Hokies Chasing the Rest of the ACC Pack in 2005 Hoops Recruiting
by Stefan Adams, TechSideline.com,
10/29/04
One
of our favorite publications is the ACC Area Sports Journal, and one of the
things they do best is cover ACC basketball recruiting, with noted basketball
recruiting analyst Brick Oettinger. The latest issue of the ACC Area Sports
Journal and the information it contains on hoops recruiting should give Hokie
fans pause and illustrate what a mountain Seth Greenberg's team has to climb in
their new league.
As of right now, the Hokies have begun to fill in
the voids currently found in the four (power forward) and five (center) spots.
Coach Greenberg has made it apparent that his No. 1 priority with respect to
recruiting is finding depth for the post positions.
The Hokies enter the 2004-05 season with a solid
2004 recruiting class in the likes of Marquie Cooke, Wynton Witherspoon, Deron
Washington and Robert Krabbendam. These four players are guys who can come in
and play vital roles for Tech from day one.
Greenberg is in the midst of rebuilding the
Virginia Tech basketball program that is now part of the most elite collegiate
conference in the country—this is no easy task. One of the most important
aspects of elevating the status of any basketball program is the ability to
bring in talent that can help build and maintain a winning mentality on the
basketball court.
The Hokies' 2004 recruiting class was ranked
anywhere from 5th to 7th in the 12-team ACC (the league including Boston
College), though it should be noted that the ranking included JUCO hotshot
Justin Holt, who has since been dismissed from the team. At this point, though,
the 2005 recruiting class isn't shaping up as strong. Brick Oettinger’s
analysis of the ACC’s recruiting for the class of 2005 breaks down like this:
ACC Men's Basketball
Recruiting
(per Vol. 28, No. 5 of the ACC Area Sports Journal, Oct. 21-Nov. 3,
2004) |
Team |
2005 Commitments |
2005 Outstanding Offers |
Virginia Tech |
Top 300 Hyman Taylor (6-9 F/C),
Top 300 Terrance Vinson (6-8 F/C) |
No. 75 Uche Echefu (6-8 W/F)
No. 186 Quinton Thorton (6-8 F),
Top 250 Brian Gilmore (6-7 W/F)
Top 300 Horace Dixon (6-9 F)
Top 300 Eric Whitehurst (6-8 W/F) |
Boston College |
No. 150 Marquez Haynes (6-2 G)
Top 250 Evan Neisler (W/F) |
No. 169 Arinze Onuaku (6-9 C)
Top 300 Joe Wolfinger (6-11 C) |
Clemson |
No. 65 K.C. Rivers (5-4 G/W)
No. 104 Julius Powell (6-8 W/F) |
Top 250 Cameron Lewis (6-8 F/C)
Top 250 Kyle Madsen (6-8 F)
Top 250 Raymond Sykes (6-9 F) |
Duke |
No. 7 Josh McRoberts (6-9 F)
No. 20 Eric Boateng (6-10 C)
No. 28 Greg Paulus (6-2 PG),
No. 28 Jamal Boykin (6-6 W/F) |
Top 100 Martynas Pocius (6-4 G) |
Florida State |
No. 153 Ryan Reid (6-8 F) |
No. 13 Keith Brumbaugh (6-8 F)
No. 59 Jeremy Pargo (6-2 G)
No. 75 Uche Echefu (6-8 W/F)
No. 117 Casaan Breeden (6-7 F)
No. 143 RouSean Cromwell (6-9 F/C)
No. 158 DeAndre Thomas (6-8 C/F)
No. 161 Rashad Chase (6-8 F)
Top 300 Joe Wolfinger (6-11 C) |
Georgia Tech |
No. 50 Lewis Clinch (6-3 G),
No. 64 Alade Aminu (6-9 F/C),
No. 99 D’Andre Bell (6-5 G/F),
No. 162 Austin Jackson (6-1 G) |
No. 18 C.J. Miles (6-5 G/F),
No. 22 Korvotney Barber (6-7 F),
No. 24 Andrew Bynum (6-11 C) |
Maryland |
None |
No. 87 Shane Clark (6-7 F),
No. 169 Arinze Onuaku (6-9 C) |
Miami |
No. 62 Adrian Thomas (6-7 F),
No. 86 Denis Clemente (6-0 G),
No. 159 (6-6 F/G) |
No. 108 Jeremy Barr (6-8 C) |
North Carolina |
No. 5 Tyler Hansbrough (6-9 F),
No. 19 Bobby Frasor (6-3 G),
No. 43 Marcus Ginyard (6-5 G),
No. 47 Danny Green (6-5 G/F) |
No. 24 Andrew Bynum (6-11 C) |
N.C. State |
No. 34 Brandon Costner (6-8 F),
No. 56 Courtney Fells (6-6 G/F),
No. 98 Ben McCauley (6-7 F) |
None |
Virginia |
No. 145 Laurynas Mikalauskas (6-8 F),
No. 155 Sam Warren (6-9 F/C),
No. 168 Mamadi Diane (6-5 F/G)
Top 250 Brian Moten (G/F) |
None |
Wake Forest |
No. 53 David Weaver (6-9 C),
No. 123 Harvey Hale (6-3 G),
No. 132 Kevin Swinton (6-7 F) |
None |
Both of Tech’s commitments fall somewhere
between 250 and 300 in the rankings for the class of 2005. The other seniors
Greenberg and his staff are after do not rank much higher than that, with the
exception of Uche Echefu and Quinton Thorton.
Considering selling points such as a team on the
rise, a recent move into the ACC and television exposure, it is troublesome that
only one elite player is considering the Hokies as a college destination.
A look at the majority of Tech’s opponents in
the ACC shows what kind of talent these schools can pull in on an annual basis.
It should not be overlooked that Duke and North Carolina will pull in the
country’s best athletes without having to hunt them down—the best of the
best want to play at these schools.
However, when it is obvious that schools like
Clemson and Miami (both far from heavy-hitters in Division-I basketball) are
pulling in top talent, better than VT per the recruiting rankings, it should
cause concern.
It is vital that Greenberg and his staff can
recruit players that will allow Tech to exceed the successes of schools such as
Clemson, Miami, Virginia and Boston College. If the Hokies can find their way to
the middle of the ACC standings at the end of a basketball season (and not get
robbed of a spot in a post season tournament), there is the possibility of the
sky being the limit for Virginia Tech basketball.
What also should not be overlooked is the ability
of Seth Greenberg to coach the talent he has corralled to Blacksburg. If last
season was any indication that the coach can make the best of what he has to
work with, Tech has the possibility of a very bright future in years to come—but
the road to success would be traversed much easier with the guidance of top high
school talent like Marquie Cooke.
It is interesting to guess how the future of Tech
basketball will play out. In every conference, there are powerhouses and the
teams those powerhouses feed on. While it seems apparent Tech will be the latter
for the most part in the beginning, there is light at the end of the tunnel.
What most Hokie basketball supporters are hoping
for is that Coach Greenberg can continue to put together seasons like he did in
his first year at Tech to arouse interest in future talent that is currently
rising up in high schools coast to coast, instead of putting together recruiting
classes that rank near the bottom of the league.
Source for recruiting rankings: the ACC
Area Sports Journal, $49.00 a year. We recommend the print version of this
outstanding publication, which is printed every two weeks during the academic
year and once a month during the summer.
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