GREENSBORO — With NC State having a senior dominated squad this upcoming year, the Wolfpack coaches will be looking high and low to add players in the class of 2025 and transfer portal.
NC State has at least seven scholarships available in the class of 2025, with the addition of junior power forward transfer Ismael Diouf and the subtraction of junior small forward M.J. Rice. The additional departure of senior power forward Ernest Ross could also end up affecting the scholarship numbers for 2025, if NCSU lands a non-senior this summer or fall.
NC State coach Kevin Keatts and new assistant Brett Nelson were at the NCISAA event at Greensboro (N.C.) Day this past weekend. It was the first of two open weekends for players to play with their high school teams in front of college coaches. The NCHSAA didn’t have an event, but both associations will be playing this upcoming weekend.
Stock up
One of the fascinating players that is emerging in the state of North Carolina is Raleigh Grace Christian junior small forward Michael Phillips.
I had seen Phillips at the N.C. Top 80 Camp last October, which is run by Phenom Hoop Report and was intrigued. I made sure to watch him play at Cary Christian on Jan. 5, and it just confirmed that he’d be a solid Division I recruit, but not a lock high major target.
Phillips has some good offers — LSU, Mississippi State, Virginia Tech, and West Virginia. After his performance Saturday, Wake Forest has jumped in with an offer. Keatts and Nelson were in attendance, along with WFU coach Steve Forbes. Grace Christian is where Keatts’ son finished up before going to NC State, and also where former Wolfpack center Jaylon Gibson attended, who is now at Charleston Southern.
Phillips showed his tantalizing potential during one second half stretch where he hit four three-pointers, and he was fouled on one of them. To score 13 points in such a quick period of time was fun to watch, especially with two of the three-pointers about 6-7 feet beyond the three-point arc. He finished with seven three-pointers.
Call it recency bias in that he played well against NC State, but Phillips has some similarities to Syracuse 6-7, 188-pound small forward Chris Bell, who averaged 12.0 points per game this season and shot 42.0 percent from three-point land.
The question to be answered over the next two years with Phillips is how well will he get at getting into the lane and finishing. He is long and lanky, but he’s not the kind of wing that gets around the corner and finish at the rim. His length does help him as a shot-blocker.
Phillips will be playing on Boo Williams 16s, with Wilson (N.C.) Greenfield School junior point guard Kobe Edwards, who also played at the NCISAA event, but not when I saw Knights play Sunday.
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Mr. Efficient
Junior power forward Justin Caldwell of Fayetteville, N.C., has a new home but the focus hasn’t wavered.
Caldwell played at Trinity Christian last year, but is now at Fayetteville Berean Prep, where he’ll play with junior small forward and good friend Josiah Sanders. The latter didn’t play Saturday against a scrappy Greensboro (N.C.) Caldwell Academy squad and senior guard Jaylen Cross.
Caldwell was an efficient machine in the paint at about 6-8 during the first half. I looked up and Caldwell had 19 points and the rest of the team had four. He was dominant.
The third quarter was solid and it looked like he was going to get 30-plus points. Well, he didn’t get the same amount of touches in the fourth quarter, and not coincidentally, Caldwell Academy won in overtime. Caldwell finished with 28 points, and Cross had 22 in the victory.
George Mason offered Caldwell on Sunday, but he’s trending as a high-major post player. He tried one jumper, which he missed, but he knew his bacon was in the paint. On one possession, he ended up missing three shots around the rim, grabbed three offensive rebounds and scored on the fourth attempt. He wasn’t going to be denied.
Caldwell will be playing on a loaded Team Loaded NC 16s squad in Rock Hill, S.C., on the adidas circuit coming up.
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Colleges came to see…
A good contingent of college coaches came to see Arden (N.C.) Christ School senior power forward Zymicah Wilkins and Davidson (N.C.) Day senior point guard Isaiah Denis.
I watched Denis on Saturday and Wilkins on Sunday, and both had a wide array of coaches.
Virginia Tech coach Mike Young and Clemson coach Brad Brownell, along with UNC assistant coach Sean May came to watch Wilkins. He was content letting his teammates shine and didn’t put up a big stat line, but he’s having a good stretch in May and June.
Denis has become the hottest recruit in the state it seems. Keatts and Nelson, Brownell, Michigan coach Dusty May, Wake Forest coach Steve Forbes, Marquette coach Shaka Smart, Ohio State assistant coach Joel Justus and Pittsburgh assistant coach Jason Capel, were watching Denis.
Michigan had an assistant coach Sunday for when Denis played, and it’s clear the Wolverines and Buckeyes really want him, and I believe he’s officially visiting both.
NC State hasn’t offered Denis yet, and it will be interesting if they do. He came to two games this past season and Justus did a good job with hime while working for NCSU. He’s different in the sense he’s taller at 6-4 but really fast end-to-end.
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Worth the wait
Sometimes it takes some time to watch a player live.
I had seen Matthews (N.C.) Carmel Christian junior power forward Cody Peck on video, but not live, and he showed flashes of why he’s flirting with being a top 100 player in the class of 2026.
Peck finished lobs, played tall at about 6-10 and is a fluid athlete. He tried a pair of outside jumpers, but missed them. Someone mentioned to me he really hopes to be a small forward one day, but his money is at power forward. He just needs to add weight and strength with maturity.
In some ways, he reminds me of current Alabama sophomore power forward Jarin Stevenson, but Stevenson was further ahead at the same age, hence his top 35 prep ranking.
Peck will team with exciting Washington (N.C.) High junior point guard Chaise Smith and St. Paul’s (N.C.) High junior center Tyson Thompson on Garner Road 16s, who will be playing at the adidas event in Rock Hill, S.C.
Peck earned his first high major offer Monday, with Georgetown offering him.
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Who has next
The NCISAA event featured sophomore shooting guard King Gibson of The Burlington School in Burlington, N.C., and Burlington Christian sophomore post player Charles Chienggen Pur. The
Phenom Hoop Report event in Bermuda Run, N.C., had Raleigh Broughton sophomore wing Jordan Page.
All three will be high-major targets coming up, with Gibson and Page fighting for position in the top 30 in the class of 2027 over the next three years is my prediction.
Page, with former NC State star Scott Wood as the Broughton coach, showed he could create his own shot whenever he wanted Saturday en route to 18 points. He plays physically and with an edge to his game. At about 6-4, he does some nifty stuff to create space.
Page’s father played at nearby Shaw University and the family has deep roots in South Carolina. Page was even asked to play some quarterback on the JV team last year at Broughton, but won’t be playing football this season.
Gibson showed Sunday with The Burlington School against Charlotte United Faith that the game is getting easier for him. He showed a knockdown mid-range jump shot and he’s a high-riser going to the rim. Unofficially, he had 14 points in a win. Michigan, who has Burlington native Drew Williamson on staff, and he watched him Sunday and the Wolverines offered Monday.
Pur showed flashes, but didn’t have a lot of touches in a blowout win Saturday. He’s gone from about 6-6 in August at the CP3 Rising Stars Camp to a legit 6-8. He’ll likely always be skinny, but he plays hard and showed better than expected foot work in the post.
Pur and Gibson helped Team United 14s win the title last year, but Pur remained and move up to 15s, while Gibson switched to Team Loaded VA 16s this spring and summer. Page is with Garner Road 15s, and both Page and Gibson will be playing in Rock Hill coming up, while Pur is at Nike Peach Jam in North Augusta, S.C.
Another new member in the class of 2027 is former Hillsborough (N.C.) Orange center Mason Robinson, who reclassed to 2027 at Greensboro Day.
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