Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Ex-UConn target Flagg does not disappoint

No. 1 recruit dazzles at Hoophall Classic

- By Joe Arruda

SPRINGFIEL­D – A capacity crowd filled in shoulder-to-shoulder on the wooden bleachers inside Springfiel­d College’s Blake Arena, about 2,000 fans, young and old, divided evenly along each side of the court to see the nation’s No. 1 recruit, Cooper Flagg, in the Hoophall Classic.

Kids, standing at the end of the bleachers where Flagg and his Montverde Academy team waited for their cue to make an entrance, tested the strength of the black metal rails as they peered over to capture whatever glimpse they could of the star prospect and his team. Swells grew in the corners as eager spectators walked slowly, with half their attention locked on the 6-foot-9 phenom who’d taken to the court with a high-flying dunk exhibition, finding any bit of space to squeeze into.

The size of the crowd could be likened to the flock that filled the same building for Mikey Williams, a former internet sensation and the first high school athlete to sign a shoe deal, in the 2022 event. The only time it’s been bigger, at least in the last few years, was when Bronny James, son of LeBron, and his Sierra Canyon team played against Alex Antetokoun­mpo, brother of Giannis, in 2020.

These scenes are what Flagg has gotten used to.

“This is the type of atmosphere that I love the most,” he said after the game. “I feel like I kind of thrive in these type of moments, these environmen­ts. I really just soak it all in and have fun in the moment.”

Just a week ago, Montverde played two games before a capacity crowd of about 6,000 in Flagg’s home state of Maine. Tickets for the homecoming event sold out within 12 hours, according to the Bangor Daily News.

“If I was a presidenti­al candidate I would try to get his endorsemen­t in Maine,” legendary Montverde head coach Kevin Boyle quipped.

The national basketball powerhouse continued its New England tour with what has become an annual stop at the Hoophall Classic, put on by the Basketball Hall of Fame. The prime-time game on Friday night against Oak Hill Academy was the first of three at the event.

It was only about a minute in before Flagg was above the rim flushing home a putback dunk, gesturing to raise the roof as the crowd exploded. He dunked three more times in the first half and made two of his three 3-point attempts, all while owning the area below the basket where he repeatedly flew in to grab offensive rebounds.

By halftime, the dominant forward had a game-high 20 points and missed only three shots. He also had six rebounds, all on the offensive end, three blocks, two assists and two steals with his team up 34-24.

He took a much different approach to the third quarter, only attempting two shots and, instead, dished four more assists, grabbed three defensive rebounds and blocked another pair of shots before grabbing a cup of water on the bench. In the fourth quarter he made his third 3-pointer of the game from the wing to a collective “whoosh” from the crowd before taking a seat for the final four minutes, his team up 70-42.

A decent chunk of the crowd, sensing Flagg’s night was done, made its way for the exits.

He finished with 25 points, nine rebounds, seven assists, five blocks and two steals in 26 minutes.

Montverde, ranked No. 1 in the country, improved to 16-0 on the year.

 ?? JOE ARRUDA/HARTFORD COURANT ?? Cooper Flagg, the No. 1 high school basketball recruit in the class of 2024, celebrates after converting a three-point play Friday in the Hoophall Classic.
JOE ARRUDA/HARTFORD COURANT Cooper Flagg, the No. 1 high school basketball recruit in the class of 2024, celebrates after converting a three-point play Friday in the Hoophall Classic.

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