Saturday, March 31, 2012

ESPN Rise National High School Invitational Day 2 Results

ESPN Rise National High School Invitational
Day 2
Results

Quarterfinals (March 29, 2012)
  • Montverde Academy (FL) 62, La Lumiere School (IN) 54
  • Montrose Christian (MD) 64, Ravenscroft (NC) 48
  • St. Benedict’s Prep (NJ) 67, Ely (FL) 61
  • Findlay Prep (NV) 79, Coolidge (DC) 44
Semifinals (March 30, 2012)
  • Montverde Academy (FL) 50, Montrose Christian (MD) 47
  • Findlay Prep (NV) 68, St. Benedict’s Prep (NJ) 55
Finals (March 31, 2012)
  • Findlay Prep (NV) vs. Montverde Academy (FL)

Kendall Marshall wins Cousy Award

Kendall Marshall
wins
 Cousy Award
ALL-MET ELITE
Bishop O'Connell High School in Arlington, Virginia.

North Carolina's Kendall Marshall has been selected as the winner of the Bob Cousy Award, presented annually to the top point guard in the nation.
The sophomore helped the Tar Heels to a record of 32-6, but his season came to an abrupt end after the third round of the NCAA Tournament when a fractured bone in his right wrist forced him to the bench. North Carolina won its first game without Marshall, but lost to Kansas in the regional final.
Marshall led the nation in assists with an ACC single-season record 351, and averaged 8.1 points with 9.8 assists in 36 games. He had 17 double-figure assist games and set an ACC Tournament record with 31 assists in three games.

Friday, March 30, 2012

2012 ESPN NHSI Results - DAY 1

2012 ESPN NHSI Results 
 DAY 1
ALL-MET ELITE

Quarterfinals (March 29, 2012)


  • Montverde Academy (FL) 62, La Lumiere School (IN) 54
  • Montrose Christian (MD) 64, Ravenscroft (NC) 48
  • St. Benedict’s Prep (NJ) 67, Ely (FL) 61
  • Findlay Prep (NV) 79, Coolidge (DC) 44
Semifinals (March 30, 2012)
  • Montverde Academy (FL) vs. Montrose Christian (MD)
  • Findlay Prep (NV) vs. St. Benedict’s Prep (NJ)
Finals  (March 31, 2012)

Thursday, March 29, 2012

St. John's Boys Head Varsity Basketball Coach Position Open

St. John's Boys Head Varsity Basketball
Coach Position
Open
WASHINGTON D.C.
POSITION:
St. John’s College High School is accepting applications for a Head Coaching position for the Boys Varsity basketball program. Candidates must demonstrate previous success in coaching a high school or college team, scouting, talent assessment, and recruitment of quality student-athletes. The Head Coach will be responsible for facilitating the development both academically and athletically, of every boys basketball student-athlete. Additionally, this individual will work closely with the Athletic Director, to continually assess, elevate, and promote the program.

This position specifically supports the Lasallian mission of St. John’s College High School and the rules and regulations set by the Washington Catholic Athletic Conference.
DUTIES AND RESPONSIBILITIES:
  • Recruit qualified student-athletes who can developmentally thrive at our school;
  • Manage the hiring and management of basketball staff including Freshman, Junior Varsity and Varsity teams;
  • Monitor academic progress of all student-athletes;
  • Coordinating pre and post season workouts;
  • Market and operate summer program for middle school athletes;
  • Develop, track, manage and be fiscally responsible for the sport budget;
  • Coordinate admission process for incoming student-athletes;
  • Identify and provide an outreach opportunity for student-athletes in the men's basketball program.
To apply, please send cover letter and resume by Monday, April 16 to St. John’s College High School Athletic Director, Tom Veith, via e-mail or mail.

