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Recruiting Senior WR Je'Rel Bolder talks Georgia visit...

Some have wondered if Marshville (N.C.) Forest Hills senior wide receiver Je'Rel Bolder might pop on his Georgia official visit, but he hasn't at least yet. Bolder will be at NC State this weekend and then go into decision-making mode. He is the longest-running recruitment for NC State in this class.

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Recruiting Kanon Catchings update...

Former Purdue signee Kanon Catchings will be visiting NC State this weekend, with Florida State and BYU also in the mix, after he decided the Boilermakers wasn't right for him. He also could return to Overtime Elite for a post-graduate year. Terrific basketball family and Kanon has been a known commodity for a while.

He's probably a year away body-wise and needs a weight room, but it's more about his maturity, focus and intangibles at this point in his development. That is what makes him the ultimate boom or bust type and why up to now, it has been BYU and FSU types giving him a look.

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Recruiting The Run Down — Hoops Version

1. Taking Ricardo “R.J.” Greer Jr. early as a prep recruit bucks the mantra of what coach Kevin Keatts has been talking about in recruiting.

Keatts has often said he wanted to phase out prep recruits unless they were no-brainers, in favor of taking four-year college transfers.

To land Greer this early in the process is a culmination of a few things, led by it being the first prep recruit assistant coach Kareem Richardson has signed while at NCSU.

a.) NC State needs bodies in 2025-26 with now at least seven scholarships available, and that includes two incredibly unreliable players in junior M.J. Rice and freshman Treymane Parker, who both essentially missed a season with the Wolfpack already for very different reasons. NC State will never plan a roster relying on Rice/Parker, but will instead make sure they are covered at their positions, and that is where Greer comes in.

b.) Greer doesn’t fit the mold of nearly any guard that Keatts has signed. He’s a terrific catch-and-shoot or pull-up and shoot outside shooter, with a nice basketball IQ. Maybe the last guy who fit those traits is when NC State brought home Thomas Allen from Nebraska, who had signed with former coach Mark Gottfried, but landed at NU following the Keatts hire.

Greer is about two inches taller than Allen and a little slicker than the former Garner (N.C.) High scoring machine, but similar styles. Another shooter that arrived under Keatts was Sam Hunt, who carved out a off the bench role and shot 41.8 percent from three-point land in 2017-18.

c.) Most of NC State’s guards under Keatts have been ball dominant and create their own shots. Casey Morsell spotted up and and had teammates give him a steady stream of open jumpers. Greer doesn’t have the muscular football frame that Morsell has, which helped Morsell drive to the rim more and take on challenging defensive assignments, but he can make those spot up jumpers.

The key for Greer is what style of play will NC State feature, and will he have players who create shots. Usually the best things a shooter can have is to have a point guard that collapses the defense and kicks it out, or a big man that gets double teamed and defenses don’t rotate quick enough to the shooter. Regardless, NC State’s fast pace of play should open things up for Greer and other shooters, particularly McNeil, who is just ahead in his development than Greer.

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2. The biggest piece of Greer’s evaluation came last July at the NBA Academy Games in Atlanta, Ga. NC State watched him and offered, and quickly got him on campus last September.

To understand the setting of the NBA Academy Games, it is foreign born players — Greer was born in France — who get thrown together on a squad and they just make it work. Greer played for NBA Global Academy Select Blue, and had some players who ended up joining the class of 2023 like Matar Diop at power forward, who was a freshman at Nebraska, and transferred out this spring.

Greer played in six games last year, July 5-9. Greer went 16 of 47 on two-pointers for 34 percent, but was 19 of 51 on three-pointers for 37.3 percent. He doesn’t get to the line much, going 2 of 3, and was just 4 of 15 on layup attempts. He had 10 assists and nine turnovers. What was impressive is on guarded three-point attempts, he went 10 of 22, and he was 15 of 38 on catch and shoot jumpers.

Greer’s only chance to play in front of college coaches this summer was going to be a return to the NBA Academy Games on July 10-14 at Atlanta Holy Innocents Episcopal School.

The local player comp to Greer was actually just inserted four spots behind him in the Rivals150. Greer dropped 13 slots to No. 135 and hasn’t played since the high school season. At No. 139, Ryan Crotty, who is originally from Holly Springs (N.C.) High, but now goes to Crozet (Va.) Miller School outside of Charlottesville, Va. As a reclassed class of 2025 prospect with Boo Williams 17s, he’s torched the nets this spring on three-pointers.

