I can see a few ways that a wooden coaster could be done.
Traditional lift, 60-70 ft tall:
If they choose to limit the height such as this, it will mean forgoing thrills/speed or capacity, or more likely, both. Wooden coasters can only do 2 across seating and need fairly large train spacing, which means that a long train is required to get the capacity that will be needed. This will make it harder to build up speed, and a longer train demands larger elements which limits what the ride can do. The upside of keeping the height in this range is that it won't totally ruin sight lines from everywhere in the park, and will fit better in the space they have.
Traditional lift, 80-90 ft tall:
To accommodate a ride of this scale, pretty much the entire northern part of JP will have to be redone to fit the length of track required. Furthermore, at 80 ft tall the lift hill will be well above the treeline, visible form around the park, and probably dominate the area. The advantage is that a coaster of this height will provide a much faster and high thrill ride experience, like people have come to expect from modern wooden coasters.
Launched Wooden Coaster:
This option allows for higher thrill and speed without sticking out as much, but has some of the same negatives as a traditional lift in terms of space required and possible capacity limitations. Also, we could commence complaining about how universal is building too many launched coasters that are taking over the park and that they need to try building something different for a change.