Tennessee May Have Found The Backcourt Spark Fans Wanted

Terrence Hill Jr. brings his dynamic talent and leadership to Tennessee, filling a crucial gap left by JaKobi Gillespie and sparking new hope for the team.

Terrence Hill Jr. didn’t waste much time deciding where his next chapter would start. Less than a month after his biggest college moment at VCU, the 6-foot-3 guard committed to Tennessee on April 19, picking the Vols over Kansas and stepping into a backcourt that needs a new answer after Ja’Kobi Gillespie moved on to the NBA draft.

Hill arrives in Knoxville with real momentum behind him. As a sophomore at VCU, he went from limited minutes to a centerpiece role, earning A-10 first team honors along with Sixth Man of the Year, Most Improved Player and MVP of the A-10 Tournament. He played in all 36 games, started only two, and still put up 15.0 points, 2.8 assists and 2.7 rebounds while shooting 46.6% from the field and 37% from 3-point range.

That breakout came with a national stage attached. Hill’s name traveled fast after VCU’s first-round NCAA Tournament upset of North Carolina, a game that featured the largest comeback in tournament history.

Hill helped erase a 19-point deficit, scored the tying layup and then drilled the go-ahead 3-pointer with 15 seconds left in overtime. He finished with 34 points, 7 rebounds and an assist, with 24 of those points coming after halftime.

It was VCU’s first tournament win in a decade.

Now Tennessee is asking him to bring that same burst to a new setting. Hill said he had already been imagining himself in the Vols’ offense before he ever got to campus, watching Gillespie’s rise under Rick Barnes from afar.

“It was funny because last year I was watching the tournament when Tennessee played,” Hill said July 13. “I think it was the Sweet 16 game.

I was like, ‘Ja’Kobi’s going crazy, that could be me out there.’ I was talking to my agent about it.”

Barnes clearly saw a fit, too. In the school’s April 20 release announcing the addition, he called Hill “a dynamic player with speed, quickness, a strong basketball IQ and extreme confidence,” and added, “Terrence can separate off the bounce and can put the ball in the basket from all three levels.”

Assistant coach Gregg Polinsky, who helped recruit Hill, described a player whose game already looks built for the next level.

“Really quick-handed, something that’s not talked about enough, like making a pocket pass,” Polinsky said. “Very NBA-like, and that window’s so small because guys are so long.

He gets rid of that basketball in a hurry. We tell the bigs, turn your head.

They’re starting to learn to play with him, but I think he’s making everybody better around him, and we all know he’s capable of scoring the ball.”

At Tennessee, Hill is also adjusting to a different kind of backcourt workload. He said he and Dai Dai Ames have gotten off to a strong start building chemistry, and he pointed to Ames and Juke Harris as part of a group of new ball handlers who can share the load.

“I feel like me and Dai Dai (Ames) have been doing a great job to start it off to lead the team,” Hill said. “I feel like the chemistry is going to come over time, but building that bond early is very special.”

Hill said he’s spending more time away from the ball than he did at VCU, and he expects defenses to treat him differently after the season he just had.

“I felt like guys are going to guard me different this year with the resume I had coming in from last year,” Hill said. “So being able to play with Dai Dai and Juke and those guys handling the ball is going to make it a lot easier for all of us.”

Barnes’ focus for Hill is straightforward: push the tempo and speak up more. Hill said those are the two areas the coach has emphasized most.

“My speed. I play at a different type of pace, but he wants me to pick up my pace more and get the team going,” Hill said.

“Me using my voice more, taking on that leader role. Speed and leadership.”

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