Bullish on Abrams: Eisenhower coach likens AJ Abrams to former Chicago Bulls star Derrick Rose. ‘He reminds me of that.’

As a sophomore last season, AJ Abrams had a strong varsity debut for Eisenhower, but he knew there was something major to work on.

His outside shot was not good enough to keep defenders honest and stop them from sagging off to prevent him from driving to the basket.

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“I wasn’t really a shooter,” Abrams said. “I was scared to shoot the ball last year. This year, everyone is pushing me to shoot the ball more. I got in the gym over the offseason, worked on it a lot.

“It makes it easier to get to the basket when they have to respect my shot.”

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While he is still most dangerous when he’s driving to the basket, Abrams’ shot is respectable now and that makes him even tougher to stop.

“His 3-point shooting still needs improvement but it’s gotten a lot better,” Eisenhower coach Neil Miguez said. “He’s super athletic. He’s 5-foot-10 and he can get up and dunk. He really gave us a boost last year, and then he trained hard all offseason to get better.”

Abrams is leading Eisenhower (9-13) in just about every statistical category. He’s averaging 21 points, 9.0 rebounds, 3.0 assists, 2.5 steals and 1.0 blocked shot.

“Nine rebounds a game is pretty impressive for a 5-foot-10 guard and he gets one block a game too, which is ridiculous,” Miguez said. “He’s doing everything for us.

“Every team we play is face guarding him or doing a diamond-and-one against him, and he’s still putting up these numbers.”

Abrams had a plan to get tougher going into his junior season so he could do some of the dirty work for the Cardinals.

“I was working out, lifting weights, getting my legs right,” Abrams said. “For my size, it’s pretty hard to get rebounds over tall defenders. It takes hustle, speed and determination.

“Don’t underestimate me because of my size.”

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Abrams started playing basketball when he was 5 years old, with his love for the game unleashed after seeing an ad in the newspaper.

“I saw something about a rec league, and I asked my mom and dad if I could sign up,” Abrams said. “The first time I woke them up on a Saturday and told them I had a game, they were surprised. They didn’t realize I had the basketball talent.”

Now, Abrams’ talent is on full display. Miguez sees it every day. In fact, Abrams makes him think about a former NBA MVP from Chicago.

“I don’t want to say he’s like Derrick Rose, but he reminds me of that in just the way he plays,” Miguez said. “He gets to the hole. He’s so explosive that he goes up and gets bumped and it doesn’t mess with his shot. He’s just super athletic.”

Overcoming adversity: Despite losing leading scorer Xavier Sulaiman to injury and struggling in late December, Oak Lawn (14-6) is on a six-game winning streak and has not lost in 2023.

Sulaiman, who had been out since mid-December with a knee injury, briefly returned for the Jan. 13 game against Lemont but reinjured the knee.

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Oak Lawn coach Jason Rhodes confirmed Sulaiman will have surgery soon and is out for the season.

The Spartans, though, won that Lemont game without him and have stayed hot ever since.

“Our wins haven’t been the most pretty, but I’d rather win and learn than lose and learn,” Rhodes said. “Our guys have done a good job pulling off some of these close games.”

Ayham Salah and Corey Lee have led Oak Lawn in scoring, while Rhodes credited Robert Wagner for being the team’s “glue guy.”

Viking conquest: Homewood-Flossmoor’s 70-69 overtime upset of Bloom on Saturday marked the first huge win for new coach Jamere Dismukes.

Seniors Vincent Davis and Jahlil Birchette have emerged as key leaders for the Vikings (14-8), who have won four straight.

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Steve Millar is a freelance reporter for the Daily Southtown.