, and generally not look like they're trudging through wet cement trying to defend a wing 25 feet from the hoop. The Bucks may be able to deploy units that can do that across all five positions, with Antetokounmpo, Middleton, Maker, Wilson, and Tony Snell essentially lining the court with reams of yellow tape. This is scary stuff.
In college, Wilson was able to fix critical defensive mistakes by recovering before too much damage was done. Open threes and blow-by layups turned into contested twos. His lateral quickness needs to improve, but Michigan coaches are confident it can, along with other areas of Wilson's game that make his skill set so attractive.
After Michigan was eliminated from the NCAA tournament, in a game where Wilson, a junior, made four threes, grabbed six boards, and blocked two shots, the Wolverines held a couple practices with everyone except the graduating seniors. Wilson dominated in ways that caught his coaches off-guard, from individual drills to five-on-five scrimmages.
"I was like, 'Oh my God, if scouts were in the gym right now they would be freaking drooling over themselves,'" Washington said.
There, they decided to put the rock in Wilson's hands and let him create in space a little bit, a terrifying concept if he continues to work on his ball-handling and is eventually given an opportunity to attack in Milwaukee's offense. He doesn't project to be a first or second option, but anyone that large who can confidently attack a closeout, corner crash, and engineer a screen-and-roll is devastating.
But that's all a best-case scenario. Wilson's frame needs to fill out and he has to approach each possession with a certain amount of belligerence. The existing technical skills make projecting what he can amount to such a tantalizing exercise, but it still takes a leap of faith to assume he'll get there.
It's telling that those who know him best were surprised to see him go as high as he did in the draft, but gambles have worked out for the Bucks before. If they hit on Wilson, this team could own the Eastern Conference with futuristic versatility like the NBA has never seen.
D.J. Wilson Is Milwaukee's Next Positionless Freak published first on http://ift.tt/2pLTmlv
0 notes
flauntpage · 7 years
Text
D.J. Wilson Is Milwaukee's Next Positionless Freak
During the Milwaukee Bucks' final Summer League game, D.J. Wilson, who had been having a rather unremarkable Summer League stint to that point, exemplified the spectacle he can seemingly create whenever he wants.
With one arm cocked behind his head and his nose nearly at the rim, Wilson glided across the paint, his eyes locked on a floater from a Utah Jazz player that seemed out of reach. But instead of falling through the net, as the shooter hoped it would, the ball was met with a violent swing by Wilson, who whipped it off the glass at an awkward angle and right into the hands of his own teammate standing directly underneath the basket.
The possession ended with two points for the Jazz, but moments like this help rationalize Milwaukee's decision to select Wilson with the 17th overall pick in last month's NBA draft. In discussing Wilson, questions about an up-and-down collegiate career, his overall toughness, and his inconsistency are weighed against the fact that he'll turn 22 in the middle of his rookie season, his impressive wingspan, and his athletic 6'10'' frame.
For all his promising qualities—the gymnastic spring, the nimble touch, the agility—Wilson played only 182 minutes in his first two years at the University of Michigan, and didn't score more than ten points in eight of his first ten games this past season. During the Summer League, he averaged only 11.8 points per game on 38 percent shooting. But then there was that block that made you forget those average numbers.
When asked when he first realized Wilson could be a first-round pick, Michigan assistant coach Saddi Washington deadpanned, "On draft night." There's a bit of truth in every joke, though; Wilson's unpredictable play has thus far been intertwined with his nearly limitless potential.
"A lot of the NBA scouts, in the early part of the season, we'd get calls and questions on him," Washington told VICE Sports. "You'd walk in the gym, he has presence and he fits the profile. But can he really make that next jump?"
On the whole, Wilson's Las Vegas experience was mediocre. He launched 22 threes and only made six of them, with an assist rate that eclipsed his rebound percentage. But it can be overkill to base any sort of meaningful criticism on Summer League stats. In many ways it's a peculiar environment that won't make or break anyone's career, especially a big man. Thon Maker, Wilson's new teammate, held his own in the NBA playoffs a few months ago, but was an anxious horror show (six points per game, 22 percent shooting) in two ultimately meaningless Summer League games a couple weeks ago.
Contending with his own nerves, Wilson battled in the post, flashed some bullish aggression on the glass, and inevitably sketched the chalk outline of a player who can be useful for a very long time.
"I think I performed alright," Wilson told VICE Sports. "Some games my shot wasn't falling or whatnot, and I think that kind of changed a lot of things for me as far as, I don't know, just my mentality. But once I get over that, once I get those shots to fall—because those are shots that I can make any day of the week—I think my game will definitely elevate to another level."
Even if his ceiling isn't on the same plane as an All-NBA headline act like Giannis Antetokounmpo, or if he doesn't have the intangibles of bottomless intrigue that surround Maker, Wilson is still tailor-made to complement those two, Khris Middleton, and Jabari Parker with his own upside.
He made 37.3 percent of his threes at Michigan last year while displaying an ability to stick with shiftier players on the perimeter. He should be able to switch most screens in the NBA (if the Bucks ever adopt that strategy on a full-time basis) and allow Milwaukee to maintain size without sacrificing speed or skill.
"At 6'10", he's an elite athlete," Washington said. "In time he may get to be a player who can masquerade at the three in the NBA. The league is just emerging into positionless basketball, so there would be times where we had D.J. playing the five for us.… For him to go 17 was a bit of a shock, but for him to go to the Bucks was a blessing in disguise."
It makes sense to be as long and tall as you possibly can, with gifted offensive players who can pass, dribble, shoot, cut, rebound, and generally not look like they're trudging through wet cement trying to defend a wing 25 feet from the hoop. The Bucks may be able to deploy units that can do that across all five positions, with Antetokounmpo, Middleton, Maker, Wilson, and Tony Snell essentially lining the court with reams of yellow tape. This is scary stuff.
In college, Wilson was able to fix critical defensive mistakes by recovering before too much damage was done. Open threes and blow-by layups turned into contested twos. His lateral quickness needs to improve, but Michigan coaches are confident it can, along with other areas of Wilson's game that make his skill set so attractive.
After Michigan was eliminated from the NCAA tournament, in a game where Wilson, a junior, made four threes, grabbed six boards, and blocked two shots, the Wolverines held a couple practices with everyone except the graduating seniors. Wilson dominated in ways that caught his coaches off-guard, from individual drills to five-on-five scrimmages.
"I was like, 'Oh my God, if scouts were in the gym right now they would be freaking drooling over themselves,'" Washington said.
There, they decided to put the rock in Wilson's hands and let him create in space a little bit, a terrifying concept if he continues to work on his ball-handling and is eventually given an opportunity to attack in Milwaukee's offense. He doesn't project to be a first or second option, but anyone that large who can confidently attack a closeout, corner crash, and engineer a screen-and-roll is devastating.
But that's all a best-case scenario. Wilson's frame needs to fill out and he has to approach each possession with a certain amount of belligerence. The existing technical skills make projecting what he can amount to such a tantalizing exercise, but it still takes a leap of faith to assume he'll get there.
It's telling that those who know him best were surprised to see him go as high as he did in the draft, but gambles have worked out for the Bucks before. If they hit on Wilson, this team could own the Eastern Conference with futuristic versatility like the NBA has never seen.
D.J. Wilson Is Milwaukee's Next Positionless Freak published first on http://ift.tt/2pLTmlv
0 notes