Saturday, June 30, 2012

KENNER LEAGUE 2012 UPDATE - ALL-MET ELITE

KENNER LEAGUE
 2012
UPDATE 
 ALL-MET ELITE

Kenner League is the summer league organized by Nike that takes place every year in historic McDonough Gymnasium on the campus of Georgetown University. Georgetown players as well as players from local schools George Mason, George Washington, Maryland, and Morgan State all participate in this league that features round robin play followed by a playoffs. Local players from colleges around the country participate as well as a number of NBA and former NBA players. Most importantly, the Games are free and open to the public!
The most exciting thing for Hoyas fans is a chance to see the incoming freshman play, and D'Vauntes Smith-Rivera, Brandon Bolden and Bradley Hayes will get to show their stuff in front of the Hoya faithful for the first time. All the freshman play on the Tombs team alongside two returning players on the current Georgetown roster.
The Kenner League will run from July 6th to August 12th. The Schedule has not been fully set, but the first games will be on Friday, July 6th and the Championship game for Kenner will take place on Sunday, August 12th.

Friday, June 29, 2012

THOMAS ROBINSON DRAFTED BY SACRAMENTO KINGS - ALL-MET ELITE

THOMAS ROBINSON
 DRAFTED BY
SACRAMENTO KINGS 
 ALL-MET ELITE

Thomas Robinson embraced his 9-year-old sister and broke down as soon as Commissioner David Stern announced the Sacramento Kings had taken him fifth overall in the NBA draft.
It had been quite an emotional ride for Robinson to get to Thursday night.
"I worked hard to get here and to see it all right in front of me, I got emotional," he said. "It was everything. Everything that I had been holding in came out."
In January 2011, Robinson received a phone call from his younger sister, Jayla, who told him that their mother had died of a heart attack in his hometown of Washington, D.C. The two had been raised by their single mother, Lisa Robinson. In a span of three weeks, they had also lost their grandfather and grandmother, and Robinson's father had never really been involved in his life.
Robinson endured through the hardship on the court as a valuable sixth man at Kansas in 2010-11 and then one of the best players in the country this past season.
Robinson, the first unanimous first-team All-American since Blake Griffin, led the Jayhawks to the national championship game against Kentucky, where Kanas lost 67-59. He averaged 17.9 points and 11.8 rebounds per game in 31.8 minutes in his junior season and led the nation with 27 double-doubles. He was one of the top couple of talents in the draft overall, particularly at his position," Kings president of basketball operations Geoff Petrie said. "I thought even as
of this morning we were fairly sure he would not be at five. That's why the draft is the draft. We certainly have a need there as far as our depth up front. He's going to bring a lot of competitive spirit, he's a ferocious rebounder. He has a lot of speed. He'll be a great addition to the team."
He was considered perhaps the most NBA-ready player in the draft and the Kings need plenty of immediate help after missing the playoffs for a sixth straight season.
The Kings had Robinson rated as the second best player in the draft and were surprised he was still available when they picked. But when Charlotte chose Michael Kidd-Gilchrist second and Dion Waiters went fourth to Minnesota, the Kings got their man.
"It kind of went based on team needs," Robinson said. "The teams that skipped me didn't need me at that position. The Kings took a chance on me and took me at five. I'm going to make the best of it."
The Kings are coming off another disappointing season, finishing the shortened campaign 22-44 to miss the postseason once again. Coach Paul Westphal was fired after just seven games and replaced by Keith Smart, who will be back for his first full season next year.
Smart said the one thing that stood out most about Robinson was his work ethic and humility.
"It's easier to turn a live body down than to raise a dead man," Smart said. "This guy has a live body that can create things offensively and defensively that you don't have to say, 'Go do this.' He has a motor already. He has unique skills where he can play out on the floor. He can move real well defensively with schemes like the pick and roll. He has that motor and you know he has that toughness."

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

NBA 2K13 - KEVIN DURANT - ALL-MET ELITE

NBA 2K13
VIDEO GAME
KEVIN DURANT 
 ALL-MET ELITE
MONTROSE CHRISTIAN HS.
ROCKVILLE MD.

Tuesday, June 26, 2012

RODDY PETERS ONE TO WATCH IN JULY FROM CLASS OF 2013 - ALL-MET ELITE

RODDY PETERS
 ONE TO WATCH IN JULY FROM CLASS OF
2013 
 ALL-MET ELITE

RODDY PETERS

Things started inauspiciously for Class of 2013 guard Roddy Peters in National Basketball Players Association Top 100 High School Basketball Camp play, as in his first game – and somewhat less so during day one’s second contest – he looked uncertain, maybe even nervous. For the first game, Peters, a 6-foot-2 guard dropped four points, two assists and six points during the second. His mojo just wasn’t on display at the University of Virginia’s John Paul Jones Center.
After the first contest, Peters was reached and supplied an interesting and honest explanation for his play, which included an aversion to attacking the tin, bailing out his drives by passing almost too early, and missed shots: “My first game down here and everything, I was kind of nervous. I didn’t really know what I was getting into to”.

