2007 Basketball Recruiting Rankings & Review

Basketball recruiting for this year’s class is complete and first year Head Coach, Sidney Lowe has an awful lot of which to be proud!! Coach Lowe made the best of his opportunity to make a big impact as early as he could last summer.

After inheriting a program that was in such disarray that Lee Fowler found it necessary to sign the new coach to an (uncustomary) SIX YEAR deal last year, Sidney bested expectations on the court during his first season and has continued his momentum off the court in recruiting.

(Sidebar: After six years of listening to “Coach” Fowler extol the strength of NC State’s program under Herb Sendek, I never understood the ‘logic’ and lack of consistency that the program was in such bad shape that Fowler needed to go outside of his box and give Lowe an extra year on his first contract. Don’t get me wrong, I am not complaining about the maneuver as it relates to Sidney – just flabbergasted at the hypocrisy of Fowler’s actions when measured against his words).

This year’s recruiting class started coming together when Johnny Thomas committed to the Wolfpack in early June of last year. The class kept picking up steam and then picked up momentum from there.

If you do not include point guard Farnold Degand or combo guard Marques Johnson who is transferring from Tennessee, the Wolfpack signed four players in this year’s class.

* JJ Hickson, C/PF, Scout – 5-star, #13 rank; Rivals – 5-star, #10 rank
* Tracy Smith, F, Scout – 4-star, #70 rank; Rivals – 4-star, #46 rank
* Javi Gonzalez, PG, Scout – 3-star, Top 150 rank; Rivals – 3-star, Top 150 rank
* Johnny Thomas, SF, Scout – 3-star, Top 150 rank; Rivals – 3-star, Top 150 rank

Not including the transfers, Coach Lowe’s first recruiting haul was ranked:

* 16th in the country CollegeHoopsUpdate.com. (Link to rankings)
* 16th by Scout.com (Link to rankings )
* 18th by Rivals.com (Link to rankings) (We particularly liked the Rivals article because of its format and easy access to past recruiting rankings.

The ACC Perspective
As always, the first place to turn for broad and deep analysis of the conference is Dave Glenn.

Glenn’s ACCSports.com has a detailed breakdown of both 2007 signees and a look ahead to 2008 recruits at this link.

The Fayetteville Observer highlighted the recruiting classes of the entire conference in this article that uses the Prepstars recruiting service for its basis.

Duke signed three of the top 20 basketball prospects in the Class of 2007, getting signatures from Kyle Singler, Taylor King and Nolan Smith in the fall. The only other top-20 player headed to the ACC is J.J. Hickson, who signed with N.C. State.

ACC schools are bringing in eight of the top 50 high school hoops players in the nation as ranked by prepstars.com. In addition to the three future Blue Devils, N.C. State and Florida State signed two apiece, while Georgia Tech got one.

Of the 43 high school players who signed with ACC schools, 20 are ranked in the top 100. One of those, however, Augustus Gilchrist, has said he will not attend Virginia Tech because of last month’s campus shootings.

None of Clemson’s three signees is rated in the top 100. All of the other ACC schools, with the exception of North Carolina, added at least one top-100 prospect.

Carolina did not sign anybody. In fact, the Tar Heels did not recruit anyone in the 2007 class after making the nation’s No. 1 haul last year. UNC’s 2006 group included six of the top 100 high school players.

Virginia Tech has the largest 2007 ACC class with six signees. Maryland has five.

The rankings are summarized below:

(1) Duke
(2) Georgia Tech
(3) N.C. State
(4) Florida State
(5) Virginia Tech
(6) Wake Forest
(7) Maryland
(8) Virginia
(9) Boston College
(10) Miami
(11) Clemson
(12) North Carolina

Related, Dave Sez has done a nice analysis on the talent entering the ACC this year.

NC State’s Future
We’ve been keeping a running list of the Wolfpack’s projected roster for the past year as we have been following recruiting. With the news that Tracy Smith has not only signed but is projected to academically qualify to play next season (and should be enrolling at State this summer), then it becomes more clear that someone on NC State’s current roster will not be returning to the program next season.

Early rumblings from Raleigh seem to indicate that Bartosz Lewandowski may be having some health issues that will preclude him from participating in college athletics in the future. We do not know who true this is and will be looking into it further; we will exclude Lewandowski for the purposes of the following projections. Also unknown for the purposes of the following projections is the classification of Marques Johnson next year. Will he be a freshman or a sophomore?

