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Recruiting OLB Donovan Darden picks South Carolina...

Havelock (N.C.) High senior outside linebacker Donovan Darden picked South Carolina and Clayton White over NC State and Illinois. I believe he'd be the third Havelock player to go there, with wide receiver Pharoh Cooper and tackle Corey Robinson both making the NFL.
Darden grew up in South Carolina and his family has deep roots in the Palmetto State, with his mother going to Clemson.

This is a two things can be true at the same time situation ... Darden was going to be a linebacker project as he didn't have too much experience at the position yet, so it should be hard to find similar caliber prospects. Yet, this stings in that NC State jumped in late, got him on campus, had his former teammate Javonte Vereen host him and he still picked South Carolina. That means the Wolfpack went 0-fer at the linebacker position.

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Recruiting Wednesday's Nike Peach Jam recap...

NORTH AUGUSTA, S.C. — The Nike Peach Jam had one door re-open while another one closed sort to speak Wednesday.

CP3 senior small forward Jackson Keith had been playing well, but got hurt after taking a tumble and has returned home to Durham, N.C. The Southern Durham High standout ended his three-game Peach Jam with 22.7 points and 7.7 rebounds per game, and he shot 23 of 41 from the field (5 of 9 on three-pointers) in the Peach Invitational, which is the secondary event for Nike.

With Keith gone, CP3 welcomed back senior point guard Isaiah Denis of Davidson (N.C.) Day. Dennis had missed some games this week, but came back Tuesday. NC State offered Denis after watching him during the two live periods in June with Davidson Day.

The slender 6-foot-5 Denis, who can play both guard spots, had to lead a CP3 team that was down to six healthy players. Clemson senior power forward commit Trent Steinour of Lake Norman (N.C.) High joined Keith on the injured list, and wing Zacch Wiggins had left before the event for Team Curry.

Denis and CP3 played a quality Pro Skills Elite squad, which had two ranked senior players in No. 63-ranked point guard Jeremiah Green of Bel Air (Kan.) Sunrise Christian Academy and .No. 146-ranked Francis Chukwudebelu of Mouth of Wilson (Va.) Oak Hill Academy. Add in senior wing Bryson Wheatfall of Houston (Texas) Summer Creek, and it has some pieces.

Denis and the quad didn’t get off to a good start, but hung around and hung around. With about three minutes left in the third quarter, Denis got activated. He unofficially scored 13 of his 21 points in the last 11 minutes of the game to help force overtime. Denis and senior wing Isaiah Henry were carrying the short-handed CP3 squad.

Denis finished with three three-pointers, which is one of the big keys for him. When he shoots the ball well, it makes the rest of his game look better. He’s so explosive in the open court and is similar in style to former Pittsburgh freshman guard Carlton “Bub” Carrington, who went in the first round of the NBA Draft to the Washington Wizards.

Michigan, Ohio State and Pittsburgh are locked in for official visits, and then Denis wants to visit maybe two or three more colleges. NC State is in a dog fight for one of those last visits, and Tennessee is trying too.

There has been a lot of buzz about the Buckeyes in this recruitment, thanks to having assistant coach Joel Justus and his cousin also played basketball there.

***

Nicolet, Wis., native Davion Hannah had a game that he’ll likely forget about due to how bad the score got.

Hannah, who is transferring to Branson (Mo.) Link Academy Prep, is ranked No. 27 overall by Rivals.com in the class of 2025. He plays for Tyler Herro sponsored Team Herro, sharing perimeter duties with Herro’s younger brother. The team has a shooting guard going to Wisconsin, a rugged power forward going to Iowa State and another power forward slotted for Northern Iowa. It’s not a bad team.

Arguably the top team in the EYBL, Nightrydas Elite of Florida, boat-raced Team Herro 88-58. The score was 49-15 at halftime and 72-29 after three quarters.

The Nightrydas are loaded:

No. 2-overall ranked power forward Cameron Boozer
No. 4-overall ranked power forward Caleb Wilson
No. 20-overall ranked point guard Cayden Boozer
No. 72-overall ranked shooting guard Alex Lloyd (Florida commit)
No. 90-overall ranked point guard Dante Allen

Now, Hannah had some struggles. There was one stretch where he turned the ball over back-to-back and Nightrydas got fast-paced dunks. Sometimes he tries too hard to get a shot off and over-dribbles. He has a solid body that will get stronger after a college S&C program and he’s motivated on the court.

