Jarvis, Sacar Anim, Bjorn Broman, and Marshawn Wilson were the others in the top 5.
Top 5 list sounds about right. Pretty good job by the committee this year.
Jarvis, Sacar Anim, Bjorn Broman, and Marshawn Wilson were the others in the top 5.
No that was Traci Carter who committed to Marquette a few weeks ago. It wasn't much talk of them going to the same school either Ellison was asked about it in an interview and just said that would be cool and that was about all there was.Might be noteworthy that Jamall Gregory committed to South Carolina today. Werent him and Ellison throwing around the idea of going to school together?
Jarvis, Sacar Anim, Bjorn Broman, and Marshawn Wilson were the others in the top 5.
People rag on Gopher coaches for not recruiting well and say the state has sooo much talent. These are evidently Minnesota's 5 best seniors. The Minnesota pool of talent is typically very thin. Last year Minnesota happened to have 4 really nice once in a 100 year recruits in the same class. This year...not so much even if you add the Wisconsin commit. A group of players with limitations either academically, or size, or can't shoot ... for the most part. And the winner is going to Nebraska Omaha.
Illikainen and Johnson are top recruits in any class, i wouldn't consider this a bad class at all, the top players in the next couple of years are very good.
http://go4report.com/qa-2015-3-star-shooting-guard-kj-walton/ found this article. Didn't know we were still after Walton this much
His name does seem to get buried. We've certainly been on him for a long time so who knows? Maybe that will pay off for us.
I don't know that much about the 2015 Minnesota class because I don't pay attention to high school ball, but I have watched Vaughn, Jones, and Travis in college this year. Do you really think Illikainen and Johnson are as good as those three?
Not nearly as good as last years but not mince meat either, at this point Minnesota just isn't going to get top 25 recruits in state or not, I think they are both very solid high division 1 players though, if you have two of that caliber every year I don't think you can call the talent pool bad.
Indiana 14, Illinois 15, Wi 9, Maryland 8, Ohio 9, Pennsylvania 8, D1 recruits in those states and just because there are ONLY 2 or 3 each year in Minnesota almost means you HAVE to recruit them, even if you don't like their abilities for what you look for or need. And if you miss you are villified. And, If you do get a guy from MN you aren't that excited about because he is local and but you needed a precedence for future recruits that's an issue....does it help? So, 2 or 3 in a pool has lot's of issues. Your percentage has to be 50% to get one of two. Not a likely closing rate.
If we live here we generally like it here but we still complain. But to recruit someone to endure winter can't be easy.
Florida 32, TX 22, GA 22, Tenn 10, AL 9 D1 recruits...I'd think the thought is "I believe in my abilities to recruit...I can out recruit the competition" if I coached in those states versus first out recruiting the competition and then convincing the recruit MN is a great place to live on top of that and oh by the way after you graduate we'll have a new practice facility and oh, we like our arena the way it is here.
All I'm saying is...history says it's hard to recruit here for the last 20 years. I respect the people picking Mr Basketball...how "high division 1" can you be if you are not the MR Bkb winner in the state of MN in 2015? Neither
of those guys is going to turn the program around. Last years 4 guys had that ability in helping Minnesota rise up.
Coffey might, but that's one guy again in the state. Limited choices...if it's 1,2 or 3 players and even more so if those players have limitations. Difficult place to recruit history says.
Indiana 14, Illinois 15, Wi 9, Maryland 8, Ohio 9, Pennsylvania 8, D1 recruits in those states and just because there are ONLY 2 or 3 each year in Minnesota almost means you HAVE to recruit them, even if you don't like their abilities for what you look for or need. And if you miss you are villified. And, If you do get a guy from MN you aren't that excited about because he is local and but you needed a precedence for future recruits that's an issue....does it help? So, 2 or 3 in a pool has lot's of issues. Your percentage has to be 50% to get one of two. Not a likely closing rate.
If we live here we generally like it here but we still complain. But to recruit someone to endure winter can't be easy.
Florida 32, TX 22, GA 22, Tenn 10, AL 9 D1 recruits...I'd think the thought is "I believe in my abilities to recruit...I can out recruit the competition" if I coached in those states versus first out recruiting the competition and then convincing the recruit MN is a great place to live on top of that and oh by the way after you graduate we'll have a new practice facility and oh, we like our arena the way it is here.
All I'm saying is...history says it's hard to recruit here for the last 20 years. I respect the people picking Mr Basketball...how "high division 1" can you be if you are not the MR Bkb winner in the state of MN in 2015? Neither
of those guys is going to turn the program around. Last years 4 guys had that ability in helping Minnesota rise up.
Coffey might, but that's one guy again in the state. Limited choices...if it's 1,2 or 3 players and even more so if those players have limitations. Difficult place to recruit history says.
