Jackson dishes out team-high five assists as U.S. U19 team rolls into medal round 3–0

By R.L. Bynum

Ian Jackson didn’t get into the United States’ game until the second quarter and struggled with his shot but showed his versatility in a 122–70 victory Tuesday over Lebanon at Fönix Arena in Debrecen, Hungary.

Jackson led the Americans with five assists and collected eight points, five rebounds and two steals in 21½ minutes as the team finished FIBA U19 Men’s World Cup Group B pool play 3–0 and dropped Lebanon to 0–3.

The USA begins the medal round at 9 a.m. ET Wednesday in the round of 16 against China (0–3), with the quarterfinals Friday, the semifinals Saturday and the championship game on Sunday. China lost to Spain 83–74 on Tuesday.

Jackson, a five-star UNC Class of 2024 commitment, didn’t start and wasn’t in the group of five that came in to relieve the starters in the first quarter as the Americans went on a 19–1 run and built a 39–10 lead.

Soon after he came into the game to start the second quarter, Jackson made a slick, long bounce pass from near mid-court in transition to Eric Dailey Jr. for a dunk, and the U.S. led 74–35 at halftime.

Jackson started the second half but didn’t score until sinking the first of two 3-pointers with 4:16 left in the game.

Late in the game, Jackson snagged a loose ball in the backcourt and shoveled an underhanded alley-oop pass to Eric Dailey Jr. for a dunk.

Jackson was 3 of 8 from the floor and 2 of 4 from 3-point range.

Mark Armstrong led the United States with 17 points, with Tre Johnson, Asa Newell and Cody Williams each adding 13.

The USA outrebounded Lebanon 54–32, scored 31 fast break points and netted 29 points off of 19 Lebanon turnovers.


Subscribe for a cleaner, smoother reading experience without the flashing banners, slow-loading elements, or those especially annoying pop‑up ads that interrupt the flow of the story. You’ll also get the first version of each story emailed to you. The only ads you’ll see are static, non-intrusive ads for UNC‑related books, and there are none currently on the site.



The class for next season is listed.

No./
Stars
ClassPlayerPos.HgtWgt
5
star
FreshmanMaximo AdamsSF6–7205
3
star
FreshmanMalloy SmithCG6–5190
5
star
FreshmanSayon KeitaC7–0215
4
star
FreshmanKevin ThomasW6–7190
FreshmanAlexandros SamodurovC6–11212
RS freshmanCade Bennerman — WC7–0205
SophomoreNeoklis Avdalas — XG6–9215
SophomoreIsaiah DenisG6–4180
SophomoreMatt Able — YG6–5196
1SeniorTerrence Brown — ZG6–3174
4SeniorJaydon YoungG6–4200
15SeniorJarin Stevenson46–10215
GraduateAngelo Brizzi — ZZ26–3193
Walk-ons
25JuniorJohn Holbrook46–8230
32SeniorEvan Smith26–1195

W — Northwestern transfer. X — Virginia Tech transfer; Y — N.C. State transfer; Z — Utah transfer; ZZ — Buffalo transfer

Michael Malone’s coaching staff: Chuck Martin, Bryan Tibaldi, Sean May and Pat Sullivan; Deon Thompson will be a graduate assistant, and Brandon Robinson will reportedly have a support staff position.


Players who left for the transfer portal

PlayerClass next seasonPos.HgtWgtNext
school
Luka BogavacSeniorW6–6215Oklahoma State
James BrownSeniorC6–10240Howard
Derek DixonSophomoreG6–5200Arizona
Kyan EvansSeniorG6–2175Minnesota
Zayden High JuniorC6–10230South Florida
Jonathan PowellJuniorG6–6190Pittsburgh
Ivan MatlekovicJuniorC7–0255

Schedule so far

(Other than the ACC/SEC Challenge, games without links revealed from reporting by Alex Rosinski or Rocco Miller)
(13 of 14 games)

Oct. 18 — exhibition game vs. Indiana at Gainbridge Fieldhouse in Indianapolis
Nov. 2 — vs. Western Carolina
Nov. 6 — vs. Wofford
Nov. 10 — vs. Wyoming
Nov. 13 — vs. Georgia
Nov. 20 — vs. Marshall
Nov. 27 — vs. West Virginia at the Dick Vitale Invitational at Charlotte’s Spectrum Center
Dec. 1 — vs. Arkansas in ACC/SEC Challenge
Dec. 6 — vs. Butler
Dec. 12 — at Georgetown
Dec. 15 (tentative date) — vs. N.C. State in a non-conference game in Greensboro
Dec. 19 — vs. Kentucky in CBS Sports Classic at Madison Square Garden, 2:30 p.m.
Dec. 21 — vs. The Citadel
Jan. 30 — vs. Illinois in Nashville, Tenn.

ACC games
Home and away: Duke, Louisville
Home only: California, Georgia Tech, Miami, N.C. State, SMU, Stanford, Virginia
Away only: Boston College, Florida State, Notre Dame, Pitt, Syracuse, Virginia Tech, Wake Forest

Photo courtesy of FIBA

Leave a Reply