BBall Recruiting & Scout’s 2007 Summer Top 100

I haven’t followed basketball or football recruiting with any real attention for quite a few years now. The slow death of my overall enthusiasm for NC State Basketball over the last decade combined with the exhaustion of the incessant spin from Herb Sendek’s basketball staff that almost every player the staff signed was a “diamond in the rough who is really going to suprise” completely killed my interest in the topic.

My disillusionment with recruiting (as it related to Sendek) started very early in Herb’s tenure in Raleigh when his first true recruiting class – ranked the #9 recruiting class in the country and 2nd in the ACC (with three top 60 players) never played in a single NCAA Tournament. Then I watched State’s HORRIBLE 2000-01 season unfold with the #9 class in the country playing as SENIORS on a squad supplemented by three highly ranked classes that included the #7 ranked recruiting class in the country (Gibbons).

To be fair, I don’t know what played a greater role in my dis-interested in recruiting — was it:
(a) the Groundhog Day-like selling of “the next great steal” or
(b) the relative underachievement of the more highly ranked recruits that Sendek landed. (Each of whom, of course, were supposedly much better than their rankings and were “steals” in their own right).

With all due respect to Anthony Grundy, Ilian Evtimov and Cornelius Williams…the ‘leaks’ of the last decade that every Rouldra Thomas, Dom Mejia, Mike O’Donnell, Justin Flatt, Trey Guidry, Adam Simons, Mike Bell and (insert name here) was going to be a huge surprise was just exhausting. The status quo lovers listened and believed all the while as NC State led the Atlantic Coast Conference in transfers and premature defections. These ‘secret weapons’ made zero impact on our program other than to kill our graduation rate and put us behind in the initial APR rankings released by the NCAA. (Trevor Ferguson and Dennis Horner are now on deck as the final two Sendek-recruited ‘sleepers’ that were sold to the world as ‘steals’.)

Additionally, a majority of the highly rated names that State did manage to sign in the last decade never really lived up to their high school rankings. Take a look at some of the following and tell me if their college performance matched their rankings (rankings primarily from Prepstars pulled from previous editions of ‘The Wolfpacker’):

Damon Thornton – Top 65, Prepstars
Archie Miller – #39 nationally, Prepstars; #36 nationally, Francis
Ron Kelley – #45 nationally, Prepstars; #47 nationally Recruiter’s Handbook, Gibbons
Kenny Inge – #57 nationally, Prepstars
Adam Harrington – #20 ranked recruit by Prepstars & Parade A-A
Keith Bean – #38 ranked recruit by Prepstars
Damien Wilkins – #10 nationally, Gibbons; McDonald’s AA
Marshall Williams – #32 nationally, Prepstars; Parade all-american
Clifford Crawford – #57 nationally, Prepstars
Scooter Sherrill – Top 25; McDonald’s AA
Marcus Melvin – Top 75 Prepstars
Michael Bell – Top 100 Prepstars
Julius Hodge – #7 nationally, Prepstars; McDonald’s AA
Levi Watkins – Top 40 nationally, Prepstars; Parade AA (same team as Rashad McCants)
Josh Powell – Top 80 nationally, Prepstars

Now that Sidney Lowe has been hired as NC State’s Basketball Coach, I have a renewed interest in following the recruiting game a little bit. The blog will definitely NOT go overboard with recruiting coverage…but we won’t totally ignore it, either.

Barring any unforseen defection and assuming that Andrew Brackman leaves the program to play baseball after next season, Coach Lowe/NC State should have five scholarships available to award in the 2007 recruiting class. Johnny Thomas, a swing forward from Greensboro, has already committed to one of those spots (Link to Thomas’ commitment as well as projected roster spacing)

Scout.com has released their updated rankings of the Top 100 high school basketball players in the Class of 2007. (Link) . The rankings will most definitely change as these players showcase their skills on the summer camp circuit that begins tomorrow and throughout their senior year in high school.

For those that care about rankings, Johnny Thomas was not included in Scout’s Top 100; he was listed as the #29 swing forward in the country. You need to realize that NC State’s coaches believe Thomas is the best player in the State of North Carolina next year and made a conscious decision to pursue Thomas over more highly rated recruits at the same position like Eric Wallace (to UVa) and Evan Thomas (to Ohio State). A word of caution if you follow the rankings — Thomas he turned down an invitation to the prominent ABCD Camp this summer where he would have had the opportunity to raise his personal ranking because his AAU Team has a tournament scheduled during the camp and he did not want to fall short of his team responsibilities.