Contrast that to his championship game performance, where his Mavericks team fell in defeat, a game in which Peters dropped 16 points and got a dime – there he hit floaters, jumpers, layups, found people and played with the verve those in the D.C. area have come to expect from Peters, who attended Suitland High School (MD) last year. In that final game, Peters dropped 16 points and a dime.His explanation at a recent DC Assault morning practice (his travel team home), for the difference was “I started feeling myself and that’s when I started getting going.” For the entire camp, Peters contributed a very respectable 7.9 points, 2.1 assists and a rebound, per game.
For the camp, Peters played more like the ‘chip game guy, and less like the early game baller. What became obvious was he could play at the Top 100’s level; he has a good combination of scoring and passing, and is becoming more comfortable leading a team. Not a vocal leader per se yet, Peters understands the need to increase that aspect of his game, as well as getting more body lift on his jumper and shooting it consistently with confidence.

His recruitment is definitely taking off, with Peters listing the likes of “Virginia, Virginia Tech, Xavier, St. Joe’s, Cincinnati and UMass” having tendered scholarship offers. Schools such as Georgetown, Texas, Clemson, Maryland and Tennessee have shown and are showing interest.
Of the BIG EAST, Peters noted he likes it, “they play my style – penetrating guards.” Stylistically he presently likes an up tempo arrangement, as most young guys do – but is open to explore all playing approaches. He also understands the necessity of embracing half court basketball to further his professional possibility.
Whether Peters becomes a pro, only time will tell. But it’s a good assumption with his development he will be a good college player, one that can make an impact at a program. Expect to find out where he lands sometime in the fall.


Monday, June 25, 2012

NIKE ZOOM KD IV SCORING TITLE RELEASE DATE - ALL-MET ELITE

NIKE ZOOM KD IV
SCORING CHAMP
RELEASE DATE 
KEVIN DURANT
 ALL-MET ELITE

The Nike Zoom KD IV Scoring Title  release date is finally official, with the special edition colorway set to hit stores July 21st. Featuring a predominantly yellow build with ample blue accenting, the shoe is covered in special details celebrating Kevin Durant’s third consecutive scoring title, such as “28″ on the tongue, representing KD’s average points per game this season. Hit the jump for a full shot and release details, and stay tuned for more looks.
Nike Zoom KD IV
Tour Yellow/Lemon Twist-Photo Blue
Style #: 473679-703
21 July 2012
$95



Thursday, June 21, 2012

U18 USA TEAM ADVANCES TO GOLD MEDAL GAME - ALL-MET ELITE

U18 USA TEAM
ADVANCES TO GOLD MEDAL GAME 
 ALL-MET ELITE

JERAMI GRANT
DEMATHA HS.
HYATTSVILL MD.

Incoming freshman Jemari Grant (DeMatha Catholic High School/Bowie, Md.) had seven points and seven rebounds to help the USA Basketball Under-18 squad defeat Brazil, 81-56, in the FIBA Americas championship game.

Leading by just six at halftime, the USA stepped up its defense in the second half to break open its game with Brazil. Forward Julius Randle (Prestonwood Christian Academy/McKinney, Texas), who still has his senior high school season ahead of him, helped pave the way to the win posting a double-double of 18 points and 12 rebounds. Jarnell Stokes (University of Tennessee/Memphis, Tenn.) contributed 11 points and four rebounds, and Marcus Smart (Marcus H.S./Flower Mound, Texas) was credited with 10 points, three rebounds, four assists and a game high six steals.

The USA, which averaged 97.2 points a game during the championship while winning its five contests by an average of 38.6 points a game, received scoring from 11 of its 12 players.

"I thought in the first half they went zone and we got a little stagnant and we turned the ball over way too much. We had some opportunities on some fast breaks that we got nothing out of. The one thing we were fortunate in the first half was they were 9-for-19 from the foul line.," stated USA and University of Florida head coach Billy Donovan.

"I thought in the second half we got up and down the floor, we were pushing it more; more up tempo, we attacked the basket; we attacked the paint; and I thought our defense was really, really good in the second half. We took away 3-pointers and easy baskets, and that enabled us to get out on the fast break."

