Jack Greynolds Jr.: Classless A-hole
So you read the headline and you ask, who is Jack Greynolds Jr.?
Well, let me fill you in.
First off, Greynolds was Kosta Koufos’ coach back at good ol’ GlenOak High School in Canton, Ohio, and secondly, I happen to know a lot about A-holes because I’m related to a few.
According to an article written by some fishwrap hack named Todd Porter at the Canton Repository, Greynolds had this to say about Ohio State head coach Thad Matta and the way he handled Koufos:
Listen, if you can’t get along with a kid like Kosta, then you’re clueless. If you’re making $2 million season and can’t figure out how to use a 7-foot-1 kid, you’re clueless. If you can’t get along with a kid who comes early, stays late and gets good grades, you’re clueless, and you’ve got the problem.”
Greynolds went on to say this later in that same article:
Kosta really kept his composure this year and with what he’s said publicly. As much as he was getting screwed over, he always said the right things in the paper. He’s not like some of the turds they recruit. He’s a great kid. I can’t tell you how much that upsets me.”
OK, in the five-plus years I have maintained this Ohio State sports blog, I have never, ever, heard a coach use the term, “turd.” Seriously, how many adults use that word? None that I know of, and the fact that is coming from an high school coach in the state of Ohio about kids he may have faced throughout his career is troubling.
One has to realize that the NBA Draft and the NFL Draft are really different from each other. One is conducted on the premise of potential, and the other is for the here-and-now.
Potentially, Koufos could be a good player in the NBA. And let me emphasis, COULD. But he’s several years away from that. He needs to get bigger and stronger first while impoving his shooting and ball-handling skills.
The Koufos I saw playing all last season was soft as butter. Yes, Koufos did average about 16 points a game in his first 10 Ohio State games, but his numbers dwindled during the Big Ten season when he averaged just 12 points a game in the conference.
And why is all of this? Because he was playing against better competition.
Oh, but lo and behold he eventually earned the NIT’s Most Valuable Player Award after the Buckeyes won the title in New York. And why was that? Because it was against lesser talent.
The problem is, Koufos doesn’t want to play with his back to the basket. He wants to be a forward or wing and heave three-pointers up all day and all night. He doesn’t want to do the dirty work of banging inside against the big boys all day, and this is why he’s soft.




