I am not going to spend to much of my time disproving this post. Where are you getting your numbers from? For 2015, Wisconsin has four kids committed to high major schools in Stone, Ellenson, and Pritzl according to 247. They will have a 5th if/when someone takes a chance on Noskowiak. This was a unique year for Wisconsin basketball in the manner that last year was a unique one for Minnesota (Big 3 in Minnesota vs Stone/Ellenson in Wisconsin). There's good talent in Wisconsin, but there's also good talent in Minnesota. Both states have done a nice job of producing basketball talent based on the size of the respective states.
I don't think anyone who has said their is good talent in Minnesota ever said that it produces the same amount of talent (or even close) to Illinois, Indiana, Maryland, Ohio, or Pennsylvania. That said, I count 9 players in Indiana that will definitely play high major basketball next year (two more will if they have can qualify which is unknown right now). According to 247, the top kid is undecided, the second kid is going to Illinois and the 4th kid is going to Cal. You have to get down to Ryan Cline who's 6th to find a kid who's staying in Indiana and he's going to Purdue. Cline is ranked similarly to Jarvis Johnson. Now for the sake of argument, lets say that 10 high major kids is about normal for Indiana and 4 high major kids is about where Minnesota is at. In Indiana, you have Indiana, Notre Dame, Purdue, and now Butler who is also recruiting like a high major. The fact that they have more talent than Minnesota is indisputable, but for a kid that wants to stay home..he's got four legit options.
It's also false that Minnesota "has to recruit" any high major kid in the state. It was just a month or so ago that Sacar Anim committed to Marquette without a Gopher offer. In recent history, Wisconsin has taken Jordan Taylor, Mike Buresewitz, and Riley Dearring as Minnesota kids who were not offered by the Gophers. I can remember as far back as the Clem days when the Gophers didn't offer Nick Horvath and he went to Duke!
The state of Minnesota definitely went through a lull post Royce/Rodney, but the Gophers also failed to identify some kids who were definitely high major talents (not that I blame them, but Bo/Wisconsin has been much better in this area of identifying under the radar guys) like Muscala, Wolters, Alec Brown, etc.
It also hasn't always been a lack of talent that's held Minnesota back from being more successful but coaching and other issues. Their was a ton of talent on campus at Minnesota during the Tubby era, that wasn't the issue with why this team struggled during his tenure. It's not remembered as clearly, but their was also talent on the roster at times when Monson was the coach. A front line of Bauer/Rickert/Holman (all Minnesota kids by the way) should have been a tournament team. Monson later took a team with Kris Humphries, Adam Boone, Mo Hargrow (and at this point a limited Mike Bauer) and somehow went 3-13 in conference play.
Not going to respond to the "Mr. Basketball" stuff as I don't find it relevant. It's a high school award that has much more to do with how someone performs in high school than how they will perform in college.
...why did 29 coaches turn down the Minnesota job before we got to Richard?
Seriously?
I am not going to spend to much of my time disproving this post. Where are you getting your numbers from? For 2015, Wisconsin has four kids committed to high major schools in Stone, Ellenson, and Pritzl according to 247. They will have a 5th if/when someone takes a chance on Noskowiak.
The fourth you're not listing above is probably Heldt. Also, there are others who have moved around.. Travon Bunch is committed to South Carolina; Damontrae Jefferson is a stud - what will become of him?
Lots of nice MM 2015's as well.. NIU with Key & Bradley.. Drake has a couple including Billy Wampler.. Cody Schwartz to SJSU.. many others..
Anyway, I agree with your post -- Minnesota doesn't have to recruit any high major kid from the state. They need to bring in great players that fit. Can be done in various ways.
Personally, I like the idea of Pitino going out to the east coast for players. Talent wise, you could compare east coast basketball with the state of hockey. The kids grow up in the sport there, they play on the street there, they compete against the best there. And the east coast, like the state of hockey, produces by far the most collegiate players every year.
If the Gophers can even attract their second tier kids, we'll be pretty good.
Personally, I like the idea of Pitino going out to the east coast for players. Talent wise, you could compare east coast basketball with the state of hockey. The kids grow up in the sport there, they play on the street there, they compete against the best there. And the east coast, like the state of hockey, produces by far the most collegiate players every year.
If the Gophers can even attract their second tier kids, we'll be pretty good.
And if you add Bunch and Jefferson it's 12 from Wisconsin. I understood EG's main point to be we have ample stellar prospects in Minnesota each year. That's my argument, we don't. Obviously, we need to recruit the world to be successful in Minnesota. Also, my point.
And the Gophers recruited Sacar...they didn't offer...very different than not recruiting him at all. Different than the past.