After an 83-64 victory against Brazil just two days early during the two teams’ final preliminary round game, Brazil, behind another near capacity crowd, refused to let the USA pull away in the first half. Tied 7-7 with 6:02 to play in the first quarter, five different U.S. players contributed points in a 11-2 run that saw the USA lead increase to 18-9 with 2:41 left in the opening period.
Brazil pulled to within five, 18-13, but James Robinson (DeMatha Catholic H.S./Mitchellville, Md.) drove down the middle twice for layups, and Rasheed Sulaimon (Strake Jesuit College Prep/Houston, Texas) converted a steal into a layup in the quarter’s final seconds to push the U.S. advantage to 24-16 after one quarter of action.
The USA pushed its lead to 12 points, 31-19, following a Smart 3-pointer. But Brazil, playing to its vocal crowd, regrouped and reeled off seven straight points to reduce the deficit to 31-26.
Brazil continued to close in and with 36 seconds remaining before halftime, the South Americans had cut the gap to 35-31 after Lucas Rosa Faria connected on a 3-pointer. The U.S. retired to the locker room at halftime leading 37-31 after Shaq Goodwin (Southwest DeKalb H.S./Decatur, Ga.) netted two off an offensive rebound with 12 seconds remaining before halftime.
The score could have been very different if the host country hadn’t shot itself in the foot by sinking just 9-of-19 free throws. Brazil also worked to a 22-13 advantage on the glass.
With the gold medal still in limbo, the Americans opened the third quarter with inspired defense, while kicking its offense up a notch or two.
Randle, who would account for 14 of his game high 18 points and 11 of his 12 rebounds in the second half, got the USA off to good start with a jumper that upped the USA lead to 39-31.
Ahead 42-34, Randle contributed five points as the USA exploded for a 10-0 scoring run as its lead quickly ballooned to 52-34. And it could have been even worse for Brazil as the United States’ shooting from the free throw line went cold resulting in a 3-for-8 free throw shooting performance during the game clinching run.
“I just wanted to lock in and bring energy to the team, bring leadership to the team, and in the second half I just really wanted to focus in and be aggressive on both ends and on the defensive and offensive glass,” said Randle.
“Julius made some really, really big plays; athletic plays around the basket. He really stepped up and I thought he played exceptionally well yesterday against Argentina, then to come back and follow it up was terrific,” Donovan said.
Brazil got within 14 points late in the third, 54-40, but Sam Dekker (Sheboygan Lutheran H.S./ Sheboygan, Wis.) hit a 3-pointer in the third quarter’s final minute and added a baseline drive for two early in the fourth quarter, as the USA scored seven straight points to grab a 20-point lead and end all suspense about who would leave the arena wearing the gold medal.
“I told our guys after that they’re the ones that made it all possible. There was a lot of sacrifice. We had a lot of good players and I think they all understood that they all could probably score more, they all could probably do more, but maybe it wouldn’t be the best thing for our team. I was just really proud of the way they sacrificed for one another, they sacrificed for our country and they really wanted to win,” stated Donovan.
The USA’s winning of the gold medal is the nation’s sixth FIBA Americas U18 gold medal in eight championships, and the U.S.is now 43-2 all-time in the U18 zone championship.
Serving as USA assistant coaches were Gonzaga University head coach Mark Few and Shaka Smart from Virginia Commonwealth University.
Jerami Grant (DeMatha Catholic/Bowie, Md.)
How does it feel to win the gold after all the work you had to put in?
It feels great. We came out and played hard, and we played together as a team and that’s what it took to win the gold.
Did it make it mean a little more because this was a tight game for a half?
Yeah definitely, it meant a lot playing in a good game, a tight game. Either way it would have felt great to win the gold, but I feel like in this environment, when you’re playing in Brazil against Brazil it added a lot more meaning to it

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

LEN BIAS - ALL-MET ELITE

LEN BIAS
ALL-MET ELITE
NORTHWESTERN HS.
HYATTSVILLE MD.
Twenty-six years ago yesterday—on June 19, 1986—University of Maryland basketball phenom Leonard Kevin "Len" Bias died of a cocaine overdose. He was 22.
A native of Landover, Maryland and graduate of Northwestern High School, Bias set the college basketball world ablaze at UMd. He was twice named an All-American player and tallied a career 2,149 points, then a school record.
On June 17, 1986, Bias was selected as the second overall pick in the NBA Draft by the Boston Celtics. Just two days later, emergency responders were called to his dorm room when Bias was unresponsive after taking cocaine. He was transported to Leland Memorial Hospital in Riverdale and pronounced dead two hours later.
Bias' death triggered an outpouring of grief, controversy, and legal procedings surrounding both his overdose and the past conduct of the UMd. athletic program.

Monday, June 18, 2012

2012 USA Basketball Men’s U17 World Championship Team Finalists Selected - ALL-MET ELITE

2012 USA Basketball Men’s
U17 World Championship
Team Finalists Selected 
 ALL-MET ELITE

BEEJAY ANYA
DEMATHA HS.
HYATTSVILLE MD.

