Great post. Every player has strengths and weaknesses. Here is what I think Jordan will improve on next year:
-Cutting down on the silly turnovers. Most of his TO are of the not thinking/dumb variety.
-Leadership. I think Jordan is a natural leader with his confidence. With Jok gone, I think Jordan is going to step up his leadership on the team
-Pull up game. I think Jordan will begin to learn how/when to take it all the way to the basket and when to pull up for a floater or jump shot. I though he did a great job getting to the rim vs SD, but then again that is a mid major program and that stuff won't go down vs B1G opponents
-Defensively he will get better as he gets stronger, and works on his lateral quickness. He will never be a plus defender, but I think he stops being a liability.
I think what will also continue to be apparent is that he simply spaces the floor having the ball in his hands. Teams can't sag like they did vs Mike, they have to guard him out to 25' and when you do that, passing lanes inside will open up. We really struggled to score down low the last 4 years, as all teams just sagged off Mike and Sapp and clogged up the lane. Now teams can't do that.
Either way, Jordan completely and totally surprised me and I'm guessing MOST of HN this year, something tells me he still has room to surprise us even more.
You briefly mentioned it, but I think the development of his floater will be key. He needs to practice it all off season. That will add another weapon to his game, and it will help open up the perimeter. He's just not big enough to consistently get to the basket, but if can make floaters over top of the bigs he doesn't have to be. It will have the exact same impact.
I hate to say it, but Monte is a good example. When Monte had Jameel McKay in the post there were times you couldn't tell if his floater was a shot or an alley-oop pass. It's tough to defend when you add it to your arsenal. JBo could do the exact same thing with Cook in the paint.
I think it's who he is. He's a smart player. He doesn't pick up his dribble when pressured and he's committed to finding open teammates. Which is why his asst/to ratio is what it is. You have to give him credit for what he's doing because it's not like he's simply faster or can jump higher than everyone else. He's not/ he can't. Defenses will do more to try and stop him next season once Jok is gone but I'm not worried about that so much.If they would have made the championship game, Jok probably would have broke the single season scoring record and Bohannon could have broken the single season assist record. He would have finished 2nd in 3 pointers made in a season also.
The question is, is Bohannon just playing out of his mind right now, or is this just who he is?