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06/29/2008: blogs.suntimes.com
SIU's staying power, Brandon Paul news, rumors, odds and ends
By Joe Henricksen
June 29, 2008
While watching the IBCA All-Star game at Illinois Wesleyan
University Saturday night, a casual observer of basketball
who came out to watch the top seniors in Illinois, asked,
"Where is he going to play at in college?" The answer was
Southern Illinois. Just moments later the fan asked, "What
about him, where's he headed?" The answer, again, was
Southern Illinois.
This was just 8 or 9 minutes into the game after watching
Homewood-Flossmoor's Kevin Dillard drop in
three straight three-pointers and then Marshall's
Ryan Hare go coast-to-coast and finish with a dunk
in transition. Both Dillard and Hare, a pair of top 10
players in the City/Suburban Hoops Report's final 2008
player rankings, shined in their final high school event.
And yep, both are headed to Carbondale to play for coach
Chris Lowery.
Southern Illinois may have missed the NCAA
Tournament last year after reaching the Big Dance a
remarkable six straight years, but the recruiting fortunes
have not slowed. The cupboard is hardly bare and an awfully
impressive new stock is coming in. Dillard will work a year
backing up senior star point guard Bryan Mullins,
while Hare will have time to polish his game before being
asked to do too much. Dillard's lack of physical strength
could be a hindrance early on as he adjusts to life in the
MVC, but his ballhandling (although he has to cut it down
some) and vastly improved shot will be just fine in time.
And if Hare does all the right things once he sets foot on
campus, he has a chance to be special.
And this doesn't even include SIU's most prized recruit,
6-8 Anthony Booker of Florissant, Mo.
Booker was a consensus top 100 player nationally and even
top 50 in one national recruiting list. Justin Bocot,
a 6-3 athletic guard out of Bloomington, is eligible after
sitting out a year and all reports are he has looked
terrific leading up to this year. Big 6-11, 250-pound
Nick Evans redshirted last season and will
be eligible, and 6-4 Torres Roundtree, a
high school teammate of Booker, is a versatile freshman.
Plus, guard Tony Freeman will be yet
another player to count on in two years after he sits out a
season following his transfer from Iowa.
There is no question the success the Salukis have enjoyed
this decade continues to carry over in recruiting. While SIU
may not like being called a "mid-major" due to its ability
to compete against the majority of teams in high-major
conferences, it presently remains on top of the mid-major
mountain.
Brandon Paul continues to impress
After watching several high-profile players over the weekend
of all ages and with different fanfare, including
Sterling's Joseph Bertrand, Washington's
Dyricus Simms-Edwards, Rock Island's
Chasson Randle, Downers Grove South's
Malcolm Herron, and East Aurora's Ryan
Boatright among others, it was again
Warren's Brandon Paul that stood out. Paul was the
one that showed why he is what he is -- the Hoops Report's
top-ranked prospect in the Class of 2009. He continues to
set himself apart from the rest in that class. His perimeter
shot gets more and more consistent, while he has the ability
to get his shot when he wants to due to his great
athleticism. As a basketball athlete and prospect he's just
on another level compared to others in the Class of 2009.
You can just see him rounding into the player you envision
he will be when he gets to college, which will be a scoring
2-guard with the potential to be a lockdown defender because
of that athleticism and length. What will be interesting to
see is how Paul stacks up nationally following the July
evaluation period. The plan right now is that Paul will play
for Larry Butler and the Illinois
Warriors in the Peach Jam, which should provide
Paul even more exposure.
Tough break
Nick Wasburn, a strong, up-and-coming 6-8
post prospect out of Mahomet-Seymour,
suffered a tough break -- literally. Washburn, who just
started generating college interest this past spring while
playing for the Illinois Wolves, suffered a broken foot that
couldn't have come at a worse time with the July evaluation
period right around the corner. Washburn, arguably the
fastest rising player in that class as he has gone from
complete obscurity to a top 35 or 40 player in that class,
should still have his suitors in the end due to his
tremendous frame and body.
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