Oklahoma City Thunder waive guard Frank Jackson

The Oklahoma City Thunder waived Frank Jackson on Monday. A former New Orleans Pelicans guard, he averaged 12.3 points in the preseason.

The Oklahoma City Thunder waived guard Frank Jackson, the team announced Monday night.

This roster move was a bit of a surprise. The 22-year-old played well in the preseason, posting 14 games in the first game and 15 in the second before scoring eight in the final game.

With a full roster, the Thunder needed to make one more cut before the season started. Jackson was the casualty.

He originally signed with the Thunder on Dec. 4 after playing two years with the New Orleans Pelicans. Over his first two seasons in the NBA, he appeared in 120 games for the Pelicans, averaging 7.2 points, 1.8 rebounds and 1.1 assists in 16.4 minutes per game.

Over his career, Jackson has shot 42.2% from the field and 31.9% from 3.

Oklahoma City starts the season with a primary guard rotation of George Hill, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Theo Maledon as ball handler options and Lu Dort and Hamidou Diallo as off-ball guard options. Additionally, second-year guard Ty Jerome may be able to find a role once he regains health from an injury that cost him the three preseason games. Jerome did not practice on Monday.

The Thunder’s season tips off Wednesday against the Houston Rockets at Toyota Center. The game is scheduled to start at 7 p.m.

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Thunder announce signing of former Pelicans guard Frank Jackson

The Oklahoma City Thunder have signed former New Orleans Pelicans guard Frank Jackson, the organization announced Friday.

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The Oklahoma City Thunder announced Friday that they have signed 22-year-old guard Frank Jackson.

Jackson played two seasons for the New Orleans Pelicans, during which he averaged 7.2 points and 1.1 assists in 16.4 minutes of play.

He has had one span of extended minutes as an NBA player. During the 2018-19 season, he started 16 games over a 26-game stretch. He scored at least 19 points in six of those games and averaged almost 12 points in about 27 minutes per game, but posted just 1.5 assists per game and shot below 29% from 3.

Jackson is one of three players who were on the Pelicans last season who have joined Oklahoma City this offseason. Kenrich Williams and Darius Miller arrived in the Steven Adams trade, which George Hill was also a part of via the Milwaukee Bucks.

Additionally, Zylan Cheatham and Josh Gray were traded from New Orleans to the Thunder but were waived.

Jackson will compete for a backup guard role with 23-year-old Ty Jerome, 19-year-old Theo Maledon and others.

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Guard Frank Jackson signs with Oklahoma City Thunder, Woj reports

Oklahoma City Thunder signed former New Orleans Pelicans guard Frank Jackson in free agency, according to ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski.

The Oklahoma City Thunder continue to add new names to their roster.

On Tuesday, the team signed guard Frank Jackson, according to ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski.

Jackson is yet another former New Orleans Pelicans player, adding to the group that the Thunder picked up in the Steven Adams trade. Over Jackson’s two seasons in New Orleans, he averaged 7.2 points and 1.1 assists in 16.4 minutes of play.

Drafted with the first pick of the second round in 2017, Jackson is now 22 years old and hoping to prove himself as an NBA player. With the Thunder, he can fight for a spot as a backup point guard, though with the high number of players currently on the roster, it’s difficult to project his chances of landing that spot.

Jackson has had one span of extended minutes as an NBA player. During the 2018-19 season, he started 16 games in a 26-game stretch. While he scored at least 19 points in six of those games and averaged almost 12 points in about 27 minutes per game, he posted just 1.5 assists per game and shot below 29% from 3.

As the offseason progresses and training camp begins, the Thunder’s roster outlook will become more clear. Signing Jackson as a free agent, though, indicates legitimate interest in finding a role for him to see if he can develop.

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Pelicans Player Review: Did Frank Jackson solidify his spot as a backup point guard?

After an up-and-down regular season, Frank Jackson finished stronger than perhaps any Pelican inside the bubble in Orlando.