Hannah finished going 4 of 16 from the field and 2 of 5 on three-pointers en route to 14 points. He added six rebounds, one assist and had four turnovers.

Hannah has a long list, but is hoping to officially visit NC State on Oct. 5, but he’ll see at least four schools before he gets to Raleigh (if he gets to Raleigh).

***

My last day of Peach Jam will be Thursday, with Team United 15s and Team United 17s on the docket.

That means watching senior power forward Zymicah Wilkins of Arden (N.C.) Christ School, who I have seen all three spring/summers of his traveling team career.

Wilkins play against Boston-based Expressions Elite, who has Marquette-bound guard Nigel James, Providence-bound forward Jaylen Harrell and wing Dwayne Aristode comes in highly regarded as No. 19 in the class of 2025.

Syracuse commit Sadiq White will help out Wilkins, and word is that White will be leaving the Charlotte area for Bradenton (Fla.) IMG Academy.

The Team United 15s squad features freshman King Gibson, a shooting guard, power forward Clarence Rosser Jr., center Charles Pur and small.forward Josiah Johnson-Freeman.

***

Some this and that…

Solid crowd came at Noon to watch Bryce James, son of LeBron, play against Arizona Unity, which has the current No. 1 junior in the country in point guard Brandon McCoy.

James went 2 of 10 for four points, and while has elite connections, and can produce clicks. McCoy had 19 points, six rebounds and five assists.

Maybe Team Takeover can be the team that can top Nightrydas in the playoffs. TTO has three quality guards in seniors Nykolas Lewis and Derek Dixon and junior Jordan Smith.

The race for No. 1 in the class of 2027 seems wide open and it will be interesting to see how C.J. Rosser looks today. Sophomore small forward Baba Oladotun of James Hubert Blake High in Colesville, Md., is really similar to Rosser in both build and style of play, and is another one in contention. Another aspect that links them is that Rosser's mom played basketball at Virginia Tech, and Oladotun's father also played basketball for the Hokies.

Holly Springs, N.C., native Ryan Crotty has been torching the nets from deep for Boo Williams this spring. He hit a wall Wednesday and had a tough one against Albany City Rooks, shooting 4 of 15 from the field and 1 of 9 on three-pointers. He entered the game shooting 11 of 25 on 3-pointers this week.

Recruiting Tuesday's Nike Peach Jam recap...

NORTH AUGUSTA, S.C. — The main event for NC State basketball recruiting purposes Tuesday at the Nike Peach Jam in North Augusta, S.C., was CP3 16s vs. Boo Williams.

To provide the context, the updated class of 2026 hot board is littered with players in this game. The top player going in was Greensboro (N.C.) Caldwell Academy junior wing Cole Cloer, but he is joined by junior football-basketball standouts Kendre’ Harrison and Dionte Neal of Reidsville (N.C.) High and Jaire Richburg of Kernersville (N.C.) East Forsyth.

Add in junior Antonio McKoy of Harrells (N.C.) Christian and junior small forward Josiah Sanders of Fayetteville (N.C.) Berean Baptist has joined them after playing with Team Loaded VA 16s last week on adidas. CP3 is one of the top teams in the 16s division and reigning champions from the 15s.

But why that game is heightened with Boo Williams is because of how hard that Hampton, Va., area program recruits North Carolina hard. Four of Boo Williams key players are from North Carolina — junior point guard Kobe Edwards of Wilson (N.C.) Greenfield School, junior small forward Michael Phillips of Raleigh Grace Christian, junior center Will Stevens of Davidson (N.C.) Day and power forward Rivers Knight of Durham (N.C.) Jordan.

Then the cherry on top for CP3 came when NBA star Chris Paul decided to coach the group, which he’s done in the past at Peach Jam with his program. College coaches won't arrive until 6 p.m. Friday, but can watch online.

The game got ugly fast and was never competitive, with CP3 rolling 66-44. Edwards had to make a heave at the end of the first quarter to cut it to 26-8.

In terms of evaluating, the three most productive CP3 players were Harrison and Richburg for CP3, plus junior point guard Q Williams of Lewisville (N.C.) Forsyth Country. Stevens was the lone player to play well for Boo Williams. Harrison has cut his list to North Carolina, Tennessee, Oregon, Florida State, Miami (Fla.) and Penn State. Obviously a lot of heavy NIL hitters in the group and North Carolina. He had 14 points and nine boards and owned the paint at 6-6 and 249 pounds.

