Oscar Tshiebwe hosts non-public exercise session with Flory Bidunga, Jasper Johnson, Travis Perry and extra

Oscar Tshiebwe hosts non-public exercise session with Flory Bidunga, Jasper Johnson, Travis Perry and extra

Oscar Tshiebwe‘s return to Lexington was not restricted to a youth camp that includes over 300 diehard enthusiasts and the complete Kentucky men’s basketball group. The previous Wildcat also went out of his way to aid the upcoming era of expertise in the area.

Tshiebwe hosted a personal workout featuring a number of 5- and 4-star recruits, all positioned in the region. The headliner was Kansas’ prized pledge Flory Bidunga, the nation’s No. 5 total prospect and No. 1 centre in the On3 Business Rating. He was joined by Kentucky’s ideal talent: Jasper Johnson, Travis Perry, Malachi Moreno, Ayden Evans and Gabe Weis, amongst many others.

The Invite was an special schooling session driven by Court XIV, Tshiebwe’s company led by CEO & Founder Nate Conley. Having place at the Sports Heart in Lexington, it was an chance to coach, find out and perform alongside a former countrywide participant of the yr and latest NBA rookie.

The battles had been about what you’d assume. Tshiebwe proved why he was just one of the most successful university basketball players in new memory whilst Bidunga, Johnson, Perry, Moreno and other attendees experienced their very own moments. The future Jayhawk was a pressure on the defensive finish and threw down vicious dunks in a single-on-just one and two-on-two drills, but also struggled at occasions from Tshiebwe’s physicality. Very same can be said about Moreno, known for his contact and truly feel as a legitimate 7-footer — extra finesse than brute power.

As for the backcourt, all eyes were on Johnson and Perry — two certainly elite scoring abilities out of Lexington and Eddyville, respectively. Both gamers shot lights out and thrived in situational drills, Johnson obtaining arguably the engage in of the afternoon with an ankle-breaking crossover

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Court Report: Oscar Tshiebwe, Fardaws Aimaq reaching and racing for modern rebound record

Court Report: Oscar Tshiebwe, Fardaws Aimaq reaching and racing for modern rebound record

Men’s college basketball hasn’t had a player average more than 15.0 rebounds in more than four decades. Might we see two players do it this season?

Kentucky’s Oscar Tshiebwe and Utah Valley’s Fardaws Aimaq each have a shot to become the first since Alcorn’s Larry Smith (18.1 rpg) in 1979-80 to snag more than 15.0 boards per game. Aimaq, in fact, averaged exactly 15.0 rebounds last season, albeit in only 20 games against D-I teams. (Doing it vs. a full schedule would qualify as a smidge more proper.)

While there have been superb carom-snaggers this century, the era of the dominant, game-changing rebounder has been gone so long from the college game it may as well be extinct. Tshiebwe and Aimaq are here to revive the role out of the amber. Tshiebwe leads the nation in rebound average (15.4); he’s No. 1 in offensive-rebound rate (27.6%) and No. 2 in defensive (34.4%). He also has seven double-doubles — tied with Aimaq (14.8 rpg) for most in the sport. 

In the preseason, Tshiebwe said his goal was to average 20 rebounds. CBS Sports caught up with him Tuesday night after Kentucky’s 76-64 win over Southern. He was happy with the W, of course, but let down because he fell short of his every-game objective: Tshiebwe finished with 11 boards. Oh, he had a game-high 23 points, too. But we talked about the rebounds and that preseason proclamation. 

“I’m guaranteeing again I can do it,” he said. “My goal is to go for 20 every time. I fight all the time for 20. When I don’t get it, it’s good we won, but I feel like I didn’t [fulfill] my purpose.”

Tshiebwe runs instant calculations in his head every time a shot goes up.

“If someone shoots from the right, it’s a

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