The Commercial Appeal

Winners, losers from college hoops signing day

- Scott Gleeson

College basketball’s early signing day period left some teams ecstatic and others devastated. While a good chunk of the 2020 class had already made their school picks by Wednesday, there are eight of the top 25-ranked players who are holding off on their decisions.

Although there’s still much to be determined for the outlook of the 2020-21 season, post-signing day conclusion­s can be drawn.

USA TODAY Sports tracked the signing period to see which teams bolstered their programs the most and which teams fell short (by their own standards in some cases) and were left frustrated as Wednesday’s big day concluded.

Here are the winners and losers of college hoops’ signing day:

Winner – Duke

Coach Mike Krzyzewski nabbed three five-star players and three fourstar talents to essentiall­y welcome a Fab Five-caliber batch of freshmen to Durham next season. Remember when Duke was the nemesis to the Fab Five? Times have changed, and Coach K continues to cash in on the one-and-done talent pool. While this class isn’t as topheavy as the Zion Williamson, RJ Barrett and Cam Reddish class, it could be a spectacle once put together based on the sum of its parts.

Krzyzewski is a chemistry molder, and that’ll be the key ingredient for wing Jalen Johnson (No. 4 in the composite top 100), guard Jeremy Roach (No. 22), DJ Steward (No. 25), forward Jaemyn Brakefield (No. 29), center Mark Williams (No. 30) and forward Henry Coleman (No. 41).

Loser – Kentucky

Listen, the Wildcats have a top-five class, as usual, with two five-stars and two four-stars. But by John Calipari standards, at least for now, the Wildcats are behind their fellow blue-blood competitor­s. It hurts that Cade Cunningham chose Oklahoma State over UK, especially after Cal visited him on a weekly basis, according to several reports. Kentucky

is still in the mix for two five-stars (Isaiah Jackson and Greg Brown), although neither of those two are locks and could go down to the wire, with Alabama having a slight edge on Jackson and Texas on Brown.

Winner – North Carolina

The Tar Heels have a dazzling 2020 class that’s made up of three five-star talents – center Walker Kessler (No. 20), center Day’ron Sharpe (No. 18) and point guard Caleb Love (No. 21). Factor in two additional four-star guys, and coach Roy Williams will have plenty of size and national title-caliber talent right off the bat in 2020-21, as one-anddone phenom Cole Anthony pilots UNC in 2019-20.

Loser – Memphis

Coming off news that projected No. 1 NBA draft pick James Wiseman was ruled ineligible by the NCAA, Penny Hardaway’s promising program has lost at least some of its appeal, even if Wiseman is still playing and the program is defying the NCAA. The Tigers, who had the No. 1 recruiting class of 2019, are in the running for some top 2020 players (five-stars Greg Brown and Jalen Green among them), but the timing of an illegal recruiting cloud is not ideal, and they’re way off last year’s success.

Winner – Texas Tech

On the heels of a national runner-up finish, coach Chris Beard has been busy on the recruiting trail – and it showed on signing day, as the Red Raiders landed the program’s first-ever five-star guard in Nimari Burnett, who will join two other four-stars – Micah Peavy and Chibuzo Agbo. Beard has kept Tech competitiv­e via the transfer route, but now he’s joining the top dogs.

Loser – UCLA

While Mick Cronin’s gritty style can produce a winning program with threestar talent (see his Cincinnati résumé), luring five-stars (especially in-state) to Westwood will be the key to winning over an impatient fan base that expects championsh­ip banners tomorrow. Landing top-15 point guard Daishen Nix is a perfect start, and the Bruins still appear to be a front-runner for Josh Christophe­r. But the reason Cronin isn’t a winner on this list is mostly because of the pressure he faces. It doesn’t help that in-state rival Southern California brought in the crown jewel of the 2020 class in 7-footer Evan Mobley. Former coach Steve Alford tallied several topfive classes and that became the norm, meaning a bigger haul will be expected moving forward.

Winner – Oklahoma State

Do-everything point guard Cade Cunningham (No. 1 in the composite rankings) became the program’s bestever recruit since rankings were tracked, and he’ll join four-star guard Rondel Walker to pair for a formidable backcourt in Stillwater under coach Mike Boynton.

Loser – Arizona

After an NCAA tournament-less season of irrelevanc­y last year, the Wildcats are a top 25 team again thanks to 2019’s top-15 recruiting class. Coach Sean Miller, who still is linked in the crossfire of an FBI probe, is in a downward recruiting trajectory with the Wildcats, who have brought in one fourstar guy in Dalen Terry so far.

Winner – Kansas

In spite of an NCAA notice of allegation­s hanging over the program, coach Bill Self beat out Oklahoma State and North Carolina to land five-star talent Bryce Thompson, who will join two four-star players.

After posting a top-10 freshman class last year that has coach Mike Hopkins’ team a dark-horse team to go far this year, the Huskies were nowhere to be seen on recruiting boards this time. Should this year’s talented class all go the one-and-done route, Hopkins might have to turn to the transfer pool for replacemen­ts.

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