Chet Holmgren, Azzi Fudd Headline 2021 McDonald's All-American Rosters
Feb 23, 2021
Big West's Michael Porter Jr., walks on the court against Big East during the first half of the McDonald's All- American boys high school basketball game in Chicago, Wednesday, March 29, 2017. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh)
Chet Holmgren and Azzi Fudd, two of the top boy's and girl's high school basketball players in the country, lead this year's class of McDonald's All-Americans.
The two rosters were released in full on Tuesday afternoon:
Both the boys' and girls' teams feature 24 players, though the game will not be played this year because of the COVID-19 pandemic. Instead, the 2021 class will be honored with a virtual celebration highlighting Ronald McDonald House Charities followed by a one-hour ESPN special on Saturday, April 3—the same day as the NCAA Final Four.
Among the players on the boys' roster, three have already committed to Michigan next year, two are headed to Duke and another two will join Kentucky. Five players, including Holmgren, are still undecided for 2021.
Oregon, Baylor, Michigan State, Tennessee, Alabama, Washington, Stanford, Ole Miss, Georgetown, Auburn and UCLA are also represented on the men's side.
A 7'1" center from Minnehaha, Minnesota, Holmgren is ranked the No. 1 player in the country by247Sportsand is considering offers from Gonzaga, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio State, Memphis and North Carolina. National recruiting analyst Josh Gershon at 247Sports projects Holmgren as a future NBA lottery pick who compares to Anthony Davis.
Fudd, who ESPNrankedthe No. 1 girl's basketball player in 2021, has already committed to UConn for 2021. She's joined on the McDonald's All-American roster by two other Huskies commits while South Carolina leads with four commits on the roster.
North Carolina and Texas feature three players and Stanford and USC have commitments from two players. Notre Dame, Oregon State, Baylor, Georgia and Louisville will be represented on the team, as well.
The girls' roster does not feature any players who have yet to commit.
High School Basketball Player Jo-Jo Wright Dies at Age 15 After Car Crash
Jan 28, 2021
The basketball rim during the first half of an NBA basketball game in Boston, Monday, Jan. 13, 2020. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)
Uniondale High School standout point guard Jo-Jo Wright, one of the top players in New York City, died in a car crash Wednesday. He was 15.
Knights head coach Tom Diana confirmed the news to Roger Rubin of Newsday.
"I am devastated," Diana said. "He was the best. A different kind of kid. He was funny and playful and full of life. ... And he might have been one of the most talented players to ever walk the halls at our school. He had a great future."
Our Basketball Family sends our condolences to the family of JoJo Wright and to his Uniondale Basketball Family. Sleep in Peace young baller. 🙏🏼 pic.twitter.com/G54iReioqv
Wright was traveling to a local gym for a workout with senior teammate Moses Styles and two other people when their car collided with one driven by an 87-year-old man and then struck a pole, per Rubin. The other three people in the car were transported to local hospitals for treatment.
The rising star averaged 19 points, nine assists, six rebounds and three steals per game during his freshman season at Uniondale and helped lead the Knights to the Nassau County championship game.
Diana called him a "big-time player" with the work ethic to match, but he also discussed the type of person Wright was away from the basketball court.
"I know this gets lost because of what a great basketball player he was, but he was an even better person," Diana told Rubin. "He had goals but he was always a good person."
The team met in the school's gym Wednesday night to remember Wright.
"Knowing I won't be able to [play] basketball with him really hurts," teammate Jordan Evelyn toldCory Jamesof CBS2. "He was always such a team player."
The cause of the crash remains under investigation by the Nassau County Police.
Board of Ed Forbids HSBB Star Destiny Adams Wearing Black Lives Matter Shirt
Jan 26, 2021
A demonstrator holds a
The Manchester (New Jersey) Board of Education denied a request from women's basketball player Destiny Adams to allow players to wear "Black Lives Matter" warmup shirts this season.
Adams, a senior who is committed to the University of North Carolina, said the board refused to even vote on her proposal.
"I was hurt because I took my time to write a speech and try to make them understand my view, because I know it's hard because they don't experience it," Adams told Daniel LoGiudice of the Asbury Park Press. "For them to not even discuss it with each other … it was hurtful. It didn't sit right with me."
Adams said she felt like the board didn't consider the proposal, which also included the option for players to wear an alternative shirt that read "equality" if they were not comfortable with "Black Lives Matter." The New Jersey State Interscholastic Athletic Association says there is no mandate on what shirts players can wear in pregame warmups, and those decisions are made by the individual schools.
School Board President Ken Pate, who is white, said the board is elected to "represent the whole school and our uniforms have to be uniform."
The board said it was denying Adams' request because it requires warmups to say the school name. Deja Adams, Destiny's older sister, says Manchester previously allowed teams to wear a warm-up shirt that said "unfinished business."
Sixty-six percent of the students who attend Manchester High are white, a significantly higher margin than the average New Jersey public school (44 percent).
Adams said she considered transferring over her disappointment with the school board but ultimately decided to stay at Manchester because transferring would have required her to sit out 30 days of competition.
Bronny James vs. Emoni Bates to Headline Battle Basketball Showcase in November
Oct 22, 2020
Sierra Canyon's Bronny James #0 in action against Paul VI during a high school basketball game at the Hoophall Classic, Monday, January 20, 2020, in Springfield, MA. (AP Photo/Gregory Payan)
A month removed from the Los Angeles Lakers' NBA championship, LeBron James will hit the court again in November. LeBron James Jr., that is.
Bronny James and the Sierra Canyon basketball team will square off against Michigan State recruit Emoni Bates, the top player in the Class of 2022, and the Ypsi Prep squad for the only time this season in the Battle Basketball Showcase, which will be sponsored by Lakers forward Danny Green (h/t Forbes).
Green said he expects LeBron James Sr. will be in attendance.
In addition to the James and Bates battle, four other elite high school basketball programs will appear at the showcase, with eight nationally-ranked players scheduled to attend. The showcase is set for Nov. 20-21 at the Allen Event Center in Dallas.
According to Adam Zagoria of Forbes, the game between Sierra Canyon and Ypsi Prep is scheduled for Nov. 21 at 8 p.m. and will likely be televised nationally.