Following four sessions featuring 28 of the nation’s top prep players age 17-and-under (born on or after Jan. 1, 1995) at the U.S. Olympic Training Center (USOTC) in Colorado Springs, Colo., 14 finalists for the 2012 USA Basketball Men’s U17 World Championship Team were announced todayas finalists for the 2012 USA Basketball Men’s U17 World Championship Team were: Beejay Anya (DeMatha Catholic H.S. / Gaithersburg, Md.).Joel Berry (Lake Highland Prep School / Apopka, Fla.); Dominique Collier (Denver East H.S. / Denver, Colo.); Stephen Domingo (Saint Ignatius Prep / San Francisco, Calif.); Conner Frankamp (Wichita North H.S. / Wichita, Kan.); Rondaé Jefferson (Chester H.S. / Chester, Pa.); Dakari Johnson (Montverde Academy, Fla. / Brooklyn, N.Y.); Stanley Johnson (Mater Dei H.S. / Fullerton, Calif.); Tyus Jones (Apple Valley H.S. / Apple Valley, Minn.); Kendrick Nunn (Simeon Career Academy / Chicago, Ill.); Jahlil Okafor (Whitney Young H.S. / Chicago, Ill.); Parker; Johnathan Williams (Southwind H.S. / Memphis, Tenn.); and Justise Winslow (St. John’s School / Houston, Texas).
The finalists for the U.S. U17 squad will continue training in Colorado Springs at the USOTC and their next session is tonight at 3:30 p.m. (all times listed are local, MDT). The USA will continue to train each day at 9:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. each day through June 20 and the final 12-member team will be announced before the U.S. departs for Europe.
Prior to arriving in Lithuania, the USA will train and compete June 22-25, in Gran Canaria, Canary Islands. During that time the U.S. will participate in the 2012 Spain U17 International Invitational, featuring U17 teams from Australia, Latvia and host Spain, June 24-25.
Opening 2012 FIBA U17 World Championship play on June 29 against Australia, the U.S. will face the Czech Republic on June 30, Egypt on July 1 and France on July 3 before closing preliminary play against China on July 4. The top four finishing teams from each group will advance to the medal round with the quarterfinals staged on July 6, the semifinals on July 7 and the finals on July 8.



Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Indiana makes a push for 2014 guard Phil Booth - ALL-MET ELITE

Indiana makes a push for
2014 guard
Phil Booth 
 ALL-MET ELITE

The hiring of assistant coach Kenny Johnson has further ramped up Indiana’s aggressive recruiting efforts in the D.C., Baltimore and Virginia area, one of the current hotbeds for high major programs. One of the latest names to emerge on the Hoosier radar is Phil Booth, a class of 2014 guard who plays at Mount St. Joseph’s in Baltimore and with Team Takeover, the AAU program formerly headed up by Johnson. Booth helped lead Mount St. Joseph’s to the Baltimore Catholic League (BCL) Championship as a sophomore and was named to the BCL All-Conference first team and second team All-Metro by The Baltimore Sun. Indiana is among the early offers for Booth, who hasn’t been on campus, but hopes to make a visit to Bloomington either later this month or in August. Booth’s recent schedule included a trip to the Richmond high school team camp and the Nike Elite 100 in St. Louis. He’ll attend the Villanova team camp this weekend. Indiana’s success recruiting the area known as the DMV under Crean includes landing current IU guard Maurice Creek and Victor Oladipo, who are both Team Takeover alums. Stanford Robinson, who committed to the Hoosiers in early May, is also in the Takeover program and is someone Booth is very familiar with.

USA U18 FINALIZED ROSTER - ALL-MET ELITE

USA
U18
FINALIZED ROSTER 
 ALL-MET ELITE
JAMES ROBINSON and JERAMI GRANT

Following nine U18 national team training sessions, USA Basketball announced its 12-man roster that will train through June 11 before departing for Brazil on June 12. There the 2012 USA Men's U18 national team will compete for the 2012 FIBA Americas U18 Championship. The event takes place June 16-20 in Sao Sebastiáo do Paraiso, Brazil. The eight teams competing in the event include Argentina, Brazil, Canada, Colombia, Mexico, Puerto Rico, the United States and the U.S. Virgin Islands. The top four finishers qualify for next summer’s 2013 FIBA U19 World Championship. The following are members of  the official 12-man 2012 USA Men's U18 National Team:


Nate Britt, Gonzaga (Washington, D.C.) 2013
Jerami Grant, DeMatha Catholic (Hyattsville, Md.) 2012
James Robinson, DeMatha Catholic (Hyattsville, Md.) 2012

All players eligible for the FIBA U18 Championship must have been born on or after Jan. 1, 1994. The USA Basketball Men's U18 National Team is coached by the University of Florida's Billy Donovan. His assistants are Gonzaga's Mark Few and Virginia Commonwealth's Shaka Smart. The team includes two former high school teammates -- Grant and Robinson. Last season the duo helped DeMatha Catholic to a 30-5 record and No. 13 ranking in the POWERADE FA 50. The team also includes nine players ranked in the 2012 ESPN 100 and two ranked in the class of 2013 ESPN 100 -- Randle (No. 2) and Britt (No. 22).

Tuesday, June 12, 2012

NBPA Top 100 High School Camp roster announced

NBPA Top 100 High School Camp roster announced  
ALL-MET ELITE
EDITION

The NBPA Top 100 High School Camp roster features 110 of the top prospects in the country, regardless of class.

