2025 6’8 Kaden Hammond (TBS)
Hammond has had back-to-back weekends of strong play, displayed touch and feel, being a leader on the court, excelling on the glass, and showing that he can be an effective big man in a variety of ways and areas on the court. Racked up two double-doubles against tough competition, and it sems college coaches are noticing.
2025 6’1 Bram Early (Myers Park)
Early really was strong against Davidson Day; when you talk about his play, words like gritty, tough, and shotmaker come to mind. He did what he could do to help his team, as he was effective off the dribble, getting to his spots, knocking down jumpers with range, and being such a competitor on both sides of the court.
2025 5’8 Chandler Kennedy (Carmel Christian)
Again, Kennedy has shown that he can be a piece for a college program. One can’t deny his impact in not only using his speed and ability to create for himself (as well as knock down open shots from outside), but he is an absolute pest on the defensive end. That surely is something a program could use down the road.
2025 6’10 Nate Malosa (QEA)
Malosa continues to be a rising prospect with his blend of size, fluidity, and comfort level in not only operating around the basket but being a true threat in stepping out to knock down mid-range shots as well as threes. With his size, ability to attack and be a presence on the boards, and be a presence defensively in blocking shots, he showed that he is a college-worthy prospect.
2025 6’6 Nick Hailey (Providence Day)
Really was impressed with Hailey at the event. Day 1 was a real eye-opener with his ability to knock down shots and be a strong threat from behind the arc. His frame, size, and athleticism have been there and certainly checks the boxes as a college prospect, but he showed more of his ability to knock down shots from outside and be a versatile piece on the court.
2025 6’6 Addison Newkirk (GDS)
Newkirk showed that he is a leader and a true glue piece on the court; he does a lot, can play a variety of roles, competes in several areas, and just knows how to be an effective option whether it is on the boards, defending multiple positions, scoring inside and out, and being that team guy that coaches love to have on the court.
2025 6’1 Kyri Wilson (Mooresville)
Super impressed with Wilson’s showing at the George Lynch Invitational; the senior guard just seemed to have his hands in everything with his team’s victory. Whether it was being a pest defensively, creating turnovers, being a playmaker offensively, or creating and scoring tough buckets, he did a little bit of everything on the court.
2025 6’4 Ian Howard (Queens Grant)
Howard continues to be a strong senior for a team that has a lot of talent but also young talent. Howard, though, steps up when needed, brings a consistent presence, and understands where he can excel offensively by getting to his open spots, being a threat on drives, and getting to the rim. He is just a natural glue piece that steps up when needed.
2025 6’5 Alex Pissis (WS Christian)
Pissis is another senior who had a good showing overall. He brings a toughness to the court that has to grab your attention, but he is also one that spaces the floor well, shows a good feel for the game, scores well within the offense, offers size at his position, and can knock down shots consistently.
2025 6’5 Jack Sorrell (1of1)
Sorrell had a strong showing during the Hoop State Fall League, and has started to carry that into the season. A newer name to start looking at more, Sorrell is 6’5 and has excellent bounce in his game but it shows that he is an effective scoring option at the rim or from outside. Fluid and confident release, attacks out in transition, and has good positional size along with athleticism that can create problems.