5-Star G Mikey Williams Transfers to Lake Norman Christian from San Ysidro
Sep 21, 2020
Mikey Williams, a 5-star guard from San Diego, announced on Twitter Monday he was transferring to the Lake Norman Christian high school in Charlotte.
Williams is considered the No. 3 player in the ESPN 25 for the Class of 2023, the top shooting guard in the class and the No. 2 player from the state of California.
JoshGershonof 247Sports offered the following scouting report on Williams' game:
"Extremely productive combo guard with good size and length. Strong kid for age but not maxed out physically. High level athlete who is an explosive finisher. Has range to perimeter with jumper and is pretty consistent three-point shooter. Has handle and vision to facilitate and play on ball full time. Physical tools to be a good defender. Level of fame at age is current biggest obstacle to overcome."
He also has an enormous following already for a high schooler, with 2.5 million followers on Instagram. As Langston Wertz Jr. of the Charlotte Observer noted, he was the "the No. 1 player in the nation in his age group by the Naismith National Youth All-American Report" and played on an AAU team with Bronny James—LeBron James' son—in the eighth grade.
He also scored 77 points in a game during his freshman season in December.
Williams decision to transfer high schools may seem like an unusual swerve, but he's already shown a penchant for surprise when he posted on social media in June that he's consideringHBCUschools and may eschew bigger programs like Duke or Kansas.
"Why does it always have to be the big names?" Williams said in anInstagrampost, perKrystenPeekof Yahoo Sports. "Have you ever thought about helping your own people out? We are the reason that these schools have such big names and such good history. But in the end, what do we get out of it?"
He may also consider going pro immediately through the G League Select Team, which top prospects likeJalenGreen, JonathanKumingaand Isaiah Todd have already done.
"I'll still be watching the G League super close. Especially now that it's an option for us to either go to college, the G league or overseas route," he told Peek. "I think it's great that a lot of players don't have to go overseas and they can stay home. I'm definitely going to be watching what they do this year with guys likeJalenand JonKuminga."
For now, however, he'll be moving across the country to finish out his high school years.
Peyton Watson's Crash Course in Stardom
Jun 11, 2020
The day LeBron James enrolled his son, Bronny, at Sierra Canyon, the high school basketball team became the most famous on the planet. The elite private school's 42-acre campus in L.A.'s San Fernando Valley sits right next to Iverson Movie Ranch, where The Lone Ranger, Bonanza and countless other Westerns were filmed. Mater Dei, the other prep school powerhouse in the area, is just 20 minutes from an idyllic stretch of the Pacific Coast Highway, which cuts through the part of Newport Beach seen on The O.C.
To the outside world, those schools make sense here. They fit the vision of Los Angeles—the one projected onto a million big and little screens—that's infiltrated the collective imagination. This is the mansion-in-the-hills L.A. The bronzed-bodies-on-the-beach L.A. The gluten-free-influencer L.A. This is a city built on illusions, so perhaps it's only fair that people fall for the magic trick. And there is some truth to it. It's just not all it is. L.A. isn't a single thing. It's 10 million people; it's 4,000 square miles. It contains multitudes.
So while Sierra Canyon can boast of having six assistant coaches, 15 games on ESPN and a $7 million arena, and Mater Dei of more than 1,100 wins and 11 state titles in the past 39 years, it's also true that the best high school basketball player in California goes to school right between them.
Follow that coastal highway, which runs along the water from Malibu to Laguna Beach, and it veers inland as it cuts through Long Beach. By the time it passes Long Beach Polytechnic, the PCH is just a six-lane city boulevard. There isn't a rumor of the famous Southern California coastline, save for an occasional palm tree tucked between a McDonald's, two motor inns and a muffler shop.
But right by that deceptively named stretch of road, a 6'8" 17-year-old has made himself into the brightest star in L.A.'s 2021 class. And for a cadre of L.A. sports legends, the fact that the talented teenager has stayed at his local public school means something. They've become the village that's raising the city's rising generation of hoopers. And they're all convinced the next one up is Peyton Watson.
The gym at Bishop Montgomery High School in Torrance, California, went abuzz as Kevin Durant—in a red beanie and a baggy gray sweatshirt—took a seat courtside. He'd arrived right after the tip of January's Real Run Winter Classic's main attraction: Arizona State-bound Josh Christopher's Mayfair versus Watson's Long Beach Poly.
A 215-pound senior, Christopher looked at ease with all eyes on him; the lanky Watson's poker face was harder to read. "Just seeing [Durant] at the game, bro, I was in awe," Watson says. "I was like, 'What, bro? This can't be real.' It gave me butterflies; I'm not even gonna lie."
Christopher was the gem of L.A.'s public school league—Quavo and Ja Morant had already come to see him play, and a Sports Illustrated feature would drop on Christopher later that month. He and his running mate, 5-star point guard Dior Johnson (who has since transferred to Oak Hill Academy), could score at will, but Watson and his younger brother, Christian, babyfaced and just 6'0", weren't far behind.
Though Poly eventually lost in overtime, Peyton had proved to be his older rival's equal, offsetting Christopher's 32-point effort with 30 of his own. A few days after the game, Watson gained 1,000 new followers on his Instagram. By the time the season ended, the forward was 247Sports' top-ranked junior in the state.
BR Video
That Christopher got offers from top schools such as Arizona State, Michigan and UCLA was more proof to Watson that he could realize his dreams while sticking at his local school. Sure, he wouldn't have as many eyes on him as Bronny James (Watson has 5.19 million fewer Instagram followers). And he wouldn't have the space he would while playing with a team full of 5-star recruits. But he also knows the box-and-ones and the traps he regularly faces are as much a boon as a burden.
Watson recalls a game last season in which a team wasn't double-teaming him: "They were whole-teaming me." He's getting a crash course in what it means to be the man. "I wanna show people that you don't have to go the route of going to a prep school," Watson says. "My goal, first and foremost, is to win. But also, I'd love to prove that I'm the greatest player to ever go to Poly."