Ignoring any swing forwards that may still be listing the Pack as option (because of the Johnny Thomas commitment), the following are the (currently) most highly rated names the Wolfpack is known to be pursuing for the final 3 or 4 scholarships in the 2007 class:

Chris Wright, PG, #18
JJ Hickson, PF, #24
Julian Vaughn, PF/C, #34
Dorenzo Hudson, SG, #48
Jamelle McMillan, PG/SG, #98

Quick Bytes:

* Some people close to the program have hinted that State may choose to use only four scholarships in next year’s class in order to have at least two scholarships for the 2008 class.

* Despite this^ conjecture, I would expect Coach Lowe to use his full allotment of five scholarships if State was in a position to land fantastic recruits a position of particular need – like in the paint. For example, I wouldn’t be suprised if the Pack took both Julian Vaughn and JJ Hickson if the program could be so lucky as to receive commitments from them both.

* Despite a lower ranking, Jamelle McMillan (Nate’s son) is somewhat of a key recruit because of his versatility to play both the point or the shooting guard position.

* With the presence of Courtney Fells on the roster for three more years, shooting guard is the least of State’s priorities in 2007. This need would be further decreased with a commitment from McMillan.

* The recent commitment of Farnold Degand will end up being fantastic insurance if State fails to land both Chris Wright and Jamelle McMillan…OR Degand may ultimately create a logjam at the guard position in 2008 – 2010 if State does land both of these guard prospects who could play the point.

* Degand’s presence would be PERFECT if the NCAA would allow him to play this season as opposed to mandating that he sit out of a year because of the transfer.

* We can dream about a “Fab Five” class of Thomas, Wright, McMillan Vaughn, and Hickson can’t we?

Basketball Recruiting General NCS Basketball

62 Responses to BBall Recruiting & Scout’s 2007 Summer Top 100

  1. class of 74 07/07/2006 at 7:07 AM #

    Sendek’s record was fairly consistent after year 5, the problem was he could never bring home the bacon. You could make a strong case he was the most consistent coach since Case but unlike Case, Sloan and V he was not able to hang any banners inspite of his “great” consistency! If you loved mediocrity you probably loved Sendek. Fortunately for most of us we aspire for more than mediocrity and I believe that anchor of banality was lifted when we hired Sidney.

    Sidney has brought hope to a fanbase that was in dire need of that valuable commodity. If we support Sid the glory years will return and the past 15 years will be just a bad dream we can all choose to forget.

  2. primacyone 07/07/2006 at 10:13 AM #

    This is from the Charlotte Observer so take it for what it’s worth:

    “N.C. State remains a serious contender for point guard Chris Wright after he withdrew his commitment following coach Herb Sendek’s departure for Arizona State.Wright said he plans to visit N.C. State and get to know new coach Sidney Lowe better. Lowe, like Wright, played point guard and was from the Washington, D.C., area.

    In addition to N.C. State, Wright said, he is considering Georgetown, Georgia Tech, Illinois, Miami, Wake Forest, Clemson, DePaul and Virginia Tech.

    “I want to go to a place and get immediate playing time,” he said.”

  3. choppack1 07/07/2006 at 11:35 AM #

    Thanks primacy – I was really encouraged by that article.

    redfred – I wasn’t a big fan of how Sendek handled the 2002-03 team either. I definitely believe his micromanaging hamstrung them. Regarding the Top 3, first I was considering the in-conference performance, nothing else. You could make the argument that only one team has won at a high level the last 3 years and that’s Duke since they were the only team above .500 all 3 years. Of course, that only makes my point that you have to have these high-impact players – and even then, that’s not always enough.

  4. primacyone 07/07/2006 at 2:28 PM #

    Rivals update from the Nike Camp. Context below taken out of linked article. I was not sure whether to post this here are under the “Lowe: Ready for This” thread. He seems ready. Heck ,he beat Herb Sendeck to the gym.

    http://hickoryhusker.rivals.com/content.asp?CID=559313

    “All eyes on you

    The first head coach in the gym for the 2:30 games? How about new NC State head man Sidney Lowe. It is his first outing as the Pack’s leader and he didn’t waste any time finding a seat front and center for the afternoon games.

    Lowe wasn’t the only head coach making it in to the NIFS Center. Head coaches in the house included: Bill Self (Kansas), Paul Hewitt (Georgia Tech), Herb Sendek (Arizona State), Ben Howland (UCLA), Tom Crean (Marquette), Bruce Weber (Illinois), Rick Barnes (Texas), Jay Wright (Villanova), Bob Huggins (Kansas State), Matt Painter (Purdue), Sean Miller (Xavier), Mike Anderson (Missouri), Steve Fisher (San Diego State), Sean Sutton (Oklahoma State), Dave Leitao (Virginia), Seth Greenberg (Virginia Tech), Greg McDermott (Iowa State), Lute Olson (Arizona), and others.”