NC State has offered Richburg at wide receiver and he went 6 of 8 for 14 points and showed an improved lefty jumper. He’d be a mid-major prospect in hoops.

Cloer has come back this week after his scary injury in mid-May, but he struggled to get into the flow of the game and didn’t play like his attacking normal self, and finished with two points. Sanders came off the bench and had six points and six rebounds in just nine minutes. The general consensus is that he’s going to be a really good player, but it’s going to take some patience.

The 6-10 Stevens had 16 points and eight rebounds and even hit a three-pointer. He’s trending toward being a high-major target, but he’d be a steal for a Atlantic 10 program like Richmond or Davidson.

Phillips and Edwards entered the game with such momentum, and no player gets graded just on one game, but both just didn’t have it. Phillips went 1 of 8 for four points and Edwards was 3 of 9 for nine points, but listed for seven turnovers.

It was good to see Knight player after an injury-riddled campaign at Lincolnton (N.C.) Combine Academy. He started of the spring with Team United and switched to Boo Williams. He’s the classic 6-8 pick-and-pop power forward and swished three jumpers. He had eight points and seven rebounds.

***

The other 16s game played with a pair of North Carolina natives was Memphis, Tenn.-based Team Thad vs. MoKan Elite. Team Thad, which is sponsored by former NBA player Thaddeus Young, has Charlotte Chambers junior wing Tarris Bouie and former Charlotte Mallard Creek point guard Rassell Young, who is now going to Huntington (W.Va.) Prep.

Bouie showed why he’s ascending as a prospect. He finished with 16 points but Team Thad got blown out 71-48. Bouie has been an interesting prospect from the jump. I got to see him play with Team Eat 15s last year and he showed flashes, but he was super skinny. I remember thinking, that is probably what Huntersville (N.C.) North Mecklenburg star Isaiah Evans looked like when he was a freshman.

Bouie is now 6-4 and 155 pounds, so I probably saw him a year ago in the 140ish range. He played with junior Markus Kerr on a fun Chambers squad, and really started to come on down the stretch. He poured in a career-high 40 points against Matthews (N.C.) Weddington in the NCHSAA 4A playoffs. He cracked 20 points in five games and his second highest scoring game was 24 points against Huntersville (N.C.) Hopewell High.

In recruiting, he broke through when Wake Forest offered him, and then Mississippi State. However, he’s gone to a different level of late and Alabama just offered him this past week. It’s funny to say that about the Crimson Tide in basketball recruiting, but like their football counterparts, their offers mean something in hoops in 2024.

Obviously, some teams aren’t crazy about thin wings, but NC State just had 160-pound Terquavion Smith, so exceptions can be made. Between Bouie and Kerr, Chambers will be seen pretty thoroughly next winter.

Young really struggled in this particular game. He had a good freshman year year at Mallard Creek, and then became a hot name with Garner Road 15s for his three-point shooting. He had a uneven sophomore year at Mallard Creek and got suspended at the start of it. He is going to need to reinvent himself at Huntington Prep, where he’ll play with top five senior shooting guard Darryn Peterson.

•••

The two main players to watch Wednesday in separate games is Team Herro shooting guard Davion Hannah and CP3 small forward Jackson Keith. It’s clear when you see the addition of R.J. Greer and the likely commitment of Bryce Heard of Homewood-Flossmoor in Homewood, Ill., at 3:30 p.m. July 24, that NC State is about getting wings to go with Paul McNeil and Treymane Parker on future rosters.

Then add in the pursuit of Hannah, who is from Nicolet, Wis., and is going Branson (Mo.) Link Year Prep, and it just reinforces it. NC State isn’t waiting to get wings in the portal, they want to collect a group from the prep ranks.

Hannah might break the unofficial record for most official visits in a row:

Alabama — Aug. 31
Louisville — Sept. 7
Wisconsin — Sept. 14
Ohio State — Sept. 20
Michigan State — Sept. 27
NC State — Oct. 5
Cincinnati — Oct. 12
Pittsburgh — Oct. 19
Xavier — TBD

He also could take two official visits and commit, but it’s going to be interesting to watch how many of those nine schools he goes to in light of new NCAA rules on official visits.

Hannah and Heard were both part of the Mac Irivin Fire organization a year ago, but Hannah switched to Team Herro, which has Iowa State and Wisconsin commits as teammates. He is a true bucket getter who wants to score 20-plus points and has a solid frame.