With the Pelicans season officially over, we begin our look back at each individual player’s season and recap what we learned and where they stand with the Pelicans moving forward.

Overview

After missing his rookie season due to an injury, Frank Jackson has continually developed in his next two seasons in New Orleans. After a strong de facto rookie season, Jackson’s role was reduced in his second season on the court.

Jackson’s PER, true shooting percentage and effective field goal percentage all marginally dropped while his raw averages dipped in his fewer minutes this season. However, Jackson also played a big role in the bubble and was one of the few bright spots of the team’s final eight games.

What was learned?

The biggest thing learned of Jackson this season came in the bubble in that he could be counted on in big games. Jackson played in all eight games and had an 8.9 net rating, most of anyone who played over four games. Even factoring out the final two games, which were effectively pointless games after the Pelicans were eliminated from the playoffs, Jackson’s 21.2 net rating was best of every player to feature in the six games.

But just as there can’t be overarching takeaways from Lonzo Ball’s poor performance in the bubble, there can’t be positive ones from Jackson’s strong performance.

Taking away his performance in the bubble, Jackson had a net rating of -5.9 this season. He struggled to find his role with the team as much as he struggled to find consistency throughout the season. After a strong start in October, Jackson’s net rating from the start of November through the lockdown in March was -9.1, worst among regular rotation players.

Does his strong finish in the Pelicans’ biggest games of the year make up for a season of struggles?

What does the future hold?

The Pelicans can extend a qualifying offer to Jackson this summer for just over $2 million. It’ll be an interesting decision for New Orleans. While it doesn’t hurt to extend him the qualifying offer, whether the team brings him back will say a lot about how they view him moving forward.

If he does stick around, Jackson will need to improve as a shooter. This season, he hit just 32.6% of his three-pointers, an improvement from his rookie season.

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Jordan Clarkson, Josh Hart, Jrue Holiday react to Brandon Ingram winning Most Improved Player

After Brandon Ingram was named Most improved Player on Monday, current and former teammates came out in swarms to congratulate him.

Brandon Ingram was officially named the NBA’s Most Improved Player on Monday, an award that many saw coming for much of the year. Ingram’s breakout season included career highs in points, rebounds and assists and an All-Star selection as well.

His journey to New Orleans and this season has been a winding one. After spending three frustrating seasons in Los Angeles, Ingram was dealt to New Orleans in a trade that netted the Lakers Anthony Davis.

But Ingram never wavered in his determination, culminating in Monday’s award. And his hard work hasn’t gone unnoticed as a host of his current and former teammates celebrated him receiving the award on social media.

Josh Hart was certainly the most outspoken, sharing posts on both Twitter and Instagram encouraging Ingram to secure the bag in the coming weeks and months in free agency.

A host of fellow current Pelicans took to Instagram to congratulate Ingram on their stories, including Jrue Holiday, Jahlil Okafor, Jaxson Hayes and Frank Jackson.

JJ Redick also shared a congratulatory tweet with Ingram after their first season together in New Orleans.

Current Pelican teammates weren’t the only ones to rush to congratulate Ingram. Utah’s Jordan Clarkson and Cleveland’s Larry Nance, both former teammates with Ingram in Los Angeles, tweeted messages of support or Ingram.

While Lonzo Ball, arguably Ingram’s closest friend on the Pelicans, did not initially share congratulations for Ingram, no one has a better excuse. Ball was on the Zoom call along with Ingram’s family and Pelicans owner Gayle Benson in which Ingram was told he was named Most Improved Player.

As Hart noted, the award further sets Ingram up for a huge summer as he’s set to enter restricted free agency. His improved play this season likely sets him up for a max contract offer sheet coming in the off-season.

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Jrue Holiday says Pelicans must be aggressive defensively moving forward

The New Orleans Pelicans used a strong defensive second half on Friday to down the Wizards, a hopeful sign for their final three games.

