Monday, July 26, 2021

College basketball recruiting: Top-5 most decorated prospects (and Top-5 hidden gems) in Colorado prep history

Check out this post by Kyle Fredrickson from The Denver Post discussing several important points this week. Kyle Fredrickson recently posted the article and I decided it was worth posting on this website.

A total of 26 high school players from Colorado developed into NBA draft picks since 1952, according to CHSAA. But not all were highly recruited going into college. Here is a breakdown of the top-five most decorated recruits — and the top-five hidden gems — in modern Colorado prep history. Recruiting information compiled from 247Sports.com.

MOST DECORATED

PG Chauncey Billups — George Washington, 1995

McDonald’s High School All-American. … Turned down scholarship offers from Big East and ACC schools to play at CU. … A first-team All-American as a sophomore. … Selected No. 3 overall in the NBA Draft. … NBA Champion and Finals MVP with the Pistons.

PF De’Ron Davis — Overland, 2016

Four-star prospect (No. 40 national recruit). … Signed with Indiana over scholarship offers from Arizona, CU, Texas and many others. … Made 23 career starts with 590 points and 287 rebounds over four seasons. … Signed a professional basketball contract to play in Ireland.

SF Ronnie Harrell — Denver East, 2014

Four-star prospect (No. 84 national recruit). … Picked Creighton over scholarship offers from Arizona State, Kansas State, Washington and others. … Transferred to DU for his senior season. … Averaged a career-high 12.9 points with the Pioneers.

PG Reggie Jackson — Palmer HS, 2008

Four-star prospect (No. 89 national recruit). … Chose Boston College over scholarship offers from Nevada, Wyoming and others. … Earned All-ACC honors as a junior. … Selected No. 24 overall in the 2011 NBA draft. … Tenth-year NBA guard now playing for the Clippers.

PG Dominique Collier — Denver East, 2014

Four-star prospect (No. 91 overall national recruit). … Chose CU over scholarship offers from Arizona, Gonzaga, Iowa and others. …  Made 68 career starts over four seasons. … Named co-Pac-12 Sixth Man of the Year in 2017-18.

HIDDEN GEMS

SG Derrick White — Legend, 2012

Not recruited by Division-I schools as a scholarship player. … Became a two-time All-American at the University of Colorado-Colorado Springs (D-II). … Played his final college season at CU. … Selected No. 29 overall in the NBA Draft. … Averaged a career-high 15.4 points last season for the Spurs.

C Jason Smith — Platte Valley, 2004

Two-star prospect (No. 461 national recruit). … Chose CSU over scholarship offers from Gonzaga, Utah and Wyoming. … Totaled 1,281 points, 683 rebounds and 149 blocks in college. … Picked No. 20 overall in the NBA Draft. … Played for 11 seasons between six different teams.

SG Justinian Jessup — Longmont, 2016

Two-star prospect (unranked national recruit). … Played for Boise State over scholarship offers from Davidson, Pepperdine and others. … First player in school history with at least 1,500 points, 500 rebounds, 250 assists, 250 steals and 50 blocked shots. … Picked in the second round of the NBA Draft.

Related Articles

College basketball recruiting: Zach Keller emerges as next can’t-miss prospect from Colorado Could Colorado high school football, basketball players soon profit off NIL rights? “I don’t believe 13-year-olds should be a free-market commodity”

PG Colbey Ross — Eaglecrest, 2017

Two-star prospect (No. 514 national recruit). … Signed with Pepperdine over scholarship offers from Cal Poly, Northern Colorado and others. … First player in NCAA history with at least 2,200 points, 800 assists and 400 rebounds. … Started in 125 games over four seasons. … A second-round NBA Draft prospect.

C Nick Fazekas — Ralston Valley, 2003

Three-star prospect (No. 236 national recruit) … Picked Nevada over scholarship offers from Marquette, Utah and others. … A three-time NCAA All-American. … Finished college career as school’s all-time leader in scoring (2,464) and blocked shots (192). … Selected No. 34 overall in the NBA Draft.











No comments:

Post a Comment