Keith has a Notre Dame official visit, and it has long felt like NC State could be his leader if the Wolfpack push for a commitment. He’ll know by the end of this month if North Carolina will offer or not probably.

***

The best performance I watched Tuesday was easily Miikka Muurinen, who is from Finland, but attends Chandler (Ariz.) AZ Compass Prep. The 6-foot-10 slender power forward had 33 points, went 7 of 10 on three-pointers and blocked four shots in a win for Bradley Beal Elite 16s. He's a weight room away and will need to find some a go-to action in the mid-range game from making another big jump in his game. He was ranked No. 20 at one point by Rivals, then fell to No. 39, but looked like a top 10 prospect Tuesday. Lauri Markkanen of the Utah Jazz is from Finland and the comparison is strong. At worst, he's a good three-point shooter and shot-blocker in college as a stretch four.

Murrinen's teammate on Bradley Beal Elite (Beal himself came to the game) is junior small forward J.J. Andrews, who NC State just offered. He's athletic, physical and can shoot well enough to keep a defense honest. His dad played on the offensive line at Arkansas and was a first-round NFL Draft pick. His uncle did the throws at Ole Miss, went out for football his senior year, and went in the fourth round of the NFL Draft.

Recruiting Saturday's adidas 3SSB recap...

ROCK HILL, S.C. — Semifinal Saturday saw the end of Team Loaded VA 17s run, and championship Sunday is set.

Utah Prospects defeated Team Loaded VA in a slower-paced halfcourt battle, 52-49. NC State senior guard target Kaden Magwood continued his terrific play, making three-pointers and being creative. That was the fourth game of seeing him play this week and he’s the ideal guard for NC State coach Kevin Keatts. Naturally, as has happened on the trail to NC State many times in the past, now Kansas has jumped in with a offer Saturday. The two adidas-sponsored programs always seem to end up battling over a few players each year.

Team Loaded VA will play Compton Magic in the third place game. Compton Magic had a small lead against Indiana Elite and were poised to win, and then just couldn’t finish them off and lost in Overtime. Senior center Malachi Moreno was terrific and he’s apparently going to be a major Indiana vs. Kentucky battle, though many others are trying. Indiana Elite also has senior wing Braylon Mullins and senior small forward Trent Sisley, who are high-major players, and one of its guards will be a future defensive back at Notre Dame. They were my pick going into the quarterfinals and I think they’ll defeat the Utah Prospects, who are led by star junior guard Ikenne Alozie of Dream City Christian in Glendale, Ariz.

***

The chance to see Garner Road 16s and junior power forward Cody Peck of Matthews (N.C.) Carmel Christian came undone Saturday. Peck re-injured his right thumb and will be out for a while, which is a shame because he was just starting to roll prior to the injury. Add in junior point guard Chaise Smith of Washington (N.C.) High being out with a hip injury and Garner Road was beaten up.

Garner Road 15s with Raleigh native Jordan Page did battle back in the consolation bracket and made it to Sunday. Page, who is one of the top 2027 prospects in the country, plays at 1:30 p.m. today in the last round of games in the event.

***

NC State has always, always recruited the heck out of the Team Loaded organization, and the 15s Virginia-based squad has reached the title game against New World of Washington, D.C. area. Two class of 2027 wings, who could be on the radar soon of high majors in the region could be New World’s 6-6 Jacoby Briscoe of Upper Marlboro (Md.) Riverdale Baptist High, who has a beautiful jumper, and Team Loaded VA wing Kirby Duran of Bishop McNamara in Forestville, Md.

Team Loaded VA also has an intriguing shooting guard in class of 2027 two-sport athlete Sequel Patterson of Lancaster (S.C.) Indian Land High. He already has football offers from Boston College, Georgia Tech, Kentucky, Maryland, North Carolina, Pittsburgh, South Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia Tech, Appalachian State, Charlotte, Coastal Carolina, James Madison and Eastern Kentucky.

Patterson plays like an alpha male in hoops, is quick and can score in bunches. We’ll see if NC State football ends up jumping in at some point, since South Carolina has become a major battleground for the Wolfpack football program.

***

It’s always interesting to see the next generation of players, who have had parents or relatives be successful in basketball. Just a small smattering of guys:

Junior wing Brandon Bass Jr. has a chance to be terrific and is ranked No. 50 overall in the class of 2026. His dad Brandon Bass Sr. was No. 11 overall in the class of 2003 coming out of Baton Rouge, La., and stayed home for college at LSU.