Tom Veith
Athletic Director

St. John's College High School
2607 Military Road, NW
Chevy Chase, DC 20015

tveith@stjohnschs.org
www.stjohnschs.org

LEVI COOK - WEST VIRGINIA - ALL-MET ELITE

LEVI COOK
 WEST VIRGINIA 
 ALL-MET ELITE
CLASS of 2015
6-foot-10 Liberty freshman Levi Cook. Cook broke out with a huge season, averaging 18.6 points, 15.4 rebounds (among the top rebounders in the state) and 4.3 blocks.
“The sky is the limit for Levi,” Liberty coach Aaron Pauley said. “Coming into the season, he wasn’t sure what to expect. He worked hard in junior high but he didn’t have to exert himself to be a dominant player. I think he was shocked the first couple of games.
“But as the season progressed, his numbers started to climb. I think you’re going to see even bigger and better things next year. He is already working hard in the weightroom. He’s a big guy, and people are going to see what he can really do next year.”

DeShaun Morman’s D.C. move reaps college recruiting interest

DeShaun Morman’s D.C. move
reaps college recruiting interest
ALL-MET ELITE

DeSHAUN MORMAN
Morman, 18, arrived at Coolidge with only one Division I scholarship offer, from Massachusetts. His strong play this season has made him a top local recruit, earning offers from George Washington, Providence, Seton Hall, UNLV, Virginia and Virginia Commonwealth, according to Coolidge Coach Vaughn Jones.
Where he will play next season, however, remains in doubt because of a D.C. Public Schools rule put into effect in August. Because of his grades, Morman is academically a junior at Coolidge. Athletically, his basketball eligibility may be exhausted because he played junior varsity at Meadowbrook as a freshman and started on varsity much of the next two seasons.
After years of allowing fifth-year seniors, DCPS ruled last fall that, starting in the 2012-13 academic year, a student’s athletic eligibility will be limited to eight consecutive semesters. Jones said he is considering filing a hardship waiver. Morman, who said he hopes to come back to Coolidge, is considering prep school next season.
It has been a whirlwind for Morman, who admits he wasn’t accustomed to getting this level of attention in Richmond. And with Coolidge facing Findlay Prep on Thursday in the first round of the National High School Invitational, it could be his last game in a Colts uniform.

Wednesday, March 28, 2012

AQUILLE CARR - TRANSFERS - ALL-MET ELITE

AQUILLE CARR
TRANSFERS ALL-MET ELITE

Aquille Carr is one of the nation's most exciting and talented young basketball players. Aged 18, Carr has already turned heads while touring internationally, received a stunning $650,000 professional contract offer from an Italian team, landed on the cover of DIME magazine and almost single-handedly led his team to a state title.Yet Carr's long journey to future national hoops stardom took a fascinating twist on Monday, when the junior withdrew from Baltimore (Md.) Patterson High, the only school he has known, and enrolled in Elizabeth (N.J.) St. Patrick's School. While that might normally seen like a simple decision by Carr to move on to brighter basketball pastures, that isn't the case with St. Patrick's for an extremely clear-cut reason: St. Patrick's won't even exist when Carr is a senior.As covered in detail by the Baltimore Sun, Carr's transfer to St. Patrick's is destined to be a very short term affair. Given the fact that the Seton Hall-commit only began at the school on March 26, he's essentially taking a three-month tour of courses to try and improve his chances of academically qualifying to play with the Pirates. The teen admitted that he was headed to St. Patrick's because it offered more "core classes" than Patterson, which speaks to his concern about his future eligibility.While Carr is not the first to try that tactic, he almost certainly is the first to try it at a school that everyone knows will close imminently. Usually such a transfer would come with the promise of a future basketball campaign. That certainly would have been the case in the past at St. Patrick's, which has hosted a handful of top national recruits -- Kyrie Irving and Samuel Dalembert come to mind -- when legendary coach Kevin Boyle led the program before his high profile departure to Florida school Montverde Academy.
Now the school is preparing to shut its doors in a matter of months, just as one of the nation's top players is walking in. There's no reason why doing so would necessarily be any kind of a NCAA violation, but it sure raises plenty of questions about the lengths to which Carr is going to try and get an edge on academically qualifying for the NCAA. While he did little to specifically clear up why he left Baltimore now, Carr told the Sun that he planned to return to Baltimore for his senior season, a claim which runs counter to rumors in recent weeks that he could be headed to one of the nation's premier hoops academies, likely Henderson (Nev.) Findlay Prep or Mouth of Wilson (Va.) Oak Hill Academy. No matter where he heads next, Carr's resume will now have a fascinating blip on it from his time in the shadow of the school he hopes to eventually attend.

