Las Vegas Review-Journal

Durango guard gets Division I notice

Gilbert capping strong summer with Fantastic 40

- By Sam Gordon Las Vegas Review-journal

Durango High guard Keshon Gilbert first believed he could play at the Division I level after starring in a basketball highlight mixtape in the eighth grade.

He’s in a few more mixtapes now that he’s entering his junior year and has a few Division I scholarshi­p opportunit­ies, too.

Gilbert received offers from Long Beach State, Fresno State and UNR during his club basketball season with the Las Vegas Knicks. He is positioned to become one of the top guard prospects on the West Coast.

The 6-foot-2-inch point guard averaged 15 points in the spring and summer to lead the program’s under-16 team in scoring.

“He’s really, really helped himself (with his play) this summer,” Knicks program director Lamar Bigby said. “Tireless work ethic. He’s the hardest-working kid in the program right now. The whole program. Not even close.”

Gilbert arrived in Las Vegas as a freshman by way of Peoria, Illinois, and St. Louis, where as a child he began fantasizin­g about playing college basketball. He excelled early in his playing career and realized after seeing his highlights that he was better than the majority of his peers.

So he started working harder.

And harder.

“I felt good about that,” he said of realizing his potential. “I know that there’s going to be a target on my back at the end of the day. Everybody wants my spot.”

Gilbert debuted for Durango last season as a relative unknown with little hype but a lot of potential. He scored 40 points in a game at the Tarkanian Classic and averaged 15.3 points on 54.5 percent shooting, 4.3 rebounds and 2.8 assists.

He carried his play into the club season with the Knicks and received his first offer — from Long Beach State — in May.

“It’s a blessing, honestly, because a lot of people don’t get that opportunit­y,” Gilbert said Friday after a victory in the Fantastic 40, which continues this weekend at the Tarkanian Basketball Academy. “I don’t take it for granted. It’s a good feeling.”

Gilbert is a throwback point guard who seeks to involve his teammates before creating his own offense. He can score from either the paint or the perimeter and is a tenacious on-ball defender who instinctiv­ely hunts the ball.

Bigby said he thinks Gilbert can develop into a high-major prospect and is more impressed with his intangible­s than his skills.

“He has the ability to take over a game offensivel­y and make baskets,” Bigby said. “And he knows when to do it and when not to do it.”

Contact reporter Sam Gordon at sgordon@ reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @ Bysamgordo­n on Twitter.

 ?? Erik Verduzco Las Vegas Review-journal @Erik_verduzco ?? Las Vegas Knicks guard Keshon Gilbert takes a shot under pressure from U.T.U. Gorillas’ Jaden Charles during the Fantastic 40 tournament Friday at the Tarkanian Basketball Academy.
Erik Verduzco Las Vegas Review-journal @Erik_verduzco Las Vegas Knicks guard Keshon Gilbert takes a shot under pressure from U.T.U. Gorillas’ Jaden Charles during the Fantastic 40 tournament Friday at the Tarkanian Basketball Academy.

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