Class of 2027 center Obinna Ekezie Jr. has a bright future and is already 6-11. His dad was a burly post player at Maryland and made the NBA.

Senior power forward Chamberlain Burgess showed a lot of upside at a long 6-9, due to a great wingspan. He’s the nephew of former Duke/Utah power forward Chris Burgess, who is now an assistant coach at BYU.

Class of 2026 center Cael LaFrentz is about 6-9 or so and from Decorah, Iowa. He’s a project and likely a low/mid-major type, and is the son of former Kansas and NBA star Raef LaFrentz, who was top five in the country in the class of 1994.

Compton Magic 17s junior wing Alijah Arenas is ranked No. 3 overall in the class of 2026, and he’s a terrific looking prospect. His dad is former Arizona and NBA star Gilbert Arenas.

I haven’t seen him yet, but folks from Indiana are raving about sophomore point guard Jason Gardner Jr., who is the son of Jason Sr., who starred at Arizona and now working at his alma mater.

***

Over on the Nike side, one well-sourced coaching friend said NC State was four-deep to watch senior wing Davion Hannah of Nicolet, Wis. Hannah was offered by NC State on June 19, and the Wolfpack were watching him with Tyler Herro-sponsored Team Herro.

Hannah is ranked No. 27 overall in the class of 2025 by Rivals.com and he’s a terrific scorer at about 6-4 or 6-5. He is leaving Nicolet High to attend Link Academy in Branson, Mo., which has been a powerhouse the last five years or so. He had flirted with leaving the Milwaukee area in past years for high school, so it wasn’t overly surprising.

This is where things get fun in some ways. Hannah played last year with Mac Irvin Fire 16s, and there is a woven them in the class of 2025 and NC State targets. When Magwood was a freshman, he and Heard played together on Mac Irvin Fire 15s. Magwood left for Team United 16s, but I believe Hannah joined the Mac Irvin Fire organization for 16s. Heard might have missed a chunk of time with an injury, so they didn’t a full season together.

Wisconsin, Alabama, Creighton, Cincinnati, Xavier, Arizona State and Arkansas, are some of the colleges in the mix.

***

Another litter birdie at the Nike Peach Jam said junior wing Cole Cloer is back from his injury suffered in mid-May.

Cloer was playing with CP3 16s in the Indianapolis, Ind., area May 19, and he drove baseline, and a PSA Cardinals player tried to slid in and take a charge. Cloer landed poorly, hurt his back and suffered a seizure on the court.

Cloer, who went to Hillsborough (N.C.) Orange, has since transferred to Greensboro (N.C.) Caldwell Academy, which is coached by his CP3 coach, Brandon Clifford. Cloer is ranked No. 22 overall in the class of 2026.

Recruiting Senior LB Cameron White ends up picking UCF...

Central Florida was able to keep senior linebacker Cameron White home. With outside linebacker Jaiden Braker picking South Carolina, the linebacker board will be starting over again, with Havelock (N.C.) High senior outside linebacker Donovan Darden the remaining target. Not getting White stings because he's going to be really good and is a vicious hitter.

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Recruiting Friday's adidas 3SSB recap...

ROCK HILL, S.C. — The main event at adidas 3SSB was when Team Loaded VA played Kevon Looney Power 5 on the Arena Court in one of four quarterfinals Friday.

NC State coach Kevin Keatts and assistant coach Levi Watkins were in attendance, to see senior point guard target Kaden Magwood and junior power forward Latrell Allmond. NCSU assistant coach Brett Nelson was holding it down at Nike Peach Jam in North Augusta, S.C.

To set the scene, the arena sections where the coaches don’t sit was nearly packed. Both teams came into the game wanting to run, run, run. The star power was there with Magwood, Allmond and senior small forward Nate Ament for Team Loaded VA and Power Five had Iowa State senior shooting guard commit Jamarion Bateman and senior wing Amari Allen.

The game lived up to the hype and was fun from start to finish, with an energetic crowd spurring it on. Magwood got hot from deep and pushed the tempo and he played exactly how I had talked about this week, like a player on a mission to be ranked in the top 30 in the country. He’s currently at No. 60, but with a game completely built for his abilities — completely up-tempo — he dominated and had 32 points and a good amount of three-pointers.