TOP SOPHOMORE VARSITY PLAYERS - ALL-MET ELITE REGION

TOP SOPHOMORE
VARSITY  BASKETBALL
PLAYERS 
 ALL-MET ELITE REGION
D.C. MD. VA. WEST VA.
2014
BY Jason Hickman
Maxpreps

PHIL BOOTH

Phil Booth, SG Mount St. Joseph (Baltimore, MD)
6-3/170

Jonathan Davis, PG/SG National Christian Academy (Fort Washington, MD)
6-2/18

Devon Hall, PG/SG Cape Henry Collegiate (Virginia Beach, VA)
6-5/195 

Dwayne Morgan, SF City College (Baltimore, MD)
6-7/180

Romelo Trimble, PG/SGBishop O'Connell (Arlington, VA)
6-2/180

Kevin Zabo, PG Montrose Christian (Rockville, MD)
6-2/180 

Andrew Wiggins, SF Huntington Prep (Huntington, WV)
6-7/200 

B.J. Stith, SG Brunswick (Lawrenceville, VA)
6-5/175 



TOP FRESHMAN VARSITY PLAYERS - ALL-MET ELITE REGION

TOP FRESHMAN VARSITY
BASKETBALL
PLAYERS 
2015
 ALL-MET ELITE
REGION
D.C. MD.VA. WEST VA.
BY JASON HICKMAN
MAXPREPS

JUSTIN JENNIFER

Marcus Derrickson, F Paul VI (Fairfax, VA)
6-7/235 

Franklin Howard, SG/SF Gonzaga (Washington, DC)
6-3/170

Justin Jenifer, PG John Carroll (Bel Air, MD)
5-9/160

Delonte Jones, SF Middleburg Academy (Middleburg, VA)
6-5/190 

Taron Oliver, C Bell (Washington, DC) 
6-9/235



Tuesday, March 27, 2012

THOMAS ROBINSON - FIRST TEAM ALL AMERICAN - ALL-MET ELITE

THOMAS ROBINSON
FIRST TEAM ALL AMERICAN 
 ALL-MET ELITE
Kansas forward Thomas Robinson has even more in common with Blake Griffin now. Not everything, though.
Robinson, who played through personal tragedy as a sophomore reserve, capped his junior season by being a unanimous selection to The Associated Press All-America team Monday, a day after leading the Jayhawks to the Final Four.
The 6-foot-10-inch Robinson averaged 17.9 points and 11.8 rebounds this season and he was a first-team pick by all 65 members of the national media panel that selects the weekly Top 25.
The last unanimous pick was Griffin in 2009.
“It’s a blessing to be named even in the same category as Blake Griffin,’’ Robinson said. “For that to happen, I’m glad all the hard work is paying off.’’

ALL-MET ELITE ANNOUNCEMENTS

ALL-MET ELITE
ANNOUNCEMENTS

COACHES: Team Impact seeks coaches for their AAU boys team.
571-502-7909

 teamimpactva@gmail.com

PLAYERS: Premier Sports Performance Academy seeks players and coaches for a girls AAU teams, 12-and-under through 16-and-under.
Sam Brown - 321-228- 7783

sbrown@pspacademy.com

 Ken Wright - 703-801-1465

lavoy12@yahoo.com

www.pspacademy.com


PLAYERS: VA Elite AAU basketball seeks boys and girls.
Coach Perry, 703-725-7874
sperry@vaelitehoops.com

COACHES: Prince William Jaguars AAU league seeks coaches for boys and girls travel teams and the boys development travel team.
703-580-9414

571-285-4070
 pwsports.org@gmail.com

 info@pwsports.org

 www.pwsports.org


COMMISSIONER: Prince William Jaguars AAU league seeks a commissioner for the entire league.
703-580-9414

 571-285-4070

 pwsports.org@gmail.com

 info@pwsports.org

www.pwsports.org.