On an overcast day at the end of the strangest April in memory, I park right next to Discovery Well Park, atop Signal Hill, near the GPS pin Watson's uncle, Brantley, dropped for me. Brantley's standing near the entrance of the park, leaning against a railing right at the crest of a steep grade. His nephews, who I'm here to meet, are nowhere in sight.
"I have them running this hill every other day," Brantley says. "Lunges, sprints, jumps."
Peyton's and Christian's heads come into view. The now-6'3" Christian is pushing to keep up with his brother—half a foot taller and ever so slightly more filled out—who's a couple of steps ahead.
"I gave them a few days off because it was so hot out. Now, they're out of shape," Brantley says, laughing. Then he shouts down at the brothers. "Come on! Gotta get those legs strong."
When they reach us, both brothers collapse against the railing. Peyton smiles and thanks me for driving down to meet him. Christian remains quiet, a bit skeptical. He's 15, a sophomore, 18 months younger than his brother, and he's not yet used to cameras in his face. His brother is the one who's gotten the headlines, who has the 10,200 Instagram followers, who the D-I coaches are at practice to recruit.
Damien Massey, a trainer who works with the Watson brothers, pulls up, and we head a few blocks west to Hill Street. He tosses Christian and Peyton each a basketball, and they start dribbling up the hill. Two dribbles right, between the legs, two dribbles left. Next, it's the same thing, but behind the back. Then, hesitations.
At the top of the hill, Peyton crouches over the basketball and hikes it to Christian. He runs a skinny post, and Christian hits him in stride. "You can tell they've been watching LeBron," Massey says, shaking his head.
The brothers are winded, but they still owe Massey a minute of jumping rope. Behind them, even in the fog, we can see most of Long Beach: the high school, the office buildings downtown and the smoke rising from the giant working port.
Massey points to a football field in the distance. For years, it had been a run-down dirt park dubbed the Dust Bowl. "Willie McGinest helped get that field renovated," he says. "Now, we run bleachers there at least once a week."
After games last year, McGinest, who was a two-sport star at Long Beach Poly before winning three Super Bowls with the New England Patriots, started pulling Peyton aside for "Willie Talks"—five-minute check-ins about mindset, mistakes and handling all the attention. As you'd expect, even in the crowded gyms, no one interrupted the 6'5", 265-pound former linebacker, and he never minced words. "He's not thin-skinned," McGinest says of Peyton. "He's at Poly; coaches and players don't hold back. It's always been real raw when it comes to sports and developing: telling the players what they need to hear and not what they want to hear."
Peyton Watson and his younger brother, Christian, dribbling in Signal Hill, where the brothers work out every other day.
"Willie's hilarious," Peyton says. "He keeps it real. He's like another father figure in my life. He's somebody I look up to."
McGinest tells me his daughter got him hooked on the show All-American and how he'd just finished an episode in which a character spoke about the need to keep the resources—in this case, talented young athletes—in the neighborhood. The parallel to Watson is clear.
"I commend his parents and Peyton for wanting to add to the richness of our tradition at Poly and keeping the resources right here—he is the resource," McGinest says. "Keep it rich and let everybody else figure it out. Because they can go buy whatever they need. We don't buy our athletes, and we don't bribe them with all the fancy trinkets. We just put them out, develop and love on them, and as a community, we raise them. And the output is what you've seen over the last five decades."
The list of athletic alumni is legendary. Poly has produced baseball stars Tony Gwynn and Chase Utley, as well as tennis legend Billie Jean King. But it's always been a football school first. McGinest, DeSean Jackson, JuJu Smith-Schuster, Marcedes Lewis and many other NFL players all have walked the school's hallways. The basketball output is less prolific, highlighted by current Grizzlies big man Jordan Bell. But Watson hopes to change that.
More than any of the other major sports, high school basketball stars are actively recruited to private prep schools around the country. Sierra Canyon's two best players—BJ Boston and Ziaire Williams—transferred in the July before their senior years. Peyton's father, Ju, says they got offers from a few private schools around L.A. (and this year heard from Napa, California's Prolific Prep and Phoenix's Hillcrest Prep, both top-five programs in their respective states, per MaxPreps), but they never took them too seriously. "It's cool to go to Mater Dei, and it's cool to go to Sierra Canyon, but I always thought high school was about 'our neighborhood is better than your neighborhood,'" Ju says.
"What I was proud of," McGinest says, "was I went to a public school and we didn't have to do all that and we still kicked everybody's ass."
The Watson home sits on a quiet, tree-lined street in Long Beach's Bixby Knolls neighborhood. It's a block of attorneys and doctors and kids who go to private schools. That meant Peyton was an outlier—not just on the court but also in his neighborhood growing up, and then, eventually, on his high school team because of where he was from. "All of our neighbors that he grew up with don't look like him," Ju says. "Poly changed him."
On his own among the 4,000-plus student body, Peyton used basketball as a lifeline.
The coaches didn't know Watson, who'd played on club teams outside Long Beach, but he impressed enough at tryouts to become the first freshman in four years to make varsity. That didn't mean he was going to get treated as a savior; if anything, it made him a target for his teammates.
Watson was like a little brother to the juniors and seniors around campus, but in the gym, they'd test him. "I didn't ask for anyone's help," Watson says. "I didn't come to my parents and complain. I didn't go to the coach and complain. I just took it all. It honestly built this toughness inside of me and this dog inside of me that no one can take from me."
Ju remembers his son coming home one day with a red welt on his sternum. The coach had put Peyton on senior captain Darryl Polk Jr., who now plays at Pepperdine; every chance the upperclassman got, he'd back the skinny freshman down with a shoulder to the chest. "Obviously, they thought he had a lot of potential, but them guys down there weren't treating him like he had a lot of potential. They were treating him like he was shit," Ju says. "We're so fortunate that he had a chance to go through that. A lot of kids of his caliber, nobody ever tells them they suck."
Before one of Watson's games that freshman season, Dart Stamps, long a coach of legendary AAU teams in L.A., walked into the gym and noticed that lanky kid slapping hands and fully engaged during layup lines. He walked over and asked Poly coach Shelton Diggs about the player he thought was an upperclassman: "I said, 'What grade is this kid in?' And he said, 'A ninth grader.' And I said: 'No way! No way.'"