Senior Class
(1) Gavin Grant (2G/3F)

Junior Class
(2) Courtney Fells (2G)
(3) Ben McCauley (4F/5C)

Sophomore Class
(4) Brandon Costner (3F/4F)
(5) Trevor Ferguson (2G/PG)
(6) Dennis Horner (3F)
(7) Farnold Degand (1PG)

Freshman Class
(8) Johnny Thomas (3F)
(9) JJ Hickson (5C/4F)
(10) Tracy Smith (4F/3F)
(11) Marques Johnson (2G) (eligible after first semester)
(12) Javi Gonzalez (1PG)

HS Senior Commits
(13) Julius Mays (PG)
(1) CJ Williams (3F/2G) [Gavin Grant’s old scholarship]

More from Dave Glenn:

N.C. State is in the unusual position, even at this early stage, of having filled all of its open roster spots with commitments from members of the Class of 2008. These high school juniors won’t be in college until the 2008-09 season, remember, but Lowe already has secured pledges from Indiana guard Julius Mays and in-state (Fayetteville Jack Britt) swingman C.J. Williams. Unless a current team member leaves the program prematurely, the Wolfpack has no more available scholarships for high school juniors.

Given the nature (transfers, early NBA entries, etc.) of modern college basketball, of course, the Wolfpack is continuing to stay in contact with a variety of 2008 prospects, even without an open scholarship.

Updated – July 30, 2007
Link to WS Journal

There are four incoming freshmen to go with two players who transferred in last year and will be eligible in the coming season. The four freshmen alone – center J.J. Hickson, forwards Tracy Smith and Johnny Thomas, and guard Javier Gonzalez – gave State the No. 14 class in the nation, according to PrepStars, and the No. 2 class in the ACC behind Duke. Scout.com rated the class No. 17 in the nation and No. 2 in the ACC.

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263 Responses to 2007 Basketball Recruiting Rankings & Review

  1. redfred2 06/01/2007 at 6:52 PM #

    OK xphoenix87,

    Here is my viewpoint. I think Grant needed a mentor, a father figure, whatever. But someone with the ability to give him real direction, tailored to his individual needs, when he arrived. But, since he was in a “system” that saw all the parts as equal, he therefor didn’t get that special attention back then. Again, same with his teammate Fells right now, and the long list of others before them. If I had seen some slight evidence, or even one case, where I thought another player had benefitted from what Grant’s first college basketball coach had given them, or if I thought that coach had any ability to reach out and get through to his players, then your comments may be somewhat justified. But as it stands, I think you are beating on a kid who may not have a grasp on the mental aspects of the game, but one who also hasn’t been given proper direction, and I don’t think that it is quite fair.

  2. redfred2 06/01/2007 at 7:00 PM #

    “Look at Cam Bennerman, who became exceptional at spacing and cutting in his time at State.”

    Yep, that kid with sooo much wasted potential, who was forced to learn a system that was not at all complimentary to his physical abilities, did finally fit in right there at the end. He absolutely re-wrote all of the records on spacing in the ACC. Maybe we could hang a spacing MVP banner somewhere?

  3. redfred2 06/01/2007 at 7:11 PM #

    “but they were not so completely inept that they couldn’t get across the fundamentals of the offense.”

    Please give me an example of the “fundamentals” being stressed, learned, and where you figure they are something to point to with great pride in any aspect, offensively or defensively, from the ” ” coached teams of a few years back.

