The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

UConn’s Jackson Jr. will be a popular guy in Albany this week

- By David Borges STAFF WRITER

If Andre Jackson Jr.’s family and friends convene at local restaurant in Albany this week, that restaurant might want to consider closing to the rest of the public, or at least dedicating one of its wings to Jackson’s party. It’ll be a big party. “He’s got quite a following,” said Brian Fruscio, who coached Jackson Jr. for four years at Albany Academy. “And that’s a tribute to him, because he’s such a nice person. That’s the tribute: Somebody who has his head up, who’s willing to say hello, who loves his music but is willing to take his head set off and have a conversati­on with people. That’s what makes him special.”

Jackson returns “home” this week when the UConn men’s basketball team faces Iona in an NCAA Tournament firstround game on Friday at Albany’s MVP Arena (4:30 p.m., TBS). Jackson, who hails from Amsterdam, N.Y., about 45 miles northwest of Albany, had a feeling the Huskies might be ticketed to New York’s capital city. Still, when it became official on the CBS Selection Show on Sunday evening, there was elation.

“My mom texted me, she said she’s so happy she might cry,” Jackson said. “It’s crazy. I’m definitely excited for it. I can’t wait.”

Presumably, neither can Jackson’s many fans in the Albany area. The 6foot-6 UConn junior was very popular at Albany Academy, not only as a basketball star recruited by numerous high-level programs, but as a genuinely good person.

Fruscio remembers seeing Jackson eating lunch with younger kids, all of whose names Jackson had remembered from working at the school’s basketball camp.

“He might be walking by, ‘Hey Andre, would you come in and eat lunch with us?,’ ” Fruscio recalled. “The next thing I know, he’s with a group of fourth-graders or seventh-graders, just because they wanted to spend some time with Andre. And he just couldn’t say no. So, there he was during his free period, sitting at the lunch table making some kid’s year.”

According to Fruscio, it all stems from Jackson’s large, nuclear family — particular­ly his mom, Tricia Altieri, the “driving force” in his life.

“Everything, somehow, someway, circles back to his family,” Fruscio said. “Whether it’s him being an old soul because of the time he spent with grandpa and grandma growing up, and all the cousins being around, he’s comfortabl­e with the little kids.”

Fruscio is very tight with the Jackson family. In fact, his son, Jack, is a current manager of the University of Albany men’s basketball team, where Andre’s younger

 ?? Sarah Stier/Getty Images ?? UConn’s Andre Jackson Jr. is returning to Albany for the Huskies’ NCAA Tournament game against Iona on Friday at MVP Arena.
Sarah Stier/Getty Images UConn’s Andre Jackson Jr. is returning to Albany for the Huskies’ NCAA Tournament game against Iona on Friday at MVP Arena.

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