Eighth Grader Draws Comparisons to El-Amin
Khalid El-Amin is a basketball legend in Minneapolis,
even dating back to his playing days as a middle schooler, but eighth
grader Tyus Jones, a starter this season for Apple Valley High
School, is better than El-Amin at the same grade level, according to
Al Nuness.
Nuness should know. His basketball background includes captain of the
Gophers in the late 1960s, later an assistant coach for his alma mater
and years of youth coaching with sons Jared and Jordan.
Nuness was close to El-Amin and his family. Coaching his son Jared’s
youth teams, Nuness said he had to “plot against Khalid” trying to
figure out the talented point guard who was short and stocky even back
in eighth grade, and dominated games with his playmaking and scoring.
“Tyus is better at the same level as
Khalid,” Nuness told Sports Headliners. “He is bigger and
stronger. Passes better. His basketball I.Q. is just unbelievable.
They don’t come along like him very often. He’s the real deal.”
Apple Valley’s season is just starting but the 6-foot Jones has
helped the Eagles win their first four games. He had 15 points and 14
assists on Tuesday night in a win over Burnsville, according to
http://www.avhoops.com/main.htm.
El-Amin is probably the best prep point
guard ever to come out of the state. He led Connecticut to the 1999
national championship. El-Amin had the college basketball powers
after him and changed a verbal commitment to the Gophers while in high
school.
It looks like Jones won’t lack for
attention, either. Gophers coach Tubby Smith is already scouting
the eighth grader and you can bet other schools will be in pursuit.
Tyus’ dad, Robert, is Nuness’
nephew so Nuness knows the family. Nuness said Robert and his
former wife
Debbie
(Tyus' mom) were both college basketball players, and that Tyus’ brother,
Reggie Bunch, was a preseason All-American at Robert Morris College
in Chicago.
Both Robert and Reggie are 6-foot-7,
according to Nuness, who said Tyus already wears size 13 shoes. “He has
a chance to be the size of a Jason Kidd at 6-4, 6-5,” Nuness
said. “He’s a Division I prospect now (as an eighth grader).”
Nuness said Jones “needs work like anybody
(that age) in defending,” but his overall game including shooting,
passing, directing the team, plus his court demeanor, is already
impressive. “He is so unassuming,” Nuness said. “He doesn’t care how
many points he scores. His expression never changes, just a natural
face. You can foul him, or knock him. His expression stays the same.”
Anytime Nuness walks into a gym, Jones
comes over and gives him a hug. That impresses Nuness and so too does
the athleticism that also makes Jones an A student and football
quarterback.
When Jones comes over to the Nuness house
he likes to spend time looking at family basketball memorabilia. He
sees that Nuness wore jersey No. 21. So, too, did Jared who played for
Valparaiso and Jordan whose college career took him to the Gophers and
Minnesota-Duluth.
That’s the number Jones wears, too. He
might one day wear that number with more success than anyone in the
family ever did. “If nothing goes wrong, he will be a rare kid,” Nuness
said. “He’s going to be a blue chipper.”