  4. xphoenix87 06/01/2007 at 7:56 PM #

    Dude, grow up and stop reading what I’m not saying. I didn’t say that Cam developed to the full of his ability. I never said the previous regime developed great players. I’m not defending Herb and his crew because they obviously did have flaws. I did say that Cam learned exceptional ball-movement and spacing. Yes, he had wasted potential, but he took what he could out of the system and learned something. I did say that you are framing the former coaching staff as a bunch of morons who couldn’t coach their way out of a paper bag. You might remember that the same Larry Harris who we all love so much and are so grateful that he’s still around was also on that coaching staff. You may note that, despite how much you hate him, Herb seems to be highly respected among fellow coaches. We don’t know what went on in practice. We don’t know if Herb just didn’t teach Gavin the way he needed to be taught or if Gavin just didn’t want to listen and change his style. Whatever, I don’t care. The fact is, if you’re playing in an offense that above all else requires ball-movement and spacing, you had better learn it, either by getting taught or by learning yourself by repitition. There were plenty of players from the last 5 years who developed the kind of skills I’m talking about, or had them to start with. Like I said earlier, this is fundamental basketball that most high school players know. Don’t hold the ball while it’s being swung. Don’t stand next to another guy on the perimeter. Don’t throw a vertical post entry pass. These are the kinds of things that Gavin has done for 3 years and hasn’t improved on. In comparison, I saw Courtney make some of these same mistakes early on last year and then get noticeably better as the season moved on. To me, this says that Gavin is either unwilling to learn or just loses his head on the court for whatever reason. I don’t know what it is, but Gavin is not a smart basketball player, and I don’t think you can blame that on the previous regime. You can blame them for not trying to utilize his strengths and put him in positions where he didn’t have to think, but his lack of decision making goes beyond the hated Herb staff.

  5. redfred2 06/01/2007 at 10:01 PM #

    Actually x, you are right, I don’t blame it ALL on the last regime. We’ve all skirted what might be the real issue, and you finally just came out and said it. I don’t if it’s really true for Gavin, Courtney, or if it was true for Cam also. But I would think that if a coach is recruiting for the PO that just maybe basketball IQ would be one of his top priorities on the recruiting trail. Either that, or he’s putting kids in situations, without other options, where all they can do is fail, or at least disappoint themselves as well as the fans like yourself.

  6. Rick 06/02/2007 at 8:22 AM #

    “However, if you play for two years in the PO, you’ve got to at least have some concept of spacing. That offense is all about spacing and swinging the ball.”

    Did you actually watch our version of the PO?
    IT consisted of five gusy standing around the perimeter passing hte ball back and forth and then launching a three. How can anyone learn spacing form that.
    It is like you make stuff up to support your argument.

  7. redfred2 06/02/2007 at 12:21 PM #

    What someone did was they went out and gathered up a collection of parts. Some were pre-fit and already very specialized for a certain task right out of the box and those parts didn’t need much fine tuning to carry out their assignments. While others were supercharged, high performance parts, with finicky little adjustments and constant maintenance necessary in order to get them to perform properly.

    But, in the end, and as always, they were all lumped together in an ill-fitting heap, treated as equals, and labeled as interchangeable. Et voila!!! A hybrid vehicle with a chasis and body that’s designed, very specifically, to function at well below normal highway speeds. But, then you notice a couple of out of place, and outrageous superchargers sticking way up out of the hood of that econo-box. The problem was/is that those superchargers weren’t ever called upon to do what they were intended to do, so they eventually clogged and sputtered, and they slowed the little hybrid box even more than it’s ill-fated design engineers had originally planned. AND now, by just looking at those once unused high performance parts, and without ever really thinking too hard about how clogged and confused they were allowed to become, or what they really needed to flourish back then, it is very easy to scorn and ask, “What the hell is wrong with that kid now?!!!”

  8. xphoenix87 06/02/2007 at 11:18 PM #

    Rick – Again I’m going to say it to you guys, grow up and get over your little vendetta against Herb. Every week that goes by the Herb era magically becomes worse and worse in your minds, to the point that you’re going to state that nothing good ever happened over the last 10 years. Give it another year and you’re going to be firmly convinced in your own head that the Wolfpack never even scored a point under Sendek. Seriously, grow up, we realize you don’t like Herb. I certainly didn’t think our offense was perfectly put together and I’m quite willing to admit its faults. I’m not a Herb apologist, I’m just not willing to join in on this myth that the team was coached by complete incompetents for the last 10 years. Even a casual observer from the last few years could tell you that your statement is utter garbage. Apparently you weren’t watching all the times when players got wide-open baskets off of backdoor cuts, and apparently you just turned away from the action every time Hodge or Bennerman were able to get easy baskets by posting up smaller guards in the lane. I’m making things up? Please. Drop the ignorant myth you hang on to and then maybe you can debate like a logical human being.

  9. CedarGroveWolf 06/03/2007 at 10:37 AM #

    ^ clap, clap, clap, clap BRAVO!

  10. redfred2 06/03/2007 at 11:50 AM #

    ^snore, snore, snore, snore, nothing of value again!