RODDY PETERS
SUITLAND HS.

Bee Jay Anya  - Dematha HS. - 2013
Anthony Barber - Hampton HS. - 2013
Nate Britt - Gonzaga HS. - 2013
Aquille Carr - Patterson HS. - 2013
Kris Jenkins - Gonzaga HS. - 2013
Roddy Peters - Suitland HS. - 2013
Stanford Robinson - Paul VI - 2013
Troy Williams - Oak Hill Academy - 2013




NBA MVP Vs. SCORING CHAMPION - GAME 1

NBA MVP
Vs.
NBA SCORING CHAMPION 
GAME 1
TONITE

LeBron James is quickly racking up MVP awards while Kevin Durant is collecting scoring titles at the same pace.
Either could make a case as the best player in the NBA. Neither is interested in anything beyond team accomplishments.
One of them is about to get the only crown he craves, their head-to-head duel the leading storyline of the NBA Finals that begin tonight when Durant and the Oklahoma City Thunder host James and the Miami Heat.
“I think it’s going to be a great matchup,” Miami’s Dwyane Wade said Monday. “I think it’s going to be two players that’s going to be tough to guard each other, that’s going to have to guard each other.”
Both insist the series is more than an individual matchup, and the All-Star talent around them supports the claim. But the focus will be on James, the three-time MVP in his third shot at a championship, and Durant, the three-time scoring champion who is playing for his first at age 23.
It’s the first time the MVP and scoring champ have met in the Finals since 1997, when Michael Jordan’s Bulls knocked off MVP Karl Malone and Utah.
“Everybody is going to make the most out of the matchup of me versus LeBron, but it’s the Thunder versus the Heat,” Durant said. “One guy versus another guy, it’s not going to be a 1-on-1 matchup to win the series, it’s going to be all about the team.”
They are friends and workout partners, play the same small forward position and are blessed with unlimited basketball talent. After years of waiting on a James-Kobe Bryant Finals matchup that never materialized, the league gets one that’s perhaps even better, if not quite as sexy, to wrap up a successful season after the lockout.
“It’s great for the NBA,” Miami’s Shane Battier said. “I anticipate record ratings, which is great, so maybe we can get some of the escrow check back from the owners. First and foremost, that’s why I’m excited to see Kevin Durant versus LeBron James. But selfish reasons aside, it’s just a great matchup.
“There’s so many young, great players in this league and established players and All-Stars. If you’re a basketball fan, you’re missing out if you’re not watching this series.”
Both have sworn off Twitter, at least for the time being, James posted his last message April 27 and Durant on May 1.
For now, James and Dur­ant will stick to making statements on the court.
“Kevin is locked in on what he needs to do to help the team win,” Thunder All-Star point guard Russell Westbrook said. “It’s going to be a great series for both teams, and hopefully we can come out with the win.”
James is back for a third crack at his first championship, his Cleveland Cavaliers swept aside by San Antonio in 2007 just a couple of weeks before Durant was drafted by the then-Seattle SuperSonics with the No. 2 pick in the draft.
James fell short again last year in his first season with Miami, then carried the Heat to another chance with victories in the final two games of the Eastern Conference finals against the Celtics, starting with a sensational, 45-point, 15-rebound Game 6 performance in Boston.
“You know, third time in the finals in nine years, there’s a lot of guys who don’t get there once,” Wade said. “Of course, that right there in itself is an honor. But you want to win one. You want to get there and win one. Obviously, LeBron wants to win a championship. I can’t say that he wants to win more than the next man, than anybody on OKC. I can’t say that. But obviously he wants to win and get another opportunity. I’m sure he will try to seize it a little bit better than he did the first two times.”
A disappointment last year in the Heat’s six-game loss to Dallas, James has said he’s been in a better frame of mind this season and is looking forward making up for his previous failure.
“I didn’t play well. I didn’t make enough game-changing plays that I know I’m capable of making and I felt like I let my teammates down,” he said.
“I’m happy and I’m humbled that I can actually be back in this position less than 12 months later to do a better job of making more plays, more game-changing plays out on the floor on a bigger stage. So we’ll see what happens.”
Though their core of Durant, Westbrook, sixth man of the year James Harden and Serge Ibaka are all 23 or younger, the Thunder enter as the favorites in their first finals appearance since moving to Oklahoma City from Seattle in 2008.
With signs backing the Thunder hanging from buildings throughout the city, Oklahoma City has watched Durant grow up from the player who arrived here as the rookie of the year. He received some guidance along the way from James, who reached out to him as a high school and then invited him to his home in Akron, Ohio, to work out last summer.
“For me, I understood what the situation he was getting himself into being drafted as high he was, and the things that came with being drafted to a team that needed a marquee player or superstar,” James said. “You know, from Day One I always lent my hand out to guide him if he needed it through anything, and that’s on and off the floor, because to that point I seen everything, and I’m still learning but I’ve seen everyone on and off the floor.
“Our relationship is really good. Our relationship is going to continue to grow and I’m happy to be in this position where I can compete against him.”
Only one can be considered the best player in the game, and it’s probably the guy who walks out of this series as a champion.
“I think it’s going to bring the best out of both of them, and it’s going to be the best for the game,” Wade said, “and it’s going to be a great show.”

