Without the benefit (or detriment) of watching new players compete in Kenner, I thought I would start a series on our incoming transfers. This is based on videos, internet research, and in some but not all cases, conversations I have had with certain people whose words I trust. This is not intended to predict future performance. It's more of a snapshot of what one person is seeing and hearing. Take it however you would like.
Transfer from Virginia Tech: Joe Bamisile
Player We Might Be Looking At: JR Pinnock
Player We Might Be Reminded Of: Jameer Nelson, JR.
Joe played sparingly during his lone season at Virginia Tech and there were likely a number of good reasons for this. The Hokies had about as disjointed a schedule last year as the Colonials (in fact, the two schools had been potentially slated to meet in a tournament which never happened). Not only did VT play just 7 OOC games but throughout the year, they played 10 games which were decided by 8 of fewer points. This all ads up to not having the kind of time to break in any newcomer, let alone one who truly could have benefitted from these extra opportunities. Joe not only missed his senior year of high school due to injury but his sophomore season as well. He shone during his junior season where he was an all-state performer in Virginia.
The JNJ reference does not speak to their styles of play as much as it does the rawness of their games. JNJ also missed most of his senior year of high school and it was widely reported that he didn't seriously take up the game until a fairly late age. While Joe has been playing for much longer, missing two of his final three seasons put him behind the eight ball at VT. Mike Young knew that he was getting a phenomenal athlete but getting him up to speed as a basketball player in the ACC proved to be difficult. Others played in front of him, not necessarily because they were more talented than Joe but because they were more "ready to play."
The Pinnock reference speaks to the kind of upside that Joe has. In JR, I saw someone who arrived at GW as more of an athlete than a polished basketball player (you may recall that another GW recruit, Ricky Lucas, came in as the higher ranked shooting guard out of high school). That said, JR worked like crazy to become an extremely gifted player. While he was never the three point threat that teammates like Mo Rice and Mike Hall were, JR became a very reliable midrange shooter which in turned opened up his abilities as an effective penetrator. On defense, JR became an outstanding defender which was likely the major reason why he was drafted in the 2nd round of the NBA draft.
Landing Joe has some similarities to landing James Bishop a year earlier. There is mixed opinion out of Blacksburg regarding Joe's departure. Some feel that given the logjam at the wing positions, Joe was not really going to emerge until at least his junior season and more likely, his senior season. Others are already counting on him being a major performer at GW right away, thereby regretting the day that Mike Young lost him. Like Bishop, this appears to be a situation where you have a very talented player who was sitting behind guys and who wanted to play a lot right away. I feel the new transfer rules help a program like ours more than they hurt as long as the coaching staff is aware of guys like Bishop and Bamisile who may thrive once they leave a major program.
The key to Joe's success will be whether he is able to make up the learning curve that alluded him last year. So much went against him last year....a new coach who relied on more veteran players right away, a shortened OOC season, many close, competitive games throughout the year and several Covid related disruptions throughout the season. For a player who hadn't played high school ball since his junior season, this was a lot to overcome. At GW, Joe will (hopefully) have the benefit of a full offseason (conditioning, weight lifting, etc.), a normal-length season, and a level of competition that's not the ACC. That said, the A10 isn't exactly high school competition either. Nevertheless, if Joe can regain the confidence and form that he showed during his junior year of high school, this has the chance to become JC's most significant player acquisition yet.