Watson was the first freshman in years to make the Long Beach Poly varsity roster and was forced quickly to adapt to the physicality of his older, and bigger, teammates.
Stamps, who had stepped away from AAU for a few years to train NBA players, was just getting back into the circuit and knew that Watson would be his point guard. Right away, Stamps told Ju his son was going to be a star: "I was like: 'I know players. I've been doing it for 30 years, and this is a player right here!'"
Stamps' faith let Watson believe he could be special on the court. He'd ridden the bench his freshman year, but now a guy who'd coached Baron Davis, Paul Pierce and so many L.A. stars was putting the ball in his hands. "He really instilled that killer in me," Watson says, remembering a three-on-three drill in which Stamps would stack the deck against him. "He's like, 'If you're really like that, if you're really bad, Peyton, you should be able to score five straight times.'"
Stamps and Watson both start laughing about a scrimmage early in that AAU season. "I would initiate the offense, and we'd run the play [he called] almost every time," Watson says. "But this time I'm thinking, 'All right, I gotta get in my bag. I gotta do a little something.' And as soon as I go to start, he saw it in my eyes, and he's like: 'Nope. Nope. Nope. Nope.'"
"He started going one-on-one, so I grabbed the ball out of his hand, right?" Stamps says. "And then he looked at me like I was crazy. He looked at me like, 'What the hell are you doing?'"
The next time down, Watson blew by his defender, saw that there was no help in the lane and took off. It was his first-ever in-game dunk. "He was mad, so he came and dunked on the whole team as a ninth grader," Stamps says. "I just said: 'OK. I'm done. I don't have nothing to say.'"
Watson returned to Poly as a sophomore after averaging 25 points per game on Stamps' team. He wasn't buried on the bench, but he still wasn't starting. And though, as Poly's sixth man, he played a lot, Watson was annoyed. For the first time, he started weighing the possibility of a transfer. There were private school programs that were interested. If he played someplace else, he'd get all the minutes and all the shots. He could be the star.
"The philosophy at Poly is that nothing is given," Watson says. "Transferring was a thought, most definitely, but at the end of the day, going somewhere where everything is just gonna be handed to you isn't always the best situation."
By the end of that second season, Watson was starting to bloom. He was also starting to grow. That spring, when he showed up on his new AAU team—the Nike EYBL squad The Truth—he was 6'5".
Watson was one of the last players added to a roster meant to be headlined by USC-bound shooting guard Reese Dixon-Waters, one of the top guards in the state. But in their first game, it was Watson who put up 27 points. By the end of the summer, Peyton climbed the national rankings and was brought up to play with the older kids on the U17 team.
By the time his junior season tipped off, Watson had grown another two inches. "And I'm not done growing," Watson says, grinning. "I'm a legitimate 6'8" right now."
"When I seen that he'd grown to 6'8", I said, 'It's over!'" Stamps says. "He's just a basketball player, man. What we call a hooper."
Basketball's taken Eugene "Pooh" Jeter to Ukraine, France, Spain and, for most of the last eight years, China. But he's always been known first and foremost as an L.A. hooper.
As a kid, he played on Stamps' AAU team—his coach connected him with Davis, who became his mentor. "B.D. is the Godfather of L.A. basketball," Jeter says. "Point period. B.D. really took the time to come back in the inner city and make sure that, first of all: 'I'm visible. You can talk to me about whatever.'"
Inspired by Davis' example, Jeter started a camp for the best young players in the city called Hometown Favorites. His dream is to build a network of L.A. basketball mentors for the next generation. "I have Chris Paul, Shai [Gilgeous-]Alexander, DeMar [DeRozan], Russ [Westbrook], BD, Andre Miller, Trevor [Ariza], Josh Childress, Bobby Brown," he says. "Like, it goes on and on."
I love reading stuff like this. Got me out here in China smiling my bro @peytonwatsonnn. And y’all @LBPolyHoop won. Got texts saying you had 41pts 13rebs and 7asts. Geeez!! https://t.co/dfpKlh2J34
In August 2019, Watson showed up at the second Hometown Favorites—the first one he and Christian had been invited to—on a mission. He thought he was the best 16-year-old in L.A. Now was the time to prove it.
Peyton thrived in the drills and scrimmages, but Jeter says it was during a film session that Peyton caught his eye. Devin Williams—a trainer better known by his social media handle @DevintheLab—was showing tape of Kemba Walker ahead of a dribble handoff drill. Fifteen kids watched the projected video when, all of a sudden, in the darkened gym, Peyton spoke up. "'Hey, hey, hey! Bring that back!'" Jeter remembers him saying. He was impressed the teenager was that obsessed with the minutia of guard play. "I looked over and I said: 'Oh, he's different. He's special. He's special.'"
Since the camp, Watson texts with Jeter every day. He also talks with Ariza twice per month. Ariza—a star at the public Westchester High School—was another mentee of Davis'. If Jeter's the ringleader and McGinest is the stern uncle, Ariza is that chill brother you always emulated. He says Watson is like a sponge for advice.
"I view Peyton like a baby brother," Ariza says, laughing. "Or, like a baby, baby brother. I'll let him know when he's out of line or not doing something appropriate, but I'm gonna let him be his own man too. You can't stand on the kid and not let him be free."
He wants to be to Peyton what Davis was to him: a trusted voice. He's already given him one of Davis' most impactful hand-me-down lessons: Don't get distracted from your work now, because you can have everything you've ever dreamed of once you make the league.
Ariza remembers his first time squaring off with Davis in the NBA: "It was like: 'OK, he's gonna hit me? I'm gonna have to hit him back. He's gonna talk shit to me? I'm gonna have to talk shit back to him. It was funny, because it was just like playing one-on-one against your big brother."
The hoop is set up on a brick driveway, between a manicured hedge and a lemon tree, in front of the Watsons' garage door. It's on an incline, which means the rim sits at different heights from different distances. Still, as Ju and Massey run the brothers through their drills, they hit nearly every shot.
When the drills are finally over, Peyton gets in his defensive stance. Christian sizes him up, dribbles right and misses a jumper. Peyton clears the board. He hits from mid-range, takes the ball up top and then puts his shoulder down and finger-rolls it in.
