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So, Wesson changed his diet. Instead of relying on juice, lemonade and Hi-C, he mainly stuck to drinking as much water as he could. He gave up some foods – “that list is too long” – to fill his meals with more protein and less carbohydrates. He even got offered a kale chip by Musa Jallow this summer, which he couldn’t scarf down.
“When he gave me one of those, I was like, 'No, I can't eat this, bro,’” Wesson said with a laugh. “I was like, 'If this is what healthy is, maybe I'm not there yet.'”
Working his way around the kale chips, he followed the advice of a nutritionist at Ohio State and started participating in frequent body composition analyses.
Wesson ran. He boxed. He worked out on the court with his older brother, Andre Wesson, at Woodward Park Community Recreation Center. Altogether, he altered his physical state.
“As far as moving bodies and everything, it's a little different,” Wesson said. “But I feel like I didn't lose that much strength in the offseason. I worked a lot with (strength and conditioning coach Quadrian Banks) in being able to maintain my strength and stay at a lower weight.”
After both workouts, Wesson had a chance to get feedback from the coaches and scouts, who both let him know he didn’t have enough stock to get drafted and gave him feedback about what he needs to improve to get to that point. At the top of the list was a change in his body.
“They just told me they want to see me at a lighter weight,” Wesson said.
Now at that lighter weight, Wesson will have a chance to apply what he learned from the pre-draft process and showcase himself at 255 pounds as a junior at Ohio State.
more at https://www.elevenwarriors.com/ohio...res-for-what-might-be-final-ohio-state-seasonMaking it to the NBA has been a stated goal of Wesson’s for years, and few players ever test those waters twice and return to college both times. Also, the Buckeyes have recruited with the possibility of Wesson bouncing to the NBA in mind. They recently accepted a commitment from three-star power forward Zed Key, pushing their total scholarship players for next season to 14, one over the limit.
If his game has developed as much as his body, this could be Wesson’s last year at Ohio State.
I don’t know about 6th best college player in the country but I have some huge “takeover” type of game expectations for Kaleb this year.
kid has worked his tail off and I think he’s ready to dominate.
Clearly Kaleb is one if the hardest workers, if not the hardest worker, on this OSU team. He I looks primed for a huge season.I don’t know about 6th best college player in the country but I have some huge “takeover” type of game expectations for Kaleb this year.
kid has worked his tail off and I think he’s ready to dominate.