Auburn announces attendance plans for 2020-21 basketball season

Auburn Arena will be at 20% capacity this year for the 2020-21 basketball season.

The Jungle will be a little less full this season.

On Thursday, the Auburn athletic department announced its attendance policy for the 2020-21 basketball seasons.

From the press release:

In accordance with current state health COVID-19 guidelines, Auburn Arena capacity will be reduced to approximately 20% to begin the 2020-21 season for both men’s and women’s basketball.

To meet SEC protocol and to allow for proper physical distancing, the team benches will be flipped from the east sideline to the west. Bleachers in sections D-N will be unavailable for student/fan seating for the 2020-21 season.  In addition, floor seating will not be available.  Available seats will be arranged in groups of two and four with 6 feet of distancing between each block of seats.  Unavailable seats will be marked accordingly.

Face coverings (over the nose and mouth) will be required for all spectators and gameday workers upon entry and while inside the arena.  Guests may remove face coverings while actively eating or drinking.  Additional information related to health and safety guidelines for Auburn Arena will be communicated directly to ticket holders and released on auburntigers.com/basketballgameday.

“I would like to thank the Auburn Family for their patience, understanding and cooperation as we develop plans for the 2020-21 men’s and women’s basketball seasons,” said Auburn Director of Athletics Allen Greene.  “Hosting athletic events during a pandemic continues to present a number of challenges, but we look forward to providing a safe, secure and healthy environment for our student-athletes and all those in attendance at Auburn Arena.”

Ticket information has been sent directly to season ticket holders for both men’s and women’s basketball.  Information on requesting men’s basketball tickets will be sent to current Auburn students.  All tickets for the 2020-21 men’s and women’s basketball season will be delivered digitally.

For men’s basketball, Auburn students will make up the highest percentage of tickets for the home opener on Dec. 4 vs. South Alabama, as well as all SEC games beginning with Alabama on Jan. 9through the end of the season.  For home games occurring over the holiday break between Dec. 15 and Dec. 30, a majority of tickets will be distributed to Tigers Unlimited season ticket holders and faculty and staff, with students still receiving a limited number of seats.  Premium seating locations on the east side of Auburn Arena will be reserved for Tigers Unlimited donors for the duration of the 2020-21 season.  Men’s basketball parking will also be digital, and information concerning parking will be sent directly to ticket holders.

For women’s basketball, all season tickets will be general admission in the 100 level of Auburn Arena.  Students will be admitted to women’s basketball with a valid Ignited card.  Parking will be available and free of charge in the lots surrounding Auburn Arena, including the Arena lot, the Coliseum lot and the Campus Safety lot.

For more information and the latest updates, please visit auburntigers.com/basketballgameday

Twitter reacts to Isaac Okoro getting drafted 5th overall by Cleveland Cavaliers

Twitter was on fire after former Auburn star Isaac Okoro was drafted fifth overall by the Cleveland Cavaliers on Wednesday night.

ISAAC OKORO HAS OFFICIALLY BEEN DRAFTED 5TH OVERALL BY THE CLEVELAND CAVALIERS!

You all know what this means, in addition to being fans of the Orlando Magic we must now become fans of the Cleveland Cavaliers as well. The timeline went absolutely bananas when the news broke. Here’s how it began (WOJ BOMB SPOILER ALERT)!

And then it became official:

Side note: Bruce Pearl appears to have given an interview on the side of the road.

 

Just kidding, it was a parking lot. Still hilarious.

War Eagle! If anyone asks we have all been lifelong Cavalier fans (and Magic fans too). Congratulations Isaac!

4-star guard Trey Alexander officially signs with Auburn

4-star guard Trey Alexander has officially signed with Auburn, becoming the second player in the 2021 class to pen his name.

It’s been a great two days for Bruce Pearl and the Auburn basketball program.

On Tuesday, 5-star power forward Jabari Smith signed his letter of intent with the Tigers and, on Wednesday, 4-star guard Trey Alexander followed suit.

From Auburn’s press release:

Trey Alexander, a 6-foot-4, 185-pound guard from Oklahoma City, Okla., signed a National Letter of Intent with the Auburn basketball program, head coach Bruce Pearl announced Wednesday.

Alexander is a consensus four-star shooting guard by 247Sports, ESPN and Rivals. He is rated as the 40th-best player nationally in the 2021 class by ESPN, 61st by 247Sports and 72nd by Rivals.