"Is that 2-0, Chris?" Massey laughs.
Peyton nods, checking the ball to Christian: "It's about to be 3-0."
Christian passes it back a bit too hard. "It's never 3-0."
With organized basketball runs on hiatus amid the COVID-19 pandemic, Watson has been left to refine his game on the hoop in his family's driveway.
Peyton misses a contested jumper, and Christian gets to work. He starts left and then blows by to the right, using his body to shield off his leaping brother's 7'1" wingspan. Now he starts right and then crosses over to stop on a dime. He sells a pump fake. Peyton flies by. He gathers and swishes it from 15 feet. It's 2-2.
Ju and Massey are talking now. Peyton locks in. Christian tries to drive for the win and gets hip-checked. He calls a foul. He's hot. Peyton just grins.
"It's a big-brother thing, man," Peyton says later. "I know what he's gonna look to do when he gets frustrated. And if I can shut his water off, I know I can get in his head."
Christian drives hard to his left again, but Peyton's ready for it, pinning the ball against the backboard. Peyton grabs the board, backs his little brother down to the block and hits a left-handed leaner from 12 feet. Game.
"He's my best friend," Peyton says. "We tell each other everything. But when we start playing, there's a competitiveness that comes out of both of us and we really just don't like each other. He's always trying to aspire to be better than me, and I know I can't allow that."
The brothers play again, and Peyton wins 3-2 for a second time. Christian wants another shot, but Ju calls it. It's getting too heated for his liking.
He and Peyton both tell me that Christian is the best in the city at guarding Peyton. The little brother's seen every single move a thousand times.
The two brothers compete at everything: video games, Uno and, of course, basketball. The Watson parents limited competition to keep their sons from fighting, but they've relaxed the ban on one-on-one given the restrictions around the coronavirus pandemic. Now, every afternoon, the brothers play game after game in their driveway. It's all they have for now.
Before COVID-19, Peyton had big plans for the summer. He was set to head up north for the EYBL to join the Oakland Soldiers—the same team LeBron played for in high school. "To be honest with you, I think if there would've been EYBL, I would've been the No. 1 player in the country by the end of the summer," Peyton says. "That's my goal. That's exactly what I think is gonna happen by the end of my senior year. In those final rankings, I wanna be No. 1."
Instead, he and all the other best high schoolers in the country are stuck at home. The youth-basketball machine—camps, AAU, campus visits, tournaments—has ground to a halt for who knows how long. Jeter sends Peyton and Christian YouTube links to ball-handling drills. He tells them to work on chair shooting and their left hands. "If you can go to some hills, run the hills. Do your sprints," he says. "You can always be in shape."
After Zoom class each morning, Peyton lifts weights, shoots out front and takes a run. He's gotten offers from UCLA, Michigan, Arizona and a handful of other schools, but he hasn't decided yet. He's like every L.A. high schooler—in limbo.
It's eerily quiet when I walk by Long Beach Poly that April afternoon. It's Wednesday at 2 p.m., but the courtyard is empty and the gate is locked. The Poly students are stuck at home, just like the students at Sierra Canyon and the ones at Mater Dei.
Every player has to find their own toolbox with which to build his game. For Peyton, it's Signal Hill and Christian and his collection of mentors. There's no telling when he'll get to lace up his sneakers and play five-on-five again. But he's sure of one thing: When this is all over, he'll be ready.
Joseph Bien-Kahn is based in Los Angeles and has written for the New York Times Magazine, Wired and Playboy. This is his first piece for B/R. He can be reached on Twitter @jbienkahn.
Brown University students Felicia Renulus and Bretram Rogers join David Gardner's How to Survive Without Sports podcast to discuss their school's recent decision to demote 11 varsity sports to the club level, their fight to reverse this decision and this moment of rising student-athlete empowerment.
Nike Cancels 2020 EYBL High School Events Amid COVID-19 Pandemic
May 30, 2020
MAPLE GROVE, MN- MAY 23: Jarred Vanderbilt #2 from Houston Hoops and Victory Prep Academy during Session Four of the Nike EYBL on May 23, 2015 at Maple Grove Community Gym in Maple Grove, Minnesota. (Photo by Brace Hemmelgarn/Getty Images)
Nike announced Saturday the cancellation of the 2020 Elite Youth Basketball League because of the coronavirus pandemic.
Matt Norlander of CBS Sports tweeted Nike's statement on the matter:
Big news in CBB recruiting: Nike has officially nixed its premier grassroots hoops circuit, the EYBL, for all of 2020. This means no Peach Jam—or any other Nike grassroots event—even if NCAA allows for a live eval period in fall. News per EYBL’s homepage: https://t.co/7h9zmvdahYpic.twitter.com/5Or6Dpz5RV
The EYBL is a circuit that features many of the best high school players in the nation. AAU travel teams comprised of players who are 17 years and older compete, and it is considered a recruiting tool for colleges.
The Nike EYBL was founded in 2010, and several NBA stars were part of the circuit.
Los Angeles Lakers forward Anthony Davis, Philadelphia 76ers guard Ben Simmons, Phoenix Suns guard Devin Booker, Boston Celtics forward Jayson Tatum and Atlanta Hawks guard Trae Young are just a few of those players.
Norlanderreported there is "still hope" the NCAA will allow live evaluation events at some point if given the necessary health clearance to do so, but he noted Nike's lack of participation figures to be a major blow.
The biggest cancellation related to the campaign is the Peach Jam, which is played every July in North Augusta, South Carolina. The Peach Jam makes up the circuit finals and features the best of the best.
While scouting high school teams is important, the EYBL is generally viewed as a better barometer since it primarily consists of top-flight talents with college basketball aspirations.
The 2020 NCAA tournament was canceled because of the COVID-19 pandemic, and the 2019-20 NBA season was suspended.
Brandon Boston Is Ready for the Spotlight
May 19, 2020
Sierra Canyon's Brandon Boston Jr. #3 in action against Paul VI during a high school basketball game at the Hoophall Classic, Monday, January 20, 2020, in Springfield, MA. (AP Photo/Gregory Payan)
Brandon Boston feels like the plot of his life could make for a good movie one day.
