Take A Look At The 2013-14 Freshman Class for Wolfpack Basketball

While the potential losses of players from the NC State program due to graduation, turning pro or even transferring will be heavy, the roster for next year will definitely see an infusion of talent into the program that will pave the way for a solid squad that will be the core of a potential ACC championship-level squad over the next few years.   The ’13-’14 class players are incredibly talented, have a high level of basketball IQ and are going to make the Wolfpack faithful quite happy while they are here in Raleigh.   They are

Cat Barber

The nationally third-ranked point guard in the class of 2013, according to CBS Sports, Cat Barber has the tools to be a starter in Raleigh from day one over Tyler Lewis, who proved himself to be an effective player at the ACC level in the second half of last season.  He has excellent speed — and a lightning fast first step — and has the moved to beat defenders off of the dribble into the lane.  There, Barber is a solid finisher with a high scoring percentage.  He’s also got good accuracy from beyond the three point line, making him a double-threat who will serve to loosen up packed in defenses that want to stop the Wolfpack bigs from scoring.  Barber is also in superb condition now — he won’t come into the program as a young stick-figure type still growing into his body.

One of Barber’s skills — jumping into passing lanes and going the other way on the fast break — will be something that can change games in a hurry and will be a skill that will suit the uptempo style of ball that has become the standard since Mark Gottfried came to Raleigh.

Here’s a couple quick looks at Barber:

BeeJay Anya

Hailing from Germantown, Maryland, BeeJay Anya follows a long line of Wolfpack players to come from top-notch DeMatha Catholic High School: former Wolfpack greats Kenny Carr, Sidney Lowe and Derek Whittenberg are former Stags, as are other great players such as Keith Bogans, Adrian Dantley, Joseph Forte and Danny Ferry.  He could well be the replacement for the graduating Richard Howell, a player who’s post presence was quite often the savior of many a Wolfpack offensive possession the past couple of seasons.  The 6’9″ Anya is a muscular 265 pounds, and will be a load for defenders to keep away from the rim.

He’s been described as an “old school center” – the kind of player who makes the paint his own and one who is not afraid to use his bulk to earn himself room to operate.  He’s also been described as having “freakishly long arms” – he has a 7’9″ wingspan but still needs to work a bit on his offense.  The upside on Anya is incredible, and depending on how quickly the young man grows his game at the college level, the Wolfpack could have Richard Howell’s replacement in uniform at the start of the season.

Kyle Washington

Kyle Washington, a four-star recruit, may have a lot to talk about with “Washington is an extra long and athletic lefty power forward that is oozing with potential,” according to ESPN.com’s scouting report. “He runs the floor effortlessly. Can finish drop off passes created by dribble penetration on the break and in the half court with length not strength.” Washington chose N.C. State over Louisville, Ohio State, Washington, Marquette and several other Division I schools.

Brewster Academy’s head coach, Jason Smith, told [bleacherreport.com’s Jon Hancock] of Washington, “Kyle is an excellent forward who can be successful at any program in the nation. He’s a tremendous young man who would be a great asset to any college community and program.”

Washington is also a good defensive rebounder, blocks shots, hustles constantly and often scores easy baskets as a result of his hard play.  From the looks of the tape I have seen, Washington has a sweet hook shot and in some ways recalls Thurl Bailey with stronger defense at this point in his career.  Those comparisons can be dangerous, however, as Bailey was a bona fide ACC stalwart who then had a 11-year stint in the NBA, followed by four in Europe before finally finishing out his pro days back in the Association for one last year.  Washington has yet to accomplish any of that, of course, but at first look, he definitely stirs memories of Bailey…and if he turns out to anything like Bailey was in a Wolfpack uniform, State fans will be happy indeed with this young man’s play.

Obviously, Gottfried does have some holes to fill, however, as the misses on Julius Randle and other players, plus players like Lorenzo Brown and CJ Leslie turning pro could leave the Pack in a pinch for bodies to put on the floor.  Some of that will come from Ralston Turner, the LSU transfer that becomes eligible next year, and still other help could come from SG Desmond Lee, a highly sought SG from the Juco ranks who’s visiting Raleigh this week.  CJ Leslie — whose draft stock took a dip in 2012/13 — could return and give the Wolfpack some scoring power.  If Leslie does return, and if his defense and mid-range jumper were to improve over the offseason, then State could be a young but quite dangerous squad in the 2013/14 season.

 

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103 Responses to Take A Look At The 2013-14 Freshman Class for Wolfpack Basketball

  1. vtpackfan 03/29/2013 at 8:50 AM #

    Screw all these people’s rampant “transfer” jibber-jabber and it all falls on the shoulder of the HC (like he’s either the best CEO or near worst and needs to be cut loose sooner over later).

    Anyone ever taken a look at how many friggin HS many these players have been on? It’s common to see at least three, and four or five are not that much anomaly. Romper Room just doesn’t even come up and counts as a fraction.