THE DREAM TEAM DOCUMENTARY - DAVID ROBINSON / ALL-MET ELITE

THE DREAM TEAM DOCUMENTARY
DAVID ROBINSON 
 Osbourn Park High School
 Manassas, Virginia
 ALL-MET ELITE

SAN ANTONIO SPURS
1989-2003

BRYANT CRAWFORD - GONZAGA HS. - ALL-MET ELITE

BRYANT CRAWFORD 
 GONZAGA HS.
WASHINGTON D.C.
ATTENDS
CHIS PAUL
CP3 ELITE GUARD CAMP
ALL-MET ELITE

Bryant Crawford immediately identified with what Chris Paul was lecturing about during the CP3 Elite Guard Camp at the Gateway YWCA here this weekend.

Crawford too doesn’t see the point of shooting a 12 to 15-footer when he’s “more than confident” that he can get all the way to the basket at will.

But as he continued to listen to the Los Angeles Clippers All-Star point guard, Crawford changed his perspective almost immediately.

“See I had to transition my mind to start shooting floaters because once you get to the league guys are longer and way more athletic,” Paul told the campers. “It’s so important for your game to evolve, and adding a floater opens up so much more offensively. It’s just something else that keeps the defense guessing and makes you more dangerous offensively.”

After the chat, Crawford, a rising sophomore point guard at Gonzaga College High School (Washington, D.C.), and the rest of the campers ran through countless drills to try and perfect the floater.

“When CP3 broke it down like that it made so much sense,” Crawford said. “I know that from now on I’m going to be using the floater so much more. It’s hard because I’m a young guy and I’m really confident so I always want to take it all the way to the hoop. Now I’ll use the floater more.”



Sunday, June 10, 2012

KEVIN DURANT Vs. LEBRON JAMES FACEOFF NBA FINALS

KEVIN DURANT
Vs.
LEBRON JAMES
FACEOFF
IN THE
 NBA FINALS


MIAMI – LeBron James and Kevin Durant are the two best basketball players in the world. Come June 26, one of the two will become an NBA champion for the first time … at the expense of the other.
Three-time MVP vs. three-time scoring champ. Head to head. Defending each other for 40-plus minutes a night for (likely) six or seven games. Who could ask for anything more?
KD-LeBron is enough to get you excited for the 2012 NBA Finals. But championships are won by teams, not individuals.
Miami Heat vs. Oklahoma City Thunder is a Finals matchup that many of us foresaw back in December. But both teams overcame adversity in the conference finals – Oklahoma City was down 0-2, Miami was down 2-3 – to get here.
Now that Chris Bosh is healthy, both teams have three legit scoring threats. The series could very well be decided by which team gets its stars into the paint and to the free throw line more often. But the play of role players can have a big impact.
The Thunder have been the better offensive team all season, while the Heat have been the better defensive team. Dwyane Wade‘s health and Russell Westbrook‘s decision-making will be key storylines. And two young coaches will be under the microscope.
Miami has been here before, but the Thunder have home-court advantage, hosting Games 1, 2, 6 and 7. The team with home-court advantage has won 20 of the 27 Finals since the league switched to the 2-3-2 format in 1985. And only twice in the 27 years has the other team won three straight games on its home floor.
LeBron James. Kevin Durant. Heat vs. Thunder. It begins Tuesday.


USA U18 FINALIST - ALL-MET ELITE

USA
U18 FINALIST 
 ALL-MET ELITE
EDITION

JAMES ROBINSON
DEMATHA HS.
HYATTSVILLE MD.

Before the team competes in the FIBA Americas U18 Championship later this month in Brazil, the roster will be cut from 14 to 12. Billy Donovan of Florida is serving as head coach and assisted by Mark Few of Gonzaga and Shaka Smart of Virginia Commonwealth.
"I think it was very, very difficult for the committee to get this group narrowed down just because there were so many good players. I thought for the past three days their effort was great," Donovan said of training.
Jerami Grant, DeMatha (Hyattsville, Md.) – Syracuse
 Nate Britt of Gonzaga (Washington, D.C.) - North Carolina -2013
James Robinson, DeMatha (Hyattsville, Md.) – Pittsburgh

Saturday, June 9, 2012

KEVIN DURANT - THUNDERSTRUCK MOVIE TRAILER - ALL-MET ELITE

KEVIN DURANT 
 THUNDERSTRUCK
MOVIE TRAILER 

 ALL-MET ELITE
MONTROSE CHRISTIAN HS.
ROCKVILLE MD.