The 6'7" forward wants to be a filmmaker one day, and he often thinks about ideas for movies and television shows, which he writes down or types up. And there may not be a better place for him to start than his own story: A promising, hard-working player moves with his family from his childhood home in Georgia to Los Angeles, where he emerges from a star-studded roster of celebrity teammates to become a top-10 national prospect only to see his crowning moment—a journey to the California state championship—taken from him by forces beyond his control.
In this case, a global pandemic.
Casting his part wouldn't be hard. He'd tap his little cousin for the role. But he would have to find others to play his teammates at Sierra Canyon.
"They would have to be bulky," he says about who would play teammate Shy Odom. "Shy is a big dude. Bronny, they'd have to be funny, have a lot of energy and always want to play."
It's April, and Boston has been sheltering in place at his house in Los Angeles for the past two months after his senior season ended abruptly because of the COVID-19 pandemic. In a Zoom virtual meeting, he swivels back and forth in an office chair, wearing a bright blue Kentucky long-sleeve shirt, the kind he might be wearing when he arrives on campus at some point this fall. He's talking about how much he looks up to LeBron James, Bronny's dad, and about the experience of playing last season on a team with a who's who of NBA progeny, from Bronny James to Zaire Wade, top-five-ranked Stanford commit Ziaire Williams and Amari Bailey, who's ranked eighth in the class of 2022.
Sierra Canyon's games were televised on ESPN, and he and his teammates traveled the country (and the world) to play in front of packed arenas. Cameras followed them everywhere.
Brandon Boston had helped lead Sierra Canyon to a 30-4 record and a spot in the California state championship before the coronavirus pandemic ended the season after a stunning win in the regional final.
His mind circles back to the movie of his life and how his last game against Etiwanda High School had felt like a heroic climax. The crowd, the energy, stepped up when the game was on the line.
Down 13 points in the final three minutes, Sierra Canyon clawed its way back any way it could. Bronny was diving on the floor. Odom was snagging rebounds and taking elbows to the face. Bailey was running through the lane and straight to the basket like a freight train.
And then Brandon had his moment.
With 1:29 left, he unleashed a crossover move with a hesitation jab step to get his defender off-balance. Then he pulled up from the three-point line for a game-tying jumper to bring the score to 61-61.
A mid-range jumper from Williams a little more than a minute later secured the comeback victory, along with a place in Brandon's memory. In the locker room afterward, he watched his teammates celebrate and cry tears of relief and joy. It's a moment he wishes he could relive.
"We practiced all year for a game like that, and to come out with wins like that, I was speechless," he said. "I couldn't believe that happened.
"I play to win, play to put on a show," he said later. "I want fans to know that I was the best player when they leave the building."
In big-time moments, Boston says something comes over him, a feeling.
Every hooper has his or her own antics, whether it's Steph Curry's three-finger gesture when he nails a three or Lance Stephenson's dance moves.
Boston has his, too.
And after falling to the ground following his game-tying three versus Etiwanda, Boston stayed on the floor and celebrated by extending his right arm out while keeping his left elbow bent inward. Placing his fingers on imaginary strings, he began strumming his own electric guitar.
With the game on the line, Boston looked like a rock star in the making.
It was Brandon Sr. who put the ball in his son's hands when BJ, as most know him, was only three years old. Some days, early in the morning, he'd take his young son to their local YMCA, or outside to go shoot around in their front driveway. He would have him run through dribbling drills in the basement, where Brandon Sr. would make BJ wear anti-grip gloves to control the ball. He'd show him figure eights, looping the ball around and through each of his small legs.
BJ grew up in Atlanta, specifically the north side (or Nawf, for those familiar with Migos lexicon), in an upwardly mobile neighborhood. Brandon Sr., who is originally from Pittsburgh, came from a tough upbringing and wanted more for his son. When he noticed BJ's attraction to basketball, he dedicated himself to helping his son develop his game. Midway through BJ's freshman year at Norcross High School in Georgia, he took BJ to his first workout with Chuck and Michael Pack, twin brothers who run Double Trouble Training and have been working with BJ for the past four years.
It was on a Saturday at a local Lifetime Fitness gym in Atlanta. Chuck remembers meeting Brandon Sr. and liking his vibe right away, how he radiated energy. Meanwhile, BJ, who was an unranked prospect his freshman year, was on the shy side and a little quiet at first. Chuck had heard his name around the ATL, but he wasn't a top-notch player yet.
"I knew who he was a little bit; he definitely wasn't a high-profile player by any means at the time," Chuck said in a phone interview.
To get a feel for him and see where he was at athletically, Chuck tested his strengths and weaknesses during the workout. They ran through ball-handling drills, wearing the same grip gloves Brandon Sr. made BJ wear as a kid, as well as full-court transition layups and shooting. Chuck saw a lanky kid, still growing into his size. He couldn't even dunk at the time.
But what stood out to Chuck was how BJ came to their next workouts having retained what he was learning. He paid attention, focused on the feedback and applied it quickly. By their fifth workout, Chuck wanted to see what kind of player BJ wanted to be.
"Yo, what's your goals or whatever?" Chuck asked him during warm-ups. What he heard back was that BJ wanted to be more, a lot more.
"He said he wanted to be McDonald's All-American," Chuck recalled. "He had three years left at Norcross, so he wanted to win three state championships, and to definitely be the NBA's top player. ... He told me by 25-26, he should be the best player in the world."
So they all pushed him, both his father and his trainers. Sometimes to the point where he'd cry, or refuse to work out at all. It wasn't a sign of defeat, but a frustration with the process, with understanding that potential takes time to develop. But the workouts began to pay off, and by his sophomore year, ESPN ranked him No. 15 overall and the No. 6 shooting guard in the country.
As the attention grew, his trainers felt that humbling him was just as important within his training.
"He got so much praise from everyone else, so my brother and I, we never told him 'good job,'" Chuck admitted. "If he had 35 points or something, we would say, 'Bro, you had two turnovers, you missed this rebound, you missed this from the passing lane.' He understood it came from a good spot."
Brandon Sr. kept him just as accountable, not allowing his son to go to work out if his room wasn't clean or his homework wasn't done. Brandon Sr. declined to be interviewed for this story because he wanted his son to speak for himself.
