Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Two relish BlueStar 30 experience

- By Sam Gordon Contact reporter Sam Gordon at sgordon@ reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @ BySamGordo­n on Twitter.

Girls basketball luminary Mike Flynn stood in the middle of Tarkanian Basketball Academy — surrounded by some of the best young players in the country — and made a bold proclamati­on about the two locals at his invite-only camp.

“This isn’t for everybody,” Flynn said Saturday morning. “They’re the somebodies of this city.”

Flynn was referring to Centennial sophomore Taylor Bigby and Spring Valley freshman Aaliyah Gayles, the city’s best underclass­men and two of the 92 players at the annual BlueStar 30 Camp.

The event, akin to the Nike Top 100 camp for boys, ran from Wednesday to Saturday, and brought some of the nation’s top-tier talent to Las Vegas for four days of competitio­n, instructio­n and developmen­t.

Bigby already has several high-major Division I offers, and is regarded as one of the top 10th graders on the West Coast. Gayles hasn’t yet played high school basketball and already has a scholarshi­p offer from UNLV.

The majority of the camp’s participan­ts are high-end Division I recruits.

“This separates (Bigby and Gayles) from all the players in the city,” said Flynn, who coached AAU basketball on the East Coast and is a member of the McDonald’s All-American selection committee.

“The pressure to receive the recruitmen­t is not there anymore. They can go out there and play and pick their school when they’re ready,” he said. “The fact that they’re both here in one city tells that there’s a lot of talent in Las Vegas.”

The camp, its third year, was in the Chicago area in 2016 and the Washington D.C. area last year. Flynn partnered this year with Tarkanian Basketball Academy general manager Lamar Bigby, who hopes the event returns to Las Vegas on an annual basis.

Gayles, a 5-foot-9-inch guard, said she felt like she represente­d the entire city. Bigby, a 6-foot point guard, expressed the same sentiment and indicated the talent at the camp fostered a competitiv­e environmen­t.

“No one (is bad),” she said. “For (Gayles), I know what she can do, but for someone else, I don’t know what they can do. So you have to give it your all every time you’re out there.”

The campers also attended the Aces’ victory over the Los Angeles Sparks on Friday night and mingled with WNBA personnel after the game.

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