http://w3.nbebasketball.com/2009/04/07/class-of-2010-intro-kadeem-jack/Rice Junior Receiving Solid Big East Interest
By Zach Smart
Rice high school is where throwback jerseys are in and Abercrombie is out. It’s where Maurice Hicks makes basketball a year-around commitment. Not just a workaday activity but a majorly significant 24-hour, 365 day marriage.
Every little aspect of Hicks’ daily hoops regimen is critical. It’s all a detailed, righteous recipe for success. Hicks lays out a blueprint which he challenges some of the city’s most promising youth to follow. He molds young minds and launches these kids to career opportunities they may not have fathomed elsewhere.
This is not a prep school. They don’t recruit kids. It’s a storied program that breathes life into a once-ailing area that’s been revamped, refurbished, and rejuvenated these past few years. It’s as if the reverend created a tool for community engagement and Hicks (â€Mo,†as he’s known in the city’s never dwindling basketball culture) and the
reverend’s plan came to fruition.
Marquee matchups are certain, quiet gyms are nonexistent.
Shoot first, ask questions later. That’s the mindset Hicks instills in his players.
The Raiders gym is where a laundry-list of college coaches will flock, where a high-end player’s stock will either increase or drop, and an emphatic, violent two-handed banger will instigate a chorus of wowing eruptions.
Somewhere in the busload of talented young players is Kadeem Jack.
At the towering height of 6-8, Jack stands out like a police officer armed to the teeth at a Wu Tang concert.
Jack, he of the stickbacks, glasswork, and improved back to the bucket moves, is starting to garner some major Division-I attention.
He’s still a bit rough around the edges, but his leaps-and-bounds progression was an essential ingredient in this year’s New York state championship team.
“Kadeem just loves the game,†said Hicks.
“He hasn’t been playing basketball for that long, I think the last 3-4 years, tops. He’s a sponge. Throughout the year, I had a couple of meetings with him. I sat him down and told him, ‘we’ve got a have an inside presence on this team to be successful. It’s got to be you.â€
Jack apparently took his coach’s words to heart. He became more aggressive and suddenly emerged as a stallion in the paint.
The Big East is showing big interest in the biggest, most promising man in the middle since Shagari Alleyne (2003). Pittsburgh, Seton Hall and Rutgers are all potential suitors for the big fella.
“They (Big East schools) are starting to realize who he is,†said Hicks of his behemoth.
“This summer is going to tell it all. They’ll be able to see him play. The Big East is going to be all over him. So will other people. But I think that’s something he wants to do, play in the Big East. It works for most of our kids as it’s close to home and extremely competitive.â€
UConn’s Kemba “EZ Pass†Walker is a prime example of a recent Rice graduate to master the transition to the Big East.
Hicks believes Jack’s stock will balloon as time ticks into the future.
“He’s going to improve at a rapid rate, because he wants to be good. That’s what is going to make him. He’s going to be a sleeper, because a lot of teams don’t know about him.â€
A major upside to Jack is his ability to handle the intangibles.
He listens. He makes his teammates better and is able to work cohesively and harmoniously with them. He is extremely coachable.
“I tell Kadeem he needs to get into the weight room to improve,†said Hicks. “A few minutes later I walk by the weight room and he’s already in there, working hard.â€