Thursday, June 7, 2012

Kevin Durant leads Thunder to NBA finals - ALL-MET ELITE

Kevin Durant leads Thunder to NBA finals
ALL-MET ELITE
MONTROSE CHRISTIAN HS.
ROCKVILLE MD

 For all the points, rebounds and assists that filled Kevin Durant’s impressive stat line, it was a defensive play he made that fired up his coach and teammates.
“That’s his first charge of the year,” Russell Westbrook interjected when Durant was asked about drawing an offensive foul against Manu Ginobili in the fourth quarter of Oklahoma City’s 107-99 win in Game 6 of the Western Conference finals on Wednesday night.
Indeed, it was. The league’s three-time scoring champion had 34 points and 14 rebounds while playing all of regulation for the first time all season, leading the Thunder into the NBA finals. But it was taking that charge that got his team pumped up.
Durant stepped in front of Ginobili’s drive during a 3½-minute scoreless stretch by San Antonio that allowed Oklahoma City to take the lead for good.
“I just wanted to go out there and sacrifice my body for my team. I knew that would give us a little spark,” Durant said.

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

STEVE FRANCIS returns to dedicate basketball court - ALL-MET ELITE

STEVE FRANCIS
returns to dedicate basketball court 
 ALL-MET ELITE
TAKOMA PARK MD.

Steve Francis bounced around area high schools, endured the death of his mother at age 18, and made stops at two junior colleges and the University of Maryland before a nine-year NBA career that brought the 35-year-old Takoma Park native and guest of honor to the microphone on Sunday.
Behind him was a new basketball court with glass backboards, padded stanchions and his signature, painted between the half-court and 3-point lines, part of the $70,000 donation the Steve Francis Foundation made to Montgomery County Parks to renovate Takoma-Piney Branch Local Park.
In front of him were many of the friends and family members who played roles in his uncommon path to professional stardom, including his sister, Tiffany Bryant, and grandmother, Mabel Wilson, who continued to help raise him after his mother, Brenda Wilson Bryant, died of cancer in 1995.
“Most guys in the NBA, they take the traditional route,” Francis said. “I was never a high school All-American. I didn’t have those accolades. For myself, this is my accolade right here.”
The skinny, trash-talking kid from the Park Ritchie apartments on Maple Avenue stood in front of a crowd at the ribbon-cutting ceremony Sunday, and spoke about what he hoped the rebuilt park would mean to his hometown.
Francis, his eyes hidden by sunglasses, began to choke up midway through his speech. His hand started to shake. Wilson stood up, walked over to him and put her hand on his to help steady the microphone.
“My mom passed away when I was 5,” Bryant told the audience. “I know she loved children and I know if she was here today, she’d be smiling. She’d just be so happy.”
Francis was a three-time All-Star for the Houston Rockets from 2002 to 2004. By then, his aggressive style for a point guard and highlight-making athleticism had made him a household name. In 1998, when he transferred from the Allegany College of Maryland in Cumberland to the nationally-ranked University of Maryland basketball team for his junior season, he vaulted into the national consciousness by leading the Terrapins to what was then the best record in school history.
Tony Langley met Francis well before that. Langley, who coached Francis at the Boys & Girls Club and at Takoma Park Middle School, remembered when the 9-year-old Francis walked into the basement court at the old Takoma Park Fire Station in 1986 with no tennis shoes and the idea that football would be his sport.
“He was really small, but he could play,” Langley said.
Langley brought Francis to Foot Locker to buy him athletic shoes and guided him through a series of setbacks. He was a bench warmer as a sophomore at Montgomery Blair High School, then broke his ankle upon transferring to Kennedy High School the next year. When he came back to Blair, his mother died and his focus on basketball waned.
Langley helped him along, teaching him how to play all five positions despite his size. He also connected Francis with an Amateur Athletic Union team, which helped him garner interest from college recruiters once a growth spurt finally came.
“He’s been there throughout everything,” Francis said.
In 1999, after one season in College Park, he was the second pick in the NBA Draft. The court at Takoma-Piney Branch Local is dedicated to Langley.
“A lot of guys who are late bloomers like Steve, they wind up appreciating it a lot more because they were always underestimated and undervalued,” Langley said. “It’s hometown boy does good and it’s wonderful.”
Francis now lives in the Houston area with his wife and children. He toured the park, which also has a pavillion dedicated to his mother, a skateboard park, volleyball court and playground, for the first time on May 31.
“To me, it’s like 25 years coming. For me to see that was mind blowing,” Francis said. “Growing up out there, playing out there gave me so much.”
Trees line the park, built about 30 years ago near Darwin Avenue between the middle school and a wooded area that backs up to the highrise where Francis grew up. Friends called him “710” because he lived in apartment 710. They would walk through the woods to get to the park.
“It’s about the scenery, the trees, about everybody knowing that this is a family place,” Francis said. “That’s the feeling I want everybody to have, to be able to feel like this is a place you can come to be yourself.”