    This all has to do with one thing-jockeying for class positioning at your chosen spot in the lineup. I went to my home town HS, and played combo guard. OMG, a very talented player was unfortunately born one year after me. He was so good a SG that most of my minutes were reduced, but my role I could play on D and providing depth at 2 guard positions was very valuable to the team and my sense of efficacy.

    But I should have found another HS- then anther, and another. The goal should be to always play, get a couple YouTube games, and not have anyone show the videos you went 1-15 from the field and shot about 50% from charity stripe. It doesn’t matter-coach can’t find anyone to put in place because you found the school where no one competes with you at your position.

  2. PoppaJohn 03/29/2013 at 10:24 AM #

    Hilarious to watch. No games to criticize, so you turn on each other.

    If Rodney is locker room poison -as has been suggested – or has academic issues – as has been suggested – then let him leave. We’ll be better off. I am disappointed because he does have some skills.

    I’m glad we are shooting for the moon in our recruiting. I don’t want to be exclusively recruiting TOB’s “solid citizens”. UNC and Duke lose players to transfer also. We seem to have had more than our share recently, but the program has been in disarray for years. Actually using the word “program” is almost a misnomer. We are now building a program. Once established as a perennial NCAAT team and competitor in the league, it should settle down a bit.

    TJ is the one that worries me, but hopefully his Dad will help us. He has the chance to be All ACC as long as he stays, so a critical component to our success.

  3. Texpack 03/29/2013 at 10:56 AM #

    So the epidemic of transfers consists of Harrow, Painter, and possibly Purvis. Painter had personal reasons for transferring. Harrow had the mental toughness of a 5 year old.

  4. Ed89 03/29/2013 at 11:07 AM #

    ^Painter had personal reasons for transferring.

    Yea, he wanted more playing time.

  5. Ed89 03/29/2013 at 11:10 AM #

    BTW, I probably could have gotten playing time at ODU.

    I would like to know about Davis. I generally don’t care for guys who transfer out, but is there any substance to him wanted to come back? I did like the kid, and he played hard.

  6. WolfTrack 03/29/2013 at 11:15 AM #

    Those are the starter level guys who transferred. Excluding them I have to think the team would have been significantly tougher with a bench of Harris, DeTheay and even Raymond in place of walkons at the 7-10 spots. EVEN if they only played 5-7 minutes (I think they would have had more) they are still pushing guys in practice.

  7. Ed89 03/29/2013 at 11:24 AM #

    ^they are still pushing guys in practice.

    DING, DING! Refer to my comments back in December. It killed us this year, and will kill us next year if we don’t add 2-3 more players to Barber, Anya, Washington, and Turner.

  8. JEOH2 03/29/2013 at 11:35 AM #

    And Wolftrack is on the right…track…my problem w transfers is how it affects practice…you can win going 7 deep IF 8-10 are scholarship worthy players…the benefits from scrimmages and drills suffer when you have walk-ons battling McD All-Americans…preparation for your opponents is lacking when the other teams star forward has to be played by a 6’7 freshman walk-on…

    MG comes from a background where his mentors, Harrick & Wooden used fairly short benches…but hopefully he sees that in order to get/keep important role players for depth they have to actually play…

    Hate to use Ole Roy as an example but, U*NC was not very deep this year talent-wise…but guys like Desmond Hubert and Jackson Simmons were given some time…and while these guys don’t seem like world beaters now…in a couple years they will still be at U*NC providing solid depth for a top10/15 team…gotta have (and keep) guys like that

  9. vtpackfan 03/29/2013 at 11:54 AM #

    Triad^^^^

    I can understand that Barber/AI comparisons shouldn’t be looked at as a longitudinal similarity.

    Part if Iversons game got shaped by Thompsons inability to teach anything offensively. Iverson may have had the predisposition to shoot all day long, but there can be no doubt that “Big John” gave him the Green light on the matter. One can even see that carrying over to the 76ers with Larry Brown-another coach who only focuses on D and didn’t have any concept of sharing the load offensively. Manning at KU was a one man show, and Rip Hamilton was so bad that Chauncey Billups just had to take matters over and prove himself he was a constant threat to score.

    Gott will be a great mentor and instructor to Barber of how and when to take good shots in our offense. I really believe he has a great opportunity to play both backcourt positions, log many minutes, and turn some ballots in for ROY.

  10. Rochester 03/29/2013 at 12:41 PM #

    I don’t know Painter and have no idea what his true motivation for leaving was. It may really have been his grandmother’s illness. Or that may have been just the right card to play to avoid sitting out a year.

    Aside from crybaby Harrow and TDT, most kids aren’t going to burn bridges when they leave. Time will tell how well guys like Tyler Harris and Jaqawn Raymond develop and if they would ever have been assets. But as alluded to above, they were at least legitimate practice ballers, no offense to the walk-ons, who could all play circles around most of the rest of us.

    I am by no means banging any drum to get rid of Gott. There are a lot of things I like about the guy, particularly his fire and willingness to accept the challenge of the blues. But this is one thing I don’t. Six transfers in 24 months seems high to me. If we don’t have any for the next couple of years, well, no big deal in the end, and all is forgotten. But it’s enough to make me wonder if there’s more than playing time at issue.

