Thursday, November 26, 2020

About Grovetown sophomore Malik Ferguson's performance so far and how his humility and work ethic can be instructive for other "young guns"

6'4" Sophomore G Malik Ferguson (#1) - Grovetown

In Saturday’s 88-76 season opening win over Greenbrier, sophomore Malik Ferguson scored 20 points, making 12 of 14 free throw attempts, to help lead Grovetown to a commanding win on the road after falling behind by 13 points in the first quarter.

Whether during Saturday’s game or in Grovetown’s preseason game at Richmond, Ferguson, a 6’4” guard, has played outstanding basketball so far this season. He has shown a nice shooting touching, an eagerness to distribute the ball and set teammates up for easy buckets, and a determination to change the game on defense and on the glass.

Ferguson saw time as a freshman last season. And the big guard’s talent has been apparent at least since his eighth grade campaign at Grovetown Middle. But this season his skills seem to have catapulted to a different level, and he is playing with a kind of sharpness, enthusiasm and energy that has distinguished himself from almost everybody I’ve seen play during the preseason and the opening weekend of the regular season.



In the interview below, Grovetown head coach Darren Douglas describes what he thinks is behind Ferguson’s progress. Douglas’s assessment should serve as advice and wisdom for the “young stars” across the area who have been fortunate and talented enough to make an impact for their varsity teams early in the season. For example, in our recent postings of the box scores from area games, I counted four freshmen (Derrion Reid - Grovetown, Khaleel Pratt - GreenbrierLavonta Ivery - Thomson and Lemar Edmond - Harlem) who have scored in double figures for their teams. 

All of them can benefit themselves by heeding Douglas’s wisdom about getting to play a lot at an early age not being beneficial if a player doesn’t have the work ethic to go with his talent, and the self awareness to know that no matter how far ahead of his peers he might be early on, the long term winners are always going to be the hardest workers, and those who are most eager to learn from their mistakes, and, sometimes, those who are willing to sit down, observe where they stand, and set out to improve every day so when the next season comes, people will talk about how much they’ve improved. Like Malik did last year. But let's let Coach Douglas take it from here:

Grovetown head coach Darren Douglas about Malik Ferguson's progress


Chad

I’ve heard people say “effort is a skill.” Do you have any players who give more effort than Malik Ferguson? What did you think about his performance Saturday night, and I suppose specifically in the third quarter, when he seemed to almost take over the game on both sides of the court?

Darren

We definitely teach and track effort and competitiveness here and I think that’s what kinda helped us keep the pressure up in the third. Malik was phenomenal tonight, he was all over the floor defensively, he got to the front of the rim at will and he just had a big stretch in the 3rd where he gave “Warrior Effort”.

Chad

It seems like he has made a giant leap forward since last season. What is your opinion about his progress? And what do you think it should be attributed to?

Darren

He has made a huge leap, I think more than anything not playing as much last year until towards the end of the season nudged him in the direction of getting a routine of hard work daily. It’s pretty cool to see it pay off for him.

So many kids want to be “the man” early because of pressure from parents, friends, social media etc. that a lot of kids miss out on the lessons that can push them towards success long term. Sometimes you need to sit and realize the world doesn’t revolve around you.

Kids think playing a lot early has this huge impact in going to college and it does, but only if you have the work ethic already when you are playing that early. A lot of kids’ progression as players and people is stunted because they get it early and never learn to work for it. Anything worth having takes work.

Chad

By “playing early” you mean getting a lot of playing time on varsity as a freshman, for example. Or being the guy everybody’s talking about when you’re a 14u AAU star. That kind of thing, right?

Darren

Yeah. Just getting it without ever really earning it. A lot of kids play early and I think it hurts them. Because they just kinda tread water for 4 years not showing super improvement between the years, just get a little stronger but nothing else really to it.

Malik is a completely different player and if you ask him I’ll bet he will tell you that being humbled last year was the best thing for him as a player and a person. A lot of kids miss that. Now you have a few every year that leave and go to school and end up moving up to a D1, but if they had that work ethic earlier that they (later) found by going Juco, you would see this place become a recruiting stop every year.

Self awareness is a skill.

Chad

Learning to use that skill to his advantage has helped Malik immensely. I hope as many young guns as possible will learn that same skill and use it well, too.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.