Monday, March 26, 2012

Justin Anderson Named Gatorade Maryland Boys Basketball Player of the Year

Justin Anderson

Named

Gatorade

Maryland Boys Basketball

Player of the Year

ALL-MET ELITE

In its 27th year of honoring the nation's best high school athletes, The Gatorade Company, in collaboration with ESPNHS, today announced Justin Anderson of Montrose Christian (Rockville, Md.) as its 2011-12 Gatorade Maryland Boys Basketball Player of te Year. Anderson is the third Gatorade Maryland Boys Basketball Player of the Year to be chosen from Montrose Christian School. The 6-foot-7, 220-pound senior forward led the Mustangs to a 21-2 record and a berth in the 2012 ESPNHS National High School Invitational, scheduled for March 29. Anderson is averaging 18 points, 5.7 rebounds, 4.4 assists and 2.4 steals per game through 23 games. The 2012 Iolani Classic MVP, Anderson is the No. 54 ranked recruit in the Class of 2012 as rated by ESPNU.Anderson has maintained a 3.11 GPA in the classroom. A devoted member of his church community, he has volunteered locally as a youth basketball coach.
"Justin Anderson is one of the top players in our area and an excellent kid off the floor," said Ivan Thomas, head coach at Kecoughtan High. "He brings passion and energy on every possession."Anderson has signed a National Letter of Intent to play basketball on an athletic scholarship at the University of Virginia this fall. Anderson joins recent Gatorade Maryland Boys Basketball Players of the Year Marcus Thornton (2010-11, Bishop McNamara High School), Josh Hairston (2009-10, Montrose Christian School), Christian Webster (2008-09, Landon School), Sean Mosley (2007-08, St. Frances Academy), and Malcolm Delaney (2006–07, Towson Catholic) among the state's list of former award winners.

Kris Jenkins Named Gatorade D.C. Boys Basketball Player of the Year

Kris Jenkins

 Named

 Gatorade D.C.

Boys Basketball Player of the Year

ALL-MET ELITE

In its 27th year of honoring the nation's best high school athletes, The Gatorade Company, in collaboration with ESPNHS, today announced Kris Jenkins of Gonzaga (Washington, District of Columbia) High School as its 2011-12 Gatorade District of Columbia Boys Basketball Player of the Year. Jenkins is the sixth Gatorade District of Columbia Boys Basketball Player of the Year to be chosen from Gonzaga College High School. The award, which recognizes not only outstanding athletic excellence, but also high standards of academic achievement and exemplary character demonstrated on and off the court, distinguishes Jenkins as District of Columbia's best high school boys basketball player. The 6-foot-6, 250-pound junior wing averaged 19.8 points, 10.6 rebounds, 4.0 assists, 3.9 steals and 1.2 blocks per game this past season, leading the Eagles (27-7) to the Washington Catholic Athletic Conference championship game and a fourth-place finish at the national Alhambra Catholic Invitational Tournament. Also the WCAC Player of the Year and a two-time First Team All-WCAC selection, he captured tournament Most Valuable Player honors at this winter's Cancer Research Classic in West Virginia, Basketball Hall of Fame Spalding Hoophall Classic in Massachusetts and the Piggly Wiggly Roundball Classic in South Carolina.
The Gatorade Player of the Year program annually recognizes one winner in the District of Columbia and each of the 50 states that sanction high school football, girls volleyball, boys and girls cross country, boys and girls basketball, boys and girls soccer, baseball, softball, and boys and girls track & field, and awards one National Player of the Year in each sport. The selection process is administered by ESPNHS and the Gatorade high school sports leadership team, which work with top sport-specific experts and a media advisory board of accomplished, veteran prep sports journalists to determine the state winners in each sport.
Jenkins joins recent Gatorade District of Columbia Boys Basketball Players of the Year Nate Britt (2010-11, Gonzaga College High School), Tyler Thornton (2009-10, Gonzaga College), Ian Hummer (2008-09, Gonzaga College High School), Max Kenyi (2007-08, Gonzaga College High School), and Chris Wright (2006 07, St. John's College) among the state's list of former award winners.