The New Orleans Pelicans came alive in the third quarter of Friday’s win against Washington largely because of play off the bench from Nicolo Melli and Frank Jackson. The pair ignited the team with their defense and helped the Pelicans remain mathematically alive for a spot in the play-in tournament.

The team exited Friday’s contest with all eyes set on a must-win match-up against the San Antonio Spurs. With the two teams occupying the 10th and 11th spots in the Western Conference, Sunday’s game will all but eliminate one of the sides from contention for the play-in tournament.

After the game, the team talked about the need to carry over lessons learned from the win against Washington into Sunday’s game.

“Be aggressive,” Jrue Holiday said. “Be aggressive. I think we were aggressive today, which is awesome. I think in the third and fourth quarter, we got into the bonus kind of early. I feel like that’s something we can control a little better the next game. I just think being aggressive and not making it easy for opponents is something that’ll benefit us.”

Jackson, who finished with a plus-minus of +30 in Friday’s win, also noted that the team must return to its pre-hiatus form on the defensive end of the court. Inside the bubble, the Pelicans have a defensive rating of 111.8, over two points worse than their 109.2 rating between Zion Williamson’s debut and the lockdown.

“We have to remind ourselves who we are defensively,” he said. “It starts at that end of the ball because I know when we’re into people and when we’re applying that pressure, it gets us going offensively. I think we need to remind ourselves to have that same intensity on defense and keep rolling and keep knocking these games out.”

New Orleans’ fate is entirely out of their hands moving forward as the team sits 1.5 games back of Portland for the ninth seed with three games to go. Portland’s loss to the Clippers on Saturday afternoon was huge from the Pelicans, but they will need more Blazers losses on top of winning the remainder of their own games.

To finish unbeaten, the Pelicans will almost certainly have to up their game on the defensive end akin to Friday’s second-half[lawrence-related id=25165,25073,25055] performance.

 

Frank Jackson, Nicolo Melli provide second-half spark, keep Pelicans playoff hopes alive

Nicolo Melli and Frank Jackson’s defensive sparks in the third quarter helped the Pelicans stay alive in the playoff hunt on Friday with a 118-107 win over Washington.

For perhaps the first time in the bubble, the New Orleans Pelicans played with the desperation of a team clinging to its playoff lives. All it took was a halftime deficit to the lowly Wizards and a spark from an unlikely source.

Nicolo Melli, a 29-year old “rookie,” was signed by the Pelicans for his shooting. On Friday, it was his defense that changed the tide. Melli and fellow reserve Frank Jackson turned up the intensity on Washington and the result was a big third quarter for the Pelicans that turned into a 118-107 win.

“I think it was the difference in the game,” head coach Alvin Gentry said of Jackson and Melli’s defense. “(Assistant coach) Fred Vinson said right from the start…one of the things that we wanted to get back to is we wanted to get back to being aggressive defensively, attacking the screen and rolls, being into the ball, having good weakside help. I thought that we did that tonight.

“I thought that we did that in the third quarter. The first five minutes, we always talk about how important that is and I thought we did a good job with that.”

Melli checked in at the 7:48 mark in the third period with the Pelicans trailing 72-65. By the time he checked out 90 seconds into the fourth quarter, New Orleans led 97-85 and had grabbed control of the game.

It was Melli and Jackson that started picking up the Wizard guards 94 feet from the basket, slowing their offense down to a slog. New Orleans immediately went on an 11-2 run upon Melli’s insertion, a run that included a three-pointer from the Italian forward after he entered the game having hit just one of his 14 attempts from range inside the bubble.

“I think we just needed a little bit of energy,” Melli said. “I think Frank and I, we brought it to the team and then of course Josh (Hart) but Josh always brings to the team. We just needed to pick up Washington from their baseline and we did it and I think we did a pretty good job. We needed this win. This was the most important thing, no matter how, no matter what. And we did it.”

