On July 8, Lompoc High School and Allan Hancock College alum Rijo Jackson signed to play basketball for Northland College in Wisconsin.Ā
Jackson, a Lompoc native, is part of the Jackson family. āMy grandfather and Michaelās dad, Joseph, theyāre brothers, so thatās how heās in the picture,ā he explained. He remembers the King of Pop fondly: āEver since I was little, I traveled with him. He really took me under his wing. I was raised around a bunch of women, and he was my male mentor.ā
Itās the basketball court, not the stage, where Rijo finds release. āSome people dance and listen to music,ā he explained. āI play basketball. Itās my place to cope, my stress reliever.ā
On the court, heās a shooterāa shooting guard, hanging around on the edge of the paint and firing off three-point shots when he can.Ā
āFor me,ā Jackson said, āMy theory is why move more when you can move less and score more?ā Heās not a fan of the Warriorsāpraised for their field goalsābut instead prefers the Phoenix Suns.Ā
āI love the way they play,ā he said. āItās a transition game. As soon as they get a transition, itās an open three.ā
Transitioning to Hancock was as hard as any shot outside the paint for Jackson. āI wasnāt as mature; I wasnāt as old,ā he recalled. āCoach Gordon gave me a shot, and I proved that I was worthy.ā He took classes in criminal justice and sociology and played two seasons for the Bulldogs.
A foot injury last year prevented Jackson from playing at Northland, so he stuck around in Lompoc and worked at the YMCA as a child care provider and youth instructor.
Now, however, heās ready to play competitive basketball again. In the fall, heāll start as the first member of his family to attend a four-year university. Jackson hopes that basketball will give him the focus and the drive to learn as much as he can at school.
āIām going for an education,ā he stated emphatically. āAnd to be able to play the sport that Iāve been playing my whole life. You gotta get educated. And if I donāt want to play a sport, but Iām going to schoolāI donāt want to [just] go to school,ā he said, before pausing. āI want something that grabs me into school.ā
This article appears in Jul 16-23, 2015.