Terps sign Baltimore native Sam Cassell Jr.

TERPS
SIGN
BALTIMORE NATIVE
SAM CASSELL JR.
By Matt Bracken

After two years in Massachusetts, Sam Cassell Jr. is coming home for college.
Cassell, a Baltimore native and former St. Frances combo guard, committed to Maryland on Sunday. Cassell picked the Terps over Connecticut, Dayton, Florida State, Villanova, Washington and several others. The hometown school definitely won out," said Carlton “Bub” Carrington, Cassell’s AAU coach with Nike Baltimore Elite. "I know Sam has had an affection for the University of Maryland. He has a good relationship with Coach Bino [Ranson]. I know that they had identified him in the summer time. And they have been very, very persistent. Coach [Mark] Turgeon identified him along with Bino. Once the head coach gets involved, it’s hard to get away." “He is a guard that can score and a guard that can distribute,” Hurd said. “He can do it all. He’s a ball-player above all else. We had a whole new staff this year of assistants. They were coming in, saying ‘I can’t believe the shots he takes.’ I just laughed and said, ‘wait until you see him do it in a game.’ It’s unbelievable. That kid can score lying on his back. It’s uncanny how he puts the ball in the basket.”The biggest factor in Cassell’s development has been his maturation physically and mentally. Hurd said the future Terp’s transformation has been impressive.

Sunday, March 25, 2012

TOP VIRGINIA H.S. PLAYERS - ALL-MET ELITE

TOP VIRGINIA BOYS H.S. PLAYERS 
 ALL-MET ELITE

ANTHONY BARBER



Player of the Year
Anthony Barber, Hampton, junior. He did it last year, and he did it again — this time, by leading his team to the Group AAA state championship. His numbers (21.3 points per game) are good enough, but it was his leadership that made the kid known as “Big Cat” so valuable.

First team
Aaron Bacote, Bethel, senior. Always a fundamentally sound player, Bacote added more scoring to his game and led the Peninsula District at 22.1 points a game. He was named a Co-Player of the Year in the Peninsula District, along with first-team All-Eastern Region and second-team all-state.

Troy Williams, Phoebus, junior. His year didn’t go the way he had hoped as Phoebus lost in the first round of the regional. But you can’t blame that on Williams, who averaged 18.1 points a game and remained the most athletic presence in the district.

Elijah Moore, Grafton, junior. Primarily an outside shooter as a sophomore, Moore improved his handle and penetration and became a fierce rebounder. He averaged 18 points and 10 rebounds in earning first-team AA all-state honors and leading the Clippers to the Division 4 state final.

Josh Fortune, Kecoughtan, senior. He battled back spasms most of the year, but Fortune toughed it out to average 13.9 points a game while improving his defense and rebounding. He’s taking his dangerous 3-pointer to the Big East, where he’ll play for Providence.

Rodney Bullock, Kecoughtan, junior. Another solid year for the 6-foot-6 “Rajay,” who averaged 14.3 points and more than 10 rebounds a game. You could argue that nobody had as much effect on the game on both ends of the floor as Bullock.


Thomas Robinson has gone from D.C. playgrounds to the verge of the Final Four with Kansas.