Alexander, tabbed as the No. 1 player from the state of Oklahoma, averaged 27 points, 10 rebounds, 4.5 assists and four steals per game during his junior season at Heritage Hall School.

“First of all, we’re getting an outstanding student-athlete from an incredible family,” Pearl said. “I want to thank our former players because Trey and his father, Steve, who has been his coach his entire life, watched our backcourt grow, develop and play with freedom. That is what set us apart. I want to thank our former players for representing in such a way that somebody as talented as Trey would want to come to Auburn.

“His ability to score on all three levels, his work ethic and upside make him one of the best guard prospects that we’ve been able to recruit.”

Alexander, already Heritage Hall’s all-time leading scorer and rebounder, was named a MaxPreps Junior All-American last season. He also was named First Team All-State.

The sharpshooter averaged 24 points, 8.4 rebounds, 2.6 assists and 2.2 steals as a sophomore and was labeled as the Greater Metro Athletic Conference Most Valuable Player in 2019.

The Chargers won the Class 4A state title during Alexander’s freshman campaign and were runners-up when he was a sophomore after he was named the Little All-City Player of the Year in 2018.

On the AAU circuit, Alexander averaged 24 points per game with various travel teams over the summer.

Prior to his junior season, Alexander averaged 19 points, seven assists, five rebounds and two steals for 16U Team Griffin during the 2019 grassroots season in which he led the team to the Nike E16 Peach Jam Championship.

The run to the title included Alexander’s driving buzzer-beater to send the championship game to overtime.

Alexander, who is cousins with current Utah Jazz point guard Mike Conley Jr., is Auburn’s second signee in the Class of 2021.

5-star forward Jabari Smith officially signs with Auburn

Five-star power forward Jabari Smith, one of the top five players in the 2021 class, has officially signed with Auburn.

It is never official until it is official. Well, now it is official. (Try saying that five times really fast.)

Five-star power forward Jabari Smith has officially signed with Auburn, becoming the top-ranked player ever to pen with the program.

From Auburn’s press release:

Smith is a consensus five-star forward by 247Sports, ESPN and Rivals. He is rated as the No. 4 player in the country in the 2021 class by Rivals and No. 5 by 247Sports and ESPN. Smith is the highest-rated signee in program history.

Chosen as the No. 1 player from the state of Georgia, Smith averaged 24.5 points, 10.8 rebounds, 2.8 blocks, 1.6 assists and 1.3 steals per game while shooting 50 percent from the floor, including 38 percent from 3, while playing at Sandy Creek High School.

“Competitive programs are built by bringing in really good people that want to work hard together to accomplish something special,” Pearl said. “What gets lost in Jabari being ranked as one of the top-5 players in the country is that he’s one of the top-5 people because of his character and his work ethic. That fits what we’re trying to do at Auburn.

“A skilled big that can play any position on the floor, he is a very difficult matchup. Being an hour and a half from his home, having Chuma Okeke and Isaac Okoro come before him and develop, seeing the environment of Auburn Arena firsthand, these were all factors that led to his commitment.”

Smith was tabbed as a MaxPreps Junior All-American and an all-state selection a year ago while leading the Patriots to a 25-5 record, including 12-0 in the region, and an appearance in the Class 4A state quarterfinals. Following the 2019-20 season, he was named the Junior of the Year in Class 4A.

As a sophomore, Smith averaged 12.7 points, 6.7 rebounds, two blocks, 1.9 assists and 1.2 steals per game while shooting 48 percent from the court as he led Sandy Creek to a 27-4 record, including 12-0 in the region.

More recently, Smith was named the Most Valuable Player at the Pangos All-American Festival when he racked up 22 points, eight rebounds and three blocks in a game that featured many of the top prospects in the nation.

Smith represented his country as he paced USA Basketball to a gold medal in the FIBA Americas U16 championship while averaging 13.8 points and 6.2 rebounds.

On the AAU circuit, Smith played for the Atlanta Celtics and led them to a championship in the Adidas Gauntlet series.

Smith is the son of Jabari Smith Sr., who played at LSU for two seasons before playing in the NBA in stints with the New Jersey Nets, Philadelphia 76ers and the Sacramento Kings. Smith is also the cousin of 13-year NBA veteran Kwame Brown, who was the No. 1 overall pick in 2001.

4-star guard Trey Alexander picks Auburn over Kansas

The 4-star guard out of Oklahoma City is the No. 61 overall player in the 2021 recruiting class.

Bruce Pearl continues to bring the talent to the Plains.