    “Even a casual observer from the last few years could tell you that your statement is utter garbage. Apparently you weren’t watching all the times when players got wide-open baskets off of backdoor cuts, and apparently you just turned away from the action every time Hodge or Bennerman were able to get easy baskets by posting up smaller guards in the lane.”

    Again, Hodge was a very special player on the college level, was outrageously determined and with shear will he made things happen on the basketball court. AND, if you can honest enough to admit it, *”even a casual observer”* would have easily picked up on the fact that Hodge actually went totally against the offensive philosophy more times than not. Bennerman, on the other hand, was a less persuasive, but much more physically gifted individual/basketball player. His physical talents were in evidence, in very brief flashes, throughout his four years.

    Now, if you want to say that there were flashes of player brilliance, and on VERY RARE occassions that the offense looked unstoppable, that is totally agreed. But if you are coming up with any defense of the OVERALL coaching back then with use THE VERY LATE EFFORTS and the PREVIUOSLY WASTED FOR YEARS gifts of a talent like a Cameron Bennerman, then please just drop your own foolishness and move on.

    Hell, anybody can make a great play every now and then during a game, a season, or a collegiate career. It’s great, or even just good coaching that reinforces those efforts, recognizes and gives them a place to happen, and sees that those efforts become consistent. That, just DID NOT EVER HAPPEN.

  11. xphoenix87 06/03/2007 at 12:25 PM #

    if you would stop reading what I’m not saying, this would go a lot easier. I quite clearly stated that I’m not going to defend the previous 10 years because there were plenty of flaws that can be picked at.

    “I certainly didn’t think our offense was perfectly put together and I’m quite willing to admit its faults.”

    I also previously acknowledged the wasted potential of Cam Bennerman. I used Hodge and Bennerman as examples because they were the two players that came readily to mind for the example I was using. The guard passing from the top of the key then cutting to the low post was one of the basic parts of our version of the Princeton over the last few years. Hodge was the best at it because of his finishing ability and size advantage, but he certainly wasn’t the only one to run the play. Also, if you’re not willing to admit that backdoor cuts were a huge part of the offense, then I’d have to question whether you’ve been watching the NC State Wolfpack or the Nevada Wolf Pack for the last few years. Again, I made no claims as to the effectiveness of the offense or the overall ideaology of the previous coaching staff. I responded to Rick’s comment about how our version of the PO didn’t involve ball movement and spacing, which is clearly false.

    What I did say about the previous coaching staff is that I’m tired of the growing trend to completely devalue everything that happened over the last 10 years and frame Herb as a complete idiot. If you hate Sendek, that’s your prerogative, but stop trying to turn every one of my points into a way to attack the previous coaching staff.

  12. CedarGroveWolf 06/03/2007 at 12:57 PM #

    “snore, snore, snore, snore, nothing of value again”

    just as valuable as your blabbering day after day

  13. redfred2 06/03/2007 at 1:18 PM #

    xphoenix87,

    When someone breaks it down to a couple of games/plays/players, whether they looked like they had been taught spacing or how to get an open cut to the basket when they should have on occassion, then yes, there is evidence that received some proper coaching.

    What I am saying, and I think maybe Rick is too, is that in the BIG PICTURE, THE HUGE OVERALL, is that that combined group of coaches with their leader setting the tone, and apparently with the backing of the NC State administration, wasted and ignored more resources, human and otherwise, that were at their very beckoned call, than any other group I’ve ever witnessed.

  14. redfred2 06/03/2007 at 1:20 PM #

    Thanks Cedar. Great contribution again BTW.

  15. CedarGroveWolf 06/03/2007 at 3:24 PM #

    “if you would stop reading what I’m not saying, this would go a lot easier.”

    get used to it around here.

  16. redfred2 06/03/2007 at 4:40 PM #

    ^Alrighty then Cedar.

    You guys, especially ^ “Old Faithful” just above me there, are constantly defending the fact you aren’t…well…defending. Sad fact is, you still very much are, and doing a worse and worse job of it as time goes by. If somehow, you could come up with a well thought out comment, without using such bad examples to make your points about the past coach or the offense, then maybe you wouldn’t get this backlash all of the time. It’s apparent though that you’re running out of room and futhermore, some of these player’s names that continually keep cropping up in your posts are the worst examples of any, that could even be mentioned in a common sense discussion about NC State’s recent past.