It’s doubtful if Crotty got looked at much by NC State, but his jumper has led to high major offers from Virginia Tech, Iowa, Butler, DePaul, Miami, Mississippi State, West Virginia, Clemson and Oklahoma State thus far.

Greer is not much different from Crotty, but the lack of time playing in front of college coaches, or perhaps a misguided notion he would play at Dayton where his father Ricardo Greer Sr. is an assistant coach, slowed down his recruitment to a crawl. So, NC State really didn’t have any competition for him at the moment, and instead of gambling on his one planned event in July — the NBA Academy Games in Atlanta area — he grabbed the NC State offer.

Odds are good that Greer won’t be needed to play heavy minutes as a freshman. If the roster can hold together just a little, the various wings would likely be Paul McNeil, Mike James and Dennis Parker in 2025-26, or Parker could end up being a small-ball four.

3. Rankings can sometimes fool people and if NC State can somehow close the NIL gap on BYU or whoever else jumps in on Kanon Catchings, he’d be a prime example of that. Catchings had committed to Purdue as far back as Sept. 2, 2022, an eternity in recruiting for a class of 2024 member.

Catchings is originally from Brownsburg (Ind.) High and ended up going to Overtime Elite in Atlanta this past year. The hope was being from home would help him grow up and mature and instead, it likely exacerbated things. Overtime Elite simply isn’t for everyone and it could have played a role in the breakup with Purdue, which is fresh off finishing in second place.

Catchings is ranked No. 31 by Rivals.com in the class of 2025, and that is due to his length, athleticism and he has a nice jumper. For instance, he is ranked 18 spots higher than incoming freshman wing Paul McNeil of Rockingham (N.C.) Richmond Senior High. They didn’t play each other, but both Catchings and McNeil were at the John Wall Holiday Invitational at Raleigh Broughton this past December.

If you took a poll of college coaches who evaluated both players, I’d feel confident that McNeil would be the selection of who is ready to contribute as a college freshman. He isn’t as long as Catchings and he isn’t as athletic as him, but he understands the emotional aspects of carrying his prep team, heck his entire town, on his shoulders the last two years. Call it intangibles, but they do mean something at least in the beginning. Could Catchings find the magic cure of maturity over the next four years and show why he’s a top 31 player? Definitely possible.

Where Catchings always got people’s attention with is his family. It starts with his grandfather Harvey Catchings, who was a 6-9 post player who played in the NBA from 1974-85. Never a star, but a quality backup who played in 725 career games, often on winning teams with the Philadelphia 76ers or Milwaukee Bucks. The family ended up settling in the far western suburbs of Chicago.

Catchings’ aunt is a legendary player in Tamika Catchings. She played at Tennessee and one of the first calls after decommitting from the Boilermakers were the Volunteers, who declined to recruit him. Tamika averaged 16.6 points and 7.9 rebounds per game at UT, and then played in the WNBA from 2002-16 with similar numbers. She has four gold medals from playing in the Olympics.

Catchings’ mother, Tauja Catchings, was an accomplished player in her own right at Illinois, but it was hard to be in Tamika’s shadow. Tauja averaged 12.3 points and 6.8 rebounds in 122 games at Illinois (1996-00) and played overseas.

Tauja and Tamika’s brother, Kenyon Catchings, signed with Northern Illinois, but had a medical condition that led to not playing in college. His son, Kale Catchings, just played at Harvard and Duke. Kale would Kanon’s cousin.

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New radio guy Matt Chazanow arrives from Washington State...

NC State radio has hired Matt Chazanow as play-by-play guy as he leaves Washington State after he was in Pullman, Wash., the last seven years. Originally from Westfield, N.J., he did play-by-play for football, basketball and baseball, along with coaches shows. The Syracuse graduate began his career doing High Point women's basketball.

Recruiting Kentrell Rinehart nugget...

The recruitment of Columbus (Ohio) Westland High senior running back Kentrell Rinehart has had some interesting twists and turns. He didn't like his Minnesota officially visit apparently, and then Syracuse dropped him this week, so no visit this weekend unless he finds a school willing. Then he's been trying to get some of the top schools to look at him, camping at hometown Ohio State and he got Missouri to jump in. His next official visit for sure is Iowa on June 19-21, and then straight to NC State. Funny if it comes down to Iowa and NC State, deja vu with Kendrick Raphael, who is a different kind of running back.

My guess is schools have had a hard time "meshing" with his personality, but he's always liked NC State and they have never gone away. As a player, he's got good size and good speed, so his video is basically a lot of one cuts and he just takes off untouched for long runs. His team doesn't throw the ball and he's probably never had to do blitz pickup much, but he has that north-south gift of running, and rarely dances with the ball or go east-west. I'll be curious when he gets to college how well he is at shedding tacklers because that isn't part of his HUDL video. His talent is better than his offer list.