On Thursday evening, 4-star guard Trey Alexander committed to Auburn over Kansas. He is the No. 61 overall player in the 2021 class by 247Sports composite.

Out of Oklahoma City, Alexander is 6-foot-4 and 185 pounds and averaged 26.6 points per game for Heritage Hall as a junior last season.

“I prayed about the decision and committing to Coach Pearl and Auburn is what it came to,” says Alexander. “God led me to this decision. Nothing more. Nothing less.”

From 247Sports:

Scouting Report: In Alexander, the Tigers program is getting a combo guard comfortable playing with or without the ball in his hands. He is a comfortable scorer who allows the game to slow down for him to be clever and instinctual in creating his own scoring opportunities. Alexander has also developed into a reliable off-the-dribble playmaker who can get his teammates involved through his herky-jerky penetration. The defensive upside is there as well with good length, decent lateral mobility, and the instincts to blossom on that end as well. He is a proven winner and competitor that is aware of the work he will have to put in to earn early minutes in the SEC.

Alexander joins 5-star power forward Jabari Smith as the two hard commits for the 2021 Auburn class.

Auburn picked seventh in preseason basketball media poll

Auburn lost all six top producers from last year’s team that finished 25-6 on the season.

Auburn and Bruce Pearl aren’t getting a lot of respect from the media regarding their shot at winning the SEC championship for the second time in three years.

On Thursday, the preseason media poll was released and the Tigers were picked to finish seventh in the SEC this season. Tennessee are the favorites to win the title.

The Tigers lost all six top producers from last year’s team that went 25-6 before the season was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Five-star point guard Sharife Cooper and 4-star power forward J.T. Thor should make immediate contributions for Pearl’s team while Tyrell Jones, Babatunde Akingbola, Allen Flanigan and Jaylin Williams return with some playing time from the previous season.

Here is the complete media poll:

Preseason Media Poll

  1. Tennessee
  2. Kentucky
  3. LSU
  4. Florida
  5. Alabama
  6. Arkansas
  7. Auburn
  8. South Carolina
  9. Ole Miss
  10. Missouri
  11. Texas A&M
  12. Mississippi State
  13. Georgia
  14. Vanderbilt

First Team All-SEC

John Petty Jr. – Alabama

Keyontae Johnson – Florida

Brandon Boston Jr. – Kentucky

Trendon Watford – LSU

John Fulkerson – Tennessee

Second Team All-SEC

Olivier Sarr – Kentucky

Javonte Smart – LSU

Dru Smith – Missouri

AJ Lawson – South Carolina

Yves Pons – Tennessee

Savion Flagg – Texas A&M

SEC Player of the Year

Keyontae Johnson – Florida

Auburn basketball agrees to home-and-home with UCF

Auburn will travel to Orlando on Nov. 30 to take on the Knights while UCF will come to the Plains in 2021.

Auburn basketball will have a lot of time to enjoy the Florida sunshine later this month.

Bruce Pearl’s squad will be traveling to Fort Myers to play Saint Joe’s on Nov. 26 and then face No. 1 Gonzaga the next day in the Fort Myers Tip Off. It was then announced on Tuesday that the Tigers have agreed to a home-and-home with UCF. Auburn will play in Orlando on Nov. 30 while the Knights will come to the Plains next season.

The Tigers have a young team in 2020-21 as the six leading scorers from last year’s squad all departed due to graduation or for the NBA draft. A strong recruiting class led by 5-star point guard Sharife Cooper and 4-star power forward JT Thor is supposed to help the rebuilding process come along faster than usual for Pearl.

Auburn basketball: Everything Tyrell Jones, Babatunde Akingbola said

The two players previewed Auburn’s basketball season on Thursday.

[jwplayer GJ7OzBQz]

Tyrell Jones, G, So.

 On what he’s working on in his game…

“Decision making and scoring, shooting the ball better with a better percentage.”

 On the point guards…

“We’ve all been doing pretty good at it with me playing the point guard and the shooting guard position this year, JP (Justin Powell) playing at the point guard position, Sharife (Cooper) playing at the point guard position. All of us have been doing pretty good and we’re just learning from each other.”

 On what he has focused on in the offseason…

“Picking the shots where I like to shoot the ball a bit more and being more consistent with my shot, and better decision making. Last year, I didn’t really do too much. This year, I feel like I’m going to be a big part of what we’re going to have coming in. Just really scoring and making better decisions with my scoring.”