  17. xphoenix87 06/03/2007 at 5:30 PM #

    AAAAARRRRRRGGGGGGGGHHHHHHH

    “I didn’t say that Cam developed to the full of his ability. I never said the previous regime developed great players. I’m not defending Herb and his crew because they obviously did have flaws.”

    “Again, I made no claims as to the effectiveness of the offense or the overall ideaology of the previous coaching staff.”

    “I certainly didn’t think our offense was perfectly put together and I’m quite willing to admit its faults. I’m not a Herb apologist, I’m just not willing to join in on this myth that the team was coached by complete incompetents for the last 10 years.”

    I have stated quite clearly, many times, that I am perfectly willing to admit the faults of the previous coaching staff. I’m not going to elaborate on those specific faults because you guys are have done that enough times for everyone. The original point that brought all this up was that you can’t use switching offenses as an excuse for why Gavin doesn’t have the court sense he should. The Princeton Offense, even our version, requires more knowledge of spacing and ball movement than most, and that you cannot use that as an excuse for his lacking those skills. That was it, that was my point. It was your insistence that the previous coaching staff was completely incompetent that made me address that point. If you don’t like Herb, that’s fine, but if you want to try and debate me with a point like

    “Did you actually watch our version of the PO?
    IT consisted of five gusy standing around the perimeter passing hte ball back and forth and then launching a three. How can anyone learn spacing form that.
    It is like you make stuff up to support your argument.”

    then you bet I’m going to have something to say about that. I’m not going to defend the previous coaching staff, but I’m also not going to put up with the ignorant idea that nothing good happened in the last 10 years.

  18. Rick 06/04/2007 at 7:27 AM #

    You keep saying you are not going to defend the previous staff and yet repeatedly do so. You are quickly falling into the “cedar” category. Fortunately your posts are more than one sentence. Unfortunately you keep insulting those you disagree with. Not exactly a mature way to debate.

    I find it strange that you are so willing to rip into current players but are so ready to defend former coaches. Warped allegiences to say the least.

  19. lush 06/04/2007 at 9:13 AM #

    ^ clap, clap, clap, clap BRAVO!

  20. xphoenix87 06/04/2007 at 9:40 AM #

    Here’s what I’ve said so far about the previous coaching staff.

    A) I’m not going to address the big picture, overall direction of the team under Sendek because it doesn’t actually pertain to the point we’re arguing over.

    B) I admit that the previous coaching staff did not develop players well and wasted a significant amount of talent by forcing players into a system that did not fit them.

    C) We don’t know if Herb failed to teach Gavin spacing/ball-movement or if Gavin was too stubborn to listen/just doesn’t have a good basketball mind. However, the development of Courtney Fells this year in comparison to Gavin this year seems to indicate one of the latter.

    D) Herb and company were not complete and total morons. I only brought up this last point because of the complete hyperbole about our offense not requiring ball-movement/spacing that you put forward as fact.

    Those are the points I’ve made concerning the previous coaching staff. The only reason that I brought up the previous staff at all was because, of all the points I’ve made against Gavin, you chose harp on the one that would allow you to attack the Herb regime. I have adamantly refused to comment on the overall performance of Sendek, beyond saying that he isn’t a moron, because it doesn’t pertain at all to the point at hand.

    If you guys would stop reading things in my post that I’m not saying and drop your insistence on turning every point into an attack against a long-gone coach, then maybe I wouldn’t have anything to insult.

  21. Rick 06/04/2007 at 10:30 AM #

    “If you guys would stop reading things in my post that I’m not saying and drop your insistence on turning every point into an attack against a long-gone coach, then maybe I wouldn’t have anything to insult.”

    Ok, we got it. You may now resume trashing some players.

  22. xphoenix87 06/04/2007 at 10:52 AM #

    that’s all I ask 🙂

  23. CedarGroveWolf 06/04/2007 at 11:25 AM #

    “Unfortunately you keep insulting those you disagree with. Not exactly a mature way to debate. ”

    ROTFLMAO!

  24. CedarGroveWolf 06/04/2007 at 11:27 AM #

    ^ like this?

    “You really are an obstinate little fella.”

  25. Rick 06/04/2007 at 1:57 PM #

    My dancing monkey is making an appearance.

    Did anyone drop a coin in your cup? If so I get 50%.

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