Thomas Robinson
has gone from D.C. playgrounds
to the verge of the Final Four
with Kansas.
ALL-MET ELITE


By Mark Giannotto
ST. LOUIS — About two hours before the Midwest Region semifinals Friday night, Kansas star Thomas Robinson received a text message on his cellphone that made him flash the smile that has illustrated one of the great stories in college basketball this season. It was a message from his former AAU coach in Northeast Washington, Dwight Redd, a man Robinson calls “a father to me.”
Redd hadn’t told the 6-foot-9 junior forward he was coming to St. Louis, hoping to surprise him now that Robinson is on the cusp of completing his evolution from a skinny 13-year-old on the playgrounds of Southeast Washington to a chiseled physical specimen expected to be one of the top five picks in this year’s NBA draft. That, though, only made Robinson worry about tickets as the Jayhawks were getting ready for their Sweet 16 game against North Carolina State.
“He’s taken care of me my whole life, so when he told me he was here [Friday], I was kind of mad I didn’t know because . . . our tickets had to be in the night before the game,” Robinson said Saturday as No. 2 seed Kansas prepared to face No. 1 seed North Carolina on Sunday in the Midwest Region final.
“Basketball didn’t always look so clear for me and when it didn’t look clear for me I was just a regular kid in D.C., and Dwight, he didn’t see it as that. He took care of me no matter what my situation was. Without him, I probably wouldn’t have made it this far.” Basketball has been his outlet and a way to channel his desire to provide for his family, something that hasn’t really changed even dating back to his days at Eastern High and Riverdale Baptist, Redd explained.
“People think he’s this overnight sensation, but it’s been years coming with a whole lot of hard work and determination,”.Riverdale Baptist Coach Louis Wilson still remembers how raw Robinson was when he first came to the school before his junior year of high school. But he knew there was something special in his new player and recalled telling former Maryland assistant Keith Booth at the time, “this kid, he’s gonna be really, really good.”
Maryland didn’t offer Robinson a scholarship until his senior year, when his recruitment went viral following a dominant performance at a Reebok summer camp in Philadelphia, but the Terrapins weren’t the only ones who underestimated him. As a junior at Riverdale Baptist, Robinson only mustered honorable mention All-Met honors. He left the area to play at Brewster Academy in New Hampshire for his senior year because “my mom wanted me to get out of D.C.,” Robinson said. 
Robinson lived with Wilson in Upper Marlboro during the week while he attended Riverdale Baptist, and his work ethic was insatiable. After dinner most nights, he would beg Wilson to let him go back to the gym even though he had already been through a full practice.
“The sacrifices he’s made throughout his life to the game of basketball is why he’s now a star in the making,” Wilson said. “I get a smile every time I see him performing with that great, big old smile.”


Friday, March 23, 2012

KRIS JENKINS WCAC - PLAYER OF THE YEAR

KRIS JENKINS
GONZAGA
 WCAC 
 PLAYER OF THE YEAR
 Kris Jenkins, who plays for Gonzaga College Prep in Washington D.C., was recently named the Washington Catholic Athletic Conference (WCAC) Player of the Year.
With the likes of Paul VI, DeMatha, Bishop O'Connell and Archbishop Carroll, among others also in the conference, the WCAC is considered one of the best high school leagues in the country.