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NC State AD Boo Corrigan gets extension…

From NC State:

The NC State Board of Trustees has approved a new contract for Director of Athletics Boo Corrigan, who has served in that role since April 2019. His contract will now run through June of 2029.

During Corrigan’s tenure, NC State Athletics has excelled in its mission to ‘strengthen the Pack through the development of think and do student-athletes. Competitively, the Wolfpack has posted back-to-back top 20 finishes in the Learfield Directors’ Cup, which measures all-sport success. NC State’s No. 19 ranking following the 2022-23 athletic year marked the first time the Pack has finished in the top 25 in three consecutive years and was the third-highest final ranking in school history.

“Under Boo’s outstanding leadership, NC State Athletics is experiencing new levels of competitive, academic, and financial success,” said Chancellor Randy Woodson. “We are fortunate to have such an experienced and well-respected leader to help us navigate through the ever-changing landscape of college athletics.”

Since he arrived in Raleigh, NC State has won 16 ACC team championships – three more than any other league school during that time frame. Women’s cross country has brought home three consecutive national titles, with its 2021 championship marking the first NCAA title ever by a Wolfpack women’s team and the school’s first national team title in any sport since 1983.

In 2022-23, the Wolfpack won a combined total of 37 individual and team titles on the conference and national levels. Four NC State teams won ACC titles in 2022-23 (cross country, men’s swimming, wrestling, and women’s tennis), while six teams finished in the top 10 nationally. NC State was one of just eight Division I schools to advance to the postseason in all of its “Big Four” sports: football, men’s basketball, women’s basketball, and baseball last year.

The Wolfpack has also excelled academically. NC State registered a 993 in the most recent Academic Progress Rate (APR), the highest mark in school history. Ten teams earned a perfect 1000, while 19 teams boasted marks above the national average for their sport.

“I appreciate Chancellor Woodson and the Board of Trustees for their continued trust and support and to our coaches, staff, and student-athletes who work tirelessly every day to strengthen our Pack,” said Corrigan.

The student-athlete and fan experience has been greatly enhanced under Corrigan by improvements to the Wolfpack’s facilities, which include new nutrition centers in Weisiger-Brown and the Murphy Center; renovations to the Case Academic Center, the football weight room, and the Dail Center’s player lounge for men’s basketball; locker room renovations for women’s track and field/cross country, women’s basketball and wrestling; new field surfaces at Dail Soccer Stadium and Doak Park; and, of course, the new video board and sound system at Carter-Finley Stadium, which is one of the largest in the nation. There are also ongoing improvements to baseball’s home, Doak Park, in process.

Under Corrigan’s veteran leadership, annual giving increased 13 percent year-over-year this past academic year, with nearly 1,000 new donors joining the Wolfpack Club.

Corrigan was named a Cushman & Wakefield Athletics Director of the Year for 2022. It marked the second time in six years that Corrigan was honored, as he was named a 2017 Athletic Director of the Year by the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics while he was the leader at Army.

Recruiting One less school on center Isaac Sowells...

Louisville (Ky.) Male senior center Isaac Sowells has had a heated recruitment, but it looks like Louisville has dropped him from its board. NC State feels good about him, and he's also looking at South Carolina, Kentucky and Miami (Fla.). Sowells and Wilmington (N.C.) Hoggard offensive lineman Michael Gibbs will define the offensive line class for the Wolfpack.

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2024 Swimming and Diving Championship Season

The other thread was getting a little long so this one will focus on the ACC and NCAA Championships, the Olympic trials and hopefully follow some current and past Wolfpack swimmers in the Olympics.



The men are favorites to win their third straight championship. Louisville and Virginia Tech are contenders. The women are probably battling Louisville for second place behind Virginia.

Teams are limited to 18 participants for the men's and women's teams. Divers count 1/2 so they could have 17 swimmers and 2 divers.

Coach Holloway probably has some decisions to make. He has more than 18 swimmers, especially on the men's team, capable of scoring in the ACC Championship. Not all of them will be able to compete.

OT: Danny Hurley to stay at UConn...

UConn coach Danny Hurley won't be taking the Los Angeles Lakers job and will remain with the Huskies. My guess, and just a guess, he'd be more in line in wanting a East Coast NBA team if he ever wants to make the jump in the future. UConn should be a top 5-10 team again next year going into the season, and it would have set off a feeding frenzy on the roster if he had left.
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