Springing the upset and landing Magwood would make up for Jalen Lecque signing with NC State and then turning pro. It would be some balancing out from the basketball recruiting Gods. Lecque played fast and was uber-athletic, but didn’t have the jump shot Magwood has.

Allen did a little bit of everything and was offered by his home state Wisconsin Badgers after the game, and Bateman showed why he’s so highly regarded. As stated earlier, Bateman is everything NC State wants in a wing, so good get for the Cyclones.

After such a terrific game, which Team Loaded VA won by pulling away over the last 3-4 minutes, the Utah Prospects vs. Dream Vision contest seemed like a let down. Utah Prospects won the game and will play Team Loaded VA on Saturday in the semifinals. Indiana Elite rode the hot shooting of senior wing Braylon Mullins (named after former Michigan wide receiver Braylon Edwards), and defeated Team Loaded NC in a mercy rule game. Indiana Elite will play Compton Magic, who got the services of star forward Koa Peat back from USA Basketball. Compton Magic defeated Ohio-based Phenom U, who got a spectacular 33-point performance from top five senior shooting guard Darryn Peterson. Already rumors of some major, major NIL offers floating around for Peterson.

The semifinals are Saturday for 17s, 16s and 15s, and the title games Sunday. One change this year that adidas did is have the quarterfinals go one after another, so the coaches and media could see the top eight games in succession. The same will happen today with the semifinals. I could be wrong, but it felt like a lot of the “bigger” games were played at the same time in the past, so you had to make decisions on which quarterfinal to watch or maybe even which semifinal to watch.

•••

Matthews (N.C.) Carmel Christian junior power forward Cody Peck and Garner Road 16s will be on the docket today against Anthony Edwards Five.

Peck has been shooting the three-ball well this week at 6-foot-10, which hasn’t always been the case. NC State just offered him and he’s a down the road prospect only due to being around 195 pounds. He’ll need time for his body to fill out, but he is fluid for his size and comes from an athletic family with his aunt Carolyn Peck, his father Michael, a former Marshall post player, and his older sister played volleyball at North Carolina.

Garner Road 16s also has junior point guard Chaise Smith of Washington (N.C.) High now, and reclassed sophomore post player Mason Robinson and junior center Tyson Thompson help Peck inside. Robinson has transferred from Hillsborough (N.C.) Orange to Greensboro Day, while Thompson might end up at Winston-Salem (N.C.) Christian, after playing for his dad at St. Pauls High.

The 6-foot-8, 230-pound Thompson, who is the great nephew of the late Charles Shackleford on his mom’s side. Shackleford is a former NC State player and NBA player.

Thompson is making the move to the Triad due to his father, Corey Thompson, getting hired as the new head coach at Winston-Salem State, his alma mater. Thompson had coached on the college level before coaching his son at St. Pauls.

•••

I also got to watch another former St. Pauls High player. Junior small forward Josiah Sanders joined Team Loaded VA 16s this week. He had played with Bobby Maze 16s and apparently even moonlighted with CP3 a week ago.

Sanders played with Thompson at St. Pauls his freshman year, and then made the move to Berean Prep in Fayetteville, N.C. The 6-7 lefty is versatile and handles the ball really well for his size. I got to see him with his high school team and then Bobby Maze Elite in late April, but he was injured and didn’t play with Berean Prep during the live period in June.

What Sanders is gifted at is that he can take the outlet pass, initiate the offense or pull-up from about 17 feet and make the pull-up jumper. He’s athletic enough to block shots on defense and is the kind of glue guy forward who can get 12 points, six rebounds and four assists in most games. When he cuts down the turnovers and fully learns what he can and can’t do, I think his recruitment will take off to another level. East Carolina offered him this weekend, but he does have a few high-major offers.

Team Loaded VA 16s is a quality squad, led by junior wing Adam Oumiddoch of Overtime Elite, who is from the Washington, D.C. area. He makes the team go with his skill and basketball IQ. He’d be different from the wings that NC State has recruited in the past, but is scholarship worthy and ranked No. 32 overall in the class of 2026 by Rivals.com.

Lincolnton (N.C.) Combine Academy junior guard Yohance Conner is still out with an injury or Team Loaded VA would be even more explosive.

•••

Another player that I’ll get to see for the first time is 6-7 sophomore post player Cannon DeBerry of Charlotte Olympic High on Team Loaded VA 15s. They have made it to the semifinals today. I’d have to check the database, but the last time Olympic had a high major prospect might have been when former Baylor/NC State guard Allerik Freeman played there.