Mount Vernon's Isaiah Cousins in demand - Senior's stock has soared since fall

Mount Vernon's Isaiah Cousins in demand 
 Senior's stock has soared since fall
ALL-MET ELITE
With the AAU season over and August melting into September, Isaiah Cousins made a decision about his college future. Actually, the Mount Vernon senior’s decision was there would be no decision at all. Not yet anyway.Sure, Cousins had suitors, but he also trusted that more were bound to chase him. “I was just basically waiting because I knew the hard work was going to pay off,” he said. “I knew it was going to happen one day for me.” So Cousins kept working, and kept waking up before dawn every morning for daily shooting sessions at the YMCA. Months later, the 6-foot-4 senior has reaped the rewards for both his patience and diligence, exploding as a recruit and earning well more than a dozen scholarship offers, several from high-major Division I programs. “I’ve never had a senior explode like this,” said Bob Cimmino, who has coached Section 1’s “Mr. Basketball” the last seven seasons, including Cousins. “He’s been recruited as high as any player I’ve ever had. With Jabarie (Hinds) it was a gradual climb. Ben (Gordon), it was a gradual climb. With Isaiah, it was overnight.”Case in point: Late in the summer, Cousins’ scholarship offers came from low to mid-majors. On Wednesday afternoon, Oklahoma coach Lon Kruger and assistant Lew Hill (a Mount Vernon graduate) both lingered at practice, as did former Manhattan coach Barry Rohrssen.  Cousins’ ever-changing national profile now includes schools like UConn, Dayton, Xavier, Rhode Island, Villanova, and Virginia Tech, all of which have flocked to Mount Vernon games to catch a glimpse of the lithe point guard, whose star began to rise last fall during a string of 30-point efforts at the famed IS8 basketball tournament. It was there respected tri-state scout Tom Konchalski stamped Cousins a high-major recruit. Konchalski’s word reverberated, Cimmino said, and Cousins lived up to his billing at big events up and down the coast during the high school season. “People slowly started to notice,” Cimmino said. “It’s not that he’s a freak, but there aren’t many 6-foot-4 point guards who can dribble as well as him, shoot as well as him and who are gym rats. He’s the complete package.”  Konchalski became most familiar with Cousins last summer. He recommended him to Nike for “Breakfast Club” workouts that were operated for elite talent in New York City, Chicago and Los Angeles. Cousins was among 10 players recommended to Nike by Konchalski, along with the likes of Omar Calhoun of Christ the King, Leroy Fludd of Boys & Girls, and Daniel Dingle and Kerwin Okoro of St. Raymond. The players were run through grueling workouts by Idan Ravin, the athletic trainer for All-Stars Chris Paul and Carmelo Anthony. “I never saw kids work so hard in my life,” Konchalski said. “Of all the kids there, Isaiah Cousins had the best footwork by far. He just had the best feet and he had really good stamina.” After the graduation of Hinds, a two-time “Mr. Basketball,” Cousins’ improved conditioning has allowed him to benefit from assuming the role of team leader. He added 15 pounds of muscle and now weighs 181 pounds, but hopes to creep closer to 200 before starting college in the fall. Cousins’ size and skill set are what make him such a compelling prospect. Konchalski said Cousins is the top unsigned recruit in the state. The list of schools in contention for him has been narrowed to five finalists: Oklahoma, UConn, Xavier, Virginia Tech and Dayton. He will visit the schools once Mount Vernon completes its season Sunday, with a trip to Oklahoma first up on Monday. Cousins said there were no favorites, at least not until he completes at least some of the official visits, which should happen between now and spring break. He hopes to make a decision in early April and is in search of a school that wants him as a point guard. “I just want a coach who will let me play how I play,” he said. He never thought anyone saw his full capabilities until this season. Judging by the number of coaches buzzing to his side these days, Cousins was right.  “This is what I was playing for,” he said. “If they offered me (last summer), they hadn’t seen what I was really capable of. I was just waiting until everyone saw what I really could do.”


Charlottesville Dream Presents - USBA Virginia Boys & Girls Super Regional

Charlottesville Dream
Presents 
 USBA Virginia Boys & Girls
Super Regional

Charlottesville Dream Presents
USBA Virginia Boys & Girls Super Regional (the largest tournament in Central Virginia)
Grades 3rd thru 12th
Cost $275.00 (multi team discounts)
April 28th-29th, 2012
Deadline is midnight April 21, 2012

Location:
Albemarle High School
2775 Hydraulic Road
Charlottesville, Va.
Dont have to travel from school to school, "4 courts under one roof".

To register:
Go to the website
or contact John Whitley 
or email 

Events includes:
3 games guaranteed
VHSAA certified refs
Awards given to 1st & 2nd place teams and players
Affordable & great concessions
On site certified trainer
(College coaches will be in attendance)

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Top-ranked Paul VI Catholic defeats Coolidge - 70-64

Top-ranked Paul VI Catholic
defeats
Coolidge
70-64

The victory capped a momentous season for the Panthers (35-3), who went undefeated in league play, captured their first Washington Catholic Athletic Conference championship and won a Virginia private schools title.
Paul VI never trailed Tuesday, but there were a few moments when it seemed as if Coolidge (29-7) might pull off another victory to cap its own splendid season. The Colts, who previously posted thrilling victories over two of the region’s other top private schools — fourth-ranked Montrose Christian and eighth-ranked Riverdale Baptist — were making just their second appearance in the City Title Game. They outscored the Colts 44-34 in the paint and doubled Coolidge up on second chance points, 16-8. Holloway and Coleman Johnson each scored 15 points, while Tilman Dunbar and Robinson each added 12.