 On who are the leaders of the team…

“I feel like I have been a better leader. This team, you know, we’re young. Stretch (Babatunde Akingbola), Allen (Flanigan) – those guys have been leading this team in the right direction from last year to this year being more experienced players. Knowing that we’re a young team, everybody has been mature enough to take on leadership roles. We’ve done a pretty good job of that.”

 On the leaders vocally vs. by example…

“Stretch is more of a vocal leader. Me, Allen and some of the other guys have led by example on and off the court. On the court, Stretch is more of a vocal leader.”

 On what he sees being his role this year…

“With me playing at the 1 and the 2, I’m going to have a big role this year, as far as scoring and leading the team. As far as playing-wise, I’m not really sure.”

 On his 3-point shooting…

“It’s better. Me being more consistent and picking a spot where I like to shoot at, I feel like I’ve been in the gym enough to where I can make a lot of open 3s.”

 On what the fans are going to see from the team this year…

“Knowing that we’re a young team, it could be iffy in between. We haven’t really done anything yet to show the fans what we really can do.”

 On the progress at practice…

“We’re making a whole lot of progress. Everyone is locked in and doing what they’re supposed to do on and off the court because of COVID. I think we’re all doing a pretty good job.”

 On if there is a bad taste because of how last year ended due to COVID…

“We’ve just been locked in and staying away from outside noise. We’re in the gym a lot knowing that we’re going to have a season. With everything that is going on right now, we’re really staying focused and worried about what’s going on outside.”

 On competition between guards…

“Everybody is competitive. Everybody is going hard in their roles. It’s going to be tough. I don’t know how it’s going to be, but everybody is really competitive, and we push each other to go hard each and every day.”

 On the growth of Stretch (Babatunde Akingbola)…

“He’s grown tremendously. Last year, Stretch wasn’t really one to talk a lot in practice, not knowing that once he got on the court now, he learned from last year and transferred it to this year. Him being a vocal leader on the court is really big for us. That’s his role that he wanted to take on. He’s been doing a pretty good job of that.”

 Babatunde Akingbola, C, So.

 On hunger to get back in action after not having NCAA Tournament because of COVID…

“First of all, it’s really great to get back playing. For last year’s team, I feel bad for them. We worked so hard to get to where we were at, and for us not to get a postseason was pretty bad. But, there’s nothing nobody can do, so we’ve got to accept that and move on.”

 On if a 3-point shot is in his game for this season or down the road…

“I can see it for this season because we’ve been working so hard on our outside game. Jaylin Williams is going to shoot a lot of 3s. For me, I’m probably not going to shoot a lot, but I will once in a while. We’re going to have big guys that can shoot. JT (Thor) is going to shoot a lot of 3s. Me and Dylan (Cardwell) probably aren’t going to shoot a lot, but we’re working on it every day.”

 On the offense opening up once he adds a 3-point shot to his game…

“That’s going to be tough. BP (Bruce Pearl) loves 3s. I don’t know if y’all know that. If we can shoot 3s with the plays in the playbook, that’s going to be a great offense for us. We’ve been working really hard on that. Now, it’s just about confidence once you shoot it. When we get there, we’re going to be good to go.”

 On the challenge of him developing a 3-point shot…

“Just staying in the gym, working on it every day. I’ve been working on my inside game – my layups, post-ups – after that, 5-out shots. I do that every day. Even if I don’t do it in the game, I make it a rhythm shot for me.”

 On Dylan Cardwell…

“Dylan grew up a lot. He’s been getting better. Dylan has been pushing me and I’ve been pushing him. We’re pushing each other every day at practice. Off the court, on the court, he’s a great guy. He’s smart. He’s been working so hard.”

 On his game and what he’s trying to improve…

“My offense is a big thing for me. My defense is kind of right there. I’m still working on it – being in the right spot, knowing when to jump, tying to stay away from foul trouble. My offense, I’ve been working really hard. This offseason, we’ve been getting in there (the gym), every day after practice sometimes. I’ve been working on my inside game and my post-ups. I’m trying to make my shooting percentage 70 percent if I can this year. That’s the goal and I’ve been working hard on that.”

 On if there’s a move or something on offense he’s most confident in…

“Just finishing around the rim. That’s the big thing for me because that’s where I’m going to be getting my points from. Getting offensive rebounds and trying to put it back in, that’s the thing for me.”

 On Turbo (Tyrell Jones)…

“Turbo has been working on his leadership. We’re a young team and we need leaders this year. That’s what I’m trying to put myself in that position. I’ve seen Turbo grow up since last year assuming that role. His shot has been really, really good this year. He’s been making a lot of shots – wide-open shots, contested 3s and stuff like that. He’s really improved his game.”

