Don't misunderstand - I'm not saying they've all been bad, or even that some of them haven't been good and even at times very good. But we have yet to have a single one of our highest-rated so-called star recruits really take over, find a hugely productive role in the system and live up to elite billing on a consistent basis.
Our best guys have invariably been slept-on transfers or guys on that upper middle class tier, 3* or 4* guys who've developed over time. One of them is sitting on the coaches' side of the bench right now in Tweety Carter.
They weren't all 1-and-dones, but certainly I wouldn't put any of these guys in a top 5 most important players in Scott Drew's tenure. Don't know how many would even make the top 10. This is generally how I'd rank them in terms of impact.
1. Perry Jones
2. Keyonte George
3. Quincy Miller
4. Kendall Brown
5. Isaiah Austin (I get this one is an outlier for reasons)
Given how much time it takes coaches to recruit these guys, and how many resources you have to pour into them over years and years just to get your hat on the selection table (Alvin Brooks started his relationship with Keyonte six years ago), it's fair to expect more of them than anyone else.
And this isn't necessarily a wholesale indictment of recruiting 5* freshmen, but specifically the ones we've pulled have disappointed relative to the peer standard. Walsh, Walker, Miller, Black (just off the top of my head) were all 5* blue chips and all had more impactful years than Key (or any of our 5* guys ever), integrated into the team ethos and are currently leaders on teams that are still dancing.
This is particularly relevant because our program is turning this direction. We currently have three elite 5* recruits coming to campus in the next 18 months, with a possible fourth on the way in Tre Johnson, one of four recruits in the last 10 years 247 is grading at 1.000 (Chet Holmgren, RJ Barrett & Andrew Wiggins are the others, if you're skeptical).
You can recruit elite, star AAU guys and win titles, but programs often sacrifice their time and resources to those guys at the expense of real stem-to-stern team building. Drew has earned the benefit of the doubt on the latter, but as to the former it's fair to be somewhat disappointed in the return on our largest investments. Since our strategy does seem to be shifting toward these elite kids who've been on the social media highlight circuit their entire youth careers and told consistently their game is gold-plated, it's fair to wonder what this program will look like in another five years.
Our best guys have invariably been slept-on transfers or guys on that upper middle class tier, 3* or 4* guys who've developed over time. One of them is sitting on the coaches' side of the bench right now in Tweety Carter.
They weren't all 1-and-dones, but certainly I wouldn't put any of these guys in a top 5 most important players in Scott Drew's tenure. Don't know how many would even make the top 10. This is generally how I'd rank them in terms of impact.
1. Perry Jones
2. Keyonte George
3. Quincy Miller
4. Kendall Brown
5. Isaiah Austin (I get this one is an outlier for reasons)
Given how much time it takes coaches to recruit these guys, and how many resources you have to pour into them over years and years just to get your hat on the selection table (Alvin Brooks started his relationship with Keyonte six years ago), it's fair to expect more of them than anyone else.
And this isn't necessarily a wholesale indictment of recruiting 5* freshmen, but specifically the ones we've pulled have disappointed relative to the peer standard. Walsh, Walker, Miller, Black (just off the top of my head) were all 5* blue chips and all had more impactful years than Key (or any of our 5* guys ever), integrated into the team ethos and are currently leaders on teams that are still dancing.
This is particularly relevant because our program is turning this direction. We currently have three elite 5* recruits coming to campus in the next 18 months, with a possible fourth on the way in Tre Johnson, one of four recruits in the last 10 years 247 is grading at 1.000 (Chet Holmgren, RJ Barrett & Andrew Wiggins are the others, if you're skeptical).
You can recruit elite, star AAU guys and win titles, but programs often sacrifice their time and resources to those guys at the expense of real stem-to-stern team building. Drew has earned the benefit of the doubt on the latter, but as to the former it's fair to be somewhat disappointed in the return on our largest investments. Since our strategy does seem to be shifting toward these elite kids who've been on the social media highlight circuit their entire youth careers and told consistently their game is gold-plated, it's fair to wonder what this program will look like in another five years.