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"His dad came from a more tough area," Chuck said. "I think through that, his dad just tried to put BJ in the best situation to learn and have a good life. I think he set him on the right track and just pushed him.
"Some people are like, 'Let me talk to B,' but BJ always says, 'Go talk to my dad. My dad will handle it.' His dad oversees everything, makes sure no one is out to hurt him or do anything bad. ... I hope one day when I have a son, I'm something like that."
His mother, Alissa, also played a big role in BJ's development. She greeted him with breakfast and a smile when he'd return home from a workout at 7 a.m. BJ grew to appreciate her energy, how she supported him when he was unranked and felt like everyone was doubting him. When he was 16, he convinced a local tattoo artist to give him his first ink. BJ chose his mom's favorite bible scripture, Jeremiah 29:11.
"'For I know the plans I have for you,' declares the Lord, 'plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future.'"
In time, Chuck started to see a turning point in BJ's maturity and how he conducted himself around other people. He was always laughing and joking around, and as he became more notable, he didn't shy away from the attention.
During one of their workouts, a group of people playing on the other end of the court noticed him. Rather than ignore them or brush them off, BJ stopped the workout to talk to them.
"They all just came over, 'Oh my God, that's BJ!'" Chuck said. "He could have been, like, 'No, I'm not taking a picture,' but he just stopped and talked to them. That probably made their day. BJ is really people-oriented. People love being around him."
It was BJ's energy that caught the eye of Kentucky head coach John Calipari.
"When I'm watching young people play, I'm watching how they impact the game in a positive way, their body language, their spirit about them on the court," Calipari said in a phone interview. "How they dominate the game before three or four minutes of a game, I'm watching. I want to know if they can dominate well. BJ, he ends up being able to dominate both defensively, blocking shots, making plays, and then he can dominate the game offensively, too."
Boston's maturity, along with his floor-stretching range, earned him an offer from Kentucky's John Calipari before he began classes at Sierra Canyon for his senior year.
By his junior year at Norcross, BJ had established himself as a top-10 prospect with offers from almost every premier program in the country, including Duke, Kansas and Ohio State. But BJ wanted a program that would keep it real with him and his family. That's what he got from the Kentucky coaching staff when he visited in July.
"They told me ... what I was going to expect when I come to the campus," BJ said. "Just come in, be prepared for Coach Cal to be yelling and for me every day in practice, be prepared to work hard."
Calipari was intrigued with how BJ carried himself during his visit, a maturity that he felt was a reflection of his upbringing. He laughed with Brandon Sr. about their Pittsburgh connection, how the city has a certain way about it, the "ins and downtowns and the crick."
"I think [BJ] wanted what we're about," Calipari said. "He didn't need anything handed to him. He didn't need to be promised, to say, 'You're going to take this many shots, and here's everything we're going to do.' ... I don't think he wanted that. I think that's [why], at the end of the day, everybody wanted him."
BJ committed to Kentucky on the spot.
"I want him to teach me how to be a pro," he said. "What things I need to do and what I need to get there."
BJ soon decided his first steps couldn't wait for Lexington. For his senior season, he hatched a plan to leave Norcross and head to McEachern High School, a public school about 35 miles west in Powder Springs, Georgia, to team up with Auburn commit Sharife Cooper.
"Sharife, that's my brother," Boston said. "It would have been crazy."
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The two had joined forces on the AAU circuit the prior summer, playing on the AOT Running Rebels. Together, they were an eyebrow-raising offensive threat, dishing lobs and no-look passes to each other so in sync, it was as though they were always on the same wavelength. Boston saw them selling out gyms at every game.
"I was gonna go there at first, honestly. But I don't think that would have benefited my whole family."
During a visit to Los Angeles with his father, BJ checked out Sierra Canyon, a private school in the nearby suburb of Chatsworth. He immediately liked the outdoorsy vibe of the campus, but he also felt the school would benefit his sister, Brandi.
He knew she looked up to him and that a private school like Sierra Canyon could have her around successful people who knew not only what they wanted to do, but how to get there. Visions of past alumni were hard to ignore, names like Kendall and Kylie Jenner, Willow Smith, Ireland Baldwin—all celebrities with brands, platforms and their own businesses.
"I really came for my family," he said. "Growing up with the kids that go to Sierra Canyon, it's just a different environment and better schooling. I think it was good for them to come out here."
BJ also would get the benefit of added exposure while growing accustomed to the larger arenas he will experience at the next level and playing alongside other stars.
The next year, he and his entire family moved with him to Los Angeles, a change that the family appears to have embraced. His sister, as BJ hoped, has made new friends and adopted new hobbies, like volleyball and dance. And BJ has gotten used to the West Coast vibe.
"It reminds me of High School Musical," he said about the school. "It's just like a movie 'cause it's different than where I came from."
Before the season started, BJ found himself on a 23-hour flight to China with his newest teammates. They went to five different cities, tried new types of cuisine and visited outdoor hot tubs and huge malls. BJ didn't speak Mandarin, so at times, it felt like all he had were his new teammates to talk to.
BJ and his sister, Brandi, from early in his high school career at Norcross.
They brought that connection to the court. BJ found himself becoming a vocal leader and holding his younger teammates accountable. They came to take practice as though it was a game.
"We're all competitive," Boston said. "We all want to win, we all talk trash and we're all pretty good. ... Playing with those good guys, I feel like competing every day in practice made me a better player, made me want to work hard and play with other good players.
While Boston admits he misses home at times—his friends, the food, the NAWFside vibes—he also recognized that Sierra Canyon was putting him in a position to deal with a new circumstance and make the best of it.
"Coming in here, I really got my mental health strong," Boston said. "[That's] a big part on the court. You gotta, like, stay in control and keep your emotions controlled. ... I think I handled it really well. I'm used to cameras being in your face. But here, they came all at once. Everybody was at every game, every game was sold out. It was crazy."
That mindset will help him deal with the incoming attention—and doubts—that are set to come his way at Kentucky. The Wildcats' entire starting five declared for the 2020 NBA draft, leaving Kentucky's incoming recruiting class with a sizable vacuum to fill.