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

ALL-MET ELITE ANNOUNCEMENTS

ALL-MET ELITE
ANNOUNCEMENTS

COACHES: Team Impact seeks coaches for their AAU boys team. 
 teamimpactva@gmail.com

PLAYERS: Premier Sports Performance Academy seeks players and coaches for a girls AAU teams, 12-and-under through 16-and-under.
Sam Brown - 321-228-7783
sbrown@pspacademy.com

 Ken Wright - 703-801-1465
lavoy12@yahoo.com

www.pspacademy.com

PLAYERS: VA Elite AAU basketball seeks boys and girls. Coach Perry, 703-725-7874
sperry@vaelitehoops.com

COACHES: Prince William Jaguars AAU league seeks coaches for boys and girls travel teams and the boys development travel team.
703-580-9414

571-285-4070
pwsports.org@gmail.com
info@pwsports.org 
www.pwsports.org

COMMISSIONER: Prince William Jaguars AAU league seeks a commissioner for the entire league.
703-703-580-9414

571-285-4070
 pwsports.org@gmail.com
 info@pwsports.org
 www.pwsports.org

A.S.S.I.S.T. - 4th Annual Best of the East Unsigned Seniors and Juco Sophomores Showcase

A.S.S.I.S.T. 
 4th Annual
Best of the East Unsigned Seniors
and
Juco Sophomores Showcase

Boys (April 14, 2012)
Registration: 1:00pm
Games:  2:00 – 600 pm
Girls (April 14, 2012)
Registration: 10:00am
Games: 10:20am – 1:50pm

Location
Hagerstown Community College
1400 Robinwood Drive
Hagerstown, Maryland 21742
(College Coaches will be in attendance)

Event Includes:
·         Assist Game T-Shirt for each player
·         3-games guaranteed for each player
·         Educational Counselor on Site for parents and student athletes



For more information contact:
William Carter: 804-397-3261
To Register:
Step 1: Email the following information to wcarter@assiststudentathletes.com
Full name, Grade, Height, High School, Position, Student & Parent Telephone #
Step 2: Upon receipt of your information ASSIST will send a waiver form to you via Email.
Step 3: Bring $60 registration fee and waiver form to the clinic on the day of the event.
**** Registration Deadline: April 10, 2012****
No Walk-ins


A.S.S.I.S.T. - 5TH ANNUAL SPRING FLING - Unsigned Senior Basketball Showcase


A.S.S.I.S.T. 
 5TH ANNUAL  SPRING FLING 
 Unsigned Senior Basketball Showcase
(Top Unsigned Seniors in Virginia Area and outside of Virginia)

Boys  (March 23, 2012)
Registration – 4:00pm
Education Seminar – 4:30pm
Games – 5:00pm-9:30 pm



Girls  (March 24th, 2012)
Registration – 12:00noon
Education Seminar – 12:30pm
Games – 1:00pm-600pm

Location
Menchville High School
Newport News Virginia 23602
 (College Coaches will be in attendance)

Event Includes
        Warm ups and Drills
        Assist Game T-Shirt for each player
         3-games guaranteed for each player
To Register:
Step 1: Email the following information to wcarter@assiststudentathletes.com
Full name, Grade, Height, High School, Position, Student & Parent Telephone #
Step 2: Upon receipt of your information ASSIST will send a waiver form to you via Email.
Step 3: Bring $45 registration fee and waiver form to the clinic on the day of the event.
**** Registration Deadline: March 21, 2012****
                                                                
   William Carter: 804-397-3261
Randy Price 1757-748-6435