***

I got a second look of Adriel Nyorha of Winston-Salem Christian, who is arriving from the Montreal, Canada, area. It just confirmed what I saw Thursday in that he’s smooth, athletic and doesn’t force anything. He’s the type of guard who gets his 20 points and you don’t realize he scored that many.

Ohio and George Mason offered him this weekend, but my prediction still holds true that he’ll end up with 10-15 high major schools chasing him at some point.

Nyorha played against the Atlanta Celtics, who had senior guard Akai Fleming, who is headed to Georgia Tech. Fleming is ranked No. 94 in the country by Rivals.com, but Nyorha more than held his own and each player impacted the game.

His coach in the middle of the second half turned to me out of the blue and he goes: “You really like Adriel?” I said, “Yes coach, I do.” And then returned to coaching.

***

Boston, Mass., native Collins Onyejiaka could be someone NC State could monitor moving forward. The 6-10 junior center is a massive human being. He normally has played with BABC 16s, but has moved up to the 17s squad after their center early enrolled at Providence. The Friars and Bryant have offered Onyejiaka, but he’ll get a good chunk of Big East and East Coast colleges on him because you can’t teach size.

It will be interesting to see how often NC State after heavier centers in light of the success D.J. Burns had.

Recruiting Thursday's adidas 3SSB recap...

ROCK HILL, S.C. — Every year some of the private schools in North Carolina attract someone from out of state that could get recruited by NC State.

NC State coach Kevin Keatts was able to see Kaden Magwood of Louisville, Ky., play Thursday with Team Loaded VA, following an offer to him this past Monday. Magwood will be playing at Lincolnton (N.C.) Combine Academy with exciting junior guard Yohance Connor of Salisbury, N.C.

Another player making his way to the U.S. is point guard Adriel Nyorha of Ottawa, Canada, which is west of Montreal. It’s not that far away from where new NC State post player Ismael Diouf is from. Nyorha, who plays with Brookwood Elite, is making the move to Winston-Salem (N.C.) Christian, and will take over the point guard spot from Jordan Lowery. Last year, Lowery was the move-in player that NC State started to pursue in the class of 2025. He came from Denton (Texas) Guyer High, got offered by NC State, and is now back at Guyer High for his senior year.

Nyorha is much different than Lowery. He’s closer to Isaiah Denis of Davidson (N.C.) Day, who NCSU has already offered. He doesn’t force the action, but he’ll have about 4-5 plays where. you get surprised and think “Wow, he can do things like that.” He played well against a solid Jalen Green Elite squad, but some coaches didn’t even know he was back from his injury.

Nyorha isn’t a complete unknown. He currently has offers from Arizona State, DePaul, Mississippi State, Canisius and UC-Santa Barbara. My hunch is that another 15 high-major schools will jump in once they see him play in the future. It’s easy to predict that many of the colleges chasing Denis, will move on to Nyorha after Denis picks a school. Ohio State and assistant coach Joel Justus are the rumored current leader for Denis.

NC State and Winston-Salem Christian coach Antonio Lowe have a good working relationship. Lowe once coached Shakeel Moore and Josh Hall at Hickory (N.C.) Moravian Prep, when they signed with NC State.

•••

Magwood and Team Loaded VA had a major battle on their hands against a scrappy team from Indiana, Team Tradition. Loaded won 64-58 and needed every basket Magwood and senior small forward Nate Ament could produce. Magwood had 24 points and two three-pointers, and Ament finished with 19 points.

Magwood has the gift of being able to create his shot any time he wants, and that is what separates players. That combined with great speed and his fearlessness and the prediction is that he’ll move up from No. 60.

Last year, guard Jalil Bethea of Team Final and Archbishop Wood Catholic in the Philadelphia, Pa., area went through that rise last year. He finished No. 7 in the class of 2024 and signed with Miami and the Hurricanes should be turning him loose this season.

Magwood probably won’t be a top 10 recruit, but he will be coveted. Team Loaded VA has at least four high-major players for sure, and the coaches were lined up all around the court. The people who take pictures and videos, at least 12 people were around the court. They are the biggest show on adidas this year.

Some will wonder if Magwood is a point guard or shooting guard, but I view him as a weapon. He’ll have some wild shots and turnovers, but his plusses definitely outweigh minuses. He’s a cross of Terquavion Smith and D.J. Horne in many ways.