 On what has made him a vocal leader…

“Even from high school, I always love to talk on the court, trying to put my teammates in the right position. I’m trying to be the man to put them in the right space and right position during games because it’s always loud in the gym. I have to be vocal. I have to talk. That’s my job. I’ve been doing that since high school, so I feel like I just keep doing it. In college, there’s more fans, so we need to talk. When the coaches call out the play, I need to tell them. When the team is down, I need to keep talking to them every time because sometimes you’re going to have bad games. I just want to put myself in the position when things are good or when things are bad, I’m telling my teammates to keep pushing.”

 On what he learned playing behind Austin Wiley and Anfernee McLemore last season…

“I learned a lot. Being patient is the key. Don’t rush things when you get the ball in the post. Take your time trying to finish everything. Austin is a big guy. I don’t know that anybody can be big like Austin. The thing that I see myself doing is talking to my teammates and keeping my teammates going. On defense, I’m supposed to block shots. That’s what my job. I like to block shots. I feel like I will do a lot of that this year. Last year, from Austin and Anfernee, they’re good defenders and they’re good offensive players. I’ve been working really hard on my offense. We just have to see how that goes this year.”

 On if there’s pressure of trying to meet previous teams’ results…

“Maybe a little bit. People are talking about us as a basketball school now, not just a football school. That’s a little more pressure.”

 On the pride of being a rim protector…

“That’s my thing. I love to play defense. You have to be good at something. You can’t be great at everything on the court. If I’m really good at defense, I can help my team. People like Turbo (Tyrell Jones) are going to score a lot. People like Sharife (Cooper) and Allen (Flanigan) are going to score. I’m going to score, too, but my first thing is my defense. I really take pride in it.”

 On the team’s progress…

“I feel like we’ve been doing great. The team is really working hard – after practice, during the weekend, playing against each other. The bigs and the guards are pushing each other.”

 On Devan Cambridge and Allen Flanigan…

“Allen Flanigan has grown a lot. From last year to this year, his decision making is way better now. He’s making shots now. He’s finishing at the rim. I see Allen as our next Isaac Okoro. Around the rim, he’s gotten way better. He can take his man to the rim. He’s a great defender on the ball. He’s gotten way better. Devan has gotten better. Devan makes shots for us. Devan doesn’t miss a lot. Devan is a good shot maker. I feel like he’s going to do really great this year.”

No respect! CBS Sports has Auburn as 88th best team in college basketball

Auburn will be young but talented for the 2020-21 season.

We are all aware that Bruce Pearl has a tough job with a young but talented team for the 2020-21 basketball season but whoa … CBS Sports is having none of the Tigers.

In a ranking of all Division I teams preseason, the site has Auburn all the way down at No. 88.

From the rankings:

88. Auburn: I think it’ll be a tough season on the Plains, and this is a lower projection than most you’ll see with the Tigers. Bruce Pearl’s got a rebuild on his hands (lost all his starters), but at least there’s Sharife Cooper, a freshman point guard with flair who was a blue-chip prospect.

“But at least there’s Sharife Cooper?” I’m guessing that whoever wrote this has forgotten about Allen Flanigan, Tyrell Johnson, Babatunde Akingbola and a bunch of other talented freshmen including J.T. Thor that Pearl will have had his disposal.

Auburn is expected to begin the season on Nov. 25 against Saint Joe’s in Fort Myers.

Auburn basketball: Allen Flanigan, Jaylin Williams preview season

Auburn begins the 2020-21 basketball season on Nov. 25 against St. Joe’s.

[jwplayer mntqLfH0]

Allen Flanigan, G, So.

 On how practice is going…

“Preseason practice is going really well. We’re just getting our chemistry down, having more of an impact and learning how to be leaders and take bigger roles this year.”

 On what he is working on in his game…

“Just to be better in my all-around game, leading on defense and get better at guard skills.”

 On how the point guards and big guys are coming along in practice…

“The bigs are coming along great. The point guards are coming along great, too. They’re learning how to get the ball down the floor faster and communicate. Communication is the biggest key for our point guards. They’re the quarterbacks of our team. The bigs, they’re the vocal leaders on defense. They can see everything.”

 On what the team has been working on during the week…

“This week, communication has been key. [Coach Pearl] wants us to be louder and call out more actions, just talk and communicate on defense, call out your frames, your denies, who to switch off of and who not to switch off of.”