Monday, June 4, 2012

COACHES AFTER THE MIT AND NATIONALS - ALL-MET ELITE

COACHES
 AFTER YOU WIN
THE MIT AND AAU NATIONALS 
 ALL-MET ELITE BASKETBALL CAMP IS YOUR NEXT STOP!!!!

WE ARE ACTIVELY SEEKING  BOTH
 COACHES
 AND
EVALUATORS
FOR ALL AGE GROUPS
A STIPEND WILL BE PROVIDED

FOR MORE INFO
PLEASE CONTACT
202-498-4357
or
email
ALLMET.ELITE @GMAIL.COM







MARYLAND INVITATIONAL TOURNAMENT MIT SCHEDULES

MARYLAND INVITATIONAL TOURNAMENT
MIT
2nd - 11th Grade
Schedule
ALL-MET ELITE
SCHEDULE LINK
BELOW

Saturday, June 2, 2012

Thomas Robinson would welcome playing for hometown Wizards - ALL-MET ELITE

Thomas Robinson
would welcome playing for hometown
Wizards
ALL-MET ELITE
RIVERDALE BAPTIST HS.
UPPER MARLBORO MD.

Kansas power forward Thomas Robinson would welcome the chance to play for his hometown Washington Wizards, who hold the No. 3 pick in the June 28 NBA draft, The Washington Post reported. “That’s where I started my dream at, in D.C.,” Robinson said, according to the newspaper, “and to be able to come back home would mean a lot to me, because that’s something that you fantasize in your mind about when you’re little, bringing the city back to where it belongs. That’s something that I definitely wouldn’t mind doing.”
The New Orleans Hornets are expected to take Kentucky’s Anthony Davis with the first overall pick—though Robinson told The Post that he thinks he should at least be in the conversation.
“Of course I feel that way,” Robinson said. “I’m a competitor.”
Robinson—a consensus first-team All-American—could go No. 2 to the Charlotte Bobcats, but there’s also the chance he could slide to the Wizards at No. 3.
And unlike Oklahoma City Thunder superstar Kevin Durant, another D.C. native who has repeatedly said he has no interest in playing so close to where he grew up, Robinson would be OK with that.
According to The Post, the Wizards like Robinson as a person and a player, with his triumphs over personal loss—his mother, grandmother and grandfather died within a one-month span from December 2010 to January 2011—serving as a great example of his character and mental toughness, as did his patience in waiting his turn at KU.
The 6-foot-9 Robinson, 21, was a backup to Marcus and Markieff Morris for two years at Kansas but then dominated Big 12 play with his physical style and led the Jayhawks to the national title game.
“I felt I did what the typical college player is supposed to do,” Robinson told The Post. “I waited my turn. I grew as a person, as a player and when my name was called, I produced. Now, I’m happy with my career. I gave it my all and I can be happy with that.”
Robinson averaged 17.7 points and 11.9 rebounds last season and decided to leave college so that he could provide a better life for him and his sister, Jayla, who was raised by her father, James Paris, in Washington after their mother, Lisa, died of a heart attack at age 43.
A Wizards decision to take him would say a lot about their opinion of the young forwards they have on the roster. In the past two drafts, the Wizards have taken forwards Kevin Seraphin, Trevor Booker and Jan Vesely, but they still have a glaring need for help on the perimeter, The Post noted.


 

Friday, June 1, 2012

NIKE GLOBAL CHALLENGE SCHEDULE ALL-MET ELITE

NIKE GLOBAL CHALLENGE
SCHEDULE
ALL-MET ELITE


The top 30 players from throughout the EYBL season and the rest of the NIKE summer events are selected to represent the United States in the NIKE Global Challenge. The players are split into EAST, MIDWEST and WEST and compete against five other countries in this International competition.
Friday, July 13th (Episcopal High School)
10:00-11:30 am: Pool A Game – Episcopal HS
12:00-1:30 pm: Pool A Game – Episcopal HS
2:00-3:30 pm: Pool B Game – Episcopal HS
4:00-5:30 pm: Pool B Game – Episcopal HS
6:00-7:30 pm: Pool A Game – Episcopal HS
8:00-9:30 pm: Pool A Game – Episcopal HS


Saturday, July 14th (Episcopal High School)
10:00-11:30 am: Pool B Game – Episcopal HS
12:00-1:30 pm: Pool B Game – Episcopal HS
2:00-3:30 pm: Pool A Game – Episcopal HS
4:00-5:30 pm: Pool A Game – Episcopal HS
6:00-7:30 pm:Pool B Game – Episcopal HS
8:00-9:30 pm: Pool B Game – Episcopal HS


Sunday, July 15th (DC Armory)
10:00-11:30 am: 7th/8th Place Game – DC Armory
11:30-1:00 pm: 5th/6th Place Game – DC Armory
1:00-2:30 pm: 3rd/4th Place Game – DC Armory
2:30-4:00 pm: Championship Game – DC Armory