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T. J. Leaf

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Position
  
Power forward

Nationality
  
American / Israeli

Listed weight
  
225 lb (102 kg)

Weight
  
102 kg

Parents
  
Brad Leaf, Karen Leaf

League
  
Pac-12 Conference

Listed height
  
6 ft 10 in (2.08 m)

Height
  
2.08 m

Number
  
22

T. J. Leaf Tag Archive for tjleaf Inside the Hall Indiana Hoosiers

Born
  
April 30, 1997 (age 19) Tel Aviv, Israel (
1997-04-30
)

High school
  
Foothills Christian (El Cajon, California)

Siblings
  
Talia Leaf, Troy Leaf, Trent Leaf

Similar
  
Lonzo Ball, Bryce Alford, Aaron Holiday, Isaac Hamilton, Steve Alford

Ty Jacob "T. J." Leaf (born April 30, 1997) is an American–Israeli basketball player. He played college basketball at UCLA. As a high school senior in 2016, he earned All-American honors. Leaf earned first-team all-conference honors in the Pac-12 as a freshman at UCLA in 2016–17. He played for Israel at the FIBA Europe Under-18 Championship in 2015.

Contents

T. J. Leaf Arizona basketball TJ Leaf decommits from Wildcats Bruce Pascoe

Early life

T. J. Leaf Tag Archive for tjleaf Inside the Hall Indiana Hoosiers

Leaf was born in Tel Aviv to Karen and Brad Leaf. His father was playing professional basketball in Israel at the time, and he enjoyed a 17-year career in the country. Leaf lived his first 2 12 years in Tel Aviv before growing up in Lakeside, California, in San Diego County. His father coached him in summer leagues prior to high school. Despite possessing the height of a power forward—he stood 6 ft 3 in (1.91 m) in junior high—Leaf played on the perimeter to develop guard skills. His father wanted him to be versatile like the big men that he had competed against as a pro in Europe.

T. J. Leaf aespncdncomcombineriimgiheadshotsrecruiti

Leaf attended Foothills Christian High School in El Cajon, California, where he also played under his father. As a junior, Leaf averaged 27.4 points, 14.2 rebounds, 4.8 assists, 1.8 steals and 2.7 blocks per game, leading Foothills Christian to the San Diego Section Division II championship. Cal-Hi Sports named him their Division II State Player of the Year.

T. J. Leaf UCLA scores fivestar forward TJ Leaf NCAA Basketball Sporting

In his senior year, Leaf led the team to a No. 3 state ranking after averaging 28.4 points, 12.4 rebounds, and 5.1 assists. He scored a season-high 44 points in a loss to Chino Hills, who were led by future teammate Lonzo Ball. Leaf earned McDonald's and Ballislife All-American honors, and USA Today named him second-team All-USA. He was a runner-up to Ball for California Mr. Basketball. Leaf finished his high school career second all-time in the San Diego Section in both points (3,022) and rebounds (1,476). He trailed only his brother, Troy, in points (3,318 for Foothills Christian from 2007 to 2010) and Angelo Chol in rebounds (1,732 with Hoover from 2008 to 2011).

College career

T. J. Leaf TJ Leaf Named StudentAthlete of the Week UCLABruinscom UCLA

Leaf originally committed in 2014 to play for Arizona under coach Sean Miller. He tried out for the United States under-19 national team, also coached by Miller, but was cut in training camp in June 2015. In August, Leaf decommitted from Arizona, leading to speculation that the cut by Miller was a motivating factor. He signed with UCLA three months later, choosing them over Oregon and San Diego State. A consensus five-star and overall top-20 recruit, he joined his Amateur Athletic Union (AAU) teammates from the Compton Magic, Ike Anigbogu and Kobe Paras, who also committed to UCLA. The Bruins recruiting class also included Ball, who along with Leaf were both expected to lead a UCLA turnaround in 2016–17 after the Bruins finished just 15–17 the year before.

T. J. Leaf UCLA Basketball TJ Leaf Player of the Week

On December 5, 2016, Leaf was named Pac-12 Player of the Week following his performance at Kentucky, where he registered 17 points, 13 rebounds and 5 assists. He and Ball were named to the midseason watch list for the John R. Wooden Award, given annually to the top college player in the nation; UCLA was one of just five schools with two candidates on the list. The two were also among 30 on the midseason watch list for the Naismith College Player of the Year. On February 1, 2017, Leaf scored a career-high 32 points on 14-for-18 shooting and added 14 rebounds in a 95–79 win over Washington State, which ended a two-game losing streak for No. 11 UCLA. He missed the regular season finale with a sprained left ankle, which he suffered five minutes into the prior game against Washington. He was named first-team All-Pac-12 along with teammates Ball and Bryce Alford. Leaf and Ball were also placed on the Pac-12 All-Freshman team. He finished the season as UCLA's leading scorer and ranked third in field goal percentage (61.7) among Power Five conference players.

On March 30, 2017 Leaf announced that he would be leaving UCLA after his freshman year to declare for the NBA draft.

National team career

After being cut by Miller from the U.S. U19 team in 2015, Leaf joined Israel the following month in July to play in the FIBA Europe Under-18 Championship in Austria. Although Israel lost 73–72 in the Division B final, Leaf was named tournament MVP after averaging 16.1 points on 55 percent shooting along with 8.4 rebounds in nine games.

Accomplishments and awards

College
  • First-team All-Pac-12 (2017)
  • Pac-12 All-Freshman team (2017)
  • High school
  • McDonald's All-American (2016)
  • Ballislife All-American (2016)
  • Second-team USA Today All-USA (2016)
  • Second-team Naismith All-American (2016)
  • Cal-Hi Sports Division II State Player of the Year (2015)
  • 2× All-CIF San Diego Section Player of the Year (2015, 2016)
  • References

    T. J. Leaf Wikipedia