 On adjustments being made due to COVID…

“The biggest adjustment has been not being able to go to class. We have more time in the gym. You have to take advantage of your time and also be able to get your classwork done. With practice, it’s just the safety protocols – being six feet away when we’re not at practice, wearing masks 24/7 and all the safety protocols with COVID.”

 On Jamal Johnson…

“The biggest growth I’ve seen from him is he’s real talkative. He’s communicating a lot on defense, stepping up and knocking down big shots in practice and leading as an older guy on the team.”

 On the defense and its importance to the team’s success…

“The defense is coming along. At Auburn basketball, we hang our hats on defense, speeding the other team up, forcing turnovers and capitalizing off those turnovers. The defense has been key at practice.”

 On how good the team can be on defense this year…

“I think defense this year will rely a lot on ball pressure and not letting guys get set up in their half-court sets and run their offense freely.”

 On the election and voting…

“As a team, we’ve all registered to vote. It was very important for us to register to vote because our voices can be heard.”

 On Jaylin Williams…

“He is a lot more athletic this season. You saw the athleticism from him last year. He’s playing all over – above the rim, knocking down shots in practice, being able to put the ball down on the floor and playing defense, keeping guys in front and challenging them at the rim vertically.”

 On who has been good in practice recently…

“This week, Dylan [Cardwell] has been moving good. He’s running the floor, sprinting, not getting tired, talking on defense, blocking shots, getting rebounds and being able to turn around and face up to the basket.”

 On steps he’s been taking to work on his offensive game…

“Ball handling and knocking down open shots. I’m getting a lot of shots up on the gun. Just being able to knock down open shots as well as playing off the dribble.”

 On COVID’s effect on a player’s motivation and if a game gets canceled…

“It doesn’t really affect the players. They’re working hard. They’re more so worried about the COVID protocols, them working hard and then the games being canceled after all their hard work.”

 On his comfort level entering his second year with the program…

“Last year, I was a freshman and new to college basketball. With me playing last year, I have a little bit of experience under my belt and get some confidence heading into the season because I’ve been there before.”

 Jaylin Williams, F, So.

 On his improvement from last year to this year…

“Last year, I didn’t have many minutes or play as well because I had two seniors ahead of me. It was kind of hard, but I just stayed in the gym. I worked on my ball handling and everything all around. This summer, I was just working on my game to improve in everything. I’m still working on the same stuff – rebounding better, playing off two feet better and making plays.”

 On how he improved his athleticism this offseason…

“I’ve got bad knees, but working with Clark Pearson and Damon Davis, they really helped me with lifting and made me more athletic, helped my ankles get more flexible and being able to move better, which made me more athletic.”

 On how his performances at the end of last year helped him heading into this season…

“I wish we could’ve played in the [NCAA] Tournament. That would’ve been so nice. [The performances] push me to do more to become a better player for this season and to be more of a leader for this team. We’re a young team, so we’ve got to have a leader somewhere. I’m trying to fit that role of being a leader.”

 On how he feels about the team overall…

“I think we’re going to be good. Lots of people may be like, ‘we’re young and we might not have good chemistry,’ but we know each other. We talk to each other. Even before we all got here, we all talked to each other. I feel like our chemistry is pretty good right now. There’s nobody that says, ‘I’m the man here.’ We’re all in this together and we just want to win games.”

 On JT Thor…

“He’s long and very skilled. He does everything offensively and defensively. If you can drive it to the block on him, you might as well give him a couple pump fakes or something because he’s going to block it. He’s an all-around player. He hustles, talks and communicates. He’s got it all.”

 On importance of defense and how Auburn has progressed at it…

“Defense is going to be key for us. We have a lot of offensively skilled guys. We can’t just keep scoring on every possession and then the other team come down and score. We’ve been trying to improve on communicating our actions and being in the right spots. Chemistry is key. I feel like we have that right now.”

 On the point guards…

“They’re looking really good. They’ve very confident. They’re handling ball pressure and getting us set up in our offense. For ball pressure on the defense, the point guards are getting it every time. They’re looking good.”

 On his motivation to earn a starting role this season…

“I’ve been working really hard. Last year motivated me to be better than I was, increase my minutes and do what I can to help the team win.”

 On pressure being labeled as a left-handed Chuma Okeke…

“I wouldn’t say there’s any pressure. That’s a good comparison because he was a first-rounder. It’s cool with me. No pressure.”