•••

Some quick hitters…

• I talked to a MAC head coach who I’ve known off and on for about three decades. He was recruiting Ricardo Greer Jr., and he said the biggest concern has been his injury history. Greer isn’t on the NBA Academy rosters and was seen with a cast on his arm in accepting a recent award, so the guess is he might not play at all in July.

The coach also said he liked Bowling Green transfer Marcus Hill’s one-on-one skills. He viewed him as the kind of guard who passes the ball when he has to, meaning, he wants to score and when that is taken away from him, then he’ll look to pass the ball.

• ACC coaches such as NC State’s Kevin Keatts, Wake Forest’s Steve Forbes, California’s Mark Madsen, North Carolina’s Hubert Davis, Clemson’s Brad Brownell, Notre Dame’s Micah Shrewsberry and Virginia’s Tony Bennett, were in attendance. Maybe I missed someone along the way. The other ACC coaches seemed excited in talking to former NBA player and Stanford star Madsen, who brought in a host of transfers this offseason.

• Iowa State has been quietly super effective in getting players out of Wisconsin. It hasn’t just been Tyrese Haliburton of the Indiana Pacers. Batemon plays with Kevon Looney-sponsored Power 5.

Senior shooting guard Jamarion Batemon of Milwaukee Academy of Science is a player that some told me is a “Kevin Keatts kind of player.” After watching him, I concur. He’s a heck of a steal for Iowa State on the wing. He’s ranked No. 104 by Rivals.com at the moment, but I see him rising considerably.

• Michael O’Connell transferred in from Stanford last year and few expected him to be a 30-plus minutes a night point guard for NC State, but he proved everyone wrong.

Portland (Ore.) Central Catholic senior point guard Isaac Carr has a lot of O’Connell in his game. Not surprisingly Stanford has offered him, but so has Wake Forest, Oregon, Oregon State and a good amount of mid-majors.

• One high major coach said some schools are recruiting high school players to be able to build a foundation to land them as transfers down the road.

• It took some time, but finally got to see Jacob Wilkins, the son of NBA legend Dominique Wilkins of Washington, N.C. Jacob Wilkins also is going to Georgia, which is where Dominique went and his cousin Damien Wilkins, who transferred there after playing at NC State.

Jacob Wilkins is ranked No. 28 in the class of 2025, but he struggled with Team Huncho. He’s a perfect example of why you need to watch players a few times. He looks the part and I'm under the impression he's a freaky athlete at 6-8, but he just didn't get much done.

• Maybe a traveling team first, but former NBA player and coach Sam Mitchell is coaching Phenom United, an Ohio-based traveling program built around senior wing Darryn Peterson. He is ranked No. 3 in the country by Rivals and plays with Huntington (W.Va.) Prep, and he’s a terrific scorer. The top 7-8 players in the class of 2025 will come in and make a big impact as freshman, and Peterson could be a 15-plus points per game scorer in a year.

Mitchell coached the Toronto Raptors from 2004-09, and with Minnesota in 2015-16. He last coached as an assistant at Memphis in 2018-19.

• Not at adidas, but heard that coach Curtis Malone has a traveling team on the new Puma circuit. He’s one of the original big name traveling team coaches, making D.C. Assault one of the most elite programs ever. He had D.C. Assault on both Nike and adidas, and then D.C. Premier on Under Armour is my understanding. He was sentenced to 100 months in prison in 2014 for dealing cocaine and heroin in the Washington, D.C. area.

• Team Loaded VA 16s is the one of the main attractions Friday.

Combine Academy’s junior guard Yohance Connor and junior power forward Elhadji Diallo, Fayetteville (N.C.) Berean Prep forward Josiah Sanders and Winston-Salem Christian junior center Kosi Mgbejiofor play for Team Loaded VA 16s.

I’ll also get a second look at Adriel Nyorha and Brookwood Elite against the Atlanta Celtics today.
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Recruiting NC State offers top 60 senior guard...

NC State had shown interest in Kaden Magwood in the past and then he landed at Mouth of Wilson (Va.) Oak Hill Academy, and the interest just kind of faded over time. Now, he's at Lincolnton (N.C.) Combine Academy and playing with Team Loaded VA on the adidas circuit, and the Wolfpack offered him Monday. He said he wants to do an unofficial relatively soon when the recruiting calendar opens up again. He's originally from Louisville, Ky.

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