Charlotte rookie point guard LaMelo Ball is looking as electric as Knicks president Leon Rose envisioned. The 6-foot-7 Ball was the No. 1 point guard on the Knicks’ draft board and believed to be No. 1 on their board, period.
Ball fell to Michael Jordan’s Hornets at No. 3 and fully announced himself as the favorite for rookie of the year honors after his first career triple-double Saturday vs. Atlanta.
It was a bittersweet night for Rose when his Knicks face the league’s newest supreme playmaker Monday at Charlotte’s Spectrum Center. That’s magnified because Rose’s two first-round draft picks, injured Obi Toppin and point guard Immanuel Quickley, don’t have nearly the same momentum.
Ball interviewed with the Knicks in the pre-draft process before Tom Thibodeau was hired.
“I watched the interview, and I watched a lot of film on him,’’ Thibodeau said before Monday’s game. “You can see the vision, the way he sees the game — the way he passes the ball tells you how he sees the game. And that’s a gift the way he sees the game at his size. I think when you have that type of size they can see over people and it’s easy for them to make passes. He makes everyone around him a lot better.’’
When the Knicks fell from No. 6 to No. 8 in the draft, with the lottery gods again showing their anger toward New York, so went Rose’s chances of reuniting with Ball, a former Creative Artists Agency client.
Now former Knicks point guard Jermaine Jackson handles Ball’s affairs as his manager. Jackson was Ball’s coach in high school at Spire Institute in Ohio in 2018-19. He enlisted with Ball professionally when Ball decided to play in Australia instead of college last season.
LaVar Ball said before the draft that New York would be his top choice for his most talented son. And Papa Ball wasn’t the only one thinking along those lines.
“That would’ve been a phenomenal place,” Jackson told The Post from Charlotte on Monday. “That was one of the places we all wanted to go. And I played there. I know the owner [James Dolan]. I know the people there. It’s a phenomenal place. When you win, it’s an incredible place, New York. You always want to play for the Knicks. The last two years they haven’t had [lottery luck].”
Because of a point-guard logjam, Ball comes off the bench for the Hornets, averaging 12.8 points, 6.3 assists, 5.9 assists and shooting a respectable 35.6 percent from 3.
Ball’s status should change as he’s becoming the face of the Hornets, even exceeding expectations with his readiness at age 19. Saturday against the Hawks, Ball went for 22 points, 12 rebounds and 11 assists, shooting 9 of 13.
“I’m just being totally honest, nothing has surprised me,” Jackson said. “A lot of people thought I was crazy when I told them two, three years ago he’s the Michael Jackson of basketball right here. He doesn’t just sing. He seeks records as well. That’s called a performer. He’s like a third-year player in the league right now. He’s been playing ball since he was 16 years old.”
Indeed, LaMelo Ball had a quick stint in Lithuania at age 16 before returning home to enroll at Spire.
“I’ve seen this, I’ve seen it in high school,” Jackson said. “What he’s doing is not surprising to me at all. He’s a real live student of the game who has a real knack and feel for it. He’s a filmer. What I mean is that he’s always watching film.”
Jackson moved with Ball to Charlotte and hasn’t been able to watch Ball in person, but is content to stay in their home and watch Ball on the big screen.
Ball probably should have been the No. 1 pick and Minnesota (Anthony Edwards) and Golden State (James Wiseman) may regret this.
According to NBA sources, Ball dropped because of 3-point shooting fears, team interviews that weren’t spectacular as a quiet kid and the elephant in the room. His father, a former Jets tight end on their practice squad in the 1990s, can be a distraction. So far, LaMelo has been a lot louder than LaVar, who has stayed in California and away from Jordan.
“No, our biggest goal is to be a Hall of Famer,” Jackson said on whether Ball was angry not being picked first. “It’s never about being 1. Our whole goal is to work on becoming a Hall of Famer. It’s not about No. 1. It’s about a 15-year, 20-year goal of being a Hall of Famer.”
Toppin, selected eighth, is out indefinitely with a calf strain, last playing in the season opener following a modest preseason. After a big start, Quickley has looked very shaky the past three games (1-for-14 with seven points) as teams adjusted to his bouncy game.
Jackson loved “the enthusiasm” when he played for the Knicks during the Isiah Thomas era in 2004-05. Maybe someday Ball will leave sleepy Charlotte.
“The Charlotte organization is like family and he’s comfortable with them,” Jackson said. “He’s having fun. He’s here to do a job.’’