  11. travelwolf 03/29/2013 at 1:39 PM #

    Having followed college basketball for 30 years, it pains me to say this, but so far the signs show that evidently MG is not the coach we all hoped for. He’s a good coach, a great recruiter, but not a great coach. The signs… multiple transfers, an underachieving team, lack of disciplined team play, losing after a big win. Yes, this year could have been an anomaly, and it’s too early to say that I am definitely correct, but right now I’m thinking this way. I hope I’m wrong.

  12. doug 03/29/2013 at 2:10 PM #

    damn quit crying over things that have not happened yet. WE just had the best two back to back season in 20 years give some credit.

  13. highstick 03/29/2013 at 2:15 PM #

    “he won’t even find that at Atlantic Christian.”

    LOL! Man, you’re dating yourself! (There’s a blond joke buried in that line too!)

  14. ringo 03/29/2013 at 2:44 PM #

    Doug,

    Short, sweet, and right on target. Well done.

  15. vtpackfan 03/29/2013 at 2:55 PM #

    “MG is not the coach we hoped for”.

    “What we (a large portion of the fanbase) hope for” show a lot of signs too. For every Gott (or insert Head Coach name) has raised many red flags, WPN could easily look in the mirror and find as many red flags that the national media has pegged for.

    Two years. Haven’t even seen the second recruiting class ENROLL. Anywhere from 3 to 5 players from this years team could make an NBA roster.

    Any cosch walks into this culture knowing it’s career derailer. Gott just happened to have nothing to lose. We could fire him next season and have Archie Miller be our “safety net”. He would turn it down and get a raise from Dayton even if they were an NIT team.

  16. vtpackfan 03/29/2013 at 3:08 PM #

    Recruiting related:

    When he was hired he retained commits from two Larry Harris guys; Harris and DeQuan whoever (sorry). Gott called the recruit of the class Calvin Leslie.

    Could history repeat itself? He talked Leslie out of leaving for pro’s or transferring once when he had no personal relationship. He’s capable of it again, though it seems unlikely. Roy Williams has pulled this rabbit out of the hat so many times that I wouldn’t sell Gott short of making it happen once.

  17. wolfpackdawg 03/29/2013 at 3:26 PM #

    Stevens just turned UCLA down…Lol

  18. vtpackfan 03/29/2013 at 3:35 PM #

    They should go all in on Marshall. He is going to take a huge lump of salary just based on this impressive post season. After him-it’s a complete FAIL-maybe come back at Gott with a share of ownership of the Lakers 😉

  19. doug 03/29/2013 at 4:22 PM #

    I have had more fun the last two years than the past 2o together. Think about this guards win titles. Lewis,Purvis and Barber I like.

  20. Tau837 03/29/2013 at 5:46 PM #

    Someone mentioned six transfers, apparently assuming Purvis is gone. ho are they? But most have not hurt:

    Painter – hurt the team; could have been about Grandmother or about playing time

    Harrow – addition by subtraction given his attitude; didn’t hurt, since Brown would not have moved to PG if he stayed, plus Purvis may not have committed with Brown at SG

    TDT – addition by subtraction given his attitude; may have hurt a bit, hard to tell given we didn’t see him play much

    Harris – addition by subtraction, even if due to his Dad; I can’t believe it hurt, because I think he would have been a negative influence on the team

    Raymond – not an ACC caliber player, so no loss

  21. doug 03/29/2013 at 5:51 PM #

    I agree TAU837

  22. wolfpack4ever 03/29/2013 at 8:26 PM #

    I have to think that our starters practicing against walk- ons did not help our situation any. There are obviously situations going on behind the scenes. I have no access to know who or what. However, I just cannot envision continued progress with 6 – 7 player rotation and little to no bench talent.

  23. vtpackfan 03/29/2013 at 9:54 PM #

    Anya has got really long arms and he lowers them to collect himself before taking it up strong. This really hampered Richard as he had the ball raked out a bunch. Refs just won’t call that foul unless that contact happens with arms extended up (well, at least outside the ACC)

    Losing some pounds and getting in the gym will get him some bounce off the floor. With that he will become a monster shot blocker. I love blocked shots kept in play because teams who love to run and get up an down in transition thrive on that stuff. Even Washington shows nice help side shot blocking potential.

  24. vtpackfan 03/29/2013 at 10:30 PM #

    Desmond Lee hanging out with Gott and watching Sweet 16 games.

    Get this: I don’t know how these JuCo programs operate but Lee averaged 17 minutes a game. He was averaging just over 20 pts

    His calculated points per 40 minutes is 49 points. He shoots the three at only a 33% clip, but gets to the line a ton and is 78% there. If his defense is solid then we would really hit pay dirt with his commit.

    Have to think playing near his home of Norfolk should be in our favor. Baylor, Illinois and a few others a long ways from home are the only ones to beat.

  25. motorhead 03/30/2013 at 7:49 AM #

    Good points VTPACK. To say that we need a commitment from Desmond Lee is an understatement at this point.

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