  5. primacyone 07/07/2006 at 2:34 PM #

    ^ I’d bet he was wearing RED too.

  6. choppack1 07/07/2006 at 2:36 PM #

    Good find and great to here. Why do I have a feeling Sid is going to be a great salesman?

  7. Wulfpack 07/07/2006 at 5:21 PM #

    If mediocrity is considered making 5 straight NCAA’s, then the remainder of the conference is falling WELL short.

    And I’m the blind one????

  8. StateFans 07/07/2006 at 5:34 PM #

    ^ You must have been blind to the fact that during those “5 Straight NCAAs”

    That FOUR DIFFERENT ACC teams played in Final Fours (some multiple times)

    THREE DIFFERENT ACC teams WON NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIPS

    FOUR DIFFERENT ACC teams garnered #1 rankings

    SIX DIFFERENT ACC programs achieved signficantly more time ranked in the Top 10 than NC State did with our 1 or 2 weeks at the beginning of a single season

    And at least 6 programs compiled a BETTER season during those 5 years than our best season.

    For more on the “accomplishment” of going to 5 in a row, please click here.

    As a good friend of mine said just today related to the Carolina Hurricanes:

    REAL winning, not that lukewarm “at least we got to the tourney even if we didn’t do anything!” kind. I was at at 4th of July party telling 2 Sabres and Devils fans that it didn’t really matter that the Canes stunk in between finals appearances, and even if they lost players and struggled next season. The point is to WIN (conference and league) TITLES, not just make the post-season repeatedly. It’s what Herb Sendek and his cult never “got.” Championship runs are what it’s all about. Especially in pro sports in a salary cap era, trying to be “consistently pretty good” thinking you’ll slowly make it to the top like the little engine that could just doesn’t work.

    Let’s get back to the topic now.

  9. redfred2 07/08/2006 at 12:21 PM #

    “If mediocrity is considered making 5 straight NCAA’s, then the remainder of the conference is falling WELL short.”

    Wulf, that is a fact. Now if you will just start believing your own statement, and base your thoughts on NC State as being an elite basketball program like our new coach, we will all be able move on from here.

  10. Wulfpack 07/10/2006 at 2:01 PM #

    I understand our results have not been what we as fans expect of our program. However, the point to me is I’d rather be NCSU today than Wake, GT, Maryland (even with a title), Clemson, UVA, FSU, VT and Miami. We were NOT mediocre. We were consistently good…not great. As I said, the previous administration had its faults and Lowe will seek to correct those. At the same time, if Lowe goes to 5 straight tourneys and a Sweet 16 and we still whine, are we going to grant him the support to do the job or are we going to rat out a guy who was doing very, very well in relation to his peers.

  11. redfred2 07/10/2006 at 8:18 PM #

    Wulf, You are unreal.

    Even with what I think was possibly his most all around talented team by far last year, we were far behind where were at other points in his preceeding 9 years and not making progress. If you have an answer, think hard and try to do it without mentioning Les Robinson or the five straight NCAA’s, they were debunked long ago.

    If Lowe makes 5 straight NCAA’s but consistently loses games because of the lack of his own imagination, which will be quickly evident in the fading confidence of his players as a result, he will not be BLINDLY granted support from the majority of us. If all of his resources are used to their fullest and players are allowed to play full bore as hard as they can, I will say ONE MORE TIME, then we can all be happy with good results. We all want the greatness to return but all we are asking for beyond “good” is a vision that derives it confidence from our great accomplishments of the past and a true belief that it can and will happen again. Seeing some concrete evidence of it taking shape at least from time to time with a least a slight hint of consistency, will grant Sidney Lowe more support than you could ever imagine. Just those few simple things would be a far cry from the constant no where direction we were heading in until now.

  12. redfred2 07/11/2006 at 1:22 PM #

    One more thing Wulf, it was so much incredibly harder just to even get into the NCAA tournament in especially back in ’74 when DT and crowd ruled over a talented and perrenial winner like UCLA but also in ’83, than it is today. Just shake down the talent playing especially in the ACC and the nation during either of those time periods. I already know you didn’t witness it for yourself.

    Just like everything else these days, the tournament has been totally watered down with more undeserved teams, more media coverage, all for the sake big $$$’s, and of course to be politically correct and absolutely fair to include all the also-rans of the world. It hasn’t always been as your narrow frame of reference leads you to believe.

    Wulf, you are right, this is not 1974 or even ’83, it was a hell of a lot tougher to get into post season play back then. Comparing 5 NCAA trips now to anything back then, is absolute and uneducated non sense. I know that for a fact, I was around, and witnessed it all for myself.

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