07/18/2008: sports.espn.go.com
SUMMER SESSION: COLLEGE COACHES SETTING SIGHTS YOUNGER AND YOUNGER
July 18th, 2008
by Scott Powers
Wearing the trademark bright orange shirt,
Illinois assistant coach Jerrance Howard
positioned himself against the basketball post's padding while the
Rising Stars' 14-and-under AAU team went through its layup line.
Standing under the rim, Howard got to this spot 15
minutes before the game even began, making sure he'd beat out the
75-plus college coaches in the building to it. It wasn't that Howard
wanted the prime location to best evaluate the on-court talent. No,
Howard's motive was simply to be seen prominently by a 6-foot-6,
13-year-old.
Once, July was the most important month for a college
coach to recruit the talent of the senior class. Offers would be
extended during this time; kids would decide sometime in the fall where
they were going, and in early November they'd sign their letters of
intent. Now, July is a month where the targets have simply expanded.
While coaches are still focused on putting the finishing touches on
their latest recruiting classes, they're just as concerned with scouting
and possibly securing commitments from incoming eighth graders,
freshmen, sophomores and juniors.
On this day, Alex
Foster is the 13-year-old who Howard, his
boss Illinois coach Bruce Weber
and another dozen college coaches have made a point to see and be seen
by. Foster, an athletic wing, still has another year to decide on which
high school to attend—they're recruiting him, too—but that hasn't kept
him from banking two college scholarship offers.
"In our case, we've tried to make the effort to see
younger and younger players," Weber said. "We want to try and get them
on campus, going to our camps."
This is how Illinois and plenty of others have
leveled the recruiting field. They've gone from spending most of their
time and effort on the older kids to using the same approach on the
younger ones. Kentucky coach Billy Gillispie
has been the latest to pull off a kiddie commitment as 14-year-old
Michael Avery, a 6-4 eighth grader,
verballed to the Wildcats.
For Weber, this wasn't the initial strategy. But
after missing out on nearly every big-time recruit in his own backyard
recently—guys like Sherron Collins, Jon
Scheyer, Derrick Rose, Julian Wright—despite
coaching Illinois to the NCAA championship game, he realized something
had to change. So, it did. No longer were the Illini going to wait on
players. They were going to go after them young and were going to go
after them hard.
"Everything is sped up," said City/Suburban
Hoops Report recruiting analyst Joe
Henricksen, who has been covering the
Chicago area for the past 13 years. "It's to keep up with the Joneses."
The Illini have already put together arguably
two of the nation's best recruiting classes for 2009 and 2010, and none
of those commitments have come anywhere near the current recruiting
period. Jereme Richmond, a top 10 junior, committed as a freshman.
Crandall Head, a
top 20 junior, verballed as a sophomore. Incoming seniors
Joseph Bertrand,
Brandon Paul and
D.J. Richardson, all
top 100 guys, pledged before their junior seasons.
Weber turned his recruiting around just like that. He
went from having a true concern for the future security of his job to
putting together classes that can return Illini to the Final Four. But
don't think he still isn't sweating a bit. Verbally, he has put together
two elite classes. On paper, he has nothing. This is common. The
greatest trend in college basketball recruiting is early commitments.
Heck, 11 of the top 20 players in the Class of 2010 have committed. The
second one is early decommitments. Until there's a signature on that
Letter of Intent no coach feels safe.
"You can't even call them before the summer of their
junior year," Weber said. "A kid who's committed early, you don't know
in two or three years what might happen. With AAU and everything, more
people can get involved."
Fellow Big Ten coach
Thad Matta knows this
feeling all too well. Last year, he had Luke
Babbitt decommit and opt for Nevada, and
2010 commit DeShaun Thomas
has been like a rollercoaster. Thomas originally committed to Ohio State
in May of 2007 but quickly backed out. Later that year, he was quoted,
"I like Ohio State. That's my school right now, but I want to look at
the other schools, but Ohio State is my main school." Now just recently,
Thomas came out again and said he was locked into the Buckeyes.
He's just one of many.
Brandon Jennings
committed to USC in August of 2006, decommited in April of 2007 and
committed to Arizona. Remember, Eric Gordon
was an Illini recruit first. Just in the Chicago area,
Cully Payne, a 2009
recruit, committed to DePaul as a freshman and after three solid years
of holding to that decommited and verballed to Alabama this summer.
Foster's parents, Tony and Hope, don't plan on
their son going down that path. Tony recalled seeing how much pressure
on and off the court Ryan Boatright,
a fellow Illinois prep player, was put under last season after
committing to USC and Tim Floyd
as an eighth-grader.
"We're not letting him commit like other kids in
eighth grade," Hope said. "It's too early … He's growing up too fast
already."
As for Illinois' recruiting tactics, Tony and Hope did
notice Howard under the basket and later acknowledged a smile and a wave
by Weber. For Foster, it's something that is still new to him.
"It's a little bit strange to see all the coaches,"
said Foster, who received his first college letter in sixth grade. "You
kind of feel pressure, but you still got to go and play."
Weber didn't extend Foster a 2013 scholarship after
seeing him play and he doesn't plan to for some time. Weber plans on
following the National Association of Basketball Coaches' recent
opposition to offering scholarships or accepting commitments no earlier
than June 15 following a player's sophomore season.
Of course, it's not an NCCA rule, so plenty of coaches
aren't following it.
"We recently had a ninth-grader on campus, and we
didn't offer him because of the NABC mandate or whatever you want to
call it," Weber said. "We later got a call that he had been offered by
another school and they were thinking about taking it. … We got to be
careful not to over do it. If we can't control ourselves, the NCAA will
control us and we already have enough rules."
The question is where the future leads. Will coaches
start recruiting sixth graders or younger? Will younger players feel
more like pros, and more hungry to be paid, or see Brandon Jennings and
wonder if that could be them? Henricksen certainly never expected to be
watching someone Foster's age while being joined by Weber and coaches
from Colorado, Georgia Tech, Purdue, SIU and Wisconsin among others.
"Was I watching seventh graders play 10 years ago?
Hell, no," Henricksen said. "I really think there will eventually be a
mandate put in place involving a recruiting age limit—not offering
before a certain age. The NCAA is already looking into it. Until then,
the issue will continue because recruiting is so cutthroat. And I also
think there will be more and more broken engagements before the actual
wedding ceremony (signing day). There are still too many variables
during that three or now sometimes four-year commitment, such as
coaching changes, style of play, the make-up of the roster and talent
level at the school, an individual player's development."
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