"That class is a really strong class," Calipari said of a group that also includes top-60 prospects Terrence Clarke, Devin Askew, Isaiah Jackson and Cam'Ron Fletcher, who together comprise what is considered the No. 1 recruiting class in the country, per 247Sports. "We may not be the best team early, but if these kids come together, we have the talent, the length and the experience in some of the older kids [that] by the end of the year, this will be one of those teams."
Boston is confident his class can handle the quick transition.
"I feel like we're gonna shock a whole lot of people," Boston said. "A lot of people don't think we can do it, but I think we're going to shock a lot of people by winning games. I feel like the talent--our talent--is unmatched. And we all get along well, so I think we're going to jell ... when we get out there."
He can see himself bonding with his incoming teammates, just like he did at Sierra Canyon.
"I really think it's going to be like how this year was, times five," he said about the bonds he hopes to form with his new teammates at UK. "We're going to have a lot of fun."
Though Boston had gained plenty of attention when he played in Georgia, the crowds his Sierra Canyon team regularly drew offered him a preview of what his games might look like when he plays at Kentucky.
While other top recruits such as Jalen Green and Isaiah Todd have opted to skip out on college and join the G League, Boston is committed to his decision, one he feels is another step in his journey toward what he hopes lies ahead.
"When you talk over a five-year period, he's going to be one of those kids that we talk about," Calipari said.
While Boston thinks that conversation will center around his similarity to New Orleans forward Brandon Ingram ("just because we look alike"), he adds, "I gained a lot from Kevin Durant's game, too, [as well as] Jamal Crawford. I can really handle the ball."
Don't be mistaken: BJ has his own vibe. He's the type to hand himself the auxiliary cord to play music, still rocks skinny jeans and doesn't just think he could beat Durant; he knows he can.
"I could learn some things," he said about the chance to compete against Durant. "But I think I could take him."
That doesn't mean he wants to be the next KD, though.
"[I want] to be the next Brandon Boston, that's all I can ask for," he adds. "A player that's going to get after it, a player that is versatile, can do anything a coach asks me. Becoming the best player on the court."
To get there will be no small feat. He will have to roll with whatever punches the COVID-19 pandemic brings, will have to get to know yet another new team and have to fit into Kentucky's system. But he hasn't shown any sides of faltering or stumbling yet.
This is how a rock star makes it from one curtain call to the next show—from the stage at Sierra Canyon to Rupp Arena at Kentucky.
Deyscha Smith is a sportswriter based in Boston who writes for Boston.com and the Boston Globe. She can be reached via Twitter, @deyschasmith.
Longtime Sports Illustrated writer, author and host of The Dream Team Tapes podcast, Jack McCallum, joins The Full 48 with Howard Beck to discuss the final episodes of “The Last Dance,” Karl Malone, the Bryon Russell push-off, MJ and the Dream Team and more.
NBPA Cancels 2020 TOP 100 High School Basketball Camp Amid COVID-19 Pandemic
May 15, 2020
Basketball through the hoop in the first half of an NCAA college basketball game, Tuesday, Feb. 18, 2020, in Baton Rouge, La. (AP Photo/Bill Feig)
The National Basketball Player Association announced Friday that the 2020 TOP 100 High School Basketball Camp scheduled for June in Charlottesville, Virginia, has been canceled because of the coronavirus pandemic.
NBPA Chief of Player Programs Purvis Short released the following statement regarding the decision to cancel:
"It is with great regret that the NBPA is unable to provide this unique experience for this year's group of elite high school basketball players. We hope all of our campers and their families are staying safe and healthy during this time and we look forward to interacting with them virtually as we adapt some our TOP 100 programming to be done online."
Although the camp isn't taking place, the NBPA noted that it will offer the campers "online seminars and discussions on topics related to stress management, college recruiting, social media, and others," with experts, counselors and both current and former NBA players lending guidance.
The TOP 100 High School Basketball Camp began in 1994 and has continued as a way to prepare young players for NBA careers ever since. The NBPA noted that the camp usually utilizes "classroom discussions and a comprehensive on- and off-the-court basketball program."
It also offers an educational program for the players' parents and guardians, which will still be available this year in virtual form.
As part of the press release, the NBPA credited the TOP 100 High School Basketball Camp with helping over 400 players eventually transition to the NBA over the past 25 years.
Kevin Durant, Anthony Davis, James Harden, Kyrie Irving, Ben Simmons and Karl-Anthony Towns are just a few of the current NBA superstars who have taken part in the TOP 100 High School Basketball Camp over the years.
Dwyane Wade's Son Zaire to Join Brewster Academy After Sierra Canyon Graduation
Apr 21, 2020
Sierra Canyon's Zaire Wade #2 plays defense against Dominican during a high school basketball game at the Hoophall Classic, Saturday, January 18, 2020, in Springfield, MA. (AP Photo/Gregory Payan)
Zaire Wade, the son of Dwyane Wade, announced Tuesday that he will take a postgraduate year at Brewster Academy rather than play college basketball in 2020-21.
"Told em it's another route, ima take the other way," Wade posted on Instagram.
Wade was ranked as the No. 197 overall prospect in the 2020 class by 247Sports. He had offers from Rhode Island, Toledo and DePaul.
Brewster Academy is a private boarding school in New Hampshire that has produced several NBA players, including Utah Jazz guard Donovan Mitchell.
Wade played high school basketball at Sierra Canyon in California, along with Bronny James, Ziaire Williams and BJ Boston, but found himself falling out of a loaded rotation as the season went along. Dwyane Wade publicly criticized Sierra Canyon's coach during an appearance on Inside the NBA in March.
"I will not be there," Wade said when asked if he'd be at the state championship game. "My son ain't playing, and I don't want to do nothing to the coach. So, I won't be there. … But I'll be rooting for the kids."
Zaire Wade will likely attempt to use the postgraduate year to boost his reputation among collegiate scouts and get a scholarship offer to a higher tier school. It seems highly likely that some sort of playing time promise was a requirement to gain his commitment.
Brewster Academy does not have a playerrankedin 247Sports' top 150 for the 2021 class. The school had five top 150 players in the 2020 class, highlighted by Kentucky signee Terrence Clarke.