Melli’s three-pointer to put the Pelicans up 83-76 with 3:43 left capped off a spurt that saw him score eight of the team’s 12 points in a span of just over two minutes. More impressively, he recorded three blocks as New Orleans, who entered the night with just seven blocks in total inside the bubble, finished with eight against the Wizards.

Jackson, meanwhile, continued creating havoc for the Wizards’ undermanned backcourt. Despite not being credited with a steal on the night, Jackson’s impact on the game was felt as his plus-minus of +30 in 20 minutes was best on the team and just the 12th time this season a player has accomplished that feat, per ESPN Stats & Info.

“I just think we were aggressive, man,” Jackson said. “I think we were who we were, who we are as a team, who we try to play as. When we apply the pressure and get up into people and pick them up, it causes problems so I think we did a good job.”

Melli and Jackson helped the Pelicans save face after a first half that looked all too familiar. The Wizards shot 51.2% from the field and hit seven of their 13 long-range attempts. Only the Pelicans shooting twice as many free throws helped them stay within two points at the break at 56-54.

And as Melli and Jackson set the tone in the third quarter, it was Jrue Holiday that picked up the load and carried it the rest of the way. The veteran guard missed just one shot in the second half as he finished with a game-high 28 points.

“I think we controlled (the game) a little more defensively,” Holiday said, “picking up full-court, being able to get them down in the clock and when they’re trying to get into their play, there’s 14, 12 seconds left on the shot clock which benefits us. I think just doing that in the third quarter and continuing doing that throughout the second half really helped us get back into the game and then push the lead.”

“We just needed to do something because we were down two at halftime and we had to win this game,” Melli added. “It was just a matter of energy, I think. A rookie has to bring energy so that’s what I did. I think we just need a little bit more energy. We know how to play defense. We just need to go back and play with a lot of energy. That’s what we did in the second half and you saw the result.”

Seven Pelicans finished in double figures in scoring with Brandon Ingram overcoming a poor shooting night to finish with 17. JJ Redick, who also shot just 3-of-11 from deep, finished with 15 and Derrick Favors scored eight of his 12 points in the second half. Jackson (13), Melli (10) and Josh Hart (10) contributed to the Pelicans’ bench outscoring Washington’s 44-17.

New Orleans’ playoff hopes are still mathematically alive, though only barely. Memphis’ win on Friday further damaged New Orleans’ chances as they now sit 2.5 games out of the eighth seed and 1.5 games out of the ninth seed with three games left.

Sunday’s showdown with San Antonio, who is just a half-game ahead of the Pelicans, will prove to be the do-or-die moment for New Orleans in the bubble. But Friday’s glimpse of a Pelicans side that looked the closest it has to its pre-bubble selves could prove to be a turning point for the final three games.

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Pelicans vs. Wizards: The good, the bad and the Ball

The New Orleans Pelicans turned around a slow first half with strong defensive showing in the third quarter to down the Washington Wizards, 118-107.

The New Orleans Pelicans turned around a slow first half with strong defensive showing in the third quarter to down the Washington Wizards, 118-107.

Jrue Holiday had a team-high 28 points on 11-of-16 shooting but it was the Pelicans’ bench, which scored 44 points, that pushed New Orleans to a victory.

The Good: Second-half defense

After a slow start to the game, the Pelicans came out in the third quarter and turned to a full-court defense to turn the game around. The result was a huge run that turned a halftime deficit into a double-digit lead.

New Orleans outscored Washington 37-25 in the third period and grabbed control of the game by completely derailed the Wizards’ offense. Interestingly, it was the Pelicans bench that made the biggest impact as Frank Jackson and Nicolo Melli provided the biggest sparks. Jackson finished with 13 points and had a team-best plus-minus of +30 in 20 minutes and Melli had 10 points and was second in plus-minus at +18.

The third quarter is what turned another potential frustrating and embarrassing loss to a double-digit win.

Honorable mentions: Jrue Holiday, Josh Hart, Derrick Favors’ second half