Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Top recruits select surprising journeys

Newcomers don’t pick obvious schools

- By Steve Megargee

Many of the nation’s brightest prospects in the most recent recruiting class didn’t necessaril­y select the most obvious schools.

Kentucky, Duke and Kansas have landed many of the notable one-and-done performers over the last decade. But according to composite rankings of recruiting sites compiled by 247Sports, those three schools landed only two of the top 12 recruits in this year’s freshman class: Kentucky guards Brandon Boston Jr. (No. 5) and Terrence Clarke (No. 8).

In the meantime, four of the top seven players chose Oklahoma State, Southern California, Stanford and Florida State.

Jerry Meyer, the director of basketball scouting at 247Sports, says he noticed this trend starting in 2015. That’s the year four of the top eight recruits selected Lousiana State (Ben Simmons), California ( Jaylen Brown and Ivan Rabb) and Mississipp­i State (Malik Newman). One year earlier, seven of the top 13 prospects had chosen either Duke, Kentucky or Kansas.

“That was when like, boom, things started to change,” Meyer said.

Kentucky, Duke and Kansas are still obviously getting their share. Kentucky had the nation’s No. 1 2020 class and Duke ranked third, while Kansas signed the nation’s No. 21 prospect in guard Bryce Thompson. But other schools are attracting elite talent as well.

That list starts with Cade Cunningham, the nation’s No. 1 recruit last year. Cunningham chose Oklahoma State and stuck with the Cowboys even when they received a postseason ban from the NCAA as part of the federal corruption investigat­ion into college basketball.

Here’s a rundown of some freshmen who should make an impact this season:

Scottie Barnes, guard, Florida State

No. 21 Florida State lists Barnes as a guard even though he’s 6 feet, 8 inches. Seminoles assistant Charlton Young calls Barnes “the kind of guy that comes once every 25 years” with his combinatio­n of size, athleticis­m and unselfishn­ess. Barnes is ranked seventh in the 247Sports Composite and played high school basketball at Montverde (Florida) Academy.

Brandon Boston Jr., guard, Kentucky

The 6-7 guard from Norcross, Georgia, played at Sierra Canyon in Chatsworth, California, and was named the California male athlete of the year and the California player of the year by USA Today. Boston already has earned first-team honors on the media’s preseason all-Southeaste­rn Conference team.

Cade Cunningham, guard, Oklahoma State

Although Cunningham hasn’t played a college game yet, the 6-8 guard still made the Associated Press preseason All-America team. He’s from Arlington, Texas, but played with Barnes at Montverde Academy and was named the Naismith high school player of the year. Meyer calls him a “do-everything-type player.”

Evan Mobley, center, Southern Cal

This 7-footer was rated as the nation’s No. 3 prospect in his class by the 247Sports Composite. He won the 2020 Morgan Wooten high school player of the year award his senior season at Rancho Christian in Temecula, California. He was a two-time California Gatorade player of the year. He’s the younger brother of Southern Cal sophomore forward Isaiah Mobley. “Evan is a special talent,” USC coach Andy Enfield said. “Seven feet tall, runs like a guard and very skilled. Great passer for his size.”

Jalen Suggs, guard, Gonzaga

Suggs joins the nation’s top-ranked team as the No. 11 prospect in the 247Sports Composite. The former high school quarterbac­k at Minnehaha Academy in Minneapoli­s was the first athlete in Minnesota history to be named Mr. Football and Mr. Basketball in the same year. The 6-4 guard averaged 23.5 points, 3.2 rebounds, 5.1 assists and 3.8 steals his senior year.

Ziaire Williams, forward, Stanford

This 6-foot-8-inch forward played with Kentucky’s Boston at Sierra Canyon. He’s rated as the nation’s No. 6 prospect in the 247Sports Composite. Stanford coach Jerod Haase says Williams “has the unique ability to score on all three levels, and his versatilit­y as a defender is elite.”

“He can create a shot, make a shot,” Meyer said. “He’s not the most physical guy, so I don’t know that he’ll have the physicalit­y off the bat. He’s a questionab­le one-and-done because of that, but his upside is so great.”

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