MikeCheck: With Jackson and Green in tandem, power forward now position of strength as Grizzlies address rebounding woes

MEMPHIS – From his third-row aisle seat near midcourt inside the Thomas & Mack
Center, JaMychal Green had an unobstructed view of the future.

On the court a few feet away that day in July was Jaren Jackson Jr., drafted
fourth overall by the Grizzlies in June to eventually take over as their
starting power forward and ultimately become the future face of the franchise.
At the time, Jackson was making a major splash in summer league play.

In his first game in a Grizzlies’ uniform, the dynamic 6-11 Jackson shocked many
when he drilled eight three-pointers to open play in the Utah Jazz Summer
League. A few games later, Jackson flashed his defensive prowess by tying a Las
Vegas Summer League record with seven blocks in a game.

Green was among a handful of the Grizzlies’ veterans who showed up in Las Vegas
to check out the team’s rookie draft picks and young prospects. From the outset,
Green viewed Jackson as an essential asset; not a potential threat.

“That kid’s got everything to be real special, and I’m glad we got him,” Green
said then and continues to insist now. “I don’t look it as me having to go
against him or him having to go against me or anything like that. I look at my
job as being one to help him learn the ropes and get better. And he can help me
get better. When we get out there, we’re fighting for the same thing – and
that’s to help us win games.”

Whether Jackson immediately starts at power forward or is gradually brought
along behind the incumbent in Green remains one of the most intriguing questions
early in training camp. Grizzlies’ coach J.B. Bickerstaff seems in no rush to
reveal his rotation plans at the position, although he told Grind City Media at
Monday’s media day that Green has “earned the right to be a starter” in the
league.

As the fourth day of training camp approached Thursday, Jackson indicated
players are rotating throughout practices in various five-man groupings during
conditioning and competitive drills.

“He mixes it up every day,” Jackson said of Bickerstaff. “He mixes the teams up
between drills, just to give us a feel for everybody. It’s random.”

What’s certain is Bickerstaff has placed a premium on versatility throughout the
roster. That could lead to a power rotation formula in which Green, Jackson and
starting center Marc Gasol share the bulk of the 96 game-night minutes available
at center and power forward. All three big men have three-point shooting range
and are capable of playing either spot on both ends of the floor.

The Grizzlies also plan to increase the pace at times and use traditional small
forwards Kyle Anderson and Chandler Parsons at power forward for stretches.
Flexibility and versatility have been Bickerstaff buzzwords throughout camp, and
that will remain the case when the preseason slate opens with Tuesday’s game in
Birmingham against the Rockets.

“I think that’s the key – our depth is a weapon,” Bickerstaff said. “It’s our
responsibility to use it as such. We know we’re going to get the best out of
people because they know the guy next to him is going to be pushing him. If
there’s a guy beside you and he’s pushing for that spot, you’ve got to continue
to work. And if not, then that guy is going to come in and do his job and then
you’ll be pushing him. I think depth is going to be key to who we are and key to
sustaining what we’re trying to do.”

48.8%

That was the Grizzlies’ rebound percentage rate last season, which ranked 24th
among the NBA’s 30 teams. Memphis also looks to improve on its last-place finish
in defensive rebounds per game (31.0).

There’s adequate motivation across the board for the Grizzlies.

And speaking of boards, Memphis must correct woes that had it ranked dead last
among the NBA’s 30 teams in defensive rebounds (31.0) per game and 29th in total
rebounds (40.5) last season. Their slower pace of play factored in the low
rankings, but advanced and pace-adjusted metrics still revealed the Grizzlies
were 24th in both rebounding margin and rebounding percentage.

That’s a collective problem that must be addressed, regardless who starts.

Individually, though, there are factors pushing both Green and Jackson to excel
from the outset. Green is entering the final season of a two-year, $17 million
contract he signed after prolonged negotiations as a restricted free agent in
2017. Green led the Grizzlies in rebounding last season at 8.4 per game and was
second two years ago at 7.1 when he replaced Zach Randolph as the starter.

Nagging ankle, knee and shoulder injuries limited Green to 55 games last season,
but he’s determined to prove he can bounce back to be an elite defender and
rebounder at the position this season.

“We all want to put last season behind us,” Green said of the Grizzlies’ 22-60
finish that left them out of the playoffs for the first time in eight years.
“We’re all working to make sure that don’t happen again.”

Meanwhile, Jackson is working to learn all he can from veteran teammates as he
tries to build on a promising summer league showing. He entered the draft out of
Michigan State regarded as the best defensive prospect among big men, but
Jackson also faced questions about his durability. During his lone college
season, Jackson averaged slightly more than 20 minutes a game for the Spartans
and was routinely in foul trouble that impacted his playing time.

Grizzlies’ executives have a development strategy in place for Jackson, who
turned 19 this month and is still growing into a wiry body that already packs
242 pounds. If growing into his frame and NBA game warrants bringing Jackson off
the bench initially, which would seem the more likely scenario, so be it.

And if it means assuming a starting role from the outset, Jackson obviously is
fine with that, too.

“Summer league helped, but this is a different speed, players are better and any
information you can get helps going into the season,” Jackson said of adjusting
from summer league to his first NBA training camp. “Patience, man. That’s one
thing I need to really get. I’m younger, I like to go fast, do everything, want
everything to click. (The veterans) know how the game is played, like it slows
down to where it’s almost a different sport. Whatever they tell me, I’m
listening. I try to write that stuff down.”

While Jackson is taking plenty of notes in camp, Green isn’t taking anything for
granted. Either way the pecking order plays out, power forward should be a
position of strength in Memphis for two reasons.

The rookie lottery pick represents a bright future.

Meanwhile, the rugged vet is fighting for one.

The contents of this page have not been reviewed or endorsed by the Memphis
Grizzlies. All opinions expressed by Grind City Media are solely its own and do
not reflect the opinions of the Memphis Grizzlies or its Basketball Operations
staff, owners, parent companies, partners or sponsors. Its sources are not known
to the Memphis Grizzlies and it has no special access to information beyond the
access and privileges that go along with being an NBA accredited member of the
media.

Player: JaMychal Green

Player: Jaren Jackson Jr.

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